Arthur Hallam's was the most important of these friendships. Hallam, another
precociously brilliant Victorian young man like Robert Browning, John Stuart
Mill, and Matthew Arnold, was uniformly recognized by his contemporaries
(including William Gladstone, his best friend at Eton) as having unusual
promise. He and Tennyson knew each other only four years, but their intense
friendship had major influence on the poet. On a visit to Somersby, Hallam met
and later became engaged to Emily Tennyson, and the two friends looked forward
to a life-long companionship. Hallam's death from illness in 1833 (he was only
22) shocked Tennyson profoundly, and his grief lead to most of his best poetry,
including In Memoriam , "The Passing of Arthur", ÒUlysses,Ó and ÒTithonus.Ó
By 41, Tennyson had written some of his greatest poetry, but he
continued to write and to gain in popularity. In 1853, as the Tennysons were
moving into their new house on the Isle of Wight, Prince Albert dropped in
unannounced. His admiration for Tennyson's poetry helped solidify his position
as the national poet, and Tennyson returned the favor by dedicating
  Check out various pictorial scenes taken from within works on "Idylls of the King"
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Pictures of the family!
Alfred Tennyson was born August 6th, 1809, at Somersby, Lincolnshire, fourth of
twelve children of George and Elizabeth Tennyson. The poet's
grandfather had violated tradition by making his younger son, Charles, his heir,
and arranging for the poet's father to enter the ministry. The contrast of his own family's relatively straitened
circumstances to the great wealth of his aunt Elizabeth Russell and uncle
Charles Tennyson (who lived in castles!) made Tennyson feel particularly
impoverished and led him to worry about money all his life.
In 1827 Tennyson escaped the troubled atmosphere of his home when he followed
his two older brothers to Trinity College, Cambridge, where his tutor was
William Whewell -- see 19th century philosophy. Because they had published Poems
by Two Brothers in 1827 and each won university prizes for poetry (Alfred
winning the Chancellor's Gold Medal in 1828 for ÒTimbuctooÓ) the Tennyson
brothers became well known at Cambridge. In 1829 The Apostles, an undergraduate
club, whose members remained Tennyson's friends all his life, invited him to
join. The group, which met to discuss major philosophical and other issues,
included Arthur Henry Hallam, James Spedding, Edward Lushington (who later
married Cecilia Tennyson), and Richard Monckton Milnes--all eventually famous
men who merited entries in the Dictionary of National Biography.
"The Idylls
of the King" to his memory. Queen Victoria later summoned him to court several
times, and at her insistence he accepted his title, having declined it when
offered by both Disraeli and Gladstone.
Tennyson suffered from extreme short-sightedness--without a monocle he could not
even see to eat--which gave him considerable difficulty writing and reading, and
this disability in part accounts for his manner of creating poetry: Tennyson
composed much of his poetry in his head, occasionally working on individual
poems for many years. During his undergraduate days at Cambridge he often did
not bother to write down his compositions, although the Apostles continually
prodded him to do so. (We owe the first version of "The Lotos-Eaters" to Arthur
Hallam, who transcribed it while Tennyson declaimed it at a meeting of the
Apostles.)
Long-lived like most of his family (no matter how unhealthy they seemed to be)
Alfred, Lord Tennyson died on October 6, 1892, at the age of 83.
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