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.

And then, to fill the conception with the spirit of humanity, the personal passion of the poet rises and falls through the description, as the music rises and falls.  We feel his breast beating against ours; till the time comes when, like a sudden change in a great song, his emotion changes into ecstasy in the outburst of the 9th verse: 

    Therefore to whom turn I but to thee, the ineffable Name?

It almost brings tears into the eyes.  This is art-creation—­this is what imagination, intense emotion, and individuality have made of the material of thought—­poetry, not prose.

Even at the close, the conception, the imagination, and the personal passion keep their art.  The rush upwards of the imaginative feeling dies slowly away; it is as evanescent as the Vision of the Palace, but it dies into another picture of humanity which even more deeply engages the human heart.  Browning sees the organ-loft now silent and dark, and the silent figure in it, alone and bowed over the keys.  The church is still, but aware of what has been.  The golden pipes of the organ are lost in the twilight and the music is over—­all the double vision of the third heaven into which he has been caught has vanished away.  The form of the thing rightly fits the idea.  Then, when the form is shaped, the poet fills it with the deep emotion of the musician’s soul, and then with his own emotion; and close as the air to the earth are the sorrow and exultation of Abt Vogler and Browning to the human heart—­sorrow for the vanishing and the failure, exultant joy because what has been is but an image of the infinite beauty they will have in God.  In the joy they do not sorrow for the failure.  It is nothing but an omen of success.  Their soul, greater than the vision, takes up common life with patience and silent hope.  We hear them sigh and strike the chord of C.

This is lyric imagination at work in lyric poetry.  There are two kinds of lyrics among many others.  One is where the strong emotion of the poet, fusing all his materials into one creation, comes to a height and then breaks off suddenly.  It is like a thunderstorm, which, doubling and redoubling its flash and roar, ends in the zenith with the brightest flash and loudest clang of thunder.  There is another kind.  It is when the storm of emotion reaches, like the first, its climax, but does not end with it.  The lyric passion dies slowly away from the zenith to the horizon, and ends in quietude and beauty, attended by soft colour and gentle sounds; like the thunderstorm which faints with the sunset and gathers its clouds to be adorned with beauty.  This lyric of Browning’s is a noble example of the second type.

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