Saturday, February 16, 2019
The Difficulty of Remembering Robert Browning :: Biography Biographies Essays
The Difficulty of Remembering Robert cook It is no great revelation that people primarily either indispensableness to be remembered or forgotten, they either want to be noticed or they want to disappear. And its this binary that celebrities seem to struggle with all the time constantly absentminded to be in the spotlight and all the fame and glory that goes along with it. exactly once their integrity is compromised, they run and hide and declare their lives to be personal, fall out of view of the public eye. No one seems to contradict this binary of fame / retirement more than poet Robert Browning. Although he wanted to be known and remembered, every witting decision he made within his career seems to have prevented this. innate(p) in 1812, Robert Browning led a shielded suburban life, in the south of France (Damrosch, 1305). Both his parents were supportive and encouraging of his interests especially when, at the mount up of 14, he expressed an interes t in poetry (Damrosch, 1305). The poet that sparked Brownings interest in poetry was none other than Percy Bysshe Shelley. P.B. Shelleys poetry affected Browning greatly and even though Browning wasnt writing poetry yet at this time, Shelley was influencing him in other ways (Damrosch, 1305). Percy Shelley was a poet widely known for his positive ideas and beliefs it was this acknowledgment that most attracted Browning. Robert Brownings path to being a poet was not direct. It was because of Shelley that Browning found this path, but it would be years earlier he would dismay writing (Damrosch, 1305). Browning tried many other career paths before publishing his scratch poem, among them art, music, law and business (Damrosch, 1305). He produce his first poem anonymously at the age of 21 (Damrosch, 1305). It was titled Pauline and was poorly received (Damrosch, 1305). Publishing his first poem anonymously goes against Brownings proclivity to be well know n. Over the next ten years, Browning published various plays and poems that were as poorly received as his first poem (Damrosch, 1305). But it was in 1842 that Browning would get much deserved recognition for his work
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment