Sonnets from the Portuguese: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Elizabeth-Barrett-Browning_Poetical_Works_Volume_I_engraving_6387.jpg|frame|The love of Robert Browning's life, and he was hers.]] |
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| title = Sonnets from the Portuguese |
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| original title = |
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| image = Elizabeth-Barrett-Browning, Poetical Works Volume I, engraving.jpg |
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| caption = The love of Robert Browning's life, and he was hers. |
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| author = Elizabeth Barrett Browning |
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| central theme = |
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| elevator pitch = A collection of 44 love sonnets |
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| genre = |
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| publication date = 1850 |
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| source page exists = |
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Forty-four love sonnets by [[Victorian Britain|Victorian era]] British poet [[Elizabeth Barrett Browning]]. |
Forty-four love sonnets by [[Victorian Britain|Victorian era]] British poet [[Elizabeth Barrett Browning]]. |
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I shall but love thee better after death. }} |
I shall but love thee better after death. }} |
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The complete work is now in the public domain and available online. |
The complete work is now in the public domain and available online, including [https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Prometheus_Bound,_and_other_poems/Sonnets_from_the_Portuguese at Wikisource]. |
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[[Category:Poetry]] |
[[Category:Poetry]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Literature of the 19th century]] |
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[[Category:Sonnets from the Portugese]] |
[[Category:Sonnets from the Portugese]] |
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[[Category:Literature]] |
[[Category:Literature]] |
Latest revision as of 21:40, 3 May 2021
The love of Robert Browning's life, and he was hers. | |
Written by: | Elizabeth Barrett Browning |
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Central Theme: | |
Synopsis: | A collection of 44 love sonnets |
First published: | 1850 |
Forty-four love sonnets by Victorian era British poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
Written in 1845–46 after she met fellow poet Robert Browning and before they married, the sonnets remain among the most popular love poetry of all time. The collection was published in 1850 as being translated "from the Portugese" in order to provide some measure of privacy for the Brownings.
The most famous sonnet is undoubtedly number 43 (especially its first line):
How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. |
The complete work is now in the public domain and available online, including at Wikisource.
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