Paper Status Tracking
Contact us
[email protected]
Click here to send a message to me 3275638434
Paper Publishing WeChat

Article
Affiliation(s)

Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid, Spain

ABSTRACT

Tennyson’s poem “Boädicea”, published in 1864 but at least conceived in 1858, has never been very highly regarded. It is usually omitted from editions of the complete poetical works. There are two reasons for this. Firstly, written in an approximation of Catullan/Callimachan galliambics, it is no easy read. Secondly and more importantly, however, it sits most awkwardly within a huge body of contemporary art -paintings, sculptures, and novels as well as poems which present the (properly) Queen Regent of the Iceni as the spiritual ancestor of Victoria (the Gaelic word boudicca does, after all, men “victory”). Far from portraying Boadicea (as the name was then commonly spelt from the 18th to themed 20th centuries) as the harbinger of British imperial glory, Tennyson presents her as the half-mad victim of Roman oppression, brutalized by her own experiences into a personal vendetta. I argue that this poem is a riposte to Sir William Thornycroft’s bronze statue of Boadicea, a symbol of patriotic pride. It was begun at roughly the same time as the poem, both at the behest of Prince Albert; Tennyson would have seen Thornycroft’s models. In the poem, Tennyson envisions Boädicea reducing Colchester and Londonto a red-black stain infested with carrion eaters, and he seems to be asking whether this colour, ironically reflected in the finished statue of the Regent, chariot and horses (she used cavalry and chariots to attack Londinium, after all) is anything like a becoming tribute to Victoria. As for the dating of composition, Tennyson’s the most likely model for Boädicea is Lakshmibai, Queen Regent of Jhansi, who, during the Indian Mutiny of late 1857, is reputed to have ordered a massacre of English civilians who were tortured and dismembered in much the same as Boudicca’s victims. The poem is thus a meditation on the evils inherent in empire building and its effect upon native peoples.

KEYWORDS

become, empire, nation, tribe, massacre, madness

Cite this paper

References
Ackroyd, P. (2001). London: The biography. London: Vintage.
Collingridge, V. (2006). Boudica. London: Random House. 
Cowper, W. (n.d.). Boadicea, an ode. Retrieved from http://www.bartleby.com/41/320.html
David, D. (1995). Women, empire and Victorian writing. New York: Cornell University Press.
Ferguson, J. (1969). Catullus and Tennyson. English Studies in Africa, 12(1), 41-58.
Fisher, C. D. (Ed.). (1906). Conelii Taciti Annalium. Oxford: The Latin Library. Retrieved from http//www.thelatinlibrary.com/
Hibbert, C. (2000). Queen Victoria: A personal history. London: Harper Collins.
Hingley, R. (2000). Roman officers and English gentlemen: The imperial origins of Roman archaeology. London: Routledge.
Hodder, K. (Ed.). (2008). The works of Alfred Lord Tennyson. London: Wordsworth Poetry Library.
Johnson, M. (2012). Boudicca. Bristol: Bristol Classical Press.
KJV (King James Version) Refence Bible. (Noeditor cited). (1994). Michigan: The Zondervan Corporation.
Lawson, S. (2013). Nationalism and biographical transformation: The case of Boudicca. Humanities Review, 19(1), 101-119.
Merrill, E. T. (Ed.). (2015). Catullus Carmina. N.Y.: Tufts Digital Library. Retrieved from http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/
Meyer, K. E., & Brysac, S. B. (1999). Tournament of shadows. Washington, DC: Counterpoint.
Murray, J. A. H., Bradley, H., Craigie, W. A., & Onions, C. T. (1978). The Oxford English dictionary. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 
Morton, H. V. (2002). In search of London (p. 65). N.Y.: Da Capo Press. 
Ó hÓgain, D. (1991). Myth, legend and romance: An encyclopedia of the Irish folk tradition. Oxford: Prentice Hall Press. 
Tacitus, P. C. (n.d.). Annalium Liber Qvartvs Decimvs. Retrieved from http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/tacitus/tac.ann14.shtml

About | Terms & Conditions | Issue | Privacy | Contact us
Copyright © 2001 - David Publishing Company All rights reserved, www.davidpublisher.com
3 Germay Dr., Unit 4 #4651, Wilmington DE 19804; Tel: 001-302-3943358 Email: [email protected]