Growing like the Plants from Unseen Roots : The Equalizing Role of Plant Imagery in Aurora Leigh

Abstract

Plant imagery abounds in Elizabeth Barrett Browning\u27s novel-poem, Aurora Leigh, and critical readings have not thoroughly explored the meaning of and intent behind that imagery. Plant metaphor and images in Aurora Leigh are used to challenge the concept of Victorian women\u27s inherently inferior nature and to present an argument for female equality. When traced throughout the work, plant imagery foreshadows Aurora and Marian\u27s ultimate personal independence and familial harmony and helps the reader to understand the poem\u27s controversial ending. Ties to three of Browning\u27s literary influences in the selection of plant images are explored: Emanuel Swedenborg, Mary Wollstonecraft, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Each of these three understood and used nature imagery to significant effect in their own writings, and Browning adopted and developed those images in her work

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