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Austin, âMastering the Ineffableâ VP (2007)
, 159-173
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Baum, ed., The House of Life, 211-214
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WMR, DGR as Designer and Writer, 254-255
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Stein, The Ritual of Interpretation, 188-189
This collection contains 58 texts and images, including:
1870 Poems First Edition Text
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
Stein's excellent comments on the shifting and decorative character of the sonnet deserve the most careful consideration. He is certainly correct to say that a central subject of the sonnet is the problem of interpreting aesthetic works, and to argue that the problem emerges through the decorative approach DGR takes to his materials, including the various meanings that are suggested by the sonnet's sets of figurations. In this last respect the sonnet should be compared to the pair of Mary's Girlhood sonnets, where meanings are represented at the same level as pictorial details.
The sestet, as so often in DGR's sonnets, pivots the whole into a self-reflexive condition: âthis vaseâ signals this sonnet. But the identity of the âyouâ (line 1) and the âHeâ (lines 2, 9)âstandard markers for constructing an interpretation according to a grammar of subjective or romantic expressionâremains indeterminate throughout. The distinctly impersonal cast that develops as a consequence supplies the sestet with its impressive and dark power. The vase's masterâthe artist, the individual personâwould have destroyed the vase, so dreadful are its histories, had he not come to see the vase in such an impersonal way. According to the sonnet, the vase has been fated to serveâin the words of the sequence's opening sonnetâas a âMemorial from the Soul's Eternityâ. The master of the vase is in the end its subject (in several senses).
Textual History: CompositionÂ
WMR calls it âa comparatively early performanceâ in one instance, and in another dates it 1869 (see WMR, DGR as Designer and Writer, 254 and 1911 ). All commentators have accepted the 1869 dating. Neither the Fitzwilliam manuscript (printer's copy) nor the Princeton manuscript illuminate the question of the date of composition.
Textual History: RevisionÂ
Except for the title,the substantive text is stable from the printer's copy manuscript through all subsequent printings.
Printing HistoryÂ
First printed (under the title Run and Won) as Sonnet VII in the sequence of sonnets initially printed in the Fortnightly Review (March 1869). The group was printed again in the Penkill Proofs in August and kept through all prepublication texts until its publication in the 1870 Poems, where it is titled âThe Vase of Lifeâ. The sonnet is numbered XLV in The House of Life as published in the 1870 volume, and XCV in the sequence as published in 1881.
LiteraryÂ
The octave recalls Keats's âOde on a Grecian Urnâ.
AutobiographicalÂ
WMR suggested that the âHeâ of the sonnet was meant to signify Millais; Frederick Page suggested Keats, while Baum thought it referred to DGR himself (see WMR, DGR as Designer and Witer, 254 and Baum, Poems, Ballads, Sonnets, 321n ).