An Introduction to the Study of Browning by Arthur Symons
page 260 of 290 (89%)
page 260 of 290 (89%)
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[Footnote 62: The _Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister_ is here included
as No. III. In the edition of 1868 it follows under a separate heading. This is the only point of difference between the two editions.] 25. GOLD HAIR: A Legend of Pornic. By Robert Browning. (With imprint--London: Printed by W. Clowes and Sons, Stamford Street and Charing Cross) 1864, pp. 15. 26. Prospice.--_Atlantic Monthly_, Vol. XIII., June 1864, p. 694. 27. DRAMATIS PERSONÆ. By Robert Browning. London: Chapman and Hall, 193 Piccadilly. 1864, pp. vi., 250. Contents:--1. James Lee [James Lee's Wife, 1868]. 2. Gold Hair: a Legend of Pornic. 3. The Worst of it. 4. Dîs aliter visum; or, Le Byron de nos jours. 5. Too Late. 6. Abt Vogler. 7. Rabbi ben Ezra. 8. A Death in the Desert. 9. Caliban upon Setebos; or, Natural Theology in the Island. 10. Confessions. 11. May and Death. 12. Prospice. 13. Youth and Art. 14. A Face. 15. A Likeness. 16. Mr Sludge "The Medium." 17. Apparent Failure. 18. Epilogue. 28. Orpheus and Eurydice.--_Catalogue of the Royal Academy_, 1864, p. 13. No. 217. A picture by F. Leighton. Printed as prose. It is reprinted in _Poetical Works_, 1868, where it is included in _Dramatis Personæ_. The same volume contains a new stanza of eight lines, entitled "Deaf and Dumb: a Group by Woolner." This was written in 1862 for Woolner's partly-draped group of Constance and Arthur, the deaf and dumb children of Sir Thomas Fairbairn, which was |
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