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WMR, DGR Designer and Writer, 221-224
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Baum, ed., House of Life, 148-153
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Bernard Richards, âRossetti's âTrue Womanââ, in The Explicator (Winter 1985), 19-20
This collection contains 67 texts and images, including:
Ballads and Sonnets first edition text
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
Baum's commentaries are useful, not least for their critical sympathy with the ideology of these remarkably Victorian sonnets. As he observes, in these works âAnything like intelligence, anything like an individuality of her own, anything more than being an ornament and comfort to man, is not desideratedâ (149). WMR has a similar comment, though given from a point of view more attentive to the Swednborgian/Blakean orientation of the sonnets (see the third): âA certain interchangeability of idea and of imageryâthe things of time symbolizing the things of eternity, or vice versââappears to me to be one of the most ruling qualities of Rossetti's poetry, and a leading source of that difficulty or elusive character which many readers feel in it. The present sonnet is a prominent example. The reader's mind remains in suspense as to whether the poet is speaking of what takes place in heaven (in the ordinary sense of that term), or of what takes place on earth. It appears to me that, by strict attention to the contents of this sonnet, one finds that he only speaks of what takes place on earth.â (223) That last sentence undercores the âfleshlyâ emphasis that pervades what readers, especially early readers, were apt to call the âmysticalâ character of DGR's peculiar neo-platonism.
Textual History: CompositionÂ
DGR seems to have written these sonnets in late November-December 1880, as we see from his letters of that period. That he had them all completed by 17 December is evident from his letter of that date to Hall Caine: âI wish I had you by me to hear 3 sonnets with which I wind up Part I of The House of Life. They are called True Woman and are my bestâ (see Fredeman, Correspondence, forthcoming) and Bryson, DGR and Jane Morris Correspondence, 165 ).
The earliest draft of âTrue Woman. I. Herselfâ is at Princeton in the same folder with the earliest (pencil) draft of âTrue Woman. III. Her Heavenâ.
Separately at Princeton is the composite âHouse of Lifeâ sequence which has five manuscripts: for âTrue Woman. I. Herselfâ a fair copy; for âTrue Woman. II. Her Loveâ a fair copy and a corrected copy; and for âTrue Woman. III. Her Heavenâ a lightly corrected and a heavily corrected copy. The Fitzwilliam composite âHouse of Lifeâ sequence has three fair copies, one each for âTrue Woman. I. Herselfâ, âTrue Woman. II. Her Love â, and âTrue Woman. III. Her Heavenâ. There is also a fair copy of the three sonnets in the Bodleian's miscellaneous collection of DGR's verse.
Several draft scraps of these sonnets appear in DGR's notebooks. There is a prose cartoon for the three sonnet sequence as well as a draft of lines 13-14 of âTrue Woman. III. Her Heavenâ scripted in Notebook III (Duke University Library). The Ashley notebooks also have drafts: in Notebook II, line 1 and lines 13-14 of âTrue Woman. III. Her Heavenâ;
Printing HistoryÂ
First published in the 1881 Ballads and Sonnets and collected thereafter.
PictorialÂ
In his commentary on the sonnet WMR observes that his brother was painting The Day-Dream when writing these sonnets, and that the painting was originally ornamented with snowdrops (not honeysuckle).
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
âII. Her Loveâ: Baum focuses on the conceit of the mirror and observes: âNo one but Rossetti or John Donne could, or would, have treated itâ in such an extended fashion (151). The remark is acute. Also worth noting is the deliberateness with which DGR continues to elaborate the figure of the mirror (see âThe Dark Glassâ and its related sonnets).