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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TENNYSON.
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Vol. VII. Patriotic and Laureate Poems (with various readings).
Vol. VIII. Maud; and The Window, or the Loves of the Wren (with various readings).
Vols, IX., X. Miscellaneous Later Poems, comprising the later Versions, as re-written, of some of the Poems of 1832-1833; Poems, Narrative, Elegiac and Lyrical (not included under the above headings); Ballads; Poems addressed to friends; Sonnets; Experiments; Dialect Poems; "Nugæ"; and Fragments (with various readings).
Vols. XI., XII. Idylls of the King (with various readings).
Vols. XIII., XIV. and XV. Dramatic Works.
Vol. VIII. Maud; and The Window, or the Loves of the Wren (with various readings).
Vols, IX., X. Miscellaneous Later Poems, comprising the later Versions, as re-written, of some of the Poems of 1832-1833; Poems, Narrative, Elegiac and Lyrical (not included under the above headings); Ballads; Poems addressed to friends; Sonnets; Experiments; Dialect Poems; "Nugæ"; and Fragments (with various readings).
Vols. XI., XII. Idylls of the King (with various readings).
Vols. XIII., XIV. and XV. Dramatic Works.
Detailed Contents of Vol. I. (Juvenilia, 1827-1832.)
- Alfred Tennyson's contributions to "Poems, by Two Brothers," 1827 (separated by internal and external evidence).
- The original Fragment of "The Lover's Tale," as written in 1828, with the original Preface, as privately printed in 1833.
- The Cambridge Prize Poem, "Timbuctoo."[1]
- ↑ [The couplet which forms a motto to this Prize Poem:"Deep in that lion-haunted inland lies A mystic City, goal of high Emprize,"