Porphyrias Essays

  • Porphyria

    1080 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Fierce pain, paralysis and sickness took over my body, for week’s doctors seemed to think I was either making it up, mad or anorexic. Eventually they discovered it was porphyria, and it was inherited from my father… We learned that antibiotics prescribed for a minor infection, had probably triggered it in my case, but after that, I generally suffered attacks in my pre-menstrual period. These attacks varied in severity, but the pain and vomiting were omnipresent… My weight gradually dropped, as I

  • Porphyrias Lover and My Last Duchess by Robert Browning

    2228 Words  | 5 Pages

    ‘Porphyria’s Lover’ does not follow this pattern, but has a different rhyming scheme. On the surface, the narrators in each poem show completely different characteristics. In ‘Porphyria’s Lover’, the narrator shows powerful emotions towards Porphyria, which demonstrate his strong romantic feelings. The reader acknowledges that the narrator is passionately in love, as the following extract demonstrates. “Too weak, for all her heart’s endeavour, To set its struggling passion free From pride

  • Comparing Poems First Love, Amen and Porphyrias Lover

    879 Words  | 2 Pages

    Comparing Poems First Love, Amen and Porphyrias Lover First love is a poem describing when a man falls in love for the first time. This poem is very well worded, with similes and adjectives. It describes how love takes over everything; your mind, your body, your soul. It hits you like a bullet, and stops you dead. “I ne’er was stuck before that hour with love so sudden and so sweet.” The poet describes at the beginning how he first noticed the woman’s beauty, and how at each second

  • Porphyria’s Lover

    4336 Words  | 9 Pages

    Porphyria’s Lover The finest woks of Browning endeavor to explain the mechanics of human psychology. The motions of love, hate, passion, instinct, violence, desire, poverty, violence, and sex and sensuousness are raised from the dead in his poetry with a striking virility and some are even introduced with a remarkable brilliance. Thanks to the changes wrought by the Industrial Revolution, so many people living in such close quarters, poverty, violence, and sex became part of everyday life.

  • Point of View in Porphyria's Lover

    1372 Words  | 3 Pages

    who is so obsessed with Porphyria that he decides to keep her for himself.  The only way he feels he can keep her, though, is by killing her.  Robert Browning's poem depicts the separation of social classes and describes the "triumph" of one man over an unjust society.  As is often the case in fiction, the speaker of "Porphyria's Lover" does not give accurate information in the story. The speaker is a deranged man who will stop at nothing to keep his dear Porphyria.  Although the introduction

  • Porphyria’s Lover : Browning’s Portrait of a Madman

    1895 Words  | 4 Pages

    Robert Browning’s "Porphyria’s Lover" contains the methodical ramblings of a lunatic; it is a madman’s monologue that reveals the dark side of human nature. Power and passion coalesce to form the strangulation of the beautiful and innocent Porphyria, and at the same time strangle the reader’s ability to comprehend what is occurring and why it is occurring. The murder’s monologue depicts a heinous crime. The simple fact that the monologue is issued from the murderer himself creates a sense of

  • Comparing Males in Browning's Porphyria's Lover and My Last Duchess

    1732 Words  | 4 Pages

    events of the dark, stormy evening in which he anxiously waits "with heart fit to break" for his beloved Porphyria to enter. "Evidently, her absence is due to her attendance at a 'gay feast,' one of the 'vainer ties' which Porphyria presumably cultivated" (Magill 338). When she finally arrives, he tells the reader: "she sat down by my side / And called me. When no voice replied" (14-15). Porphyria speaks to him, "murmuring how she loved [him]" while the lover silently watches, becoming the mastered

  • Perspectives On Women In Browning's Poetry

    1196 Words  | 3 Pages

    'I listened with heart fit to break.' However when Porphyria enters the poem, she alters the circumstances by replacing cold with warmth and seems completely unaffected by the weather even though it is she who has been out in it. 'And kneeled and made the cheerless grate Blaze up and all the cottage warm' Porphyria's actions at this point in the poem seem effortless in direct contrast to the impotence of her lover. Porphyria continues to take charge at this point in the poem by

  • Comparing the Male Characters of Porphyria’s Lover and My Last Duchess

    1717 Words  | 4 Pages

    Comparing the Male Characters of Porphyria’s Lover and My Last Duchess The creation of a plausible character within literature is one of the most difficult challenges to a writer, and development to a level at which the reader identifies with them can take a long time. However, through the masterful use of poetic devices and language Browning is able to create two living and breathing characters in sixty or less lines. When one examines these works one has to that they are quite the achievements

  • Porphyria Research Paper

    559 Words  | 2 Pages

    truth. Porphyria is the deficiency or inactivity of a specific enzyme in the heme production process. Porphyria effects different people in different ways. It is also the origin of the myth of vampires. Since there is no actual recording of vampires, this disease is the only thing that could make a person vampire-like. There are two main types of Porphyria; Acute Intermittent Porphyria and Cutaneous Porphyria. Both of which have negative effects that will affect a person badly. Porphyria effects

