Robert Browning.
Martens, Britta
While no book-length studies on Browning have appeared during this
review period, the year has seen a healthy number of articles which
apply a variety of critical approaches to individual poems. They
demonstrate how well the poet lends himself to many current critical
paradigms, including queer and feminist interpretations, cognitive
psychology, and readings informed by material culture and narratology.
I will begin with articles which focus on gender. In
"Increasing Suspicion about Browning's Grammarian" (VP
44, no. 2 [Summer 2006]: 165-182), Arnd Bohm adds another name to the
list of possible inspirations for "A Grammarian's
Funeral": Brunetto Latini, whom Dante's Inferno places in the
circle of sodomites, although there is no clear evidence that the
scholar was a homosexual. Having explained that Brunetto may have been
linked with sodomy through the suspicion of homosexual relationships
between teachers and pupils and the medieval association of scholars
interested in grammatical deviations with sexual deviance, Bohm reads
Browning's poem as preoccupied with the grammarian's and the
speaker's ambiguous gender identity. The evidence he proposes
ranges from the arresting revelation that medieval scholars associated
dactylic feet (which are prominent in Browning's poem) with the
male genitalia and that the kinds of grammatical particles in which the
grammarian is interested can be read as encoding homosexual tendencies,
to a predictable reading of the speaker's use of the term
"erect" and the rather unconvincing claim that the text is
"blatantly reticent" (p. 171) about confirming the
speaker's gender and therefore that his gender is ambiguous. By the
same token, many other monologists whose gender is perfectly obvious but
not explicitly stated would be confused about their sexuality. Although
the grammarian's renunciation of his sexual identity certainly
needs to be considered, the article did not leave me fully persuaded
that the grammarian's "research was deeply rooted in his
[homosexual] desires" (p. 178). The discussion of "the
narrator's contempt for the city" (p. 174) also left me
slightly puzzled, as the grammarian is not carried away from the cities
in the plain, as Bohm states, but from a pastoral setting in the plain
toward a city on top of a mountain (see 11. 14, 41-42, 73-74), playing
on the associations of urbanity with culture and of prophets with the
mountaintop (albeit probably ironically).
In a similar vein, Ernest Fontana's "Gender and Sexual
Anxiety in Browning's 'Waring' and 'The
Guardian-Angel,'" in the same issue of Victorian Poetry (pp.
183-189), offers a queer interpretation of these two poems as encoding
Browning's feelings about an unrealized homosocial relationship or
same-sex intimacy with Alfred Domett before his friend left for New
Zealand. As in Bohm's article, the reading of a virile Waring seen
in a boat in the company of a boy as evidence that "Waring has come
out and is revealed in a tableau of festive homosociality" (p. 186)
seems to me to rely on an overinterpretation of detail. Fontana's
analysis of "The Guardian-Angel" as negotiating the transition
from Browning's companionship with Domett to that with Elizabeth is
more convincing, although it is not necessary to understand this in
terms of "same-sex amatory feelings" (p. 187).
As the bicentenary year of Elizabeth Barrett Browning's birth,
2006 saw, of course, a substantial amount of critical material on her,
but reference to Robert in these publications has as usual been quite
sparse. This reluctance to consider the Brownings in conjunction may
arise from the fact that, as Corinne Davies puts it, critics "over
the years have felt the mutual influence, but found the proving
elusive" ("Two of Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Pan Poems
and Their After-Life in Robert Browning's 'Pan and
Luna,'" [VP 44, no. 4 (Winter 2006): 562]). It may also be a
result of the different critical positions from which the two poets tend
to be approached. Judging from some recent publications--Mary Saunders
Pollock's monograph of 2003 and Corinne Davies and Marjorie
Stone's "'Singing Song for Song': The Brownings
'in the Poetic Relation,'" in Marjorie Stone and Judith
Thompson (eds.), Literary Couplings: Writing Couples, Collaborators, and
the Construction of Authorship (Madison: Univ. of Wisconsin, 2006), pp.
