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Title: Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of Robert Browning

Author: Robert Browning

Editor: David Widger

Release Date: March 25, 2019 [EBook #59123]

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INDEX OF THE PG WORKS OF BROWNING ***




Produced by David Widger






INDEX OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG

WORKS OF

ROBERT BROWNING


Compiled by David Widger




CONTENTS


##  INTRODUCTION TO ROBERT BROWNING

##  LIFE AND LETTERS OF ROBERT BROWNING

##  A BLOT IN THE 'SCUTCHEON

##  DRAMATIC ROMANCES

CHRISTMAS EVE

LETTERS OF BROWNING

##  SHORTER POEMS

##  MEN AND WOMEN

THE PIED PIPER OF HAMELIN

O MAY I JOIN THE CHOIR INVISIBLE!

##  SELECTIONS FROM THE POEMS AND PLAYS

A DAY WITH BROWNING

##  THE PIED PIPER OF HAMELIN AND OTHER POEMS

POMEGRANATES FROM AN ENGLISH GARDEN

##  COMPLETE POETIC AND DRAMATIC WORKS







TABLES OF CONTENTS OF VOLUMES





AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF ROBERT BROWNING’S POETRY
by Hiram Corson
CONTENTS
PREFACE.
INTRODUCTION.
I. The Spiritual Ebb and Flow exhibited in English Poetry
Popularity.
II. The Idea of Personality and of Art as an intermediate agency of Personality
1. General Remarks.
2. The Idea of Personality as embodied in Browning’s Poetry.
3. Art as an Intermediate Agency of Personality.
III. Mr. Browning’s “Obscurity”.
IV. Browning’s Verse.
V. Arguments of the Poems.
Wanting is—What?
My Star.
The Flight of the Duchess.
The Last Ride Together.
By the Fireside.
Prospice.
Amphibian.
James Lee’s Wife.
A Tale.
Confessions.
Respectability.
Home-Thoughts from Abroad.
Home-Thoughts from the Sea.
Old Pictures in Florence.
Pictor Ignotus.
Andrea del Sarto.
Fra Lippo Lippi.
A Face.
The Bishop orders his Tomb.
A Toccata of Galuppi’s.
Abt Vogler.
‘Touch him ne’er so lightly’, etc.
Memorabilia.
How it strikes a Contemporary.
“Transcendentalism”.
Apparent Failure.
Rabbi Ben Ezra.
A Grammarian’s Funeral.
An Epistle containing the Strange Medical Experience of Karshish
A Martyr’s Epitaph.
Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister.
Holy-Cross Day.
Saul.
A Death in the Desert.
POEMS.
Wanting is—What?
My Star.
The Last Ride Together.
By the Fireside.
Prospice.
Amphibian.
James Lee’s Wife.
A Tale.
Epilogue to ‘The Two Poets of Croisic’.
Confessions.
Respectability.
Home Thoughts, from Abroad.
Home Thoughts, from the Sea.
Old Pictures in Florence.
Pictor Ignotus.
Andrea del Sarto.
Fra Lippo Lippi.
A Face.
The Bishop orders his Tomb.
A Toccata of Galuppi’s.
Abt Vogler.
Memorabilia.
How it strikes a Contemporary.
“Transcendentalism”:
Apparent Failure.
Rabbi Ben Ezra.
A Grammarian’s Funeral.
An Epistle containing the Strange Medical Experience of Karshish
A Martyr’s Epitaph.
Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister.
Holy-Cross Day.
Saul.
A Death in the Desert.
A LIST OF CRITICISMS OF BROWNING’S WORKS.
Notes on the Genius of Robert Browning. By James Thomson.





LIFE AND LETTERS OF ROBERT BROWNING
by Mrs. Sutherland Orr
Second Edition


CONTENTS
LIFE AND LETTERS OF ROBERT BROWNING
Chapter 1       Origin of the Browning Family
Chapter 2       Robert Browning's Father
Chapter 3       1812-1826
Chapter 4       1826-1833
Chapter 5       1833-1835
Chapter 6       1835-1838
Chapter 7       1838-1841
Chapter 8       1841-1844
Chapter 9       1844-1849
Chapter 10      1849-1852
Chapter 11      1852-1855
Chapter 12      1855-1858
Chapter 13      1858-1861
Chapter 14      1861-1863
Chapter 15      1863-1869
Chapter 16      1869-1873
Chapter 17      1873-1878
Chapter 18      1878-1884
Chapter 19      1881-1887
Chapter 20      Constancy to Habit
Chapter 21      Marriage
Chapter 22      Illness and Death
Conclusion
Index





