Relationship in the Elizabeth Barrett Browning poetry Let's say that if it is to be a matter of indifference between men and women if you have to love me it was always a widely discussed subject. All sexes want to know what it feels like to be someone else and experience things in other ways. Men and women will never understand each other, and from time to time they can not love those who love them. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's poem "If you must love me and make it innocent" explains how women hurt men.
The last declaration of love written by Alice Barret Browning. "How do I love you? I will count the way" is a rhyme drowned in a sentimental oath. This sonnet shows how eternal love Browning shared with her husband and how this love can not be destroyed by human or spiritual power (Elizabeth Barrett Browning's " Sonnet 45 "). Based on answering simple seemingly complicated questions, "How do I love you?" (Browning 1st line) is the foundation of this poem.
Relationship in the Elizabeth Barrett Browning poetry Let's say that if it is to be a matter of indifference between men and women if you have to love me it was always a widely discussed subject. All sexes want to know what it feels like to be someone else and experience things in other ways. Men and women will never understand each other, and from time to time they can not love those who love them. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's poem "If you must love me and make it innocent" explains how women hurt men.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning Elizabeth Barrett Browning was born in 1806 in Durham, England. She is the eldest of twelve children born in Edward Barrett Moulin Barrett and Mary Graham Clark. Elizabeth Barret Browning, or Ba, grew up in her house at the Hope End. They are a member of the middle class and succeed in sugar trading. Elizabeth began writing early. When she was twelve years old, her father's first epic "Marathon Battle" was personally printed (Radley 15).