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WMR, DGR Designer and Writer, 197
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Baum, ed., House of Life
92-93
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WMR, DGR Designer and Writer, 197
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Baum, ed., House of Life
92-93
This collection contains 35 texts and images, including:
The 1881 first edition of Ballads and Sonnets
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
The brilliant âpre-raphaeliteâ simile that opens the sestet defines why this sonnet is anything but a descriptive nature piece. The lovers are immersed in the heart of their loving and as such are not in but âout ofâ nature. This is the place cited as the âbower of unimagined flower and treeâ in the earlier sonnet âLove's Loversâ.
Much admired, the sonnet has been set to music at least three times.
Textual History: CompositionÂ
Initially composed in 1871 when DGR was at Kelmscott with Jane Morris, the sonnet was later rebuilt through DGR's notebooks, which contain a series of fragmentary draft texts of various parts of the poem (see notebook 1 and notebook 2 in the British Library (the latter with texts at folios 3v, 4r, and 15r; and notebook 2 at Duke). Two complete holograph draft texts are housed in the Rosenbach Library, one of these the copy-text of the other. These are the earliest manuscripts. The Fitzwilliam composite manuscript of âThe House of Lifeâ has two copies, a corrected draft just subsequent to the Rosenbach manuscripts, and a fair copy with further corrections (here it was given its received title after passing through the titles âSilenceâ and âThe Silent Hourâ). A second fair copy is included in the Princeton composite âHouse of Lifeâ. The sestet of the sonnet was altered drastically sometime between the scripting of the Rosenbach texts and the Fitzwilliam draft. This important revision emerged through DGR's notebook writings.
No text of the poem appears in the âKelmscott Love Sonnetsâ manuscript, but it is likely that the early version of the poem was originally in the group. The book has several pages torn from it.
Printing HistoryÂ
First published in the 1881 Ballads and Sonnets and collected thereafter.