Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Sonnet 43 by Elizabeth Barrett
Browning
- She wrote it for her husband Robert Browning
- English poet from the Victorian period
- She suffered from a lot of pain in her
childhood and adulthood, so took
Laudanum (an addictive drug) as a
pain killer
- Her Dad disinherited her after she married Robert
as he wanted her to take care of him
- She married Browning and moved to Italy, so
she chose Browning over her family
- She published this poem under her real name, which was unusual for a woman of that time as it may not have been
as well respected
- There is an anaphora of 'I love thee' on lines 7,8 and 9, but it is
repeated throughout the whole poem . This underscores how much
she loves Browning
- There's a semantic field of spiritual thoughts
such as 'grace','faith','God' and 'purely'. This
suggests that there love is pure and that it is
natural
- The use of a triple 'depth and breath and height'
underscores her love for him. By using and instead of a
comma it makes her love for him seem larger
- The use of direct address makes it seem personal to Browning,
making the poem seem more romantic as it is based on actual
feelings
- Petrarchan sonnet, so
it has a rhyme scheme
of abba abba cdcdcd
- The iambic pentameter mirrors that of a heart beat, adding to the idea of this being a love poem