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h Museum, 52, 53; travels in 1833 to Russia, 57; to Italy, 58; return to Camberwell, 1834, 58, and begins "Paracelsus," sonnet signed "Z," 1834, 60; love for Venice, 62; "Paracelsus," 59, 62; criticisms thereon, 71, 73; he meets Macready, 73; "Narses," 76; he meets Talfourd, Wordsworth, Landor, 77; "Strafford," 79; his dramas, 85; his love of the country, 95; "Pippa Passes," 96, 98; "Sordello," 105; origin of "The Ring and the Book," 1865; "The Ring and the Book," 113-119; "The Inn Album," 127; "Men and Women," 128; proposed "Transcripts from Life," 129; "Flower o' the Vine," 131; correspondence between him and Miss Barrett, 136; meeting in 1846, 138; engagement, 140; marriage, 12th September 1846, 145; sojourn in Pisa, 146; they go to Florence, 148; to Ancona, _via_ Ravenna, 150; "The Guardian Angel," 150; Casa Guidi, 152; birth of son, March 9th, 1849, 157; they go to Vallombrosa and Bagni di Lucca for the autumn, and winter at Casa Guidi, 156; spring of 1850 in Rome, 159; "Two in the Campagna," 156; 1851, they visit England; description of Browning, 161; winter 1851-2 in Paris with Robert Browning, senior, 162; Browning writes Prefatory Essay to Moxon's edition of Shelley's Letters, 163; midsummer, Baths of Lucca, 165; in Florence, 166; "In a Balcony," 166; winter in Rome, 1853-4, 166; the work written there, 167; "Ben Karshook's Wisdom," 167; "Men and Women" published, 168; Kenyon's death, and legacies to the Brownings, 170; poems written between 1855-64, 169; July 1858, Brownings go to Normandy, 173; "Legend of Pornic," "Gold Hair," 173; autumn of 1859 in Sienna; winter 1860-61 in Rome, 173; death of Mrs. Browning, June 1861, 175; "Prospice," 176; 1866, Browning loses his father; Miss Sarianna resides with Browning, 177; his ways of life, 177; first collected edition of his works, 1868, 178; first part of "The Ring and the Book" published, 178; "Herve Riel," 179; Tauchnitz edition, 1872, 179; "Bishop Blougram," 179; "Selections," 180; "La Saisiaz," 1877, 180; "The Two Poets of Croisic," 181; later works, 182; "Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau," "Red Cotton Nightcap Country," 182, 183; "Fifine at the Fair," 183, 184, 185-7; "Jocoseria," 187; 1881, Browning Society established, 188; his latter years, 189; revisits Asolo, 191; Pal
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