CHESTERTON-ROBERT BROWING - (SLUDGE.)


CHAPTER VII

_THE RING AND THE BOOK_



When we have once realised the great conception of the plan of The

Ring and the Book, the studying of a single matter from nine

different stand-points, it becomes exceedingly interesting to notice

what these stand-points are; what figures Browning has selected as

voicing the essential and distinct versions of the case. One of the

ablest and most sympathetic of all the critics of Browning, Mr.

Augustine Birrell, has said in one place that the speeches of the two

advocates in The Ring and the Book will scarcely be very interesting

to the ordinary reader. However that may be, there can be little doubt

that a great number of the readers of Browning think them beside the

mark and adventitious. But it is exceedingly dangerous to say that

anything in Browning is irrelevant or unnecessary. We are apt to go on

thinking so until some mere trifle puts the matter in a new light, and

the detail that seemed meaningless springs up as almost the central

pillar of the structure. In the successive monologues of his poem,

Browning is endeavouring to depict the various strange ways in which a

fact gets itself presented to the world. In every question there are

partisans who bring cogent and convincing arguments for the right

side; there are also partisans who bring cogent and convincing

arguments for the wrong side. But over and above these, there does

exist in every great controversy a class of more or less official

partisans who are continually engaged in defending each cause by

entirely inappropriate arguments. They do not know the real good that

can be said for the good cause, nor the real good that can be said for

the bad one. They are represented by the animated, learned, eloquent,

ingenious, and entirely futile and impertinent arguments of Juris

Doctor Bottinius and Dominus Hyacinthus de Archangelis. These two men

brilliantly misrepresent, not merely each other's cause, but their own

cause. The introduction of them is one of the finest and most artistic

strokes in The Ring and the Book.

We can see the matter best by taking an imaginary parallel. Suppose

that a poet of the type of Browning lived some centuries hence and

found in some cause celebre of our day, such as the Parnell

Commission, an opportunity for a work similar in its design to The

Ring and the Book. The first monologue, which would be called

"Half-London," would be the arguments of an ordinary educated and

sensible Unionist who believed that there really was evidence that the

Nationalist movement in Ireland was rooted in crime and public panic.

The "Otherhalf-London" would be the utterance of an ordinary educated

and sensible Home Ruler, who thought that in the main Nationalism was

one distinct symptom, and crime another, of the same poisonous and

stagnant problem. The "Tertium Quid" would be some detached

intellectual, committed neither to Nationalism nor to Unionism,

possibly Mr. Bernard Shaw, who would make a very entertaining Browning

monologue. Then of course would come the speeches of the great actors

in the drama, the icy anger of Parnell, the shuffling apologies of

Pigott. But we should feel that the record was incomplete without

another touch which in practice has so much to do with the confusion

of such a question. Bottinius and Hyacinthus de Archangelis, the two

cynical professional pleaders, with their transparent assumptions and

incredible theories of the case, would be represented by two party

journalists; one of whom was ready to base his case either on the fact

that Parnell was a Socialist or an Anarchist, or an Atheist or a Roman

Catholic; and the other of whom was ready to base his case on the

theory that Lord Salisbury hated Parnell or was in league with him, or

had never heard of him, or anything else that was remote from the

world of reality. These are the kind of little touches for which we

must always be on the look-out in Browning. Even if a digression, or a

simile, or a whole scene in a play, seems to have no point or value,

let us wait a little and give it a chance. He very seldom wrote

anything that did not mean a great deal.

It is sometimes curious to notice how a critic, possessing no little

cultivation and fertility, will, in speaking of a work of art, let

fall almost accidentally some apparently trivial comment, which

reveals to us with an instantaneous and complete mental illumination

the fact that he does not, so far as that work of art is concerned, in

the smallest degree understand what he is talking about. He may have

intended to correct merely some minute detail of the work he is

studying, but that single movement is enough to blow him and all his

diplomas into the air. These are the sensations with which the true

Browningite will regard the criticism made by so many of Browning's

critics and biographers about The Ring and the Book. That criticism

was embodied by one of them in the words "the theme looked at

dispassionately is unworthy of the monument in which it is entombed

for eternity." Now this remark shows at once that the critic does not

know what The Ring and the Book means. We feel about it as we should

feel about a man who said that the plot of Tristram Shandy was not

well constructed, or that the women in Rossetti's pictures did not

look useful and industrious. A man who has missed the fact that

Tristram Shandy is a game of digressions, that the whole book is a

kind of practical joke to cheat the reader out of a story, simply has

not read Tristram Shandy at all. The man who objects to the Rossetti

pictures because they depict a sad and sensuous day-dream, objects to

their existing at all. And any one who objects to Browning writing his

huge epic round a trumpery and sordid police-case has in reality

missed the whole length and breadth of the poet's meaning. The essence

of The Ring and the Book is that it is the great epic of the

nineteenth century, because it is the great epic of the enormous

importance of small things. The supreme difference that divides The

Ring and the Book from all the great poems of similar length and

largeness of design is precisely the fact that all these are about

affairs commonly called important, and The Ring and the Book is

about an affair commonly called contemptible. Homer says, "I will show

you the relations between man and heaven as exhibited in a great

legend of love and war, which shall contain the mightiest of all

mortal warriors, and the most beautiful of all mortal women." The

author of the Book of Job says, "I will show you the relations between

man and heaven by a tale of primeval sorrows and the voice of God out

of a whirlwind." Virgil says, "I will show you the relations of man to

heaven by the tale of the origin of the greatest people and the

founding of the most wonderful city in the world." Dante says, "I will

show you the relations of man to heaven by uncovering the very

machinery of the spiritual universe, and letting you hear, as I have

heard, the roaring of the mills of God." Milton says, "I will show you

the relations of man to heaven by telling you of the very beginning of

all things, and the first shaping of the thing that is evil in the

first twilight of time." Browning says, "I will show you the relations

of man to heaven by telling you a story out of a dirty Italian book of

criminal trials from which I select one of the meanest and most

completely forgotten." Until we have realised this fundamental idea in

The Ring and the Book all criticism is misleading.

In this Browning is, of course, the supreme embodiment of his time.

The characteristic of the modern movements par excellence is the

apotheosis of the insignificant. Whether it be the school of poetry

which sees more in one cowslip or clover-top than in forests and

waterfalls, or the school of fiction which finds something

indescribably significant in the pattern of a hearth-rug, or the tint

of a man's tweed coat, the tendency is the same. Maeterlinck stricken

still and wondering by a deal door half open, or the light shining out

of a window at night; Zola filling note-books with the medical

significance of the twitching of a man's toes, or the loss of his

appetite; Whitman counting the grass and the heart-shaped leaves of

the lilac; Mr. George Gissing lingering fondly over the third-class

ticket and the dilapidated umbrella; George Meredith seeing a soul's

tragedy in a phrase at the dinner-table; Mr. Bernard Shaw filling

three pages with stage directions to describe a parlour; all these

men, different in every other particular, are alike in this, that they

have ceased to believe certain things to be important and the rest to

be unimportant. Significance is to them a wild thing that may leap

upon them from any hiding-place. They have all become terribly

impressed with and a little bit alarmed at the mysterious powers of

small things. Their difference from the old epic poets is the whole

difference between an age that fought with dragons and an age that

fights with microbes.