A BLOT IN THE 'SCUTCHEON
By Robert Browning


CONTENTS
Transcriber's comments
INTRODUCTORY NOTE
A BLOT IN THE 'SCUTCHEON
ACT I
ACT II
ACT III





DRAMATIC ROMANCES
By Robert Browning
Introduction and Notes: Charlotte Porter and Helen A. Clarke
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
INCIDENT OF THE FRENCH CAMP
THE PATRIOT
MY LAST DUCHESS
COUNT GISMOND
THE BOY AND THE ANGEL
INSTANS TYRANNUS
MESMERISM
THE GLOVE
TIME'S REVENGES
THE ENGLISHMAN IN ITALY
IN A GONDOLA
WARING
THE TWINS
A LIGHT WOMAN
THE LAST RIDE TOGETHER
THE PIED PIPER OF HAMELIN:
THE FLIGHT OF THE DUCHESS
A GRAMMARIAN'S FUNERAL,
THE HERETIC'S TRAGEDY
HOLY-CROSS DAY
PROTUS
THE STATUE AND THE BUST
PORPHYRIA'S LOVER
"CHILDE ROLAND TO THE DARK TOWER CAME."





BROWNING'S SHORTER POEMS
Selected And Edited By Franklin T. Baker


CONTENTS
       Page
LIFE OF BROWNING        vii
BROWNING AS POET        x
APPRECIATIONS   xx
CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF BROWNING'S WORKS  xxiv
BIBLIOGRAPHY

xxvii
The Pied Piper of Hamelin       1
Tray    15
Incident of the French Camp     17
"How they brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix"      19
Hervé Riel     22
Pheidippides    30
My Star 40
Evelyn Hope     41
Love among the Ruins    43
Misconceptions  47
Natural Magic   48
Apparitions     49
A Wall  50
Confessions     51
A Woman's Last Word     53
A Pretty Woman  55
Youth and Art   58
A Tale  61
Cavalier Tunes  67
Home-Thoughts, from the Sea     70
Summum Bonum    71
A Face  72
Songs from Pippa Passes 73
The Lost Leader 75
Apparent Failure        77
Fears and Scruples      80
Instans Tyrannus        82
The Patriot     85
The Boy and the Angel   87
Memorabilia     91
Why I am a Liberal      92
Prospice        93
Epilogue to "Asolando"  94
"De Gustibus—"        96
The Italian in England  98
My Last Duchess 105
The Bishop Orders his Tomb at Saint Praxed's Church     107
The Laboratory  113
Home Thoughts, from Abroad      115
Up at a Villa—Down in the City        116
A Toccata of Galuppi's  122
Abt Vogler      126
Rabbi Ben Ezra  133
A Grammarian's Funeral  143
Andrea del Sarto        149
Caliban upon Setebos    161
"Childe Roland to the Dark Tower came"  174
An Epistle      183
Saul    196
One Word More

224

NOTES

235

ILUSTRATION: Robert Browning    271





MEN AND WOMEN
By Robert Browning


CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
"TRANSCENDENTALISM: A POEM IN TWELVE BOOKS"
HOW IT STRIKES A CONTEMPORARY
ARTEMIS PROLOGIZES
AN EPISTLE CONTAINING THE STRANGE MEDICAL EXPERIENCE OF KARSHISH, THE ARAB PHYSICIAN
JOHANNES AGRICOLA IN MEDITATION
PICTOR IGNOTUS
FRA LIPPO LIPPI
ANDREA DEL SARTO
THE BISHOP ORDERS HIS TOMB AT SAINT PRAXED'S CHURCH
BISHOP BLOUGRAM'S APOLOGY
CLEON
RUDEL TO THE LADY OF TRIPOLI
ONE WORD MORE





SELECTIONS FROM THE POEMS AND PLAYS
Edited By Myra Reynolds
CONTENTS

Introduction— PAGE
   I. The Life of Browning     7
  II. The Poetry of Browning   31

