Elizabeth Barrett-Browning was a famous poet in Durham, England and Florence, Italy. She was a woman without education; yet, she still has achieved her goal to be a poet. (3) She started writing poems when she was twelve years old. The poem she wrote when she was twelve was called The Battle of Marathon. (1) That sonnet was published when she was fourteen years old. It was published by her father.
Elizabeth Barrett-Browning was born in Kelloe Durham, England on March 6, 1806. She was the oldest out of twelve. (2) Her and her siblings were born at Coxhoe hall. She was born in a writing family. Her family wrote poems and published it. Elizabeth Barrett-Browning (1806-1861) married Robert Brown (1812-1858) on September 12, 1846 at St. Marylebone Parish Church. Their family was known for knowing many languages.
Elizabeth did not attend any school, but was homeschooled. Her brother went to school and had a tutor after school. Elizabeth would sit down with her brother and get tutored too. They were tutored for Latin and Greek. Elizabeth read voraciously in history, philosophy, and literature. She writes that at six was reading novels, at eight she was entranced by Pope’s translations of Homer, studying greek at ten and writing her own Homeric epic The Battle of Marathon.
Elizabeth has written some poems at the age of twelve. The poem she wrote at the age of twelve was published when she was fourteen. On her fourteenth birthday, her father gave her fifty copies of The Battle of Marathon. Her father than published her poem. After that publication, the family then called her ‘Poet Laureate of Hope End’. They called her ‘Poet Laureate of Hope End’ because the result of her work was one of the largest collections of juvenili...
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...cial injustice, including slavery in the United States, injustice towards Italian citizens by foreign rulers, and child labour. In Lilian Whiting’s 1899 biography of Elizabeth she describes her as “the most philosophical poet” and depicts her life as a “Gospel of applied Christianity.” Leighton cites the 1931 play by Rudolf Besier,
References / Bibliography
1) Poemhunter.com. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Feb. 2014.
2) "Elizabeth Barrett Browning." Welcome to The Browning Society. N.p., n.d. Web. 24 Feb. 2014.
3) "Elizabeth Barrett Browning Biography." Bio.com. A&E Networks Television, n.d. Web. 27 Feb. 2014.
4) Geraldine, Lady. "Lady Geraldine's Courtship : Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Biography." Lady Geraldine's Courtship : Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Biography. Stockton New Jersey Distinctive Public College, n.d. Web. 26 Feb. 2014.
"Robert Browning." Critical Survey of Poetry: English Language Series. Ed. Frank N. Magill. Vol. 1. Englewood Cliffs: Salem, 1982. 338, 341.
Armstrong, Isobel. 'A Music of Thine Own': Women's Poetry. in: Joseph Bristow, Victorian Women Poets. Emily Bronte, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Christina Rossetti. Basingstoke and London: Macmillan Press Limited, 1995, 32-63.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning follows ideal love by breaking the social conventions of the Victorian age, which is when she wrote the “Sonnets from the Portuguese”. The Victorian age produced a conservative society, where marriage was based on class, age and wealth and women were seen as objects of desire governed by social etiquette. These social conventions are shown to be holding her back, this is conveyed through the quote “Drew me back by the hair”. Social conventions symbolically are portrayed as preventing her from expressing her love emphasising the negative effect that society has on an individual. The result of her not being able to express her love is demonstrated in the allusion “I thought one of how Theocritus had sung of the sweet
Famous poets and poems. “Emily Bronte Poems” famouspoetsandpoems.com. Famous Poets and Poems. 2006-2010. Web. 4 Dec. 2011.
In essence, Elizabeth Barrett Browning dramatic monologue proved a powerful medium for Barrett Browning. Taking her need to produce a public poem about slavery to her own developing poetics, Barrett Browning include rape and infanticide into the slave’s denunciation of patriarchy. She felt bound by women’s silence concerning their bodies and the belief that “ a man’s private life was beyond the pale of political scrutiny” (Cooper, 46).