This tide of the importance of small things is flowing so steadily

around us upon every side to-day, that we do not sufficiently realise

that if there was one man in English literary history who might with

justice be called its fountain and origin, that man was Robert

Browning. When Browning arose, literature was entirely in the hands of

the Tennysonian poet. The Tennysonian poet does indeed mention

trivialities, but he mentions them when he wishes to speak trivially;

Browning mentions trivialities when he wishes to speak sensationally.

Now this sense of the terrible importance of detail was a sense which

may be said to have possessed Browning in the emphatic manner of a

demoniac possession. Sane as he was, this one feeling might have

driven him to a condition not far from madness. Any room that he was

sitting in glared at him with innumerable eyes and mouths gaping with

a story. There was sometimes no background and no middle distance in

his mind. A human face and the pattern on the wall behind it came

forward with equally aggressive clearness. It may be repeated, that if

ever he who had the strongest head in the world had gone mad, it would

have been through this turbulent democracy of things. If he looked at

a porcelain vase or an old hat, a cabbage, or a puppy at play, each

began to be bewitched with the spell of a kind of fairyland of

philosophers: the vase, like the jar in the Arabian Nights, to send

up a smoke of thoughts and shapes; the hat to produce souls, as a

conjuror's hat produces rabbits; the cabbage to swell and overshadow

the earth, like the Tree of Knowledge; and the puppy to go off at a

scamper along the road to the end of the world. Any one who has read

Browning's longer poems knows how constantly a simile or figure of

speech is selected, not among the large, well-recognised figures

common in poetry, but from some dusty corner of experience, and how

often it is characterised by smallness and a certain quaint exactitude

which could not have been found in any more usual example. Thus, for

instance, Prince Hohenstiel--Schwangau explains the psychological

meaning of all his restless and unscrupulous activities by comparing

them to the impulse which has just led him, even in the act of

talking, to draw a black line on the blotting-paper exactly, so as to

connect two separate blots that were already there. This queer example

is selected as the best possible instance of a certain fundamental

restlessness and desire to add a touch to things in the spirit of

man. I have no doubt whatever that Browning thought of the idea after

doing the thing himself, and sat in a philosophical trance staring at

a piece of inked blotting-paper, conscious that at that moment, and in

that insignificant act, some immemorial monster of the mind, nameless

from the beginning of the world, had risen to the surface of the

spiritual sea.

It is therefore the very essence of Browning's genius, and the very

essence of The Ring and the Book, that it should be the enormous

multiplication of a small theme. It is the extreme of idle criticism

to complain that the story is a current and sordid story, for the

whole object of the poem is to show what infinities of spiritual good

and evil a current and sordid story may contain. When once this is

realised, it explains at one stroke the innumerable facts about the

work. It explains, for example, Browning's detailed and picturesque

account of the glorious dust-bin of odds and ends for sale, out of

which he picked the printed record of the trial, and his insistence on

its cheapness, its dustiness, its yellow leaves, and its crabbed

Latin. The more soiled and dark and insignificant he can make the text

appear, the better for his ample and gigantic sermon. It explains

again the strictness with which Browning adhered to the facts of the

forgotten intrigue. He was playing the game of seeing how much was

really involved in one paltry fragment of fact. To have introduced

large quantities of fiction would not have been sportsmanlike. The

Ring and the Book therefore, to re-capitulate the view arrived at so

far, is the typical epic of our age, because it expresses the richness

of life by taking as a text a poor story. It pays to existence the

highest of all possible compliments--the great compliment which

monarchy paid to mankind--the compliment of selecting from it almost

at random.

But this is only the first half of the claim of The Ring and the

Book to be the typical epic of modern times. The second half of that

claim, the second respect in which the work is representative of all

modern development, requires somewhat more careful statement. The

Ring and the Book is of course, essentially speaking, a detective

story. Its difference from the ordinary detective story is that it

seeks to establish, not the centre of criminal guilt, but the centre

of spiritual guilt. But it has exactly the same kind of exciting

quality that a detective story has, and a very excellent quality it

is. But the element which is important, and which now requires

pointing out, is the method by which that centre of spiritual guilt

and the corresponding centre of spiritual rectitude is discovered. In

order to make clear the peculiar character of this method, it is

necessary to begin rather nearer the beginning, and to go back some

little way in literary history.

I do not know whether anybody, including the editor himself, has ever

noticed a peculiar coincidence which may be found in the arrangement

of the lyrics in Sir Francis Palgrave's Golden Treasury. However

that may be, two poems, each of them extremely well known, are placed

side by side, and their juxtaposition represents one vast revolution

in the poetical manner of looking at things. The first is Goldsmith's

almost too well known

"When lovely woman stoops to folly,

And finds too late that men betray,

What charm can soothe her melancholy?

What art can wash her guilt away?"

Immediately afterwards comes, with a sudden and thrilling change of

note, the voice of Burns:--

"Ye banks and braes o' bonnie Doon,

How can ye bloom sae fair?

How can ye chant, ye little birds,

And I sae fu' of care?

Thou'll break my heart, thou bonny bird,

That sings upon the bough,

Thou minds me of the happy days

When my fause Love was true."

A man might read those two poems a great many times without happening

to realise that they are two poems on exactly the same subject--the

subject of a trusting woman deserted by a man. And the whole

difference--the difference struck by the very first note of the voice

of any one who reads them--is this fundamental difference, that

Goldsmith's words are spoken about a certain situation, and Burns's

words are spoken in that situation.

In the transition from one of these lyrics to the other, we have a

vital change in the conception of the functions of the poet; a change

of which Burns was in many ways the beginning, of which Browning, in a

manner that we shall see presently, was the culmination.

Goldsmith writes fully and accurately in the tradition of the old

historic idea of what a poet was. The poet, the vates, was the

supreme and absolute critic of human existence, the chorus in the

human drama; he was, to employ two words, which when analysed are the

same word, either a spectator or a seer. He took a situation, such as

the situation of a woman deserted by a man before-mentioned, and he

gave, as Goldsmith gives, his own personal and definite decision upon

it, entirely based upon general principles, and entirely from the

outside. Then, as in the case of The Golden Treasury, he has no

sooner given judgment than there comes a bitter and confounding cry

out of the very heart of the situation itself, which tells us things

which would have been quite left out of account by the poet of the

general rule. No one, for example, but a person who knew something of

the inside of agony would have introduced that touch of the rage of

the mourner against the chattering frivolity of nature, "Thou'll break

my heart, thou bonny bird." We find and could find no such touch in

Goldsmith. We have to arrive at the conclusion therefore, that the

vates or poet in his absolute capacity is defied and overthrown by

this new method of what may be called the songs of experience.

