Robert Browning.
Martens, Britta
As Robert Browning was not covered in "The Year's
Work" for 2005, the present article reviews a selection of
publications from the past two years. The three major items are the
latest volumes of The Brownings' Correspondence and of the Oxford
University Press Poetical Works of Robert Browning, and John Haydn
Baker's monograph Browning and Wordsworth. Some of the articles in
this review period share Baker's focus on Browning's attitude
toward the Romantics, though the dominant theme here is the poet's
creative response to various aspects of the Victorian cultural context,
especially religion, but also a number of other cultural practices, such
as art criticism, archaeology, and photography.
Volume 15 of The Brownings' Correspondence, edited by Philip
Kelley, Scott Lewis, and Edward Hagan (Winfield: Wedgestone Press, 2006)
is as ever carefully presented and copiously annotated, especially
Elizabeth's letters to her sister Arabella, previously published
separately by Lewis. The present volume covers the period between
January 1848 and August 1849, an exceptionally unproductive period for
Robert from an artistic point of view, but an eventful time both
politically and in the Brownings' private life. Letters, mostly by
Elizabeth, detail the excitement and worries surrounding her pregnancy
and Pen's first six months, while also conveying a sense of
Robert's deep sadness on the death of his mother only nine days
after Pen's birth. Few are the letters which do not bear witness to
the couple's intense interest in Italian and French politics. While
other British residents flee Florence to avoid the tumult of the
short-lived republic and the subsequent Austrian occupation, the poets
with their republican sympathies stay behind to watch with dismay as the
Florentines' initial enthusiasm for the republic is replaced by
renewed allegiance to the returning Grand Duke, a fickleness which EBB
repeatedly blames on the Italian national temperament.
Both Brownings are realistic in their evaluation of the French
Second Republic, but there are also some disagreements between them,
such as the first indications of a key difference on politics, as
Elizabeth begins to succumb to the charisma of Louis Napoleon, while
Robert remains more critical of the man he will later caricature in
Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau. For instance, on April 22, 1848, Elizabeth
writes to her sister Henrietta, alluding to the recent bloodshed in
France: "Robert and I think just alike on most points--but if one
of us two goes further than the other, I conscientiously believe it is
I--Dont say that I say so, though! Sometimes, in joke, I call him an
aristocrat." By contrast, on August 31, 1849, she declares:
It seems to me that [Louis Napoleon] has given proof, as far as the
evidence goes, of prudence, integrity, & conscientious
patriotism--the situation is difficult & he fills it honorably. The
Rome business [i.e. the French occupation of Rome] has been
miserably managed--this is the great blot on the character of his
government. But I, for my own part, (my husband is not so minded)
do consider that the French motive has been good, the intention
pure.
For the student of Robert's poetry, the main value of these
letters lies in the insight which such passages give into his political
opinions as they will be reflected in later works. Most of the material
in this volume has been published previously, but the chronological
presentation here of all known letters, with notes explaining references
to specific events, makes it much easier to trace the development of
Browning's views. The appendix of contemporary reviews contains not
only reviews of the 1849 Poems but also notices of the 1848 revival of A
Blot in the 'Scutcheon which are otherwise difficult to access.
The Ring and the Book, Books IX-XII, Volume 9 of The Poetical Works
of Robert Browning (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2004), completes Stefan
Hawlin and T.A.J. Burnett's edition of Browning's magnum opus.
Like the previous two volumes of this edition, Books IX-XII are
meticulously presented and annotated, going beyond the less detailed
notes in previous critical editions. Especially helpful are the notes
which elucidate over fifty allusions to classical authors by Bottini,
the Advocate of the Fisc who defends Pompilia, in Book IX, a monologue
which has received much less critical attention than those by the Pope
and Guido which follow. The full citation of all of Bottini's
classical allusions allows the reader better to appreciate
Browning's highly ironic characterization of the erudite lawyer as
an arrogant orator manque, enamored of his own pompous rhetoric.
