Lover Essays

  • 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.

  • Sons and Lovers Essay

    907 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the novel, Sons and Lovers, by D.H. Lawrence, the protagonist, Paul Morel, represented the epitome of the phrase “mama’s boy.” Mrs. Morel was very demanding, and smothered Paul to the point where he felt it was wrong to love anyone else but her. Paul’s disturbing infatuation with his mother became an obstacle in what could have blossomed into successful relationships with two very important women in his life, Miriam and Clara. In Chapter 7, Paul shows a yearning for some connection beyond what

  • Porphyria’s Lover and The Laboratory

    1499 Words  | 3 Pages

    Porphyria’s Lover and The Laboratory “Porphyria’s Lover” and “The Laboratory” both deal with crimes of passion. Explore ways Browning explains ways of obsessive nature of his character and analysis the effects of literary techniques. “Porphyria’s Lover” is a poem about a crime and passion. Porphyria is a young, wealthy girl who seems to have abandoned her family’s tradition of choosing wealthy men as lovers. Her lover remains anonymous, this could be because he has murdered her and does

  • Sons And Lovers

    1133 Words  | 3 Pages

    D.H. Lawrence: Son and Lover “Bildungsroman, a form of fiction which allows the novelist to recreate through the maturing of his protagonist some of his own remembered intensity of experience” (Nivin, Alastair; pg. 34) D.H. Lawrence re-created his own life experience through the writing of Son’s and Lovers, an intensely realistic novel set in a small English mining town, much akin to the town in which he was raised. The son of a miner, Lawrence grew up with a father much like the character of Mr

  • The Lady in Black and the Lovers in The Awakening

    873 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Lady in Black and the Lovers in The Awakening Kate Chopin's The Awakening is a terrific read and I am hardly able to put it down!  I am up to chapter XV and many of the characters are developing in very interesting ways.  Edna is unfulfilled as a wife and mother even though she and her husband are financially well off.  Her husband, Leonce Pontellier, is a good husband and father but he has only been paying attention to his own interests.  At this point he is unaware of the fact that

  • The poem The Lover by Don Patterson.

    813 Words  | 2 Pages

    The poem The Lover by Don Patterson. The Lover - Don Patterson The poem "The Lover" by Don Patterson explores traditional notions of fate and romantic love. The title represents both of these ideas, as the lover is a tarot card used by fortune-tellers to tell you your fate, and "the lover" has connotations of romance. He also uses vivid imagery describes how a human is knocked down by a car, and against the odds, is brought back to life because of love. The poem has three stanzas of

  • Bondage and Escape in Sons and Lovers

    623 Words  | 2 Pages

    Bondage and Escape in Sons & Lovers A major theme in "Sons & Lovers" is bondage and escape. Every major character is held hostage by another character or by their environment. Her husband, her family and her anger at the family's social status hold Mrs. Morel hostage. She has no friends to be seen or money of her own to use. Her escape from her bondage is her death. She was unhappy her whole life and lived though another human as a source of happiness. She essentially lived her life through

  • Color Symbolism in Sons and Lovers

    1307 Words  | 3 Pages

    Color Symbolism in Sons and Lovers Throughout Sons and Lovers, D.H. Lawrence uses colors to suggest the underlying implications of the events taking place. Three colors in particular - red, black, and white - seem to carry some sort of subtle connotation which reveals more about the characters, their actions, and their motives for those actions, than the plot or the setting alone. Tied to the color images are material images which carry the same connotative meaning: the color red is associated

  • Sons and Lovers as Bildungsroman

    930 Words  | 2 Pages

    and Lovers as Bildungsroman As a twentieth century novelist, essayist, and poet, David Herbert Lawrence brought the subjects of sex, psychology, and religion to the forefront of literature. One of the most widely read novels of the twentieth century, Sons and Lovers, which Lawrence wrote in 1913, produces a sense of Bildungsroman1, where the novelist re-creates his own personal experiences through the protagonist in (Niven 115). Lawrence uses Paul Morel, the protagonist in Sons and Lovers, for

  • A Critical Response to Lady Chatterley's Lover

    1884 Words  | 4 Pages

    A Critical Response to Lady Chatterley's Lover Lady Chatterley's Lover by D. H. Lawrence examines the human condition in the modern era.  Through the experiences of the novel's characters, Lady Chatterley's Lover advances techniques for coping with the modern world:  retreating from society and engaging in phallic sex.  However, the application of these techniques is problematic as phallic sex necessitates the abandonment of social convention, while retreating from society conflicts with phallic

