Difference between revisions of "Elizabeth Barrett Browning"
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Elizabeth Barrett Browning <ref name="term_69556" /> | |||
<p> <i> née </i> </p> <p> oetess, born at Carlton Hall, Durham; a woman of great natural abilities, which developed early; suffered from injury to her spine; went to [[Torquay]] for her health; witnessed the death by drowning of a brother, that gave her a shock the effect of which never left her; published in 1838 "The Seraphim," and in 1844 "The Cry of the Children"; fell in with and married [[Robert]] Browning in 1846, who immediately took her abroad, settling in Florence; wrote in 1850 "Sonnets from the Portuguese," in 1851 "Casa Guidi Windows," and in 1856 "Aurora Leigh," "a novel in verse," and in 1860 "Poems before Congress"; ranks high, if not highest, among the poetesses of England; she took an interest all through life in public affairs; her work is marked by musical diction, sensibility, knowledge, and imagination, which no poetess has rivalled (1806-1861). </p> | Elizabeth Barrett Browning <ref name="term_69556" /> | ||
==References == | <p> <i> née </i> </p> <p> oetess, born at Carlton Hall, Durham; a woman of great natural abilities, which developed early; suffered from injury to her spine; went to [[Torquay]] for her health; witnessed the death by drowning of a brother, that gave her a shock the effect of which never left her; published in 1838 "The Seraphim," and in 1844 "The [[Cry]] of the Children"; fell in with and married [[Robert]] Browning in 1846, who immediately took her abroad, settling in Florence; wrote in 1850 "Sonnets from the Portuguese," in 1851 "Casa Guidi Windows," and in 1856 "Aurora Leigh," "a novel in verse," and in 1860 "Poems before Congress"; ranks high, if not highest, among the poetesses of England; she took an interest all through life in public affairs; her work is marked by musical diction, sensibility, knowledge, and imagination, which no poetess has rivalled (1806-1861). </p> | ||
== References == | |||
<references> | <references> | ||
<ref name="term_69556"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/browning,+elizabeth+barrett Elizabeth Barrett Browning from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref> | <ref name="term_69556"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/browning,+elizabeth+barrett Elizabeth Barrett Browning from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref> | ||
</references> | </references> |
Latest revision as of 17:58, 15 October 2021
Elizabeth Barrett Browning [1]
née
oetess, born at Carlton Hall, Durham; a woman of great natural abilities, which developed early; suffered from injury to her spine; went to Torquay for her health; witnessed the death by drowning of a brother, that gave her a shock the effect of which never left her; published in 1838 "The Seraphim," and in 1844 "The Cry of the Children"; fell in with and married Robert Browning in 1846, who immediately took her abroad, settling in Florence; wrote in 1850 "Sonnets from the Portuguese," in 1851 "Casa Guidi Windows," and in 1856 "Aurora Leigh," "a novel in verse," and in 1860 "Poems before Congress"; ranks high, if not highest, among the poetesses of England; she took an interest all through life in public affairs; her work is marked by musical diction, sensibility, knowledge, and imagination, which no poetess has rivalled (1806-1861).