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You are in: Hampshire > Entertainment > Arts and Culture > Arts and Culture Features > Tennyson's bicentenary

Alfred Lord Tennyson

Alfred, Lord Tennyson

Tennyson's bicentenary

August 2009 marks the 200th anniversary of the birth one of the giants of the poetry world. Alfred, Lord Tennyson lived on, and was inspired by, the Isle of Wight and is now immortalised on the island's spectacular coastline.

In the second half of the 19th century, the Isle of Wight was home to a poet who was the closest thing the Victorians came to a 'celebrity'.

Alfred, Lord Tennyson, one of the most influential poets ever to have written in the English language, moved to west Wight in 1853

Tennyson, and his wife Emily, lived at Farringford, a neglected, isolated Georgian house with a fine view over Freshwater Bay.

Famous lines by Alfred, Lord Tennyson

"Nature, red in tooth and claw."Ìý

"Tis better to have loved and lost Than never to have loved at all."

"Brief is life but love is long."

"To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield."

"All experience is an arch wherethrough gleams that untravelled world."

Queen Victoria, who also had an Island residence, Osborne House,Ìý was reportedly a fan of his poetry and appointed Tennyson Poet Laureate, succeeding William Wordsworth.

The spectacular coastal scenery inspired some of Tennyson's best poetry - including Maud, The Charge of the Light Brigade and Crossing the Bar.

Although he initially rented Farringford, he was able to purchase it with the profits he made from his poem, Maud.ÌýÌý

Tennyson held court in Farringford, attracting the great and the good of Victorian society - including Edward Lear, Lewis Carroll, Bram Stoker, Charles Darwin and Prince Albert - to the Isle of Wight to hear his poems and discuss the issues of the day.

Tennyson died in 1892 and was buried in Westminster Abbey and Emily's tomb is in All Saints Church at Freshwater.Ìý Farringford is now a hotel but recognisable as the Tennysons' house.

The Tennyson Trail

Walking the Tennyson Trail

Tennyson Down

The National Trust now owns much of the coastal countryside, now known as Tennyson Down.Ìý The challenging downland between Freshwater and the Needles with spectacular views over to the Solent and mainland attract thousands of walkers each year.

The 12-mile Tennyson Trail passes Farringford as well as the Tennyson Monument.

Within the 33 acres surrounding the house is a bridge that Tennyson built so he could get access to the countryside avoid the 'cockneys' (his name for tourists),Ìýavoiding his legions of fans.

Tennyson's bridge

Tennyson's bridge

Events

2009 marks the 200th anniversary of Tennyson's birth and there are special bicentennial events organised by the hotel, including the opportunity to explore Tennyson's poetry with the former Poet Laureate, Sir Andrew Motion.

Sir Andrew has written a poem inspired by Tennyson and Farringford - entitled This Next Life - which he will read at the house on 1 July.

There will also be guided tours of the house every Tuesday morning at 10am.

On the 6 August Tennyson's restored Library will be officially opened with a 'Tennyson at Farringford' exhibition running until August 27th.

Meanwhile on the cliffs overlooking Freshwater Bay, a new toposcope – a polished slate panel showing the direction and distance to visible landmarks – will be unveiled next to the Tennyson Memorial.

It will be edged with words from another of Tennyson's most famous poems, Crossing the Bar.

last updated: 09/07/2009 at 10:57
created: 24/06/2009

You are in: Hampshire > Entertainment > Arts and Culture > Arts and Culture Features > Tennyson's bicentenary

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