An Introduction to the Study of Browning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 299 pages of information about An Introduction to the Study of Browning.

An Introduction to the Study of Browning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 299 pages of information about An Introduction to the Study of Browning.

41.  Song. ("The Blind Man to the Maiden said")—­The Hour will come.  By Wilhelmine von Hillern.  Translated from the German by Clara Bell.  London, 1879, Vol.  II., p. 174.  Not reprinted.

42.  “Oh, Love, Love”:  Translation from the Hippolytus of Euripides.  (Eighteen lines, dated “Dec. 18, 1878").  Contributed to Prof.  J.P.  Mahaffy’s Euripides ("Classical Writers.”  Macmillan, 1879).  P. 116.

43.  DRAMATIC IDYLS.  By Robert Browning.  London:  Smith, Elder and Co. 1879, pp. vi., 143.

    Contents:—­1.  Martin Relph. 2.  Pheidippides. 3.  Halbert and
    Hob. 4.  Ivan Ivanovitch. 5.  Tray. 6.  Ned Bratts.

44.  DRAMATIC IDYLS.  Second Series.  By Robert Browning.  London:  Smith, Elder and Co. 1880, pp. viii., 149.

    Contents:—­Prologue. 1.  Echetlos. 2.  Clive. 3.  Muleykeh. 4. 
    Pietro of Abano. 5.  Doctor ——. 6.  Pan and Luna.  Epilogue.

45.  Ten New Lines to “Epilogue.”—­Scribner’s Century Magazine, November 1882, pp. 159-60.  Lines written in an autograph album, October 14, 1880.  Printed in the Century without Browning’s consent.  Reprinted in the first issue of the Browning Society’s Papers, Part III., p. 48, but withdrawn from the second issue.

46.  JOCOSERIA.  By Robert Browning.  London:  Smith, Elder and Co. 1883, pp. viii., 143.

Contents:—­1.  Wanting is—­What? 2.  Donald. 3.  Solomon and Balkis. 4.  Cristina and Monaldeschi. 5.  Mary Wollstonecraft and Fuseli. 6.  Adam, Lilith, and Eve. 7.  Ixion. 8.  Jochanan Hakkadosh. 9.  Never the Time and the Place. 10.  Pambo.

47.  Sonnet on Goldoni (dated “Venice, Nov. 27, 1883").—­Pall Mall Gazette, December 8, 1883, p. 2.  Written for the Album of the Committee of the Goldoni Monument at Venice, and inserted on the first page.  Reprinted in the Browning Society’s Papers, Part V. p. 98.*

48.  Paraphrase from Horace.—­Pall Mall Gazette, December 13, 1883, p. 6.  Four lines, written impromptu for Mr. Felix Moscheles.  Reprinted in the Browning Society’s Papers, Part V., p. 99.*

49.  Helen’s Tower:  Sonnet (Dated “April 26, 1870").—­Pall Mall Gazette, December 28, 1883, p. 2.  Reprinted in Browning Society’s Papers, Part V., p. 97.* Written for the Earl of Dufferin, who built a tower in memory of his mother, Helen, Countess of Gifford, on a rock on his estate, at Clandeboye, Ireland, and originally printed in the later copies of a privately printed pamphlet called Helen’s Tower.  Lord Tennyson’s lines, written on the same occasion, appeared a little previously in The Leisure Hour.

50.  The Divine Order, and other Sermons and Addresses.  By the late Thomas Jones.  Edited by Brynmor Jones, LL.B.  With INTRODUCTION by Robert Browning.  London:  W. Isbister. 1884.  The introduction is on pp. xi.-xiii.

51.  Sonnet on Rawdon Brown. (Dated “November 28, 1883").—­Century Magazine, “Bric-a-brac” column, February 1884.  Reprinted in the Browning Society’s Papers, Part V., p. 132.* Written at Venice, on an apocryphal story relating to the late Mr Rawdon Brown, who “went to Venice for a short visit, with a definite object in view, and ended by staying forty years.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
An Introduction to the Study of Browning from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.