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 2. Poems of 1832-1833, those retained in the edition of 1842, or restored and reinstated in later collected editions of Tennyson's Works. (The original versions only of "The Lady of Shalott," "Œnone," "The Miller's Daughter," and "The Palace of Art,")

3. Poems added, and first printed in the first volume of the edition of 1842, said to have been "written (with one exception) in 1833."

4. "The Two Voices," from the second volume of the edition of 1842, bearing there the date (afterwards dropped) of "1833." As the first twenty-eight sections of "In Memoriam" were composed in the autumn and early winter (Sept.-Dec.} of 1833, it is highly improbable that so long a poem as "The Two Voices" should have been produced at the same period and during the first poignancy of the Poet's anguish. It may therefore be assumed with tolerable certainty to have been written during Arthur Hallam's lifetime, and was probably seen by him.

Index of First Lines.

{{c|{{sc|Appendix}} {to Vol. II.).}}

Arthur Hallam's Review of " Poems, Chiefly Lyrical," from the Englishman's Magazine.

Extract from the article in the Westminster Review.

Extract from the article by Christopher North, in Blackwood's Magazine.

Extract from the article in the Quarterly Review, 1833.