preview

Jealousy In 'My Last Duchess' By Robert Browning

Decent Essays

Browning’s poetry has been analysed for centuries and still presents relevant ideas, influencing those interested in changing ideals. A flawed individual who gains power through a high position will begin to expect things they don’t deserve, thus endangering others through the process and of being consumed by pride and jealousy. Browning imagines “My Last Duchess” through the perspective of the Duke of Ferrara who lived during Renaissance Italy of the 16th century, when a man was expected to be able to control his wife and she was only appreciated for her beauty and compliance. Similarly, Browning’s “The Laboratory” exposes the strict class structures of aristocratic France where the women were expected to be pure and impermeable to such base …show more content…

The voice becomes consumed by the power given to her by the “poison” and is regularly alluded to, “the poison to poison her, prithee?” the alliteration intensifying the poisons importance. Whilst articulating her jealousy the speaker’s sentences are disjointed and provide a staccato effect, she knows “they know that I know”; she’s paranoid, becoming consumed with justification for her actions. The power that comes with the ability to murder excites her, thinking that “Pauline should have just thirty minutes to live!” and “Elise … should drop dead!”, the repetitive use of the exclamation mark only heightens her passion for murder, reflecting the destructive tendencies of mankind . When finally rewarding the apothecary a play of power is employed with her ‘allowing’ the “old man” to “kiss me … on my mouth if you will!” and to “gorge gold to your fill”, the alliteration reiterating that she holds the power and can do with it what she wants. Although power can have a positive effect Browning uses it here to highlight how it can consume an individual to go to extreme lengths and become mentally

Get Access