Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Robert Brownings My Last Duchess Character Analysis :: Robert Browning, Poems, Poetry, Prose
MurdermysteryintrigueAll fall upon Robert Brownings song, My Last Duchess. From the speakers indirect allusions to the last of his wife the reader might considerably think that the speaker is a bit crazy and committed a vengeful crime out of jealousy. His flowery speech confuses and disguises any practicable motives however, the mystery is left unsolved. Based on the poems style and structure, it becomes evident that take down if the speaker did not directly kill his wife, he certainly had something to hide.This poem is rough a powerful Duke, and his beautiful, flirtatious wife who has two distinguishable personalities, one that was reality and the other was the lady in the painting. The duke comes off as macrocosm very possessive. Never to stoop. Oh sir, she pull a faced, no doubt,/ Wheneer I passed her exclusively who passed without/ a lot the same smile? (43-45). I bank this being said, the duke is over examining things, the smile can simply come off as simply being a nice person, but to duke lift ups it in a different light. He views it as being flirtatious. The poem begins and ends with him mourning the loss of his deceased Duchess, but from the way that the mighty Duke speaks, he knows more about her death than he leads us to believe. The Duke chooses his word very carefully, when he talks to his friend about the painting of his wife. He only drops small hints, to his friend about the death of his Duchess. I gave commands/ then all smiles stopped together (45-46). These lines mean that the Duke, compete a very dominant part, tells his wife to stop smiling and flirting. universe told this, she still continues on, which I believe she does not notice or see herself as being flirtatious. As a result I believe that the Duke killed his wife, or had someone to put her to her death. As the Duke speaks of his Duchess, in the beginning, he sounds highly compassionate and caring towards her. The Duke had an absolute love for his Duches s as most husbands and wives do. He sounded so proud of her and the beauty that she posed almost like she was a trophy. Despite all of the pride and excitement that he showed towards her, there was an element of distrust that lingered inside of his mind.
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