In 1881, the
Robert Browning Society was founded by Frederick Furnivall against Browning's wishes, who reportedly stated in French, "It seems to me that this sort of thing borders on the ridiculous." •
Christmas Eve and Easter Day; • ''''; •
Rabbi Ben Ezra; •
Saul. To these, Stefan Hawlin adds: • ''
A Toccata of Galuppi's''; •
The Statue and the Bust; •
The Tragedy of the Heretic; •
Holy-Cross Day; As well as three poems from
Dramatis personae: •
A Death in the Desert; •
Apparent Failure; •
The Epilogue. Yann Tholoniat includes
Abt Vogler, from the same. According to Glenn Everett, Browning's religious opinions shifted, a typical Victorian response to the challenges Christianity faced at the time. While his poetry demonstrates that he had overcome the "
Shelleyan" temptation of his youth—marked by a passionate admiration for Shelley and an attempt to emulate his lifestyle and beliefs—it remains uncertain whether
skepticism ever entirely left him. Browning expressed gratitude for a form of love "closely akin to Christian love" and was so well-versed in the Bible that he named his early collection
Bells and Pomegranates, referencing the decorations on Hebrew priests’ robes—something even
Elizabeth Barrett, well-read in the Scriptures, had not recognized. However, while many of his poems deal with faith and humanity's religious aspirations, the proposed solutions often accumulate without apparent coherence. Everett recounts an anecdote where, late in life, Browning emphatically responded "No!" when asked if he considered himself a Christian. by Sir
John Everett Millais. Adding to this is Browning's reaction to a friend reading from
Cardinal Newman’s
Apologia Pro Vita Sua, where Newman, a former Anglican who had converted to Catholicism, claimed to be as certain of God's existence as his own. Browning later wrote to his friend
Julia Wedgwood, stating, "I believe he deceives himself and that no sane man has ever had, with mathematical exactness."
The "annexation" of Browning's work "Master of religion" Despite Browning's resistance to being labeled a "master of religion," many contemporary critics regarded him as such. This view was highlighted in the 1900 Burney Essay Prize, organized annually by
Christ's College, Cambridge, to promote the study of religious philosophy. Commentators such as Edward Berdoe asserted that Browning reconciled science and religion, demonstrating that "one complements the other" and achieving what Berdoe called "scientific religion."
The "central truth" (1804–1872), by August Weger (1823–1892). Other critics, from the mid-20th century, focus on analyzing what they refer to as the "central truth" of Browning's work, which they consider to be of religious inspiration. For instance, William Whitla, a doctor from the
University of Oxford and an emeritus professor at the
University of Toronto, presented in 1963 a chapter entitled Spiritual Unity: Poetry and Religion, a sufficiently evocative title in itself. Whitla begins his demonstration with citations: in
Paracelsus, Book V, line 638, the hero exclaims, "I knew, I felt… what God is, what we are, / What life is… / What is time to us?" Similarly, in
Sordello, V, 26, one finds the line "Fit to the finite his infinity," and in A Pillar at Sebzevar, as a sort of conclusion: We circumscribe
omnipotence, which can be interpreted in two ways—either "we encompass omnipotence" or "we limit it." Whitla explains that during the 19th century, Christianity faced various assaults driven by scientific advancements, the discovery of geology and its related disciplines (and later
Darwinism from 1859 onward), as well as philosophical developments, particularly the ideas of
Feuerbach (1804–1872), who argued that God is merely a projection of human imagination. Finally,
biblical criticism, led by the German scholar D.F. Strauss (1808–1874)—likely the model for the philosopher in
Christmas Eve—claimed that the Church's Christological account of Jesus’ life was nothing more than a historical myth. These intellectual movements created a
dichotomy, placing science and its methodologies on one side and religion on the other. Between these two domains, Whitla observes, a space of conflict emerged—one into which Browning "threw himself" to counterbalance what should have remained a critique rooted in biblical research but had instead evolved into a systematic assault on faith. "His response," Whitla writes, "was that of a poet, conveyed through the objective guise of speakers expressing themselves in a series of dramatic monologues."