Bibliography    57

Chronological Table     60

Selections from Browning—
  (The figures in parentheses refer to the pages of the Notes.)
  Songs from Paracelsus (389)  65
  Cavalier Tunes (391) 69
  The Lost Leader (391)        72
  "How They Brought the Good News" (392)       73
  The Flower's Name (393)      76
  Meeting at Night (393)       78
  Parting at Morning (393)     78
  Evelyn Hope (393)    78
  Love Among the Ruins (394)   81
  Up at a Villa—Down in the City (394)       84
  A Toccata of Galuppi's (395) 88
  Old Pictures in Florence (396)       91
  "De Gustibus—" (399)       101
  Home-Thoughts, from Abroad (399)     103
  Home-Thoughts, from the Sea (400)    104
  Saul (400)   105
  My Star (402)        126
  Two in the Campagna (403)    126
  In Three Days (403)  129
  The Guardian-Angel (403)     130
  Memorabilia (404)    132
  Incident of the French Camp (404)    133
  My Last Duchess (404)        135
  The Boy and the Angel (404)  137
  The Pied Piper of Hamelin (404)      141
  The Flight of the Duchess (405)      152
  A Grammarian's Funeral (406) 183
  "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came" (407) 189
  How It Strikes a Contemporary (409)  196
  Fra Lippo Lippi (409)        200
  Andrea Del Sarto (413)       213
  The Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed's Church (414)    222
  Cleon (416)  227
  One Word More (417)  239
  Abt Vogler (419)     247
  Rabbi Ben Ezra (422) 253
  Caliban Upon Setebos (423)   260
  May and Death (425)  271
  Prospice (425)       272
  A Face (425) 273
  O Lyric Love (425)   274
  Prologue to Pacchiarotto (425)       275
  House (426)  276
  Shop (426)   278
  Hervé Riel (426)    282
  Good to Forgive (427)        289
  "Such a Starved Bank of Moss" (427)  290
  Epilogue to the Two Poets of Croisic (427)   290
  Pheidippides (427)   295
  Muléykeh (428)      302
  Wanting Is—What? (428)     309
  Never the Time and the Place (428)   310
  The Patriot (429)    311
  Instans Tyrannus (429)       312
  The Italian in England (430) 315
  "Round Us the Wild Creatures" (431)  321
  Prologue to Asolando (431)   321
  Summum Bonum (431)   323
  Epilogue to Asolando (431)   324
  Pippa Passes (431)   325

Notes   389





THE PIED PIPER OF HAMELIN AND OTHER POEMS
By Robert Browning
CONTENTS
       PAGE
The Pied Piper of Hamelin       11
Hervé Riel     24
Cavalier Tunes  31
“How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix”  34
Through the Metidja to Abd-el-kadr      37
Incident of the French Camp     39
Clive   41
Muléykeh       59
Tray    68
A Tale  70
Gold Hair       75
Donald  82
The Glove       90
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
       PAGE
The Pied Piper of Hamelin       Frontispiece
“‘Leave to go and see my wife, whom I call the Belle Aurore’”   30
“I galloped, Dirck galloped, we galloped all three” 34
“A rider bound on bound full galloping, nor bridle drew until he reached the mound” 39
“Hair, such a wonder of flix and floss”     75
“And full in the face of its owner flung the glove” 95





