Life and Letters of Robert Browning
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第116章 Conclusion(4)

Browning,Robert:his last years --marriage of his son;his change of abode;symptoms of declining strength;new poems,and revision of the old;journey to Italy:Primiero and Venice;last winter in England:visit to Balliol College;last visit to Italy:Asolo once more;proposed purchase of land there;the 'Lines to Edward Fitzgerald';with his son at Palazzo Rezzonico;last illness;death;funeral honours in Italy;'Asolando'published on the day of his death;his burial in Westminster Abbey;the purport and tendency of his work [16]

Browning,Robert:letters to --

Bainton,Mr.George (Coventry)[1]

Blagden,Miss Isa [12]

Fitz-Gerald,Mrs.[8]

Flower,Miss [2]

Fox,Mr.[4]

Haworth,Miss E.F.[3]

Hickey,Miss E.H.[1]

Hill,Mr.Frank (editor of the 'Daily News')[2]

Hill,Mrs.Frank [1]

Keep,Miss [3]

Knight,Professor (St.Andrews)[5]

Lee,Miss (Maidstone)[1]

Leighton,Mr.(afterwards Sir Frederic)[4]

Martin,Mrs.Theodore (afterwards Lady)[2]

Moulton-Barrett,Mr.G.[2]

Quaire,Madame du [1]

Robertson,Mr.John (editor of 'Westminster Review',1838)[1]

Scott,Rev.Dr.[1]

Skirrow,Mrs.Charles [4]

Smith,Mr.G.M.[3]

Browning,Robert:Works of --

'A Blot in the 'Scutcheon'[2]

'A Death in the Desert'[2]

'Agamemnon'[1]

'Andrea del Sarto'[1]

'Aristophanes'Apology'[1]

'Artemis Prologuizes'[1]

'Asolando'[5]

'At the Mermaid'[2]

'A Woman's Last Word'[1]

'Bad Dreams'[1]

'Balaustion's Adventure'[3]

'Bean Stripes'[1]

'Beatrice Signorini'[1]

'Bells and Pomegranates'(incl.meaning of the title,and list of the dramas and poems)[7]

'Ben Karshook's Wisdom'[1]

'Bishop Blougram'[1]

'By the Fireside'[1]

'Childe Roland'[1]

'Christmas Eve and Easter Day'[2]

'Cleon'[1]

'Colombe's Birthday'[4]

'Crescentius,the Pope's Legate'[1]

'Cristina'[1]

'Dramatic Idyls'[4]

'Dramatic Lyrics'[1]

'Dramatis Personae'[5]

'Essay on Shelley'[1]

'Ferishtah's Fancies'[2]

'Fifine at the Fair'[2]

'Flute-Music'[1]

'Goldoni',sonnet to [1]

'Helen's Tower'(sonnet)[1]

'Herve Riel'(ballad)[2]

'Home Thoughts from the Sea'[1]

'How they brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix'[1]

'In a Balcony'[2]

'In a Gondola'[2]

'Ivan Ivanovitch'[3]

'James Lee's Wife'[3]

'Jocoseria'[1]

'Johannes Agricola in Meditation'[1]

'King Victor and King Charles'[3]

'La Saisiaz'[4]

'Luria'[1]

'Madhouse Cells'[1]

'Martin Relph'[1]

'May and Death'[1]

'Men and Women'[3]

'Ned Bratts'[1]

'Numpholeptos'[1]

'One Word More'[2]

'Pacchiarotto'[3]

'Paracelsus'[8]

'Parleyings'[2]

'Pauline'[10]

'Pippa Passes'(incl.the Preface to)[5]

'Ponte dell'Angelo'[1]

'Porphyria's Lover'[1]

'Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau'[3]

'Red Cotton Nightcap Country'[3]

'Rosny'[1]

'Saint Martin's Summer'[1]

'Saul'[1]

'Sludge the Medium'[2]

'Sordello'[7]

'Strafford'[3]

'The Epistle of Karshish'[1]

'The Flight of the Duchess'[1]

'The Inn Album'[3]

'The Lost Leader'[1]

'The Pied Piper of Hamelin'[1]

'The Return of the Druses'[3]

'The Ring and the Book'[3]

'The Two Poets of Croisic'[2]

'The Worst of It'[1]

'Two in the Campagna'[1]

'White Witchcraft'[1]

'Why I am a Liberal'(sonnet)[2]

'Women and Roses'[1]

Browning,Mrs.(the poet's wife:Elizabeth Barrett Moulton-Barrett):

Browning's introduction to her;her ill health;the reasons for their secret marriage;causes of her ill health;happiness of her married life;estrangement from her father;her visit to Mrs.Theodore Martin;'Aurora Leigh':her methods of work;a legacy from Mr.Kenyon;her feeling about Spiritualism;success of 'Aurora Leigh';her sister's illness and death;her own death;proposed reinterment in Westminster Abbey [14]

Browning,Mrs.:extracts from her letters --on her husband's devotion;life in Pisa,and on French literature;Vallombrosa;their acquaintances in Florence;their dwelling in Piazza Pitti;'Father Prout's'cure for a sore throat;apartments in the Casa Guidi;visits to Fano and Ancona;Phelps's production of 'A Blot in the 'Scutcheon';birth of her son;the effect of his mother's death on her husband;wanderings in northern Italy;the neighbourhood of Lucca;Venice;life in Paris (1851);esteem for her husband's family;deion of George Sand;the personal appearance of that lady;her impression of M.Joseph Milsand;the first performance of 'Colombe's Birthday'(1853);Rome:death in the Story family;Mrs.Sartoris and the Kembles;society in Rome;a visit to Mr.Ruskin;about 'Penini';deion of a carnival masquerade (Florence,1857);impressions of Landor;tribute to the unselfish character of her father-in-law;on her husband's work;on the contrast of his (then)appreciation in England and America;Massimo d'Azeglio;on her sister Henrietta (Mrs.Surtees Cook);on the death of Count Cavour [34]

Browning,Mr.Robert Wiedemann Barrett (the poet's son):his birth;incidents of his childhood;his pet-name --Penini,Peni,Pen;in charge of Miss Isa Blagden on his mother's death;taken to England by his father;manner of his education;studying art in Antwerp;with his father in Venice (1885);his marriage;purchase of the Rezzonico Palace (Venice);death of his father there [14]

Browning,Mrs.R.Barrett [2]

Browning,Mr.Robert Jardine (Crown Prosecutor in New South Wales)[1]

Browning Society,the:its establishment [1]

Brownlow,Lord [1]

Bruce,Lady Augusta [1]

Bruce,Lady Charlotte (wife of Mr.F.Locker)[1]

Buckstone,Mr.(actor)[1]

Buloz,M.[1]

Burne Jones,Mr.[2]

Burns,Major (son of the poet)[1]

Californian Railway time-table edition of Browning's poems [1]

Cambo [1]

Cambridge,Browning's visit to [1]

Campbell Dykes,Mr.J.[6]

Carducci,Countess (Rome)[1]

Carlyle,Mr.Thomas [6]

Carlyle,Mrs.Thomas (incl.anecdote)[2]

Carnarvon,Lord [1]

Carnival masquerade,a [1]

Cartwright,Mr.and Mrs.(of Aynhoe)[3]

Casa Guidi (Browning's residence at Florence)[2]

Cattermole,Mr.[1]

Cavour,Count,death of [1]