A commonplace of literary criticism has been the pejorative judgment of 19th century drama. Yet at the height of his fame as Poet Laureate, Alfred, Lord Tennyson devoted eight valuable years and all his rich gifts to seven plays that he considered to be the best work he had done, and, like the Idylls of the King, to form an epical history of England.
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A commonplace of literary criticism has been the pejorative judgment of 19th century drama. Yet at the height of his fame as Poet Laureate, Alfred, Lord Tennyson devoted eight valuable years and all his rich gifts to seven plays that he considered to be the best work he had done, and, like the Idylls of the King, to form an epical history of England.
Read Less