Now Browning, as he appears in The Ring and the Book, represents the

attempt to discover, not the truth in the sense that Goldsmith states

it, but the larger truth which is made up of all the emotional

experiences, such as that rendered by Burns. Browning, like Goldsmith,

seeks ultimately to be just and impartial, but he does it by

endeavouring to feel acutely every kind of partiality. Goldsmith

stands apart from all the passions of the case, and Browning includes

them all. If Browning were endeavouring to do strict justice in a case

like that of the deserted lady by the banks of Doon, he would not

touch or modify in the smallest particular the song as Burns sang it,

but he would write other songs, perhaps equally pathetic. A lyric or a

soliloquy would convince us suddenly by the mere pulse of its

language, that there was some pathos in the other actors in the drama;

some pathos, for example, in a weak man, conscious that in a

passionate ignorance of life he had thrown away his power of love,

lacking the moral courage to throw his prospects after it. We should

be reminded again that there was some pathos in the position, let us

say, of the seducer's mother, who had built all her hopes upon

developments which a mesalliance would overthrow, or in the position

of some rival lover, stricken to the ground with the tragedy in which

he had not even the miserable comfort of a locus standi. All these

characters in the story, Browning would realise from their own

emotional point of view before he gave judgment. The poet in his

ancient office held a kind of terrestrial day of judgment, and gave

men halters and haloes; Browning gives men neither halter nor halo, he

gives them voices. This is indeed the most bountiful of all the

functions of the poet, that he gives men words, for which men from the

beginning of the world have starved more than for bread.

Here then we have the second great respect in which The Ring and the

Book is the great epic of the age. It is the great epic of the age,

because it is the expression of the belief, it might almost be said,

of the discovery, that no man ever lived upon this earth without

possessing a point of view. No one ever lived who had not a little

more to say for himself than any formal system of justice was likely

to say for him. It is scarcely necessary to point out how entirely the

application of this principle would revolutionise the old heroic

epic, in which the poet decided absolutely the moral relations and

moral value of the characters. Suppose, for example, that Homer had

written the Odyssey on the principle of The Ring and the Book, how

disturbing, how weird an experience it would be to read the story from

the point of view of Antinous! Without contradicting a single material

fact, without telling a single deliberate lie, the narrative would so

change the whole world around us, that we should scarcely know we were

dealing with the same place and people. The calm face of Penelope

would, it may be, begin to grow meaner before our eyes, like a face

changing in a dream. She would begin to appear as a fickle and selfish

woman, passing falsely as a widow, and playing a double game between

the attentions of foolish but honourable young men, and the fitful

appearances of a wandering and good-for-nothing sailor-husband; a man

prepared to act that most well-worn of melodramatic roles, the

conjugal bully and blackmailer, the man who uses marital rights as an

instrument for the worse kind of wrongs. Or, again, if we had the

story of the fall of King Arthur told from the stand-point of Mordred,

it would only be a matter of a word or two; in a turn, in the

twinkling of an eye, we should find ourselves sympathising with the

efforts of an earnest young man to frustrate the profligacies of

high-placed paladins like Lancelot and Tristram, and ultimately

discovering, with deep regret but unshaken moral courage, that there

was no way to frustrate them, except by overthrowing the cold and

priggish and incapable egotist who ruled the country, and the whole

artificial and bombastic schemes which bred these moral evils. It

might be that in spite of this new view of the case, it would

ultimately appear that Ulysses was really right and Arthur was really

right, just as Browning makes it ultimately appear that Pompilia was

really right. But any one can see the enormous difference in scope and

difficulty between the old epic which told the whole story from one

man's point of view, and the new epic which cannot come to its

conclusion, until it has digested and assimilated views as paradoxical

and disturbing as our imaginary defence of Antinous and apologia of

Mordred.

One of the most important steps ever taken in the history of the world

is this step, with all its various aspects, literary, political, and

social, which is represented by The Ring and the Book. It is the

step of deciding, in the face of many serious dangers and

disadvantages, to let everybody talk. The poet of the old epic is the

poet who had learnt to speak; Browning in the new epic is the poet who

has learnt to listen. This listening to truth and error, to heretics,

to fools, to intellectual bullies, to desperate partisans, to mere

chatterers, to systematic poisoners of the mind, is the hardest lesson

that humanity has ever been set to learn. The Ring and the Book is

the embodiment of this terrible magnanimity and patience. It is the

epic of free speech.

Free speech is an idea which has at present all the unpopularity of a

truism; so that we tend to forget that it was not so very long ago

that it had the more practical unpopularity which attaches to a new

truth. Ingratitude is surely the chief of the intellectual sins of

man. He takes his political benefits for granted, just as he takes

the skies and the seasons for granted. He considers the calm of a city

street a thing as inevitable as the calm of a forest clearing, whereas

it is only kept in peace by a sustained stretch and effort similar to

that which keeps up a battle or a fencing match. Just as we forget

where we stand in relation to natural phenomena, so we forget it in

relation to social phenomena. We forget that the earth is a star, and

we forget that free speech is a paradox.

It is not by any means self-evident upon the face of it that an

institution like the liberty of speech is right or just. It is not

natural or obvious to let a man utter follies and abominations which

you believe to be bad for mankind any more than it is natural or

obvious to let a man dig up a part of the public road, or infect half

a town with typhoid fever. The theory of free speech, that truth is so

much larger and stranger and more many-sided than we know of, that it

is very much better at all costs to hear every one's account of it, is

a theory which has been justified upon the whole by experiment, but

which remains a very daring and even a very surprising theory. It is

really one of the great discoveries of the modern time; but, once

admitted, it is a principle that does not merely affect politics, but

philosophy, ethics, and finally poetry.

Browning was upon the whole the first poet to apply the principle to

poetry. He perceived that if we wish to tell the truth about a human

drama, we must not tell it merely like a melodrama, in which the

villain is villainous and the comic man is comic. He saw that the

truth had not been told until he had seen in the villain the pure and

disinterested gentleman that most villains firmly believe themselves

to be, or until he had taken the comic man as seriously as it is the

custom of comic men to take themselves. And in this Browning is beyond

all question the founder of the most modern school of poetry.

Everything that was profound, everything, indeed, that was tolerable

in the aesthetes of 1880, and the decadent of 1890, has its ultimate

source in Browning's great conception that every one's point of view

is interesting, even if it be a jaundiced or a blood-shot point of

view. He is at one with the decadents, in holding that it is

emphatically profitable, that it is emphatically creditable, to know

something of the grounds of the happiness of a thoroughly bad man.

Since his time we have indeed been somewhat over-satisfied with the

moods of the burglar, and the pensive lyrics of the receiver of stolen

goods. But Browning, united with the decadents on this point, of the

value of every human testimony, is divided from them sharply and by a

chasm in another equally important point. He held that it is necessary

to listen to all sides of a question in order to discover the truth of

it. But he held that there was a truth to discover. He held that

justice was a mystery, but not, like the decadents, that justice was a

delusion. He held, in other words, the true Browning doctrine, that in

a dispute every one was to a certain extent right; not the decadent

doctrine that in so mad a place as the world, every one must be by the

nature of things wrong.

