he owed more to his father than to anyone else in the world.
Words to this effect,
spoken in conversation with his sister,
have since, as it was right they should, found their way into print.
The more
justly will the world interpret any
incidental admission
he may ever have made, of
intellectual disagreement
between that father and himself.
When the die was cast, and young Browning was
definitely to adopt literature
as his
profession, he qualified himself for it by
reading and digesting
the whole of Johnson's Dictionary. We cannot be surprised
to hear this of one who displayed so great a
mastery of words,
and so deep a knowledge of the capacities of the English language.
Chapter 5
1833-1835
`Pauline' -- Letters to Mr. Fox -- Publication of the Poem;
chief Biographical and Literary Characteristics --
Mr. Fox's Review in the `Monthly Repository'; other Notices --
Russian Journey -- Desired
diplomatic Appointment --
Minor Poems; first Sonnet; their Mode of Appearance -- `The Trifler' --
M. de Ripert-Monclar -- `Paracelsus' -- Letters to Mr. Fox
concerning it;
its Publication -- Incidental Origin of `Paracelsus';
its inspiring Motive; its Relation to `Pauline' --
Mr. Fox's Review of it in the `Monthly Repository' --
Article in the `Examiner' by John Forster.
Before Mr. Browning had half completed his twenty-first year
he had written `Pauline, a Fragment of a Confession'.
His sister was in the secret, but this time his parents were not.
This is why his aunt,
hearing that `Robert' had `written a poem,'
volunteered the sum
requisite for its
publication. Even this first
instalment of success did not
inspire much hope in the family mind,
and Miss Browning made pencil copies of her favourite passages for the event,
which seemed only too possible, of her never
seeing the whole poem again.
It was, however, accepted by Saunders and Otley, and appeared anonymously
in 1833. Meanwhile the young author had bethought himself
of his early sympathizer, Mr. Fox, and he wrote to him as follows
(the letter is undated):
==
Dear Sir, -- Perhaps by the aid of the subjoined initials
and a little
reflection, you may
recollect an oddish sort of boy,
who had the honour of being introduced to you at Hackney some years back --
at that time a sayer of verse and a doer of it, and whose doings
you had a little
previously commended after a fashion --
(whether in
earnest or not God knows): that individual it is
who takes the liberty of addressing one whose slight
commendation then,
was more thought of than all the gun drum and
trumpet of praise would be now,
and to
submit to you a free and easy sort of thing which he wrote
some months ago `on one leg' and which comes out this week --
having either heard or dreamed that you
contribute to the `Westminster'.
Should it be found too
insignificant for cutting up, I shall no less remain,
Dear sir,
Your most
obedient servant,
R. B.
I have forgotten the main thing -- which is to beg you not to spoil
a
loophole I have kept for backing out of the thing if necessary,
`
sympathy of dear friends,' &c. &c., none of whom know anything about it.
Monday Morning; Rev. -- Fox.
==
The answer was clearly encouraging, and Mr. Browning wrote again:
==
Dear Sir, -- In
consequence of your kind
permission I send, or will send,
a dozen copies of `Pauline' and (to mitigate the infliction) Shelley's Poem --
on
account of what you mentioned this morning. It will perhaps be as well
that you let me know their safe
arrival by a line to R. B. junior,
Hanover Cottage, Southampton Street, Camberwell. You must not think me
too encroaching, if I make the getting back `Rosalind and Helen'
an excuse for
calling on you some evening -- the said `R. and H.' has,
I observe, been well thumbed and sedulously marked by an
acquaintance of mine,
but I have not time to rub out his labour of love.
I am, dear sir,
Yours very really,
R. Browning.
Camberwell: 2 o'clock.
==
At the left-hand corner of the first page of this note is written:
`The
parcel -- a "Pauline"
parcel -- is come. I send one as a witness.'
On the inner page is written:
`Impromptu on
hearing a
sermon by the Rev. T. R. --
pronounced "heavy" --
`A HEAVY
sermon! -- sure the error's great,
For not a word Tom uttered HAD ITS WEIGHT.'
A third letter, also undated, but post-marked March 29, 1833,
refers probably to the promise or
announcement of a favourable notice.
A fourth conveys Mr. Browning's thanks for the notice itself:
==
My dear Sir, -- I have just received your letter, which I am desirous
of acknowledging before any further mark of your kindness reaches me; --
I can only offer you my simple thanks -- but they are of the sort
that one can give only once or twice in a life: all things considered,
I think you are almost repaid, if you imagine what I must feel --
and it will have been worth while to have made a fool of myself,
only to have obtained a `case' which leaves my fine fellow Mandeville
at a dead lock.
As for the book -- I hope ere long to better it, and to
deserve your goodness.
In the
meantime I shall not forget the
extent to which I am, dear sir,
Your most obliged and
obedient servant
R. B.
S. & O.'s, Conduit St., Thursday m-g.
==
==
I must
intrude on your attention, my dear sir, once more than I had intended
-- but a notice like the one I have read will have its effect at all hazards.
I can only say that I am very proud to feel as
grateful as I do,
and not
altogetherhopeless of justifying, by effort at least,
your most
generous `coming forward'. Hazlitt wrote his essays,
as he somewhere tells us,
mainly to send them to some one in the country
who had `always prophesied he would be something'! --
I shall never write a line without thinking of the source of my first praise,
be assured.
I am, dear sir,
Yours most truly and obliged,
Robert Browning.
March 31, 1833.
==
Mr. Fox was then editor of a
periodical called the `Monthly Repository',
which, as his daughter, Mrs. Bridell-Fox, writes in her
graceful article
on Robert Browning, in the `Argosy' for February 1890,
he was endeavouring to raise from its
original denominational
characterinto a
first-classliterary and political
journal. The articles comprised
in the
volume for 1833 are certainly full of interest and variety,
at once more popular and more solid than those prescribed
by the present fashion of
monthly magazines. He
reviewed `Pauline' favourably
in its April number -- that is, as soon as it had appeared;
and the young poet thus received from him an introduction
to what should have been, though it probably was not,
a large
circle of
intelligent readers.
The poem was
characterized by its author, five years later,
in a
fantastic note appended to a copy of it, as `the only remaining crab
of the shapely Tree of Life in my Fool's Paradise.' This name is ill bestowed
upon a work which, however wild a fruit of Mr. Browning's genius,
contains, in its many lines of
exquisite fancy and deep pathos,
so much that is rich and sweet. It had also, to
discard metaphor,
its faults of
exaggeration and
confusion; and it is of these
that Mr. Browning was probably thinking when he wrote
his more serious apologetic
preface to its reprint in 1868.
But these faults were
partly due to his
conception of the
characterwhich he had tried to
depict; and
partly to the
inherent difficulty
of
depicting one so
complex, in a
succession of
mental and moral states,
irrespectively of the conditions of time, place, and circumstance
which were involved in them. Only a very powerful
imagination could have
inspired such an attempt. A still more
conspicuous effort of
creative genius
reveals itself at its close. The moment chosen for the `Confession'
has been that of a
supreme moral or
physical crisis.
The
exhaustionattendant on this is directly expressed
by the person who makes it, and may also be recognized in the vivid,