  • Unrequited Love In Porphyrias Lover

    890 Words  | 2 Pages

    introduces the persona, a twisted and abnormally possessive lover whose dealings are influenced by the perceived deliberation of others actions. As the monologue begins, a terrible, almost intentional storm sets upon the persona, who awaits his love, Porphyria. His lover "glide[s] in" (l 6) from a "gay feast" (l 27) and attempts to calm her angry love. This leads to a disastrous end, either for spite or fulfillment of a figurative wish that "would [now] be heard" (l 57). Browning suggests one must be cautious

  • Porphyrias Lover And Edgar Allan Poe's White

    1022 Words  | 3 Pages

    devastation, he strangles her. Due to the speaker’s desperate desire for Porphyria, his obsession takes over. After kissing her, he places the corpse’s head on his shoulder and contemplates why God has not said anything. This shines light on the speaker being an obsessive psychopath (Cummings “Porphyria’s”). Moreover, symbolism in “Porphyria’s Lover” contributes to the theme of obsession and desire. The name Porphyria symbolizes the Greek word for the color purple, thus representing

  • Compare and contrast Porphyrias lover and My last Duchess

    944 Words  | 2 Pages

    Compare and contrast Porphyrias lover and My last Duchess “Porphyrias lover” and My Last Duchess are similar in many ways, they are both written by Robert Browning. In “My Last Duchess” the speaker is an Italian Duke who is speaking to the ambassador of a count, whose daughter he hopes, to marry. The Duke is trying to impress the counts representative by showing him around his gallery and the painting of his last Duchess. He openly speaks about having his last Duchess murdered, because she

  • My Last Duchess and Porphyrias Lover by Robert Browning

    1244 Words  | 3 Pages

    the recipient of a sinister, uncontrolled, and destructive love. Her mysterious admirer is overwhelmed by Porphyria's supreme beauty and her sensual mannerisms. His jealousy and obsession for Porphyria, compels him to act upon his depraved thoughts that will secure her total love and devotion. Porphyria and the Duchess experience similar outcomes that result in the death of both women.

  • How are Women Portrayed in Robert Browning’s ‘Porphyria Lover’?

    1164 Words  | 3 Pages

    sexual desires was considered sinful, let alone acting on those desires - like Porphyria did - was borderline criminal. Moreover, when Porphyria “glided in” she “untied her hat and let her damp hair fall”. Victorian moralists referred to female fornicators as ‘fallen’ women. Additionally, committing adultery was also a sin as it went against one of the Ten Commandments “Thou shall not commit adultery”, therefore, Porphyria ‘letting her hair fall’ could symbolise the boundaries she had willingly chosen

  • The Relations Sex and Death in Poe’s “For Annie” and Browning’s “Porphyrias Lover”

    1249 Words  | 3 Pages

    Browning’s poem “Porphyrias Lover” create complex relations between sex and death. In “For Annie” the masochistic storyteller sees sexual excitement as a suffering to be endured and embraces the state that follows as an estimate to death. He is masochists, who takes pleasure in envisioning himself dead and resolves his own sexual worries by visualizing a situation in which he is motionless and immobile, while his lover takes on a maternal role. In Robert Browning’s “Porphyrias Lover,” on the other

  • Porphyrias Lover, My Last Duchess and The Flea all have the theme of

    799 Words  | 2 Pages

    Porphyrias Lover, My Last Duchess and The Flea all have the theme of love in them Porphyrias Lover, My Last Duchess and The Flea all have the theme of love in them. But they are not all the same theme of love for example Porphyrias Lover is obsessive and seductive love whereas; The Flea is more like sexual love. Robert Browning writes both Porphyrias Lover and My Last Duchess and John Donne writes The Flea. I think Porphyrias Lover and My Last Duchess are alike as Robert Browning uses similar

  • The two poems I have chosen on the theme of love are Porphyrias

    2591 Words  | 6 Pages

    on the theme of love are Porphyrias Lover’ by Robert Browning and Stop All The Clocks by W.H Auden. A Comparison of Two Poems About Love. The two poems I have chosen on the theme of love are ‘Porphyria’s Lover’ by Robert Browning and ‘Stop All The Clocks’ by W.H Auden. ‘Porphyria’s Lover’, a dramatic monologue was written as a piece of entertainment in Victorian times, it would have been acted out to an audience. The narrative of this poem is that Porphyria was seeing someone below

  • Porphyria's Lover Analysis

    1186 Words  | 3 Pages

    poem, which deals with the subject of love. However, unlike most of his Victorian contemporaries, Browning wished to challenge the perceptions of his readers, in this case having the speaker of poem driven increasingly mad by his obsessive love for Porphyria. The reader witnesses the speaker’s obsession growing throughout the poem, from sitting in the cold and dark awaiting Porphyria’s arrival, his manipulative behavior towards her, his desire for more than love from her and his eventual need to possess

  • Critical Analysis Of Porphyria's Lover

    1008 Words  | 3 Pages

    reader is first introduced to the unnamed speaker who is sitting alone in his house on a stormy night, this storm is banished when Porphyria enters his house. As the poem develops the man realises the love that Porphyria has for him, in this “perfect” moment he kills her with ‘all her hair In one long yellow string’ . The unnamed narrator then proceeds to position Porphyria as if she