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Sonnet XXIX | Summary
Lines 1–4
Barrett Browning’s first statement (“I think of thee!”) is, in part, the subject of the poem, for the entire sonnet attempts to imitate, through its imagery and sound, the dynamics of her mind dwelling on Browning, her fond yet absent lover. (Though readers customarily use the term “speaker” to note the difference between a poet and the voice behind his or her work, in the case of “Sonnet XXIX” one can speak of Barrett Browning as the speaker, since the poems are deliberate and undisguised addresses to her husband.) Barrett Browning compares her...
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- Sonnet XXIX: Introduction
- Sonnet XXIX: Summary
- Sonnet XXIX: Elizabeth Barrett Browning Biography
- Sonnet XXIX: Themes
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