![]() ![]() 'Demeter and Other Poems ' (1889) contained works addressing the loss. The devastating death of his younger son at sea in 1886 led to two years of silence. In 1883, he was offered a peerage and was created Baron Tennyson of Aldworth and of Freshwater. At age of sixty-five, he wrote his first play, 'Queen Mary '(1875), followed by Harold (1876), Becket (1884), The Cup (1884), The Foresters (1892), and The Promise of May (1886), none of which were particularly successful, and he abandoned the attempt at playwright to return to poetry. The 'Charge of the Light Brigade' (1854) was written after reading accounts of the Battle of Balaclava in Crimea and published a week later in 'The Examiner,' and became so popular, it was distributed in pamphlet form among the soldiers serving in the Crimea. In 1851, he was selected at the queen's Poet Laureate. 'The Princess,' published in 1847, was his first attempt at a long narrative poem, several others 'In Memoriam,' 'Maud,' and 'Idylls of the King' followed. In 1845, he was granted a government civil list pension of £200 a year in recognition of his poetic achievements. ![]() In 1833, the death of his best friend and future brother-in-law led to an outpouring beginning with the elegy 'In Memoriam.' After ten years, of writing but refusing to publish, the two volume 'Poems' which included such works as 'Ulysses' and 'Locksley Hall,' appeared in 1842 to critical success. 'Poems, Chiefly Lyrical ' appeared in June 1830 and included 'The Kraken,' 'Ode to Memory,' and 'Mariana.' In 1831, he left Cambridge following the death of his father, and his third volume of poetry, 'Poems' was published in 1832 and included versions of some of his most recognized works 'The Lady of Shalott,' 'The Hesperides,' 'Oenone,' and 'The Lotos-Eaters' though at the time, reviews were scathing. That same year his first volume of poetry, now regarded juvenilia, 'Poems by Two Brothers' was published, it had been written in collaboration with by his brothers Frederick and Charles. His childhood was difficult under an heavy drinking and abusive father, he escaped from home in 1827, attending Trinity College, Cambridge. Born in Somersby, Lincolnshire, England one of twelve to Elizabeth Ffytche and George Clayton Tennyson, a clergyman. ![]()
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