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            <titlestmt>
                <title>Alfred Tennyson. An Essay. In Three Parts.</title>
                <author>William Fulford</author>
                <guestEditor>PC Fleming</guestEditor>
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            <date compdate="1856">1856</date>
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                <head>Commentary</head>
                <section type="intro">
                    <head>Introduction</head>
                    <p>William Fulford (1831-1882) wrote this three-part essay on Tennyson, who in 1856 had been poet laureate for six years and
                        was at the height of his popularity. As Walter Gordon notes,  this essay would have excited
                        more interest  than any other contribution in the first issue of the
                        Magazine (78).</p>
                    <p>All the members of the brotherhood
                        were fond Tennyson (a medallion of him, by Thomas Woolner, was advertised in the <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.November.rad">November issue</xref>,
                        intended to be bound with the Magazine) but Fulford particularly adored him. Dixon described Fulford as &#8220;absolutely devoured with
                        admiration for Tennyson,&#8221; (Mackail 42) and Fulford&#8217;s esteem for Tennyson is
                        clear in this essay, and in many of his other contributions to the Magazine. Fulford counts on the reader recognizing
                        his enthusiasm, and he closes the last part of the essay by hoping that his
                        zeal may encourage his readers to examine Tennyson more closely, even if his
                        arguments do not. </p>
                    <p>This essay sets the tone for the Magazine&#8217;s later essays on contemporary
                        authors. Fulford begins by discussing the relationship between the author and the
                        reviewer, portraying himself as &#8220;an interpreter between [Tennyson]
                        and the public,&#8221; and claiming &#8220;whatever I shall advance will have been
                        carefully weighed, and will be the result of several years&#8217; almost
                        uninterrupted reading of the Author. Would that every reviewer of a great
                        writer could say as much&#8221; (7).  Vernon Lushington and Edward Burne-Jones, writing on
                        <xref doc="a.VLushington001.raw">Carlyle</xref> and <xref doc="a.Burne-Jones005.raw">Ruskin</xref>, respectively, would continue Fulford&#8217;s ideal, and taper
                            their admiration for these men with carefully thought-out observations.</p>
                    <p>From the beginning, Fulford planned this essay to be in three parts, with one
                    part appearing in each of the Magazine&#8217;s first three issues. In the 
                    <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.January.rad" from="7" workcode="Fulford001">first part</xref>,
                    he discusses poetry in general, and specifically &#8220;The Two Voices&#8221;
                    (which he praises as true philosophical poetry), &#8220;The Lady of
                    Shalott&#8221;, &#8220;The Vision of Sin&#8221;, and &#8220;The
                    Princess&#8221;, with the most attention given to the two latter poems. Following Carlyle, Fulford links poetry with music, and he
                    gives &#8220;The Lady of Shallott&#8221; as the example of Tennyson at his
                        most musical. He uses this poem also to illustrate his feeling that poetry
                        should be &#8220;painting in words.&#8221; The unity of different artistic mediums &#8212;
                        poetry, music, and painting &#8212; is a common theme in the Magazine.</p>
                    <p>In the <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.February.rad" from="73" workcode="Fulford001">February issue</xref>, Fulford reviews &#8220;In
                        Memoriam&#8221;, continuing the discussion of philosophical poetry he began
                    in January. He allies modern English poets with the biblical prophets, and
                        argues that the task of the poet is to interpret between men and God. A
                        central point of Fulford&#8217;s argument here is that not all of Tennyson&#8217;s poetry should be
                        considered obscure, and that &#8220;a very large portion of it is
                        intelligible at once to every mind, and of universal interest.&#8221; The power of &#8220;In
                        Memoriam&#8221;, says Fulford, 
                        stems from Tennyson&#8217;s ability to move from the
                        common to the uncommon, to address complicated philosophical questions
                        within a simple commemoration of Hallam. Fulford critcises contemporary
                        readers who see poetry as simply &#8220;light literature.&#8221;</p>
                    <p>The <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.March.rad" from="136" workcode="Fulford001">final part</xref> of Fulford's essay,
                        published in March, reviews the recently-published <title level="bk">
                     <hi rend="i">Maud, and other Poems</hi>.</title> Again, Fulford challenges contemporary
                        readers, and directs this last part of his essay toward those who reviewed <title level="bk">
                     <hi rend="i">Maud</hi>
                  </title> unfavorably. He  spends the majority of the
                        essay discussing the title poem, turning to the other
                    poems only in the last few pages.</p>
                </section>
                <section type="texthistcomp">
                    <head>Textual History: Composition</head>
                    <p>Burne-Jones, in an 1855 letter, mentions that the first instalment of a three-part essay on
                        Tennsyson, written by Fulford, is to be included in the first issue of the
                        magazine. (<hi rend="i">Memorials</hi> 122).</p>
                </section>
                <section type="texthistrev">
                    <head>Textual History: Revision</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="prodhist">
                    <head>Production History</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="recepthist">
                    <head>Reception</head>
                    <p>Fulford sent a copy of the January
                        issue of <hi rend="i">The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine</hi> to Tennyson. He
                        responded warmly to the magazine as a whole, but declined to comment on this essay because
                        &#8220;to praise it, seeming too much like self-praise.&#8221; (Gordon, 84)</p>
                </section>
                <section type="icon">
                    <head>Iconographic</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="printhist">
                    <head>Printing History</head>
                    <p> First printed in <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.raw">
                        <hi rend="i">The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine</hi>, 1856,</xref> in
                        three parts: The <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.January.rad" from="7" workcode="Fulford001"> first part</xref> in January, the <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.February.rad" from="73" workcode="Fulford001">second
                                part</xref> in February, and the <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.March.rad" from="136" workcode="Fulford001">last part</xref> in March.</p>
                </section>
                <section type="pictorial">
                    <head>Pictorial</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="historical">
                    <head>Historical</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="literary">
                    <head>Literary</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="translation">
                    <head>Translation</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="autobio">
                    <head>Autobiographical</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="biblio">
                    <head>Bibliographic</head>
                    <p>
                        <bibl>
                     <author>Georgiana Burne&#8211;Jones</author>, <hi rend="i">
                        <title>Memorials</title>
                     </hi>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                     <author>Gordon</author>, <title>&#8220;Oxford and Cambridge Magazine&#8221;</title>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                     <author>Mackail, J. W</author>. <title>
                        <hi rend="i">Life of William Morris </hi>
                     </title>.</bibl>                        
                    </p>
                </section>
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