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A poem by Alfred Lord Tennyson |
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To---- [You might have won the Poet's name] |
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Title: To---- [You might have won the Poet's name] Author: Alfred Lord Tennyson [More Titles by Tennyson] AFTER READING A LIFE AND LETTERS Originally published in the 'Examiner' for 24th March, 1849; then in the sixth edition of the poems, 1850, with the second part of the title and the alterations noted. When reprinted in 1851 one more slight alteration was made. It has not been altered since. The work referred to was Moncton Milne's (afterwards Lord Houghton) 'Letters and Literary Remains of Keats' published in 1848, and the person to whom the poem may have been addressed was Tennyson's brother Charles, afterwards Charles Tennyson Turner, to the facts of whose life and to whose character it would exactly apply. See Napier,'Homes and Haunts of Tennyson', 48-50. But Sir Franklin Lushington tells me that it was most probably addressed to some imaginary person, as neither he nor such of Tennyson's surviving friends as he kindly consulted for me are able to identify the person.
You might have won the Poet's name And you have miss'd the irreverent doom For now the Poet cannot die "Proclaim the faults he would not show: Ah, shameless! for he did but sing. He gave the people of his best: Who make it seem more sweet [2] to be Than he that warbles long and loud
[Footnote 2: In Examiner. Sweeter seem. For the sentiment 'cf'. Goethe:-- Ich singe, wie der Vogel singt --'Der Saenger'.] [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |