Page:The bibliography of Tennyson (1896).pdf/101

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OF TENNYSON.
85

Nugæ:

"Break, break, break."

"Come not, when I am dead."

"Here often, when a child, I lay reclined."

"Flower in the crannied wall."

To my grandson, Alfred Tennyson (1880).

Franklin.

To the Princess Frederica of Hanover.

Dante (written at the request of the Florentines).

Compromise.

Helen's Tower (written at the request of the Marquis of Dufferin and Ava).

Lines in Fancy Fair Albums.

To W. G. Ward, and other short poems in the 'Demeter" volume, and "The Death of Ænone."

Fragments.

Unpublished lines quoted by Alford, 1830-31 (see Memoir of Dean Alford): "Tennyson says:—

"To search the secret is beyond our lore,
And man must wait till God doth furnish more."

The Eagle: A Fragment, 1842,
"What time I wasted youthful hours," 1851, in the metre of "The Two Voices," and perhaps composed originally to form part of that poem.

"Move eastward, happy earth" (1842).

Unpublished lines in "Ros Rosarum" (1885).

Index of First Lines.