AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to millions of articles from top publications available through your library.

Divining Desire: Tennyson and the Poetics of Transcendence.

Victorian Studies

| September 22, 2001 | Shaw, W. David | COPYRIGHT 1993 Indiana University Press. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Divining Desire: Tennyson and the Poetics of Transcendence, by James W. Hood; pp. xi + 209. Aldershot and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2000, [pounds sterling]45.00, $79.95.

The title of James Hood's new book, Divining Desire: Tennyson and the Poetics of Transcendence, harbors a double entendre. Expounding the ways in which Tennyson's poetry interprets or makes known the mysteries of desire, the book also shows how Tennyson "divinizes" or renders godlike what Arthur Hallam calls "erotic devotion" (qtd. 9). In Hood's words, the book looks "both at attempts to perfect desire in divine fashion and at the means by which Tennyson's poems try to 'divine' the nature of desire itself" (8). It is the first and less common of these two meanings of the verb "divine" that links Tennyson's exploration of desire and eros to the book's subtitle, "the poetics of transcendence." Hood wants to show how the mourner in In Memoriam (1850) makes his grief for his dead friend into a "divine despair" ("Tears, idle tears," line 2). How do the Prince in The Princess (1847) and the Byronic speaker in Maud (1855) make desire for the women they love transcendent? Can Tennyson ennoble Guinevere's love for Art hur and Lancelot as a divine love? Or does her sexual betrayal throw …

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
©2013 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions

The AccessMyLibrary advertising network includes: womensforum.com GlamFamily