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Topics related to "Brownings Johannes Agricola in Meditation analysis of a Robert Browning poem"

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Michael Field Michael Field
Michael Field pseud. used by two English authors, Katherine Harris Bradley, 1846-1914, and her niece Edith Emma Cooper, 1862-1913, who collaborated on numerous literary works, including lyrics and poetic tragedies. Although their work was praised by such contemporaries as Robert Browning and... Read more
Robert Browning Robert Browning
Robert Browning 1812-89, English poet. His remarkably broad and sound education was primarily the work of his artistic and scholarly parents—in particular his father, a London bank clerk of independent means. Pauline, his first poem, was published anonymously in 1833. In 1834 he visited... Read more
childe childe
childe archaic or literary word for a youth of noble birth, typically forming part of a name, as Childe Harold. The word is recorded from late Old English, and is a variant of child.Childe Roland is the hero of a poem by Browning, ‘Childe Roland to the Dark Tower came’, the title... Read more
William Vaughn Moody William Vaughn Moody
William Vaughn Moody 1869-1910, American poet and dramatist, b. Spencer, Ind., grad. Harvard, 1893. After writing several verse dramas, Moody achieved wide success with the prose play The Great Divide (produced as A Sabine Woman, 1906). The Faith Healer (1909), however, also written in prose,... Read more
Felicia Dorothea (Browne) Hemans Felicia Dorothea (Browne) Hemans
Hemans, Mrs Felicia Dorothea, née Browne (1793–1835), a precocious and copious poet, born in Liverpool and educated at home. She published her first volume of Poems when she was 15, and in 1812 married Captain Hemans, from whom she lived apart from 1818, though they had five sons.... Read more
Elizabeth Barrett Browning Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Elizabeth Barrett Browning 1806-61, English poet, b. Durham. A delicate and precocious child, she spent a great part of her early life in a state of semi-invalidism. She read voraciously—philosophy, history, literature—and she wrote verse. In 1838 the Barrett family moved to 50 Wimpole... Read more
Osip Emilyevich Mandelstam Osip Emilyevich Mandelstam
Osip Emilyevich Mandelstam , 1892-1938, Russian poet. Mandelstam was a leader of the Acmeist school. He wrote impersonal, fatalistic, meticulously constructed poems, the best of which are collected in Kamen [stone] (1913) and Tristia (1922). Although he opposed the Bolsheviks, he remained in... Read more
Abraham ben Meir Ibn Ezra Abraham ben Meir Ibn Ezra
Abraham ben Meir Ibn Ezra , c.1089-1164, Jewish grammarian, commentator, poet, philosopher, and astronomer, b. Tudela, Spain. He traveled widely and wrote a number of ethical treatises, poems, and other works. Revered in Orthodox Judaism as one of the most important authors of biblical commentary,... Read more
Richard Henry Horne Richard Henry Horne
Richard Henry Horne or Richard Hengist Horne, 1802-84, English author. His chief work was the allegorical poem Orion (1843). A New Spirit of the Age (1844), written with Elizabeth Barrett (later Elizabeth Barrett Browning) and others, contains social and literary studies. His correspondence... Read more

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