1830-1868
EDITED BY J.C. THOMSON
- [EDITOR'S NOTE]
- [TIMBUCTOO]
- [POEMS CHIEFLY LYRICAL]
- [i. The How and the Why]
- [ii. The Burial of Love]
- [iii. To ——]
- [iv. Song 'I' the gloaming light']
- [v. Song 'Every day hath its night']
- [vi. Hero to Leander]
- [vii. The Mystic]
- [viii. The Grasshopper]
- [ix. Love, Pride and Forgetfulness]
- [x. Chorus 'The varied earth, the moving heaven']
- [xi. Lost Hope]
- [xii. The Tears of Heaven]
- [xiii. Love and Sorrow]
- [xiv. To a Lady sleeping]
- [xv. Sonnet 'Could I outwear my present state of woe']
- [xvi. Sonnet 'Though night hath climbed']
- [xvii. Sonnet 'Shall the hag Evil die']
- [xviii. Sonnet 'The pallid thunder stricken sigh for gain']
- [xix. Love]
- [xx. English War Song]
- [xxi. National Song]
- [xxii. Dualisms]
- [xxiii. οἱ ρἑοντες]
- [xxiv. Song 'The lintwhite and the throstlecock']
- [CONTRIBUTIONS TO PERIODICALS, 1831-32]
- [POEMS, 1833]
- [MISCELLANEOUS POEMS AND CONTRIBUTIONS TO PERIODICALS, 1833-68]
- [xl. Cambridge]
- [xli. The Germ of 'Maud']
- [xlii. 'A gate and afield half ploughed']
- [xliii. The Skipping-Rope]
- [xliv. The New Timon and the Poets]
- [xlv. Mablethorpe]
- [xlvi. 'What time I wasted youthful hours']
- [xlvii. Britons, guard your own]
- [xlviii. Hands all round]
- [xlix. Suggested by reading an article in a newspaper]
- [l. 'God bless our Prince and Bride']
- [li. The Ringlet]
- [lii. Song 'Home they brought him slain with spears']
- [liii. 1865-1866]
- [THE LOVER'S TALE, 1833]
- [INDEX OF FIRST LINES]
To those unacquainted with Tennyson's conscientious methods, it may seem strange that a volume of 160 pages is necessary to contain those poems written and published by him during his active literary career, and ultimately rejected as unsatisfactory. Of this considerable body of verse, a great part was written, not in youth or old age, but while Tennyson's powers were at their greatest. Whatever reasons may once have existed for suppressing the poems that follow, the student of English literature is entitled to demand that the whole body of Tennyson's work should now be open, without restriction or impediment, to the critical study to which the works of his compeers are subjected.
The bibliographical notes prefixed to the various poems give, in every case, the date and medium of first publication.
J.C.T.