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Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning: An Annotated Bibliography for 1974
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 October 2008
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- Bibliography for 1974
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1976
References
A. PRIMARY WORKS
A74:1]Berridge, Elizabeth, ed. The Barretts at Hope End: The Early Diary of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. London: John Murray, 1974. pp. xiii + 276. ▪ Abridged and popularized edition of the diary first published as A69:5. ▪ Rev. by Claire Tomalin, New Statesman, 88 (5 July 1974), 18–19; Paul Scott, Country Life, 156 (18 July 1974), 182–83 (corrections by Scott, 5 Sept. 1974, p. 628); Elizabeth Jane Howard, Spectator, 27 July 1974, p. 118; Alethea Hayter, TLS, 6 Sept. 1974, p. 948; Blackwood's, 316 (December 1974), 570–71; Arthur Kincaid, BSN, 5 (March 1975), 29–31; Gardner B. Taplin, SIB, 3 (Spring, 1975), 141–42.Google Scholar
A74:2]Camp, James E., Kennedy, X. J., and Waldrod, Keith, eds. Pegasus Descending: A Book of the Best Bad Verse. New York: Macmillan, 1971. ▪ The Brownings are amply represented; see index.Google Scholar
A74:3]George, David. “Four New Browning Letters: Robert Browning to the Rev. James Graham of Much Cowarne.” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 61–70. ▪ The letters are dated 6 Apr. 1888, 26 Apr. 1888, 28 Jan. 1889, and 8 May 1889. Among other things, RB admits to Graham that the reference to the “great text in Galatians” in “Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister” was an error.Google Scholar
A74:4]Hart, Nathaniel I. “A Browning Letter on ‘The Poetical Works’ of 1863.” Notes and Queries, NS 21 (1974), 213–15. ▪ Browning's discussion of errors in the 1863 edition; letter to the Rev. Walter G. Wilkinson, 21 May 1864.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
A74:5]Heydon, Peter N., and Kelley, Philip, eds. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Letters to Mrs. David Ogilvy. [See A73:11.] ▪ Rev. by Choice, 11 (March 1974), 86; Geoffrey Grigson, Country Life, 157 (17 Apr. 1975), 1010; Alethea Hayter, TLS, 25 July 1975, p. 837.Google Scholar
A74:6]Hudson, Ronald. “Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Her Brother Alfred: Some Unpublished Letters.” BIS, 2 (1974), 135–60. ▪Prints 8 letters, with linking narrative.Google Scholar
A74:7]King, Roma A. Jr., ed. Complete Works of Robert Browning. ▪ Vol. 3 [see A71:8] rev. by Michael Hancher, Modern Language Review, 70 (July 1975), 610–13. Vol. 4 [see A73:15] rev. by John Woolford, BSN, 5 (July 1975), 25–34.Google Scholar
A74:8] [Peterson, William S., ed.] “Two Autobiographical Essays by Elizabeth Barrett.” BIS, 2 (1974), 119–34. ▪ The essays are “My Own Character” (1818), hitherto unpublished, and “Glimpses into My Own Life and Literary Character” (1820), previously published but newly transcribed from the manuscript.Google Scholar
A74:9]Pope, Willard B., ed. Invisible Friends. [See A72:4.] ▪ Rev. by Stanley Jones, Review of English Studies, 25 (November 1974), 501–02.Google Scholar
A74:10]Preston, Harriet W., ed. The Poetical Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. With a new Introduction by Ruth M. Adams. (Cambridge Edition.) Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1974. pp. xxii + 548. ▪ Only the Introduction is new; the rest is a reprint of the 1900 Cambridge Edition.Google Scholar
A74:11]Scheuerle, William H. “An Unpublished Browning Letter to Mary Baring.” SIB, 2 (Fall, 1974), 64–66. ▪ Letter (dated 31 Mar. 1871) is about Morte dell' Uxoricida Guido Franceschini Decapitate, a minor source for The Ring and the Book.Google Scholar
A74:12]Scudder, Horace E., ed. The Poetical Works of Robert Browning. With a new Introduction by Stange, G. Robert. (Cambridge Edition.) Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1974. pp. xix + 1032. ▪ Only the Introduction is new; the rest is a reprint of the 1895 Cambridge Edition.Google Scholar
A74:13]Secor, Robert. “Swinburne at His Lyre: A New Epigram by Browning.” SIB, 2 (Fall, 1974), 58–60. ▪ Corrected version of an epigram about Swinburne.Google Scholar
A74:14]Turner, Paul, ed. Men and Women. [See A72:5.] ▪ Rev. by J. R. Watson, YWES, 53 (1972), 324.Google Scholar
A74:15]Whitla, William. “Four More Fugitives by Robert Browning.” Notes and Queries, 21 (1974), 448–53. ▪ A supplement to A67:5.Google Scholar