151-174--it would seem that Robert lends himself more readily to
comparative analyses from a feminist stance than Elizabeth does to the
main paradigms of Robert's critics. In their rich joint essay,
which takes the original form of a correspondence, Stone and Davies
review the various critical positions on the Brownings' literary
relations. These are succinctly summarized by Stone: "RB
specialists tend either to ignore EBB or to construct her as part of
RB's 'circle' or as one of his 'audiences' (Lee
Erickson's term), while feminist critics (as Auerbach said back in
1984) have treated RB as an 'ancillary presence' in setting
out to recover a heroic grandmother. (I plead guilty on this count
myself.)" (p. 160).
Davies is one of the critics with the least antagonistic view of
the Brownings' literary relations. In her correspondence with
Stone, she responds to Laura Haigwood's opinion that Robert's
description of Sonnets from the Portuguese as a "strange, heavy
crown" is a token of his sense of oppression. Instead, Davies sees
this as "a key instance not of conflict but of RB 'singing
song for song,' echoing his wife's sonnets and harking back to
[the call for the reader's 'co-operating fancy' in] his
1835 preface in Paracelsus" (p. 160). Davies also argues that
"The Flight of the Duchess," on which EBB commented so
extensively in the courtship correspondence, responds to her
"Romaunt of the Page," subverting conventions and gender
stereotypes just as EBB had done. Davies proposes that both poets were
attracted to the ballad-romance because "it provided them with a
conventional literary site, ripe for revision, on which to play out
their notions of social and sexual politics--which they acted out in
their own flight to Italy" (p. 161).
Stone furnishes further evidence of this pervasive mutual
influence, pointing to EBB's unpublished experiments with
"dramatic impersonations" (EBB's term) and suggesting
that her advocacy of monodrama influenced Robert's shift from stage
drama to the internal drama of the dramatic monologue (pp. 164-165). The
article offers a wealth of fascinating connections. Stone adds to the
chain of intertextual relations by linking the gender politics in
"The Flight of the Duchess" and "The Runaway Slave at
Pilgrim's Point." Both critics reflect together on the
significance of Robert's bracketed "[my EBB]" at the end
of his annotated manuscript of the latter poem, playing with readings of
this gesture as possessive encircling (Stone) or as loving embrace and
an allusion to the marriage vow (Davies). The argument is then spun
further to include Robert's circle of predecessors in "Childe
Roland" and the invocation of EBB in The Ring and the Book. It is a
real pleasure to witness Stone and Davies both reflect on and illustrate
fruitful co-operation. The growing tensions between the poets in the
1850s and 60s, intriguingly suggested by the ambiguous imagery
associated with EBB in "One Word More," are also given
consideration, although the final verdict is that the couple's
affinities outweigh their differences.
It is once again Corinne Davies who contributes the only
comparative article to last year's voluminous special issue of
Victorian Poetry on Elizabeth. Her article (cited above) examines
textual interrelations between "The Dead Pan," "A Musical
Instrument," and "Pan and Luna," focusing on the nexus of
gender politics and poetics. She argues that both of the latter poems
with their depiction of the goat-god's sexually charged chase of a
female add a "feminist corrective" (p. 562) to "The Dead
Pan" as a statement of Elizabeth's Christian, realist poetics.
In "A Musical Instrument," the hollowed out reed which once
was Syrinx links the cost and pain of poetic creation with the pain of
the victimized woman, thus offering an alternative to the male-centered
view of Pan as the egotistical Romantic artist. The sexual politics of
"Pan and Luna" are more radical in their attempt to understand
the woman's experience and the subversive suggestion that she
enjoys the sexual encounter. This refusal to conceive of Pan in terms of
a gendered power struggle, Davies concludes, "may lead us some way
... to a new gendered discourse in which the other becomes perceivable
in new and less threatening ways" (p. 567). This argument could be
related in interesting ways to the association of the moon with female
promiscuity in "Andrea del Sarto," while it would form an
intriguing contrast with Robert's recurrent association of
Elizabeth with the moon, above all in "One Word More" and
arguably in "Numpholeptos," where the male and female are in a
power relationship which inverts the traditional hierarchy. These
pervasive cross-references throughout the corpus of the Brownings'
work illustrate why it seems so difficult to come up with a comparative
study that does full justice to the complexity and subtlety of their
mutual influences.
