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Matthew Arnold

I lived from 1822-1888. I was from England, and am in the English category.

Poet and critic, was born at Laleham on the Thames, the eldest son of Thomas Arnold, historian and great headmaster of Rugby, and of Mary (Penrose) Arnold. He was educated at Winchester; Rugby, where he won a prize for a poem on "Alaric at Rome"; and Oxford, to which he went as a Scholar of Balliol College in 1841, and where he won the Newdigate Prize for "Cromwell, A Prize Poem," and received a Second Class in litterae humaniores, to the regret though hardly to the surprise of his friends. Always outwardly a worldling, he had not yet revealed the "hidden ground of thought and of austerity within" which was to appear in his poetry. "During these years," writes Thomas Arnold the younger in Passages in a Wandering Life, "my brother was cultivating his poetic gift carefully, but his exuberant, versatile nature claimed other satisfactions. His keen bantering talk made him something of a social lion among Oxford men, he even began to dress fashionably."

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    The tide is full, the moon lies fair
    39 lines, 16 comments
  • Light flows our war of mocking words, and yet,
    Behold, with tears mine eyes are wet!
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  • And the first grey of morning fill'd the east,
    And the fog rose out of the Oxus stream.
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  • Weary of myself, and sick of asking
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    32 lines, 1 comment
  • Others abide our question. Thou art free.
    We ask and ask--Thou smilest and art still,
    14 lines, 2 comments
  • Goethe in Weimar sleeps, and Greece,
    Long since, saw Byron's struggle cease.
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  • We were apart; yet, day by day,
    I bade my heart more constant be.
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  • Mist clogs the sunshine.
    Smoky dwarf houses
    90 lines, 2 comments
  • Come, dear children, let us away;
    Down and away below!
    143 lines, 2 comments

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