The "incarnation" in 1869, by J. Cameron. Browning could offer an individual version of an orthodox theological position: his journey, starting from the naive belief of his childhood, moving first towards a form of "rational" indifference and agnosticism (this being the "
Shelleyan" episode—see
Precocity and Cultural Wanderings), and later towards a more mature belief, aligned with his mother’s
evangelical piety. His work subsequently reflects his constant struggle to maintain this faith, made all the more resilient by its continual exposure to doubt. Beginning with
Christmas Eve and
Easter Day, Whitla adds, Browning had reached "a sufficiently coherent Christian point of reference to serve his poetry effectively." He emphasizes one of Browning's essential beliefs: the mystery of the
Incarnation of
Jesus Christ, citing Beryl Stone, who in 1957 highlighted the centrality of the Incarnation in the poet's thinking: "The symbol of Christ’s Incarnation provided Browning with an analogy to his own experience as an artist." Beryl Stone's argument is straightforward: just as God took on human form, the artist clothes in words the vision that inhabits him; if he can convey its truth, he "shares in Christ’s redemptive work by liberating humanity from the tyranny of error and the bondage of the 'self.'" To critics attacking Christianity, Browning responds, Whitla asserts, by affirming traditional faith in the Gospel, the early Church, and the
Church Fathers. Already, in an essay read at
Balliol College in 1904, William Temple proposed the idea that, for Browning, "the apex of history, the pinnacle of philosophy, and the crowning of poetry is undoubtedly the Incarnation." According to Temple, this doctrine informs Browning's poetry in
Saul, ,
A Death in the Desert, and
Christmas Eve and Easter-Day. When Whitla revisits this argument, he adds that Browning's approach led him to a "religious individualism" that caused him to "forget the community of believers and, consequently, overlook the expression of shared action in the sacrament." Temple and Whitla seem to suggest that Browning's interiorized religion distanced him from the Church, established or otherwise, and from communal practice.
The distancing In response to this analysis, Glenn Everett argues that Browning's religious characters "generally take their beliefs to the extreme" and thereby discredit themselves. Everett sees the
dramatic monologue as Browning's chosen means to present ideas that elicit neither the sympathy of the reader nor the poet and, in some cases, to refute certain positions by example without revealing his views. Thus, in
Saul, the speaker is not a Church dignitary but David, a "quasi-Christ-like biblical figure," who expresses an undeniably Christian perspective in the final stanzas, XVIII and XIX: "I believe it! ’Tis Thou, God, that givest, ’tis I who receive; / In the first is the last, in Thy will is the power of my belief" (stanza XVIII, lines 1–2). However, David’s ecstatic declarations do not necessarily reflect the author’s stance.
The quasi-certainties A certain interest Doubt, a spur to faith There is no denying that Browning was interested in religious matters. He could approach the topic intellectually, as in
Bishop Bloughram’s Apology, a title echoing
Cardinal Newman’s
Apologia Pro Vita Sua (1865). Bishop Bloughram, a character modeled on Cardinal
Wiseman, responds to an English journalist, Mr. Gigadibs, who expresses amazement that, in the 19th century, an educated and informed individual could still believe in the Church's teachings. The bishop's response, complex and nuanced, manages to turn doubt itself into a powerful spur for faith.
From primitive religion to the sublime and
Saul by Julius Kronberg, 1885. At the opposite extreme,
Caliban upon Setebos: Or, Natural Theology in the Island (1864) depicts religious sentiment in its most primitive form. The grotesque Caliban, who speaks of himself in the third person—something John Lucas interprets as evidence that he has not yet attained self-awareness—worships the monstrous, savage god Setebos. Caliban addresses this deity in an archaic language, described by Yann Tholoniat as a sort of
Ursprache, characterized by elliptical syntax, frequent references to the body, and the use of monosyllabic verbs describing animal movements and cries: sprawl, creep, snarl, groan, hiss. These elements portray Caliban as having a nature barely "refined." In contrast,
Saul, in which David sings of divine beauty, achieves the
sublime.
An epistle "buzzing with biblical resonances" Browning effectively conveys curiosity and incomprehension about the divine potentially being made flesh. This theme resonates throughout , a poem "buzzing with biblical resonances." Its fictional narrator, an Arab doctor steeped in rationalism, is struck dumb with astonishment as he recounts the irrational miracle of "the Nazarene Sage," this Christ—also a healer—who, some years earlier, had raised Lazarus from his tomb.
The quest within In
Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came, Browning seems to prefer the positive aspect of failure (the squire Roland finally reaches the Dark Tower) over falsehood or compromise. Roland's quest symbolizes an extraordinary human life. Browning responded laconically and evasively: "Just about that." Browning's response did not put an end to speculation about the poem's meaning. As John Lucas notes, numerous echoes have been identified in the work: references to
John Bunyan’s ''
The Pilgrim's Progress'' (though, while the full title of Bunyan's work is ''The Pilgrim's Progress From This World to That Which Is to Come'', Roland's path does not lead to a land of hope); allusions to scientific advancements, particularly
Charles Lyell’s
Principles of Geology (1830–32), which scientifically dated the Earth's age, refuting the idea of a seven-day creation—hence the symbolic description of a tormented, ulcerated, and hostile desert. . In the late 1850s,
William Dyce (1806–1860) painted
Pegwell Bay, Kent, a recollection of 5 October 1858 (a year before
Darwin's
On the Origin of Species was published). In this painting, now displayed at the
Tate Gallery, women and children are seen collecting fossils on the beach, beneath cliffs streaked with geological veins. The somber landscape, dim lighting, and brown and black clothing illustrated nature surrendered to science—a scene where "God has disappeared." According to John Lucas, the desert in
Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came symbolizes "the spirit of the Quest," while the dark tower, like Dyce's beach, portrays a godless universe "without light and without redemptive end."
