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Fredeman, William. âA Key Poem of the
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Fredeman, William. The
P.R.B. Journal: William Michael Rossetti's Diary of the
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Ives, Maura C. âDescriptive Bibliography
and the Victorian Periodical.â Studies in Bibliography 49 (1996): 61-94.
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Lang, Cecil Y., ed. The
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Peattie, Roger W., ed. Selected Letters of William Michael Rossetti.
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Poe, Edgar. âThe Black Cat.â Poetry and Tales. New York:
Library of America, 1984. 597-606.
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Poe, Edgar. âThe Imp of the
Perverse.â Poetry and Tales. New York: Library of America, 1984. 826-832.
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Roll-Hansen, Diderik. âThe Third Rossetti
Reconsidered.â Journal of Pre-Raphaelite Studies 4.1 (1983): 1-11.
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Rossetti, William Michael. Dante Gabriel Rossetti. His Family-Letters with a
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This collection contains 1 text or image, including:
The Broadway Annual text
Scholarly Commentary
Guest Editor: Paul Fyfe
IntroductionÂ
âMrs. Holmes Greyâ is William Michael Rossetti's longest poetic effort and a signal artifact of the development of early Pre-Raphaelitism. It was composed in the midst of the PRB's enthusiastic plans to produce a journal, soon published in 1850 as The Germ. WMR undertook âMrs. Holmes Greyâ as an experiment in the aesthetic principles the PRB were attempting to formulate. The poem's significance and its critical reception have largely been framed by WMR himself. âMrs. Holmes Greyâ was, as WMR described in the Family Letters, âa Præraphaelite poemâ: âThe informing idea of the poem was to apply to verse-writing the same principle of strict actuality and probability of detail which the Præraphaelites upheld in their picturesâ (2: 63). WMR wrote of his poem to W.B. Scott that âit was written rather as an experiment in principle [...]. I wanted to attempt, in subject of commonplace life, a more systematically commonplace treatment that I remember to have met with in any poetâ (Peattie 11-12). So important was this interpretive context to WMR that when the poem was published in 1868 he appended an explanatory note about the poem's origins in the âprae-Raphaelite movementâ: âI [...] entertained the idea that the like principles might be carried out in poetry; and that it would be possible, without losing the poetical, dramatic, or even tragic tone and impression, to approach nearer to the actualities of dialogue and narration than had ever yet been doneâ (459).
Perhaps as a result of WMR's thorough characterizations, âMrs. Holmes Greyâ has won little acclaim beyond its significance as an experiment in poetic documentary. However, as Fredeman suggests, the poem does represent an interesting and underappreciated aspect of Pre-Raphaelite poetics, one that shades into naturalism rather than a visionary surreal (âKey Poemâ 149-150). WMR evinces what Florence Boos calls an almost âprotoscientific curiosityâ (183). âMrs. Holmes Greyâ undertakes a âstrict naturalism,â according to Roll-Hansen, that differs from the continental procedures of Zola (5). With its unexalted characters, domestic subject, descriptive particularity, absence of moral platitudes, transliteration of a coroner's inquest report, and long stretches of unadorned dialogue, âMrs. Holmes Greyâ describes a naturalism or realism that, like the term Pre-Raphaelitism itself, is difficult to adequately define. It accepts the mundane, characterizing individuals only to the limits of their likely personalities. It exhibits âindiscriminateâ interest in particulars and does not attempt to subordinate the trivial to the consequential (Fredeman, âKey Poemâ 156). It recovers an empirical dimension to Pre-Raphaelite poetics and makes claims for the uniqueness of its enterprise. But it did not, apparently, carry much influence. Still, WMR refused to let âMrs. Holmes Greyâ fade completely away. Much of its lesson, then, may be in considering its failures.