  • Porphyria's Lover

    785 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the monologue, “Porphyria’s Lover”, Robert Browning portrays the narrator as a lunatic in love with her mistress, Porphyria. The madman is so deeply in love with the angelic Porphyria, she commits a heinous crime in order to keep her to herself. Browning puts the reader into the mind of the sociopath, enabling for the reader to have a better understanding of who she is, reasoning for killing her lover, and the metaphorical ties to the setting and the lunatics emotional adaptations throughout

  • Porphyria's Lover Analysis

    1186 Words  | 3 Pages

    Porphyria’s Lover By Robert Browning “Porphyria’s Lover” by Robert Browning is a 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

  • Point of View in Porphyria's Lover

    1372 Words  | 3 Pages

    in Porphyria's Lover "Porphyria's Lover" is an exhilarating love story given from a lunatic's point of view.  It is the story of  a man 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

  • The Story of Lovers in Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights

    532 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Story of Lovers in Wuthering Heights Set in England on the Yorkshire Moors in the 19th century, Emily Brontë¹s novel Wuthering Heights is the story of lovers who try to withstand the separation of social classes and keep their love alive. The main characters, Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff grew up on a middle class English countryside cottage called Wuthering Heights. Heathcliff was the servant and Catherine the daughter of the owner of Wuthering Heights. As children, Heathcliff and Catherine

  • The Irrationality of the Lovers in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet

    1749 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the play Romeo and Juliet ,by Shakespeare we are constantly bombarded with different meanings of words, contrasts, and characters who are quite irrational. They wish things upon themselves, and when they happen, are astonished. This piece of literature is filled with situations where the character intends one thing to happen, but his results are completely different. Throughout the following paragraphs the reader is to decide if the examples shown display opposite results from the original plan

  • Relationships in Lawrence's Sons and Lovers

    849 Words  | 2 Pages

    Relationships in Lawrence's Sons and Lovers There can be no argument that D. H. Lawrence's Son's and Lover's is a study of  human relationships. Gertrude Morel, because of her turbulent and odd relationship with her husband, ends up developing deep emotional relations with her two eldest son's. The second eldest in particular, Paul, is the receiver of most of this deep emotion. Because of these feelings and the deeper-than-usual emotional bond between the two, Paul has difficulty

  • Psychoanalytical and Feminist approaches to D. H. Lawrence's Sons and Lovers

    1581 Words  | 4 Pages

    Psychoanalytical and Feminist approaches to D. H. Lawrence's Sons and Lovers Psychoanalytical and feminist approaches are two relatively recent critical responses towards literary texts. When applied to D. H. Lawrence's Son's and Lovers, both can be insightful yet problematic at the same time. The theories of psychoanalysis, primarily identified with Sigmund Freud, can be applied to imaginative literature and art in general, in order to study their manifest and latent content, in the same

  • The Demon Lover, An Analysis

    602 Words  | 2 Pages

    In "The Demon Lover," by Elizabeth Bowen, Kathleen Drover returns to London from her house in the country in order to gather some things that she and her husband had abandoned during the bombings of the war. It is a humid, rainy day in late August and her once familiar street is now mostly deserted. The caretaker of her house is supposed to be out of town for a week and her arrival is assumed unknown. Mrs. Drover enters the old musty house and discovers a letter addressed to herself and it is

  • Porphyria's Lover Essay

    566 Words  | 2 Pages

    Porphyria’s Lover Robert Browning’s Poem is a dramatic narrative about a murder. The poem is about violent love affairs. The narrators repetition of the word love exactly 4 times seems to have many meanings behind it. The word love mainly comes from Porphyria, the narrators lover. She is saying it as an affirmation that she is indeed in love with him. His behavior in the poem is psychotic and murderous. It appears that he is in a situation where he is being the one dominated in a the sexual relationship

  • Porphyria's Lover Diction

    693 Words  | 2 Pages

    Is Porphyria’s Lover a Monster? “Porphyria’s Lover” by Robert Browning tells the story of a young woman that is strangled and killed by the man that she loves. The poem is set in the lover’s point of view. Browning challenges the reader to judge the speaker not as a simple monster, but as a person with much more complex emotions. By reading the speaker’s view the audience becomes captivated by him and searches the text for any redemptive qualities. Browning hides these qualities in the text using