Browning's conception of the Universe can hardly be better expressed

than in the old and pregnant fable about the five blind men who went

to visit an elephant. One of them seized its trunk, and asserted that

an elephant was a kind of serpent; another embraced its leg, and was

ready to die for the belief that an elephant was a kind of tree. In

the same way to the man who leaned against its side it was a wall; to

the man who had hold of its tail a rope, and to the man who ran upon

its tusk a particularly unpleasant kind of spear. This, as I have

said, is the whole theology and philosophy of Browning. But he differs

from the psychological decadents and impressionists in this important

point, that he thinks that although the blind men found out very

little about the elephant, the elephant was an elephant, and was there

all the time. The blind men formed mistaken theories because an

elephant is a thing with a very curious shape. And Browning firmly

believed that the Universe was a thing with a very curious shape

indeed. No blind poet could even imagine an elephant without

experience, and no man, however great and wise, could dream of God and

not die. But there is a vital distinction between the mystical view of

Browning, that the blind men are misled because there is so much for

them to learn, and the purely impressionist and agnostic view of the

modern poet, that the blind men were misled because there was nothing

for them to learn. To the impressionist artist of our time we are not

blind men groping after an elephant and naming it a tree or a serpent.

We are maniacs, isolated in separate cells, and dreaming of trees and

serpents without reason and without result.








CHAPTER VIII

THE PHILOSOPHY OF BROWNING



The great fault of most of the appreciation of Browning lies in the

fact that it conceives the moral and artistic value of his work to lie

in what is called "the message of Browning," or "the teaching of

Browning," or, in other words, in the mere opinions of Browning. Now

Browning had opinions, just as he had a dress-suit or a vote for

Parliament. He did not hesitate to express these opinions any more

than he would have hesitated to fire off a gun, or open an umbrella,

if he had possessed those articles, and realised their value. For

example, he had, as his students and eulogists have constantly stated,

certain definite opinions about the spiritual function of love, or the

intellectual basis of Christianity. Those opinions were very striking

and very solid, as everything was which came out of Browning's mind.

His two great theories of the universe may be expressed in two

comparatively parallel phrases. The first was what may be called the

hope which lies in the imperfection of man. The characteristic poem of

"Old Pictures in Florence" expresses very quaintly and beautifully the

idea that some hope may always be based on deficiency itself; in other

words, that in so far as man is a one-legged or a one-eyed creature,

there is something about his appearance which indicates that he

should have another leg and another eye. The poem suggests admirably

that such a sense of incompleteness may easily be a great advance upon

a sense of completeness, that the part may easily and obviously be

greater than the whole. And from this Browning draws, as he is fully

justified in drawing, a definite hope for immortality and the larger

scale of life. For nothing is more certain than that though this world

is the only world that we have known, or of which we could even dream,

the fact does remain that we have named it "a strange world." In other

words, we have certainly felt that this world did not explain itself,

that something in its complete and patent picture has been omitted.

And Browning was right in saying that in a cosmos where incompleteness

implies completeness, life implies immortality. This then was the

first of the doctrines or opinions of Browning: the hope that lies in

the imperfection of man. The second of the great Browning doctrines

requires some audacity to express. It can only be properly stated as

the hope that lies in the imperfection of God. That is to say, that

Browning held that sorrow and self-denial, if they were the burdens of

man, were also his privileges. He held that these stubborn sorrows and

obscure valours might, to use a yet more strange expression, have

provoked the envy of the Almighty. If man has self-sacrifice and God

has none, then man has in the Universe a secret and blasphemous

superiority. And this tremendous story of a Divine jealousy Browning

reads into the story of the Crucifixion. If the Creator had not been

crucified He would not have been as great as thousands of wretched

fanatics among His own creatures. It is needless to insist upon this

point; any one who wishes to read it splendidly expressed need only be

referred to "Saul." But these are emphatically the two main doctrines

or opinions of Browning which I have ventured to characterise roughly

as the hope in the imperfection of man, and more boldly as the hope in

the imperfection of God. They are great thoughts, thoughts written by

a great man, and they raise noble and beautiful doubts on behalf of

faith which the human spirit will never answer or exhaust. But about

them in connection with Browning there nevertheless remains something

to be added.

Browning was, as most of his upholders and all his opponents say, an

optimist. His theory, that man's sense of his own imperfection implies

a design of perfection, is a very good argument for optimism. His

theory that man's knowledge of and desire for self-sacrifice implies

God's knowledge of and desire for self-sacrifice is another very good

argument for optimism. But any one will make the deepest and blackest

and most incurable mistake about Browning who imagines that his

optimism was founded on any arguments for optimism. Because he had a

strong intellect, because he had a strong power of conviction, he

conceived and developed and asserted these doctrines of the

incompleteness of Man and the sacrifice of Omnipotence. But these

doctrines were the symptoms of his optimism, they were not its origin.

It is surely obvious that no one can be argued into optimism since no

one can be argued into happiness. Browning's optimism was not founded

on opinions which were the work of Browning, but on life which was

the work of God. One of Browning's most celebrated biographers has

said that something of Browning's theology must be put down to his

possession of a good digestion. The remark was, of course, like all

remarks touching the tragic subject of digestion, intended to be funny

and to convey some kind of doubt or diminution touching the value of

Browning's faith. But if we examine the matter with somewhat greater

care we shall see that it is indeed a thorough compliment to that

faith. Nobody, strictly speaking, is happier on account of his

digestion. He is happy because he is so constituted as to forget all

about it. Nobody really is convulsed with delight at the thought of

the ingenious machinery which he possesses inside him; the thing which

delights him is simply the full possession of his own human body. I

cannot in the least understand why a good digestion--that is, a good

body--should not be held to be as mystic a benefit as a sunset or the

first flower of spring. But there is about digestion this peculiarity

throwing a great light on human pessimism, that it is one of the many

things which we never speak of as existing until they go wrong. We

should think it ridiculous to speak of a man as suffering from his

boots if we meant that he had really no boots. But we do speak of a

man suffering from digestion when we mean that he suffers from a lack

of digestion. In the same way we speak of a man suffering from nerves

when we mean that his nerves are more inefficient than any one else's

nerves. If any one wishes to see how grossly language can degenerate,

he need only compare the old optimistic use of the word nervous,

which we employ in speaking of a nervous grip, with the new

pessimistic use of the word, which we employ in speaking of a nervous

manner. And as digestion is a good thing which sometimes goes wrong,

as nerves are good things which sometimes go wrong, so existence

itself in the eyes of Browning and all the great optimists is a good

thing which sometimes goes wrong. He held himself as free to draw his

inspiration from the gift of good health as from the gift of learning

or the gift of fellowship. But he held that such gifts were in life

innumerable and varied, and that every man, or at least almost every

man, possessed some window looking out on this essential excellence of

things.

Browning's optimism then, since we must continue to use this somewhat

inadequate word, was a result of experience--experience which is for

some mysterious reason generally understood in the sense of sad or

disillusioning experience. An old gentleman rebuking a little boy for

eating apples in a tree is in the common conception the type of

experience. If he really wished to be a type of experience he would

climb up the tree himself and proceed to experience the apples.

Browning's faith was founded upon joyful experience, not in the sense

that he selected his joyful experiences and ignored his painful ones,

but in the sense that his joyful experiences selected themselves and

stood out in his memory by virtue of their own extraordinary intensity

of colour. He did not use experience in that mean and pompous sense in

which it is used by the worldling advanced in years. He rather used it

in that healthier and more joyful sense in which it is used at

revivalist meetings. In the Salvation Army a man's experiences mean

his experiences of the mercy of God, and to Browning the meaning was

much the same. But the revivalists' confessions deal mostly with

experiences of prayer and praise; Browning's dealt pre-eminently with

what may be called his own subject, the experiences of love.

