Article ID: CBB001201801

Reading Maud's Remains: Tennyson, Geological Processes, and Palaeontological Reconstructions (2014)

unapi

As Tennyson's little Hamlet , Maud (1855) posits a speaker who, like Hamlet, confronts the ignominious fate of dead remains. Maud's speaker contemplates such remains as bone, hair, shell, and he experiences his world as one composed of hard inorganic matter, such things as rocks, gems, flint, stone, coal, and gold. While Maud's imagery of stones, and hard substances has been read as signifying the speaker's desire unnaturally to harden himself into insensibility (Killham 231, 235), I argue that these substances benefit from being read in the context of Tennyson's wider understanding of geological processes. Along with highlighting these materials, the text's imagery focuses on processes of fossilisation, while Maud's characters appear to be in the grip of an insidious petrification. Despite the preoccupation with geological materials and processes, the poem has received little critical attention in these terms. Dennis R. Dean, for example, whose Tennyson and Geology (1985) is still the most rigorous study of the sources of Tennyson's knowledge of geology, does not detect a geological register in the poem, arguing that by the time Tennyson began to write Maud, he was relatively at ease with the geological world (Dean 21). I argue, however, that Maud reveals that Tennyson was anything but at ease with geology. While In Memoriam (1851) wrestles with religious doubt that is both initiated, and, to some extent, alleviated by geological theories, it finally affirms the transcendence of spirit over matter. Maud, conversely, gravitates towards the ground, concerning itself with the corporal remains of life and with the agents of change that operate on all matter. Influenced by his reading of geology, and particularly Charles Lyell's provocative writings on the embedding and fossilisation of organic material in strata in his Principles of Geology (1830--33) volume 2, Tennyson's poem probes the taphonomic processes that result in the incorporation of dead remains and even living flesh into the geological system.

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Authors & Contributors
Aragonès, Enric
Brook, Anthony
Buckland, Adelene
Clary, Renee M.
Guo, Shi-rong
Huff, Warren D.
Journals
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Journal of Literature and Science
Nei Menggu Shifan Daxue Xuebao (Ziran Kexue Ban)
Nuncius: Annali di Storia della Scienza
Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza
Publishers
Princeton University
University of Virginia
Firenze University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
Unicopli
West Sussex Geological Society
Concepts
Geology
Earth sciences
Mineralogy
Science and literature
Paleontology
Coal and coal mining
People
Lyell, Charles
Buckland, William
Mantell, Gideon Algernon
Davy, Humphry
Dickens, Charles
Geikie, Archibald
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
18th century
20th century, early
Qing dynasty (China, 1644-1912)
21st century
Places
United States
Armenia
Great Britain
China
Germany
Scotland
Institutions
Geological Society of London
Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA)
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