Robert Browning (7 May 1812 – 12 December 1889) was an English
poet and playwright whose mastery of the dramatic monologue and his psychological
portraiture made him one of the foremost Victorian poets. It is believed that he was already
proficient at reading and writing by the age of five. A bright and anxious
student, Browning learned Latin, Greek, and French by the time he was fourteen.
From fourteen to sixteen he was educated at home, attended to by various tutors
in music, drawing, dancing, and horsemanship. At the age of twelve he wrote a
volume of Byronic verse entitled Incondita, which his parents
attempted, unsuccessfully, to have published. In 1825, a cousin gave Browning a
collection of Percy Bysshe Shelley’s poetry; Browning was so taken with
the book that he asked for the rest of Shelley’s works for his thirteenth
birthday, and declared himself a vegetarian and an atheist in emulation of the
poet. Despite this early passion, he apparently wrote no poems between the ages
of thirteen and twenty. In 1828, Browning enrolled at the University of London,
but he soon left, anxious to read and learn at his own pace. The random nature
of his education later surfaced in his writing, leading to criticism of his
poems’ obscurities.
In 1833,
Browning anonymously published his first major published work, Pauline,
and in 1840 he published Sordello, which was widely regarded as a
failure. He also tried his hand at drama, but his plays, including Strafford,
which ran for five nights in 1837, and the Bells and Pomegranates series,
were for the most part unsuccessful. Nevertheless, the techniques he developed
through his dramatic monologues—especially his use of diction, rhythm, and
symbol—are regarded as his most important contribution to poetry, influencing
such major poets of the twentieth century as Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot, and Robert Frost.
After
reading Elizabeth Barrett’s Poems (1844) and
corresponding with her for a few months, Browning met her in 1845. They were
married in 1846, against the wishes of Barrett’s father. The couple moved to
Pisa and then Florence, where they continued to write. They had a son, Robert
“Pen” Browning, in 1849, the same year his Collected Poems was
published. Elizabeth inspired Robert’s collection of poems Men and
Women (1855), which he dedicated to her. Now regarded as one of
Browning’s best works, the book was received with little notice at the time;
its author was then primarily known as Elizabeth Barrett’s husband.
Elizabeth
Barrett Browning died in 1861, and Robert and Pen Browning soon moved to
London. Browning went on to publish Dramatis Personae (1864),
and The Ring and the Book (1868–1869). The latter, based on a
seventeenth-century Italian murder trial, received wide critical acclaim,
finally earning a twilight of reknown and respect in Browning’s career. The
Browning Society was founded while he still lived, in 1881, and he was awarded
honorary degrees by Oxford University in 1882 and the University of Edinburgh
in 1884. Robert Browning died on the same day that his final volume of
verse, Asolando: Fancies and Facts, was published, in
1889.