A74:16]Whitla, William. “Letters of Robert Browning and His Sister to the Snellgroves.” BSN, 4 (07 1974), 13–24. ▪ One letter by RB, dated 20 July 1888; eight by Sarianna Browning.Google Scholar
B. REFERENCE AND BIBLIOGRAPHICAL WORKS AND EXHIBITIONS
B74:1] “Additions to Collection.” Armstrong Browning Library Newsletter, No. 10 (04 1974), p. 2. ▪ Covers the period April 1973–March 1974.Google Scholar
B74:2] “Additions to Collection.” Armstrong Browning Library Newsletter, No. 11 (10 1974), p. 2. ▪ Covers the period April–September 1974.Google Scholar
B74:3]Croft, Peter J.Autograph Poetry in the English Language: Facsimiles of Original Manuscripts from the Fourteenth to the Twentieth Century. 2 vols. London: Cassell, 1973. ▪ Reproduces Sonnet XIV of Sonnets from the Portuguese (II, 113) and the Epilogue to Fifine at the Fair (II, 122–23).Google Scholar
B74:4]Crowell, Norton B.A Reader's Guide to Robert Browning. [See B72:3.] ▪ Rev. by J. R. Watson, YWES, 53 (1972), 324.Google Scholar
B74:8]Freeman, Ronald E. “A Checklist of Publications (July 1973–December 1973).” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 71–77.Google Scholar
B74:9]Hardwick, Michael. A Literary Atlas and Gazetteer of the British Isles. Detroit: Gale Research, 1974. ▪ See index.Google Scholar
B74:10]Herring, Jack W. “Camberwell to Venice to Waco.” Manuscripts, 26 (Winter, 1974), 2–11. ▪ Description of the holdings of the Armstrong Browning Library. Illustrated.Google Scholar
B74:11]Hudson, Gladys W., comp. An Elizabeth Barrett Browning Concordance. [See B73:9.] ▪ Rev. by Peter P. Olevnik, LJ, 99 (15 Feb. 1974), 473; American Notes and Queries, 12 (April 1974), 124–25; Reference Services Review, 2 (April–June 1974), 33.Google Scholar
B74:12]King, Roma A. Jr., “The Ohio Browning.” Essays in Criticism, 24 (1974), 317–19. ▪ Reply to Pettigrew's unfavorable review of The Complete Works of Robert Browning (A70:8).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
B74:13]King, Roma A. Jr., “Robert Browning.” Guide to the Year's Work in Victorian Poetry and Prose, ed. Tobias, Richard C.. (Supplement to VP, 12 [Spring, 1974].) Morgantown: West Virginia Univ., 1974. (pp. 15–33) ▪ Covers the period 1966–73.Google Scholar
B74:14]King, Roma. “Robert Browning.” VP, 12 (1974), 244–52. ▪ Review of recent scholarship.Google Scholar
B74:15]Machann, Clinton. “The Wise-Wrenn Copy of Browning's Helen's Tower.'” Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 68 (1974), 432–34. ▪ The leaflet of “Helen's Tower”—allegedly an 1870 offprint—is a Wise forgery.Google Scholar
B74:16]Meredith, Michael. “Robert Browning and the Book Collector.” BSN, 4 (03 1974), 9–22. ▪ A description of some Browning first editions and of RB's publishers.Google Scholar
B74:17]Monteiro, George. “The Legitimizing of Pauline.” SIB, 2 (Fall, 1974), 56–58. ▪ Horace E. Scudder's role in the 1868 reprinting of Pauline.Google Scholar
B74:20]Peterson, William S. “Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning: An Annotated Bibliography for 1972.” SIB, 2 (1974), 181–200.Google Scholar
B74:21]Peterson, William S.Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning: An Annotated Bibliography, 1951–1970. New York: Browning Institute, 1974. pp. xii + 209. ▪ Arranged in three sections—Primary Works; Reference and Bibliographical Works; Biography, Criticism, and Miscellaneous—and fully indexed. Designed as a supplement to the Broughton, Northup, and Pearsall bibliography (B53:3).Google Scholar
B74:22] “A Reprint of the Dobell Browning Catalogue.” BIS, 2 (1974), 77–118. ▪ The catalogue (1913) supplies much information about the Browning collections not found in the better-known Sotheby catalogue.Google Scholar
B74:25]Taplin, Gardner B. “Elizabeth Barrett Browning.” VP, 12 (1974), 241–44. ▪ Review of recent scholarship.Google Scholar
C. BIOGRAPHY, CRITICISM, AND MISCELLANEOUS
C74:1]Aaron, Jonathon. “The Idea of the Novelistic Poem: A Study of Four Victorian ‘Verse-Novels’ by Clough, Tennyson, and Browning.” DAI, 35 (1974), 2928A (Yale Univ.). ▪ On The Ring and the Book.Google Scholar
