[The Poetry Of Robert Browning by Stopford A. Brooke]@TWC D-Link bookThe Poetry Of Robert Browning CHAPTER XII 19/34
Browning, who himself was compact of boldness, who loved experiment in what was new, and who shaped what he conceived without caring for criticism, felt for these men, of whom he must have met many; and, asking himself "How they would think; what they would do; and how life would seem to them," wrote this poem.
In what way will poor human nature excuse itself for failure? How will the weakness in the man try to prove that it was power? How, having lost the joy of life, will he attempt to show that his loss is gain, his failure a success; and, being rejected of the world, approve himself within? This was a subject to please Browning; meat such as his soul loved: a nice, involved, Daedalian, labyrinthine sort of thing, a mixture of real sentiment and self-deceit; and he surrounded it with his pity for its human weakness. "I could have painted any picture that I pleased," cries this painter; "represented on the face any passion, any virtue." If he could he would have done it, or tried it.
Genius cannot hold itself in. "I have dreamed of sending forth some picture which should enchant the world (and he alludes to Cimabue's picture)-- "Bound for some great state, Or glad aspiring little burgh, it went-- Flowers cast upon the car which bore the freight, Through old streets named afresh from the event. "That would have been, had I willed it.
But mixed with the praisers there would have been cold, critical faces; judges who would press on me and mock.
And I--I could not bear it." Alas! had he had genius, no fear would have stayed his hand, no judgment of the world delayed his work. What stays a river breaking from its fountain-head? So he sank back, saying the world was not worthy of his labours.
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