And this quality of Browning's optimism, the quality of detail, is

also a very typical quality. Browning's optimism is of that ultimate

and unshakeable order that is founded upon the absolute sight, and

sound, and smell, and handling of things. If a man had gone up to

Browning and asked him with all the solemnity of the eccentric, "Do

you think life is worth living?" it is interesting to conjecture what

his answer might have been. If he had been for the moment under the

influence of the orthodox rationalistic deism of the theologian he

would have said, "Existence is justified by its manifest design, its

manifest adaptation of means to ends," or, in other words, "Existence

is justified by its completeness." If, on the other hand, he had been

influenced by his own serious intellectual theories he would have

said, "Existence is justified by its air of growth and doubtfulness,"

or, in other words, "Existence is justified by its incompleteness."

But if he had not been influenced in his answer either by the accepted

opinions, or by his own opinions, but had simply answered the question

"Is life worth living?" with the real, vital answer that awaited it in

his own soul, he would have said as likely as not, "Crimson toadstools

in Hampshire." Some plain, glowing picture of this sort left on his

mind would be his real verdict on what the universe had meant to him.

To his traditions hope was traced to order, to his speculations hope

was traced to disorder. But to Browning himself hope was traced to

something like red toadstools. His mysticism was not of that idle and

wordy type which believes that a flower is symbolical of life; it was

rather of that deep and eternal type which believes that life, a mere

abstraction, is symbolical of a flower. With him the great concrete

experiences which God made always come first; his own deductions and

speculations about them always second. And in this point we find the

real peculiar inspiration of his very original poems.

One of the very few critics who seem to have got near to the actual

secret of Browning's optimism is Mr. Santayana in his most interesting

book Interpretations of Poetry and Religion. He, in contradistinction

to the vast mass of Browning's admirers, had discovered what was the

real root virtue of Browning's poetry; and the curious thing is, that

having discovered that root virtue, he thinks it is a vice. He

describes the poetry of Browning most truly as the poetry of

barbarism, by which he means the poetry which utters the primeval and

indivisible emotions. "For the barbarian is the man who regards his

passions as their own excuse for being, who does not domesticate them

either by understanding their cause, or by conceiving their ideal

goal." Whether this be or be not a good definition of the barbarian,

it is an excellent and perfect definition of the poet. It might,

perhaps, be suggested that barbarians, as a matter of fact, are

generally highly traditional and respectable persons who would not put

a feather wrong in their head-gear, and who generally have very few

feelings and think very little about those they have. It is when we

have grown to a greater and more civilised stature that we begin to

realise and put to ourselves intellectually the great feelings that

sleep in the depths of us. Thus it is that the literature of our day

has steadily advanced towards a passionate simplicity, and we become

more primeval as the world grows older, until Whitman writes huge and

chaotic psalms to express the sensations of a schoolboy out fishing,

and Maeterlinck embodies in symbolic dramas the feelings of a child in

the dark.

Thus, Mr. Santayana is, perhaps, the most valuable of all the Browning

critics. He has gone out of his way to endeavour to realise what it is

that repels him in Browning, and he has discovered the fault which

none of Browning's opponents have discovered. And in this he has

discovered the merit which none of Browning's admirers have

discovered. Whether the quality be a good or a bad quality, Mr.

Santayana is perfectly right. The whole of Browning's poetry does rest

upon primitive feeling; and the only comment to be added is that so

does the whole of every one else's poetry. Poetry deals entirely with

those great eternal and mainly forgotten wishes which are the ultimate

despots of existence. Poetry presents things as they are to our

emotions, not as they are to any theory, however plausible, or any

argument, however conclusive. If love is in truth a glorious vision,

poetry will say that it is a glorious vision, and no philosophers will

persuade poetry to say that it is the exaggeration of the instinct of

sex. If bereavement is a bitter and continually aching thing, poetry

will say that it is so, and no philosophers will persuade poetry to

say that it is an evolutionary stage of great biological value. And

here comes in the whole value and object of poetry, that it is

perpetually challenging all systems with the test of a terrible

sincerity. The practical value of poetry is that it is realistic upon

a point upon which nothing else can be realistic, the point of the

actual desires of man. Ethics is the science of actions, but poetry is

the science of motives. Some actions are ugly, and therefore some

parts of ethics are ugly. But all motives are beautiful, or present

themselves for the moment as beautiful, and therefore all poetry is

beautiful. If poetry deals with the basest matter, with the shedding

of blood for gold, it ought to suggest the gold as well as the blood.

Only poetry can realise motives, because motives are all pictures of

happiness. And the supreme and most practical value of poetry is this,

that in poetry, as in music, a note is struck which expresses beyond

the power of rational statement a condition of mind, and all actions

arise from a condition of mind. Prose can only use a large and clumsy

notation; it can only say that a man is miserable, or that a man is

happy; it is forced to ignore that there are a million diverse kinds

of misery and a million diverse kinds of happiness. Poetry alone, with

the first throb of its metre, can tell us whether the depression is

the kind of depression that drives a man to suicide, or the kind of

depression that drives him to the Tivoli. Poetry can tell us whether

the happiness is the happiness that sends a man to a restaurant, or

the much richer and fuller happiness that sends him to church.

Now the supreme value of Browning as an optimist lies in this that we

have been examining, that beyond all his conclusions, and deeper than

all his arguments, he was passionately interested in and in love with

existence. If the heavens had fallen, and all the waters of the earth

run with blood, he would still have been interested in existence, if

possible a little more so. He is a great poet of human joy for

precisely the reason of which Mr. Santayana complains: that his

happiness is primal, and beyond the reach of philosophy. He is

something far more convincing, far more comforting, far more

religiously significant than an optimist: he is a happy man.

This happiness he finds, as every man must find happiness, in his own

way. He does not find the great part of his joy in those matters in

which most poets find felicity. He finds much of it in those matters

in which most poets find ugliness and vulgarity. He is to a

considerable extent the poet of towns. "Do you care for nature much?"

a friend of his asked him. "Yes, a great deal," he said, "but for

human beings a great deal more." Nature, with its splendid and

soothing sanity, has the power of convincing most poets of the

essential worthiness of things. There are few poets who, if they

escaped from the rowdiest waggonette of trippers, could not be quieted

again and exalted by dropping into a small wayside field. The

speciality of Browning is rather that he would have been quieted and

exalted by the waggonette.

To Browning, probably the beginning and end of all optimism was to be

found in the faces in the street. To him they were all the masks of a

deity, the heads of a hundred-headed Indian god of nature. Each one of

them looked towards some quarter of the heavens, not looked upon by

any other eyes. Each one of them wore some expression, some blend of

eternal joy and eternal sorrow, not to be found in any other

countenance. The sense of the absolute sanctity of human difference

was the deepest of all his senses. He was hungrily interested in all

human things, but it would have been quite impossible to have said of

him that he loved humanity. He did not love humanity but men. His

sense of the difference between one man and another would have made

the thought of melting them into a lump called humanity simply

loathsome and prosaic. It would have been to him like playing four

hundred beautiful airs at once. The mixture would not combine all, it

would lose all. Browning believed that to every man that ever lived

upon this earth had been given a definite and peculiar confidence of

God. Each one of us was engaged on secret service; each one of us had

a peculiar message; each one of us was the founder of a religion. Of

that religion our thoughts, our faces, our bodies, our hats, our

boots, our tastes, our virtues, and even our vices, were more or less

fragmentary and inadequate expressions.

