Robert Browning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 420 pages of information about Robert Browning.
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Robert Browning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 420 pages of information about Robert Browning.

    Loving not, hating not, just choosing so.

If any of the phenomena of nature lead us to infer or imagine some law superior to the idle artistry and reckless will of Setebos, that law is surely very far away; it is “the Quiet” of Caliban’s theology which takes no heed of human life and has for its outposts the cold unmoving stars.

Except the short piece named May and Death, which like Rossetti’s poem of the wood-spurge, is founded upon one of those freaks of association that make some trival object the special remembrancer of sorrow, the remaining poems of Dramatis Personae, as originally published, are all poems of love. A Likeness, skilfully contrived in the indirect directness of its acknowledgment of love, its jealous privacy of passion, and its irresistible delight in the homage rendered by one who is not a lover, is no exception.  Not one of these poems tells of the full assurance and abiding happiness of lovers.  But the warmth and sweetness of early passion are alive under the most disastrous circumstances in Confessions.  The apothecary with his bottles provides a chart of the scene of the boy-and-girl adventures; the professional gravities of the parson put an edge on the memory of the dear indiscretions; “summer’s distillation,” to borrow a word from Shakespeare, makes faint the odour of the bottle labelled “Ether”; the mummy wheat from the coffin of old desire sprouts up and waves its green pennons. Youth and Art may be placed beside the earlier Respectability as two pages out of the history of the encounters of prudence and passion; youth and maiden alike, boy-sculptor and girl-singer, prefer the prudence of worldly success to the infinite prudence of love; and they have their reward—­that success in life which is failure.  Like the tedious brief scene of young Pyramus and Thisbe, this is a poem of “very tragical mirth.”  And no less tragically mirthful is Dis Aliter Visum, a variation on the same or a kindred theme, where our young Bohemian sculptor is replaced by the elderly poet, bent, wigged, and lamed, but sure of the fortieth chair in the Academy, and the lone she-sparrow of the house-top by a young beauty, who adds to her other attractions a vague, uninstructed yearning for culture and entirely substantial possessions in the three-per-cents.  But the moral is the same—­the folly of being overwise, the wisdom of acting upon the best promptings of the heart.  In Too Late Browning attempts to render a mood of passionate despair;—­love and the hopes of love are defeated by a woman’s sentence of rejection, her marriage, and, last, her death; it reads, more than any other poem of the writer, like a leaf torn out of “Wuthering Heights.”  There is a fixity of grief which is more appalling than this whirlblast; the souls that are wedged in ice occupy a lower circle in the region of sorrow than those which are driven before the gale. The Worst of it—­another poem of the failures

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Robert Browning from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.