C74:2]Armstrong, Isobel, ed. Robert Browning. (Writers and Their Background.) London: G. Bell, 1974. pp. xxvi + 365. ▪ John Woolford, “Sources and Resources in Browning's Early Reading” (pp. 1–46); Morse Peckham, “Browning and Romanticism” (pp. 47–76); Roger Sharrock, “Browning and History” (pp. 77–103); Philip Drew, “Browning and Philosophy” (pp. 104–41); Trevor Lloyd, “Browning and Politics” (pp. 142–67); Barbara Melchiori, “Browning in Italy” (pp. 168–83); Leonee Ormond, “Browning and Painting” (pp. 184–210); Penelope Gay, “Browning and Music” (pp. 211–30); Michael Mason, “Browning and the Dramatic Monologue” (pp. 231–66); Isobel Armstrong, “Browning and Victorian Poetry of Sexual Love” (pp. 267–98); P. J. Keating, “Robert Browning: A Reader's Guide” [survey of scholarship] (pp. 299–328); P. J. Keating, “Robert Browning: A Select Bibliography” (pp. 329–41). With a chronology and index. ▪ Rev. by Mark Roberts, TLS, 16 May 1975, p. 543; Roma A. King, Jr., VP, 13 (Summer, 1975), 151–52; Kerry Mc-Sweeney, Queen's Quarterly, 82 (Summer, 1975), 313; A. S. Byatt, BSN, 5 (December 1975), 28–32.Google Scholar
C74:3]Assad, Thomas J. “Browning's ‘Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came.’” Tulane Studies in English, 21 (1974), 67–76. ▪ A reconsideration of the traditional reading of the poem–that it is an allegory of the journey through life to death.Google Scholar
C74:4]Baetzhold, H. G.Mark Twain and John Bull: The British Connection. Bloomington: Indiana Univ. Press, 1970. ▪ Twain knew RB's poetry well and gave occasional readings from it to the Hartford Browning Club. See index.Google Scholar
C74:5]Bieman, Elizabeth. “The Ongoing Testament in Browning's ‘Saul.’” University of Toronto Quarterly, 43 (1974), 151–68. ▪ The Biblical context of the poem.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
C74:6]Bishop, Alan, and Ferns, John. “‘Art in Obedience to Laws’: Form and Meaning in Browning's ‘Abt Vogler.’” VP, 12 (1974), 25–32. ▪ Number symbolism in the poem's stanzaic form.Google Scholar
C74:7]Blackburn, Thomas. Robert Browning. [See C67:8.] ▪ Rev. by David Kwinn, LJ, 99 (1 May 1974), 1301; Laurence Lerner, Encounter, 43 (July 1974), 60–62.Google Scholar
C74:8]Bloom, Harold. “How to Read a Poem: Browning's ‘Childe Roland.’” Georgia Review, 28 (1974), 404–19. ▪ The Shelleyan influence upon the poem.Google Scholar
C74:11] “The Brownings on Radio and Television.” BSN, 4 (07 1974), 30. ▪ Three recent broadcasts.Google Scholar
C74:12]Burr, Michael A. “Browning's Note to Forster.” VP, 12 (1974), 343–49. ▪ RB's note in the “Mill” copy of Pauline was not addressed to Forster, and it emphasizes that the poem was “dramatic in principle.”Google Scholar
C74:13]Cannon, R. A. F. “Browning's Imagery: The Development of Technique.” Ph.D. thesis, Birbeck College, Univ. of London, 1972.*Google Scholar
C74:14]Carpenter, Ann. “Browning's Personal Experiences and the Dating of ‘Mr. Sludge, “The Medium.”’” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 78–79. ▪ The poem “must have been revised after Browning's return to England in November of 1861.”Google Scholar
C74:15]Carruth, Jane. Mie Bwk ov the Pied Pieper, Reetoeld. Taeken from Poeem, The Pied Pieper ov Hamelin, bie Robert Browning. London: Initial Teaching Publishers, 1964.* ▪ A phonetic alphabet version of C63:8. Illustrations by Lupatelli.Google Scholar
C74:16]Chakraborty, S. C. “The Continent in Robert Browning.” Panjab University Research Bulletin (Arts), 4 (04 1973), 35–74.* ▪ RB's interest in European culture, especially the Italian Renaissance.Google Scholar
C74:17]Columbus, Claudette K. “Fifine at the Fair: A Masque of Sexuality and Death Seeking Figures of Expression.” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 21–38. ▪ “Fifine works in deepest waters, man's deepest feelings about sex, death, and the self” (p. 29).Google Scholar
C74:18]Columbus, Claudette K. “The Ring and the Book: A Masque for the Making of Meaning.” Philological Quarterly, 53 (1974), 237–55. ▪ “The argument of this paper is that The Ring and the Book is a masque.”Google Scholar
C74:19]Cook, Eleanor. Browning's Lyrics: An Exploration, Toronto: Univ. of Toronto Press, 1974. pp. xvi + 317. ▪ An extensive study of the lyrics, with emphasis on RB's imagery and poetics. ▪ Rev. by Patricia M. Ball, BSN, 5 (March 1975), 27–28; Norton B. Crowell, SIB, 3 (Spring, 1975), 135–41; Mark Roberts, TLS, 16 May 1975, p. 543; Roma A. King, Jr., VP, 13 (Summer, 1975), 149–50.Google Scholar
C74:20]Coulling, Sidney. Matthew Arnold and His Critics: A Study of Arnold's Controversies. Athens: Ohio Univ. Press, 1974. ▪ See index.Google Scholar
C74:21]Crowder, Ashby Bland. “Browning's Case for the Elder Man.” SIB, 2 (Fall, 1974), 21–31. ▪ A sympathetic view of the Elder Man in The Inn Album. Correction by Crowder, SIB, 3 (Spring, 1975), 128.Google Scholar
