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Tennyson, The Unquiet Heart

Robert Bernard Martin

Plot Summary

Tennyson, The Unquiet Heart

Robert Bernard Martin

Nonfiction | Biography | Adult | Published in 1980

Plot Summary
Tennyson, The Unquiet Heart (1980) is American author Robert Bernard Martin’s biography of the British poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson. Great Britain's Poet Laureate during much of the Victorian Era, Tennyson is considered one of the greatest poets of all time. He is the ninth most quoted individual in The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, having popularized a number of famous phrases, including, "'Tis better to have loved and lost / Than never to have loved at all." A former Professor Emeritus of English at Princeton University, Martin has written the "definitive" biography of Tennyson, according to Kirkus Reviews, which adds that Tennyson, The Unquiet Heart is "a thoroughly satisfying work of mature scholarship."

Born in Somersby, England on August 6, 1809, Tennyson belonged to a middle-class family descended from an Earl. Both of his parents had connections to the Church of England. His father, George Clayton Tennyson, was a rector at no fewer than three nearby churches, while his mother, Elizabeth Fytche, was the daughter of a vicar at St. James Church in Louth. Among other artistic endeavors, his father dabbled in poetry, a vocation he passed on to his three sons. Together, Alfred Tennyson and his brothers, Charles and Frederick, jointly published a book of poetry when Alfred was only seventeen.

At the age of eighteen, Tennyson began studying at the prestigious Trinity College in Cambridge, England. Two years later, Tennyson won Trinity's much-coveted Chancellor's Gold Medal for his poem, "Timbuktu." The following year, when Tennyson was twenty-two, he published his first solo collection, Poems Chiefly Lyrical, which contained "Mariana," a work still considered today to be among the poet's finest. "Mariana" expresses a sense of isolation so profound that its female protagonist prays for her own death at each stanza's end, crying, "I am aweary, I am aweary; I would that I were dead!" Among early admirers of Tennyson's work was the well-known poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge.



A year later, Tennyson was forced to leave Cambridge early to care for his mother and siblings in the wake of his father's death. This began a difficult time in Tennyson's life. His second solo publication, released in 1833, received such negative reviews that Tennyson wouldn't publish another collection for almost a decade. Later that year, Arthur Hallam, a dear friend of Tennyson's as well as his sister Emily's fiancé, died suddenly of a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of twenty-two. Hallam's death inspired a number of Tennyson's poems, including "In the Valley of Cauteretz" and "In Memoriam A.H.H.," which many consider his masterpiece.

Though Tennyson continued to write during this period, he stayed out of the public eye, tending to his family at the rectory which kept its doors open to the Tennysons until around 1837, when the family relocated to a rustic abode deep in the woods of Epping Forest in Essex. Sometime after settling there, Tennyson lost most of his family's fortune in an ill-advised investment in his friend's ecclesiastical woodcarving business.

With little money and a stalled poetry career, Tennyson moved to London in 1840, hoping to change his fortunes for the better. After two years of scraping by on a modest income, Tennyson published his third collection, a two-volume book simply titled Poems. The collection was a critical and financial success, with particular praise directed at poems like "Locksley Hall" and "Ulysses," a dramatic monologue delivered in blank verse by the Greek mythical hero Odysseus—referred to as Ulysses in Latin—near the end of his life. Written years earlier in 1833 at a very low point in his life, Martin opines that the domesticity Ulysses fears upon returning from his adventures reflects Tennyson's own feelings of depression and ennui at having been stuck caring for his mother and many of his siblings in the Somersby rectory.



In 1850, Tennyson's career reached unforeseen heights with the release of "In Memoriam A.H.H.," an elegy lamenting the death of his dear friend, Arthur Hallam. Queen Victoria was a huge fan of "In Memoriam A.H.H.," later writing that the poem "soothed and pleased" her in the wake of her husband Prince Albert's death. When William Wordsworth died that same year, Tennyson was selected to be England's new Poet Laureate, a position appointed and conferred by the royal government. Holding the position for forty-two years until his death in 1892, Tennyson is still the longest-serving Poet Laureate in the history of England. Personally, 1850 was a big year for Tennyson, for it was the year he married Emily Sellwood, a talented musician who would set many of Tennyson's poems to music.

For the rest of his life, Tennyson continued to write while enjoying a fair bit of stardom owing to his status as Poet Laureate and his association with the royal family. In 1892, Tennyson died at the age of eighty-three. Reportedly, his last words were, "Oh that press will have me now!"

Tennyson, The Unquiet Heart enriches the poet's body of work by pointing out the autobiographical life events that influenced it.

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