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.

He asks what is the secret of the world:  “of man and man’s true purpose, path and fate.”  He proposes to understand “God-and his works and all God’s intercourse with the human soul.”

We are here, he thinks, to grow enough to be able to take our part in another life or lives.  But we are surrounded by limitations which baffle and retard our growth.  That is miserable, but not so much as we think; for the failures these limitations cause prevent us—­and this is a main point in Browning’s view—­from being content with our condition on the earth.  There is that within us which is always endeavouring to transcend those limitations, and which believes in their final dispersal.  This aspiration rises to something higher than any possible actual on earth.  It is never worn out; it is the divine in us; and when it seems to decay, God renews it by spiritual influences from without and within, coming to us from nature as seen by us, from humanity as felt by us, and from himself who dwells in us.

But then, unless we find out and submit to those limitations, and work within them, life is useless, so far as any life is useless.  But while we work within them, we see beyond them an illimitable land, and thirst for it.  This battle between the dire necessity of working in chains and longing for freedom, between the infinite destiny of the soul and the baffling of its effort to realise its infinitude on earth, makes the storm and misery of life.  We may try to escape that tempest and sorrow by determining to think, feel, and act only within our limitations, to be content with them as Goethe said; but if we do, we are worse off than before.  We have thrown away our divine destiny.  If we take this world and are satisfied with it, cease to aspire, beyond our limits, to full perfection in God; if our soul should ever say, “I want no more; what I have here—­the pleasure, fame, knowledge, beauty or love of this world—­is all I need or care for,” then we are indeed lost.  That is the last damnation.  The worst failure, the deepest misery, is better than contentment with the success of earth; and seen in this light, the failures and misery of earth are actually good things, the cause of a chastened joy.  They open to us the larger light.  They suggest, and in Browning’s belief they proved, that this life is but the threshold of an infinite life, that our true life is beyond, that there is an infinite of happiness, of knowledge, of love, of beauty which we shall attain.  Our failures are prophecies of eternal successes.  To choose the finite life is to miss the infinite Life!  O fool, to claim the little cup of water earth’s knowledge offers to thy thirst, or the beauty or love of earth, when the immeasurable waters of the Knowledge, Beauty and Love of the Eternal Paradise are thine beyond the earth.

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