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Students of Browning have long been puzzled by the discrepancies
between the dramatic framework of Fifine and its symbolic
development, but these difficulties are resolved in Southwell's
explication by a biographical hypothesis. The powerful influence of
the memory of his beloved wife, Elizabeth, involved Browning in a
deep ambivalence, and Fifine at the Fair represents his effort to
escape the effects of the profound inhibitions associated with her
memory, while at the same time remaining loyal to it. The poem is
itself a flawed quest for Eros. Browning's symbolic vision of
sexuality as the central vitalizing force in human culture -- a
supreme achievement of the poem -- is followed by a renunciation of
the quest, but the validity of the vision is explicitly affirmed
and its promise recognized. In Fifine at the Fair Browning's
artistic powers are splendidly in evidence. Southwell's fresh
examination of the tensions within the poem offers new
understanding of its power.
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