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Baum, ed., The House of Life
100-102
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WMR, Dante Gabriel Rossetti as Designer and Writer.
200-201
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Baum, ed., The House of Life
100-102
â¦
WMR, Dante Gabriel Rossetti as Designer and Writer.
200-201
Editorial glosses and textual notes are available in a pop-up window. Line numbering reflects the structure of the 1870 Poems First Edition text.
This collection contains 54 texts and images, including:
1870 Poems First Edition text
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
This sonnet follows closely the motifs first touched in âBridal Birthâ and âLovesightâ. Most relevant are the images of the bird of Love and the grove or covert where the drama of Love is intimately played out.
As Baum observes, âThe note of foreboding, first sounded in [âLovesightâ] . . . returns now clearlyâ (see Poems, Ballads, and Sonnets 276n ). Because of the intimate relation DGR draws between love and art/poetryâa relation underscored in this sonnet with the wordplay in lines 4 and 11â the threat to love intimated here is equally imagined as a threat to the imagination.
Textual History: CompositionÂ
Although we have no certain evidence of the fact, this sonnet was almost certainly written in early 1869âone of the new pieces he composed for publication in the March Fortnightly Review. A draft copy is preserved in the Princeton composite âHouse of Lifeâ manuscript.
Textual History: RevisionÂ
The text underwent some revisions between its initial printing in March 1869 and its final authorial constitution in 1881.
Printing HistoryÂ
First printed as Sonnet IX in the initial Fortnightly Review sequence of sonnets (March 1869) of The House of Life project. It 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 number XXV in The House of Life as published in the 1870 volume, and number XXV in the sequence as published in 1881.
LiteraryÂ
Recurring to the stil novisti image of the embowered bird (a trope of Love), which figures regularly in the sequence, DGR underscores his attempt to relate his own passage through âthe difficult deeps of loveâ (âHeart's Hopeâ line 2) to his Italian and specifically Dantean heritage. Also, the tree/leaf/bough images owe a good deal to Petrarch here and throughout the sequence.
AutobiographicalÂ
Baum rightly observes that âAutobiography is unmistakable here, but not unambiguousâ (see Baum, The House of Life 101 )âby which he means that the sonnet can be read both in relation to DGR's wife and to Jane Morris.