[5] Fitzgerald, in a letter written in London (April, 1838) says: “We have had Alfred Tennyson here; very droll, and very wayward: and much sitting up of nights till two and three in the morning with pipes in our mouths: at which good hour we would get Alfred to give us some of his magic music, which he does between growling and smoking.”—Letters and Literary Remains, vol. i., pp. 42, 43.

[6] Milnes, in a letter dated July 20, 1856, gives this glimpse of the Laureate’s domestic life: “He is himself much happier than he used to be, and devoted to his children, who are beautiful.”—Reid’s Life of Lord Houghton, Vol. I.

[7] The time of Tennyson’s removal from Twickenham to Farringford can be fixed with tolerable definiteness. Fitzgerald writes (Oct. 25, 1853): “I am going to see the last of the Tennysons at Twickenham;” and again (in December, 1853): “I hear from Mrs. Alfred they are got to their new abode in the Isle of Wight.”—Letters and Literary Remains, vol. i., pp. 225-6.

[8] In 1865, Alfred Tennyson was elected a member of the Royal Society; in 1869, an honorary fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge; and, in 1884, president of the Incorporated Society of Authors. He is also president of the London Library.

[9] “An interesting fact relating to the poet’s descent may here be mentioned. His mother’s mother (Mrs. Fytche) was a granddaughter of a certain Mons. Fauvelle, a French Huguenot, who was related to Madame de Maintenon.”—Church’s Laureate’s Country, p. 10.

[10] Edward Fitzgerald, in a letter written soon after Charles Turner’s death (April 25, 1879), says: “Tennyson’s elder, not eldest, brother is dead; and I was writing only yesterday to persuade Spedding to insist on Macmillan publishing a complete edition of Charles’ Sonnets: graceful, tender, beautiful, and quite original little things.”—Letters and Literary Remains, vol. i., p. 437.

[11] Mary Tennyson (1810-1884) married the Hon. Alan Ker, Puisine Judge of the Supreme Court of Jamaica.

[12] Emily Tennyson (1811-1887), who was betrothed to Arthur Hallam about 1830, became the wife of Capt. Richard Jesse, R. N.

[13] The Hon. Lionel Tennyson was attacked by jungle fever during a visit to India, and died on board the Chusan, near Aden, April 20, 1886, aged thirty-two. He was a profound student of dramatic poetry, and would have won a name for himself in literature. For several years he was connected with the India office, and prepared a masterly report on “The Moral and Material Condition of India,” for 1881-82. In 1878, he married the accomplished daughter of Frederick Locker. The eldest of their three sons is the “golden-haired Ally” who inspired the well-known verses of his grandfather.

[14] “Queen Mary” was produced at the Lyceum Theatre, London, in April, 1876—Miss Bateman as Mary and Irving as Philip.