In Memoriam

Alfred TENNYSON

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In Memoriam
In Memoriam

“‘TIS BETTER TO HAVE LOVED AND LOST THAN NEVER TO HAVE LOVED AT ALL”

TENNYSON, Alfred. In Memoriam. London: Edward Moxon, 1867. Small octavo, contemporary full red crushed morocco gilt, raised bands, elaborately gilt-decorated spine, all edges gilt.

Later edition of one of Tennyson’s beautiful elegy on the death of his friend Arthur Hallam, one of his most famous poems, and the poem that won Tennyson the position of Poet Laureate.

Tennyson began writing In Memoriam in 1833, soon after the unexpected death of his close friend Arthur Henry Hallam and did not complete it until nearly 16 years later. "With all its unevenness, the elegy for the poet's beloved friend… is Tennyson's greatest poem, and one of the chief poems of the century" (Houghton, 6). The news of his friend's death was a shocking blow to Tennyson and his family—Hallam was engaged to Tennyson's sister—"yet in the first stricken month, Tennyson set to write poems that later became some of the finest sections of In Memoriam… as well as soon drafting 'Ulysses,' 'Morte d'Arthur,' and 'Tithonus' (this last not published until 1860, the other two 1842)—three great poems prompted by the death of his Arthur, and all finding extraordinarily compelling correlatives, in ancient worlds, for his feelings personal and universal, ancient and modern" (ODNB). "In late May 1850, after 17 years of intermittent composition, In Memoriam was published anonymously; on 13 June, after 14 years of intermittent courtship, Tennyson married Emily Sellwood; and on 19 November, after months of wavering, Queen Victoria officially appointed him Poet Laureate… Thus, in a few months, great personal happiness, financial security and popular and official recognition were showered on the same Tennyson who had before been living in a drought of intermittent distress and a flood of water-cures" (Hagen, Tennyson and His Publishers, 80). Publisher's advertisement tipped to front free endpaper. See Wise, 115. A few minor penciled marginal markings.

Near-fine in original cloth.

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