Page:Highways and Byways in Lincolnshire.djvu/154

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THE TENNYSON STATUE

Old Inland Revenue Office, Lincoln.

a short and memorable address. In the evening the writer read a paper on Tennyson to an intently listening audience of twelve hundred people, which is now published by Routledge & Co., in a little book called "Introductions to the Poets, by W. F. Rawnsley." Lincoln that day showed how fully she appreciated the great Lincolnshire poet. The statue, a colossal one, represents him looking at a flower, as described in his poem, "Flower in the crannied wall," and his grand wolf-hound is looking up into his face. This hound was a Russian, whose grandfather had belonged to the Czar Alexander II., he who freed the serfs in 1861, and was so basely assassinated twenty years later. The wolf-hound was a very handsome light brindle,