Carol Ann Duffy's poem "Anne Hathaway" is about Ahn Hathaway and Shakespeare's mutual love, and its greatness. Robert Browning's poem "Laboratory" is about a woman whose lover is poisoning a sleeping woman. In the first line of "Anne Hathaway", the sound seems to be full of dreams and enthusiasm. However, in the "laboratory" the sound is bad, sharp and seems to be excited. "The bed we love is a rotating forest, a castle, a torch, a torch, a cliff top, the sea, we can enter into the pearls more than everyone else."
This contemporary Victorian poetry can also be compared with the Shakespearean sonnet and another contemporary Carroll Andhafi poem. Ann Hathaway plays a loving wife and an adventurous woman at Anne Hathaway's poet "Anne Hathaway". Duffy's method to demonstrate this is by her choosing the type of structure used in poetry. She became a rhyming crowd that could be thought of as resembling Shakespeare's Sonnet style, using a modified sonnet. After all, this couple almost imitates the style used in Shakespeare's sonnet. Because they always use rhyming couplets and end up with dramatic rhyming tuplets. Anne Hathaway was a wife of Shakespeare, so this sonnet style was being considered in her poem. Finally, using this rhyming phrase highlights the focus of her and his beloved poetry.
"Anne Hathaway" is a poem of love written by Carlo Ann Duffy in the voice of Shakespeare's wife Anne Hathaway. This poem explores the relationship between Shake Spear and his wife at a physical and emotional level. This poem uses imagination after his death to celebrate the work and creativity of Shake Spear. Shakespeare's Sonnet 130 can be said to be the opposite. One of Shakespeare's many love sonnets was written in his lover and expressed his feelings to her. He made a fool of other poets' foolishness comparing women with cliche or beautiful things, which seems silly, but his intention is to express deep love. His way is to express love with humor. Both poets call the poetry with the first person and lead a very unique direct character.
Poems such as Carol Ann Duffy's Havisham, Anne Hathaway, Salome and others highlight women's stereotypes and perspectives. Duffy shows a series of roles supporting and reflecting the stereotypes associated with depictions of women and women's personality. Duffy concludes that the traditional and widely repeated women's view is in a way that is in contrast to the unexpected image of an innocent, innocent, incredible, violent and liberal female character in some way I emphasize.