The Complete Works of Robert Browning: Poems, Plays, Letters & Biographies in One Edition. Robert Browning

The Complete Works of Robert Browning: Poems, Plays, Letters & Biographies in One Edition - Robert  Browning


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but yesterday that I sat by his [Mr. Elton’s] side in the green-room at the reading of Robert Browning’s beautiful drama, ‘A Blot in the ‘Scutcheon’. As a rule Mr. Macready always read the new plays. But owing, I suppose, to some press of business, the task was entrusted on this occasion to the head prompter, — a clever man in his way, but wholly unfitted to bring out, or even to understand, Mr. Browning’s meaning. Consequently, the delicate, subtle lines were twisted, perverted, and sometimes even made ridiculous in his hands. My “cruel father” [Mr. Elton] was a warm admirer of the poet. He sat writhing and indignant, and tried by gentle asides to make me see the real meaning of the verse. But somehow the mischief proved irreparable, for a few of the actors during the rehearsals chose to continue to misunderstand the text, and never took the interest in the play which they would have done had Mr. Macready read it.’

      Looking back on the first appearance of his tragedy through the widening perspectives of nearly forty years, Mr. Browning might well declare as he did in the letter to Lady Martin to which I have just referred, that her ‘perfect behaviour as a woman’ and her ‘admirable playing as an actress’ had been (or at all events were) to him ‘the one gratifying circumstance connected with it.’

      ‘“Colombe’s Birthday” is charming on the boards, clearer, more direct in action, more full of delicate surprises than one imagines it in print. With a very little cutting it could be made an excellent acting play.’

      Mr. Gosse has seen a first edition copy of it marked for acting, and alludes in his ‘Personalia’ to the greatly increased knowledge of the stage which its minute directions displayed. They told also of sad experience in the sacrifice of the poet which the play-writer so often exacts: since they included the proviso that unless a very good Valence could be found, a certain speech of his should be left out. That speech is very important to the poetic, and not less to the moral, purpose of the play: the triumph of unworldly affections. It is that in which Valence defies the platitudes so often launched against rank and power, and shows that these may be very beautiful things — in which he pleads for his rival, and against his own heart. He is the better man of the two, and Colombe has fallen genuinely in love with him. But the instincts of sovereignty are not outgrown in one day however eventful, and the young duchess has shown herself amply endowed with them. The Prince’s offer promised much, and it held still more. The time may come when she will need that crowning memory of her husband’s unselfishness and truth, not to regret what she has done.

      ‘King Victor and King Charles’ and ‘The Return of the Druses’ are both admitted by competent judges to have good qualifications for the stage; and Mr. Browning would have preferred seeing one of these acted to witnessing the revival of ‘Strafford’ or ‘A Blot in the ‘Scutcheon’, from neither of which the best amateur performance could remove the stigma of past, real or reputed, failure; and when once a friend belonging to the Browning Society told him she had been seriously occupied with the possibility of producing the Eastern play, he assented to the idea with a simplicity that was almost touching, ‘It was written for the stage,’ he said, ‘and has only one scene.’ He knew, however, that the single scene was far from obviating all the difficulties of the case, and that the Society, with its limited means, did the best it could.

      I seldom hear any allusion to a passage in ‘King Victor and King Charles’ which I think more than rivals the famous utterance of Valence, revealing as it does the same grasp of non-conventional truth, while its occasion lends itself to a far deeper recognition of the mystery, the frequent hopeless dilemma of our moral life. It is that in which Polixena, the wife of Charles, entreats him for duty’s sake to retain the crown, though he will earn, by so doing, neither the credit of a virtuous deed nor the sure, persistent consciousness of having performed one.

      Four poems of the ‘Dramatic Lyrics’ had appeared, as I have said, in the ‘Monthly Repository’. Six of those included in the ‘Dramatic Lyrics and Romances’ were first published in ‘Hood’s Magazine’ from June 1844 to April 1845, a month before Hood’s death. These poems were, ‘The Laboratory’, ‘Claret and Tokay’, ‘Garden Fancies’, ‘The Boy and the Angel’, ‘The Tomb at St. Praxed’s’, and ‘The Flight of the Duchess’. Mr. Hood’s health had given way under stress of work, and Mr. Browning with other friends thus came forward to help him. The fact deserves remembering in connection with his subsequent unbroken rule never to write for magazines. He might always have made exceptions for friendly or philanthropic objects; the appearance of ‘Herve Riel’ in the ‘Cornhill Magazine’, 1870, indeed proves that it was so. But the offer of a blank cheque would not have tempted him, for his own sake, to this concession, as he would have deemed it, of his integrity of literary purpose.

      ‘In a Gondola’ grew out of a single verse extemporized for a picture by Maclise, in what circumstances we shall hear in the poet’s own words.

      The first proof of ‘Artemis Prologuizes’ had the following note:

      Mr. Browning would have been very angry with himself if he had known he ever wrote ‘I had better’; and the punctuation of this note, as well as of every other unrevised specimen which we possess of his early writing, helps to show by what careful study of the literary art he must have acquired his subsequent mastery of it.

      ‘Cristina’ was addressed in fancy to the Spanish queen. It is to be regretted that the poem did not remain under its original heading of ‘Queen Worship’: as this gave a practical clue to the nature of the love described, and the special remoteness of its object.


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