When I was about 6 years old, Elizabeth wrote a poem and started to recite it to my mother. Soon Elizabeth's poetry began to get better and better every year. At the age of fifteen, browning was very serious, there was intense pain in the head and spine, which was the end of her life, which truly weakened her. She began taking medicine called laudanum to treat the pain.
Elizabeth Barrett Moulton - Barrett was born on 6th March 1806 at the Koku Show Hall located between Kokuho village and Kello village in Durham State, England. Her parents are Edward Barrett Moulton Barrett and Mary Graham Clark; Elizabeth is the largest of the twelve children (8 boys and 4 girls). Except for the girl who Elizabeth died at the age of eight at the age of three, everyone lived until they were adults. Children have nicknames: Elizabeth is "pack". She took a pony and went for a family walk or a picnic, exchanged with other county families, and participated in the home theater production. However, unlike her brothers and sisters, she is often immersed in books because she can remove family social rituals.
Elizabeth is the eldest son of Edward Barrett Moulton (later Edward Moulton Barrett). She was very happy that she spent most of her teens at the Country House in Malvern Hills, Worcestershire. But at the age of fifteen she was probably a serious illness due to spinal cord injury, and her health was permanently affected. In 1832 the family moved to Sidmouth, Devon State, moved to London in 1836 and 50 Winpole Street in 1838. In London, she contributed several journals, and her first work, Seraphim and Other Poetry, was published in 1838. For health reasons she spent the next three years at Torquay, Devon. After older brother Edward drowned, she developed a nearly pathological fear that would meet anyone except the small undergarment circle.