There are many underlying issues that that are uncovered in the treatment of gender roles within the society in which these poems were written.
Men are expected to have a voracious appetite for sex. This appetite for sex is equated with power and power is the key defining feature of male identity. Gender roles and structures of oppression are clear in Wilmot's poem. Behm tears them down on a number of levels in her work. Thus, Behm lashes out against oppression against women, which was the norm in her society. The woman in Wilmot's poem is the object of desire. She displays the perfect response to male advances. She is at first hesitant and reluctant, but later gives in to his advances. In this way, she acts in the manner of a proper lady. The women are not supposed to be promiscuous. To simple give in to his advances would not be the actions of a proper lady. The proper lady must first resist before giving in to his advances. The forward control exhibited by the woman in Behm's poem would be considered to be lewd undesirable because of her outward style of sexual advances towards the male.
Another aspect of the impotence in these two poems is the suggestion of the time from that is imposed on the condition. In "The Imperfect Enjoyment" we suspect that the condition is temporary. It will be restored at some time in the future, as indicated by line 24, "Than fire to ashes could past flames restore." In "The Disappointment" the imagery suggests that the condition is permanent and enjoyment will never be restored the power will never be restored and the man's impotence is a permanent condition. This suggests that the man's power will be gone forever, ushering in a new age of woman's power and the beginning of echoes of he woman's suffrage movement that would not reach its culmination until several hundred years later.
Society at the time promoted the idea that the woman had to remain virtuous all the time. However, the man was expected to be sexually active, as a symbol of his power and prestige. This resulted in a double jeopardy for women. They were not supposed to actively enjoy sex, but they were expected to passively accept it. Behm's poem lashes out at this double standard and attempts to set a new tone for male/female interactions by portraying the strong women figure who is in control over the weaker male figure. The two poems examined in this research study are excellent examples of gender roles in their respective affect on the lives of men and women at the time of their writing.
Profanity and Culture
Wilmot's use of profanity was apparently meant to shock the reader, but how it was received by the contemporary reader is not known. By today's standards he poem is harsh and crude. The direct use of profane language and the references to body parts is a male perspective. It would be allowable for a male writer of the time, but it would have been scandalous for a woman to use that type of language. Woman were supposed to be the gentile gender. They were expected to be more refined in their nature and to use such language would have...
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