C74:22]Crowder, Ashby Bland. “The Inn Album: A Record of 1875.” BIS, 2 (1974), 43–64. ▪ A survey of the poem's contemporary allusions. Illustrated.Google Scholar
C74:23]Culler, A. Dwight. “A Profile: Frederick A. Pottle.” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 100–02. ▪ On the author of Shelley and Browning: A Myth and Some Facts (C3637).Google Scholar
C74:24]DeLaura, David J. “Robert Browning the Spasmodic.” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 55–60. ▪ When and how the label “Spasmodic” was first applied to RB's poetry. See also DeLaura, “Browning the Spasmodic: An Addition,” SIB, 3 (Spring, 1975), 113–14.Google Scholar
C74:25]Eakins, R. L. “Robert Browning: The Art and Thought of a Dis senter.” D.Phil, thesis, Oxford Univ., 1972.*Google Scholar
C74:26]Faverty, Frederic E. “The Brownings and Their Contemporaries.” BIS, 2 (1974), 161–80. ▪ Review-essay on several recent collections of correspondence.Google Scholar
C74:27]Flowers, B. S. M. “Some Aspects of Browning's Relation to Modern Poetry.” Ph.D. thesis, Queen Mary College, Univ. of London, 1973.*Google Scholar
C74:28]Franklin, Stephen L. “The Dilemma of Time: Time as a Shaping Force in the Writings of Carlyle, Arnold, Browning, Dickens, and Tennyson.” DAI, 34 (1974), 5966A (Univ. of Illinois). ▪ “In The Ring and the Book, Browning presents time as a difficulty because it separates man in the temporal continuum from expressions of truth that are locked in a single moment or age.”Google Scholar
C74:29]Galinsky, G. Karl. The Heracles Theme: The Adaptations of the Hero in Literature from Homer to the Twentieth Century. Oxford: Blackwell, 1972. ▪ Discusses Aristophanes' Apology and Balaustion's Adventure; see index.Google Scholar
C74:30]Gent, Margaret. [Review of the Byam Shaw illustrations in Poems of Robert Browning, ed. Richard Garnett (1898), recently reprinted.] BSN, 4 (07 1974), 30–34.Google Scholar
C74:31]Golden, Arline. “Victorian Renascence: The Revival of the Amatory Sequence, 1850–1900.” Genre, 7 (1974), 133–47. ▪ Treats Sonnets from the Portuguese. Cf. C71:17.5.Google Scholar
C74:32]Goldfarb, Russell M. “Hiram H. Horsefall and Company: The Audience for Mr. Sludge, the Medium.” Research Studies (Washington State University), 41 (1973), 192–200. ▪ Sludge is a generalized portrait of Victorian spiritualists rather than a portrait of D. D. Home in particular.Google Scholar
C74:33]Gridley, Roy E.Browning. [See C72:21.] ▪ Rev. by J. R. Watson, YWES, 53 (1972), 324; J. B. Bullen, Notes and Queries, NS 21 (June 1974), 232–33; Kerry McSweeney, Queen's Quarterly, 82 (Summer, 1975), 314.Google Scholar
C74:34]Gross, Dalton H. “Browning's Positivist Count in Search of a Miracle: A Grim Parody in The Ring and the Book.” VP, 12 (1974), 178–80. ▪ Guido does not experience an eleventh-hour conversion. Cf. C72:.42.Google Scholar
C74:35]Guerin, Wilfred L. “Browning's ‘Cleon’: A Teilhardian View.” VP, 12 (1974), 13–23. ▪ “Cleon seems to approach such Teilhardian ideas as the increase of consciousness, the personalization of creation, love as energy, and the movement towards the Christosphere.”Google Scholar
C74:36]Hair, Donald S.Browning's Experiments with Genre. [See C72:23.] ▪ Rev. by J. R. Watson, YWES, 53 (1972), 324.; Laurence Lerner, Encounter, 43 (July 1974), 60–62; Donald P. Draper, Aberdeen University Review, 45 (Autumn, 1974), 417–19; Isobel Armstrong, Review of English Studies, NS 25 (November 1974), 487–88.Google Scholar
C74:37]Hair, Donald S. “Browning's ‘Pan and Luna’: An Experiment in Idyl.” BSN, 4 (07 1974), 3–18. ▪ The poem—an especially interesting example of the idyl form—makes use of a myth which has personal significance for RB.Google Scholar
C74:38]Hamilton, Olive. Paradise of Exiles: Tuscany and the British. London: André Deutsch, 1974. ▪ See especially Chap. 9, “The Brownings.”Google Scholar
C74:39]Harrold, William E.The Variance and the Unity. [See C73:62.] ▪ Rev. by Vincent L. Tollers, Southern Humanities Review, 9 (Spring, 1975), 218–19.Google Scholar
C74:40]Hey, A. “An Examination of the Relationship Between Theme and Image in Selected Poems of Robert Browning, with Relevant Background Material.” B.Litt. thesis, Oxford Univ., 1973.*Google Scholar
C74:41]Heydon, Peter N. “Annual Report of the President of the Browning Institute, Inc.” BIS, 2 (1974), 203–06.Google Scholar
