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Understanding "Porphyria's Lover" - Research Papers

Understanding "Porphyria's Lover"



Trials and hearings take place frequently in our society today. In
a trial, it is the job of two lawyers to persuade a jury to see a situation
a certain way, regardless if it is the right way, the truthful way, or if
it is even the way they themselves see it. It is then the jury's
obligation, after listening to both sides of the story, to make a decision
based on the evidence presented, and in most cases, the evidence is either
not presented in its entirety or overwhelmingly slanted to fit one side's
particular case. Therefore it is up to the juror to be able to throw away
the false information, and to pick out the shreds of truth and make a
conclusion based on them. This process, ...

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is actually right and what the
lawyers imply to be right is the same one the reader of a dramatic
monologue must make. Browning's Dramatic Lyrics is a collection of poems
in which many are written in dramatic monologue. "Porphyria's Lover" is a
poem from Dramatic Lyrics critics often cite when explaining dramatic
monologue. Because of it, the reader is pulled between what the speaker
thinks is right and what really is. Robert Browning's perfection of
dramatic monologue and use of a dramatic mask in his poem "Porphyria's
Lover" create in his audience a conflict between sympathy and judgement
(Magill, 335).
To fully understand and comprehend Browning's "Porphyria's Lover,"
one must understand dramatic monologue. Robert Langbaum makes a few
observations about dramatic monologues. One of his observations is that
speakers in them never change their minds. A second observation is that
the speaker uses his dramatic monologue to pursue a meaning for himself,
and learn something ...

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he was killing her using her own "long yellow string" of hair (39).
Everything the speaker says, implies that his decision was the right one,
and the only one possible. Magill (338) says, "Exultant that he has done
the perfect thing, he [the speaker] ends his speech with the words, ‘And
yet God has not said a word!'" Critics are quick to accuse Browning of
failure to construct his own framework of ethical and moral values in his
poems and characters. This is because his character is not representing
himself. Browning hides behind a sort of dramatic mask that conceals his
own feelings, beliefs and morals from his audience, so the character can be
a unique one, not modeled after ...

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Understanding "Porphyria's Lover". (2007, October 21). Retrieved December 23, 2024, from http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Understanding-Porphyrias-Lover/73068
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PAPER DETAILS
Added: 10/21/2007 01:50:14 PM
Category: Poetry & Poets
Type: Free Paper
Words: 1396
Pages: 6

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