Reviews

Aurora Leigh, by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

oxfordcommaon's review against another edition

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5.0

This was a masterpiece of a poem. Shines a light which permeates through the ages - recommend to everyone.

goomsel's review against another edition

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4.0

this would be really cute if they weren't cousins

adeleighpenguin's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5
My music undergrad is showing-vast epic poems like this just aren’t quite in my wheelhouse yet. And with how fast paced my life is right now, I didn’t have time to read it two or three times like I might have preferred to let it sink in. For now I do find Aurora to be lovely, and kind of exceptionally independent given the time. I’ll be revisiting this one outside of class when I get the chance

emselders's review against another edition

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challenging reflective slow-paced

3.25

I've always been an avid reader, but I'm vastly more comfortable reading prose than poetry, so this was a challenge for me in terms of my recreational reading choices. The more poetry I read, the more I enjoy it and the less I struggle. I chose this one because I read some excerpts in a lit course I took and was interested to get the full context.

Marian Erle was the highlight of the story for me, and I sort of wish the whole story was about her, or at least that we'd gotten to see more of her. The conclusion of her character arc was somewhat disappointing.

I'm not quite satisfied with the character development in the novel, although I'm not confident enough to say if this is due to my lack of understanding or a different value system. I also didn't particularly enjoy the romance element.

noellova's review against another edition

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slow-paced

3.5

lynneelue's review against another edition

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2.0

This is epic poetry in narrative, which Elizabeth Barrett Browning attempted to give attention to in the Victorian novel-interested audience, and it was very successful. It also nicely gave details about the current culture, focusing for most of the book on life in the mid-nineteenth century. This follows the narrator, Aurora Leigh, from birth to age thirty, from her childhood in Italy to her move to "frosty" England, and back to Italy, from her denied proposal with Romney Leigh to her life with Marian Erle and Marian's baby to her accepted proposal with Romney Leigh. I did not enjoy reading this, because, frankly, I found it boring. Consistently, over 600 lines would pass that could be summarized in a short sentence. In order to get through the book without being so overcome with boredom, I broke my reading time down so I only read 600 lines at a time. It often became philosophical, for instance, about the art of poetry, and I had patience only to skim it. Barrett Browning's lines can certainly be beautiful in their attentive detail; I just don't appreciate it enough. I recognized some of her style included repeating/rephrasing the same line, which was interesting.

I did, however, like the independence and strength of Aurora Leigh. She wants to become a poet, and when faced with the possibility of becoming a wife, she declines it, because she thinks it will ruin her chances of becoming a poet/putting in the time to create poetry. I think she was correct there: 1) Romney Leigh was not mature enough when he first proposes that he would expect her to fulfill wifely duties, and she would not have time to write; 2) he did not believe in marriage for love, whereas she would have wanted that; and 3) he did not consider her poet-aspirations valid because of her gender. So, only in the end, when he fully recognizes the success and value of her poetic aspirations and states his love for her can he be a healthy match for her. As one phrase in the book states, "I am Aurora Leigh": I love the assertive strength of Aurora's character.

I also really appreciated the treatment of Marian Erle's illegitimate child. Aurora discovers the context of the child's existence and does not blame Marian for it. She considers her pure still, not Marian's fault, and takes her in. She does not judge Marian but treats her as a very caring friend would. Housing Marian was so extremely kind, and it enabled Marian and the child to grow in a loving environment rather than a hate-filled and judgmental one as would be common in the period. So I also really liked that.

aegagrus's review against another edition

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3.5

Elizabeth Barrett Browning's language in Aurora Leigh is very beautiful, full of elaborate Victorian similes, lush description, and clever dialogue. Some modern readers might find the language excessive and indulgent. This was not my reaction. EBB's poetic register is very much of its time and it serves her characters well. These are people who obfuscate and conceal not by tight-lipped caution but by overflowing verbosity.

I was struck by how unreliable of a narrator Aurora is. It's not so much that she's lying to the narrator; she's lying to herself, and a great amount of cognitive dissonance makes its way into the story she's telling. At several points she acts in ways which will self-evidently produce results contrary to her purported (and probably genuine) intent. The characters with whom Aurora interacts are similarly unreliable in their dealings with her, all of which makes for a work which is sometimes thematically ambiguous. It is not always clear how to read EBB's depictions of aristocratic society, socialist idealism, or literary culture. These depictions are plainly satirical in certain ways, but it is not always clear in which direction the satire is aimed.

The clearest unifying thread is that the three major characters -- Aurora, Romney, and Marian -- all struggle with a tension between some transcendent purpose (respectively art, social reform, and an idealized love) and the concrete relationships in which they find themselves. While we cannot know exactly what EBB made of this tension, we can be sure that she wrestled with it. She was a poet, inclined towards the transcendent, and also a woman, socialized towards the domestic and relational. Cognitive dissonance or no, Aurora's reflections on art, gender, and love offer a fascinating glimpse into some of the conflicting loyalties EBB lived with (it is this sense in which Aurora Leigh is "semi-autobiographical"). 

The story's ending is likely unsatisfying to many readers today, and one wonders whether EBB was simply offering a concession to the expectations of her readers. Even then, the ending is "saved" somewhat by the fact that the reader has by this point learned to be wary of taking the story they are being told at face value. 


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luisa447's review

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challenging emotional relaxing fast-paced

3.0

daisybirch's review against another edition

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emotional inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.25

sophiefreeman's review against another edition

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challenging hopeful lighthearted reflective medium-paced

4.5