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- 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 speaker’s 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 Duke’s last Duchess illustrates his possessiveness and greed. “She
- thanked men--good! But thanked somehow--I know not how--as if she ranked my
- gift of nine-hundred-years-old name with anybody’s 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 “ That’s 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 Duke’s 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 earth’s 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 reflect
- relaxation instead of confusion and controversy between the couple. Being
- confused the couple does not know if they are fighting to keep the relationship
- going or fighting in order to end the relationship. The setting described in the last
- three lines using words such as struggle, flight, clash, and darkling plan allows the
- reader to understand the confusion in the couples life Where Browning uses the
- setting to reveal the characters greed and cruelty, Arnold uses the setting in “Dover
- Beach” to expose the lover’s struggle in their relationship. Both poems’ settings
- reveal the weaknesses of their characters and allow the reader to draw a mental
- picture of the situations faced by the characters in the poems’. The use of setting in
- a poem emphasizes the author words and character development. Setting not only
- describes the physical surroundings; it also describes the mental though of the
- characters in a poem. .
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
- Book = Literature an intro to reading and writting 5th edition Authors = Edgar V.
- <br><br>
- Words: 905
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