Of particular interest are two appendices which develop previously
published research by their authors. In the first of these, Hawlin
presents the main source for a curious anecdote in the opening lines of
the Pope's monologue. This is the story of Pope Stephen VII's
revocation of all decisions and ordinations by his predecessor,
Formosus, which includes the grotesque scene of the "cadaver
synod," Formosus' posthumous trial in which the late
pontiff's cadaver, dressed in his pontifical robes, is put in front
of a tribunal and charged with an offence of which Stephen himself is
also guilty. Browning relies here on an offshoot of research by his
father into the history of the Roman senatrix Marozia and her
family's influence on the papacy. A comparison of the poem with the
detailed notes taken by Browning senior and his attempts to turn these
into a dramatic narrative leads Hawlin to conclude that the poet's
representation of the papaw here is not driven by the urge to "make
an aggressive or simplistic anti-Catholic statement" (p. 381).
Since comments about Italian Catholicism by Victorian authors are too
easily and frequently dismissed as chauvinistic prejudice, this more
nuanced evaluation of Browning's position is welcome. The poet does
not accept the authority of his father's narrative of events, but
instead follows his example in weighing up the conflicting accounts of
the story. The episode, which takes up only 87 lines, thus constitutes a
revealing mise en abyme of Browning's creative engagement with
divergent accounts of historical events such as those also found in the
Old Yellow Book. His awareness here of how difficult it is to establish
the facts of a case on the basis of historical documents should support
scholars who reject the view that the poet was fully convinced by the
documents in the Old Yellow Book which pleaded Pompilia's
innocence.
In case there was still any doubt over the innocence of the
historical Pompilia, the appendix by Michael Meredith and Simonetta
Berbeglia, entitled "The Truth of the Franceschini Murder
Case," sets the record straight. Meredith and Berbeglia's
research in the Arezzo town archives establishes that Caponsacchi and
Pompilia were lovers and were helped substantially in their flight by
Caponsacchi's friend Guillichini, who was also suspected of amorous involvement with Guido's wife. The authors not only outline the
genealogies of the Franceschini and Caponsacchi families but also paint
a fascinating, lively picture of life in late seventeenth-century Arezzo
and of the affair, complete with a table which details the stages of the
lovers' nocturnal escape from the town. The real Guido appears
"not [as] a monster, but [as] a weak, ineffective man, well suited
to play the part of the cuckold" (p. 388), while Caponsacchi turns
out to be a convicted rapist and member of an aristocratic gang of
aggressive street brawlers whose "two most common activities were
fighting and fornication" (p. 398).
John Haydn Baker's study of Browning's changing attitude
toward Wordsworth, Browning and Wordsworth (Madison: Fairleigh Dickinson
Univ. Press, 2004), takes inspiration from two scholars. Firstly, Baker
applies Harold Bloom's theory of the Oedipal struggle by a
"strong" poet against the influence of an overpowering
precursor which Bloom has repeatedly illustrated with reference to
Browning's confrontation with Shelley. Secondly, Baker is indebted
to John Woolford, who supervised the Ph.D. thesis on which this book is
based. Woolford has drawn attention to Browning's debt to
Wordsworth's ideas on the relationship between the poet and his
audience and to his emulation of the older poet's effort to
reconcile Romantic idealism with both realism and a humanitarian
dedication to mankind. Baker takes up the latter point and fits it into
a Bloomian pattern of development which leads from Browning's
initial imitation of Wordsworth, via a deliberate "misreading"
of this precursor that allows Browning to deny his influence for three
decades, toward an eventual reconciliation and acknowledgement of his
influence.
