Note to moderator: Please read the answerline for the first part carefully.Right after this book’s publication, its author fled to Rome with their daughters Marianne and Meta, and proceeded to perhaps fall in love with Charles Eliot Norton. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name or describe this book, whose author blithely noted that they had “three people [whom they wanted] to libel” in it. This book blames Lydia Robinson for the death of its subject’s brother Branwell.
ANSWER: The Life of Charlotte Brontë [accept Elizabeth Gaskell’s biography of Charlotte Brontë or equivalent descriptions; prompt on answers that describe a biography of Charlotte Brontë without naming its author by asking “By whom?”; prompt on answers that describe an Elizabeth Gaskell biography of a Brontë sister but that do not indicate which one by asking “which Brontë?”; prompt on answers that describe an Elizabeth Gaskell book on Charlotte Brontë, but that do not indicate what genre of book]
[10h] While in Rome, Gaskell stayed at the house of this sculptor, the inspiration for Kenyon in Hawthorne’s The Marble Faun. Henry James wrote a biography titled [this sculptor] And His Friends.
ANSWER: William Wetmore Story [accept William Wetmore Story and His Friends] (Story’s sculpture Cleopatra is attributed to Kenyon in The Marble Faun.)
[10e] Nell Stevens’s fictionalization of Gaskell’s time in Rome includes a chapter describing Harriet Hosmer’s casting of the Clasped Hands of these two people. One of these two people was the addressee of the other’s line, “Yes, call me by my pet-name!”
ANSWER: Robert Browning AND Elizabeth Barrett Browning [accept the Brownings; accept Elizabeth Barrett in place of “Elizabeth Barrett Browning”] (Nell Stevens wrote Mrs. Gaskell and Me.)
<Arya Karthik, British Literature>