Table of Contents
I Introduction 1
II Background Information 1
1. The Victorian Age 1
2. Alfred Tennyson 2
3. Background and sources 3
4. The story of Enoch Arden 4
III Theme Structure and Peculiarities of Style in Alfred Tennyson s
Enoch Arden 4
III a The main themes 5
1. The theme of common life 5
2. The religious theme 6
3. The heroic theme 7
III b The structure 8
III c Peculiarities of Style 10
IV Results 12
V Appendix 13
1. References 13
I. Introduction
This essay deals with theme, structure and peculiarities of style in Alfred Tennyson’ s “Enoch Arden”. In particular it describes the main themes (theme of common life, religious theme, heroic theme). Fur thermore it illustrates the structure and the style of writing.
The ideas of this essay are thematically linked. The second chapter gives background information (Victorian Age, Alfred Tennyson, Background and sources, story of “Enoch Arden”). In the main part (third chapter) the themes mentioned above are examined. A conclusion is given in the fourth chapter. Finally references are given in the appendix.
II. Background Information
The Victorian Age got its name from Queen Victoria who was born on May 24 th , 1819 and died at the age of 81 on January 22 nd ,1901. She became Queen after William IV had died on June 20th, 1837. She was crowned in Westminster Abbey on June 28 th , 1838 and reigned 64 years from 1837-1901. 1 Among the characteristics of Victorian England were the effects of industrialisation. The industrial revolution led to the fast growth of cities. This urbanisation was so rapid that the quality of the houses available to the poor was often appalling. The gap between rich and poor widened.
During this time these far- reaching industrial and scientific changes produced social and political upheavals. Uncertainty and doubt about accepted beliefs were characteristic of the Victorian Age because a new evolution of ideas was brought about. People such as Karl Marx and Charles Darwin introduced new, influential concepts. Karl Marx (1818-1883) in “Das Kapital” (1867) advocated a new concept of society and the distribution of wealth. Charles Darwin developed
1 Cf. article “Victoria”, in: Encyclopaedia Britannica. A new Survey of Universal Knowledge
Volume 23, Chicago/ London/ Toronto 1953, pp. 130- 131.
1
a new concept, the theory of evolution; his book “The Origin of Species”(1859) was a challenge to the old Christian Faith.
2. Alfred Tennyson
Alfred Tennyson was born in Somersby , Lincolnshire, on August 6 th , 1809 and died in Aldworth, Haslemere, Surrey on October 6 th , 1892. He was the fourth son of eleven children from Rev. George Tennyson, the Rector of Somersby and of his wife Elizabeth, daughte r of a vicar in the same county. She was a religious woman with the “somewhat over- anxious moralistic piety of her day” 2 . Growing up in Lincolnshire meant a “long, free, profound intimacy with the countryside of his birth” 3 .
In 1828 he followed his older brother Frederick to Trinity College in Cambridge. In 1829 he won the Chancellor`s Medal with his poem “Timbuctoo”. The author Harold Nicolson 4 divides his literary development into four phases. The first development extends from 1827-1842 and includes “Poems, Chiefly Lyrical” with masterpieces like ”The Dying Swan” and “A spirit haunts the year`s last hours”. In 1832 Tennyson travelled with Arthur Hallam on the Rhine and in December of the same year “Poems 1832” appeared which include “The Lady of Shalott”, “The Lotos-Eaters”, “The Miller`s Daughter”. The second phase begins with the death of Arthur Hallam in 1833 and concludes with “Maud”. The third development, the mid-Victorian phase, includes the” Idylls of the King” 1857-1874. In 1880 the last deve lopment, the Aldworth period, starts with “Ballads and other poems”.
Queen Victoria and Tennyson were in correspondence for a long time 5 . Tennyson dedicated the 12 books “Idylls of the King” (1859), dealing with the
2 Bozman, Mildred (publisher), Tennyson`s Poems in two Volumes, London 1965, Introduction,
p. XV.
3 ib. p.XVI
4 Cf. Nicolson, Harold, Tennyson. Aspects of his life, character and poetry, London² 1949.
5 Cf. Hope, Dyson/ Tennyson, Charles (publisher), Dear and Honoured Lady. The
Correspondence Between Queen Victoria and Alfred Tennyson, London 1969.
2
legend of King Arthur, to Prince Albert (Albert of Sachsen Coburg Gotha (1819- 1861) married to Victoria on February 10th, 1839).
Tennyson`s works were edited and annotated by his brother Lord Hallam Tennyson in nine volumes 6 .
Tennyson exposed problems of Victorian society and supported “many of these preoccupations“ 7 of the Victorian Age. “The Princess” (1847) and “Maud” (1855) e.g must be seen in relation to temporary issues such as commercialism and the woman question. In “The Two Voices” (1833) we hear the conflict of a mind whose orthodox Christianity is troubled by the new materialism. “In Memoriam A.H.H.”, published in 1850 deals with the question of faith as well as personal despair. “The Charge of the Light Brigade” (1854) is a patriotic poem on the heroic charge of the Light Brigade (Sept. 26 th , 1854) in the Crimean War when out of 673 officers and men who took part in it 247 were killed or wounded.
Many studies of his life and work have characterised Tennyson as the “major British Victorian Poet” 8 whose “genius was lyrical” 9 . Alfred Tennyson, who earned the name “Lord Tennyson” for his contribution to literature, succeeded Wordsworth (1770-1850) as Poet Laureate in 1850. 10
3. Background and sources
The original title of the volume which was published in 1864 was “Idylls of the Hearth”. It contained 16 poems and included Aylmer`s Field, The Voyage, The Grandmother (1859), Northern Farmer- Old Style, Sea Dreams, Welcome to Alexandra (1863), In the Valley of Cauteretz, The Flower, Requiescat, Tithonus (1860), The Sailor Boy (1861), The Is let, A Dedication, Boadicea, Milton- Alcaics (1863), Hendecasyllabics. They are mixed in style and themes.
6 Tennyson, Hallam (publisher), The Works of Tennyson, London² 1907-1908. 7 Burgess, Anthony, English Literature, London 1975, p.189.
8 Hill Jr., Robert (publisher), Tennyson’ s poetry. Authoritative texts, contexts, criticism, New York/ London² 1999, p. IX.
9 Auden, Wystan, Tennyson, An Introduction and a Selection, London 1946, p. XI. 10 Cf. article “Tennyson, Alfred Tennyson”, in: Encyclopaedia Britannica. A new Survey of Universal Knowledge Volume 21, Chicago/ London/ Tortonto 1953, pp. 938- 942.
3
Arbeit zitieren:
Matthias Storm, 2003, Alfred Tennyson - Enoch Arden, München, GRIN Verlag GmbH
Dieser Text kann über folgende URL aufgerufen und zitiert werden:
Einbetten
DOI
Soziologie - Politische Soziologie, Majoritäten, Minoritäten
Hausarbeit, 11 Seiten
Die Krise der EWG in den 60er Jahren
Politik - Internationale Politik - Thema: Europäische Union
Seminararbeit, 25 Seiten
Geschichte Europa - and. Länder - Neueste Geschichte, Europäische Einigung
Hauptseminararbeit, 50 Seiten
Die Entwicklung des politischen Liberalismus in England. Von der Bill ...
Politik - Internationale Politik - Region: Westeuropa
Seminararbeit, 21 Seiten
Matthias Storm hat den Text Alfred Tennyson - Enoch Arden veröffentlicht
Matthias Storm hat einen neuen Text hochgeladen
0 Kommentare