Browning's essentially Romantic desire to combine idealism
with practical realism is initially demonstrated through Pauline, which
displays the dangers of solipsism and a too utopian idealism that the
speaker cannot yet reconcile with humanitarian action. Whereas the value
of Pauline lies, in Baker's view, in the statement of
Browning's problem, Paracelsus offers a solution in the form of an
emulation of Wordsworth. Like the other two early long poems, Paracelsus
has so far been read mainly in terms of Browning's response to
Shelley, but Baker argues here convincingly for the influence of
Wordsworth's Excursion and the "Prospectus" to The
Recluse. Above all, he reads Paracelsus' closing vision of
mankind's gradual progression toward perfection with its synthesis
of visionary idealism and realism as inspired by Wordsworth. However,
this solution is, according to Baker, an instance of the fruitless
imitation of a precursor which temporarily keeps an immature strong poet
from developing his own poetic identity and which Browning himself
condemns in the "Essay on Chatterton." His next step is
therefore the willful "misreading" of Wordsworth in Sordello
as self-absorbed and a mere nature poet who lacks the sympathy with his
fellow men that Browning now claims for himself.
Having slain his poetic father by thus misrepresenting him,
Browning can in the period between 1840 and 1869 "erase"
Wordsworth from his poetry, but eventually he revises his unjust
representation of this predecessor. Baker identifies three major reasons
for this change of heart: Browning's realization that with his
quasi-naturalist The Ring and the Book he has reached a dead end in
poetry; his recognition that he had to an extent replicated
Wordsworth's development from radicalism to conservatism; and his
absorption of the humanitarian message of The Prelude. The text through
which Browning encodes the apology for his misreading of Wordsworth as
anti-humanitarian is the dream vision at the end of Fifine at the Fair,
in which Baker detects echoes of The Prelude. He traces the same belated
acknowledgement of Wordsworth's humanitarian commitment through an
analysis of the list of Browning's favorite Wordsworth poems as
sent to the President of the Wordsworth Society in 1887.
In his quite rigid categorization of Browning's career into
three distinct phases, Baker follows the customary view of the
poet's development but arguably glosses over some of the
complexities of Browning's ever evolving and sometimes
contradictory attitude toward his predecessor. Fortunately, he is less
rigid in his application of Bloom's schematic theory of influence.
Aware of the limitations of Bloom's ahistorical approach, he
integrates contextual factors, such as biographical explanations for
Browning's changes in attitude toward Wordsworth, and the reading
of Paracelsus includes a pertinent consideration of the poem in the
context of the discussion over electoral reform in the early 1830s. The
book's most compelling sections are the analyses of this poem and
of Fifine in terms of Browning's confrontation with Wordsworth,
although there are more obvious references to Romantic precursors than
those to Wordsworth in these works, namely to Shelley in Paracelsus and
to Byron in Fifine. Other similarities between Wordsworth's and
Browning's poetics could have been explored in a study of this
length, for instance both poets' rejection of poetic diction in
favor of realistically presented language as a formal equivalent of
their humanitarian ethics. Nevertheless, with its focus on the synthesis
of idealism and realistic humanitarianism, the study offers a coherent,
well-presented argument that rightly stresses the central influence of
Wordsworth's ideas on Browning's aesthetics.
Turning to articles, we find consideration given to poems through
which Browning participates in Victorian cultural debates. Stuart
Peterfreund's "Robert Browning's Decoding of Natural
Theology in 'Caliban upon Setebos'" (VP 43, no. 3 [2005]:
317-331) traces various allusions to Darwin's writings in the
description of flora, fauna, and geography in this poem, arguing that
Browning sides with Darwin in making his Caliban a satire on the natural
theology of Robert Chambers' Vestiges of the Natural History of
Creation. Much of the article is devoted to a discussion of works on
natural theology, but it also contains some perceptive remarks about the
poem's style, especially Caliban's idiosyncratic use of
elliptical chiasmus.
