The Courtship of Robert Browning and Elizabeth BarrettClarendon Press, 1985 - 281 pagini In 1846 Elizabeth Barrett rose from an invalid's bed to elope to Italy with Robert Browning. The secret courtship of the two poets--their long correspondence and their meetings in the shadow of Elizabeth's tyrannical father--has become one of the most celebrated romances of literary history. Based on a more intense study of the letters than has ever been attempted before, this book gives a fresh account of the powerful myth of Browning's chivalrous rescue and Barrett's miraculous recovery, examines anew the character and motivation of the three principals, and demonstrates what and important part the letters play in the interpretation of both poet's work. |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 3 din 11
Pagina 43
... object ' . He had calculated his ' whole scheme of life ' on a basis which ' supposed you , the finding such a one as you , utterly impossible — because in calculating one goes upon chances , not on providence - how could I expect you ...
... object ' . He had calculated his ' whole scheme of life ' on a basis which ' supposed you , the finding such a one as you , utterly impossible — because in calculating one goes upon chances , not on providence - how could I expect you ...
Pagina 48
... object . The nature of this object is both per- sonal ( in that it is embodied in a human being ) and intellectual ( in that it consists of an idea ) . Understanding it is the key to Brown- ing's behaviour throughout the entire ...
... object . The nature of this object is both per- sonal ( in that it is embodied in a human being ) and intellectual ( in that it consists of an idea ) . Understanding it is the key to Brown- ing's behaviour throughout the entire ...
Pagina 190
... object , but it is also a great opportunity for the realization of identity , an opportunity to ' feel more , widelier , strangelier ' : Browning's language of feeling both grasps this opportunity and problematizes it , in terms of the ...
... object , but it is also a great opportunity for the realization of identity , an opportunity to ' feel more , widelier , strangelier ' : Browning's language of feeling both grasps this opportunity and problematizes it , in terms of the ...
Cuprins
Backgrounds | 15 |
First Letters | 44 |
First Meeting | 75 |
Drept de autor | |
10 alte secțiuni nu sunt arătate
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Termeni și expresii frecvente
12 June allusion Arabel Aurora Leigh beth Barrett brothers Browning and Elizabeth Browning wrote Browning's letter Carlyle correspondence course courtship dear dearest death Drama of Exile dramatic EBB to MRM Eliza Elizabeth Bar Elizabeth Barrett Browning Elizabeth Barrett wrote elopement expression eyes fact father feeling felt Flush George Barrett George Sand give hand Haydon heart idea imagination Italy July June Kenyon kind Kintner knew language later Letters of EBB living look lover marriage Mary Russell Mitford means meant meeting mind Miss Mitford nature never opening Papa Paracelsus passage perhaps phrase Pippa Passes Pisa affair poem poet poetry reference relationship reply rhetorical Robert Browning seems sense Sept Sonnet Sordello speak talk tell thing thought tion told Browning visits whole Wimpole Street woman words writing