The Church Porches
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
General Description
Date: 1853
Genre: poem group
General Description of The Church-Porches I.
Date: 1848
Rhyme: abbaabbaccdeed
Meter: iambic pentameter
Genre: sonnet
General Description of The Church-Porches II.
Date: 1848
Rhyme: abbaabbacddece
Meter: iambic pentameter
Genre: sonnet
Electronic Archive Edition: 1
This collection contains 17 texts and images, including:
1911
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
William Bell Scott transcribed both sonnets in 1853 from DGR's manuscripts. The poems represented an early style in DGR's writing, as Scott points outâexamples of âthe spirit that had made him choose âSongs of the Art Catholicâ as a general titleâ for his work. Scott goes on to observe of the sonnets: âThe first, on entering Church, was addressed to his sister Maria; the second, on leaving Church, to Christinaâ. In a footnote Scott adds that âThey were what he considered juvenile things at that day, 1853, and I confess to being surprised to see one of them printed among his latest efforts in 1881. The two sonnets taken in connection, and as characteristic of his early time, 1848, as they were written, are very interestingâ (see Scott, Autobiographical Notes, I. 290 ).
Sharp observes that the sonnets represent âthe reaction experienced in finding a soulless service in the building wherein were expected to be found âSilence, and sudden dimness, and deep prayer, And faces of crowned angels all aboutââ ( Sharp, DGR. A Record and a Study, 403-404 ).
Textual History: CompositionÂ
WMR dates the sonnets 1853 and William Bell Scott (see above) says they were written in 1848, although his own letter and enclosure of 1869 shows that he must have forgotten that the correct date is 1853. The only extant manuscripts appear to be DGR's fair copy of the first sonnet (at Princeton) and two copies made by Scott: the copy of the first sonnet sent with Scott's letter of August 1869, and a copy of the second sonnet sent with another Scott letter. Scott's note to the second sonnet, which seems copied from DGR's (untraced) original manuscript, states that the sonnet was written âat Newcastleâ1853â
Printing HistoryÂ
The first of the two sonnets was printed in the 1881 "Ballads and Sonnets and collected thereafter. The second was first printed paired with the first by Edmund Gosse in 1882 in his essay âDante Gabriel Rossettiâ in The Century Magazine (September 1882) 722 . The second sonnet was printed again in a slightly different version by William Bell Scott in his 1892 Autobiographical Notes, I. 290-291 . WMR collected the first sonnet only in his 1886 edition but did not collect both together until 1911, where he follows the Gosse text for the first sonnet.