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قراءة كتاب The Poetry Of Robert Browning

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The Poetry Of Robert Browning

The Poetry Of Robert Browning

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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THE POETRY
OF
ROBERT BROWNING

BY STOPFORD A. BROOKE

AUTHOR OF "TENNYSON: HIS ART AND RELATION TO MODERN LIFE"


LONDON

ISBISTER AND COMPANY LIMITED

1903


Printed by BALLANTYNE, HANSON & Co. London & Edinburgh

First Edition, September 1902
Reprinted, October 1902
Reprinted, January 1903


CONTENTS

I.   Browning And Tennyson
II.   The Treatment Of Nature
III.   The Treatment Of Nature
IV.   Browning's Theory Of Human Life—Pauline And Paracelsus
V.   The Poet Of Art
VI.   Sordello
VII.   Browning And Sordello
VIII.   The Dramas
IX.   Poems Of The Passion Of Love
X.   The Passions Other Than Love
XI.   Imaginative Representations
XII.   Imaginative Representations—Renaissance
XIII.   Womanhood In Browning
XIV.   Womanhood In Browning—(The Dramatic Lyrics And Pompilia)
XV.   Balaustion
XVI.   The Ring And The Book
XVII.   Later Poems
XVIII.   The Last Poems

The publishers are indebted to Messrs. Smith, Elder & Co. on behalf of the owner of the copyright for their permission to make extracts from copyright poems for use in this volume


CHAPTER I

BROWNING AND TENNYSON

Parnassus, Apollo's mount, has two peaks, and on these, for sixty years, from 1830 to 1890,[1] two poets sat, till their right to these lofty peaks became unchallenged. Beneath them, during these years, on the lower knolls of the mount of song, many new poets sang; with diverse instruments, on various subjects, and in manifold ways. They had their listeners; the Muses were also their visitants; but none of them ventured seriously to dispute the royal summits where Browning and Tennyson sat, and smiled at one another across the vale between.

Both began together; and the impulses which came to them from the new and excited world which opened its fountains in and about 1832 continued to impel them till the close of their lives. While the poetic world altered around them, while two generations of poets made new schools of poetry, they remained, for the most part, unaffected by these schools. There is nothing of Arnold and Clough, of Swinburne, Rossetti or Morris, or of any of the others, in Browning or Tennyson. There is nothing even of Mrs. Browning in Browning. What changes took place in them were wrought, first, by the natural growth of their own character; secondly, by the natural development of their art-power; and thirdly, by the slow decaying of that power. They were, in comparison with the rest, curiously uninfluenced by the changes of the world around them. The main themes, with which they began, they retained to the end. Their methods, their instruments, their way of feeling into the world of man and of nature, their relation to the doctrines of God and of Man, did not, though on all these matters they held diverse views, alter with the alteration of the world. But this is more true of Browning than of Tennyson. The political and social events of those years touched Tennyson, as we see from Maud and the Princess, but his way of looking at them was not the way of a contemporary. It might have been predicted from his previous career and work. Then the new movements of Science and Criticism which disturbed Clough and Arnold so deeply, also troubled Tennyson, but not half so seriously. He staggered for a time under

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