Robert Browning both denied and affirmed the value of biography for
an understanding of literature. This book narrates the development
of his controversial creative life through responses to his work by
five key 19th-century figures: John Stuart Mill, William Charles
Macready, Thomas Carlyle, John Ruskin and Matthew Arnold. It also
relates Browning's sense of literary vocation to Victorian
publishing. Browning emerges as a writer vividly engaged with
contemporary assumptions, yet deeply aware of the unaccountability
of writing.
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