Robert Browning

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    Porphyria’s lover article Porphyria’s lover by Robert browning, made in 1836 is one of browning’s most famous monologues. The monologues is about the speaker who lives in a countryside with his lover named porphyria who worships him. Since his lover worships/loves him very much he decides to keep it that way and in order to do that he takes her life by rapping her own hair around her neck and strangling her. He does not bury her but he uses her corps, laying it by his side and playing with her eyes

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    Robert Browning, a Victorian poet, is well known for his use of dramatic monologue. Robert Browning use of dramatic monologue in his poems, “Porphyria's Lover” and “My Last Duchess” separates the speaker from the poet and allows the reader to use the speaker’s words to uncover Browning’s actual meaning (Greenblatt 1275). By using the dramatic monologue, in his poems “Porphyria's Lover” and “My Last Duchess,” Browning depicts the gender roles of the patriarchal society as seen during the Victorian

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    Power is said to be the ability of another to be able to control or influence others in a given situation. Power is also a reoccurring theme that is without a doubt well displayed in Othello, Much Ado About Nothing, “Porphyria’s Lover,” “Eveline,” and “My Last Duchess.” In drama Othello, by Shakespeare, the title character suspects his wife Desdemona has been unfaithful with no proof and just the assumption of a friend. He publicly confronts Desdemona by hitting her and calling her a whore. Othello

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    Porphyria's Lover Essay

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    Robert Browning’s poem, “Porphyria’s Lover,” is a dramatic monologue which focuses on gender inequalities in England. Browning effectively exemplifies the males’ desire to dominate women in all spheres of life during the Victorian Era through the speaker’s state of mind, psychology, and actions. The patriarchal society of Victorian England suppressed the female identity and sexuality, by objectifying women and treating them as inferior. In the beginning, Browning shows how dominant Porphyria is by

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    conversation with the reader. It also makes the poem more mysterious because the reader doesn’t know if Alfonso is a “reliable” character—the reader only knows what Alfonso has told him or her (the emissary). By putting the reader in this position, Browning suggests that the emissary would have had the same opinions on objectification (arranged marriage, obsession with status) as Alfonso did; otherwise, why would he have said, “I gave

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    My Last Duchess Essay

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    In Robert Browning’s “My Last Duchess,” a servant of a man named the Count is coming to see a duke to arrange a marriage between the Count’s daughter and the duke. During the meeting, the duke reminisces about his late wife, the duchess. When discussing the late duchess, the duke talks about how the duchess was unfaithful to him with men who gave her gifts. However, the duke subtly gives hints that he is not the best spouse. He is an intimidating man, and he thinks of himself superior to everyone

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    TITLE Robert Browning’s poems, My Last Duchess (‘MLD’) and Porphyria’s Lover (‘PL’) take the form of dramatic monologues and are striking examples of literature written in the Victorian era. Due to their form, a great interaction is developed between the reader and narrator, with an additional oratory effect; this allows the audience to understand a situation less ambiguously through features such as tone. Therefore, Browning is able to present male and female characters more completely. Furthermore

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    Robert Browning (7 May 1812 – 12 December 1889) was an English poet and scriptwriter whose mastery of the dramatic monologue made him one of the most prominent Victorian poets. Within his collection were two of his most renowned works, “My Last Duchess” and “Porphyria’s Lover”. In “My Last Duchess” the speaker is an Italian Duke who is speaking to the ambassador about his daughter, who he intends to marry. The Duke then begins to flaunt his gallery of art with the intent to impress. He then comes

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    to discuss death in different ways. Robert Browning’s poem “Porphyria’s Lover” has few similarities with “Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night” by Dylan Thomas. These authors have drastic differences when talking about death. Browning discusses how killing is a power play in a poem about … and Thomas talks about the transience of life in a poem about fighting death. In one of Robert Browning’s most unsettling dramatic monologues, “Porphyria’s Lover,” Browning tells a story of a man killing his

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    My Last Duchess Essay

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    Browning, Robert. “My Last Duchess.” The Harvard Classics. Bartleby. N.d. Web. 22 January 2015. This poem, written in 1843 by Robert Browning, tells the tale of the fictional Duke of Ferrara’s former duchess. While discussing with a servant his plans to remarry, the Duke reflects upon some of his late wife’s memorabilia, including a portrait of her. He explains that she was pleased too easily; that “she had a heart…too soon made glad” (22-23). He expressed to the servant that his former duchess too

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