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MARC record from Internet Archive

LEADER: 07890cam 2200709 4500
001 ocm00967057
003 OCoLC
005 20211130024749.0
008 731126s1974 mauc 001 0 eng
010 $a 73020373
040 $aDLC$beng$cDLC$dBAKER$dBTCTA$dYDXCP$dOCLCG$dYVO$dTXBXL$dOCLCO$dOCLCF$dOCLCQ$dOCLCO$dOCL$dYUS$dB9K$dDEBBG$dVOV$dVBO$dMIH$dBRL
019 $a1075309$a77584234$a959760375
020 $a0395184851
020 $a9780395184851
020 $a0395180120
020 $a9780395180129
035 $a(OCoLC)967057$z(OCoLC)1075309$z(OCoLC)77584234$z(OCoLC)959760375
043 $ae-uk-en
050 00 $aPR4180$b.F74
082 00 $a821/.8
084 $aHL 2121$2rvk
096 $a821.8 B885p
100 1 $aBrowning, Elizabeth Barrett,$d1806-1861.
240 10 $aPoems
245 14 $aThe poetical works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
250 $aCambridge ed.,$bwith a new introd. by Ruth M. Adams.
260 $aBoston,$bHoughton Mifflin,$c1974.
300 $axxii, 548 pages$bportrait$c24 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
500 $aEdited by Harriet Waters Preston.
500 $aEdition of 1900 published under title: The complete poetical works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
520 $aContains the poems of Mrs. Browning including "Sonnets from the Portuguese," and "Aurora Leigh."
505 0 $aThe seraphim: part the first -- part the second -- The poet's vow: pert the first, showing wherefore the vow was made -- part the second, showing to whom the vow was declared -- part the third, showing how the vow was kept -- part the fourth, showing how Rosiland fared by the keeping of the vow -- part the fifth, showing how the vow was broken -- The romaunt of Margret -- Isobel's child -- A romance of the ganges -- An island -- The deserted garden -- The soul's travelling -- Sounds -- Night and the merry man -- Earth and her praisers -- The Virgin Mary to the child Jesus -- To bettine -- Felicia Hemans -- Memory and hope -- The sleep Man and nature -- A sea-side walk -- The sea-mew -- The little friend -- My doves -- To Mary Russell Mitford -- The student -- The exile's return -- A song against singing -- Stanzas -- The young Queen -- Victoria's tears -- Vanities -- Bereavement -- Consolation -- A supplication for love, hymn I -- The mediator, hymn II -- The weeping savior, hymn III -- The measure, hymn IV -- Cowper's grave -- The weakest thing -- The pet-name -- 'Since without thee we do no good' -- Queen Annelida and false arcite -- The complaint of Annelida to false arcite -- Poems of 1844: A drama of Excile: Scene-The outer side of the gate of eden -- Scene-The extremity of the sword-glare -- Scene-a wild open country -- Sonnets: The soul's expression -- The seraph and poet -- On a portrait of wordsworth / B.R. Haydon -- Past and future -- Irreparableness -- Tears -- Grief -- Substitution -- Comfort -- Perplexed music -- Work -- Futurity -- The two sayings -- The look -- The meaning of the look -- A thought for a lonely death-bed -- Work and contemplation -- Pain in pleasure -- An apprehension -- Discontent -- Patience taught by nature -- Cheerfulness taught by reason -- Exaggeration -- Adequacy -- To George Sand -- a desire -- To George Sand -- a recognition -- The prisoner -- Insufficiency -- The romaunt of the page -- The lay of the brown rosary: First part -- Second part -- Third part -- Fourth part -- The mourning mother -- A valediction -- Lady Geraldine's courtship -- conclusion -- A vision of the poets -- Rhyme of the Duchess May -- The lady's 'yes' -- The poet and the bird -- The lost bower -- A child asleep -- The cry of the children -- Crowned and wedded -- Crowned and buried -- To flush, my dog -- The fourfold aspect -- A flower in a letter -- The cry of the human -- A lay of the early rose -- Bertha in the Lane -- That day -- Loved once -- A rhapsody of life's progress -- L.E.L.'s last question -- The house of clouds -- Catarina