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Baum, ed., The House of Life, 116-118
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WMR, DGR as Designer and Writer, 207
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Baum, ed., The House of Life, 116-118
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WMR, DGR as Designer and Writer, 207
Editorial glosses and textual notes are available in a pop-up window. Line numbering reflects the structure of the Poems First Edition text.
This collection contains 46 texts and images, including:
Poems First Edition text
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
Baum says that the argument of the sestet âmust be admired rather for its ingenuity or even ingenuousness, than for its cogencyâ (Baum, The House of Life 117 ). This judgment seems less informed than it ought to be. There can be little doubt, I think, that DGR is recalling (and reworking) Dante's Vita Nuova once again here, as he did in âLife-in-Loveâ; and in this case the relevant text is the one immediately succeeding âLife-in-Loveâ's antecedent Dante text. According to Dante, his encounter with the âdonna della finestraâ only serves to bring him more strongly back to an awareness of the supremacy of Beatrice. In DGR this Dantean thought mutates into an argument about a path to Love laid down through a series of âculminant changesâ (i.e., different specific lovers). DGR's âingenuityâ turns Beloved and Innominata into different figuraeâwhat Blake would call Statesâof Dante's Beatrice. Furthermore, it turns DGR's doubled love into a dialectical scene whose function is to maintain the poet in a state of erotic tension (his reciprocating committments to Old and New Love). The basic form of this dialectic is Platonic, and is classically expressed in the Symposium; here DGR refashions that set of ideas (via Dante) into a psycho-domestic myth. Briefly stated, it casts the Beloved/Elizabeth into the Platonic role of Memory, and the Innominata/Jane Morris into the Platonic role of Desire.
Textual History: CompositionÂ
âBefore mid-Autumn 1869â (see Peattie, The Letters of William Michael Rossetti 7 ); but it would have been written before August 1869, for it is printed in the Penkill Proofs for the 1870 volume. Elsewhere WMR speculates on an 1868 date (WMR, DGR as Designer and Writer). The only surviving manuscript is the corrected fair copy in the Fitzwilliam composite âHouse of Lifeâ manuscript.
Textual History: RevisionÂ
The text as first set in type in the Penkill Proofs for the 1870 volume does not change thereafter.
IconographicÂ
As in the closely related, previous sonnet (âLife-in-Loveâ), here DGR may be observing not a memory image and a present love, but two (or more) pictures of his two belovedsâtwo or more paintings or drawings that he made of them. In the octave, the words âboweredâ and âsprayâ suggest the ornamental floral work that figures so prominently in DGR's erotic portraits of the 1860s. In this frame of reference the sonnet connects to sonnets like âLove's Baublesâ in The House of Life sequence.
Printing HistoryÂ
First printed in mid-August 1869 as part of the Penkill Proofs, the sonnet remained in all proof stages and was published in the 1870 Poems and thereafter. It is The House of Life Sonnet XVII in the 1870 volume, and Sonnet XXXVII in 1881.
LiteraryÂ
As with the sonnets that precede and follow this one in The House of Life sequence, DGR here glances back at the theme of multiple loves as it is handled in stil novisti verse. Relevant here are the poems of Cavalcanti, for example, his sonnet to Dante âS'io fossi quello que d'amor fu degnoâ (âIf I were still that man worthy to loveâ), and the sonnet âO tu che porti negli occhi soventeâ (âO thou that often hast within thine eyesâ).
But Dante's Vita Nuova handles the same theme in the donna della finestra passage, which is directly alluded to in DGR's previous sonnet in the sequence, Life-in-Love. And while the form of DGR's poemâa dialogue with the god of loveâ recalls the troubador and stil novisti manner in general, DGR is almost certainly recalling the sonnet in the âdonna della finestraâ passage that takes the form of a dialogue between âHeart, that is, appetite [and] Soul, that is, reasonâ: âGentil pensiero che parla di vuiâ (âA gentle thought there is will often startâ).
AutobiographicalÂ
As in the previous sonnet âLife-in-Loveâ, this one clearly represents DGR's two great attachments, to his dead wife Elizabeth and to his innominate beloved Jane Morris.
The arresting word âeuphrasyâ in line 7 calls attention to an autobiographical subtext of some importance to this sonnet and to the sequence as a whole. In 1867 DGR's eyes began to fail, and the problem kept recurring until in 1868 he was forced to stop painting and urged to a country rest cure. The advice of his friends and his doctors led him to accept the invitation to sojourn at Alice Boyd's estate in Ayrshire, Penkill Castle, with William Bell Scott. During the visit there in the summer of 1868, Scott told DGR that his true genius lay in poetry, not painting, and the whole project of the 1870 Poems began to develop from that time. These events are relevant because âeuphrasyâ is the common medicine for the eyes, eyebright (Euphrasis officinalis). The poem's argumentâthat the Innominata's eyes allow the poet to see in and through them the figure of his lost, dead love (âburied trothâ)â becomes a second order figure for DGR's poetical work, which is taken up after his failing sight removes him from his work as an artist.