stance was especially appropriate to a woman poet. Many of Barrett's difficulties are oddly reflected in the title poem of her 1844 volume, A Drama of Exile . Like "The Seraphim," this poem is set squarely in the male traditionusing the form of Greek tragedy to retell the story of Genesis. Again the dramatic form avoids the problem of a gendered poetic voice, but in this poem Barrett began to find poetic opportunities rather than limitations in her gender. She noted that it was written "with a peculiar reference to Eve's allotted grief," which seemed to her "more expressible by a woman than a man." Still, she gave the role of visionary not only to various spirits and to Christ, but also to Adam, who is inspired by "God breathing through my breath.'' Eve's role is to be "woman, wife, and mother," and her highest good is "worthy endurance of permitted pain."
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Characteristically, Barrett's early poems lament the fallen state of humanity and look forward in Christian hope to redemption. "The Island," "The Deserted Garden," "My Doves," "The Lost Bower," "The Romance of the Swan's Nest," and "Hector in the Garden" all express regret for a lost innocence, submission to God's will, and prayerful anticipation of the "Heavenly promise." Like most women's poetry of the day, their dominant tone is melancholy, and despite what contemporary reviewers sometimes referred to as the "virile" appropriation of male forms in some of the most ambitious poems, they both implicitly and explicitly assign a subordinate role to women. The poems that contributed most to Barrett's contemporary popularity were a series of ballad romances about women's tribulations in love"The Romaunt of Margret," "A Romance of the Ganges," "The Romaunt of the Page," "The Lay of the Brown Rosary," "The Rhyme of the Duchess May," and "Bertha in the Lane." The one ballad that did not represent the woman losing all for love was the extremely popular "Lady Geraldine's Courtship," in which the highborn lady accepts the love of her lowborn suitorbut only because he is a poet, and therefore "noble, certes."
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In none of these poems does Barrett seem to "speak out" the full "expression of her being," yet she was certainly not satisfied with the cultural role assigned the mere "poetess," and Robert Browning was right in seeing full self-expression as her ultimate aim. She did "speak out" in "The Cry of the Children," her passionate poem of protest against the exploitation of children in factories and mines. And in a series of sonnets she attempted to sing "the music of my nature," to
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