Everyone has a side deviating. Sigmund Freud explained that there are three parts in the heart: identity, self, and super self. Self is conscious, super I am conscientious, and identity is a fall of people. By reading the "Porphyria's Lover" of Robert Browning using the psychological approach of Sigmund Freud, you will see how people who can not control their own identity behave. In this poem, browning draws identity using settings, symbols and satire and takes over super self. The setting in this verse reflects the two strongest emotions to personality, passion and violence.
The two love-themed poems I chose were Porphyrias Lover of Robert Browning and Stop All The Clocks of W. H Auden. Comparison of the two love poems The two love-themed poems I chose were Robert Browning's "Porphyria's Lover" and W. H Auden's "Stop All The Clocks". "Lovers of Porphyria" is a dramatic monologue, described as a form of entertainment in the Victorian era, which was originally a spectator's performance. - The stereotype of John Dunne's "Abstinence Act: Forbidden Mourning" and Andrew Marvel's "Aunt's Hostess" means to explain the relationship between the two obsessed people. They mean "love", which can often give meaning to what is called poetry of love
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 a single person; this means that you can get a single viewpoint; in these two poems they are the narrator's crisis, his feelings and his It is based on the way of thinking. Because this is the only way you see it. - Compare the use of drama monologue between my last duel and singer's lover These two poems are about love and relationship. But they are not a type of happy ending. They all represent men's love for women and reveal their shortcomings in human relationships. Like all dramatic monologues, the character of the narrator will become clear through what he says, the words he uses, and his views on the affair.