The Elon College Weekly VOL. I. New Series BURLINGTON, N. C, TUESDAY. APRIL 5, 1910. And Elon College, N. C. NO. 8 Fatheringhatn’s Studies in the Mind and Art of Robert Browning. This paper is to give, briefly, an im pression got briefly from the book bearing the above title. Fatheringham published a series of lectures in 1887 under this title,—lectures that he had prepared six years before. In I 888 a second edition, revised and en larged by two new chapters, was issued, and ten years later a third edition (the one we read) revised, nearly all the mat ter in five chapters being rewritten, and three new chapters being added. The book now contains the prefaces, one for each edition, and all interesting. The in troduction considers Browning in his rela tion to the men and thought of his time, and some observations on the influences that operated upon him in the earlier years of his literary work. As to Brown ing’s rank, Fatheringham says, " it would now, perhaps, be generally allowed that, of the poets of the Victonan age. Brown ing brought the strongest, richest and most active mind to poetry, and was for that and other reasons the keenest and most powerful poetic, force of his time,* and " in wealth and force of life and passion and thought, in variet> and ener gy of nature, and in a certain ShaKes- pearean plav, breadth, and vitality of mind, none of the Victorians have equal led him." Tennyson was the favorite poet of the Victorian age from the publi cation of the 'Poems' of 1842, and certainly from the issue of 'In Memoriam' in I 85 I. " Browning did strong and clear work as early as 1845, but not until 1870 was his quality and power as a poet broadly recognized." The first chapter is a memoir of Browning, rather interestingly told with an attempt in the end to detect the three stages of mind development, denying Mrs. Orr’s assertion that there was no mind development. Fotheringham un dertakes to show that there are three pe riods clearly enough defiend by the poe try produced in each to fix dates. The first is from 1832 to 1846, the second from I 846 to 1 869, and the third from I 869 to the poet’s death, I 889. But if there were no knowledge of the poet’s life extant nor no clue, other than inter nal evidences, of mind development, to date of the production of each poem, 1 am inclined to think Fotheringham would have a hopeless task in his classification. The other twenty chapters of the book are taken up with a study, critical, expos itory, literary and ethical, up to but not including the " Ring and the Book " nor any poems written after 1865. Chapters two and three are devoted to a criticism from the literary standpoint. The qualities of the man and of the artist are in the fact that, self-reliance and conviction are in every line of his work: the assurance of genius and of truth. " During nearly forty years the poet, in the strength of fidelity of genius, kept his aim and maintained his work." In the be ginning he was under the influence of Byron and of Shelly, and possibly of Keats. Later the influence of Greek literature and " occult Philosophy " both of which influenced " Pauline" increased as the English poets lost in influence upon him. Browning cared more for literature of fact than literature of form. This accounts, in some degree, for his obscurity and lack of polish in his verses. Unlike Ten nyson, Browning took little interest in social and political questions of his day, but his interest in human nature, which lies below social and political questions, was intense, that was his field. Of the two greatest fields in modern litera ture—nature and humanity. Browning chose, or rather found himself naturally in the latter and was content to work there, speaking through characters of history or the imaginary personages of his romances. In speaking of Browning’s obscurity and its causes, our critic says, ' some think they, [the obscurities] spring from the nature of the poetry, and certainly from Browning’s theory and practice of his art.' Such readers think all these difficulties are on the side of the poet. " It is still worth while to correct these mistakes, not only in justice to the poet, but in the hope of preparing a way of approach to him on the part of some who could read hit,' if they would, and who since tliey mij it, certainly ought, ana lose b\ not dc.ng so. There is a real objection, however, in the want of form and fluency. But genius cannot fly with its wings tied." " The ' form ' of Browning’s work, by which readers are often offended, springs from and expresses its dramatic individua lity, and its want of beauty—by which is often meant merely melody and prose —forms its dramatic realism." " It turns, we say, on the poet’s dramatic realism, and that is, perhaps, the right way to meet the objection." Browning's dramatic characters are not average minds; they frequently are persons of large views— wide visions, and what they see, if ex pressed in a realistic form the dramatic person’s understanding, the reader fails to get the thought and see the beauty until he has pondered a while on the meaning. I think Fotheringham has pretty much the idea that Browning was inspired to a certain extent, which I believe also, but he did not choose to lower the real value of his message by speaking to the gentiles in parables. As to style, " casual, harsh, and ca pricious, reckless, and grotesque as he seems, he is in his best works ifiasterly and sufficient," says Fotheringham. " He is Shakespearean in fullness, rapidity, and mastery of utterance. His style is, per haps, the most vital and natural of recent poets,—the fit medium and counterpart of his matter; with great simplicity often, great vivacity, with muscular quality and grasp, and with nothing rhetorical or ob trusive about it." Looked at from the standpoint of clas sic art, Browning’s style is not cutistic. But Its realistic ruggedness is Gothic;— Gothic art, and the hjgher art because a