Sunday, August 4, 2019
Porphyriaââ¬â¢s Lover and My Last Duchess Essay -- Robert Browning, Poem,
The two poems that I am comparing are Porphyriaââ¬â¢s Lover and My Last Duchess,   both early nineteenth century dramatic monologues by Robert Browning.     Compare the three dramatic monologues you have studied on the way in  which the characters reveal their true nature through what they say.    The two poems that I am comparing are Porphyriaââ¬â¢s Lover and My Last  Duchess, both early nineteenth century dramatic monologues by Robert  Browning. A dramatic monologue is a poem in which only one person  speaks, but the presence of another person is usually felt. The  narrator reveals a great deal about himself without any apparent  intention of doing so. In both of these dramatic monologues, it  appears that the speaker has murdered their mistress and is reflecting  upon their actions while contemplating the image of their loverââ¬â¢s  beautiful face. Both are selfish men who were jealous of their  victims. The two speakers came from very different backgrounds, one a  rich and powerful Duke, the other a low-born worker living in rural  simplicity.    Porphyriaââ¬â¢s Lover is a love story told in the words of a simple man  obsessed by his love for a woman of noble birth. The first five lines  describe the weather on a miserable, wet evening. This is Browningââ¬â¢s  use of pathetic fallacy, giving the works of nature human feelings ââ¬â  the feelings of the speaker.  ======================================================================    ââ¬Å"The sullen wind was soon awake,    It tore the elm tops down for spite,    And its worse to vex the lake:â⬠    The speaker is longing for his lover and feeling miserable but then  she arrives. The whole mood changes from darkness and cold, to warmth  and light. His mood change is shown by ââ¬Å"she shut the cold outâ⬠, both  ...              ... saw the  young Duchess, a work of art, something that he owned and could show  off, and something that he could also discard when it no longer  pleased him. The speaker in Porphyriaââ¬â¢s Lover, reveals himself to be  someone who speaks his heart and does not ââ¬Ëfence aroundââ¬â¢ the truth  like the Duke. Although the Duke says he does not have skilled  speech, its is obvious that his diction is carefully chosen through  out. He is almost inviting the listener to disagree with him.    ââ¬Å"Even had you the skill    In speech ââ¬â (which I have not)â⬠    The speaker in Porphyriaââ¬â¢s Lover uses a much simpler diction, as he  will not have been as well educated as the Duke. Both men are  murderers, one because of love, which he feels, could never be  accepted because of the social divide, the other as a result of  jealousy, arrogance and spite, again occasioned by the difference in  class.                      
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