Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,528,975 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Pressing Forward: Alfred, Lord Tennyson and the Victorian Age.


Pressing Forward

Alfred, Lord Tennyson and the Victorian Age Noun 1. Victorian age - a period in British history during the reign of Queen Victoria in the 19th century; her character and moral standards restored the prestige of the British monarchy but gave the era a prudish reputation  

WRITTEN BY Louis A. Markos

PUBLISHED BY Sapientia Press of Ave Maria University Ave Maria University is a new Roman Catholic university in southwest Florida, founded in 2003 by Tom Monaghan, Catholic philanthropist and retired founder of Domino's Pizza. , 2007, ISBN ISBN
abbr.
International Standard Book Number


ISBN International Standard Book Number

ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 
: 1932589368,

Softcover, pp. 304, $25.95 CND CND Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament

CND n abbr (= Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament) → plataforma pro desarme nuclear

CND (Brit) n abbr (=
 

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

A Strangely Contemporary Man

It's funny how after decades and even centuries of post-Christian civilization, we're still struggling with basic issues related to philosophy, ethics, spirituality, and life and death. We cannot solve these eternal issues with liberalism, nihilism nihilism (nī`əlĭzəm), theory of revolution popular among Russian extremists until the fall of the czarist government (1917); the theory was given its name by Ivan Turgenev in his novel Fathers and Sons (1861). , or technological and scientific growth.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

As Markos points out, we have not yet resolved the great paradigm shift A dramatic change in methodology or practice. It often refers to a major change in thinking and planning, which ultimately changes the way projects are implemented. For example, accessing applications and data from the Web instead of from local servers is a paradigm shift. See paradigm.  of three hundred years ago, and we are therefore still restlessly dissatisfied. Thinkers went from Who? and Why?(Who created us? Why were we created?) to What? and How? (What are we and other things made of? How do we and other things work?). Newton had explained to the English public, for instance, just what a rainbow is, spoiling the enchanting Biblical idea of rainbows.

After this shift towards materialist science and philosophy, the Romantic poets reverted to an individualistic primitivism primitivism, in art, the style of works of self-trained artists who develop their talents in a fanciful and fresh manner, as in the paintings of Henri Rousseau and Grandma Moses.  based on excessive emotionalism and a refusal to face the hard facts that society had changed forever and that the old certainties were now dead and gone.

Tennyson represents for Markus the brave Victorian explorer who, though initially tempted by the almost childish escapism es·cap·ism
n.
The tendency to escape from daily reality or routine by indulging in daydreaming, fantasy, or entertainment.
 of the Romantics, decides to look straight into and beyond the pain of life--in the case of Tennyson, the death of a beloved friend--and explore the new wide view of things.

This came at great cost and effort. Though Tennyson remained open to "the new science" which would lead to Darwin's evolutionism ev·o·lu·tion·ism  
n.
1. A theory of biological evolution, especially that formulated by Charles Darwin.

2. Advocacy of or belief in biological evolution.
, he refused to let die within himself the poet's soul.

Science and anti-Christian philosophical systems had by the Victorian age disenchanted dis·en·chant  
tr.v. dis·en·chant·ed, dis·en·chant·ing, dis·en·chants
To free from illusion or false belief; undeceive.



[Obsolete French desenchanter, from Old French,
 pretty much all the cozy old beliefs and ways of life, and technology had increasingly pushed people from what were seen as idyllic, slow-paced farms into the hustle and bustle of the industrial revolution, under full swing by Victoria's reign.

Markus offers a great background to the poet's sufferings, showing that these were largely the result of England's tumultuous, materialistic, industrial society. Philosophers such as John Stuart The name John Stuart can refer to:
  • John Stuart, 4th Earl of Atholl (d. 1579)
  • John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute (1713–1792), Prime Minister of Great Britain from 1762–1763.
 Mill, a utilitarian who experienced sharp depression and emotional pain, pushed this process along. Pressing Forward paints a none-too-pretty picture of this philosopher, whose emotional and spiritual state was, Markus writes, comparable "to that of a convicted sinner on the threshold of conversion."

Nonetheless, Mills avoided a Christian conversion, Markus notes: "His [Mill's] final resolution will be spiritual in nature, but it will happen apart from any Christian doctrine or supernatural event--will constitute, instead, a sort of secular salvation. What else could it be? Mill's education ... ignored religion completely, and his father had instilled in him the unswerving belief that non-empirical, nonrational religious doctrines were ultimately of no value and could not be relied upon to resolve the problems of society or of the individual."

Tennyson's search for the spiritual and religious within this spiritual and religious desert sounds an awful lot like our search today, but of course Mill's spiritual impotence also sounds like our own.

Tennyson represents the modern human in his need to wed the achievements of science with the belief in a higher power Higher power is a term used in a 12-step program, such as Alcoholics Anonymous, to describe "a power greater than yourself." Although many participants equate their higher power with God, a belief in God or in formal religion is not mandatory; the higher power is intended as a  and deep meaning to life and its sufferings and hardships. Markus helpfully identifies in Tennyson's poetry the belief that all of geology and biological nature's savagery is really a movement, "upward and forward," towards humans.

According to Markus, Tennyson asserts that "human life with all its dreams and accomplishments is not just so much refuse in the garbage pile of the cosmos. We must not think that we are merely nature's compost."

Pressing Forward makes the vital connection between poetry and religion. Recent theologians and bishops have spent so much of their time trying to answer the impossibly tough challenges of materialist science and secularizing post-Enlightenment philosophy that they have half-forgotten religion's artistic, poetic, and enchanting sides. They forget this at great peril.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Catholic Insight
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Welter, Brian
Publication:Catholic Insight
Article Type:Book review
Date:May 1, 2008
Words:658
Previous Article:Two concepts of separation of Church and State.(FEATURE ARTICLE)
Next Article:Changing Habits: Women's Religious Orders in Canada.(Book review)
Topics:



Related Articles
Angels and Insects.
Peter Raby. (A folklorish giant).(Review)
Supreme Attachments: Studies in Victorian Love Poetry.
Cheltenham: A History.(GREAT BRITAIN, EUROPE, BALKANS, FORMER USSR)(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Reinventing King Arthur; the Arthurian legends in Victorian culture.(ENGLISH-LANGUAGE LITERATURES)(Brief Article)(Book Review)
An imaginary England; nation, landscape and literature, 1840-1920.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Victorian values.(Book review)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles