¶ … Last Duchess
Jealousy, Rage, and Possession in Browning's "My Last Duchess"
Robert Browning's "My Last Duchess" emphasizes Victorian ideals of women and allows readers to understand how they were objectified. In this macabre poem, Browning uses the themes of jealousy, rage, and possessiveness to describe what motivated the Duke to behave as he did. In the poem, the unnamed narrator has transformed his wife into an object on numerous occasions and appears to pride himself on controlling women, and nonchalantly boasts to the emissary making arrangements for his next marriage how he controlled his previous wife and the consequences of her not obeying him. The narrator remains oblivious to his own faults throughout the poem and focuses only adding to his collection of prized possession, whether they are actual objects or wives.
In "My Last Duchess," the narrator objectifies his wife while she is alive and after she has died. While the duchess is alive, the narrator tries to transform his wife into an object, a possession he can control and manipulate. While his wife was alive, the narrator failed to assert his claim over his wife and her behavior, which often sent him into a jealous rage. The narrator exclaims, "She had/A heart -- how shall I say? -- too soon made glad,/Too easily impressed; she liked whate'er/She looked on, and her looks went everywhere."[footnoteRef:1] Through this complaint, the narrator implies that his wife was unfaithful because she was too easily impressed and was enchanted by the world around her. The narrator's jealousy also seems...
Last Duchess The Objectification of Women in Victorian England and Browning's "My Last Duchess" Robert Browning's "My Last Duchess" is a macabre poem about jealousy and rage, which simultaneously highlights Victorian ideals of women and their role in society. In "My Last Duchess," the unnamed narrator has not only objectified his last wife, nonchalantly telling the emissary sent to arrange his next marriage about his last wife and the tensions that
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