Taking very different critical approaches, two articles use
Browning's poetry to explore new conceptual frameworks. Ivan
Kreilkamp, in "'One More Picture': Robert Browning's
Optical Unconscious" (ELH 73, no. 2 [Summer 2006]: 409-435), offers
a fascinating analysis of two poems from Men and Women in relation to
contemporary developments in photography. The article adds to the
substantial body of recent criticism on the role of photography in
Victorian culture and aims to demonstrate that the overlap with the
discourse on photography elucidates Browning's participation in an
emergent culture of modernity. Kreilkamp argues that
"Mesmerism," in which the speaker's act of conjuring up,
first the ghostly image, and then the very self, of his beloved in a
darkened room, "adopts as its own timeframe and subject matter the
slow development of 1840s photography" (p. 411) to which it
explicitly refers. The poem explores the perceived proximity between
mesmerism and the elaborate process of taking and developing photographs
as well as the attempt to overcome the division between self and image
which the advent of photography had made so tangible.
By contrast, "'Childe Roland' grapples with the
sharp reduction in development time inaugurated by technical
developments in the early 1850s and ... with the dawning of the first
historical possibility of 'instantaneous' photography and such
distinctly modern image forms and technologies as the snapshot and the
electric flash" (p. 411). Kreilkamp focuses on the poem's
final, climactic scene, in which Roland stands in front of the Dark
Tower, illuminated by light effects which seem to anticipate flash
photography. He is watched by the band of his predecessors, "a
living frame / For one more picture." Kreilkamp relates this moment
to critical concepts of modernity. Roland seems to fit into Walter
Benjamin's definition of modernity as an age in which reproductions
of the self proliferate, while his detailed perception of the
nightmarish landscape, like "close-up" photography, gives
access to what Benjamin calls an "optical unconsciousness" (p.
425). The final scene also illustrates Jurgen Habermas' definition
of a moment of shock as specifically modern. The scene explores the
dangerous side of the modern fascination with instantaneousness and
mirrors attempts by contemporary photographers to overcome the need for
long exposure time in order to capture the moment. In raising questions
about how photography and the discourse it generated influenced the
concept of temporality and the relationship between self and image, and
in relating the reflections of these changes in Browning's poems to
concepts of modernity which have so far not been applied to Victorian
poetry, the article provides much food for thought.
In "Cognitive Science and the History of Reading" (PMLA
121, no. 2 [March 2006]: 484-502), Andrew Elfenbein uses contemporary
reviews of Browning's poetry as a case study in his argument that
concepts from cognitive psychology can enrich our understanding of
reading processes by historical readers as well as literary critics and
students in general. He draws on the vocabulary which cognitive science
employs when analyzing the microprocesses of reading, such as the
distinction between "online" reading, that is, processes of
cognition which occur during the reading process, and
"offline" reading, which occurs after reading, for instance in
literary criticism. Browning commends himself to the task of exploring
the variety of standards of comprehension which are used by different
readers through his reputation as a difficult poet who encouraged in
reviewers a high degree of "metacognition," that is,
self-conscious reflection on one's reading process and especially
on the desire to establish coherence. Elfenbein demonstrates how the
aesthetic standards of three reviewers (Margaret Oliphant, Thomas
McNicoll, and George Brimley) determine their reading experience of Men
and Women, while William Morris' review--the only laudatory one--relies on new reading strategies.
