Scientific American Supplement, No. 832, December 12, 1891 by Various
page 81 of 147 (55%)
page 81 of 147 (55%)
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the career of many a too finely strung _fin de siecle_ shipmaster.
--_Nautical Magazine._ * * * * * ALFRED TENNYSON. Alfred Tennyson, the poet laureate of England, was born at Sornersby, Lincolnshire, April 9, 1810, and was the third of a large family of children, eight of whom were boys and three girls. His father was a clergyman, a man of remarkably fine abilities; his mother, as should be the mother of a great poet, was a deeply religious woman with a sensitive spirit that was keenly attuned to the aspects of nature. It was from her that Tennyson inherited his poetic temperament combined with the love of study that was a characteristic of his father. Tennyson's brother, Charles, superintended the construction of his younger brother's first poetic composition, which was written upon a slate when the great laureate was a child of seven. Tennyson's parents were people who had sufficient of this world's wealth to educate their sons well, and Alfred was sent to Trinity College, where he as a mere lad won the gold medal for a poem in blank verse entitled "Timbuctoo," which is to be found in all the volumes of his collected works, though many of the other poems produced in that period are not given place. [Illustration: ALFRED TENNYSON, POET LAUREATE OF ENGLAND.] |
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