The Forsaken Merman

Poem by Matthew Arnold
The Forsaken Merman
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

Illustration of the opening lines by Minnie Dibdin Spooner, 1906

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

  1. ^ a b c The Story Museum.
  2. ^ 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
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Matthew Arnold
Prose
  • On Translating Homer (1861)
  • Culture and Anarchy (1869)
  • Literature and Dogma (1873)
Poetry
  • "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)
Family