The Poetry Of Robert Browning eBook

Stopford Augustus Brooke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 481 pages of information about The Poetry Of Robert Browning.

The Poetry Of Robert Browning eBook

Stopford Augustus Brooke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 481 pages of information about The Poetry Of Robert Browning.
reverence for good work and for the man who did it, which breathe in the poem, differ by a whole world from the atmosphere of life in Andrea del Sarto.  This is a crowd of men who are moving upwards, who, seizing the Renaissance elements, knitted them through and through with reformation of life, faith in God, and hope for man.  They had a future and knew it.  The semi-paganism of the Renaissance had not, and did not know it had not.

We may close this series of Renaissance representations by A Toccata of Galuppi’s.  It cannot take rank with the others as a representative poem.  It is of a different class; a changeful dream of images and thoughts which came to Browning as he was playing a piece of eighteenth-century Venetian music.  But in the dream there is a sketch of that miserable life of fruitless pleasure, the other side of which was dishonourable poverty, into which Venetian society had fallen in the eighteenth century.  To this the pride, the irreligion, the immorality, the desire of knowledge and beauty for their own sake alone, had brought the noblest, wisest, and most useful city in Italy.  That part of the poem is representative.  It is the end of such a society as is drawn in The Bishop orders his Tomb at St. Praxed’s Church.  That tomb is placed in Rome, but it is in Venice that this class of tombs reached their greatest splendour of pride, opulence, folly, debasement and irreligion.

Finally, there are a few poems which paint the thoughts, the sorrows, the pleasures, and the political passions of modern Italy.  There is the Italian in England, full of love for the Italian peasant and of pity for the patriot forced to live and die far from his motherland.  Mazzini used to read it to his fellow-exiles to show them how fully an English poet could enter into the temper of their soul.  So far it may be said to represent a type.  But it scarcely comes under the range of this chapter.  But Up in a Villa, down in the City, is so vivid a representation of all that pleased a whole type of the city-bred and poor nobles of Italy at the time when Browning wrote the Dramatic Lyrics that I cannot omit it.  It is an admirable piece of work, crowded with keen descriptions of nature in the Casentino, and of life in the streets of Florence.  And every piece of description is so filled with the character of the “Italian person of quality” who describes them—­a petulant, humorous, easily angered, happy, observant, ignorant, poor gentleman—­that Browning entirely disappears.  The poem retains for us in its verse, and indeed in its light rhythm, the childlikeness, the naivete, the simple pleasures, the ignorance, and the honest boredom with the solitudes of nature—­of a whole class of Italians, not only of the time when it was written, but of the present day.  It is a delightful, inventive piece of gay and pictorial humour.

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CHAPTER XIII

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The Poetry Of Robert Browning from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.