Browning and WordsworthFairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 2004 - 199 pages Wordsworth's poetry was far more influential upon that of Robert Browning than has hitherto been supposed. Browning read Wordsworth from an early age, and became an admirer of much of his work. In particular, Wordsworth's aesthetic beliefs about the poet's role in the world were as important to Browning's own conception of this role as those of Shelley, whose relationship with Browning has been far more extensively discussed. relationship, which can usefully be seen as a struggle on Browning's part to throw off the burden of influence imposed upon him by his Romantic predecessor. It also puts forward more historical and biographical explanations for some of the relationship's complexities, including Browning's awareness of Wordsworth's rising reputation in the late Victorian period and the responsibilities imposed upon him in his later career by his own position as a literary lion. John H. Baker teaches for the Open University and the University of Westminster in London. |
Contents
7 | |
A NOTE ON TEXTS | 9 |
WHY BROWNING AND WORDSWORTH? | 15 |
WORDSWORTH AND BROWNINGS REJECTION OF ROMANTICISM | 23 |
PARACELSUS THE PROBLEM SOLVED | 36 |
WORDSWORTH REJECTED | 73 |
WORDSWORTH ERASED | 92 |
THE BROWNINGKNIGHT CORRESPONDENCE WORDSWORTH DISNTERRED | 117 |
BROWNINGS WORDSWORTH SELECTION | 130 |
BROWNING AND THE PRELUDE | 149 |
CONLCUSION | 172 |
NOTES | 177 |
189 | |
194 | |
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Common terms and phrases
achievement aesthetic Alfred Domett antihumanistic Anxiety of Influence Arion attack on Wordsworth attempt attitude toward Wordsworth Balaustion Balaustion's Beaupuis beauty Bloom Browning and Wordsworth Browning the Revisionary Browning's Browning's attitude Browning's relationship Byron career clinamen conclusion condemned declares democratic describes desire Dion dismissed dream earlier edition Elizabeth Barrett Excursion fact Festus Fifine follow French Revolution human humanistic Ibid idea idealism idealist Juan Juan's Keats letter lines Lost Leader Lyrical Ballads mankind metaphysical mind misreading nature Nevertheless Paracelsus Paracelsus's passage Pauline Periander Philip van Artevelde poem's poetic poetry Poor Susan predecessor preface Prelude Prospectus published Quincey Quincey's radical reader realistic Recluse rejection relationship with Wordsworth Rob Roy's Grave Robert Browning romantic poets romanticism seems selection Shelley Shelley's Solitary Sordello sort soul strong poet suffering synthesis tion tism Victorian vision visionary William Knight William Wordsworth Words Wordsworth poem Wordsworth's influence Wordsworth's poetry Wordsworthian worth writing wrote