Elizabeth was also a huge contributor to theater during the Renaissance. She had a love for theater, and that love spread throughout the
American poet and short story writer Elizabeth Bishop lived between February 8, 1911- October 6, 1979. She won many awards such as The Pulitzer Prize, The National Book award, and The Neustadt International Prize for literature in 1976. Bishop was said to work obsessively on her poems and would spend years perfecting them. Two out of the many poems she wrote were “One Art”( a poem about a woman who says we can master the art of losing), and “The Waiting Room” (A speaker describing her experience as a young girl reading the National Geographic magazine, taking place on February 1918). Elizabeth implicitly used the two poems to demonstrate how people are connected through their own vulnerability.
On December 10, 1830, in a town called Amherst, Massachusetts, Emily Dickinson was born (poets.org). Family and friends would come to know her as a loving individual, but to the rest of the world she would become one of the best known poets from the 19th century. Writing over 1,800 poems in all; however, few have been published. Many of her poems are used today to connect with everyday life. Taking a look at her family life will help you understand how she was able to write so many poems and also some of the major influences in life (“Emily Dickinson”).
DaDundo, Laura. "Jane Austen" Concise Dictionary of British Literary Biography. Vol. III. Detroit: Gale Research Inc., 1992.
Through her endeavors, this seems to be a new way of thoroughly expressing her admiration and vast affection for her husband. Emily Barrett Browning has proved herself a master poet. Not only does she use almost every literary device in the book, but she also delves deep into her feelings. These explanations of her feelings that she adds into the sonnets are rich in metaphors, alliteration, personification, and many more.
Browning, Robert. “My Last Duchess.” Making Literature Matter. Ed. John Schilb, and John Clifford. Boston: Bedford, 2000. 1376-1378.
Emma Lazarus was born in New York City on July 22, 1849, and is the fourth child of Moses Lazarus, and Esther Lazarus. Moses Lazarus was a wealthy sugar merchant and his wife, Esther Lazarus was well known for her side of the family, which was a family whose members were very influential in New York legal circles. Emma and her siblings were raised in New York and were spoiled by their parents. Emma was very weak as a child and could not leave the house often so all of the Lazarus children were educated at home by private tutors. Lazarus’ first literary achievement happened because of her un-paralleled knack for languages. (7)
“Behavior is what a man does, not what he thinks, feels, or believes.” was one of Emily Dickinson’s most famous quotes, showing much of her swaying from Romanticism to a more Realistic view, and changing the standards of writing along with it. Between 1858 and 1864 Emily Dickinson wrote over forty hand bound volumes of nearly 1800 poems, yet during her lifetime only a few were published. Perhaps this is why today we see Dickinson as a highly influential writer, unlike those during her time who did not see the potential. Emily Dickinson wrote most of her works towards the end of the romanticism era, but considered more of a realist, ahead of her time and one to shape the new movement. The main characteristic of Romanticism that Dickinson portrays in her writing emphases of the importance of nature to the Romantics, but she is known as a Realist because of her concern and fascination with death, and the harsh realities of life. Emily Dickinson’s upbringing and early education, along with living in reclusion with death all around her, greatly influenced on of the greatest female poets of all time.
She says “writing can be an expression of one 's innermost feelings. It can allow the reader to tap into the deepest recesses of one 's heart and soul. It is indeed the gifted author that can cause the reader to cry at her words and feel hope within the same poem. Many authors as well, as ordinary people use writing as a way to release emotions.” She makes plenty points in her review that I completely agree with. After reading the poem I think that Elizabeth Barret Browning is not only the author of her famous poem, but also the speaker as well. She is a woman simply expressing her love for her husband in a passionate way through poetry. In the 1st Line it reads “How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.” A woman drunk in love she is, and next she begins to count the numerous ways she can love her significant
In 1812 on May 7th, Robert Browning was born (The comp. Poetical works of Browning) . He was born in the Parish of St. Giles in Camberwell, London to a middle-class family Browning was the oldest of three children. Browning`s family consisted of a boy and two girls. Browning`s younger sister, Clara, died during childbirth, while his other sister, Sarianna, outlived him. Robert Browning and his family were always very close, and he was also taught many good values from his father, who conducted most of his education and is said to be why his writings were so strange (The Comp. Poetical works of Browning). When browning was twelve years old he wrote his first small piece of poetry which was quite good for a young man or even women at his age, but as advanced as his talents were, Robert Browning did no writing in between the ages of thirteen and twenty (Knipp).