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Elizabeth Barrett, Robert Browning: Famous Love Letters Go Online (VIDEO)

By By DENISE LAVOIE 02/14/12 09:16 AM ET AP

Barrett Browning
In this Friday, Feb. 10, 2012 photo, a hand-written original manuscript by Elizabeth Barrett Browning of the epic poem "Aurora Leigh," is held by Mariana Oller, Wellesley College associate curator of special collections at the Margaret Clapp Library, on the campus of Wellesley College, in Wellesley, Mass. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

WELLESLEY, Mass. -- "I love your verses with all my heart, dear Miss Barrett ..."

So begins the first love letter to 19th-century poet Elizabeth Barrett from her future husband, fellow poet Robert Browning.

Their 573 love letters, which capture their courtship, their blossoming love and their forbidden marriage, have long fascinated scholars and poetry fans. Though transcriptions of their correspondence have been published in the past, the handwritten letters could be seen only at Wellesley College, where the collection has been kept since 1930.

But starting Tuesday, Valentine's Day, their famous love letters are available online, where readers can see them just as they were written – with creased paper, fading ink, quill pen cross-outs, and even the envelopes.

The digitization project is a collaboration between Wellesley and Baylor University in Waco, Texas, which houses the world's largest collection of books, letters and other items related to the Brownings.

Wellesley administrators hope the project will expose students, romantics, poetry fans and others to their love story.

Barrett, one of the best-known poets of the Victorian era, suffered from chronic illness and was in her late 30s when Browning first wrote her in 1845 to tell her he admired her work. In their fifth month of correspondence, they met for the first time, introduced by Barrett's cousin.

After more than a year of almost daily letters between them, the couple wed in secret in September 1846, defying her father's prohibition against her ever marrying. They fled from London to Italy, where doctors had told Barrett her health might improve. Her father disinherited her and never spoke to her again.

"It's the fact that she defied her father, she was in ill health, they fell in love through letters, she left with hardly anything," said Ruth Rogers, Wellesley's curator of special collections.

"If you want a perfect romance, just read the letters," she said.

The website set up for readers to see the correspondence includes both the handwritten letters and transcriptions, as well as a zoom function for readers to try to decipher faded or illegible words. The body of letters will also be searchable by keywords.

Readers can see for themselves how they fall in love, while corresponding about other writers, philosophy and their own work. Barrett first wrote the lines of what would become her most famous poem after she met Browning, "How Do I Love Thee? Let me count the ways."

Consider this, from Barrett's letter to Browning on June 4, 1846: "You are too perfect, too overcomingly good & tender – dearest you are, & I have no words with which to answer you."

Or this, from Browning to Barrett, Sept. 18, 1846, shortly before their marriage: "God bless and strengthen you, my ever dearest dearest ... Write to me one word more – depend on me ..."

"She met someone who she could share a seriously important part of her life with," said Sandra Donaldson, an English professor at the University of North Dakota and a scholar of Barrett Browning.

"Seeing these things that they touched – even though we are seeing it on the screen – has much the same effect as being able to see and touch the manuscripts," she said.

"When you look at the transcriptions, it's cold, black and white. It's nothing like these letters," she said of the handwritten online manuscripts.

Rogers said one of the most interesting things about the love letters is that Barrett almost left them behind when she and Browning left for Italy.

In her last letter to Browning, dated Sept. 18, 1846, she says she had to take them with her.

"I tried to leave them, & I could not – That is, they would not be left: it was not my fault – I will not be scolded," she wrote.

Henry Durant, who founded Wellesley College in 1870, admired the Brownings and considered Barrett Browning to be an example of a strong, educated woman who would be a good role model for the young women of Wellesley. Durant gave his large personal library to the college, including many first editions by both poets.

Because the college was already known for its Browning room and collection, Robert Browning donated Elizabeth's handwritten poem, "Little Mattie" to the college in 1882.

Former Wellesley President Caroline Hazard purchased the collection of Browning letters, and in 1930, donated them to Wellesley, where they have remained.

The library even has the actual mahogany door to the Barrett house in London, where Browning's letters to Elizabeth passed through a brass letter slot. The slot was screwed shut by a Wellesley librarian more than 40 years ago because students slipped through letters of their own to pay homage to the Brownings. Rogers said she is considering re-opening the slot.

The digitized letters are being made available free online through Baylor's digital collections.

Baylor transformed 1,723 raw digital images from Wellesley into more than 4,200 edited page and envelope images, said Darryl Stuhr, manager of digitization projects for Baylor's electronic library. Baylor also digitized more than 800 other letters written by or to the couple by friends, family and other literary greats of the era.