THE COMPLETE POETIC AND DRAMATIC WORKS
Of Robert Browning
Cambridge Edition


TABLE OF CONTENTS
       PAGE
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH     ix
PAULINE: A FRAGMENT OF A CONFESSION     1
Sonnet: "Eyes, calm beside thee, (Lady, couldst thou know!)"    11
PARACELSUS.
I. Paracelsus aspires   12
II. Paracelsus attains  19
III. Paracelsus 25
IV. Paracelsus aspires  34
V. Paracelsus attains   40
STRAFFORD: A TRAGEDY    49
SORDELLO        74
PIPPA PASSES: A DRAMA   128
KING VICTOR AND KING CHARLES: A TRAGEDY 145
DRAMATIC LYRICS.
Cavalier Tunes.
I. Marching Along       163
II. Give a Rouse        163
III. Boot and Saddle    163
The Lost Leader 164
"How they brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix"      164
Through the Metidja to Abd-el-Kadr      165
Nationality in Drinks   166
Garden Fancies.
I. The Flower's Name    166
II. Sibrandus Schafnaburgensis  167
Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister       167
The Laboratory  168
The Confessional        169
Cristina        169
The Lost Mistress       170
Earth's Immortalities   170
Meeting at Night        170
Parting at Morning      170
Song: "Nay but you, who do not love her"        170
A Woman's Last Word     171
Evelyn Hope     171
Love among the Ruins    171
A Lovers' Quarrel       172
Up at a Villa—Down in the City        174
A Toccata of Galuppi's  175
Old Pictures in Florence        176
"De Gustibus—"        178
Home-Thoughts, from Abroad      179
Home-Thoughts, from the Sea     179
Saul    179
My Star 184
By the Fireside 185
Any Wife to Any Husband 187
Two in the Campagna     189
Misconceptions  189
A Serenade at the Villa 189
One Way of Love 190
Another Way of Love     190
A Pretty Woman  190
Respectability  191
Love in a Life  191
Life in a Love  191
In Three Days   192
In a Year       192
Women and Roses 193
Before  193
After   194
The Guardian-Angel      194
Memorabilia     195
Popularity      195
Master Hughes of Saxe-Gotha     195
THE RETURN OF THE DRUSES        197
A BLOT IN THE 'SCUTCHEON        216
COLOMBE'S BIRTHDAY      230
DRAMATIC ROMANCES.
Incident of the French Camp     251
The Patriot     251
My Last Duchess 252
Count Gismond   252
The Boy and the Angel   253
Instans Tyrannus        254
Mesmerism       255
The Glove       256
Time's Revenges 258
The Italian in England  258
The Englishman in Italy 260[vi]
In a Gondola    262
Waring  264
The Twins       266
A Light Woman   267
The Last Ride Together  267
The Pied Piper of Hamelin       268
The Flight of the Duchess       271
A Grammarian's Funeral  279
The Heretic's Tragedy   280
Holy-Cross Day  281
Protus  283
The Statue and the Bust 283
Porphyria's Lover       286
"Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came"  287
A SOUL'S TRAGEDY        289
LURIA   299
CHRISTMAS-EVE AND EASTER-DAY.
Christmas-Eve   316
Easter-Day      327
MEN AND WOMEN.
"Transcendentalism: A Poem in Twelve Books"     335
How It Strikes a Contemporary   336
Artemis Prologizes      337
An Epistle, containing the Strange Medical Experience of Karshish, the
 Arab Physician        338
Johannes Agricola in Meditation 341
Pictor Ignotus  341
Fra Lippo Lippi 342
Andrea del Sarto        346
The Bishop orders his Tomb at Saint Praxed's Church     348
Bishop Blougram's Apology       349
Cleon   358
Rudel To the Lady of Tripoli    361
One Word More   361
IN A BALCONY    364
Ben Karshook's Wisdom   372
DRAMATIS PERSONÃ?.
James Lee's Wife.
I. James Lee's Wife speaks at the Window        373
II. By the Fireside     373
III. In the Doorway     373
IV. Along the Beach     374
V. On the Cliff 374
VI. Reading a Book, under the Cliff     374
VII. Among the Rocks    375
VIII. Beside the Drawing-Board  375
IX. On Deck     376
Gold Hair: a Story of Pornic    376
The Worst of It 378
Dîs Aliter Visum; or, Le Byron de Nos Jours  379
Too Late        380
Abt Vogler, after he has been extemporizing upon the Musical Instrument
 of his Invention      382
Rabbi Ben Ezra  383
A Death in the Desert   385
Caliban upon Setebos; or, Natural Theology in the Island        392
Confessions     394
May and Death   395
Deaf and Dumb: a Group by Woolner       395
Prospice        395
