"My Last Duchess" explicitly portrays the emotions and thoughts of the Duke of Ferrara. As it is set in a private art gallery in the palace of the Duke of Ferrara and depicts a devastating self-portrait of royalty that exhibits more of the Duke's personality than Ferrara intends. The poem also reveals the inner thoughts of the Duke Of Ferrara through the form of monologue. In the poem there are elements of jealousy as the portrait of the Duchess was made by Fra Pandolf; a monk who emphasises that he once was a religious and chaste man.…
On August 17, of 2016 I seen this beautiful girl named Macy Swanson. That whole school year I didn't say a word to her because I didn't think I would stand and chance with such an amazing beautiful girl. But a year later I had the gut to text her best friend on July 15th, 2017. I told her I though her best friend Macy was really pretty. Then finally on July 22, I texted her on Facebook messenger and from that day on we've been talking since.…
“Thank you Old Lady Daniels!” I turn to face the faded white picket fence and continue to lightly skip to a rhythm, trying my best to dodge the cracks of the sidewalk leading out of the lady’s house. She sits on the wicker rocking chair on her dull porch that’s coordinates with her dull house which coordinates with this dull atmosphere. Once I start to get close to the road, I turn to face her to offer her a friendly wave. “Goodbye, Gregory.…
Saving Society Tumultuously, Diana Moon Glampers burst into the auditorium. As she irately evaluated the room, her eyes met Harrison’s. The look of pure defiance that was revealed through Harrison’s eyes enraged her. “Stop the music,” she demanded fiercely. Their music remained audible.…
“You have such, pretty hair so long and healthy” I told her. I ignore the fact she was strap down on a worn out vintage table that was collecting dust in the basement. I started touching on her hair feeling it, it felt soft and silky. “You know Valerie I used to have hair like your, it went all the way down to my hips and it was so gorgeous” I started to reminisce about the hair I use to have and kept stroking her hair. “Please!…
This date was going way better than Regina had ever imagined it going. Robin is one of the greatest guys she has ever had the pleasure of meeting. He is witty, intelligent, and extremely hot. She learned that she has quite a lot in common with him. Robin is a writer for musicians.…
Hello Abbey! I came here from Toronto. Coming here made me more loving to the cold temperature or at least not complain. However the weather here is nice al most all the time and can't complain about that. Its also cool that you are enthusiastic about linguistics and practice fluency in several languages.…
After, being with both Browning never seemed to have a doubt with his last Duchesses love. With Porphyria’s lover it was different, he felt unsure and threatened by her entertaining others and not just him. His last Duchess always smiled. Porphyria’s lover always went out and never took him along and she claimed to love him. Duchess, was more of her showing him love by emotions and Porphyria’s lover more by words and not so much by…
Throughout, ‘Sonnets from the Portuguese’ B.Browning subverts the Victorian idea of ‘courtly love’ admiring Robert and thinking she is the one who isn’t worthy of him. Evident in ‘Sonnet 32’, the metaphor of “more like an out of tune / worn viol” reflects her feelings of unworthiness and admiration for Robert - “...out of tune” reinforces her rejection of the Victorian patriarchy, yet her abandonment of contextual attitudes results in feelings of uncertainty. However, she simultaneously subscribes to traditional, contextual norms - “‘Neath master = hands”. The diction of “master” creates status, and exposes women’s internalised, subservient social position in Victorian society.…
Secondly, the author reveals to us the the Duke is a Jealous person. “This grew; I gave commands.” This line shows how the Duke is jealous towards the Duchess because…
In “Porphyria's Lover” by Robert Browning, a girl wanders into the woods and finds a man who would then kill her. There are many comparisons and contrasts you can pull from Robert Browning’s “My Last Duchess” and “Porphyria’s Lover”. One contrast between Robert Browning’s “My Last Duchess” and “Porphyria’s Lover”, is that one is jealous because of love and the other is jealous for love. In “my Last Duchess”, this man love his wife buts gets angry when she smiles.…
He uses these disturbing scenes to directly attack the male patriarchy back in his time. Browning’s two poems, My Last Duchess and Porphyria’s Lover, calls into question the idea of the treatment of women in the Victorian era. In both poems, My Last Duchess and Porphyria’s Lover, Robert Browning writes two similar tragic and disturbing stories. Both poems contain men who are mentally disturbed as well as two women they supposedly “love” but end up killing in the end.…
The poem ¬¬¬My Last Duchess alongside the novel The Handmaid’s Tale conveys a strong sense of patriarchal power. Browning demonstrates the patriarchal power of the Duke throughout the whole poem, from a rhyming couplet of the poem “that’s my last duchess painted on the wall, looking as if she were alive, I call”, the use of personal pronouns emphasises the power the Duke possesses over the Duchess. Browning utilises symbolism, enjambment and an allusion; “Notice Neptune though taming a sea-horse” allowing the observation of a parallel between the relationship of the Duke and the Duchess, and Neptune and the seahorse as the Duke’s intentions to assert dominance over his future Duchess follow the same pattern as Neptune’s taming of the seahorse. Additionally, the euphemism “I gave commands; then all smiles stopped together” makes reference, through alliteration, to the transformation of his last Duchess into a medium to which he is no longer subject to her “trifling” situation and can exert his power and control over who is exposed to her smile.…
Browning’s My Last Duchess can be seen to almost resemble blank verse with incidental couplets. Thus the couplet has a very different effect to the calming pastoral or measured argument previously mentioned. There is a dramatic quality in the long sentences, exaggerated punctuation and unsettling rhetorical questions such as ‘Will’t please you rise?’ This combined with such a rigid rhyme scheme adds a sinister quality to what Browning called ‘dramatic lyric’ .…