As it is, perhaps we need more
energetictreatment than we should get with you
-- for both of us are more oppressed than ever by the exigencies
of the lengthy season, and require still more bracing air
than the
gently lulling temperature of Wales. May it be doing you,
and dear Sir Theodore, all the good you
deserve -- throwing in the share
due to us, who must forego it! With all love from us both,
ever
affectionately yours
Robert Browning.
--
* Those of Mr. Alexander Malcolm.
--
==
He did start for Italy on the following day, but had become so ill,
that he was on the point of postponing his departure.
He suffered throughout the journey as he had never suffered
on any journey before; and during his first few days at Primiero,
could only lead the life of an
invalid. He rallied, however, as usual,
under the
potent effects of quiet, fresh air, and sunshine;
and fully recovered his
normal state before
proceeding to Venice,
where the continued sense of
physical health combined with
many extraneous circumstances to
convert his proposed short stay
into a long one. A letter from the mountains, addressed to a lady
who had never been
abroad, and to whom he sometimes wrote
with more descriptive detail than to other friends,
gives a
touchingglimpse of his fresh delight in the beauties of nature,
and his tender
constantsympathy with the animal creation.
==
Primiero: Sept. 7, '88.
. . . . .
`The weather continues
exquisitelytemperate, yet sunny,
ever since the
clearing thunderstorm of which I must have told you
in my last. It is, I am more and more confirmed in believing,
the most beautiful place I was ever
resident in: far more so
than Gressoney or even St.-Pierre de Chartreuse. You would indeed delight
in
seeing the
magnificence of the mountains, -- the range on either side,
which morning and evening, in turn, transmute
literally to gold, --
I mean what I say. Their utterly bare ridges of peaks and crags of all shape,
quite naked of verdure, glow like yellow ore; and, at times,
there is a silver change, as the sun prevails or not.
`The
valley is one green luxuriance on all sides; Indian corn,
with beans, gourds, and even cabbages, filling up the interstices;
and the flowers, though not presenting any
novelty to my uninstructed eyes,
yet surely more large and
purely developed than I remember
to have seen
elsewhere. For
instance, the tiger-lilies in the garden here
must be above ten feet high, every bloom
faultless, and,
what strikes me as
peculiar, every leaf on the stalk from bottom to top
as perfect as if no
insect existed to spoil them by a notch or speck. . . .
`. . . Did I tell you we had a little
captive fox, -- the most engaging
of little vixens? To my great joy she has broken her chain and escaped,
never to be recaptured, I trust. The original wild and untameable nature
was to be
plainly discerned even in this early stage of the whelp's life:
she dug herself, with such baby feet, a huge hole, the use of which
was
evident, when, one day, she pounced
thence on a stray
turkey --
allured within reach by the fragments of fox's breakfast, -- the intruder
escaping with the loss of his tail. The creature came back one night
to
explore the old place of
captivity, -- ate some food and retired.
For myself, -- I continue
absolutely well: I do not walk much,
but for more than
amends, am in the open air all day long.'
==
No less
striking is a short
extract from a letter written in Venice
to the same friend, Miss Keep.
==
Ca' Alvise: Oct. 16, '88.
`Every morning at six, I see the sun rise; far more
wonderfully, to my mind,
than his famous
setting, which everybody glorifies. My bedroom window
commands a perfect view: the still, grey lagune, the few seagulls flying,
the islet of S. Giorgio in deep shadow, and the clouds in a long
purple rack,
behind which a sort of spirit of rose burns up till
presently all the rims
are on fire with gold, and last of all the orb sends before it
a long
column of its own
essenceapparently" target="_blank" title="ad.显然,表面上地">
apparently: so my day begins.'
==
We feel, as we read these late, and even later words,
that the lyric
imagination was renewing itself in the incipient dissolution
of other powers. It is the Browning of `Pippa Passes' who speaks in them.
He suffered less on the whole during the winter of 1888-9.
It was already
advanced when he returned to England;
and the attacks of cold and asthma were either shorter or less frequent.
He still maintained throughout the season his old social routine,
not omitting his
yearly visit, on the
anniversary of Waterloo,
to Lord Albemarle, its last surviving
veteran. He went for some days
to Oxford during the commemoration week, and had for the first,
as also last time, the pleasure of Dr. Jowett's almost
exclusive society
at his
beloved Balliol College. He proceeded with his new
volume of poems.
A short letter written to Professor Knight, June 16, and of which
the occasion speaks for itself, fitly closes the labours of his life;
for it states his view of the position and
function of
poetry,
in one brief
phrase, which might form the text to an exhaustive treatise
upon them.
==
29, De Vere Gardens, W.: June 16, 1889.
My dear Professor Knight, -- I am
delighted to hear
that there is a
likelihood of your establishing yourself in Glasgow,
and illustrating Literature as happily as you have expounded Philosophy
at St. Andrews. It is certainly the right order of things:
Philosophy first, and Poetry, which is its highest
outcome, afterward --
and much harm has been done by reversing the natural process.
How
capable you are of doing justice to the highest
philosophyembodied in
poetry, your various studies of Wordsworth prove abundantly;
and for the sake of both Literature and Philosophy I wish you success
with all my heart.
Believe me, dear Professor Knight, yours very truly,
Robert Browning.
==
But he
experienced, when the time came, more than his
habitual disinclination
for leaving home. A
distinct shrinking from the
fatigue of going to Italy
now added itself to it; for he had suffered when travelling back
in the
previous winter, almost as much as on the
outward journey,
though he attributed the
distress to a different cause: his nerves were,
he thought,
shaken by the wearing
discomforts
incidental" target="_blank" title="a.伴随的;易发生的">
incidental on a broken tooth.
He was for the first time
painfullysensitive to the
vibration of the train.
He had told his friends, both in Venice and London, that so far
as he was able to determine, he would never return to Italy.
But it was necessary he should go somewhere, and he had no
alternative plan.
For a short time in this last summer he entertained the idea
of a visit to Scotland; it had indeed
definitely shaped itself in his mind;
but an
incident,
trivial in itself, though he did not think it so,
destroyed the first
scheme, and it was then practically too late
to form another. During the second week in August the weather broke.
There could no longer be any question of the
northward journey
without even a fixed end in view. His son and daughter had taken possession
of their new home, the Palazzo Rezzonico, and were anxious
to see him and Miss Browning there; their wishes naturally had weight.
The casting vote in favour of Venice was given by a letter from Mrs. Bronson,
proposing Asolo as the
intermediate stage. She had fitted up for herself
a little summer
retreat there, and promised that her friends should,
if they joined her, be also
comfortably installed. The journey
was this time propitious. It was performed without imprudent haste,
and Mr. Browning reached Asolo un
fatigued and to all appearance well.
He saw this, his first love among Italian cities, at a season of the year
more favourable to its beauty than even that of his first visit;
yet he must himself have been surprised by the new
rapture of admiration
which it created in him, and which seemed to grow with his lengthened stay.
This state of mind was the more
striking, that new symptoms
of his
physical decline were now becoming
apparent, and were in themselves
of a depressing kind. He wrote to a friend in England,
that the
atmosphere of Asolo, far from being oppressive,
produced in him all the effects of mountain air, and he was
conscious of
difficulty of breathing
whenever he walked up hill. He also suffered,
as the season
advanced, great
inconvenience from cold.
The rooms occupied by himself and his sister were both
unprovided with fireplaces; and though the daily dinner with Mrs. Bronson
obviated the
discomfort of the evenings, there remained still
too many hours of the autumnal day in which the
impossibility of heating
their own little
apartment must have made itself unpleasantly felt.
The latter
drawback would have been averted by the fulfilment