The attitude of Robert Browning in Thomas Hardy and the killing of my last Duchess is compared with Thomas Hardy and the two poems "Man Killing Him" of "My Last Duchess" Robert Browning. Attitudes are very different; in the creation of Hardy, a very guilty, humble, confused personality, the Duke of Browning is a wasteful and proud man who killed his wife in a planned way. These features are also revealed by poets using section, structure, and language choice.
Thomas Hardy's "My Last Duchess" and Robert Browning's "Porphyria's Sweetheart" three poems "killed man" attitude are very different, and Hardy creates a discreet and confusing character, and I feel a very guilty feeling. The poet uses the structure, section and language of his choice to reveal these features. All three poems share a subject with great influence ("death"). All love poetry has one thing in common. In other words, you can draw readers to the world and interact with emotions. Poets often use tools of various poetry to get this and use several themes to cause various emotions; anger, love, disgust, etc.
In this article we will analyze the poems of Thomas Hardy and Robert Browning's "My Last Duchess" and "Pofia's Lover" "Kill". "My last Duchess" and "Lovers of Porphyria" were written during the Victorian era, "a man who killed him" was written after Queen Victoria's death. All the poetry I am studying is a dramatic monologue, and the poets use them to draw their strong emotions to the reader through a character. A dramatic monologue often involves a controversial issue that creates dramas shockingly and makes doubts through the use of dramatic words by poets
Robert Browning contrasts with Phil Phil's lover and my last Duchess Robert Browning's two poems "Lovers of Porphyria" and "My Last Duchess" show a dramatic monologue. A dramatic monologue is a story told by one person; this means that you can get a single view; in these two poems they are the narrator's crisis, his feelings and his It is based on the way of thinking, and you must believe it, because this is the only way you see it. With a dramatic monologue, you have to believe in his judgment and criticism because there is only one person speaking the story.
"My last Duchess", Robert Browning has defined the term "action" of the 19th century as "I'd like to be pleased; focused and helped" and said the "Oxford English Dictionary" by Duke of Ferrara. In the dramatic monologue Robert Browning's "My Last Duchess", this term unnecessarily represents me serving the wife of Duke of Ferrara. The speaker, Duke Ferrara, told negative about the servant, but I wanted my wife to be prepared.