25 SEPTEMBER 1880, Page 23

Selections from the Poetical Works of Robert Browning. Second Series.

(Smith and Elder.)—In this volume, which contains several of Mr. Browning's best poems, some are included which we cer- tainly would not have given a place in it. For instance, " A Wall" is a flagrant example of the forced interpretation and hard in- harmoniousness that are faults sedulously cultivated, it would almost seem, by Mr. Browning ; and " Pisgah-Sights," in spite of earnest endeavours to discover in the lines something which the writer may have supposed himself to mean, still produces the impression of non- sense-verses. The Selections is, notwithstanding, very welcome, with the charming "Garden Fancies," the fine "Death in the Desert," our old friends " Bishop Bloagram," the Cavalier Tunes, and many another lay of a time when Mr. Browning did not dormer dens is terrible so lavishly as he has done of late.