[Robert Browning by C. H. Herford]@TWC D-Link bookRobert Browning CHAPTER III 42/47
Courts, as the focuses of social artifice and ceremonial restraint, were for him the peculiar breeding-places of such tragedies, and in several of the most incisive of the Lyrics and Romances he appears as the champion of the love they menace.
The hapless _Last Duchess_ suffers for the largess of her kindly smiles.
The duchess of _The Flight_ and the lady of _The Glove_ successfully revolt against pretentious substitutes for love offered in love's name.
_The Flight_ is a tale, as Mrs Browning said, "with a great heart in it." Both the Gipsy-woman whose impassioned pleading we overhear, and the old Huntsman who reports it, are drawn from a domain of rough and simple humanity not very often trodden by Browning.
The genial retainer admirably mediates between the forces of the Court which he serves and those of the wild primitive race to which his world-old calling as a hunter makes him kin; his hearty, untutored speech and character envelop the story like an atmosphere, and create a presumption that heart and nature will ultimately have their way.
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