Robert Browning – Optimism
’Tis God shall repay one, I am safer so.
As in “Fra Lippo Lippi”, he says:
Don’t fear me! There is the grey beginning. Zooks!
Browning is a very consistent thinker of optimistic philosophy of life. His poetry has immense variety, but his unchanging philosophical view of human destiny gives unity to it. He does not challenge the old dogmas. He accepts the conventional view of God, the immortality of the soul, and the Christian belief in incarnation.
God is in his Heaven –
All is right with the world!
Browning believes that experience leads to enrichment. His attitude towards evil, pain and misery is not merely abstract. He does not accept evil merely as a practical instrument of human advancement. His approach is pragmatic as it is based on the actual experience of life. He tests every theory on the touchstone of pragmatism. Browning believes that it is not achievement, but it is struggle that empowers man in life.
Evil is, therefore, a way of man’s moral progress.
Ah, but a man’s reach should exceed his grasp,
Or what’s heaven for?
Browning’s firm faith in God is beyond any doubt. He is never sceptical about the existence of God controlling the world. Even his knaves have firm faith in God, and rely upon His mercy. They constantly talk of their relation with God, and are sure of their ultimate union with Him. It is love which harmonizes all living beings. It is on love that all Browning’s characters build their faith saying:
God, Thou art Love I build my faith on that
Life in this world is worth living because both life and the world are the expressions of Divine Love. The world is beautiful as God created it out of the fullness of His love.
… …This world’s no blot for us,
Not blank; it means intensely, and means good:
Browning’s optimism finds the passion of joy no one has sung more fervently than Browning of the delight of life. David in “Saul”, Pippa in “Pippa Passes”, Lippo in “Fra Lippo Lippi” and a host of other poems are keenly alive to the pleasure of living. The Rabbi in “Rabbi Ben Ezra” condemns the aesthetic negation of the flesh, and asserts the necessity and moral usefulness of the flesh and the soul:
As the bird wings and sings,
Let us cry ‘All good things
Are ours, nor soul helps flesh more, now, than flesh helps soul’
So, we can safely conclude the Browning speaks out the strongest words of optimistic faith in his Victorian Age of scepticism and pessimism. Of all English poets, no other is so completely, so consciously, so magnificently a teacher of man as is Browning. However, according to modern criticism, in certain cases, Browning’s optimism can be interpreted as false or hollow optimism. Sometimes, it seems a justification of failure than optimism; it seems a hope against hope or a hope for the impossible.
… … … What would one have?
In heaven, perhaps, new chances, one more chance–
As in “The Bishop Orders His Tomb”, he says:
Old Gandolf, at me, from his onion–stone,
As still he envied me, so fair she was!
As in “The Last Ride Together”, he says:
So, one day more am I deified.
Who knows but the world may end to–night?
On another place, he says:
I hoped she would love me; here we ride.
Again at the end of this very poem he says:
The instant made eternity, –
And heaven just prove that in and she
Ride, ride together, for ever ride?
Despite, all this we call him as an optimist because of his firm faith in God.