In the delightful memoirs of that very remarkable man Sir Charles

Gavan Duffy, there is an extremely significant and interesting

anecdote about Browning, the point of which appears to have attracted

very little attention. Duffy was dining with Browning and John

Forster, and happened to make some chance allusion to his own

adherence to the Roman Catholic faith, when Forster remarked, half

jestingly, that he did not suppose that Browning would like him any

the better for that. Browning would seem to have opened his eyes with

some astonishment. He immediately asked why Forster should suppose

him hostile to the Roman Church. Forster and Duffy replied almost

simultaneously, by referring to "Bishop Blougram's Apology," which had

just appeared, and asking whether the portrait of the sophistical and

self-indulgent priest had not been intended for a satire on Cardinal

Wiseman. "Certainly," replied Browning cheerfully, "I intended it for

Cardinal Wiseman, but I don't consider it a satire, there is nothing

hostile about it." This is the real truth which lies at the heart of

what may be called the great sophistical monologues which Browning

wrote in later years. They are not satires or attacks upon their

subjects, they are not even harsh and unfeeling exposures of them.

They are defences; they say or are intended to say the best that can

be said for the persons with whom they deal. But very few people in

this world would care to listen to the real defence of their own

characters. The real defence, the defence which belongs to the Day of

Judgment, would make such damaging admissions, would clear away so

many artificial virtues, would tell such tragedies of weakness and

failure, that a man would sooner be misunderstood and censured by the

world than exposed to that awful and merciless eulogy. One of the most

practically difficult matters which arise from the code of manners and

the conventions of life, is that we cannot properly justify a human

being, because that justification would involve the admission of

things which may not conventionally be admitted. We might explain and

make human and respectable, for example, the conduct of some old

fighting politician, who, for the good of his party and his country,

acceded to measures of which he disapproved; but we cannot, because we

are not allowed to admit that he ever acceded to measures of which he

disapproved. We might touch the life of many dissolute public men with

pathos, and a kind of defeated courage, by telling the truth about the

history of their sins. But we should throw the world into an uproar if

we hinted that they had any. Thus the decencies of civilisation do not

merely make it impossible to revile a man, they make it impossible to

praise him.

Browning, in such poems as "Bishop Blougram's Apology," breaks this

first mask of goodness in order to break the second mask of evil, and

gets to the real goodness at last; he dethrones a saint in order to

humanise a scoundrel. This is one typical side of the real optimism of

Browning. And there is indeed little danger that such optimism will

become weak and sentimental and popular, the refuge of every idler,

the excuse of every ne'er-do-well. There is little danger that men

will desire to excuse their souls before God by presenting themselves

before men as such snobs as Bishop Blougram, or such dastards as

Sludge the Medium. There is no pessimism, however stern, that is so

stern as this optimism, it is as merciless as the mercy of God.

It is true that in this, as in almost everything else connected with

Browning's character, the matter cannot be altogether exhausted by

such a generalisation as the above. Browning's was a simple character,

and therefore very difficult to understand, since it was impulsive,

unconscious, and kept no reckoning of its moods. Probably in a great

many cases, the original impulse which led Browning to plan a

soliloquy was a kind of anger mixed with curiosity; possibly the first

charcoal sketch of Blougram was a caricature of a priest. Browning,

as we have said, had prejudices, and had a capacity for anger, and two

of his angriest prejudices were against a certain kind of worldly

clericalism, and against almost every kind of spiritualism. But as he

worked upon the portraits at least, a new spirit began to possess him,

and he enjoyed every spirited and just defence the men could make of

themselves, like triumphant blows in a battle, and towards the end

would come the full revelation, and Browning would stand up in the

man's skin and testify to the man's ideals. However this may be, it is

worth while to notice one very curious error that has arisen in

connection with one of the most famous of these monologues.

When Robert Browning was engaged in that somewhat obscure quarrel with

the spiritualist Home, it is generally and correctly stated that he

gained a great number of the impressions which he afterwards embodied

in "Mr. Sludge the Medium." The statement so often made, particularly

in the spiritualist accounts of the matter, that Browning himself is

the original of the interlocutor and exposer of Sludge, is of course

merely an example of that reckless reading from which no one has

suffered more than Browning despite his students and societies. The

man to whom Sludge addresses his confession is a Mr. Hiram H.

Horsfall, an American, a patron of spiritualists, and, as it is more

than once suggested, something of a fool. Nor is there the smallest

reason to suppose that Sludge considered as an individual bears any

particular resemblance to Home considered as an individual. But

without doubt "Mr. Sludge the Medium" is a general statement of the

view of spiritualism at which Browning had arrived from his

acquaintance with Home and Home's circle. And about that view of

spiritualism there is something rather peculiar to notice. The poem,

appearing as it did at the time when the intellectual public had just

become conscious of the existence of spiritualism, attracted a great

deal of attention, and aroused a great deal of controversy. The

spiritualists called down thunder upon the head of the poet, whom they

depicted as a vulgar and ribald lampooner who had not only committed

the profanity of sneering at the mysteries of a higher state of life,

but the more unpardonable profanity of sneering at the convictions of

his own wife. The sceptics, on the other hand, hailed the poem with

delight as a blasting exposure of spiritualism, and congratulated the

poet on making himself the champion of the sane and scientific view of

magic. Which of these two parties was right about the question of

attacking the reality of spiritualism it is neither easy nor necessary

to discuss. For the simple truth, which neither of the two parties and

none of the students of Browning seem to have noticed, is that "Mr.

Sludge the Medium" is not an attack upon spiritualism. It would be a

great deal nearer the truth, though not entirely the truth, to call it

a justification of spiritualism. The whole essence of Browning's

method is involved in this matter, and the whole essence of Browning's

method is so vitally misunderstood that to say that "Mr. Sludge the

Medium" is something like a defence of spiritualism will bear on the

face of it the appearance of the most empty and perverse of paradoxes.

But so, when we have comprehended Browning's spirit, the fact will be

found to be.

The general idea is that Browning must have intended "Sludge" for an

attack on spiritual phenomena, because the medium in that poem is made

a vulgar and contemptible mountebank, because his cheats are quite

openly confessed, and he himself put into every ignominious situation,

detected, exposed, throttled, horsewhipped, and forgiven. To regard

this deduction as sound is to misunderstand Browning at the very start

of every poem that he ever wrote. There is nothing that the man loved

more, nothing that deserves more emphatically to be called a

speciality of Browning, than the utterance of large and noble truths

by the lips of mean and grotesque human beings. In his poetry praise

and wisdom were perfected not only out of the mouths of babes and

sucklings, but out of the mouths of swindlers and snobs. Now what, as

a matter of fact, is the outline and development of the poem of

"Sludge"? The climax of the poem, considered as a work of art, is so

fine that it is quite extraordinary that any one should have missed

the point of it, since it is the whole point of the monologue. Sludge

the Medium has been caught out in a piece of unquestionable trickery,

a piece of trickery for which there is no conceivable explanation or

palliation which will leave his moral character intact. He is

therefore seized with a sudden resolution, partly angry, partly

frightened, and partly humorous, to become absolutely frank, and to

tell the whole truth about himself for the first time not only to his

dupe, but to himself. He excuses himself for the earlier stages of the

trickster's life by a survey of the border-land between truth and

fiction, not by any means a piece of sophistry or cynicism, but a

perfectly fair statement of an ethical difficulty which does exist.