Christopher M. Keirstead's "Stranded at the Border:
Browning, France, and the Challenge of Cosmopolitanism in Red Cotton
Night. Cap Country" (VP 43, no. 4 [2005]: 411-434) makes some
connections between this poem and Victorian attitudes toward Catholicism
and the Franco-Prussian war, but the article is mainly preoccupied with
relating the text to critical discourses of our own period: travel
writing, postcolonialism, cosmopolitanism and even queer theory. The
article grapples with the problem that, while Browning repeatedly
expressed his dislike for the blending of national identities, Red
Cotton Night-Cap Country advocates immersion in the foreign culture and
values the liminal position between two cultures. This is symbolized by
the poem's setting on the coast of Normandy, a borderland between
Britain and France, and personified by the poem's central reference
to Browning's closest male friend, the French critic Joseph
Milsand. Keirstead argues that the anglophile Milsand, who is able to
strike a balance between sound faith and rationality, represents a
positive countermodel to the false cosmopolitanism of the poem's
anti-hero, Miranda. The protagonist suffers from his inability to
inhabit a liminal space and is torn apart by typically French extremes,
his fanatic Catholicism which leads him to believe in miracles and the
"soulless rationalism which finds its logical outcome in the Paris
Commune" (p. 425). The poem's addressee, Anne Thackeray, with
her vision of Normandy as peaceful and sleepy, can certainly be
interpreted as another example of false cosmopolitanism. However, it is
rather baffling to see Browning's critical view of Thackeray's
conventional, mediocre novels conflated with his comments about the
versification and effeminacy of Swinburne and Rossetti in order to
support the argument that "Browning attempts to validate homosocial
bonding as a key to cosmopolitan understanding, so long as it does not
cross over into a more threatening kind of physical indulgence" (p.
426). The article does well to relate Browning's poem to current
critical interests in national identity and space, but the effort to
read queer theory into the text seems too strained. It is undoubtedly
useful to consider Browning through the lens of new critical theories,
but not every author fits into every paradigm.
An article which offers fresh insights without recourse to new
theoretical approaches is Barry Bullen's "Browning's
'Pictor Ignotus' and Nineteenth-Century 'Christian'
Art" (Nineteenth-Century Contexts 26, no. 3 [September 2004]:
273-288), also published in a revised form in his monograph Continental
Crosscurrents (Oxford Univ. Press, 2005). Bullen makes a valuable
contribution to research into the context of Browning's painter
poems, going beyond David J. DeLaura's discovery that the poet
responded to the neo-Catholic art critic A. F. Rio. Browning agreed with
Rio that interest in the High Renaissance painters had eclipsed the
merits of the Italian pre-1500 painters, the so-called Primitives, but
for very different reasons. While Rio, whose aesthetic judgments were
determined by his religious agenda, praised the Primitives for their
spiritual purity, the Protestant Browning was attracted to their
naturalism which did not fit into the neo-Catholic concept of art but
chimed with the realism of his own poetry. Bullen explores an additional
dimension of the nineteenth-century aesthetic debate about the
Primitives, the fashion for the contemporary German Nazarene painters,
who took their inspiration from the religious paintings of the
Primitives. Bullen traces the frequent analogies which were drawn
between the two groups of painters in the writings of Browning's
acquaintances, including Anna Jameson and Richard Monckton Milnes,
arguing that "Pictor Ignotus" can be read both as a portrayal
of the Primitive Fra Bartolommeo and of the Nazarenes, especially the
prominent figure of J. F. Overbeck. To support his point, Bullen cites
parallels between the decision by Browning's speaker to sacrifice
his aesthetic standards and submit to religious conformity and the
criticism made of Overbeck's art. However, it is difficult to
establish the extent to which these similarities are a result of the
Nazarenes' debt to the Primitives rather than Browning's
conscious reference to contemporary painting, and Bullen cites no
paratextual evidence of Browning's interest in the Nazarenes.
Nevertheless, his unearthing of a lively aesthetic debate about
religious art does much to reinforce a reading of Browning's
painter monologues as interventions in the nineteenth-century debate
about the relation between (Catholic) religion and art.
