Thursday, April 10, 2014

How does Alfred Lord Tennyson portray nature in his poems?

Alfred Lord Tennyson was a Victorian writer. The Victorian
period's establishment revolved around Queen Victoria. The works from this period
changed dramatically from the beginning (1837 to 1870) to the end (1870-1901). Tennyson
is associated with the early Victorian period.


Tennyson was
renowned for his works and their association with beauty, emotion, and sentiments.
Tennyson was named the the Poet Laureate in 1850- as successor to Wordsworth upon
Wordsworth's death.


As for his portrayal of nature,
Tennyson held nature to be poignant when describing the psychology of mankind. Lines
from his poetry such as "Words, like nature, half reveal and half conceal the soul
within" exemplify his ability to use nature as a conduit to describe thoughts, feelings,
and emotions more typically described using references to man
alone.


In his poem "Ask Me No More", Tennyson compares the
trials one faces in life to that of trying to battle a rushing stream. The following
passage comes from the final stanza of the poem:


readability="8">

Ask me no more: thy fate and mine are seal'd:

I strove against the stream and all in vain:
Let the great river
take me to the main:
No more, dear love, for at a touch I yield;

Ask me no more.



Here, Tennyson is comparing
the natural aspect of a stream to that of changing his past and future. The stream
symbolizes the pressures life places upon a man. The natural element of the stream is
used to symbolize all of the problems one may face in life. Regardless of how hard one
struggles against fate, or the stream, one cannot change fate- like one cannot change
the stream. Tennyson is simply giving up "let the great river take me to the main" and
submitting to the fact that he must accept this.

No comments:

Post a Comment

What is the meaning of the 4th stanza of Eliot's Preludes, especially the lines "I am moved by fancies...Infinitely suffering thing".

A century old this year, T.S. Eliot's Preludes raises the curtain on his great modernist masterpieces, The Love...