Oliphant seeks to find coherence through emotional sympathy during
the online reading process, when the poem should resonate with her
personal experiential knowledge, but this immediate sense of coherence is inhibited by the mental effort needed to unravel Browning's
complex syntax. McNicoll also expects that appreciation happens during
online reading, but he looks for an intellectual rather than emotional
component, hoping to "track thoughts." However, a lack of
logical links and explanations in the text prevents him from
establishing coherence. Brimley's aesthetic standard is Coleridgean
organic unity. Unlike the other two critics, he reaches for background
knowledge outside the text such as generic conventions, but is
frustrated when a text like "Childe Roland," apparently an
allegory, does not live up to generic expectations. Morris disregards
barriers to comprehension in the online reading which baffle the other
three critics and instead reads the poems as character sketches, a
strategy which requires less cognitive effort than grappling with every
aspect of Browning's language. He reads the poems in the context of
each other, thus creating his own background information and discovering
a coherence that the other critics cannot find. Elfenbein also traces
the historical development of these different approaches, finding in
Brimley a precursor of New Criticism and representing Morris as an
influence on later Browning criticism which reads the dramatic
monologues as character studies. The article thus suggests that the
challenges posed by Browning's poetry contributed to conceptual
changes in literary criticism. Elfenbein demonstrates convincingly that
the cognitive approach can be useful to sharpen our awareness of how
reading processes work. He is particularly interested in the experience
of students who are easily overwhelmed by the cognitive demands placed
on them by complex literary texts. Discussing their reading process in
cognitive terms can certainly help them to understand their
difficulties, to rationalize frustrating reading experiences, and, in an
age when reflective learning is increasingly valued, to monitor their
learning progress self-consciously.
Another article concerned with strategies of reading is Heather
Morton's "'A Church of Himself': Liberal Skepticism
and Consistent Character in 'Bishop Blougram's
Apology'" (VP 45, no. 1 [Spring 2007]: 29-47). Morton situates
the poem in the context of mid-century attacks on Tractarianism and
Anglo-Catholicism which criticized the character of prominent Catholics
as a way of attacking the institution. She links the eagerness of these
critiques to denounce inconsistencies in writings by Catholics with the
reader's search for contradictions in the dramatic monologue,
arguing that "while critics of Newman and Wiseman point to
inconsistency as a problem for character, Blougram claims it as an asset
in a description that might also illustrate one of the dramatic
monologue's principal attractions" (p. 37). The ability of
this rational Catholic, who seems to be both a skeptic and a believer,
to disrupt established dichotomies and live with contradictions makes
the poem, in Morton's view, an intriguing hermeneutical challenge
to readers, who have over the years largely continued to expect the same
character consistency as the Victorians.
Laurence Lerner's "Browning's Painters" (YES
36, no. 2 [2006]: 96-108) provides a very accessible survey of some key
critical debates surrounding the famous painter poems, such as the
conjectures about the identity and artistic merits of "Pictor
Ignotus." Lerner also discusses the psychoanalytical
interpretations of"Andrea del Sarto," of which he is
perceptively critical. The most interesting point for me is his attempt
to explain why "Fra Lippo Lippi" and "Old Pictures in
Florence" (both, of course, published at the same time) advocate
two opposed views on the merits of medieval painting with its emphasis
on "soul" as opposed to painting that aims at a mimetic representation of the human body. The former poem portrays medieval
religious painting as lifeless and needing liberation through
Lippo's realistic skills, while the latter represents the medieval
painting of "soul" as a token of progression in comparison to
the static perfection of ancient Greek art. Although he does not spell
this out, Lerner seems to account for this paradox by establishing a
parallel with Browning's theory on the history of poetry as one of
dialectic alternation between the opposed modes of objective and
subjective art when he suggests that "once we cease to see history
as regular progress, we can expect to see the contrary pull of soul and
body occurring at any time" (p. 100).