There are some people who think that it must be immoral to admit that

there are any doubtful cases of morality, as if a man should refrain

from discussing the precise boundary at the upper end of the Isthmus

of Panama, for fear the inquiry should shake his belief in the

existence of North America. People of this kind quite consistently

think Sludge to be merely a scoundrel talking nonsense. It may be

remembered that they thought the same thing of Newman. It is actually

supposed, apparently in the current use of words, that casuistry is

the name of a crime; it does not appear to occur to people that

casuistry is a science, and about as much a crime as botany. This

tendency to casuistry in Browning's monologues has done much towards

establishing for him that reputation for pure intellectualism which

has done him so much harm. But casuistry in this sense is not a cold

and analytical thing, but a very warm and sympathetic thing. To know

what combination of excuse might justify a man in manslaughter or

bigamy, is not to have a callous indifference to virtue; it is rather

to have so ardent an admiration for virtue as to seek it in the

remotest desert and the darkest incognito.

This is emphatically the case with the question of truth and falsehood

raised in "Sludge the Medium." To say that it is sometimes difficult

to tell at what point the romancer turns into the liar is not to state

a cynicism, but a perfectly honest piece of human observation. To

think that such a view involves the negation of honesty is like

thinking that red is green, because the two fade into each other in

the colours of the rainbow. It is really difficult to decide when we

come to the extreme edge of veracity, when and when not it is

permissible to create an illusion. A standing example, for instance,

is the case of the fairy-tales. We think a father entirely pure and

benevolent when he tells his children that a beanstalk grew up into

heaven, and a pumpkin turned into a coach. We should consider that he

lapsed from purity and benevolence if he told his children that in

walking home that evening he had seen a beanstalk grow half-way up the

church, or a pumpkin grow as large as a wheelbarrow. Again, few people

would object to that general privilege whereby it is permitted to a

person in narrating even a true anecdote to work up the climax by any

exaggerative touches which really tend to bring it out. The reason of

this is that the telling of the anecdote has become, like the telling

of the fairy-tale, almost a distinct artistic creation; to offer to

tell a story is in ordinary society like offering to recite or play

the violin. No one denies that a fixed and genuine moral rule could be

drawn up for these cases, but no one surely need be ashamed to admit

that such a rule is not entirely easy to draw up. And when a man like

Sludge traces much of his moral downfall to the indistinctness of the

boundary and the possibility of beginning with a natural extravagance

and ending with a gross abuse, it certainly is not possible to deny

his right to be heard.

We must recur, however, to the question of the main development of the

Sludge self-analysis. He begins, as we have said, by urging a general

excuse by the fact that in the heat of social life, in the course of

telling tales in the intoxicating presence of sympathisers and

believers, he has slid into falsehood almost before he is aware of it.

So far as this goes, there is truth in his plea. Sludge might indeed

find himself unexpectedly justified if we had only an exact record of

how true were the tales told about Conservatives in an exclusive

circle of Radicals, or the stories told about Radicals in a circle of

indignant Conservatives. But after this general excuse, Sludge goes on

to a perfectly cheerful and unfeeling admission of fraud; this

principal feeling towards his victims is by his own confession a

certain unfathomable contempt for people who are so easily taken in.

He professes to know how to lay the foundations for every species of

personal acquaintanceship, and how to remedy the slight and trivial

slips of making Plato write Greek in naughts and crosses.

"As I fear, sir, he sometimes used to do

Before I found the useful book that knows."

It would be difficult to imagine any figure more indecently

confessional, more entirely devoid of not only any of the restraints

of conscience, but of any of the restraints even of a wholesome

personal conceit, than Sludge the Medium. He confesses not only fraud,

but things which are to the natural man more difficult to confess even

than fraud--effeminacy, futility, physical cowardice. And then, when

the last of his loathsome secrets has been told, when he has nothing

left either to gain or to conceal, then he rises up into a perfect

bankrupt sublimity and makes the great avowal which is the whole pivot

and meaning of the poem. He says in effect: "Now that my interest in

deceit is utterly gone, now that I have admitted, to my own final

infamy, the frauds that I have practised, now that I stand before you

in a patent and open villainy which has something of the

disinterestedness and independence of the innocent, now I tell you

with the full and impartial authority of a lost soul that I believe

that there is something in spiritualism. In the course of a thousand

conspiracies, by the labour of a thousand lies, I have discovered that

there is really something in this matter that neither I nor any other

man understands. I am a thief, an adventurer, a deceiver of mankind,

but I am not a disbeliever in spiritualism. I have seen too much for

that." This is the confession of faith of Mr. Sludge the Medium. It

would be difficult to imagine a confession of faith framed and

presented in a more impressive manner. Sludge is a witness to his

faith as the old martyrs were witnesses to their faith, but even more

impressively. They testified to their religion even after they had

lost their liberty, and their eyesight, and their right hands. Sludge

testifies to his religion even after he has lost his dignity and his

honour.

It may be repeated that it is truly extraordinary that any one should

have failed to notice that this avowal on behalf of spiritualism is

the pivot of the poem. The avowal itself is not only expressed

clearly, but prepared and delivered with admirable rhetorical force:--

"Now for it, then! Will you believe me, though?

You've heard what I confess: I don't unsay

A single word: I cheated when I could,

Rapped with my toe-joints, set sham hands at work,

Wrote down names weak in sympathetic ink.

Rubbed odic lights with ends of phosphor-match,

And all the rest; believe that: believe this,

By the same token, though it seem to set

The crooked straight again, unsay the said,

Stick up what I've knocked down; I can't help that,

It's truth! I somehow vomit truth to-day.

This trade of mine--I don't know, can't be sure

But there was something in it, tricks and all!"

It is strange to call a poem with so clear and fine a climax an attack

on spiritualism. To miss that climax is like missing the last sentence

in a good anecdote, or putting the last act of Othello into the

middle of the play. Either the whole poem of "Sludge the Medium" means

nothing at all, and is only a lampoon upon a cad, of which the matter

is almost as contemptible as the subject, or it means this--that some

real experiences of the unseen lie even at the heart of hypocrisy, and

that even the spiritualist is at root spiritual.

