Thursday, May 30, 2019

Robert Browning Poems: My Last Duchess and Porphyrias Lover Essay

Robert Browning is one of the most celebrated poets of the Victorian age. His two poems I am working from, My Last Duchess and Porphyrias rooter, are just samples of his eminent work. Browning wrote a range of monologues when living in Italy with his wife, Elizabeth Barret. Dramatic monologues are the basis of the essay. I will discuss whether (or not) for each one poem creates a character who reveals himself in what he has to say. My Last Duchess is a monologue spoken by the Duke. He talks about his family relationship with his recently deceased wife. Through the words of the poem, he reveals the true demise of the Duchess and the reader is shown the Dukes feelings and opinions of this woman. Porphyrias Lover is also about the death of a woman. It involves a possessive lover who wishes to enshrine a moment of love. Though his method is everything but normal. Both poems are filled with rhyming couplets, however with the technique of enjambment, they are more or less undetectable. This is a clever and subtle insinuation to the murderous deed in hand. I would first like to comment on the titles of both poems. My Last Duchess abide give many hints to what the poem regards. The word My can symbolise the Dukes wish to own the Duchess and using My creates this image. Last may make the reader think that she is the in style(p) in a long line of wives, or that she is the last wife once and for all. Porphyrias Lover is left unnamed. Using Duchess the reader can imagine that the staminate character is a Duke and therefore he has a title and a label. The Lover is anonymous he has no name, but uses Porphyria to describe himself. This makes him very... ...anonymous Lover is possessively insane. He is driven only by his love for Porphyria. He feels restrained by society and feels that the moment she declares she is his he cannot let it slip away. Time is against him and he had to mold some way of keeping her perfectly preserved and unchanged. The Lover also reveals his rebellion against religion and God, thinking that God will not condemn him, as his deed was not wrong. I prefer Porphyrias Lover to My Last Duchess, as the Duke is terribly arrogant and pedantic. The Lover, I believe, truly loved Porphyria with all his heart, though it is get why he felt death was the only option. Whereas the Duke, did not love his wife but saw her as a possession to show by in front of people. The painting must surely work the way he wants it, as it is another thing to show off.

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