Another article which touches on Browning's painter poems, but
from a completely different angle, is Lawrence J. Starzyk's
"Browning's 'Childe Roland': The Visionary
Poetic" (VN 107 [Spring 2005]: 11-18). Starzyk reads this poem as
Browning's experimental exploration of an unresolved dialectical
tension between objective and subjective poetry. This tension is
primarily manifested in the speaker's self-projection onto the
landscape and the poem's open-ended, circular structure. Starzyk
traces the origins of this opposition to the Wordsworthian desire for
self-disclosure and the poet's self-effacing ability to inhabit an
other as described by Keats. He then detects it in a number of poems
from Pauline to Men and Women. The very brief readings of "Pictor
Ignotus" and "Old Pictures in Florence" as comments on
the artist's need to combine self-expression and self-denial form
an interesting contrast with Bullen's contextual reading. Starzyk
argues, for instance, that the speaker of "Pictor Ignotus"
condemns himself to anonymity by choosing the route of self-annihilation
rather than self-expression. Starzyk rightly points out that the tension
between objective and subjective art is closely linked to
Browning's belief in the superiority of the Incomplete over
closure, a fact which accounts for the open-ended structure of
"Childe Roland." A more detailed reading of other poems such
as "Old Pictures in Florence" with its closing celebration of
the Incomplete would have supported this point. In drawing attention to
Browning's interest in the possibilities of combining objective and
subjective art, the article counterbalances the many analyses of the
poet's work which, on the basis of the "Essay on
Shelley," focus on the diametrical opposition of these two modes.
However, Starzyk seems to misread the essay on a crucial point. He
refers to "Browning's hope in the essay on Shelley that in the
future poetry may somehow represent both the objective and the
subjective tendencies" (p. 12, my italics). Browning actually
states that a combination of objective and subjective genius is the norm
in all poetry: "A mere running-in of one faculty upon the other,
is, of course, the ordinary circumstance."
My own "'Knight, Bard, Gallant': The Troubadour as a
Critique of Romanticism in Browning's Sordello" in Beyond
Arthurian Romances: The Reach of Victorian Medievalism, edited by
Lorretta M. Holloway and Jennifer A. Palmgren (Basingstoke: Palgrave,
2005), pp. 39-52, discusses related issues with reference to the text in
which Browning accomplishes his transition from egotistical
self-expression to his mature, impersonal poetics. I argue that he uses
the poem's medieval setting to stage his critique of Romanticism,
which had to a large degree shaped the nineteenth-century concept of the
Middle Ages:
This critique is developed in two related ways: firstly, in his
adaptation of the Romantic version of a medieval genre, the
narrative verse romance, which displays an attitude towards the
Middle Ages that distinguishes Browning from the nostalgic
medievalism of more popular (post-) Romantic texts; and secondly,
in his representation of Sordello, who turns out to be partly a
medieval troubadour, partly a Romantic poet, and partly a
precursor of the Renaissance. (p. 40)
To return to research into Browning's cultural context, Jude
V. Nixon's essay collection Victorian Religious Discourse: New
Directions in Criticism (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2004), which re-examines
the central role of religion in relation to Victorian national and
individual identity, contains two chapters on Browning: Suzanne
Bailey's "'Decomposing' Texts: Browning's
Poetics and Higher-Critical Parody" (pp. 117-129) and Joseph A.
Dupras' "Hearing Adventure: Giuseppe Caponsacchi,
Browning's 'Hollow Rock'" (pp. 157-173). Bailey
considers Browning in the context of mid- and late-nineteenth-century
parodies of Higher Criticism, including a precedent for his late poem
"Development" which shows that he was not alone in exploring
the dichotomy between fact and fancy in relation to the Homeric epics.
Bailey suggests that Browning's epistemological concern throughout
his career with the fading of oral testimony is derived from the Higher
Critics' interest in the vanishing of historical subjects and the
instability of texts. She offers an intriguing reading of "Jochanan
Hakkadosh," with its foregrounding of the materiality of language,
the disciple's efforts to extract wisdom from the dying Rabbi and
its tongue-in-cheek editorial note, as influenced by the Higher
Critics' emphasis on the independence of language from experience
and on the limits this imposes for interpreting a text.