One curious theory which is common to most Browning critics is that

Sludge must be intended for a pure and conscious impostor, because

after his confession, and on the personal withdrawal of Mr. Horsfall,

he bursts out into horrible curses against that gentleman and cynical

boasts of his future triumphs in a similar line of business. Surely

this is to have a very feeble notion either of nature or art. A man

driven absolutely into a corner might humiliate himself, and gain a

certain sensation almost of luxury in that humiliation, in pouring out

all his imprisoned thoughts and obscure victories. For let it never be

forgotten that a hypocrite is a very unhappy man; he is a man who has

devoted himself to a most delicate and arduous intellectual art in

which he may achieve masterpieces which he must keep secret, fight

thrilling battles, and win hair's-breadth victories for which he

cannot have a whisper of praise. A really accomplished impostor is the

most wretched of geniuses; he is a Napoleon on a desert island. A man

might surely, therefore, when he was certain that his credit was gone,

take a certain pleasure in revealing the tricks of his unique trade,

and gaining not indeed credit, but at least a kind of glory. And in

the course of this self-revelation he would come at last upon that

part of himself which exists in every man--that part which does

believe in, and value, and worship something. This he would fling in

his hearer's face with even greater pride, and take a delight in

giving a kind of testimony to his religion which no man had ever given

before--the testimony of a martyr who could not hope to be a saint.

But surely all this sudden tempest of candour in the man would not

mean that he would burst into tears and become an exemplary ratepayer,

like a villain in the worst parts of Dickens. The moment the danger

was withdrawn, the sense of having given himself away, of having

betrayed the secret of his infamous freemasonry, would add an

indescribable violence and foulness to his reaction of rage. A man in

such a case would do exactly as Sludge does. He would declare his own

shame, declare the truth of his creed, and then, when he realised what

he had done, say something like this:--

"R-r-r, you brute-beast and blackguard! Cowardly scamp!

I only wish I dared burn down the house

And spoil your sniggering!"

and so on, and so on.

He would react like this; it is one of the most artistic strokes in

Browning. But it does not prove that he was a hypocrite about

spiritualism, or that he was speaking more truthfully in the second

outburst than in the first. Whence came this extraordinary theory that

a man is always speaking most truly when he is speaking most coarsely?

The truth about oneself is a very difficult thing to express, and

coarse speaking will seldom do it.

When we have grasped this point about "Sludge the Medium," we have

grasped the key to the whole series of Browning's casuistical

monologues--Bishop Blaugram's Apology, Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau,

Fra Lippo Lippi, Fifine at the Fair, Aristophanes' Apology, and

several of the monologues in The Ring and the Book. They are all,

without exception, dominated by this one conception of a certain

reality tangled almost inextricably with unrealities in a man's mind,

and the peculiar fascination which resides in the thought that the

greatest lies about a man, and the greatest truths about him, may be

found side by side in the same eloquent and sustained utterance.

"For Blougram, he believed, say, half he spoke."

Or, to put the matter in another way, the general idea of these poems

is, that a man cannot help telling some truth even when he sets out to

tell lies. If a man comes to tell us that he has discovered perpetual

motion, or been swallowed by the sea-serpent, there will yet be some

point in the story where he will tell us about himself almost all that

we require to know.

If any one wishes to test the truth, or to see the best examples of

this general idea in Browning's monologues, he may be recommended to

notice one peculiarity of these poems which is rather striking. As a

whole, these apologies are written in a particularly burly and even

brutal English. Browning's love of what is called the ugly is nowhere

else so fully and extravagantly indulged. This, like a great many

other things for which Browning as an artist is blamed, is perfectly

appropriate to the theme. A vain, ill-mannered, and untrustworthy

egotist, defending his own sordid doings with his own cheap and

weather-beaten philosophy, is very likely to express himself best in a

language flexible and pungent, but indelicate and without dignity. But

the peculiarity of these loose and almost slangy soliloquies is that

every now and then in them there occur bursts of pure poetry which are

like a burst of birds singing. Browning does not hesitate to put some

of the most perfect lines that he or anyone else have ever written in

the English language into the mouths of such slaves as Sludge and

Guido Franceschini. Take, for the sake of example, "Bishop Blougram's

Apology." The poem is one of the most grotesque in the poet's works.

It is intentionally redolent of the solemn materialism and patrician

grossness of a grand dinner-party a deux. It has many touches of an

almost wild bathos, such as the young man who bears the impossible

name of Gigadibs. The Bishop, in pursuing his worldly argument for

conformity, points out with truth that a condition of doubt is a

condition that cuts both ways, and that if we cannot be sure of the

religious theory of life, neither can we be sure of the material

theory of life, and that in turn is capable of becoming an uncertainty

continually shaken by a tormenting suggestion. We cannot establish

ourselves on rationalism, and make it bear fruit to us. Faith itself

is capable of becoming the darkest and most revolutionary of doubts.

Then comes the passage:--

"Just when we are safest, there's a sunset-touch,

A fancy from a flower-bell, some one's death,

A chorus ending from Euripides,--

And that's enough for fifty hopes and fears

As old and new at once as Nature's self,

To rap and knock and enter in our soul,

Take hands and dance there, a fantastic ring,

Round the ancient idol, on his base again,--

The grand Perhaps!"

Nobler diction and a nobler meaning could not have been put into the

mouth of Pompilia, or Rabbi Ben Ezra. It is in reality put into the

mouth of a vulgar, fashionable priest, justifying his own cowardice

over the comfortable wine and the cigars.

Along with this tendency to poetry among Browning's knaves, must be

reckoned another characteristic, their uniform tendency to theism.

These loose and mean characters speak of many things feverishly and

vaguely; of one thing they always speak with confidence and composure,

their relation to God. It may seem strange at first sight that those

who have outlived the indulgence, and not only of every law, but of

every reasonable anarchy, should still rely so simply upon the

indulgence of divine perfection. Thus Sludge is certain that his life

of lies and conjuring tricks has been conducted in a deep and subtle

obedience to the message really conveyed by the conditions created by

God. Thus Bishop Blougram is certain that his life of panic-stricken

and tottering compromise has been really justified as the only method

that could unite him with God. Thus Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau is

certain that every dodge in his thin string of political dodges has

been the true means of realising what he believes to be the will of

God. Every one of these meagre swindlers, while admitting a failure in

all things relative, claims an awful alliance with the Absolute. To

many it will at first sight appear a dangerous doctrine indeed. But,

in truth, it is a most solid and noble and salutary doctrine, far less

dangerous than its opposite. Every one on this earth should believe,

amid whatever madness or moral failure, that his life and temperament

have some object on the earth. Every one on the earth should believe

that he has something to give to the world which cannot otherwise be

given. Every one should, for the good of men and the saving of his own

soul, believe that it is possible, even if we are the enemies of the

human race, to be the friends of God. The evil wrought by this

mystical pride, great as it often is, is like a straw to the evil

wrought by a materialistic self-abandonment. The crimes of the devil

who thinks himself of immeasurable value are as nothing to the crimes

of the devil who thinks himself of no value. With Browning's knaves we

have always this eternal interest, that they are real somewhere, and

may at any moment begin to speak poetry. We are talking to a peevish

and garrulous sneak; we are watching the play of his paltry features,

his evasive eyes, and babbling lips. And suddenly the face begins to

change and harden, the eyes glare like the eyes of a mask, the whole

face of clay becomes a common mouthpiece, and the voice that comes

forth is the voice of God, uttering His everlasting soliloquy.









CHESTERTON-ROBERT BROWING - (SLUDGE.)