Zusammenfassung der Ressource
On Monsieur's Departure
- Female voiced Petrarchan lyric, she has fallen victim to unrequited love.
- As a queen was she expected/ allowed to adopt
unconventional genres, adopting a masculine genre gives
her a 'masculinised identity'.
- Tensions between public and private self
shown through use of oxymoron's. Central
dilemma is with emotions and this does
evoke pity on the reader.
- "I grieve and dare not show my discontent"
- "I love and yet am forced to seem to hate."
- "I freeze and yet am burned."
- Heat imagery common of Petrarchan poetry.
- The 'and' of the first stanza, changes to 'let' in the final stanza, she
wants to be able to settle her emotions.
- Wants freedom of choice or emotions, or is this symbolic of wanting to
choose between public and private emotions, she cannot handle both
duties involved in being Queen.
- Political and Personal: Reflections on failed marriage negotiations with Duke of Anjou.
- Meditation on Anjou or it has been attributed to Dudley.
- Private: Dudley
- Public: Anjou
- Care has multiple meanings on it's use in the second stanza:
anxiety/torment/ Anjou, public duty as queen.
- Duties/ feeling compared to a shadow: cannot be escaped "follows me".
- Fragility of queen depicted is different to her public
image: "i am soft, and made of melting snow". snow is
cold.