C74:42]Honan, Park. “Robert Browning in Brittany: Ste. Marie and Le Croisic.” BSN, 4 (03 1974), 24–25. ▪ Description of RB's summer houses.Google Scholar
C74:43]Hyde, Virginia M. “The Fallible Parchment: Structure in Robert Browning's A Death in the Desert.” VP, 12 (1974), 125–35. ▪ There are actually three “Johns” in the poem; the uncertain identity of the speaker corresponds with the triune Soul mentioned in the parchment.Google Scholar
C74:44]Irvine, William, and Honan, Park. The Book, The Ring, and the Poet: A Biography of Robert Browning. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1974. pp. xi + 607. ▪ The most comprehensive and fully documented biography to date. Includes much critical analysis of the poetry. For a correction of the book's reference to RB's copy of Shelley's poems, see Richard C. Keenan, SIB, 3 (Spring, 1975), 129–30. ▪ Rev. by Kirkus Reviews, 42 (1 Jan. 1974), 37*; Richard J. Kelly, LJ, 99 (15 Jan. 1974), 139; Publishers'Weekly, 205 (28 Jan. 1974), 288; Anthony Burgess, New York Times Book Review, 24 Feb. 1974, p. 1; William S. Peterson, New Republic, 170 (9 Mar. 1974), 25–26; Phoebe Adams, Atlantic, 233 (April 1974), 120; James A. Phillips, Best Sellers, 34 (April 1974), 29–30; Booklist, 70 (15 Apr. 1974), 899; Richard Jder, New York Times, 23 Apr. 1974, p. 39; V.S, Pritchett New York Review of Books, 21 (2 May 1974), 20–21; Victor Howes, Christian Science Monitor, 29 May 1974 P. F5; Choice, 11 (June 1974), 600; Walter demons, New York Times Book Review 2 June 1974 p. 5; Virginia Quarterly Review, 50 (Summer, 1974), xcii; Roma King, VP, 12 (Autumn, 1974). 244; Richard D. Altick, VP, 12 (Autumn, 1974), 297–300; Alfred P. Klausler, Christian Century, 91 (20 Nov. 1974), 1096–97; Philip Drew, BIS, 3 (1975), 131–53; Ralph A. Bellas, Thought, 50 (March 1975), 100–02; Thomas J. Collins, Criticism, 17 (Spring, 1975), 182–86; Maurice B. Cramer, SIB, 3 (Spring, 1975), 9–31; Geoffrey Grigson, Country Life, 157 (17 Apr. 1975), 1009–10; R. C. Churchill, Contemporary Review, 226 (May 1975), 274–75; Kerry McSweeney, Queen's Quarterly, 82 (Summer, 1975), 315–17; Isobel Armstrpng VS, 19 (September 1975), 137–40; Rachel Trickett, BSN, 5 (December 1975), 26–28.Google Scholar
C74:45]Jack, Ian. Browning's Major Poetry. [See 73:75.] ▪ Rev. by Virginia Quarterly Review, 50 (Summer, 1974), lxxiv; Laurence Lerner, Encounter, 43 (July 1974), 60–62; Choice, 11 (September 1974), 942; Philip Drew, BIS, 3 (1975), 139–53; Thomas J. Collins, SIB, 3 (Spring, 1975), 143–45; Diderik Roll-Hansen, English Studies, 56 (June 1975), 268–70; Kerry Mc-Sweeney, Queen's Quarterly, 82 (Summer, 1975), 314–15.Google Scholar
C74:46]Jack, Ian. “The ‘Coming Man’ and Disraeli.” Notes and Queries, NS21 (1974), 470. ▪ A cryptic reference to Disraeli in the letters of RB and Charlotte Brontë.Google Scholar
C74:47]Jetton, Johnnie Kate. “Browning: Symbols of Belief in Five Poems.” DAI, 34 (1974), 5915–16A (Univ. of Texas). ▪ The poems are Christmas-Eve and Easter-Day, “A Death in the Desert,” “Pompilia,” and “The Pope.”Google Scholar
C74:48]Kay, Carol McG. “Henry Adams Looks at Contemporary English Poets: A Survey of the Letters of Henry Adams.” Markham Review, 2 (1971), 112–14. ▪ Brief references to the Brownings.Google Scholar
C74:49]Keenan, Richard C. “Shelley's Influence on the Poetry of Robert Browning.” DAI, 35 (1974), 3686–87A (Temple Univ.). ▪ RB never completely freed himself of Shelley's influence, even in his later poetry.Google Scholar
C74:50]Kwinn, David. “Browning's ‘Sordello’: The Problem of the Poet.” South Atlantic Bulletin, 39 (1974), 3–9. ▪ A study of the figure of the poet as portrayed in the poem.Google Scholar
C74:51]Lammers, John H. “Browning's Treatment of Natural Theology.” DAI, 34 (1974), 4210A (Auburn Univ.). ▪ “Browning believes that a factual or historical revelation is superfluous to real faith.”Google Scholar
C74:52]Landow, George P. “Some New Thackeray Letters.” English Language Notes, 10 (1973), 279–82. ▪ Prints letter from Thackeray to RB and EBB, 19 Nov. 1859.Google Scholar
C74:53]Lawson, E. LeRoy. Very Sure of God: Religious Language in the Poetry of Robert Browning. Nashville, Tenn.: Vanderbilt Univ. Press, 1974. pp. xiii + 168. ▪ Published version of C71:33. ▪ Rev. by Christian Century, 91 (22 May 1974), 569; David Kwinn, LJ, 99 (15 June 1974), 1712–13; Choice, 11 (October 1974), 1136; Mark Roberts, TLS, 25 Oct. 1974, p. 1184; W. David Shaw, VS, 18 (March 1975), 365–66; Roma A. King, Jr., VP, 13 (Summer, 1975), 149.Google Scholar
