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.
“Ah, my friend,” rejoins Ogniben, “wish for nothing so foolish!  Worship your love, give her the best of you to see; be to her like the western lands (they bring us such strange news of) to the Spanish Court; send her only your lumps of gold, fans of feathers, your spirit-like birds, and fruits and gems.  So shall you, what is unseen of you, be supposed altogether a paradise by her,—­as these western lands by Spain:  though I warrant there is filth, red baboons, ugly reptiles and squalor enough, which they bring Spain as few samples of as possible.”

There is in all this prose, lengthy as it is, the true dramatic note, a recognisable tone of talk.  But A Soul’s Tragedy is for the study, not the stage.

13.  LURIA:  A Tragedy in Five Acts.

[Published in 1846 (with A Soul’s Tragedy) as No.  VIII of Bells and Pomegranates (Poetical Works, 1889, Vol.  VI. pp. 205-289).  The action takes place from morning to night of one day].

The action and interest in Luria are somewhat less internalised than in A Soul’s Tragedy, but the drama is in form a still nearer approach to monologue.  Many of the speeches are so long as to be almost monologues in themselves; and the whole play is manifestly written (unlike the other plays, except its immediate predecessor, or rather its contemporary) with no thought of the stage.  The poet is retreating farther and farther from the glare of the footlights; he is writing after his own fancy, and not as his audience or his manager would wish him to write.  None of Browning’s plays is so full of large heroic speech, of deep philosophy, of choice illustration; seldom has he written nobler poetry.  There is not the intense and throbbing humanity of A Blot in the ’Scutcheon; the characters are not so simply and so surely living men and women; but in the grave and lofty speech and idealised characters of Luria we have something new, and something great as well.

The central figure is Luria himself; but the other characters are not so carefully and completely subordinated to him as are those in A Soul’s Tragedy to Chiappino.  Luria is one of the noblest and most heroic figures in Browning’s works.  A Moor, with the instincts of the East and the culture of the West, he presents a racial problem which is very subtly handled; while his natural nobility and confidence are no less subtly set off against the Italian craft of his surroundings.  The spectacle he presents is impressive and pathetic.  An alien, with no bond to Florence save that of his inalienable love, he has led her forces against the Pisans, and saved her.  Looking for no reward but the grateful love of the people he has saved, he meets instead with the basest ingratitude.  While he is fighting and conquering for her, Florence, at home, is trying him for his life on a charge of treachery:  a charge which has no foundation but in the base natures

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