Porphyria's Lover Essay

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    Poets from all around the world have influences that help them create their works. Regardless of whether their lifetime had series of war or epidemics that they witnessed, their work reflects their current lifetime. During Robert Browning’s poetry life, England became more urban and newspapers started to expose the negativity of the country (Chesterton Web). Faith became a big issue as people were starting to lose faith and follow Charles Darwin and his theory of evolution. Basic morals and beliefs

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    It seemed as though he preferred to write from the perspective of psychopaths and murderers, and that contributed to the label he was given as a writer of dramatic monologues. Porphyria’s Lover best illustrates his use of madness. Not only is the main character murdered, as death is definitely a consistent theme in his work, but it shows the scary desire of the killer and essentially makes use of the saying “if I can’t have her, no

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    The situation seems ludicrous to the reader, because smiling at people does not seem a good enough reason to be killed. This is a clear indication to the reader that the narrator is mad, and thus unreliable. The portrayal of the duchess in the duke‘s words is also an important part of the poem, but the main goal of My Last Duchess is the exploration of the mind of the speaker. The description of the duchess makes clear that the duke is obviously not in his right mind. He does not gain any self-knowledge

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    Martineau and Dorothy Wordsworth. The inner reflections of these women writers not only rejects the “Angel in the House” ideal placed upon women, which is found in “The Paragon” by , but also contradicts those illustrated in “My Last Duchess” and “Porphyria’s Lover.” One can also see that the new emerging consciousness of women was a reflection of the social unrest during these time periods. During the Romantic period, “England was experiencing the ordeal of change from a primarily agricultural society

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    To his Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell and The Flea by John Donne Two of the poems in Best Words are seduction poems, rather than love poems. These are To his coy mistress by Andrew Marvell and The Flea by John Donne. Compare these two poems by analysing: - · Each poets intention · Form of the poem · Language used in the poem · Your reaction to the unromantic poems. ‘Let me not to the marriage of true minders/Admit impediments, love is not love’, is one of many famous love sonnets

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    1.) A sonnet is a lyrical poem that has fourteen lines. Sonnets were introduced in the 16th century, William Shakespeare’s time and era. William Shakespeare’s notorious “Sonnet 18” is by far my favorite sonnet that I have had the chance and pleasure to indulge in. Sonnet 18 is about the love and compassion the speaker has for his significant other. The sonnet describes the unnamed subject as a beautiful person. The rest of the poem goes on and the author contrasts the subject to a summer’s day, and

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    inextricably be linked in its purest state (i.e. when no obstacle is placed on its course) to the drive toward destruction – is not the best way to possess your object to destroy it, so that it won’t escape you?” In another Browningian monologue ‘Porphyria’s Lover‘, the speaker does choke his beloved to death in order to possess her with a finality. Even as the speaker in “The Last Ride Together” does no such thing, he nevertheless wishes for annihilation of the world: “Who knows but the world may end

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    this semester is the theme of the image of women. Women have played a huge role in many of the works of literature that were explored this semester. From the description of a woman being strangled to death by her own hair in Robert Browning’s Porphyria’s Lover, to a dead woman believing her loved ones were visiting her grave in Thomas Hardy’s Ah, Are you Digging on my Grave? Women have also played a huge role in Great Expectations by Charles Dickens and The Subjection of Women by John Stuart Mill.

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    Although the early part of Robert Browning’s creative life was spent in comparative obscurity, he has come to be regarded as one of the most important poets of the Victorian period. His dramatic monologues and the psycho-historical epic The Ring and the Book (1868-1869), a novel in verse, have established him as a major figure in the history of English poetry. His claim to attention as a children’s writer is more modest, resting as it does almost entirely on one poem, “The Pied Piper of Hamelin,”

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