Monday, August 19, 2019
The Life and Work of Robert Browning :: essays papers
The Life and Work of Robert Browning    	Robert Browning was born on May 7, 1812, in Camberwell, which is  now a part of London.  He had no real formal education so he was largely  self educated. His father was a smart man with an extensive library.  His mother was kindly, religious minded woman, who loved music and her  brilliant son.  He lived at his parents house almost until the time of his  marriage. He attended a boarding school near Camberwell and spent a  little bit of his time traveling to places like Russia and Italy.    But  he preferred to have his education at home, where he was tutored in  foreign languages, boxing, music, and horsemanship, and where he read  "omnivorously."   At the age of 14 he first discovered Percy Shelly works  and was strongly influenced by it.  After reading Shelly, He made the  decision to be an atheist and a liberal. But in a few years he grew away  from atheism and the extreme phases of his liberalism. The things he  learned from the books he read would largely influence his poems later in  his life.    	His earlier poetry was regarded with indifference and largely  misunderstood. It was not until the 1860's that he would at last gain  publicity and would even be compared with Alfred Lord Tennyson, another  very famous poet of the time. Some of his early poetry was influenced by  his unusual education. The poet also had an anxious desire to avoid  exposing himself explicitly to his readers.  The first poem he wrote  called Pauline, was written in 1883 at the age of twenty-one, but he did  not sign it because of his fear of exposing himself to the public too much.    	Since Browning did not want to expose himself too personally, he  decided to try his hand at writing plays. He was encouraged by the actor  W.C. Macready. Browning began work on his first play, Strafford, a  historical tragedy. Unfortunately, the play only lasted four nights when  it was first put on in London in 1837. For ten more years, the young  writer would continue to struggle to produce a play that would better hold  the attention of the audience, but they all remained failures. Not only  did Browning profit from this otherwise disheartening experience, but  writing the dialogue for the characters helped him explore the "dramatic  dialogue." The dramatic dialogue, "enabled him to, through imaginary  speakers, to avoid explicit autobiography and yet did not demand that  these speakers act out the story with the speed or simplifications that a  stage production demands.  					    
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