Biography of Alfred Tennyson

Biography of Alfred Tennyson | 400 Words

Biography of Alfred Tennyson great author complete biography for Class 10, Class 12 and Graduation, and other classes.

Biography of Alfred Tennyson

Full Name Alfred Tennyson
Born 6 August 1809, Somersby, United Kingdom
Died On 6 October 1892, Lurgashall, United Kingdom
Occupation Novelist, short story writer, playwright, poet, memoirist
Children Hallam Tennyson, 2nd Baron Tennyson, [Unnamed] Tennyson, Lionel Tennyson
Spouse  Emily Sellwood

Alfred Tennyson was the English poet often regarded as the chief representative of the Victorian age in poetry. Tennyson succeeded Wordsworth as Poet Laureate in 1850. Lord Tennyson was born on August 5, 1809, in Somersby, Lincolnshire. His father, George Clayton Tennyson, a clergyman and rector, suffered from depression and was notoriously absentminded. Alfred began to write poetry at an early age in the style of Lord Byron. After spending four unhappy years in school he was tutored at home. Tennyson then studied at Trinity College, Cambridge,-where he joined the literary club ‘The Apostles’ and met Arthur Hallam, who became his closest friend.

Tennyson published Poems, Chiefly Lyrical, in 1830, which included the popular Mariana. His next book, Poems (1833), received unfavorable reviews, and Tennyson ceased to publish for nearly ten years. Hallam died suddenly in the same year in Vienna. It was a heavy blow to Tennyson. He began to write In Memoriam, an elegy for his lost friend – the work took seventeen years. The Lady of Shalott, The Lotus-eaters Morte – d’Arthur and Ulysses appeared in 1842 in the two-volume Poems and established his reputation as a writer. After marrying Emily Sellwood, whom he had already met in 1836, the couple settled in Farringford, a house in Freshwater on the Isle of Wight in 1853. From there the family moved in 1869 to Aldworth, Surrey. During these later years he produced some of his best poems. Among Tennyson’s major poetic achievements is the elegy mourning the death of his friend Arthur Hallam, In Memoriam ( 1850). The patriotic poem Charge of the Light Brigade, published in Maud (1855), is one of Tennyson’s best-known works, although at first Maud was found obscure or morbid by critics ranging from George Eliot to Gladstone. Enoch Arden (1864) was based on a true story of a sailor thought drowned at sea, who returned home after several years to find that his wife had remarried. Idylls Of The King (1859-1885) dealt with Arthurian themes. In the 1870s Tennyson wrote several plays, among them the poetic dramas Queen Mary (1875) and Harold (1876).

In 1884, he has created a baron. Tennyson died at Aldworth on October 6, 1892, and was buried in the Poets’ Corner in Westminster Abbey.

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