C74:54]Lilly, G. “The Poetic Craftsmanship of Robert Browning.” Ph.D. thesis, Univ. of Wales (Bangor), 1973.*Google Scholar
C74:55]Loucks, James F. “Browning's ‘Epilogue’ to Asolando: An Error in the DeVane Handbook?” SIB, 2 (Fall, 1974), 60–62. ▪ The poem is addressed to a living person, not EBB.Google Scholar
C74:56]Loucks, James F. “Browning's Grammarian and ‘Herr Buttmann.’” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 79–83. ▪ One model for the Grammarian was Philip Charles Buttmann (1764–1829), a German philologist.Google Scholar
C74:57]Loucks, James F. “‘Guido “Hope?”’: A Response to ‘Is Guido Saved?’” SIB, 2 (Fall, 1974), 37–48. ▪ Reply to C72:42.Google Scholar
C74:58]Loucks, James F. “‘Hy, Zy, Hine’ and Peter of Abano.” VP, 12 (1974), 165–69. ▪ The phrase (in “Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister”) is drawn from a medieval manual of magical formulae.Google Scholar
C74:59]Loucks, James F. “New Light on ‘My Star.’” BSN, 4 (07 1974), 25–27. ▪ The poem is about the perfect relationship between two souls, not specifically about EBB.Google Scholar
C74:60]Loucks, James F. “A Note on Browning's ‘Bishop Blougram’ and ‘The Bottle of St. Januarius.’” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 83–86. ▪ A humorous poem by “Father Prout” (F. S. Mahony) as a possible source.Google Scholar
C74:61]Loucks, James F. “‘Popularity’ and a Forgotten Browning Letter.” SIB, 2 (Fall, 1974), 62–64. ▪ The poem is about Alfred Domett rather than Keats.Google Scholar
C74:62]Macau, Carlos. “Weekend Competition.” New Statesman, 87 (1974), 935. ▪ Contributors offer new endings to “Childe Roland.”Google Scholar
C74:63]Markus, Julia. “‘Andrea del Sarto (Called “The Faultless Painter”)’ and William Page (Called ‘The American Titian’).” BIS, 2 (1974), 1–24. ▪ RB's Andrea reflects the aesthetic theories and marital situation of the American painter William Page. Illustrated.Google Scholar
C74:64]Martin, Loy D. “The Literary Styles of Robert Browning and Ezra Pound.” DAI, 35 (1974), 2947A (Univ. of Virginia). ▪ “… my study of Browning and Pound is intended as a preliminary model for a more extensive investigation of the stylistic discontinuities between the Victorian period and the early twentieth century.”Google Scholar
C74:65]Maynard, John. “Browning's Essay on Chatterton.” Notes and Queries, NS 21 (1974), 447–48. ▪ Confirming Donald Smalley's assertion that RB discovered Chatterton had done an unacknowledged paraphrase of John Hurrion's sermons.Google Scholar
C74:66]Merchant, Ramona. “Pippa's Garden.” SIB, 2 (Fall, 1974), 9–20. ▪ “Browning makes extensive use of botanical and horticultural imagery throughout the play, in conjunction with the recurring idea of the king or queen as gardener” (p. 9).Google Scholar
C74:67]Morrison, Donald J., ed. Stories and Poems by Thomas Hardy. With an Introd. by Stewart, J. I. M. and a biographical note by Gibson, James. London: Dent, 1970. ▪ Introduction briefly discusses RB's influence on Hardy (p. xxiv).Google Scholar
C74:68]Neufeld, Victor A. “Browning's ‘Saul’ in the Context of the Age.” Journal of English and Germanic Philology, 73 (1974), 48–59. ▪ The poem is visionary and didactic, and Saul is “mid-nineteenth-century man in a state of spiritual agony and despair” (p. 54).Google Scholar
C74:69]O'Sullivan, Maurice J. Jr, “Up Against the Shambles' Gate: Robert Browning and the Loss of Leaders.” Mosaic, 7 (Winter, 1974), 101–08. ▪ RB's political attitudes are confused.Google Scholar
C74:70]Pearsall, Robert B.Robert Browning. (Twayne's English Authors Series, No. 168.) New York: Twayne, 1974. pp. 193. ▪ “The purpose of the book is simply to explain. I have tried to provide a straightforward account of Browning's poetic career as a whole, to give special attention to works and issues of special interest, and to gloss with cogent events in the life of the poet” (p. 8). ▪ Rev. by David Kwinn, LJ, 99 (1 April 1974), 1039; Roma A. King, Jr., VP, 13 (Summer, 1975), 151.Google Scholar
C74:71] [Peterson, William S.] “The Browning Institute.” British Studies Monitor, 4 (1974), 32–34. ▪ Description of the Institute's activities and plans.Google Scholar
C74:72]Peterson, William S., ed. Browning Institute Studies. Vol. 2. New York: Browning Institute, 1974. pp. x + 223. ▪ The individual articles are listed separately in this bibliography. ▪ Rev. by Allan C. Dooley, SIB, 3 (Spring, 1975), 145–49; Mark Roberts, TLS, 16 May 1975, p. 543; Roma A. King, Jr., VP, 13 (Summer, 1975), 150–51.Google Scholar
