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A 1901 illustration for "'''[[Break, Break, Break]]'''", an elegy by [[Alfred, Lord Tennyson|Lord Tennyson]] written in 1835 for his friend [[Arthur Hallam]], who had died two years previously. Written during a period of relative isolation at [[Mablethorpe]], Lincolnshire, it uses minimalistic terms and forgoes decorative aspects. In his biography of Tennyson, Michael Thorn describes the poem as "one of the great short lyrics".
A 1901 illustration for "'''[[Break, Break, Break]]'''", an elegy by [[Alfred, Lord Tennyson|Lord Tennyson]] written in 1835 for his friend [[Arthur Hallam]], who had died two years previously. Written during a period of relative isolation at [[Mablethorpe]], Lincolnshire, the poem uses minimalistic terms and forgoes decorative aspects. In his biography of Tennyson, Michael Thorn describes it as "one of the great short lyrics".


|credit=Photograph: [[William Edward Frank Britten]]; restoration: [[User:Adam Cuerden|Adam Cuerden]]
|credit=Illustration: [[William Edward Frank Britten]]; restoration: [[User:Adam Cuerden|Adam Cuerden]]
}}<noinclude>[[Category:Wikipedia Picture of the day {{#time:F Y|{{SUBPAGENAME}}}}]]
}}<noinclude>[[Category:Wikipedia Picture of the day {{#time:F Y|{{SUBPAGENAME}}}}]]
</noinclude>
==See also==
*[[Template:POTD{{#ifeq:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|POTD protected||_protected}}/{{SUBPAGENAME}}]]</noinclude>

Latest revision as of 10:50, 18 March 2019

Break, Break, Break
A 1901 illustration for "Break, Break, Break", an elegy by Lord Tennyson written in 1835 for his friend Arthur Hallam, who had died two years previously. Written during a period of relative isolation at Mablethorpe, Lincolnshire, the poem uses minimalistic terms and forgoes decorative aspects. In his biography of Tennyson, Michael Thorn describes it as "one of the great short lyrics".Illustration: William Edward Frank Britten; restoration: Adam Cuerden