Robert browning and elisabeth browning their life



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ROBERT BROWNING AND ELISABETH BROWNING THEIR LIFE


ROBERT BROWNING AND ELISABETH BROWNING THEIR LIFE
AND WORK

PLAN:
Introduction 3
Chapter 1. Robert Browning and Elisabeth Browning their life and work 4
1.1 English-speaking world in the 19th century 4
1.2 Barretts in their Herefordshire retreat came to a distressing close 7
Chapter 2. Barrett was being recognized as one of England’s most 9
2.1 Protected from the outside world 10
Conclusion 21
List of literature 22
Introduction
Before Barrett was 10 years old, she had read the histories of England, Greece, and Rome; several of Shakespeare’s plays, including Othello and The Tempest; portions of Pope’s Homeric translations; and passages from Paradise Lost. At 11, she says in an autobiographical sketch written when she was 14, she “felt the most ardent desire to understand the learned languages.” Except for some instruction in Greek and Latin from a tutor who lived with the Barrett family for two or three years to help her brother Edward prepare for entrance to Charterhouse, Barrett was, as Robert Browning later asserted, “self-taught in almost every respect.” Within the next few years she went through the works of the principal Greek and Latin authors, the Greek Christian fathers, several plays by Racine and Molière, and a portion of Dante’s Inferno—all in the original languages. Also around this time she learned enough Hebrew to read the Old Testament from beginning to end. Her enthusiasm for the works of Tom Paine, Voltaire, Rousseau, and Mary Wollstonecraft presaged the concern for human rights that she was later to express in her poems and letters. At the age of 11 or 12 she composed a verse “epic” in four books of rhyming couplets, The Battle of Marathon, which was privately printed at Mr. Barrett’s expense in 1820. She later spoke of this product of her childhood as “Pope’s Homer done over again, or rather undone.” Most of the 50 copies that were printed probably went to the Barretts’ home and remained there. It is now the rarest of her works, with only a handful of copies known to exist.


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