Two issues of the Browning Society Notes appeared during the review
period. Volume 31 (March 2006) contains three articles on Browning. In
"'Master Hugues of Saxe-Gotha': Robert Browning's
Organ for Light Denied" (pp. 7-21), Joseph A. Dupras offers an
engaging close reading of this poem. The article, which eludes a brief
summary, explores with sensitivity the intellectual challenges which the
reader has to overcome in this complex poem.
Laura Rotunno's "'This Alone Would Drive Me to
Despair': The Position of Anselm in Robert Browning's
'The Bishop Orders His Tomb at St. Praxed's Church'"
(pp. 22-34) reflects on why Anselm is singled out from the collective of
the Bishop's sons who surround his deathbed. The Bishop's
preference for Anselm, the son's apparent detachment from his more
materialistic brothers, and his name are, Rotunno suggests, indications
that this monologue is not a straightforward condemnation of the
speaker's blatant sensuality. The eleventh-century theologian Saint
Anselm, whom Rotunno proposes as an inspiration for the Bishop's
son, maintained that sin could not be redeemed through repentance but
only through the sacrifice of Christ. Browning's unrepentant Bishop
may therefore not be hopelessly damned. Saint Anselm also preached that
both the soul and the body would be resurrected in the afterlife, a
belief which strikes readers as ridiculous when articulated by the
Bishop. Rotunno concludes that through the reference to Saint Anselm
with his belief in "the merging of the spiritual and material, the
poem allows the reader to adopt a cautiously sympathetic view of the
Bishop, one in harmony with how Browning's Anselm," given his
namesake's ideas of salvation, "might view his father"
(p. 30). Such a reading makes the Bishop's strange ideas on his
physical experience after death less surprising, but it also seems to
suggest that Browning would, for the purposes of this poem, subscribe to
a theological position which is quite far removed from his own beliefs.
Gary Scharnhorst's "Kate Field and the Brownings"
(pp. 35-58) charts the acquaintance of the American journalist with the
Brownings, detailing her contact with them in Florence during the late
1850s and focusing on her gradual falling out with Robert after
Elizabeth's death. On Field's side, this is due to her
unqualified veneration for Elizabeth and her increasing disparagement of
Robert as a minor poet in comparison to his wife. The first indication
of his distancing from Field is also the most striking one: his terse
refusal in a letter of 1870 to Field's request for biographical
information about Elizabeth for a projected lecture tour. For the
Browning scholar, this reaction is hardly surprising in a decade when
Browning grew increasingly wary of and annoyed by attempts to pry, as he
saw it, into his, and especially his wife's, privacy. Field could
be said to have exploited her personal acquaintance with Elizabeth to
produce hagiographical essays on the poet and thus launch her career as
a writer. Her perceived desire to profit from her access to both
poets' private lives may thus be another contributing factor which
drove Browning to vent his exasperation with intrusions into his privacy
in Pacchiarotto.
Issue 32 of BSN (March 2007) contains select papers from the
Browning Society's conference "'Our Italians':
Anglo-Italian Relationships 1845-1865" at the Abbey of Vallombrosa,
Tuscany, in 2005. Christopher M. Keirstead's "'He Shall
be a "Citizen of the World'": Cosmopolitanism and the
Education of Pen Browning" (pp. 74-82) considers the poets'
son as an insight into Victorian attitudes toward identity and a
"testing ground for a unique kind of cultural border-crossing, one
that reflected his parents' sometimes competing notions of what it
meant to be cosmopolitan" (p. 75). Keirstead explores the conflict
between Elizabeth's wish to keep Pen as a neutral hybrid in terms
of gender, languages, and religion and Robert's intention to turn
him into an unambiguously English male, a project he implemented after
Elizabeth died, while still trying to foster his son's broader
European culture. The article offers an interesting biographical
perspective on the Brownings' ideas on nationhood and culture,
complementing Keirstead's earlier publications on cosmopolitanism
in their poetry.