Eurydice to Orpheus: a Picture by Leighton      395
Youth and Art   396
A Face  396
A Likeness      396
Mr. Sludge, "the Medium"        397
Apparent Failure        412
Epilogue        413
THE RING AND THE BOOK.
I. The Ring and the Book        414
II. Half-Rome   427
III. The Other Half-Rome        441
IV. Tertium Quid        456
V. Count Guido Franceschini     471
VI. Giuseppe Caponsacchi        489
VII. Pompilia   508
VIII. Dominus Hyacinthus de Archangelis, Pauperum Procurator    525
IX. Juris Doctor Johannes-Baptista Bottinius, Fisci et Rev. Cam. Apostol.
 Advocatus     540
X. The Pope     554
XI. Guido       572
XII. The Book and the Ring      594
Helen's Tower   601
BALAUSTION'S ADVENTURE, including a Transcript from Euripides,  602
ARISTOPHANES' APOLOGY, including a Transcript from Euripides,
 being the Last Adventure of Balaustion        628
PRINCE HOHENSTIEL-SCHWANGAU, SAVIOUR OF SOCIETY 681
FIFINE AT THE FAIR.
Prologue        701
Fifine at the Fair      702
Epilogue        735
RED COTTON NIGHT-CAP COUNTRY; OR TURF AND TOWERS        736[vii]
THE INN ALBUM   773
PACCHIAROTTO, WITH OTHER POEMS.
Prologue        802
Of Pacchiarotto, and how he worked in Distemper 802
At the "Mermaid"        807
House   808
Shop    809
Pisgah-Sights   810
Fears and Scruples      811
Natural Magic   811
Magical Nature  812
Bifurcation     812
Numpholeptos    812
Appearances     814
St. Martin's Summer     814
Herve Riel      815
A Forgiveness   817
Cenciaja        820
Filippo Baldinucci on the Privilege of Burial   823
Epilogue        827
THE AGAMEMNON OF Ã?SCHYLUS     830
LA SAISIAZ      849
THE TWO POETS OF CROISIC        859
Oh Love! Love   874
DRAMATIC IDYLS: FIRST SERIES.
Martin Relph    875
Pheidippides    877
Halbert and Hob 879
Ivan Ivanovitch 880
Tray    887
Ned Bratts      887
DRAMATIC IDYLS: SECOND SERIES.
Prologue        892
Echetlos        892
Clive   893
Muléykeh     897
Pietro of Abano 899
Doctor ——   906
Pan and Luna    909
Touch him ne'er so lightly      910
The Blind Man to the Maiden     910
Goldoni 910
JOCOSERIA.
Wanting is—What?      911
Donald  911
Solomon and Balkis      913
Cristina and Monaldeschi        914
Mary Wollstonecraft and Fuseli  916
Adam, Lilith, and Eve   916
Ixion   916
Jochanan Hakkadosh      918
Never the Time and the Place    928
Pambo   928
FERISHTAH'S FANCIES.
Prologue        929
I. The Eagle    929
II. The Melon-Seller    930
III. Shah Abbas 930
IV. The Family  932
V. The Sun      933
VI. Mihrab Shah 934
VII. A Camel-Driver     936
VIII. Two Camels        937
IX. Cherries    938
X. Plot-Culture 939
XI. A Pillar at Sebzevar        940
XII. A Bean-Stripe: also Apple-Eating   942
Epilogue        946
Rawdon Brown    947
The Founder of the Feast        947
The Names       947
Epitaph on Levi Lincoln Thaxter 947
Why I am a Liberal      948
PARLEYINGS WITH CERTAIN PEOPLE OF IMPORTANCE IN THEIR DAY.
Apollo and the Fates    948
With Bernard de Mandeville      952
With Daniel Bartoli     955
With Christopher Smart  959
With George Bubb Dodington      961
With Francis Furini     964
With Gerard de Lairesse 970
With Charles Avison     974
Fust and his Friends: an Epilogue       979
ASOLANDO: FANCIES AND FACTS.
Prologue        987
Rosny   987
Dubiety 987
Now     988
Humility        988
Poetics 988
Summum Bonum    988
A Pearl, a Girl 988
Speculative     988
White Witchcraft        989
Bad Dreams. I.  989
Bad Dreams. II. 989
Bad Dreams. III.        990
Bad Dreams. IV. 990
Inapprehensiveness      991
Which?  991
The Cardinal and the Dog        991
The Pope and the Net    992
The Bean-Feast  992
Muckle-Mouth Meg        993
Arcades Ambo    993
The Lady and the Painter        993[viii]
Ponte dell' Angelo, Venice      994
Beatrice Signorini      996
Flute-Music, with an Accompaniment      999
"Imperante Augusto natus est—"        1001
Development     1002
Rephan  1003
Reverie 1005
Epilogue        1007
APPENDIX.
I. An Essay on Shelley  1008
II. Notes and Illustrations     1014
III. A List of Mr. Browning's Poems and Dramas, arranged in the order of
first publication in book form  1023
INDEX OF FIRST LINES OF POEMS   1027
GENERAL INDEX OF TITLES 1031







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