Page:The bibliography of Tennyson (1896).pdf/70

54 the Poet Laureate; and to exclaim, "Aut Tennyson, aut diabolus"; nor have I ever wavered for one day in my opinion, that the writer of the political poems in the Examiner of 1852, the poet who contributed twice to the columns of Punch in 1846, and the writer of the above stanzas, were one and the same person.]

[including a Third Part, previously inedited, and a Fourth Part, originally published in 1870 (1869), under the title of "The Golden Supper," with a Prose Preface]. London: Kegan Paul, 1879, green cloth, pp. 95.

, with a Dedicatory Poem to the Princess Alice. Nineteenth Century, April, 1879 (No. XXVI.). The Dedicatory Poem twenty-one lines; the "Defence" consists of seven pages, in seven sections.