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Kooistra,
Christina Rossetti and Illustration, 76-80
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Marillier, DGR: An Illustrated Memorial, 117-118
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Surtees, A Catalogue Raisonné, 107-109 (no. 185).
This collection contains 19 texts and images, including:
Birmingham City Museum and Art Gallery drawing
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
It is impossible not to see a strong personal reference in this and the other illustration for DGR's sister's book The Prince's Progress and Other Poems (1866), and especially in the drawing for this frontispiece. DGR chose for his text line 526 of the title poem, âThe Prince's Progressâ: âYou should have wept her yesterdayâ. A recollection here of the loss of DGR's wife Elizabeth is emphasized by the text DGR wrote beneath one of the studies for this woodcut, which quotes line 1 from CR's âBride Songâ: âToo late for love, too late for joyâ.
Production HistoryÂ
DGR's work on these two small drawings dragged out for more than a year. As we see from his letters to Christina's publisher, Alexander Macmillan, of 4 and 26 April 1865, he had at that point committed himself to making two drawings for her book of poetry, a title page and a frontispiece, and to sending the publisher his design for the binding (see Fredeman, Correspondence, 65. 55, 67.). On 3 December he had still not sent the two drawings to Macmillan but promised them âbefore many daysâ. The same letter calls for âsome few small changesâ to the binding design: âall the lines must be made half their present thickness (from the outside in each instance) and the gold balls turned into rings. The colour I chose is a green one which I have by meâ ( Fredeman, Correspondence, 65. 170.). He was still working on âChristina's second blockââpresumably the frontispieceâ on 23 February 1866 and had not completed the work by 2 March, as he told the woodcut engraver William James Linton. DGR wrote to Macmillan on 29 March that âthe block is done and gone to Linton, who has my request to be as expeditious as may be. Now then is the time for the binder to correct the binding. I send him with this a cover representing the colour which I wish adopted among those I received, and the necessary alterationsâ. On 19 April he told his mother he had âa proof of the title page of Christina's bookâ and finally, on 21 April, he wrote to Macmillan that he was satisfied with both the cuts and the binding and that he wanted to see final proofs (see Fredeman, Correspondence, 66. 39, 44, 63, 83, 84.). The book was published in early June. more than a year after the text of the poems was sent to the publisher.
See also W. J. Linton's finished woodcut made from DGR's drawing for the frontispiece to CR's book of poems.
LiteraryÂ
Surtees' summary of the action of CR's poem is revealing: âThe story [of âThe Prince's Progressâ] is that of the Prince setting out to seek his bride but lingering so long on the way that he finds her dead when he arrivesâ ( Surtees, A Catalogue Raisonné, 108 ). The import of this tale for DGR is underscored by the illustration itself, which depicts a grief-stricken prince being attended by a woman, with the bier of his bride in the background attended by six praying women.