The Forsaken Merman
The Forsaken Merman | |
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by Matthew Arnold | |
Illustration to "The Forsaken Merman" in Poems by Matthew Arnold, 1900 | |
Full text | |
The Forsaken Merman at Wikisource |
"The Forsaken Merman" is a rhymed lyric poem written in irregular metre by Matthew Arnold, begun whilst he was studying at Oxford on a scholarship in the early 1840s, and which appeared in the poet's first published collection, The Strayed Reveller, and Other Poems, in 1849.[1]
Synopsis
The basic premise recurs in Danish, Norwegian, German, and Slavonic folklore.[1] The Merman, a King of the Sea, marries an earthly maiden, and lives with her happily, for many years, but at last she leaves him for a visit to her friends, promising, however, to return.[2] Time passes, but she comes not back.[2] Scruples of conscience have arisen, and she chooses, as she thinks, between her soul and her family.[2] The story is told by the old Sea King, in what the reviewer Charles J. Peterson called "a wild, irregular melody", to his children.[2]
Reception
Many critics initially found most of the poems in The Strayed Reveller to be obscure and aloof, but "The Forsaken Merman" was highly praised by fellow-poet Algernon Charles Swinburne for its lyric beauty.[1]
References
- ^ a b c The Story Museum.
- ^ a b c d Peterson May 1854, p. 331.
Sources
- Peterson, Charles J. (May 1854). "An Hour with the New Poets". Peterson's Magazine, 25(5). p. 331.
- "The Forsaken Merman". The Story Museum. 28 August 2020. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
Further reading
- Hyder, Clyde C. (1980). "'The Forsaken Merman' and 'The Neckan': Another Look". Studies in English, New Series, 1(4). pp. 1–15.
- Wright, Herbert (1918). "The Source of Matthew Arnold's 'Forsaken Merman'". The Modern Language Review, 13(1). pp. 90–94.
External links
- Dodsworth, Kim (December 29, 2017). "'The Forsaken Merman' by Matthew Arnold". Reading Radio (4RPH). Retrieved 7 April 2023.
- v
- t
- e
- On Translating Homer (1861)
- Culture and Anarchy (1869)
- Literature and Dogma (1873)
- "The Forsaken Merman" (1849)
- Tristram and Iseult (1852)
- Empedocles on Etna (1852)
- "To Marguerite: Continued" (1852)
- "The Scholar Gipsy" (1853)
- Sohrab and Rustum (1853)
- Balder Dead (1855)
- "Thyrsis" (1865)
- "Dover Beach" (1867)
- Tom Arnold (brother)
- Thomas Arnold (father)
- William Delafield Arnold (brother)