Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
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Standard Name: Browning, Elizabeth Barrett
Birth Name: Elizabeth Barrett Moulton Barrett
Nickname: Ba
Pseudonym: EBB
Married Name: Elizabeth Barrett Moulton Browning
Used Form: E. B. Barrett
Used Form: Elizabeth B. Barrett
Used Form: Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
Used Form: E.B.B.
Used Form: E. B. B.
EBB
was recognized in her lifetime as one of the most important poets of mid-Victorian Britain. She wrote a significant corpus of poetry which ranges from the lyric through the closet drama or dramatic lyric and the dramatic monologue to the epic, as well as letters and criticism. For much of the twentieth century, interest in her focused on her romantic life-story, her letters, and Sonnets from the Portuguese. Late in the century, critical interest in her epic female künstlerroman or verse novel Aurora Leigh and her other political poetry—in which she took up the causes of working-class children, the abolition of slavery, women's issues, and the Italian Risorgimento—revived. She is again considered one of the leading and most influential voices of her day.
The volume also includes several poems about shipwrecks and drownings, likely a reflection of AW
's nautical childhood. The Bitter Knight, Cruel Agnes, and Edith deploy traditional refrains in ways reminiscent of Elizabeth Barrett Browning
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Christina Rossetti
Influences that manifested themselves somewhat later in CR
's career were those of fairy tales—Perrault
, Keightley
, and later Hans Christian Andersen
—and later poets including Robert
and Elizabeth Barrett Browning
, whom...
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Julia Kristeva
Again Stéphanie Delacourt and Northrop Rilsky, held tightly under the control of a third-person narrator, address themselves to mystery-solving. JK
quotes Delacourt, who revels in neologisms, taking as her motto Je me voyage (I travel...
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Sarah Stickney Ellis
In a poem that can be seen as belonging to the emerging genre of the verse novel, SSE
takes up the question of the role of poetry in industrialised society, in conjunction with the theme...
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Christina Fraser-Tytler
The book is divided by topic (confession, detachment from the world, guidance in perplexity, union with Christ, etc.). Included are only a few selections from women authors, namely Madame Guyon
, Christina Rossetti
, Caroline Matilda of Denmark
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Violet Fane
Young, innocent, and orphaned Constance Leigh (almost certainly named in salute to Barrett Browning
's influential verse novel Aurora Leigh
Hoagwood, Terence Allan et al. “Introduction”. Denzil Place, Scholar’s Facsimiles and Reprints, pp. 3-11.
3
) is married to old, ultra-Tory
Fane, Violet. Denzil Place. Chapman and Hall.
7
Sir John. Although her husband is kind...
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Mary Russell Mitford
MRM
here mixed personal gossip, local scene-painting, criticism, and extracts.
Mitford, Mary Russell. Recollections of a Literary Life; or, Books, Places and People. R. Bentley.
Such verse would now be called political, in that it challenges accepted power structures. CR
also produced such poems as A Royal Princess (in which the daughter of a repressive king goes down to face...
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Eleanor Farjeon
They are highly derivative in style (from most of the standard poetical canon including Elizabeth Barrett Browning
), though The Japanese Fan shows the whimsical lightness of EF
's mature work. This poem describes a...
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Bessie Rayner Parkes
In a similar vein she writes To Elizabeth Barrett Browning, . . . I use no words Of any careful beauty, being plain As earnestness, and quiet as that Truth Which shrinks from any...
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Sophia Jex-Blake
Her dedication characterizes Sewall as having demonstrated the incalculable blessings [that] may be conferred on the sick and suffering of her own sex, by a noble and pure-minded woman who is also a thoroughly scientific...
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Louisa Anne Meredith
On 10 September 1885 LAM
's article on children's education entitled The Cry of the Children (after a famous poem by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
) appeared in the Launceston Examiner. It deplored the use...
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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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Jane Francesca, Lady Wilde
Francesca Elgee set the tone for her correspondence with John Hilson
in her earliest surviving letter, writing your Gods are my Gods about her favourite modern living poets, Tennyson
and Elizabeth Barrett
, who...
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Queen Victoria
Initially, Victoria was unreceptive to the idea of widespread publication of her journal extracts, arguing (according to Helps in his Editor's Preface) that she had no skill whatever in authorship; that these were, for the...