Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Dover Beach & My Last Duches Essays - Dover Beach, My Last Duchess
Dover Beach & My Last Duches Essays - Dover Beach, My Last Duchess    Dover Beach & My Last Duches      Setting in Dover Beach & My Last  Duches   Intro to Literature Paper II . My analysis of the setting in My Last Duchess and  Dover Beach At first glance the setting of a poem is the psychological and  physiological environment in which the story takes place. In some instances, the  setting is used to develop the characters. Robert Browning and Matthew Arnold  use the setting to expose their character traits. My Last Duchess and Dover  Beach, respectively, portray the weaknesses of the characters using elements from  the setting. The text, page 629 and 630, tells us that the setting in My Last  Duchess displays a valuable art form that exposes his greed and cruelty. Dover  Beach demonstrates changeability and impermanence. The speakers solution is  to establish personal fidelity as a fixture against change, dissolution, and brutality.  Even though the text tells us the main use of setting in these two poems, I believe  that many individual words used in the poems help describe the surroundings and  the feelings that the speaker is trying to get across. Robert Browning, the author of  My Last Duchess, uses the setting to show the Dukes greed, cruelty, and  jealousy. The development of the setting begins with the Duke showing an agent  for the Count of Tyrol the curtained picture of his deceased Duchess. Count of  Troy sent an agent in order to see if the Duke is worthy to marry his daughter. The  fact that he keeps the picture behind closed curtains and deems it a privilege to  view the Dukes last Duchess illustrates his possessiveness and greed. She  thanked mengood! But thanked somehowI know not howas if she ranked my  gift of nine-hundred-years-old name with anybodys gift. This line lends to the  setting by showing his greed and how he places himself above other men  according to his possessions and can not believe that she had the audacity to place  the Duke in the same category as other men. The physical setting of this poem is  revealed by phrases such as Thats my Duchess painted on the wall and words  like curtains and Duke. Duke itself makes one think of a beautiful castle  with priceless furniture and art work. The use of curtains to cover up the Duchess  picture implies that the Duke is hiding something. The phrase mentioned above  informs all that the Dukes past wife is dead and that by putting her picture on the  wall shows the love and devotion that he had for her and will have for his future  wife. Where the words of the Duke imply that he shows dedication and warm heart  for the Duchess the setting reveals the true character of the Duke. Dover Beach  is a poem written by Matthew Arnold and was first published in 1849. The  physical setting is described as a moon lit night by a calm sea. In the distant  background the speaker describes the cliffs of England as he looks across a  tranquil bay. The author is setting up a romantic scene for two people in love. The  waves give both a mental and physical setting for the poem. Listen! You hear the  grating roar of pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling, at their return, up  the high strand, begin, and cease, and then again begin, with tremulous cadence  slow, and bring the eternal note of sadness in. Here, Arnold begins using the  setting to describe the characters and their traits. The phrase begin, and cease,  and then again begin is indicative of the characters changing state of mind; to like  then dislike, to love then hate then love again. The use of ebb, flow, and misery  makes the night and the relationship between the lovers appears dark and chaotic.  Through his depiction of the eroding shores of the earth, Arnold describes the  constant changes in the relationship and the continuous changes of their feelings  towards each other. Lines 20 and 21, the Sea of Faith, was once, too, at the full,  and round earths shore, describe the erosion of not only the land but the  relationship of the couple, too. The wind, waves, and sounds that you hear along  the beach, obviously the physical aspects of the setting represent the emotional ties  of the lovers. The speakers description of a land of dreams having, neither joy,  nor love, nor light, nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain: is one were the  relationship has nothing hidden and the roar of the waves on the beach    
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