Analysis of My Last Duchess by Robert Browning __ Robert Browning, My Last Duchess

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    5/2/2016 Analysis of My Last Duchess by Robert Browning :: Robert Browning, My Last Duchess

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    Analysis of My Last Duchess by Robert Browning

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    A dramatic monologue is a poem in which a single speaker who is not

    the poet recites the entire poem at a critical moment. The speaker

    has a listener within the poem, but the reader of the poem is also one

    of the speakers listeners. In a dramatic monologue, the reader learns

    about the speaker's character from what the speaker says. Robert

    Browning is said to have perfected this form of writing. One of his

    most famous dramatic monologues is "My Last Duchess."

    The speaker in the poem is an Italian duke who ordered the murder ofhis wife and is at the offset of the poem showing off the portrait to

    his future son-in-law. Browning lets the reader know in a roundabout

    way that the duke only shows the portrait of his late wife to select

    strangers. In doing this, the speaker is able to show off his wealth to

    the stranger and he seems to enjoy telling these people the story of

    how he ordered her to death. The speaker tries to convey to the

    people that he shows the portrait to that he is in control of

    everything that takes place in his household. In lines 8-9, the speaker

    interjects "since none puts by The curtain I have drawn for you" In

    this line, the speaker is saying that he doesn't draw the curtain for

    just anyone. He has drawn the curtain particularly for his future

    son-in-law and he should feel privileged because the portrait can only

    be seen under the speaker's complete control.

    The Duke believes that he should be shown complete respect and be

    the center of attention while in his home. The Duke thought his wife

    should be for him and his pleasures only. He did not like it when Fra

    Pandolf, the artist who painted the portrait said:

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  • 7/25/2019 Analysis of My Last Duchess by Robert Browning __ Robert Browning, My Last Duchess

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    5/2/2016 Analysis of My Last Duchess by Robert Browning :: Robert Browning, My Last Duchess

    http://www.123helpme.com/view.asp?id=78374

    "Fra Pandolf chanced to say 'Her mantle laps

    Over my lady's wrist too much,' or, 'Paint

    Must never hope to reproduce the faint

    Half-flush that dies along her throat."

    to the duchess in lines 16-18. And then again in lines 27-28, the duke

    tells about how some "officious fool" brought her cherries from theorchard.

    The duke also could not stand the fact that the duchess treated

    everyone and every gift equally "all and each / Would draw from her

    alike the approving speech, / Or blush, at least" (lines 29-31). The

    duke thought of his wife as one of his possessions and she could

    never be treated as his equal "E'en then would be some stooping

    and I choose / Never to stoop" (lines 42-43). Now her portrait is

    behind a curtain and he has absolute power over it, just like he

    thought he should have had over his wife while she was alive. In lines

    54-56, Browning alludes to Greek mythology while making the

    comparison of how the duke tamed his wife like Neptune and the

    sea-horse "Notice Neptune, though / Taming a sea-horse, thought a

    rarity, / Which Claus of Innsbruck cast in bronze for me!"

    The duke tried to have control over his household at all times and it

    seems like he is trying to convey that to his future son-in-law. He is

    also talking to a servant as the reader finds out at the end of the

    poem. The reader could take that as the duke trying to tell the people

    in his household that he is the ultimate power of the house as well the

    people that live in it.

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