to camoens -- A portrait -- Sleeping and watching -- Wine of Cyprus -- The romance of the swan's nest -- Lessons from the gorse -- The dead pan -- Poems: of 1850: The runaway slave at pilgram's point -- Hecyor in the garden -- Sonnets: Flush or faunus -- Finite and infinite -- Two sketches -- Mountaineer and poet -- The poet -- Hiram powers' 'Greek slave' -- Life -- Love -- Heaven and earth -- The prospect -- Hugh Stuart Boyd: His blindness -- His death -- Legacies -- Confessions -- A Sabbath morning at sea -- The mask -- Calls on the heart -- Wisdom unapplied -- Human life's mystery -- A child's thought of God -- The claim -- A dead rose -- A woman's shortcomings -- A man's requirements -- A year spinning -- Change upon change -- A reed -- A child's grave at Florence -- Life and love -- A denial -- Proof and disproof -- Question and answer -- Inclusions -- Insufficiency -- Sonnets from the Portuguese -- Casa guidi windows: Part I -- Part II -- Aurora Leigh: Dedication to John Kenyon -- First book -- Second book -- Third book -- Fourth book -- Fifth book -- Sixth book -- Seventh book -- Eighth book -- Ninth book -- Poems before congress: Napoleon III, in Italy -- The dance -- A tale of villafranca -- A court lady -- An august voice -- Christmas gifts -- Italy and the world -- A curse for a nation: The curse -- Last poems: Little Mattie -- A false step -- Void in law -- Lord Walter's wife -- Bianca among the nightingales -- My Kate -- A song from the ragged school of London -- May's love -- Amy's cruelty -- My heart and I -- The best thing in the world -- Where's Agnes? -- De profundis -- A musical instrument -- First news from villafranca -- King Victor Emanuel entering Florence, April, 1860 -- The sword of Castruccio Castracani -- Summing up in Italy -- 'Died...' -- The forced recruit -- Garibaldi -- Only a curl -- A view across the Roman campagna -- The king's gift -- Parting lovers -- Mother and poet -- Nature's remorses -- The north and the south -- Translations: Prometheus bound -- A lament for Adonis, from the Greek of Bion -- Song of the rose, attributed to Sappho -- From Theocritus -- The Cyclops -- From Apileius -- Psyche gazing on cupid -- Psyche wafted by Zephyrus -- Psyche and pan -- Psyche propitiating Cerberus -- Psyche and the eagle -- Psyche and Cerberus -- Psyche and Proserpine -- Psyche and Venus -- Mercury carries psyche to Olympus -- Marriage of psyche and cupid -- From nonnus: How Bacchus finds Ariadne sleeping -- How Bacchus comforts Ariadne -- From Hesiod: Bacchus and Ariadne -- From Euripides: Aurora and Tithonus -- From Homer: Hector and Andromache -- The daughters of Pandarus -- Another version -- From Anacreon: Ode to the swallow -- From Heine: The last translation
650 0 $aPoetry, Modern$y19th century.
651 0 $aEngland$xPoetry$y19th century.
650 7 $aPoetry.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01067691
650 7 $aPoetry, Modern.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01067769
651 7 $aEngland.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01219920
648 7 $a1800-1899$2fast
655 4 $aPoetry genre.
700 1 $aPreston, H. W.$q(Harriet Waters),$d1836-1911,$eeditor.
938 $aBaker & Taylor$bBKTY$c40.00$d30.00$i0395180120$n0000427898$sactive
938 $aBaker and Taylor$bBTCP$n73020373 //r832
938 $aYBP Library Services$bYANK$n348387
938 $aYBP Library Services$bYANK$n348360
029 1 $aAU@$b000000514580
029 1 $aAU@$b000012411004
029 1 $aGBVCP$b11336475X
029 1 $aNLGGC$b781252253
029 1 $aUKBCI$b02377522X
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029 1 $aUKPMH$b02377522X
029 1 $aUKPMH$b0395184851
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029 1 $aUKSGC$b02377522X
029 1 $aUKSOM$b02377522X
029 1 $aUNITY$b02377522X
029 1 $aDEBBG$bBV008673891
994 $aZ0$bP4A
948 $hNO HOLDINGS IN P4A - 932 OTHER HOLDINGS