CONTENTS.
| PAGE | |
| Introduction | [1] |
| Depression after the Napoleonic struggle—Social problems—Spread of democracy— Popular education—Rise of periodical literature—Physical science—Tractarianism— Pre-Raphaelitism. | |
| [Chapter I.] Thomas Carlyle | [12] |
| [Chapter II.] Poetry from 1830 to 1850. The Greater Poets: Tennyson and Browning | [36] |
| Introduction—Tennyson’s first period—Browning’s first period | |
| [Chapter III.] The Minor Poets, 1830 to 1850 | [52] |
| Mrs. Hemans and L. E. Landon—Charles Tennyson Turner—Thomas Hood—Laman Blanchard—Praed—Lord Houghton—R. H. Barham—Hartley Coleridge—Sara Coleridge—William Motherwell—Henry Taylor—Philip James Bailey—R. H. Horne— William Barnes—Mangan—Whitehead—Wade—Ebenezer Jones. | |
| [Chapter IV.] The Earlier Fiction | [68] |
| Introduction—Maginn—Lord Lytton—Disraeli—Ainsworth—G. P. R. James—Marryat— Michael Scott—Warren. | |
| [Chapter V.] Fiction: The Intermediate Period | [82] |
| Dickens—Thackeray—The Brontës—Mrs. Gaskell. | |
| [Chapter VI.] The Historians and Biographers | [109] |
| Introduction—Macaulay—Thomas Arnold—Thirlwall—Grote —Milman—Finlay— Neale—Merivale—Froude—Kinglake —Buckle—Maine—Lockhart—Stanley—Minor Historians and Biographers. | |
| [Chapter VII.] Theology and Philosophy | [144] |
| Keble—Newman—Pusey—Wilberforce—Maurice—F. W. Robertson—Mark Pattison— Jowett—Mill—N. W. Senior—J. E. Cairnes—Whewell—Sir W. Hamilton—Ferrier— Mansel—Harriet Martineau—G. H. Lewes—Sir G. Cornewall Lewis—Herbert Spencer. | |
| [Chapter VIII.] Science | [175] |
| Introduction—Lyell—Hugh Miller—Robert Chambers—Darwin—A. R. Wallace. | |
| [Chapter IX.] Criticism, Scholarship, and Miscellaneous Prose | [191] |
| Introduction—J. P. Collier—Mrs. Jameson—J. O. Halliwell-Phillipps—Helps—Ruskin— Matthew Arnold—Dr. John Brown—Rands—George Borrow. | |
| [Chapter X.] Poetry From 1850 To 1870: the Intellectual Movement | [213] |
| Introduction—Matthew Arnold—Clough—Tennyson—Robert Browning—E. B. Browning—Edward FitzGerald. | |
| [Chapter XI.] Poetry From 1850 To 1870: the Pre-Raphaelites; The Spasmodic School; Minor Poets | [240] |
| D. G. Rossetti—Christina Rossetti—W. E. Aytoun—Dobell—Alexander Smith—Coventry Patmore—‘Owen Meredith’—Lord de Tabley—William Morris—Minor Poets. | |
| [Chapter XII.] The Later Fiction | [262] |
| Introduction—George Eliot—Mrs. Henry Wood—D. M. Craik—Charles Kingsley—Anthony Trollope—James Grant—Whyte-Melville—Wilkie Collins—G. A. Lawrence—Charles Reade— Conclusion. | |
| Chronological Table | [279] |
| Alphabetical List of Writers | [289] |
| Index | [295] |
THE AGE OF TENNYSON.
INTRODUCTION.
The epoch of literature which opened about the year 1830 is perhaps best described, in the first place, by negatives. It is distinguished from the previous period, when the spirit which gave rise to the French Revolution was dominant, by the absence of certain characteristics then conspicuous. First and chiefly, it is distinguished by the failure of the hopes which at once produced and were produced by the Revolution. On the border-land between the two centuries literature was marked by buoyant and often extravagant expectation. Even pessimists like Byron were somewhat superficial in their pessimism. Byron looked upon the evils from which he and others suffered as due largely to the perversity of society. But this perversity might be cured, and if it were cured an earthly Elysium seemed a thing not wholly unreasonable to expect. To all who were animated by the spirit of Rousseau the problem, how to secure happiness, appeared almost identical with the comparatively simple one, how to remove obstructions. Nature unimpeded was perfect: it was the vain imaginings and evil contrivances of man that did the mischief. There were not wanting, even in the Revolutionary period, men who thought more deeply and who saw more clearly. The speculations of Malthus, destined afterwards, both directly, and still more through the impulse they gave to Darwin, to prove among the most influential of the century, showed that some, at least, of the roots of evil reached far deeper than the orthodox Revolutionists and speculators of the type of Godwin had imagined. The exhaustion of Europe after the great struggle with Napoleon brought dimly home to multitudes who knew nothing about and cared nothing for abstruse speculation a sense of the difficulty and complexity of social problems. Exaggerated expectations bring their own Nemesis in the shape of proportionate depression and gloom; and the men of the new era set themselves somewhat wearily and with little elasticity of spirit to climb the toilsome steep of progress. The way seemed all the rougher because they had hoped to win the summit by a rush. Failure left them in the mood of Cleopatra on the death of Antony,—