Talk:The Deserted House
A fact from The Deserted House appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 10 September 2009 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
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Hello! This is a note to let the editors of this article know that File:W.E.F. Britten - The Early Poems of Alfred, Lord Tennyson - The Deserted House.jpg will be appearing as picture of the day on May 28, 2014. You can view and edit the POTD blurb at Template:POTD/2014-05-28. If this article needs any attention or maintenance, it would be preferable if that could be done before its appearance on the Main Page. Thanks! — Crisco 1492 (talk) 03:01, 9 May 2014 (UTC)
Come away: for Life and Thought
Here no longer dwell;
But in a city glorious—
A great and distant city—have bought
A mansion incorruptible.
Would they could have stayed with us!
This illustration by W. E. F. Britten, showing the eponymous house, accompanied the poem in a 1901 reprint.Illustration: W. E. F. Britten; restoration: Adam Cuerden
silliness in description of poem
[edit]I don't know who Joseph is, or what is on page 99 of him, but this description "The first four stanzas of the poem describe the emptiness of a house, while the fifth, final stanza reveals that the empty house is a metaphor for a dead body after the soul has left" is silly and inaccurate.
The clue that this is a body, not a house, is in the first stanza. Nothing in the last stanza gives away the fact that it is a body any more than any other paragraph. However, "Life and Thought have gone away" is a pretty big clue that it's about someone dead. I don't see how anyone could find the last stanza to be some big eye-opening reveal that -- GASP! -- it's about a body! If you didn't figure it out by then, you probably didn't get it in the last stanza either. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.49.196.193 (talk) 20:03, 28 May 2014 (UTC)