[The Poetry Of Robert Browning by Stopford A. Brooke]@TWC D-Link book
The Poetry Of Robert Browning

CHAPTER II
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_THE TREATMENT OF NATURE_ It is a difficult task to explain or analyse the treatment of Nature by Browning.

It is easy enough to point out his remarkable love of her colour, his vivid painting of brief landscapes, his minute observation, his flashing way of description, his feeling for the breadth and freshness of Nature, his love of flowers and animals, and the way he has of hitting and emphasising the central point or light of a landscape.
This is easy work, but it is not so easy to capture and define the way in which his soul, when he was alone, felt with regard to the heavens, and the earth and all that therein is.

Others, like Wordsworth, have stated this plainly: Browning has nowhere defined his way.

What his intellect held the Natural World to be, in itself; what it meant for man; the relation in which it stood to God and God to it--these things are partly plain.

They have their attraction for us.


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