A. “Compare how poets present the abuse of power in Ozymandias and My Last
Duchess.”
1. Introduction
o Briefly define “power” and “abuse of power.”
o Introduce both poems and their speakers (a distant traveller vs. a
controlling Duke).
o Thesis: Shelley and Browning both expose power’s corrupting
influence, but do so through different forms (sonnet/monologue)
and tones (ironic/menacing).
2. Paragraph 1: Voice & Structure
o Ozymandias: third‐person sonnet, reflective tone, volta at line 9
shifts from description to message.
o Last Duchess: dramatic monologue, enjambment and caesura
mirror the Duke’s rehearsed but sinister speech.
o Compare how form positions us as observers of power gone wrong.
3. Paragraph 2: Imagery & Irony
o Ozymandias: “colossal wreck… boundless and bare” juxtaposition
underlines time’s triumph over tyrants.
o Last Duchess: “I gave commands; Then all smiles stopped together”
— chilling understatement reveals murder.
o Show how both poets use stark images to undermine their rulers’
boasts.
4. Paragraph 3: Speaker Intent & Effect
o Shelley warns that pride invites oblivion; nature/time are ultimate
judges.
o Browning reveals a patriarch’s warped self-justification; reader feels
complicit in his hypocrisy.
o Contrast Shelley’s moral lesson with Browning’s character study.
5. Conclusion
Reiterate that both poems dismantle tyranny: Shelley on a grand, timeless
scale; Browning in intimate detail.
Final line linking form and message: human ambition crumbles under
scrutiny—whether across deserts or behind closed doors.
B. “Explore how conflict drives meaning in Bayonet Charge and Exposure.”
1. Introduction