About this book
The title poem was inspired by various images which Browning saw while living in Italy, an old tower in the Carrara Mountains, a painting in Paris and a horse on a tapestry in his home near Florence. These called to his mind the line from Shakespeare's King Lear spoken by Edgar in his feigned madness "Childe Roland to the dark tower came". The poem, full of surreal imagery, evokes the worlds of the 11th century epic poem "The Song of Roland" and of the Arthurian Legends with their notion of the "quest", a journey undertaken by a Knight into unknown hostile territory in search of a mysterious goal. - Summary by Alan Mapstone
Chapters (10)
1"Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came"
2Porphyria's Lover
3Incident of the French Camp
4The Patriot
5How they brought the good news from Ghent to Aix
6The Twins
7Cavalier Tunes
8My Last Duchess
9Home Thoughts from Abroad
10The Heretic's Tragedy

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