Sunday, August 4, 2019
Jealousy in Three Dramatic Monologues by Browning Essay -- Robert Brow
Jealousy in Three Dramatic Monologues by Browning       The poems 'My Last Duchess', 'Porphyria's Lover' and 'The Laboratory'  are three dramatic monologues, theatrical tales of bitter jealousy  told by anonymous, murderous lovers.    'My Last Duchess' and 'Porphyria's Lover' use the simple idea of cruel  male domination to portray the narrator's jealousy, as these two men  do not know any other way of controlling their seemingly flirtatious  lovers' behaviour. They try to completely possess their women as  objects, and such a need for power seems to be a pure statement of  irrational jealousy.    The following quotations show this idea clearly and, although the  later is not direct to the murder of his lover, it is plain that the  narrator is cruel, objective possessiveness.    "I propped her head up as before."    This quotation clearly shows that Porphyria's lover did not seem to  understand the full consequence of murdering this woman, an idea which  is also quite apparent in my last duchess, as the Duke certainly  appears to brag about his wife's flirtatious behaviour, and it  stopping. Returning to the idea of cruel male domination, though, this  is obviously apparent in 'My Last Duchess' when the Duke suddenly  proclaims the following;    "Notice Neptune, though, taming a sea-horse."    I would argue that Neptune is representative of the Duke, 'taming'  though I would suggest imprisoning, brutally dominating a beauty of  nature, which is representative of the Duchess, whom the Duke  violently 'tamed' also.    This idea is not so apparent in 'The Laboratory' because the narrator  is female. We do, however, see her plotting the murder of her  adulterous husband, so in a way is trying to 'tame' him too. Cruel,  male domination...              ...ithee?"    The woman has bought a poison to kill her husband's lover with, which  is a typical murder weapon of women, and also the most vicious of the  three murders, as it would be the most painful for the victim.    Murder, therefore, is the main presentation of jealousy in the three  poems, and gives us considerable insight to the point of the narrator,  because the poems are dramatic monologues. The narrators cannot see  that their jealousy has overridden natural behaviour because they  simply couldn't control and dominate their lover's behaviour.    In conclusion, therefore, jealousy is presented throughout the poems  as an ultimate need for control and brutal domination, leading to the  irrational behaviour of the narrators, and unprecedented murder  through inability to control their own behaviour, let alone anyone  else's, and of course, their own jealousy.                        
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