âMrs. Holmes Greyâ represents a road that Victorian narrative and dramatic poetries did not take, which turned instead toward monologue, idyll, and (briefly) spasmodism. WMR's poem lights out for other territory, to explore the capacities of the commonplace to carry deeper insights into character, relationships, and location. His verse delights in facts and calibrates narrative probability to its very meter. As WMR wrote of the âscientific requirementsâ for the death of Mrs Holmes Grey, ââcongestion and effusion of the ventricleâ is the right term. This will adapt itself to rhythm with all easeâ (PRBJ 32). More broadly, the poem attempts to convey the shock of the mundane, as with its scene of reading the newspaper. DGR praises his brother's poem in a letter with favorable comparison to George Crabbe, declaring that it possesses a âharsh realityâ and rings out with notes of the modern. The poem looks forward to the rough, plain aesthetic of Williams and the subsequent Objectivist work of Charles Reznikoff. Reznikoff rekindled the experiment of âMrs. Holmes Greyâ in Testimony (1965, 1968) using court evidence in free verse to tell stories both striking and plain.
In 810 lines of blank verse, âMrs. Holmes Greyâ tells the story of a Victorian domestic scandal (for a detailed précis, see Fredeman, âKey Poemâ 152-155). In brief: Holmes Grey, a physician, invites a colleague, Dr. Luton, to stay awhile at his house. Mrs. Grey recognizes in Luton the man she loved in childhood and makes several advances, which are rebuffed. Luton leaves, but she makes excuses to follow and confronts him again. When Luton threatens to contact her husband, Mrs. Grey promptly dies of an aneurysm.
The poem's central story is doubly mediated. First, through a frame tale in which Holmes Grey, keeping a candlelight vigil over his wife's corpse, explains his side to a former friend, John Harling. Harling was visiting the town and happened to catch sight of Grey in the window. WMR adds another narrative layer when Grey, in lieu of elaborating the story, hands Harling a newspaper with an article headed âCoroner's InquestâA Distressing Case.â For several hundred lines, WMR's poem becomes a transcript of the newspaper in blank verse: questions from coroner and jury, testimony by all the principals, bits of courtroom description from the implied journalist. After Harling finishes reading, he has a short conversation with Grey that ends the poem. The inquest has exculpated Luton, but Grey resolves to ruin him nonetheless.
Textual History: CompositionÂ
WMR kept track of his poem's progress in the PRB Journal. He first conceived of the idea for the poem on September 12, 1849, while on vacation on the Isle of Wight. There, WMR enjoyed several meditative walks which informed the poem's setting in an English seaside resort. The first draft was completed within the month.
Textual History: RevisionÂ
WMR revised his poem between October 1849 and February 1850, and again during November and December 1867 before its publication. However, the specific content of his revisions are difficult to trace, as neither manuscripts nor proof copies are known to have survived. What we do know comes from exchanges of letters and WMR's own notes in the PRB Journal and his diary.
By early October 1849, WMR was sharing his poem in drafts and recitations with contemporaries. DGR, traveling with Holman Hunt in Europe, enthusiastically requested the manuscript by mail and soon replied with their extensive commentary (Family Letters 2: 63-66). Their first recommendation was to change the title; WMR complied, and âAn Exchange of Newsâ became âA Plain Story of Life.â Paragraph by paragraph, DGR makes a variety of suggestions on word choice, avoiding the âawkwardâ and ârather commonâ and instead aiming âto increase the forceâ with ânewerâ and âmore strikingly truthfulâ language. DGR's own poetic commitments emerge in his criticism, as he warns off WMR from descriptions and phrasing that are melodramatic, Tennysonian, orâapparently far worseâGallic. By and large, the letter praises the poem and WMR's efforts: âa very clever and finished piece of writing,âwonderfully well-managed in parts and possessing some strong points of character. [...] your poem is very remarkable, and altogether certainly the best thing you have doneâ (66).
Fredeman notes that WMR took some but not all of his brother's suggested revisions (Correspondence 116). WMR subsequently recited his poem to John Lucas Tupper, who in turn consulted with a medical man to confirm, WMR wrote, the âscientific requirements for the death of the woman [...:] âcongestion and effusion of the ventricleâ is the right termâ (PRBJ 32). In November, he recited it to Millais and offered the manuscript to Patmoreâwho was perhaps predisposed to dislike it, considering âthe age of narrative poetry to be passed for everâ (PRBJ 27). As WMR learned through the grapevine, Patmore was not impressed. Where DGR admired the absence of cloying sentiment and morality, Patmore âfinds a most objectionable absence of moral dignity, all the characters being puny and destitute of elevationâ (PRBJ 25).