Maurizio Masetti's article "Lost in Translation:
'The Italian in England'" (pp. 17-26) charts the
development of Browning's interest in Giuseppe Mazzini and his
subsequent distancing from the Italian Republican leader as the
Brownings came to prefer the possibility of a quick unification under a
monarchy over Mazzini's more problematic and time-consuming
republican solution. Masetti also addresses the question of
Mazzini's lost translation of "The Italian in England,"
quoting from three letters by Mazzini to his mother which refer to
enclosed passages of the translation and which leave no doubt that this
text existed. Turning to the much disputed historical model for the
revolutionary in Browning's poem, Masetti argues against the claim
that he is based on the Neapolitan Bandiera brothers, who probably did
not receive enough press coverage for Browning to be aware of them at
the time of composition. Masetti therefore reverts to the contemporary
reading of the speaker as inspired by Mazzini and also explains that
Mazzini's admiration for the poem may be due to its love interest
which by coincidence has echoes of Mazzini's own love affair.
My own "'Oh, a day in the city-square, there is no such
pleasure in life!': Robert Browning's Portrayal of
Contemporary Italians" (pp. 4-16) considers Browning's
relatively few, and usually deprecatory, references to
nineteenth-century Italians in his correspondence and poetry. It
situates his conceptualization of the Italian national temperament in
relation to a number of contemporary ideas: not just the well explored
historical theory which blames the Italians' political and social
backwardness on their oppression by Austria and the Papal States, but
also a hitherto neglected ahistorical theory. Developed in the
eighteenth century but still current in the nineteenth, this theory sees
a causal connection between climate, the human organism, and national
character and provides a basis for the common stereotyping of the
Italians as passive, sensual, and fun-loving. Browning's recourse
to this theory in order to offer some explanation for the Italians'
disappointing apathy in the face of secular and religious authorities is
illustrated through an analysis of "Up at a Villa--Down in the
City."
Another article by Ernest Fontana and two short contributions to
ANQ should also be noted. In "Too Late: The Pre-Raphaelites,
Tennyson, and Browning" (JPRS 15 [Spring 2006]: 50-60), Fontana
offers an insightful reading of Browning's "Too Late" in
light of the pictorial and textual representations by Tennyson, W. L.
Windus, Adelaide Proctor, and Christina and D. G. Rossetti which link
this phrase to the death of a woman. George Monteiro's
"Scudder, Rolfe, and Browning" (ANQ 19, no. 3 [Summer 2006]:
14-16) presents a letter commenting on an 1887 American selection of
Browning's poems. And in time for John Betjeman's centenary in
2006, Kevin J. Gardner's "John Betjeman's 'Bristol
and Clifton': Echoes of Robert Browning's 'My Last
Duchess'" (ANQ 19, no. 3 [Summer 2006]: 35-38) argues for the
Poet Laureate's debt to Browning's ironic monologues. There is
also a short article by David Sonstroem on "The Laboratory"
("The Poison Within: Robert Browning's 'The
Laboratory,'" VN 111 [Spring 2007]: 10-11), which discusses
the speaker as a representative of the ancien regime. Sonstroem's
argument--that for both the speaker and the ancien regime
"aesthetics has supplanted ethics" and "the only value
that matters is beauty" (p. 11)--could be complemented by a
consideration of the speaker's desire for power and hedonism, which
also figure prominently in her mind.
I also want to mention the work of Yann Tholoniat, currently the
only French scholar publishing on Browning, who in 2003 completed a
doctoral thesis on polyphony in the poet's work up to The Ring and
the Book. I have not seen this thesis, but a number of articles
published since 2004 in the French journals Cahiers Victoriens et
Edouardiens and Imaginaires seem to build on it. These articles apply
approaches by prominent French critics (Michel Foucault, Gerard Genette)
and also Mikhail Bakhtin to Browning's work. This year's
article, "Les Preliminaires textuels de Robert Browning"
(Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens 63 [April 2006]: 463-479), considers
the titles, subtitles, and epigraphs of Browning's poems which were
published between 1842 and 1864, drawing primarily on Genette's
work on paratexts in Seuils (1987). It concludes that Browning shows an
interest in (cross-) generic classification; he uses these paratextual
devices to set up expectations, to establish a "reading
protocol" and to stimulate his reader into interpretive activity.
