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Porphyria's Lover, My Last Duchess, And The Leper

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Porphyria's Lover, My Last Duchess, And The Leper
Women in 19th Century British Poetry Response: "Porphyria's Lover," "My Last Duchess," and "The Leper"

The feelings about women in the Victorian period were very disheartening. Women were seen as objects and viewed as less than human. These views were upheld by men who perpetuated a women's place in society as a pretty thing to look at and nothing more. When a man was tired of her or felt like he could not possess her completely he could kill her as the only way to ensure that she is his forever. The following poems (all written by men), are an insight into the minds of men during the 19th century. "Porphyria's Lover, "My Last Duchess," and "The Leper" are all poems where men kill their object of affection for not being able to fully have
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Porphyria is described as beautiful, sexual, and at the same time, innocent. She walks in from the storm and starts a small fire in the cottage fireplace making "all the cottage warm" (line 9). This could allude to Porphyria makes the cottage warm with her sexuality and causes the narrator of the story, the man she is meeting at the cottage, to sweat. She proceeds to seduce him further by taking off her cloak and shaw, letting her wet hair down, she puts his arm around her waist, and pulls her shirt of her shoulder so that she can rest his head on it. He seems completely unresponsive. She continues engaging him by telling him that she loved him, "murmuring how she loved me -- she/ too weak, for all her heart's endeavor/ to set its struggling passion free/"(21-23) She goes on to imply that she is of a higher class than he is. She talks about being afraid to "server" her pride and vain from ties (her economic background) but she remembers that he loves her and she did not want him to think that she did not love him back. "But passion sometimes would prevail,/ Nor could to-night's gay feast restrain/ A sudden thought of one so pale/ For love of her and all in vain/" (29) He is in complete disbelief that she loves him that much and starts to think about what he could do to help her. He then comes up with a rational idea, he strangles her. " . . . I found/ A thing to do, and all her …show more content…
"For will to kiss between her brows/ I had no heart to sleep or eat./ Mere scorn God knows she had of me,/ A poor scribe, nowise great or fair,/"(7-10) This woman has many lovers but unfortunately procures leprosy and all her lovers shun her. She moves into an old house with the narrator and he could not be more pleased. He is even happier when she dies because he can now fully have her. "Yet I am glad to have her dead/ Here in this wretched wattled house/ Where I can kiss her eyes and head."(17-20) Though he does not kill her (he catches leprosy from her and she basically kills him) he is still relishes in her death because then he can keep her forever and know that she will never be with another

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