id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 35989 Curry, S. S. (Samuel Silas) Browning and the Dramatic Monologue .txt text/plain 91111 6224 80 dramatic character, and are at times practically monologues. listener change places; the monologue has but one speaker, and can only poem the peculiar dramatic force of the monologue. very words of the poem, and the character of the speaker's expression must monologue, for we must bring a living character into immediate action and monologues, and express the dramatic spirit. appreciation of the dramatic spirit, will feel that Browning's form is the To realize more completely the general nature of dramatic art, let us note Burns's poems often contain dramatic elements peculiar to the monologue dramatic or objective form peculiar to the monologue to give definiteness dramatic form, especially one of Browning's great monologues, and not monologue also implies and suggests a real scene or moment of human life. As the monologue is a form of dramatic expression, it necessarily implies monologue, the character of its interpretation, and its uses in dramatic ./cache/35989.txt ./txt/35989.txt