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n the root of a fault, which has, to my fancy, been a little misapprehended. I do not _say everything I think_ (as has been said of me by master-critics) but I _take every means to say what I think_, which is different!--or I fancy so! In one thing, however, you are wrong. Why should you deny the full measure of my delight and benefit from your writings? I could tell you why you should not. You have in your vision two worlds, or to use the language of the schools of the day, you are both subjective and objective in the habits of your mind. You can deal both with abstract thought and with human passion in the most passionate sense. Thus, you have an immense grasp in Art; and no one at all accustomed to consider the usual forms of it, could help regarding with reverence and gladness the gradual expansion of your powers. Then you are 'masculine' to the height--and I, as a woman, have studied some of your gestures of language and intonation wistfully, as a thing beyond me far! and the more admirable for being beyond. Of your new work I hear with delight. How good of you to tell me. And it is not dramatic in the strict sense, I am to understand--(am I right in understanding so?) and you speak, in your own person 'to the winds'? no--but to the thousand living sympathies which will awake to hear you. A great dramatic power may develop itself otherwise than in the formal drama; and I have been guilty of wishing, before this hour (for reasons which I will not thrust upon you after all my tedious writing), that you would give the public a poem unassociated directly or indirectly with the stage, for a trial on the popular heart. I reverence the drama, but-- _But_ I break in on myself out of consideration for you. I might have done it, you will think, before. I vex your 'serene sleep of the virtuous' like a nightmare. Do not say 'No.' I am _sure_ I do! As to the vain parlance of the world, I did not talk of the 'honour of your acquaintance' without a true sense of honour, indeed; but I shall willingly exchange it all (and _now_, if you please, at this moment, for fear of worldly mutabilities) for the 'delight of your friendship.' Believe me, therefore, dear Mr. Browning, Faithfully yours, and gratefully, ELIZABETH B. BARRETT. For Mr. Kenyon's kindness, as _I_ see it, no theory will account. I class it with mesmerism for that reason. _R.B.
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