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Paw Prints TidBits |
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Paw Prints TidBits for February Love is in the air and this month's anecdote is about a famous lover-poet—Robert Browning before his marriage to Elizabeth Barrett Browning. The sidebar contains some thoughts about love according to children and an invitation to visit our website, where you will find a slideshow highlighting different kinds of love. We hope these words and pictures about love will inspire you to tell that special someone how you feel about them. If you have any comments or suggestions, don't hesitate to contact us. Anecdote of the Month Robert Browning (1812–1889)
[One day during the months of suspense before his marriage to Elizabeth Barrett, Browning was working and decided to ask a question about his love by consulting a random book in his library.] “What will be the event of my love for Her?” he asked the book that fell under his hand, opening it at a random passage. The volume, unfortunately, turned out to be Cerutti's Italian grammar. He hoped he might come upon a word like conjunction or at least a possessive pronoun. To his amazement his eyes lighted upon the sentence in an exercise for translation: “If we love in the other world as we do in this, I shall love thee to eternity.” B i o g r a p h i c a l . N o t e . . . British poet. Browning's early work included poetic tragedies and several long poems that won limited critical acclaim. In 1845 he saw Elizabeth Barrett's Poems and contrived to meet her. Although she was an invalid and very much under the control of a domineering father, the two married in September 1846 and a few days later eloped to Italy, where they lived until her death in 1861. Some of the poems written during his marriage to her, particularly his love lyrics, are exquisite. After her death he returned to England. Browning specialized in dramatic verse monologues that explored human emotions and motives.
READ another anecdote about Robert Browning here. READ a brief biography of Robert Browning. You might also want to read about the relationship between Robert Browning and Elizabet Barrett Browning. Archives |
According to Children... The Facts of Love"I think you're supposed to get shot with an arrow or something, but the rest of it isn't supposed to be so painful." "If falling in love is anything like learning how to spell, I don't want to do it. It takes too long." "It's never okay to kiss a boy. They always slobber all over you ... That's why I stopped doing it." Love is |
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