Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Robert Browning s Porphyria s Lover - 967 Words

Many teenagers and even adults often struggle with the thought of being single. Some people would rather be in an abusive non-healthy relationship than in a healthy relationship so that they do not have to be alone. Nowadays, relationships are put on such a pedestal that most young girls and even boys think they are obligated to be in a relationship in order to fit in. Furthermore, many relationships lead to abusive or obsessive relationships that can often lead to traumatic injuries and even death. For instance, the poet, Robert Browning relates how an obsessive relationship can change someone’s life in a blink of an eye. Through the use of personification, imagery and character, Browning’s poem â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† proves that love can make anyone deranged. First, Browning uses personification to demonstrate the idea that love can make someone disturbed, for example, â€Å"The sullen wind was soon awake,† (Line 2). As the character in this poem sits in his dark cottage pinning over his lover, he labels the wind as being â€Å"sullen† and â€Å"awake† as if the weather is intentionally being unpleasant. In reality, the speaker is just so insane that he assumes the weather is out to get him and is being irksome on purpose. Another example is, â€Å"It tore the elm-tops down for spite,† (Line 3). The writer uses the word â€Å"spite† to describe his feelings because the wind does not feel spite during a storm. Once again, the character is so obsessed over Porphyria that he has gone crazy. Therefore,Show MoreRelatedPorphyria s Lover By Robert Browning1472 Words   |  6 Pages Robert Browning’s dramatic monologue entitled â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† tells the story of a meeting between a man and a woman that begins filled with romance, but quickly turns sinister. Porphyria visits the speaker at his cottage late at night, to confess her love for him even though they cannot be together. The speaker, filled with happiness in the newfound knowledge that Porphyria â€Å"worshiped† him, kills her by strangling her with her own hair in order to free her from her â€Å"vainer ties† and allow themRead MoreRobert Browning s Porphyria s Lover 938 Words   |  4 Pagesdeath in different ways. Robert Browning’s poem â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† has few similarities with â€Å"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 the speaker gaining control, and Thomas talks about the transience of life in a poem about fighting death. In one of Robert Browning’s most unsettling dramatic monologues, â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover,† Browning tells a story of a manRead MorePorphyria s Lover By Robert Browning936 Words   |  4 PagesRobert Browning’s â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† is a perfect representation of the status of women during the Victorian Era; women were treated as objects not people. They were property of men, not individuals. In this poem, the speaker, Porphyria’s lover, murders Porphyria and does not only think it was okay to do so, but he also thinks what he has done is noble. In the lines shown above, the speaker begins to realize that Porphyria loves him. Not only does she love him, but she â€Å"worships† him. This furtherRead MorePorphyria s Lover By Robert Browning And The Wind1830 Words   |  8 Pages In the poems, â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† By Robert Browning and â€Å"The Wind† by William Morris, the poets, both share the event s surrounding the murder of a young woman, however â€Å"The wind† is widely considered to be set 25 years later and reflection of the murder in â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover†. Both poems are told by an unreliable narrator, who forces the readers to question exactly what occurred. In the poems, the reader can draw similarities and differences between how the unreliable narrator distorts our viewRead MoreAnalysis Of The Poem Porphyria s Lover By Robert Browning1959 Words   |  8 PagesWith so much poetry coming out of Britain it can be hard for any of it to stand out from the rest, but â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† by Robert Browning and â€Å"A Poison Tree† by William Blake manage to stand out from other poems. These two poems differ in structure, writing style, and voice but both have something that sticks them out from the rest; murderers without a moral compass. While murder isn’t new to poetry it is rare to find it as nonchalant as it is in these two poems. These killers were not killingRead MoreA Brief Note On Robert Browning s Porphyria s Lover And The Laboratory1972 Words   |  8 PagesContributory Factors to the Murders in Robert Browning’s â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† and â€Å"The Laboratory.† The word ‘love’ possesses such complexity and magnitude that people commonly have a hard time defining it effectively without oversimplifying. Given the true intensity of feeling, jealousy is often said to be synonymous with being in love and the real impact love can have on a person can be unpredictable. Considering this, The Cambridge Dictionary defines a ‘crime of passion’ as a crimeRead MoreAnalysis Of `` Annabel Lee By Edgar Allan Poe1235 Words   |  5 PagesAnnabel Lee by Edgar Allan Poe was inspired by the women that had passed away in his life, but since Poe had written the poem after his wife s death, it is probably more about her. In Porphyria s Lover by Robert Browning, there was no real inspiration except the fact he was just very into dramatic love. Robert Browning in the impulsive Porphyria s Lover and Edgar Allan Poe in the somber Annabel Lee explore the theme of complicated love all throughout their poems and also their use of visualRead MoreThe Power Of Dark Love1217 Words   |  5 Pagesin â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† says, â€Å"That moment she was mine, mine, fair, perfectly pure and good† (Browning, lines 36-37). Both Robert Browning and Edgar Allan Poe share a love for the themes of obsession, desire, and complicated love. Each of those three themes play an important role in dark love poetry. Each poet describes the main character in their poems as a woman worthy of the speaker’s obsessive, complicated, and desirable love. Both Robert Browning’s tragic â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† and Edgar AllanRead MorePorphyrias Lover And My Last Duchess By Robert Browning1510 Words   |  7 PagesRobert Browning is a romantic and victorian poet who writes from a speaker’s perspective while a listener is listening to what the speaker reveals about him or herself. Oscar Wilde, author of The Complete Letters of Oscar Wilde, once exclaimed, â€Å"In art, Browning can make action and psychology one!† A healthy and fully expressed relationship is the bond between two people, consisting of trust, honesty, and respect (Denham et al. 397). Within â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† and â€Å"My Last Duchess,† Robert BrowningRead MoreCompare My Last Duchess And Porphyrias Lover1098 Words   |  5 PagesLove That Kills (Comparing and Contrasting of â€Å"My Last Duchess† and â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover†) While reading the poems â€Å"My Last Duchess† and â€Å"Porphyria’s Lover† by Robert Browning, there is a large possibility that you may be left haunted by the words that were written on the paper. â€Å" This is not to say that he was blandly optimistic, as he is sometimes portrayed. He wrote fully about the world s cruelty and vice and was quite frank that he had himself had no divine revelation. Nevertheless, he resolved

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