Book: Paperback: Mass Market | 4.33 x 6.69in | 384 pages | ISBN 9780451528759 | 04 Mar 2003 | Signet Classic | 18 - AND UP
With regal melancholy and superb craftsmanship, Tennyson’s poems evoke Past and Present—the Isle of the Lotos-eaters, Camelot, and his own twilit English gardens—seeking to reconcile the Victorian zeal for public progress with private despair. He juxtaposes opposites—not only Past and Present, but also Beauty and Squalor, High Class and Low—and then entwines them. The closeness of these opposites lets Tennyson’s poems “transcend their own achievements and their own intentions.” (George Barker)
Praised over all other poets for his unerring portraits of the gentleman and the beggar alike, Tennyson still favored neither. And just as these portraits hang together, his poems are accessible to both “intellectual potentates [and] the common or sensible man.” (George Barker) Using eloquence, melancholy, and myths, Alfred Lord Tennyson proved to be the stylist most imitated by poets of his day.
Idylls of the King
Introduction
Idylls of the King
Dedication
The Coming of Arthur
The Round Table:
Gareth and Lynette
The Marriage of Geraint
Geraint and Enid
Balin and Balan
Merlin and Vivien
Lancelot and Elaine
The Holy Grail
Pelleas and Ettarre
The Last Tournament
Guinevere
The Passing of Arthur
To the Queen
A Selection of Poems
The Kraken
Mariana
Song
The Poet
The Lady of Shalott
The Lotos-Eaters
Choric Song
Break, Break, Break
The Two Voices
Ulysses