Robert Browning by C. H. (Charles Harold) Herford
page 244 of 284 (85%)
page 244 of 284 (85%)
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"membraned wings So wonderful, so wide, So sun-suffused;"[120] or the cheery self-dependence of the solitary insect. "I always love those wild creatures God sets up for themselves," he wrote to Miss Barrett, "so independently, so successfully, with their strange happy minute inch of a candle, as it were, to light them." [121] [Footnote 119: _Donald_.] [Footnote 120: Some of these examples are from Mr Brooke's excellent chapter on Browning's Treatment of Nature.] [Footnote 121: _To E.B.B._, 5th Jan. 1846.] Finally, Browning's joy in soul flowed over also upon the host of lifeless things upon which "soul" itself has in any way been spent. To bear the mark of Man's art and toil, to have been hewn or moulded or built, compounded or taken to pieces, by human handiwork, was to acquire a certain romantic allurement for Browning's imagination hardly found in any other poet in the same degree. The "artificial products" of civilised and cultured life were for him not merely instruments of poetic expression but springs of poetic joy. No poetry can dispense with images from "artificial" things; Wordsworth himself does not always reject them; with most poets they are commoner, merely because they are better known; but for Browning the impress of "our meddling intellect" added exactly the charm and stimulus which complete exemption from it added for Wordsworth. His habitual imagery is fetched, not from flowers |
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