Several thousand letters to and from Elizabeth Barrett and Robert
Browning have survived, together with other information on the
composition and context of works from Barrett's 'lines on virtue'
written at the age of eight in 1814 to Browning's Asolando (1889). The
Chronology seeks to guide readers through this mass of material in three
main sections: youth, contrasting early backgrounds and careers, and
growing interest in each other's work to 1845; courtship, marriage,
Italy, and work including Aurora Leigh and Men and Women (1845-61);
Browning's later life of relentless socializing and prolific writing
from his return to London to his death in Venice in 1889. The book
provides not only precise dating but much matter on such topics as the
Brownings' extensive reading in English, French and classical
literature, their many friendships, and their sometimes conflicting
political beliefs.