The Ring and the Book, Robert Browning - Paul Zietlow (essay date spring 1987)
Paul Zietlow (essay date spring 1987)
SOURCE: Zietlow, Paul. “The Ascending Concerns of The Ring and the Book: Reality, Moral Vision, and Salvation.” Studies in Philology 84, no. 2 (spring 1987): 194-218.
[In the following essay, Zietlow argues that Browning's main intention in The Ring and the Book is to save souls, and contends that “to advance toward salvation the reader must bear witness to ineffable spiritual truths by experiencing internal rebirth and resurrection.”]
Robert Browning's The Ring and the Book severely challenges the reader's capacities for recognizing and assenting to empirical and moral truths. As a representation of general reality, the poem portrays a world fallen, unredeemed, presided over by evil—a world in which even the most generous and humane ideas of earthly community and relationship, although conceptions of possibility superior to prevailing realities, are no more than...
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Criticism
- John M. Menaghan (essay date spring 1983)
- Mary Ellis Gibson (essay date 1985)
- Anne Hiemstra (essay date 1985)
- Paul Zietlow (essay date spring 1987)
- W. Warwick Slinn (essay date autumn-winter 1989)
- Susan C. Hines (essay date 1990)
- Mary Ellis Gibson (essay date 1990)
- L. M. Findlay (essay date winter 1991)
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- Candace Ward (essay date spring 1996)
- Melissa Valiska Gregory (essay date winter 2000)
- Norman Friedman (essay date May 2000)
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