[English Literature: Modern by G. H. Mair]@TWC D-Link bookEnglish Literature: Modern CHAPTER VIII 16/29
But as early as his second publication, _Bells and Pomegranates_, he had begun to speak for himself, and with _Men and Women_, a series of poems of amazing variety and brilliance, he placed himself unassailably in the first rank.
Like Tennyson's, his genius continued high and undimmed while life was left him.
_Men and Women_ was followed by an extraordinary narrative poem, _The Ring and the Book_, and it by several volumes of scarcely less brilliance, the last of which appeared on the very day of his death. Of the two classes into which, as we saw when we were studying Burns, creative artists can be divided, Browning belongs to that one which makes everything new for itself, and has in consequence to educate the readers by whom its work can alone be judged.
He was an innovator in nearly everything he did; he thought for himself; he wrote for himself, and in his own way.
And because he refused to follow ordinary modes of writing, he was and is still widely credited with being tortured and obscure.[7] The charge of obscurity is unfortunate because it tends to shut off from him a large class of readers for whom he has a sane and special and splendid message. [Footnote 7: The deeper causes of Browning's obscurity have been detailed in Chapter iv.
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