ROBERT BROWNING

Previous

Robert Browning was born at Camberwell, May 7, 1812, and died at Venice, December 12, 1889. Browning's father, as his grandfather had been, was employed in the Bank of England. Mr. Browning, who was an indulgent father, decided that his son's education should be under private tutors. This lack of being educated with other boys is sometimes supposed to have been one of the causes why Browning found difficulty in expressing his thoughts clearly to other people. It was at first planned that Browning should become a lawyer, but as he had no taste for this, his father agreed to allow his son to adopt literature as a profession. When Browning had made his choice, he read Johnson's Dictionary for preparation. Pauline, his first published poem, attracted almost no attention, but Browning kept on writing, regardless of inattention. The actor, Macready, with whom he became friendly, turned Browning's attention to the writing of plays, but he was never successful as a writer for the stage. On his return from his second visit to Italy, in 1844, he read Miss Elizabeth Barrett's Lady Geraldine's Courtship and expressed so much appreciation of this poem that, on the suggestion of a common friend, he wrote to tell Miss Barrett how much he liked her work. This was the beginning of one of the famous literary love affairs of the world. Although Miss Barrett was several years older than Browning and a great invalid, they were married, against family opposition, in 1846, and went immediately to Italy. Mrs. Browning's health was now much improved, and she lived till 1861. On her death, Browning, greatly overcome, returned to England. Gradually he went more and more into society, and as his popularity as a poet increased, he became a well-known figure in public. He continued writing throughout his life. He died at his son's house in Venice in 1889.

How they brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix (Page 154)

Browning wrote concerning this poem: "There is no sort of historical foundation about Good News from Ghent. I wrote it under the bulwark of a vessel off the African coast, after I had been at sea long enough to appreciate even the fancy of a gallop on the back of a certain good horse 'York' then in my stable at home. It was written in pencil on the fly-leaf of Bartoli's Simboli, I remember." Such an incident might, of course, have happened at the "Pacification of Ghent," a treaty of union between Holland, Zealand, and southern Netherlands under William of Orange, against Philip II of Spain. The distance between Ghent and Aix as mapped out in this poem is something more than ninety miles. Do you think a horse could gallop that distance? Notice that the verse gives the effect of galloping.

[234] 10. Pique; seems to be the pommel.

[235] 14 ff. Lokeren, Boom, DÜffeld, Mecheln, Aerschot, Hasselt, Looz, Tongres, Dalhem; towns varying from seven to twenty-five miles apart on the route taken from Ghent to Aix.

[236] See Note 235 above.

[237] See Note 235 above.

[238] See Note 235 above.

[239] See Note 235 above.

[240] See Note 235 above.

[241] See Note 235 above.

[242] See Note 235 above.

[243] See Note 235 above.

[244] 46. Save Aix. Notice that this is the first we know of the purpose of this ride. Is this an advantage or a disadvantage?

Incident of the French Camp (Page 156)

Ratisbon (German Regensburg), which has been besieged seventeen times since the eighteenth century, was stormed by Napoleon, May, 1809, during his Austrian campaign. Mrs. Sutherland Orr, the biographer of Browning, says this incident actually happened, except that the hero was a man and not a boy.

[245] 5. Neck out-thrust. Notice how Browning gives the well-known attitude of Napoleon.

[246] 9. Mused. What effect has this supposed soliloquy of Napoleon?

[247] 11. Lannes; a general of Napoleon's, and the Duke of Montebello.

[248] 29. Flag-bird. What bird was on Napoleon's flag?

The Pied Piper of Hamelin (Page 158)

There are many versions of this story which Browning might have used. He is said to have used directly the account in The Wonders of the Little World; or a General History of Man, written by Nathaniel Wanley and published in 1678. This poem, however, from whatever source the story was taken, was deservedly popular long before Browning himself was. It was written to amuse, during a sickness, the son of William Macready, the most prominent English actor of his time and a close friend of Browning's.

[249] 1. Hamelin; a town near Hanover, the capital of the province of Brunswick, Prussia.

[250] 37. Guilder; a Dutch coin worth about forty cents.

[251] 68. Trump of Doom. The Archangel Gabriel was to blow his trumpet to summon the dead on the Day of Judgment.

[252] 79. Pied Piper. Pied means variegated like a magpie. Cf. piebald.

[253] 89. Cham. The Great Cham, or Khan, was the ruler of Tartary. Marco Polo, the Venetian traveller, gives an account of him. Dr. Johnson was called the Great Cham of literature.

[254] 91. Nizam; a native ruler of Hyderabad, India.

[255] 123, 126. Julius CÆsar and his Commentary. Julius CÆsar, the great Roman general and dictator, who wrote his Commentaries on his wars in Gaul and Britain.

[256] 169. Poke; pocket.

[257] 182. Stiver; a small Dutch coin.

[258] 188. Piebald. Cf. pied, line 79.

[259] 260. Needle's eye. Cf. Matthew xix. 24; Mark x. 25; Luke xviii. 25.

HervÉ Riel (Page 168)

[260]1. Hogue. Cape La Hogue, on the east side of the same peninsula as Cape La Hague, was the scene, in 1692, of the defeat of the French by the united English and Dutch fleets.

[261] 5. Saint Malo on the Rance; a town on a small island near the shore of France. The entrance to its fine harbor is very narrow and filled with rocks. At high tide there is forty-five to fifty feet of water, but at low tide this channel is dry.

[262] 30. Plymouth Sound. Plymouth is on the southwestern coast of England.

[263] 43. Pressed; forced into military or naval service.

[264] 43. Tourville; the famous French admiral, who commanded at La Hogue.

[265] 44. Croisickese; La Croisic, a small fishing village near the mouth of the Loire, which Browning often visited.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Clyx.com


Top of Page
Top of Page