CONTENTS.


PAGE
PREFACE[vii]
PART I.
BROWNING'S LIFE AND WORK.
CHAP.
I.EARLY LIFE. PARACELSUS[1]
II.ENLARGING HORIZONS. SORDELLO[24]
III.MATURING METHODS. DRAMAS AND DRAMATIC LYRICS[37]
Introduction.
I.Dramas. From Strafford to Pippa Passes[42]
II.From the Blot in the 'Scutcheon to Luria[51]
III.The early Dramatic Lyrics and Romances[65]
IV.WEDDED LIFE IN ITALY. MEN AND WOMEN[74]
I.January 1845 to September 1846[74]
II.Society and Friendships[84]
III.Politics[88]
IV.Poems of Nature[91]
V.Poems of Art[96]
VI.Poems of Religion[110]
VII.Poems of Love[132]
V.LONDON. DRAMATIS PERSONÆ[148]
VI.THE RING AND THE BOOK[169]
VII.AFTERMATH[187]
VIII.THE LAST DECADE[220]
PART II.
BROWNING'S MIND AND ART.
IX.THE POET[237]
I. Divergent psychical tendencies of Browning—"romantic" temperament, "realist" senses—blending of their données in his imaginative activity—shifting complexion of "finite" and "infinite"[237]
II. His "realism." Plasticity, acuteness, and veracity of intellect and senses[239]
III. But his realism qualified by energetic individual preference along certain well-defined lines[245]
IV. Joy in Light and Colour[246]
V. Joy in Form. Love of abruptness, of intricacy; clefts and spikes[250]
VI. Joy in Power. Violence in imagery and description; in sounds; in words. Grotesqueness. Intensity. Catastrophic action. The pregnant moment[257]
VII. Joy in Soul. 1. Limited in Browning on the side of simple human nature; of the family; of the civic community; of myth and symbol[266]
VIII. Joy in Soul. 2. Supported by Joy in Light and Colour; in Form; in Power. 3. Extended to (a) sub-human Nature, (b) the inanimate products of Art; Relation of Browning's poetry to his interpretation of life[272]
X.THE INTERPRETER OF LIFE[287]
I. Approximation of God, Man, Nature in the thought of the early nineteenth century; how far reflected in the thought of Browning[287]
II. Antagonistic elements of Browning's intellect; resulting fluctuations of his thought. Two conceptions of Reality. Ambiguous treatment of "Matter"; of Time[290]
III. Conflicting tendencies in his conception of God[295]
IV. Conflicting tendencies in his treatment of Knowledge[297]
V. Proximate solution of these antagonisms in the conception of Love[300]
VI. Final estimate of Browning's relation to the progressive and conservative movements of his age[304]
INDEX[310]

PART I.

BROWNING'S LIFE AND WORK


BROWNING.


CHAPTER I.