Nature And Human Nature In The Poetry Of Browning
In literature nature has a significant role. The word
'nature' suggests the whole universe and every created object-living or
non-living. Browning had his own attitude to nature according to his
temperament and poetic sensibilities. In the present essay let us have a
glimpse of the treatment of nature in the poetry of Browning.
Browning, nurtured in the Romantic atmosphere of poetry, did
not overlook the influence of nature on man; but in a bid to forge a new kind
of poetry consciously eschewed overemphasis on nature and attempted to focus on
human nature. More precisely, to Browning Love was more important than Nature.
It was an established practice of the Neo classical writers
to minutely and painstakingly perceive distinct/specific natural phenomenon and
then extract the unspecific/universal from them. The Romantics showed in their
creative writings a reverse trend. It's a fact that the Romantics viewed nature
more subjectively than objectively. Browning found the solely sense perceptions
not as important as the intuitive and instinctual vision of the semantic
aspects of objects in nature. In Nature Browning discovered a redoubtable
character endowed with the variegated feelings of human beings, and inducing in
us very mixed reactions of her mighty impact-benign, terrible and
awe-inspiring. "Nature and Passion are powerful", and Browning's
poetic device of harmonizing the animated Nature and primal passions in Man is
very subtle and skilful.
As a poet Browning was attracted more by the Italian
painting, sculpture and music than by its picturesque landscape. Landor's
epitaph on himself: "Nature I loved, and after Nature Art" can be
applied in the case of Browning only by inverting the word-order, and in that
reconstructed word-order Browning would have declared: "Art I loved, and
after Art, Nature." In nature Browning saw the elemental powers doing good
as well as evil. Browning is not at all partial and does not show any
temperamental inclination to magnify the benevolent powers by minimizing the
evil ones.
Browning finds nature in her totality. In other words, he
observes in nature the harmonious co-existence of calm, serene beauty on the
one hand, and ruggedness, ugliness and the grotesque on the other. As offspring
of mother nature we have similarity with the luminous, radiant and beautiful
things as well as with the monstrous, rugged ones. Browning's instress and
poetic temperament was more fascinated by things grotesque, rugged, top-heavy
like the toad-stool, lop-sided, etc. This element of ruggedness is thus amply
reflected everywhere in his treatment of human characters, in the depiction of
landscape, in the use of verse form, and vocabulary.
However, Browning is seen always at ease in describing an
object or a landscape, and it thoroughly arrests vivid pictures. Incidentally,
we may recall the question of one of the friends of Browning: "Do you care
for nature much?" In reply Browning said, "Yes, a great deal, but for
human beings a great deal more." That Browning cared a great deal for
nature is explicit in beautiful artistic descriptions of the moon which he
found most "noteworthy".
"Porphyria's Lover" opens with the lover's
description of a storm violently raging outside:
The rain set in early to-night,
The sullen wind was soon awake,
It tore the elm-tops down for spite,
And did its worst to vex the lake:
I listened with heart fit to break.
The outside storm is eerie and doing "its worst to vex
the lake" and when the lover describes it he shows his perfectly sanity,
but its fury is felt in all its intensity when he listens to it with his heart
ready to break. So the "eerie storm," as Bristow describes it, not
only serves the purpose of a decorative background but also acquires symbolic
dimension.
Browning had a belief in the general indifference of nature
towards man's situations and affairs; but this does not totally exclude the
possibility of capturing the primeval powers abundant in nature. In some
absolutely rare and exceptional situations his lovers catch "for a moment
the powers at play" and this blissful quintessential moment obliterates
the barrier between soul and soul as well as between man and nature.
In a perfect blend of nature imagery and sensuous imagery
Browning attempts to reinforce the irresistible physical appeal and attraction
of the beloved, and the transitoriness of carnal beauty and its enjoyment. The
interstellar radiance falls on and beautifully colours the
"billowy-bosomed" cloud which has an explicit suggestion of the
enticing effect of the speaker's beloved whose ripe voluptuous breast and
blushing beauty is transient and as fleeting as the "western cloud".
Though Browning had an unflinching faith in the existence of
a soul even in lifeless inert objects, in the poem
"Transcendentalism", he did neither employ the scientific concept of
the evolutionary process inextricably related to sea or find any strong
affinity between the voice of the sea and that of the human soul. Perhaps he
put aside this aspect this aspect of nature because his avowed purpose was to
unfold human nature; and he relegated nature to a foil to man. Lessening the
significance of nature in his scheme of poetry and imposing his main thrust on
the inner nature of human beings, Browning has no claim to philosophizing nature.
He has no definite philosophic views of nature.
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