The Boundless Deep
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A dazzling new biography of young Tennyson by the prize-winning,
bestselling author of The Age of Wonder. Alfred Lord Tennyson is
now remembered – if he is remembered at all – as the gloomily
bearded Poet Laureate, author of such clanking Victorian works as
‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’, and the mournful author of
the lugubrious elegy In Memoriam. In this dazzling new biography,
Richard Holmes reawakens this somnolent Victorian figure, brings
him back to sparkling life, and unexpectedly transforms him.From
the prize-winning and bestselling biographer of Shelley and
Coleridge, and author of the landmark, critically acclaimed THE AGE
OF WONDER, Holmes recovers in Young Tennyson an astonishingly
magnetic and mercurial personality, a secretly expressive and
highly emotional man but now haunted by the great intellectual –
and above all the great scientific – issues of his time.The
brilliant child of an obscure dysfunctional Lincolnshire family,
terrorised by a drunken father, torn by unhappy love affairs but
sustained by vivid friendships (especially that of Edward
FitzGerald, the author of ‘Omar Khayyam’) Young Tennyson
emerges in his first forty years as a memorable poet, hypnotically
musical (‘The Lady of Shalott’) yet intensely engaged with the
new astronomy, geology, biology – and even the psychiatry – of
the age before Darwin.Tennyson’s imagination and intellect were
haunted by the eruption of three new fundamentally transformative
scientific ideas – biological evolution, the notion of a godless,
unpitying universe and of planetary extinction. These were as
terrifying to Tennyson as climate catastrophe is to us today. Their
impact brought him into contact with the life and scientific work
of William Whewell (originally his university tutor), the
astronomer John Herschel, the geologist Charles Lyell, the
mathematician Mary Somerville, the computer pioneer Charles
Babbage, and the brilliant science populariser Robert Chambers. He
also shared his visions and anxieties with contemporary writers and
social commentators like Thomas Carlyle and Charles Dickens, and
poets like Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Edgar Allan
Poe.Tennyson’s work during these ‘vagrant years’ is suffused
with an unsuspected and strangely modern magic. Holmes’s
extraordinary biography allows us to witness Tennyson wrestling
with mind-altering ideas of geology and deep time, the vastness,
beauty and terror of the new cosmology, and the challenges of
social revolution. And how these inspired him to grapple with the
idea of human mortality, the threat of suicide and depression, the
struggle between love and loneliness, agnosticism and belief.