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In Memoriam: reinvention of faith for the scientific age? In Memoriam
is an elegy to Tennyson's friend Arthur Hallam, but bears ...
Submitted by scarlet on March 8, 2005
Category: English
Words: 2678 | Pages: 11
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In Memoriam is an elegy to Tennyson's friend Arthur Hallam, but bears the hallmark of its mid
nineteenth century context "the locus classicus of the science-and-religion debate."
Upon reflection, Hallam's tragic death has proved to be an event that provoked Tennyson's
embarkation upon a much more ambitious poetic project than conventional Miltonian elegy,
involving meditation upon the profoundest questions faced by mankind. Scientific
advancements, most notably in the fields of geology and biology, challenged the beliefs that
form the foundation of Christianity: the belief in a beneficent God responsible for creation and
ensuing superintendence and the belief in man's immortal soul. By the mid nineteenth century
apologist arguments such as those of William Paley could no longer convincingly reconcile
science and faith. In Memoriam stands as a work that truly represents the anxieties within the
Victorian mind. Queen Victoria once remarked that In Memoriam was her closest consolation,
after the bible, following her husband's death. This essay charts the consoling properties of In
Memoriam and interrogates the notion of Tennyson as a reinventor of faith for the troubling
scientific age.
There is a consensus among critics, such as Matthes and Willey, that Lyell's Principles of
Geology provoked much of Tennyson's troubling religious doubts that were to be
compounded when his dearest friend was robbed from him. Lyell made no explicit challenge
to Christian scripture (and indeed made attempts in his work to ensure readers did not
interpret his work as such), but his assertion that the Earth's landscape was shaped by an
extremely long and gradual process of weathering...
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