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WMR, DGR Designer and Writer, 206
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Baum, ed., House of Life, 113-114
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WMR, DGR Designer and Writer, 206
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Baum, ed., House of Life, 113-114
This collection contains 24 texts and images, including:
Ballads and Sonnets first edition text
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
The conceit of the sonnet is mannered and even Marinistic. Impossible to praise or even like, the sonnet's extreme artifice nonetheless exerts a certain fascination precisely because of its grotesque deliberation. Reading it one has the sense that its secret and perhaps proper meaning is purely aesthetic, and that it represents a critical comment on DGR's own artistic and poetic practice. The fascination comes from the naked and even performative candour with which DGR considers the ancient topos of art's inadequacy in face of the task of rendering a true representation of beauty.
Textual History: CompositionÂ
Six complete manuscripts come down to us as well as a draft fragment of lines 1-2. The earliest of these is the complete draft in the Ashley Library Notebook I. The other manuscripts are: two copies in the Princeton composite âHouse of Lifeâ manuscript, a heavily corrected draft and a corrected fair copy; a fair copy in the Fitzwilliam composite âHouse of Lifeâ; and another fair copy in the Bodleian Kelmscott Love Sonnets group. The fair copy in the library of the Delaware Art Museum was made as part of the preparations for the 1881 publication of the sonnet in the Ballads and Sonnets volume.
Printing HistoryÂ
First published in the 1881 Ballads and Sonnets and collected thereafter.