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World Literature 2112 Spring 2014 Poetry Explication Instructor: Weaver “My Last Duchess”, by

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World Literature 2112 Spring 2014
Poetry Explication
Instructor: Weaver “My Last Duchess”, by Robert browning, is a dramatic speech delivered by the Duke of Ferrari which highlights the covetous and cruel nature of his personality and the questions which surround his bride’s death. The poem begins as the Duke draws the attention of his fellow conversationalist, who is, we discover, a messenger representing the Count’s family whose daughter’s hand the duke seeks in marriage, to the image of his deceased bride on the wall. The Duke lionizes the work of the artist, Fra Pandolf, who exhausted a day’s worth of effort on the portrait to make it so lifelike. He invites the messenger to take a seat, and proceeds to discuss how all who have ever …show more content…

He then asks the messenger to stay and come with him to the party which has assembled below, arrogantly reminding him that the magnificence of the count is enough guarantee that anything he asks for in dowry will not be refused, but claims at the same time that it is only the hand of his fair daughter that he seeks. As they exit, he points out a bronze bust showing Neptune taming a wild sea horse. The main fixture of this poem is Browning’s use of the dramatic monologue. Even as it is the duke who is discussing the character of the duchess with the messenger, one can glean facts about his own character through his diction as he describes his wife. This as with the use of enjambment, the technique of inserting line breaks, and caesurae, emphasize the flow of the duke’s speech. It is not just a monologue in name; even written on paper this poem is so overflowing with different ideas that it seems like the duke’s thoughts were running into each other as he voiced his opinion about his late wife. As in all poetry, symbolism is present. The portrait covered by a curtain which ‘none but the duke could draw’ symbolizes of how the controlling nature of the duke is satisfied when, if not in life then after death, only he has any say in who should look upon his late wife. Also, the bust of Neptune that he points out symbolizes how he tamed his free-spirited wife, much like Neptune tames the wild spirit of the sea horse. Thus Browning, in a colorful and impressive monologue

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