ABSTRACT

First published in 1972. Browning was a keen observer and dramatic recorder of nineteenth-century European culture; his poetry reflects a wide range of intellectual, religious and artistic issues of his day. Roy E. Gridley shows here that during the six decades of Browning’s active writing career (1832-89), his poetry is a record and an interpretation of the changing modes of thought, feeling and expression of nineteenth-century life. Browning was a ‘romantic’ who, by virtue of his realistic and often revolutionary poetry, became a ‘modern’, and had considerable influence on writers such as Yeats, Eliot and Pound. While surveying the whole of Browning’s life and work, Gridley focuses closely on the more famous poems, examining them as documents that give the general reader a deeper appreciation of the richness and diversity of life in Victorian Europe.

chapter 2|25 pages

The Eighteen-Thirties

Pauline Paracelsus Sordello

chapter 3|27 pages

The Eighteen-Forties

Bells and Pomegranites

chapter 4|35 pages

The Eighteen-Fifties

Men and Women

chapter 5|22 pages

The Eighteen-Sixties: I

Dramatis Personae

chapter 6|22 pages

The Eighteen-Sixties: II

The Ring and the Book

chapter 7|20 pages

The Eighteen-Bringing Theory Back In

chapter 8|14 pages

Browning among the Modern Poets