â¦
Baum ed., The House of Life
198-199
â¦
Caine, Recollections
237
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Doughty, A Victorian Romantic
309-310
â¦
WMR, DGR as Designer and Writer
247
This collection contains 51 texts and images, including:
1881 Ballads and Sonnets text
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
In The House of Life DGR forces this sonnet to pair with the previous one, âVain Virtuesâ. As such it becomes something more than a lament for the passage of time and lost opportunities. Both octave and sestet accumulate a set of distinct (absent) presences: loss figured in (as it were) a transitive not an intransitive mode, loss that appears not as a failure to act but as a set of specific events (âthis or that fair deedâ, according to âVain Virtuesâ). When the sestet personalizes these losses, it simultaneously reimagines them in psychological termsâspecifically, as a dismembered identity.
The sonnet looks forward to âA Superscriptionâ and âHe and Iâ.
Textual History: CompositionÂ
WMR assigns various dates to this sonnet: âBefore 1863â (see Peattie, Letters of William Michael Rossetti ); 1862 (in 1911 ; 1858? (in DGR as Designer and Writer, 293 ). W. F. Prideaux in 1904 said that CR had a copy of the sonnet before Elizabeth died (see W. F. Prideaux, âRossetti Bibliographyâ, Notes and Queries 10th series II (10 Dec. 1904), 464 ). Scholars now generally accept 1862 as the date of composition: that is to say, shortly after the death of his wife.
One manuscript is extant, a fair copy in the Fitzwilliam composite âHouse of Lifeâ sequence.
Textual History: RevisionÂ
The text of the Fortnightly Review is followed in all printings through the 1870 Poems, but in 1881 DGR made a signal change in line 8.
Printing HistoryÂ
First printed in Emily Faithfull's A Welcome, a collection of verse and prose she printed in 1863. It was next printed as Sonnet XII in the Fortnightly Review sequence of sonnets (March 1869) of âThe House of Lifeâ project. The group was printed again in the Penkill Proofs in August and kept through all prepublication texts until its publication in the 1870 Poems. The sonnet is numbered XL in âThe House of Lifeâ as published in the 1870 volume, and LXXXVI in the sequence as published in 1881.
LiteraryÂ
The title recalls the âperduti giorniâ of Petrarch's Rime sparse LXII. 1.
AutobiographicalÂ
The poem has regularly been read in an autobiographical context, as Doughty's commentary shows. DGR spoke cryptically to Hall Caine about âin what but too opportune juncture it was wrung out of meâ (see Caine, Recollections, 237 ). WMR's uncertainty about the poem's dateâand in particular his conjecture that it might belong to 1858âsuggests that he thought the poem might have reference not to DGR's wife Elizabeth but to Jane Morris (see DGR as Designer and Writer, 247 ).