Stuhr said Baylor needed 107 gigabytes for the love letters alone.

"It is giving worldwide access to the collection, where somebody can actually see what the letters look like without having to travel, from the comfort of their own homes," Stuhr said.

___

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WELLESLEY, Mass. -- "I love your verses with all my heart, dear Miss Barrett ..." So begins the first love letter to 19th-century poet Elizabeth Barrett from her future husband, fellow poet Robert Br...
WELLESLEY, Mass. -- "I love your verses with all my heart, dear Miss Barrett ..." So begins the first love letter to 19th-century poet Elizabeth Barrett from her future husband, fellow poet Robert Br...
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07:38 PM on 02/14/2012
i can't seem to locate them at the baylor website...any tips on what terms to search???
06:17 PM on 02/14/2012
A link would be really useful here. LOL
04:29 PM on 02/14/2012
Where has the romance gone?
04:24 PM on 02/14/2012
TO DENISE LAVOIE, the alleged "writer" of the article: WHAT THE HECK IS THE SITE ADDRESS??? As a "writer" you did not resolve the thrust of the article: the letters and the website. You forgot half, my dear.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rightasrain
05:26 PM on 02/14/2012
Thank you! I was wondering the same.
04:20 PM on 02/14/2012
This is why pornography wasnt used back then HAHA
04:13 PM on 02/14/2012
One Bear Place , Waco, TX Baylors address.
03:21 PM on 02/14/2012
Good article with one minor grievance. Other than saying Baylor they needed to include the address to access this collection. I watched the video just to see if they included it and they did not. It would be helpful if we didn't have to do a web search to follow through if interested in reading or seeing these items.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charleen Borchers
03:17 PM on 02/14/2012
Growing up my boyfriend lived next door. We wrote notes to each other all the time and either threw them accross to each other thru windows directly upstairs in our homes, or left on a gate in the backyard.I learned how to communicate by writing my feelings down thay way. He was my first love and sadly we grew apart. I am now divorced from my husband and I found out a year or so ago he divorced his wife. I am on the East Coast and he lives not far from where we grew up. We send each other Christmas cards every year, and comment on how long ago it all was. That is about as far as it goes.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
moonflowerjewelry
Buy American made, no excuses.
10:12 AM on 02/14/2012
Socially we have moved towards lust being the defining factor as to whether or not a couple thinks they are compatible enough to marry. How different to spend a slow time of sharing thoughts before meeting. A different era, indeed. It's so romantic!

Late 30's and forbidden by her father to marry! Be glad those "daughter as property" days are gone.
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Ainsaade
Covered in bees
11:10 AM on 02/14/2012
I'm going a tad off topic, but if we let certain people have their way, those days could come back.
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homer winslow
Truth in Beauty, Beauty in Truth
11:43 AM on 02/14/2012
I met my wife through match.com. We spent a month exchanging emails before talking on the phone. We discovered that we both loved e.e.cummings and several of his poems in particular. We discussed politics, religion, family, pets, childhoods and more before ever speaking to each other. We finally met in person, took a trip to the Denver Art Museum and the Tattered Cover bookstore and have been together for 8 years now. While not the same as writing letters by hand, I feel that our courtship was similar in many ways.
09:33 AM on 02/14/2012
Cool
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Flor Arellano
West Coast chick with an East Coast heart.
09:26 AM on 02/14/2012
Writing letters period is such a lost art. Who would love to received a love letter?
02:47 PM on 02/14/2012
I prefer a nice love e-mail. Easier to delete if you don't like it.
04:18 PM on 02/14/2012
Well I do, but I cant even get him to not cheat on me :(... lol. .... And FB is on now so get an account there lol
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Urfubar12
Jezebel, destroyer of worlds...
09:13 AM on 02/14/2012
Awwwww, how cute. To bad no one does this kind of thing anymore. 8^(
02:47 PM on 02/14/2012
Too bad no one knows the difference between "to" and "too" anymore.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Urfubar12
Jezebel, destroyer of worlds...
02:59 PM on 02/14/2012
No one cares.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dembabe40
I don't need no stinkin' bio
08:29 AM on 02/14/2012
The lost art of writing.....I miss it.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
08:28 AM on 02/14/2012
Terrific decision. by Wellesley University
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Timesachanging
Thinking is harder than feeling.
08:22 AM on 02/14/2012
I, the world's biggest cynic, cried when I read this. How wonderful to be given the gift of letters.