Robert Browning

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Standard Name: Browning, Robert
Used Form: Z
RB wrote thirty-one books of poetry (excluding numerous collected editions) and became the most influential practitioner of the dramatic monologue in the Victorian period. He also wrote literary criticism and two plays that were staged. His poetry's conversational phrasing, challenging syntax, quotidian imagery, and philosophical preoccupations respond to romanticism and anticipate modernism. He has become one of the most prominent among canonical Victorian poets.

Connections

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Textual Production Alice Meynell
As a reviewer, AM dealt with writing by Samuel Johnson , Christina Rossetti , George Eliot , Emily Brontë , Dickens , Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Browning , Jean Ingelow , Charles Williams ,...
Textual Production Angela Thirkell
Private Enterprise was followed by Love Among the Ruins, 1948 (a title borrowed from Robert Browning ), The Old Bank House, 1949, and The Duke's Daughter, 1951. The draft of Love Among...
Textual Production Elizabeth Barrett Browning
EBB 's posthumous Last Poems, as collected by Robert Browning , were published.
Taplin, Gardner B. The Life of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Yale University Press.
407
Textual Production Michael Field
Printing of the book was limited to one hundred copies. (Robert Browning received no. 2.) It was beautifully bound in vellum and printed in two ink colours: MF 's poems in black and Sappho
Textual Production Alice Meynell
AM wrote introductions or prefaces to over twenty books. For Blackie 's Red Letter Library series alone she introduced Elizabeth Barrett Browning 's letters and poems (1896 and 1903), and works by Robert Browning (1903),...
Textual Production Lucille Iremonger
LI published another fictionalised biography, this time of Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning . It was entitled (from Elizabeth's famous poem) How Do I Love Thee.
British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo.
Textual Production A. Mary F. Robinson
AMFR published a survey of modern English literature for French readers: Grands écrivains d'outre-manche: lesBrontëAnne Brontë , Thackeray , Les Browning [both Elizabeth and Robert ], Rossetti.
Textual Production Penelope Lively
Once more the titles provoke curiosity. They include Venice, Now and Then, Grow Old Along with Me, the Best Is Yet to Be (opening line of a poem by Robert Browning ), Yellow...
Textual Production Marjorie Bowen
MB recalls being influenced at an early age by her enjoyment of Tennyson 's Idylls of the King, Wilde 's Picture of Dorian Gray, the novels of Sir Walter Scott , and Richardson
Textual Production Betty Miller
Betty Spiro (later BM ) published her first novel, The Mere Living (titled from a line from Robert Browning ).
Miller, Sarah, and Betty Miller. “Introduction”. On the Side of the Angels, Virago, p. vii - xviii.
x
Miller, Betty. The Mere Living. Victor Gollancz.
prelims
Textual Production Norah Lofts
In this text she examines the stories of Sarah and Hagar, Deborah and Jael, Delilah, Jezebel, and Esther, among others. Lofts takes as her epigraph a line from Robert Browning 's A Toccata of Galuppi's...
Textual Production Betty Miller
BM published her life of Robert Browning , in the event her last biography.
British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo.
Textual Production Marie Belloc Lowndes
MBL began early to publish short stories. In her diary she wrote that the first to see print was in a journal called Merry England (edited by Alice and Wilfrid Meynell from May 1883 to...
Textual Production Elizabeth Barrett Browning
She was also a prolific letter writer from a young age, and her early letters evince a linguistic confidence and liveliness of style that formed the foundation for a life-time of rich intellectual, social, and...
Textual Production Mary Russell Mitford
The editor of this second selection of Mitford's letters was Henry Chorley . Her Correspondence with Charles Boner and John Ruskin followed in 1914. R. Brimley Johnson published another selection of her letters in 1925...

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