Elizabeth Barrett Browning |
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Elizabeth Barrett Browning (Moulton) (March 6, 1806 - June 29, 1861) was the most respected female poet of the Victorian era. She was born near Durham, England, of a wealthy family, but in her teens she contracted tuberculosis, and was treated as an invalid by her parents. For a girl, she was well-educated, having been allowed to attend lessons with her brother's tutor, and published her first poem, anonymously, at the age of fourteen. Her most famous work is "Sonnets from the Portuguese[?]".
How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. The family moved to London in 1837, and it was there that Elizabeth met the English poet Robert Browning, whom she married. They went to live in Italy and had one son. She died at their home in Florence, and is buried there in the Cimitero Degli Inglesi[?]. Other Works
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