Religion is not as central to Dupras' contribution to the
collection as one might expect. Instead, the chapter offers an insight
into the author's work in progress on Browning's audiovisual
poetics. Dupras proposes that the critical concern with perspective and
optics in Browning's monologues should be balanced by a
consideration of "his canon in terms of listening and deaf
spots" (p. 158). He examines the "[a]ural dimensions of
creativity and religion" (p. 159) in a poem which has attracted
many comments on textuality rather than voice, The Ring and the Book.
Focusing on Caponsacchi's monologue, he traces how hearing plays a
central role in the speaker's self-definition as priest and in his
interaction with Pompilia.
Another article which situates Browning's place within (less
orthodox) Christian discourse is Richard Lines's
"Swedenborgian Ideas in the Poetry of Elizabeth Barrett Browning
and Robert Browning" in a themed issue of the Journal of the
Swedenborg Society, edited by Stephen McNeilly and entitled Essays on
Swedenborg and Literature: In Search of the Absolute [London: Swedenborg
Society, 2004], pp. 23-43). Drawing on the Brownings' letters and
late nineteenth-century publications on the two poets' interest in
the Swedish mystic, Lines identifies the mediators of this influence and
illustrates it in the Brownings' work. Not all of the
Brownings' ideas which are attributed to Swedenborg here are
exclusive to him, but the article is to be commended for its rare focus
on Robert's response to Swedenborg and for pointing out the
importance of his Conjugal Love not just for Elizabeth's but also
for Robert's poetic representation of marriage as transcending life
on earth.
The two Brownings are also considered together in my own
"'Hardly shall I tell my joys and sorrows': Robert
Browning's Engagement with Elizabeth Barrett Browning's
Poetics" (VP 43, no. 1 [Spring 2005]: 75-98). The article examines
three poems in propria persona from Men and Women ("The
Guardian-Angel," "Old Pictures in Florence," and
"One Word More") in which Robert responds to Elizabeth's
recommendation from the courtship correspondence that he write in the
self-expressive mode. However, through tensions between the
self-expressive voice and devices from the dramatic monologue, all three
poems expose in different ways his reluctance to follow her ideal and
thus reaffirm his commitment to his impersonal, dramatic poetics.
Finally, the past year has also seen two articles on
Browning's translation of Aeschylus' Agamemnon (for the reader
who does not know Ancient Greek, probably Browning's most
inaccessible text): Will Turtle's "'The Truth of Mere
Transcript': Browning's Agamemnon" (Translation &
Literature 14, no. 2 [2005]: 196-211) and Eugenio Benitez's
"On Literal Translation: Robert Browning and the Agamemnon"
(Philosophy and Literature 28, no. 2 [October 2004]: 259-268).
Turtle's point of departure is the fact that Browning conceived the
idea to translate the play when reading about Schliemann's
excavations at Troy and proposed to his publisher to illustrate the
translation with photographs of the archaeologist's finds. Having
demonstrated that at the time both photography and archaeology had some
currency as analogies for the process of translation, Turtle suggests
that Browning's text engages with these two practices. He comments,
for instance, on Browning's "freeze-frame syntax" (p.
198) and on his attempt at quasi-photographic verisimilitude in his
representation of Ancient Greek culture. In this respect,
Browning's agenda is akin to that of the popular contemporary
ethnographic photographers who tried to preserve records of disappearing
cultures. Turtle also commends Browning for his self-conscious
foregrounding of the translator's inability to lend a voice to a
historically, geographically, and linguistically distant culture. The
article includes some interesting appreciations of Browning's
intentional ambiguities in the text which either emphasize
Aeschylus' own obscurities or play with archaic and modern meanings
of words. Of less immediate interest to Browning scholars is the article
by Benitez, who has recently translated the Agamemnon. However, the
consideration of Browning's defense of literal translation in his
preface, from the pragmatic point of view of a writer who has personal
experience of the difficulties of translating Aeschylus' text,
forms a noteworthy complement to Turtle's more scholarly approach.
Both articles whet the reader's appetite for the Oxford University
Press edition of Browning's Greek plays which is due to be
published soon.