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| Lives of Girls Who Became Famous | Sarah Knowles Bolton |
Elizabeth Barrett Browning |
Page 9 of 9 |
For fifteen years this happy wedded life, with its work of brain and hand, had been lived, and now the bond was to be severed. In June, 1861, Mrs. Browning took a severe cold, and was ill for nearly a week. No one thought of danger, though Mr. Browning would not leave her bedside. On the night of June 29, toward morning she seemed to be in a sort of ecstasy. She told her husband of her love for him, gave him her blessing, and raised herself to die in his arms. "It is beautiful," were her last words as she caught a glimpse of some heavenly vision. On the evening of July 1, she was buried in the English cemetery, in the midst of sobbing friends, for who could carry out that request?--
"And friends, dear friends, when it shall be The Italians, who loved her, placed on the doorway of Casa Guidi a white marble tablet, with the words:-- "_Here wrote and died E.B. Browning, who, in the heart of a woman, united the science of a sage and the spirit of a poet, and made with her verse a golden ring binding Italy and England. "Grateful Florence placed this memorial, 1861_." |
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Lives of Girls Who Became Famous Sarah Knowles Bolton |
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