Fresh Strange Music

Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Language

By Donald S. Hair
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773545939, 314 pages, August 2015
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773597662, 312 pages, September 2015
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780773597679, 312 pages, September 2015

Description

Elizabeth Barrett Browning evokes several figures as muses for her poetry, and one recurring type is the music master. While her writing has always been recognized as highly experimental, the influence and use of music in her work have not been fully examined. Fresh Strange Music defines the exact nature of Browning's experiments and innovations in rhythm, which she called the "animal life" of poetry, and in sound repetition, which she labelled her "rhymatology." Donald Hair approaches Elizabeth Barrett Browning's art with a focus on the power that shapes it - the technical music of her poetry and the recurring beat at the beginning of units of equal time that requires a different system of scansion than conventional metres and syllable counting. Music for Barrett Browning, Hair explains, has momentous implications. In her early poetry, it is the promoter of kindly and loving relations in families and in society. Later in her career, she makes it the basis of nation-building, in her support for the unification of Italy and, more problematically, in her championing of French emperor Napoleon III. Fresh Strange Music traces the development of Barrett Browning's poetics through all her works - from the early An Essay on Mind to Last Poems - showcasing her as a major poet, independently minded, and highly innovative in her rhythms and rhymes.

Reviews

“This book is very welcome and timely in bringing together contemporary critical attention to Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s prosody with the intense interest in recent decades in the poet’s imaginative engagement with political issues. the book’s serious s

“[Hair] offers excellent accounts of Barrett Browning’s use of theories of language from Francis Bacon and John Locke and also Victorian arguments and expositions of prosodic theory. Central arguments include the poet’s preference of quantity (long and s

“This is the first in-depth, wide-ranging study of much misunderstood aspects of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s poetical theory and practice: her experiments with rhythm and rhyme in a range of poetical genres. A work of genuine and impressive scholarship, Fresh Strange Music is timely, needed, and illuminating. It will interest specialists in poetical form, literary historians, and especially students and critics of nineteenth-century poetry on both sides of the Atlantic.” Marjorie Stone, Dalhousie University

"[Hair's] rich discussions are prismatic and probing: he examines all facets of Barrett Brownin's form, and he is scrupulous in discovering its import. It is a joy to read these examinations of Barrett Browning's formal manoeuvres, both because it is a pl

“Hair is incomparably well prepared to study [Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s (EBB’s)] poetic techniques, and his close attention to her ideas about English and classical meter, her handling of the pause as a unit of meaning, and her recurring metaphors for