Life of Robert Browning by William Sharp
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page 8 of 308 (02%)
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NOTE. In all important respects I leave this volume to speak for itself. For obvious reasons it does not pretend to be more than a _Mémoire pour servir_: in the nature of things, the definitive biography cannot appear for many years to come. None the less gratefully may I take the present opportunity to express my indebtedness to Mr. R. Barrett Browning, and to other relatives and intimate friends of Robert Browning, who have given me serviceable information, and otherwise rendered kindly aid. For some of the hitherto unpublished details my thanks are, in particular, due to Mrs. Fraser Corkran and Miss Alice Corkran, and to other old friends of the poet and his family, here, in Italy, and in America; though in one or two instances, I may add, I had them from Robert Browning himself. It is with pleasure that I further acknowledge my indebtedness to Dr. Furnivall, for the loan of the advance-proofs of his privately-printed pamphlet on "Browning's Ancestors"; and to the Browning Society's Publications--particularly to Mrs. Sutherland Orr's and Dr. Furnivall's biographical and bibliographical contributions thereto; to Mr. Gosse's biographical article in the _Century Magazine_ for 1881; to Mr. Ingram's _Life of E.B. Browning_; and to the _Memoirs of Anna Jameson_, the _Italian Note-Books_ of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Mr. G.S. Hillard's _Six Months in Italy_ (1853), and the Lives and Correspondence of Macready, Miss Mitford, Leigh Hunt, and Walter Savage Landor. I regret that the imperative need of concision has prevented the insertion of many of the letters, anecdotes, and reminiscences, so |
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