The scope of an article, of course, imposes limitations.
Tholoniat's consideration of the three kinds of paratext in
isolation from each other means that there is no space to analyze
Browning's intricate play with these devices within the same poem.
For instance, a closer reading of the relationship between the subtitle
to "Holy Cross Day," the fictional diary entry by "the
Bishop's Secretary" which serves as an epigraph, and the
presumably authorial intervention "What the Jews really said
...," which contrasts the epigraph with the following dramatic
monologue, would have allowed for a more nuanced evaluation of
Browning's use of multi-perspectivism. Nonetheless, the article
indicates areas of inquiry which may yield more detailed insights into
Browning's use of these devices. As Tholoniat suggests, it might,
for example, be fruitful to examine Browning's debt to the
paratexts of Romantic lyrical dramas, a genre which Robert Langbaum saw
as a major influence on the dramatic monologue.
I will close with a publication which does not present any new
research but will be of interest to teachers of Browning: the new
revised Norton critical edition of Robert Browning's Poetry. Andrew
M. Stauffer has updated James F. Loucks' 1979 edition, retaining
the bulk of Loucks' poems and notes, but making a few changes in
the selection from the period leading up to The Ring and the Book. His
additions respond well to the shifting critical preoccupation with
spiritualism ("Mesmerism"), the Brownings' interest in
Italy ("The Italian in England," "The Englishman in
Italy," "The Patriot," and "'De
Gustibus--'"), and feminist approaches to Browning
("Pompilia" replaces "Caponsacchi"), the latter
being also reflected in the critical appendix. The complete text of
Pauline--rather than Loucks' 4-page extracts--is also included.
This is indeed a central text for anyone with a lively interest in the
poet's development, and readers' appreciation of the
poem's importance might have been heightened by the inclusion of
some supporting material in the appendix. John Stuart Mill's
notorious summarizing commentary on Pauline and Browning's very
revealing self-defense in response to it would have been obvious
candidates for inclusion in the section on Victorian critical views,
which remains unchanged from Loucks' edition.
Contrasting with the Victorian section of the appendix, the
selection of modern critical essays is almost completely new, with only
Langbaum's classic "Sympathy Versus Judgment" from The
Poetry of Experience and Bloom's reading of "Childe
Roland" from The Ringers in the Tower surviving from the earlier
edition. These have been supplemented with well-established essays by
leading Browning critics of the past two decades, Isobel Armstrong
(represented twice, with an extract from Victorian Poetry: Poetry,
Poetics and Politics and her reading of "Caliban"), Daniel
Karlin ("Browning's poetry of intimacy"), and Herbert
Tucker ("Dramatic monologue and the overhearing of lyric"). To
these are added texts by Jennifer A. Wagner-Lawlor on Browning's
silent auditors and readers, and by Catherine Maxwell on the Pygmalion
myth, as well as readings of individual poems, by Stefan Hawlin on
"A Toccata of Galuppi's," Erik Gray on "Andrea del
Sarto," and Susan Brown on "Pompilia." Taken together,
these essays offer an engaging, up-to-date first taste of Browning
criticism. Unfortunately, there are a few misclassifications and
omissions in the Selected Bibliography: the listing of Adam
Roberts' selection of poems for Oxford University Press as an essay
collection, the inclusion of Daniel Karlin's review of The
Brownings' Correspondence instead of his selected edition of the
courtship correspondence, and the absence of Langbaum's seminal
Poetry of Experience. That said, the economically annotated poems and
the new selection of critical essays provide an accessible and compact
resource for today's student.