what"s the moral of the chapter "the browning version"??
In The Browning Version, everyone seems to equate success with popularity and sports. On one hand we find the example of Mr. Frank Hunter, who is a successful schoolmaster because he relates better to the boys. On the other hand, there is Mr. Andrew Crocker-Harris who is not at all popular in spite of being a gifted classical scholar because of being a strict disciplinarian. However, Hunter is envious of Harris, as he lacks the devotion of the latter; he teaches science but shows no interest in his subject. The author through this play vividly brings about the agony of a dedicated teacher and how we many a times fail to realise the real worth of a person.