more sufficient expression of life than if he were classic in style. Then, to con clude the literary criticism, we may sum up the^ main ideas of the critic thus: Browning was well qualified in m.nd and soul to deal in a most vital way with most vital poetic matter,—had greater penetration and vigor than any other poet of his day. He chose to express his thought and feeling in the most natu ral way, going direct to the heart of his theme, unfettered and unhampered by conventional niceties of his art, thus be coming a law unto himself. Chapters four, five and six are exposi tory, dealing with " Pauline," " Paracel sus," and " Sordello." The critic is too much of an apologist here for me. Hav ing studied all three of these poems, and having put a whole day on " Sordello," I am not of the same opinion as Fother ingham in this one thing: that " Sordel lo " is well worth study." There are ev idences in his (Browning’s) correspond ence with Elizabeth Barrett that he thought of revising it, but I presume he found it impossible, for it is incapable of being so revised as to make a legible po em,—it would have to be re-written. Chapter seven is expository also and deals with all the other dramatic poems. Chapter eight is an exegetical and critical study of the dramatic lyrics. Chapters nine to twelve inclusive deal with the literary and ethical aspect of the subject. Browning’s poetry in its rela tion to life cannot be compassed by Matthew Arnold’s definition of literature, viz; that literature is a criticism of life. Browning’s poetry was more than a criti cism of life; it was " an expression and an interpretation of life, wise, large, and free." Browning is both broad and pow erful in his interpretation of life. So his ethical and religious teaching has a liber ality, yet a vigor of interpretation scarce ly equalled. Goodness is not in rank or degree but in quality. In the " Statue and the Bust," over which many Brown ing readers stumble, our critic sees this ethical teaching; that a negative and an indolent virtue is no virtue at all; that to keep from action on immoral grounds is Itself wrong; that the last danger and the most hopeless wrong is to falter and to conventionalize, to chill the heart, and paralyze the will." "To live is our only chance of coming right; to be dead even while we live is the greatest of wrongs both in Dante and in the Gos pels." This is likely close to Browning’s meaning but the poem teaches a hazard ous doctrine. Browning is always con crete and in this instance he is rather un fortunate in the example chosen. The religious poems and the poems on immor tality are interestingly treated by Father ingham but finding no marked dissent in my own mind from his views, I pass on to the psychological poems. Here we have observations on " Cal iban," "Bishop Blangram." Both are treated somewhat exegetically, but with no thought advanced that a careful read ing had not already brought out. A futher phychological study is in " Sludge " the medium, chapter fourteen. This and the two poems just noticed in chapter thirteen, should be classed as religious. Fatheringham is clearly right in deciding that this is a satirical poem. Though Browning represets Sludge as the speaker, yet it is Browning’s own mind expressing itself through the medium of Sludge, who was indeed a medium. If one did not know that Browning dis agreed with his wife about mediums, yet one could feel this poem to be Brown ing’s argument against them, for no apolo gist would show up his creed in such an adverse way. Here Browning is a critic, not an interpreter of life. Passing from the so called phycholog ical poems, we come to three chapters on art. Here we have, first, the poems on painting discussed, or rather explained, secondly, the poems on poets and poems, and thirdly the poems on music. Father ingham raises the question as to whether Browning really expressed the thoughts, of the artist in question, in each poem or his own thought and feeling under the inspiration of the picture, poem or music, whichever he might be treating. To my mind, he expressed his own thought as a critic of art. It was a favorite way in the eighteenth century and part of the nineteenth century for an author to get himself expressed through some long lost manuscript found and translated. Brown ing has translated h itorical characters and inidginary characters into his poems and the stamp of the translator is on all of them. The chapter on dramatic romances and ballads is expository and occasionally critical. Here Fatheringham’s superiority to Mrs. Orr, as a maker of hand-book on Brown ing is most clearly shown. In the be ginning of chapter nineteen we have a brief, concise discussion of how love poetry for love’s sake grew out of chivalry. Then follows an expository and critical treatise of Browning’s love poetry. Chapter twenty is about Browning’s humor. "Some say Browning’s humor is in his bias for the grotesque; others say it is in his realistic mode and style of art, and a few that his humor is best seen in his dramatic breadth and power, and in the fact that all he has to say of men and life is said from a dramatic point of view." Then follows an exposition of of his most humorous poems. Browning’s nature poetry is the subject of the twenty-first, and last chapter. In the following thought, Fatheringham ex presses about the whole truth, as I have seen it, regarding Browning’s nature poetry: " Quick glimpses of landscape, and rapid descriptions of natural facts, occur frequently in Browning, and they are good, though quite subordinate. In not a few of the dramnatic lyrics you find these, sometimes in a phrase only, or a line, but fresh to the life." He observes as others have done, that there is less of nature as Browning grew older. Finally we come to the epilogue, a summary of the preceding twenty-one chapters. All in all, this book is the most satisfactory study of Browning I have seen. W. P. L. 5-5-06.