Article ID: CBB001211491

“The Poet of Science”: How Scientists Read Their Tennyson (2012)

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Holmes, John (Author)


Victorian Studies
Volume: 54, no. 4
Issue: 4
Pages: 655-678

Tennyson's responses to science have been thoroughly documented and discussed, but how did scientists respond to his poetry? Through examining in detail the work of three scientists who wrote at length about Tennyson---the astronomer Norman Lockyer, the physicist Oliver Lodge, and the American geologist William North Rice---it is possible to see how Tennyson went from being respected by contemporary scientists to being feted as the Poet of Science itself after his death. As a materialist, a spiritualist, and a Darwinian Methodist respectively, Lockyer, Lodge, and Rice had very different conceptions of how science worked and what it implied about the universe, yet each looked to Tennyson and his poetry to confirm and extend his own judgements and values.

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Citation URI
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Authors & Contributors
Taylor, Jesse Oak
O'Connor, Ralph
Hutchinson, Hazel
Sease, Kasey Marie
Wilmer, Clive
Shearer, Emily Carroll
Journals
Victorian Literature and Culture
Victorian Studies
Journal of the History of Biology
Historical Records of Australian Science
Publishers
University of Pittsburgh Press
Middle Tennessee State University
The College of William and Mary
Oxford University Press
Anthem Press
University of Virginia
Concepts
Science and literature
Communication of scientific ideas
Public understanding of science
Poetry and poetics
Evolution
Popularization
People
Tennyson, Alfred, Lord
Dickens, Charles
Darwin, Charles Robert
Ruskin, John
Lyell, Charles
Hardy, Thomas
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
21st century
18th century
Places
Great Britain
Sydney (Australia)
England
Americas
United States
Institutions
Royal Society of London
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