C74:73]Pickering, George. Creative Malady: Illness in the Lives and Minds of Charles Darwin, Mary Baker Eddy, Sigmund Freud, Florence Nightingale, Marcel Proust, Elizabeth Barrett Browning. New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1974. ▪ Chapter on EBB (pp. 245–65) suggests that she was creative and mentally ill but that there was no relationship between the two facts.Google Scholar
C74:74] “Poet's Concern.” Light: A Journal of Spiritual Progress and Psychical Research, 92 (Autumn, 1972), 143–47.* ▪ The spirits of EBB and RB visit the author and help the latter write poetry.Google Scholar
C74:75]Poston, Lawrence III., “Browning Rearranges Browning.” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 39–54. ▪ The significance of RB's arrangements of his poems in the Poetical Works of 1863.Google Scholar
C74:76]Poston, Lawrence III., Loss and Gain: An Essay on Browning's Dramatis Personae. (Univ. of Nebraska Studies, NS No. 48.) Lincoln: Univ. of Nebraska, 1974. pp. xi + 64. ▪ A close study of the volume, which is seen as occupying a pivotal position between Men and Women and The Ring and the Book. ▪ Rev. by Ashby Bland Crowder, SIB, 3 (Spring, 1975), 134–35; Roma A. King, Jr., VP, 13 (Summer, 1975), 150.Google Scholar
C74:77]Randall, Dale B. J. “Conrad Interviews No. 4: Edward K. Titus, Jr.” Conradiana, 3, No. 1 (1970–1971), 75–80. ▪ Conrad praised RB as a great novelist (p. 77). Reprinted from New York World, 20 May 1923.Google Scholar
C74:78]Robert Browning—His Life and Poetry (film). [See C73:110.] ▪ Rev. by Arthur, Kincaid, BSN, 5 (07 1975), 22–24.Google Scholar
C74:79]Rogers, Neville. “Browning and the Clavichord.” BSN, 4 (07 1974), 27–29. ▪ RB's use of the clavichord in “A Toccata of Galuppi's.”Google Scholar
C74:80]Ross, Michael L. “Henry James' ‘Half-man’: The Legacy of Browning in ‘The Madonna of the Future.’” BIS, 2 (1974), 25–42. ▪ The influence of RB's poetry, especially “Andrea del Sarto,” upon James' story.Google Scholar
C74:81]Russo, Francine G. “Browning's ‘James Lee's Wife’: A Study in Neurotic Love.” VP, 12 (1974), 219–34. ▪ An examination of the poem's language and imagery, which convey a sense of the woman's passivity.Google Scholar
C74:82]Ryals, Clyde de L., ed. Nineteenth-Century Literary Perspectives: Essays in Honor of Lionel Stevenson. Durham, N.C.: Duke Univ. Press, 1974. ▪ “The Structural Logic of The Ring and the Book” by Boyd Litzinger (pp. 105–14) discusses the sequence of the 12 books; “Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau: Browning's ‘Ghostly Dialogue’” by Clyde de L. Ryals (pp. 115–28) attempts to show “(1) that whatever inconsistencies there are in Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau stem not from the poet's inability to control his material but from the character of the speaker himself and (2) that the poem is a product of Browning's further experimentation with the dramatic monologue and manifests his increasing awareness of the limitations of that mode.”Google Scholar
C74:83]Sansom, Clive. “Mystery of the Pied Piper” (letter). Country Life, 153 (15 02 1973), 402. ▪ On the date and genesis of the poem.Google Scholar
C74:84]Scheer, Thomas F. “Mythopoeia and the Renaissance Mind: A Reading of A Grammarian's Funeral.” Journal of Narrative Technique, 4 (1974), 119–28. ▪ “… the Grammarian's students are utlizing the occasion of their master's burial to defend the pursuit of humanistic learning in a primarily ecclesiastical age” (p. 120).Google Scholar
C74:85]Shaw, W. David. “Mystification and Mystery: Browning's ‘Pan and Luna.’” BSN, 4 (07 1974), 9–12. ▪ A close reading of the poem.Google Scholar
C74:86]Shumway, Eric B. “The Pain of Finite Hearts: A Study of Robert Browning's Love Poems.” DAI, 34 (1974), 5123–24A (Univ. of Virginia). ▪ Provides close readings of the love poems and “shows how Browning relates erotic love with spiritual love to make a total philosophy of love.”Google Scholar
C74:87]Siegchrist, Mark. “Browning's Red Cotton Night-Cap Country: The Process of Imagination.” VP, 12 (1974), 137–52. ▪ The poem “is a reconstruction of the imaginative origins of a dramatic monologue, exploring the process through which the poet—in this case actually Browning himself—can find meaning even in the most unlikely material” (p. 138).Google Scholar
