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Friday, September 8, 2017

'The Poetry of Tennyson, Browning and Browning'

' twee Englands sudden incline towards a crisis in creed is often seen reflected on kit and caboodle of Alfred master Tennyson, Matthew Arnold and Robert Browning in an almost autobiographic manner. The crisis in trustfulness chiefly resulted from dickens of the most weighty literatures in memoir: One of these was Charles Darwins ideas and last his real prestigious work, The Origin of Species. This keep had a neat impact on peoples beliefs because it in a most planetary sense- challengeed the creation of world in sevener days and withal the origins of man that were related to apes, which was very contrary from the religious teachings until then. These make even the laymen question Biblical teachings and the role of the Church. This paved powerity for theological criticisms. sise Clergymen and one secular published a watchword on Higher censure in 1860 called Essays and Reviews. This book aimed to handle the subjects that convey from conventional repetition s muster out of traditions (Scott,271). These two works can be accepted as main reasons for this rapid shift in faith in prissy minds. The exit of faith, coupled with the specialize of industrial England low from illnesses, destructions and injustices mainly among the working classes resulted in a dismal atmospheric state that the terzetto authors had mull overed upon, stemming from a loss of faith. This account will ponder n the shift using three of the most momentous verses about Victorian crisis of faith that the authors mentioned had penned.\nThe very first meter that comes to mind in this context is the Poet laureate Alfred Lord Tennysons In Memoriam. Tennyson dedicated this meter to a dear(p) friend who had passed apart at a young age; and through him, he questioned his faith in God, in temper and in poetry. The poem reflects grief and despair, unrepresentative emotions that we find embodying the Victorian era, and it leads the reader to surmise the existe nce of fancy and faith, as the author clearly does. Knowle... '

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