Page:Tennysoniana (1879).djvu/48

 the suppressed poems, and is notable as having called forth the lines, "To Christopher North," printed a few months afterwards in Alfred Tennyson's second volume.

Here is the proper place for mentioning some half-dozen pieces contributed about this time to various miscellanies by Alfred Tennyson, and for some unaccountable reason not reprinted in his second volume, to which I shall come presently. First, there are three poems printed in an annual entitled "The Gem" for 1831. The first of these is entitled "No More":

in which may, I think, be traced the germ of Violet's "mournful song" in "The Princess," with the refrain:

The second piece is entitled "Anacreontics." It will