Yes, he will seem sentimental at times, but from how many Victorian poems would we not nowadays want to snip off the last few, homilizing lines?
"The Lady of Shalott" is a Victorian poem by the English poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809-1892).
A later Victorian poem, "Chertsey Curfew" by Montgomerie Ranking, is on a similar theme.
She uses a contorted syntax that seems to be derived from some morbid Victorian poem featuring a speaker acting powerfully from beyond the grave.
In a famous Victorian poem, the fly was depicted as a little man with 'rainbows on his wings, a black and brown gown laced around his waist'.
It also contained a tale that became the material for Matthew Arnold's Victorian poem The Scholar Gipsy.
Mazeppa was a popular Victorian heroic poem.
"Invictus" is a short Victorian poem by the English poet William Ernest Henley (1849-1903).
First there was "England, my England," a much-quoted phrase from a patriotic late Victorian poem by W. E. Henley.
In some ways this is a typically Victorian poem.