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・ The Prisoner (video game)
・ The Prisoner in other media
・ The Prisoner in popular culture
・ The Prisoner in the Opal
・ The Prisoner of Benda
・ The Princes of Malibu
・ The Princes of the Golden Cage (novel)
・ The Princess
・ The Princess (1966 film)
・ The Princess (1981 film)
・ The Princess (1983 film)
・ The Princess (D. H. Lawrence story)
・ The Princess (golf)
・ The Princess (Killigrew)
・ The Princess (Maykov poem)
The Princess (Tennyson poem)
・ The Princess (W. S. Gilbert play)
・ The Princess Academy
・ The Princess and Curdie
・ The Princess and the Butterfly
・ The Princess and the Cabbie
・ The Princess and the Clown
・ The Princess and the Frog
・ The Princess and the Frog (disambiguation)
・ The Princess and the Goblin
・ The Princess and the Goblin (film)
・ The Princess and the Hound
・ The Princess and the Marine
・ The Princess and the Pauper
・ The Princess and the Pea


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The Princess (Tennyson poem) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Princess (Tennyson poem)

''The Princess'' is a serio-comic blank verse narrative poem, written by Alfred Tennyson, published in 1847. Tennyson was Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom from 1850 to 1892 and remains one of the most popular English poets.〔See, for example, Tucker (2009), forward〕
The poem tells the story of an heroic princess who forswears the world of men and founds a women's university where men are forbidden to enter. The prince to whom she was betrothed in infancy enters the university with two friends, disguised as women students. They are discovered and flee, but eventually they fight a battle for the princess's hand. They lose and are wounded, but the women nurse the men back to health. Eventually the princess returns the prince's love.
Several later works have been based upon the poem, including Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera ''Princess Ida''.
==Background==
Tennyson planned the poem in the late 1830s after discussing the idea with Emily Sellwood, whom he later married in 1850. It seems to have been a response to criticism that he was not writing about serious issues. It was also a response, in part, to the founding of Queen's College, London, Britain's first college for women, in 1847.〔Scott (1992).〕〔The college was not quite a higher education institution in the modern sense: it admitted girls and women from the age of twelve upwards, and is now an independent secondary school for girls: see Cockburn, King & McDonnell 1968, p. (311-312 )〕 Two of Tennyson's friends were part-time professors there.〔 Other critics speculate that the poem was partly inspired by the opening of ''Love's Labour's Lost'' and other literary works.〔Lang (1904), Chapter IV – 1842–1848 — The Princess.〕〔Zimmerman (2008), p. 77.〕 Janet Ross, the daughter of Lucie, Lady Duff-Gordon recalled that "() told my mother that he had her in mind when he wrote ''The Princess''. I don't think she was as much flattered as many of his admirers would have been".〔Ross (1912), p. (16 ).〕
Tennyson is reported as saying, in the 1840s, that "the two great social questions impending in England were 'the education of the poor man before making him our master, and the higher education of women'."〔Tennyson, Hallam (2005), p. 206.〕 The women's rights movement, including the right to higher education, was still at an early stage in 1847.〔Shaw (2003).〕 In Britain, the first university-level women's school, Girton College, Cambridge was not opened until 1869,〔 more than two decades after Tennyson wrote ''The Princess''.〔Even then, it was not recognised as a full constituent of the university until 1948. See (Girton's official website )〕 In ''A Vindication of the Rights of Woman'' (1792), however, Mary Wollstonecraft had been an early advocate of the equality of men and women,〔 and writers such as John Stuart Mill had argued for female emancipation.〔Mack & Strobel (2008).〕 Nevertheless, "Tennyson was in the vanguard in writing of the subject〔Tennyson must have been aware of a number of earlier writings about women's higher education as he wrote the poem. See Zimmerman, p. 77.〕 and although feminist critics have complained about the conservative ending of his poem, he must be credited with broaching the topic and voicing some of the injustices women suffered."〔〔 In ''The Princess'', "Tennyson describes with such clarity the principal problems of feminism".〔Lefkowitz (2007), p. (1 ).〕
As in the case of many other Tennyson poems, ''The Princess'' is framed by a prologue and a conclusion outside of the main narrative.〔 The description of a summer fête that opens the poem is based on a feast of the Mechanics' Institute at a country house, Park House, near Maidstone, in 1842. The narrative device is a tale of fancy composed in turn by some university undergraduates, based on an old chronicle.〔Drabble (2000), p. 817.〕 Though the poem was moderately successful, Tennyson wrote to a friend, saying "I hate it and so will you". He revised the work after its first publication. Some of the best-known lyrics, including "The splendour falls on castle walls" were added for the third edition (1850).〔

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