Expression of love in poetry Robert Browning was a British poet born in Camberwell in 1812 and is now part of London. Today he is considered one of the most outstanding figures in the Victorian poem. It is worth noting that Browning had little education since the age of 14 because his family could not afford the fee and was mainly self-taught. His favorite is his poem of love, like the Victorian tendency, he often writes in dramatic monologue form.
Poetry imitates, copies, or reflects something. Things are real (such as love to someone in the poet), ideal (universal expression or copy such as dialogue with the truth), or fictional things or experiences or emotions (eg, but it is physical Regardless of whether it contains nature or not, this poem must convey and reproduce the truth.It is a mirror of possibility or reality, "Even if we read about the dragon and the tree Even if you are talking
As long as there is a poem, there is a poem of "love". Many poets express themselves by writing their emotions, so many poets are writing about love and other emotions. Different poets different writing style, approach different topics in different ways. "I am very angry", Simon Armitage, "I am not thankful for Valentine's Day", Liz Lochhead and Andrei Voznesensky's "First Ice" is poetry, poets use different writing styles
Romantic love was always the subject of endless thinking by poets of all ages. Invisible, complex, love is mankind's highest manifestation. The theme of poetry is less concerned than romantic love. Instead, the ultimate expression of love is through poetry. In every era of poetry, the expression of romantic love arises from the social and cultural values of those days. Therefore, as time goes on, attitudes towards romantic love change with values and beliefs.