How To Use Robert browning In A Sentence
-
It was a pathetic love story of the romanticist poetess Elizabeth Barrett and novice poet Robert Browning.
-
Robert Browning is credited as the "precursor of Modernist technique" for he "energetically hacked through a trail that has subsequently become the main road of twentieth century poetry".
-
The publisher Moxon went so far as to put out an edition of the Shelley forgeries, with an introduction by Robert Browning.
-
His quote is, of course, from that fine poem The Lost Leader in which Robert Browning decries Wordsworth's desertion of liberal causes and his selling-out to the Tory establishment and values "Just for a handful of silver he left us,/ Just for a riband to stick in his coat...
Letters: Electoral lessons for the Lib Dems and Labour
-
The publisher Moxon went so far as to put out an edition of the Shelley forgeries, with an introduction by Robert Browning.
-
Thus, Robert Browning becomes the hero of the romance of immortality.
-
He was a distant cousin of Miss Barrett, and a friend of Robert Browning, who dedicated to him his volume of 'Dramatic Romances,' besides writing and sending to him 'Andrea del Sarto' as a substitute for a print of the painter's portrait which he had been unable to find.
The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1 of 2)
-
When the Dodgers and the Giants left New York in 1957, he quoted Robert Browning: ‘Just for a handful of silver he left us, just for a riband to stick in his coat.’
-
Now and again he has a good rummage though his bookshelf to see what he can find, and at the moment he's reading a book of Robert Browning's poetry.
-
Robert Browning put it well when he wrote in Andrea del Sarto, "Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp, or what's a heaven for?
David Finkle: First Nighter: Tony Kushner's Intelligent Homosexual's Guide... Continues Genius Display