Religious prophets In the latter part of his career, Browning composed a series of poems titled
Parleyings with Certain People of Importance in Their Day (1887). Among the notable religious, political, and literary figures included,
Christopher Smart stands out. Smart, who had published
A Song to David—a poem Browning knew by heart —is a counterpoint to poets like
Edwin Arnold and Robert Montgomery. These poets grounded their work in a universal cosmic consciousness. Browning critiques their approach through the lines: “We scale the skies, then drop / To earth – to find, how all things there are loth / To answer heavenly law: we understand / The meteor's course, and lo, the rose's growth.” Understanding the course of meteors represents scientific knowledge of the universe’s workings and aligns with a godless worldview. In contrast, Browning’s Christopher Smart responds: “Friends, beware [...] learn earth first ere presume / To teach heaven legislation. Law must be [...] Live and learn / Live and learn / Not first learn and then live, is our concern." Late in life, Browning uses Smart to caution religious prophets (like the Jesuit Bartoli, 1609–1685), political figures (such as George Bubb Doddington, 1691–1762, whom Browning uses to critique
Disraeli), and scientists.
"The delusion of contemplatives" In
Johannes Agricola in Meditation, Browning satirizes what
Nietzsche called the "delusion of contemplatives." Yann Tholoniat observes that readers are led to question "the political place of religion in a society like that of
Fra Lippo Lippi, compared to that of the bishop in ''Bishop Bloughram's Apology and the Caliban of Caliban upon Setebos
. From poem to poem, Browning’s concept of divinity undergoes a metamorphosis—a layering of perspectives that Tholoniat describes as an anaglyph of the divine concept. These varying depictions—from David, Caliban, Karshish, Bloughram, the bishop of The Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed’s Church, to St. John in A Death in the Desert''—contribute to the emergence of Browning’s perspective. His descriptions of the Incarnation, artistic creation, and the temptation to transcend the body, time, and history Similarly, music transcends time: “And I know not if, save in this, such gift be allowed to man, / That out of three sounds he frame, not a fourth sound, but a star” (
Abt Vogler, v. 51–52). This reflection on time is "intimately linked to Browning’s exploration of the mystery of the Incarnation throughout his work, where the dramatic monologues can be seen as incarnations," revealed through epiphanies. Browning described these moments to
Elizabeth Barrett: "[...] bursts of my inner power, living within me like those peculiar lighthouses found in the Mediterranean, where the light revolves endlessly in a dark gallery, vivid, alive, and only after a long interval, springs forth through a narrow fissure and extends [...]."
The gallery of creeds The poems
Christmas-Eve and
Easter Day, published together in 1850, offer additional insights. In the former, the speaker compares three modes of belief: that of the Nonconformist Church, somewhere in England; that of Catholicism as seen in St. Peter's in Rome; and that emanating from the biblical exegeses conducted by German scholars (
Higher Criticism) in
Göttingen. The professor there, the speaker asserts, "inflates you with ruthless ingenuity like a drouthy piston / Atom by atom […] and leaves you—vacuity" ([...] like a drouthy piston [he] / Pomps out with ruthless ingenuity / Atom by atom, and leaves you—vacuity), Christmas Eve, lines 912–913. By doing this, he favors the imperfect but sufficiently flexible and open belief system in which Browning was raised—namely, his mother's dissenting faith, which was presented first.
Easter Day, the companion (or counterpart) poem, is more austere and focuses not on the manifestations of worship or the exegesis of sacred texts but on the very nature of faith in the omnipotence and omnipresence of God. As Pettigrew and Collins write in the notes to the 1981 Penguin edition, the poet "lays out his religious beliefs in these poems after a long period of uncertainty. And here, as his wife had urgently requested, he expresses himself far more directly than he usually does."
God, but within oneself (1823-1892). The collection
Dramatis personae, published in 1864, contains poem named
Epilogue, whose significance regarding Browning's religious position is "universally recognized," according to Pettigrew and Collins. Employing a strategy he had used before, Browning presents three characters (hence Yann Tholoniat's term, "triphonic poem") representing three perspectives on Christianity. The first, David (the prophet), seeks God within the Church. The second, Renan (the historian), offers a more pessimistic view, concluding that Christ's death is irreversible—a direct allusion to
Ernest Renan (1823–1892), whose
The Life of Jesus was published in 1863. The third speaker remains anonymous, juxtaposing the search for God externally with finding God within one's inner self. Philip Drew interprets this final stance as the one Browning had reached by 1864. For Browning, Drew explains, God was no longer located "in orthodox Christianity" but could only be found in the depths of the self. Religion, therefore, had become a matter of intimacy. == Art ==