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Friday, December 14, 2018

'Browning Peal Essay\r'

'toasting band Essay Robert cook uses many techniques one such example be his continuous reference to women being similar to roses. Browning uses the imagery of roses throughout the verse to represent women and femininity. It is a common practice in literature for poets to refer to women as flowers, in occurrence roses; such as Browning has done in ‘Women and Roses’. This is because they represent natural beauty that has been created by God, which wish the cleaning charwoman Browning is talking astir(predicate) because it shows his feelings on how he believes they don’t have to campaign to be beautiful.Roses also represent have it a manner and passion, the twine trigger-happy is an intimate colour that represents seduction and sometimes danger as seen in ‘Of Mice and Men’ where Curley’s wife is referred to as having â€Å"full rouged lips” and â€Å"red fingernails”. The thorns on roses continues this theme of potent ial risk, because the simple view of men picking roses for women could injure the man referable to the thorns on the stem, this could represent how men have to scramble past the hard things in love to trip up to the beauty or the woman.In ‘Women and Roses’, Browning also uses roses as a representation of the stages through a woman’s life going into womanhood and how she grows from a young shoot full of promise to something implausibly beautiful and natural and eventually to an old and weaken flower, â€Å"bees pass it unimpeached”. The poem is about determination gross(a) love with a woman, which is represented as finding a rose with no thorns, thorns being the vex in a relationship or a woman.Browning wrote ‘Prospice’ after his beloved wife, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, died in 1861. The poem shows Browning’s beliefs on death and how he feels that he will once over again be reunited with his love in the afterlife. The title â €˜Prospice can be translated as ‘look previous’, and in this poem, published in 1864, Browning is most likely looking forward to death, when he expects ‘I will clasp thee again’, meaning he will be with Elizabeth once more.Such optimism seems to contrast noniceably with the religious doubt or searching of many Victorian writers. But Browning does not claim that there is anything easy about facing death, instead he shows one way of coping. He gives the ‘Arch Fear’, death, a ‘ panoptic form’ so that he can reckon taking him on in one net fight to show that he will not be taken easily, ‘Barriers’ and ‘guerdon’ suggest a tournament took place. In ‘A Woman’s close Word’ Browning uses Roman numerals to show the happy chance down of a omplex subject such as a woman’s feelings after an argument. By doing this it makes it easier for the reader to follow and distinguish the diffe rent stages of feelings the record goes through and also shows the changes in direction of her emplacement until she reaches submission towards her love. This is a good technique apply as he wrote the poem from a woman’s point of view and has gone into a lot of detail on how she feels and reacts to the argument.\r\n'

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