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Elizabeth Barrett Browning And Aurora Leigh By Sarah Stickney Ellis

Decent Essays

The Victorian Age of writing has many unique characteristics and topics associated with it. One topic written about heavily during this time period is the role of the women in life. Many writers had differing views on the role of the women and their literary work showed this. Two notable works from the Victorian Age about the issue of the women’s role include “Aurora Leigh” by Elizabeth Barrett Browning and “The Women of England” by Sarah Stickney Ellis. Browning’s work presents the English Utilitarian role for women and Ellis’s work’s purpose is to “cultivate what she called “the heart” rather than the intellectual faculties of her pupils [women]” (The Norton Anthology 1610). Browning’s book one from “Aurora Leigh” is a firsthand account …show more content…

Ellis asserts that the role of women is being a “monitress who [sit] alone, guarding the fireside comforts of [their husband’s] distant home” (Ellis 1611). The woman’s moral superiority at the home allows their husbands to be the best they can be in society when they think back to their wives and home. Ellis says that the women who best do this are not “the learned, the accomplished women; the women who could solve problems, and elucidate systems of philosophy” (1612) but the opposite. Thus, Ellis is instructing that in order for women to fulfill their role of being morally great, they should not subject themselves to the ways of the smart and intelligent women as this will prevent them from fulfilling this moral greatness. Ellis’s idea of the woman’s role in life is to be an image for men to look to when the men need moral guidance and structure. However, in order for women to reach this moral pedestal, woman cannot pursue intellectual and heroine ways of life as these ways of life would prevent them from being morally great. Ellis thinks it is a bad idea for women to be immoral because “the influence of woman in counteracting the growing evils of society is about to be more needed than ever” (1612) and the only way women have an influence is if they are morally sound as Ellis

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