C74:88]Siegchrist, Mark. “Pollyanna of Polyanthus: Clara de Millefieurs in Browning's Red Cotton Night-Cap Country” English Language Notes, 11 (1974), 283–87. ▪ The symbolic overtones of Clara's name.Google Scholar
C74:89]Sinha, A., and Das, S. K., eds. Nineteenth Century Studies: Essays Presented to Professor Amalendu Bose. Calcutta: World Press Private, 1973. ▪ K. N. Bakaya, “Browning's Predecessors in the Art of the Dramatic Monologue” (pp. 107–15); Virendra Sharma, “The Place of Browning's Dramas in the Total Context of His Poetical Works” (pp. 133–41); O. P. Govil, “Satire in Browning's Fifine at the Fair” (pp. 143–63; previously listed as C73:53). There are also references to RB in other chapters.Google Scholar
C74:90]Sirugo, Marilyn S. “Abt Vogler.” SIB, 2 (Fall, 1974), 55–56. ▪ Description of Vogler's organ.Google Scholar
C74:91]Slinn, E. Warwick. “The Judgement of Justice in ‘Ivàn Ivàno-vitch.’” BSN, 4 (03 1974), 3–9. ▪ The poem creates a sense of unfathomable mystery, for RB “has dramatized the uncertain springs of human behaviour when under stress and the fruitless efforts to judge the morality of such action” (p. 8).Google Scholar
C74:92]Sonstroem, David. “On Resisting Brother Lippo.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language, 15 (1974), 721–34. ▪The flaws in Lippo's character.Google Scholar
C74:94]Tennyson, Emily. The Letters of Emily Lady Tennyson, ed. Hoge, James A.. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1974.▪ See index.Google Scholar
C74:95]Thomas, Charles F. “Saint Jerome in ‘Fra Lippo Lippi’ and ‘Bishop Blougram's Apology’—Two Correlated Paintings.” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 86–88. ▪ RB “intends the reader to associate Correggio's painting [of St. Jerome] with Blougram's emblematic allusion to the Immaculate Conception and St. Jerome.”Google Scholar
C74:96]Timmerman, John H. “Feet of Clay: Concepts of Heroism in the Works of Carlyle, Browning, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche.” DAI, 34 (1974), 5933A (Ohio Univ.). ▪ In RB's poetry the quest for meaning “turns inward as outward forms and traditions prove valueless as guides.”Google Scholar
C74:97]Tuman, Myron C. “Frederick the Great, Romola, The Ring and the Book, and the Mid-Victorian Crisis in Historicism.” DAI, 34 (1974), 7251A (Tulane Univ.). ▪ The Ring and the Book was an attempt to “continue the original historicist tradition in a materialistic, unbelieving age.”Google Scholar
C74:98]Walsh, Thomas P. “Robert Browning: Poet, Prophet, Priest. A Reading of the Early Poems.” DAI, 34 (1974), 4222A (Univ. of Nebraska).▪“This study attempts to interpret Robert Browning's early poems in terms of his dedication to poetry.”Google Scholar
C74:99]Ward, Maisie. The Tragi-Comedy of Pen Browning. [See C72:72.] ▪ Rev. by J. R. Watson, YWES, 53 (1972), 325.Google Scholar
C74:100]Watkins, Charlotte C. “Form and Sense in Browning's The Inn Album” BIS, 2 (1974), 65–76. ▪ The poem is a daring experiment in contemporary subject matter and treats many of RB's favorite themes.Google Scholar
C74:101]Watson, J. R., ed. Browning: ‘Men and Women’and Other Poems. [See C73:134.] ▪ Rev. by Wilson G. Baroody, SIB, 2 (Fall, 1974), 91–95 (correction in SIB, 3 [Fall, 1975], 143); John Lucas, BSN, 5 (December 1975), 32–33.Google Scholar
C74:102]Wear, Richard. “Further Thoughts on Browning's Spanish Cloister.” VP, (1974), 67–70. ▪ “Hy, Zy, Hine” is a simple, spontaneous song by Brother Lawrence, which is followed by an inappropriate prayer. The speaker, a strict formalist, mocks both.Google Scholar
C74:103] “What's Become of Browning?” TLS, 22 03 1974, pp. 293–94.▪ Review-essay. Two corrections by reviewer, 12 Apr., p. 395.Google Scholar
C74:104]Whitla, William. “Sources for Browning in Byron, Blake, and Poe.” SIB, 2 (Spring, 1974), 7–16. ▪ Links these poems: “The Dance of Death” and Byron's Manfred; the Prologue to Fifine at the Fair and Blake's The Gates of Paradise; the Epilogue to Fifine at the Fair and Poe's “The Raven.”Google Scholar
C74:105]Wiggins, Genevieve E. “The Brownings and Napoleon III: A Study in Political Poetry.” DAI, 34 (1974), 7206–07A (Univ. of Tennessee). ▪ “Approximately one–fourth of the study deals with Mrs. Browning's political poetry, the remainder of the work being a close analysis of Browning's Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau.”Google Scholar
C74:106]Ziegler, Heide. “Browning's ‘The Bishop Orders His Tomb at St. Praxed's Church,’ 76–79, 98–100.” Explicator, 32 (1974), Item 45. ▪ Reply to C61:8.Google Scholar