and cherished by him as a religion, and that it entered as such
into the courage with which he first confronted it. It is no less true
that he directly and
increasinglycultivated happiness;
and that because of certain sufferings which had been connected with them,
he would often have refused to live his happiest days again.
It seems still harder to
associatedefective human
sympathywith his kind heart and large
dramaticimagination,
though that very
imagination was an important
factor in the case.
It
forbade the
collective and
mathematicalestimate of human suffering,
which is so much in favour with modern philanthropy,
and so
untrue a
measure for the individual life; and he
indirectly" target="_blank" title="a.间接地;迂回地">
indirectly condemns it
in `Ferishtah's Fancies' in the parable of `Bean Stripes'.
But his
dominantindividuality also barred the recognition
of any judgment or
impression" target="_blank" title="n.印刷;印象;效果">
impression, any thought or feeling,
which did not justify itself from his own point of view.
The
barrier would melt under the influence of a
sympathetic mood,
as it would
stiffen in the
atmosphere of
disagreement. It would yield,
as did in his case so many other things, to continued
indirect pressure,
whether from his love of justice, the strength of his
attachments,
or his power of
imaginativeabsorption. But he was bound
by the conditions of an
essentiallycreative nature. The subjectiveness,
if I may for once use that hackneyed word, had passed out of his work
only to root itself more
strongly in his life. He was self-centred,
as the
creative nature must
inevitably be. He appeared, for this reason,
more widely
sympathetic in his works than in his life, though even
in the former certain grounds of vicarious feeling remained untouched.
The
sympathy there displayed was
creative and obeyed its own law.
That which was demanded from him by
reality was responsive,
and implied
submission to the law of other minds.
Such
intellectual egotism is unconnected with moral selfishness,
though it often
unconsciously does its work. Were it
otherwise,
I should have passed over in silence this
aspect,
comprehensive though it is,
of Mr. Browning's
character. He was
capable of the largest self-sacrifice
and of the smallest self-denial; and would exercise either
whenever love or duty clearly
pointed the way. He would, he believed,
cheerfully have done so at the command, however
arbitrary, of a Higher Power;
he often spoke of the
absence of such
injunction, whether to
endurance or action, as the great theoretical difficulty of life
for those who, like himself, rejected or questioned
the dogmatic teachings of Christianity. This does not mean that he ignored
the
traditional moralities which have so largely taken their place.
They coincided in great
measure with his own instincts;
and few occasions could have
arisen in which they would not be to him
a sufficient guide. I may add, though this is a digression,
that he never admitted the right of
genius to defy them;
when such a right had once been claimed for it in his presence,
he rejoined quickly, `That is an error! NOBLESSE OBLIGE.'
But he had difficulty in acknowledging any
abstract law
which did not
derive from a Higher Power; and this fact may have been
at once cause and
consequence of the special conditions of his own mind.
All human or
conventionalobligation appeals finally
to the individual judgment; and in his case this could easily be obscured
by the always militant
imagination, in regard to any subject
in which his feelings were even
indirectly" target="_blank" title="a.间接地;迂回地">
indirectlyconcerned. No one saw
more
justly than he, when the object of
vision was general or remote.
Whatever entered his personal
atmosphere encountered a refracting medium
in which objects were decomposed, and a
succession of details,
each held as it were close to the eye, blocked out the larger view.
We have seen, on the other hand, that he accepted
imperfect knowledge
as part of the
discipline of experience. It detracted in no sense
from his
conviction of direct relations with the Creator. This was indeed
the central fact of his
theology, as the
absolute individual existence
had been the central fact of his metaphysics; and when he described
the fatal leap in `Red Cotton Nightcap Country' as a
frantic appeal
to the Higher Powers for the `sign' which the man's religion did not afford,
and his nature could not supply, a special
dramaticsympathy was at work
within him. The third part of the epilogue to `Dramatis Personae'
represented his own creed; though this was often accentuated
in the sense of a more personal
privilege, and a perhaps less
poetic mystery,
than the poem conveys. The Evangelical Christian and the subjective
idealist
philosopher were
curiously blended in his composition.
The
transition seems
violent from this old-world religion
to any
system of
politicsapplicable to the present day.
They were,
nevertheless, closely
allied in Mr. Browning's mind.
His
politics were, so far as they went, the practical
aspect of his religion.
Their
cardinaldoctrine was the liberty of individual growth;
removal of every
barrier of
prejudice or convention by which
it might still be checked. He had been a Radical in youth,
and probably in early
manhood; he remained, in the truest sense of the word,
a Liberal; and his position as such was defined in the
sonnet prefixed in 1886
to Mr. Andrew Reid's essay, `Why I am a Liberal', and
bearing the same name.
Its
profession of faith did not, however,
necessarily bind him
to any political party. It separated him from all the newest developments
of
so-called Liberalism. He respected the rights of property.
He was a true
patriot, hating to see his country plunged into
aggressive wars,
but tenacious of her position among the empires of the world.
He was also a
passionate Unionist; although the question
of our political relations with Ireland weighed less with him,
as it has done with so many others, than those considerations
of law and order, of
honesty and
humanity, which have been
trampled under foot in the name of Home Rule. It grieved and surprised him
to find himself on this subject at issue with so many valued friends;
and no pain of Lost Leadership was ever more angry or more intense,
than that which came to him through the defection of a great statesman
whom he had honoured and loved, from what he believed to be the right cause.
The
character of Mr. Browning's friendships reveals itself
in great
measure in even a simple
outline of his life.
His first friends of his own sex were almost
exclusively men of letters,
by taste if not by
profession; the circumstances of his entrance into society
made this a matter of course. In later years he
associated on
cordial terms
with men of very various interests and
professions;
and only writers of
conspicuous merit, whether in prose or poetry,
attracted him as such. No
intercourse was more
congenial to him
than that of the higher class of English clergymen.