WMR continued on, making corrections to accentuate the poem's ânewspaper fidelityâ. He sent the manuscript to William Bell Scott in January 1850 (PRBJ 43). Scott did not condone the experiment. As WMR noted, â[h]e evidently looks on it as a curiosity out of his line of thought and poetic faith, not wanting in good description, but exceptional and wrong in delineation of characterâ (PRBJ 47). By February, WMR seems to have conceded. In a reply to Scott, he humbled himself as naïve: â[I] now feel convinced that it is almost too ambitious, before a somewhat extended experience of real life, to attempt the embodiment of what is likely to strike as a metaphysical paradoxâ (Peattie 12). The last straw may have been the reaction of Joseph Wrightson, who looked upon the poem âas more than half intentionally comicâ (PRBJ 58). âA Plain Story of Lifeâ went into a long dormancy.
In 1867, WMR received a letter from Edmund Routledge soliciting literary contents for his fledgling monthly magazine The Broadway Annual. WMR balked at the overwrought prospectus, but Routledge appealed to him again in October with promises of the magazine's improved character, more serious contributors, and likely commercial success (Peattie 181-182). WMR signed on and dug up his blank-verse poem, though confessing to Swinburne in a letter that âany 2 lines out of 3 need some amount of modificationâ (Peattie 182). By this point, WMR was referring to the poem as âThe Coroner's Inquest,â and eventually settled upon âMrs. Holmes Greyâ for publication. WMR also felt the need to append an explanatory noteâalmost an apologiaâto the end of the published version of âMrs. Holmes Grey.â This note deprecates his âunpractised handâ and his poetic âexperiment,â admitting that the poem has been published ânot indeed without some revision, but without the least alteration in its general character and point of viewâ (Broadway 459). The note may extend WMR's misgivings about the poem's original reception, or his worries for the lost context of the poem's composition in the ferment of the early PRB.
ReceptionÂ
After its publication, âMrs. Holmes Greyâ elicited only one formal review. In the last of his three-part series on the Rossettis for Tinsley's Magazine, H. Buxton Forman spent the better part of his article on WMR panning âMrs. Holmes Grey.â Forman's admiration for the Rossettis notwithstanding, his article targets âthe theory of the preraphaelitesâ that simple materials will increase the caliber of artistic production (276). As for âMrs. Holmes Grey,â Forman cannot abide the non-poetic language. He denigrates it as âsensational literatureâ barely differing from âcarefully-written proseâ (277).
WMR denied that the Tinsley's review bothered him, telling Swinburne of his detachment from the poem (Peattie 232). Swinburne, for his part, overflowed with praise for WMR. Swinburne gave âMrs. Holmes Greyâ several close readings and wrote: âI now take leave to tell you honestly that it seems to me not only good but great in quality. [...I]t is the only thorough and poetic piece of domestic tragedy wrought out since Balzacâexcept of course Flaubertâ (Lang 28). Even though WMR considered this a âsuperfluously enthusiastic letterâ and that Forman's review was ânearer the mark,â he was grateful, perhaps even persuaded to continue writing poetry (Rossetti Papers 297; Some Reminiscences 1: 82). When he asked DGR what kind of poetry to pursue, DGR advised him âto go on the same tackâ as âMrs. Holmes Grey.â Considering WMR's total hiatus from poetry until beginning the Democratic Sonnets in 1881, WMR may not have concurred (Roll-Hansen 7).
âMrs. Holmes Greyâ languished in relative obscurity after its initial publication. In 1974, amid his efforts to rekindle critical comment about the PRB, William Fredeman suggested that âMrs. Holmes Greyâ possesses âa documentary significance that overshadows its literary shortcomingsâ (159). Fredeman uses to poem to complicate evaluations of Pre-Raphaelite poetics typically based upon works like âThe Blessed Damozelâ (149-150). Following on Fredeman's claims, Roll-Hansen sees âMrs. Holmes Greyâ as a window into the dispassionate naturalism and philosophical positions of WMR and early Pre-Raphaelitism.
Printing HistoryÂ
âMrs. Holmes Greyâ was originally slated for the fourth number of The Germ (PRBJ 43), but, because of the periodical's early demise and lukewarm response to the poem, it was not included. WMR did not again actively seek to publish the poem, even when encouraged by George Meredith in 1861 (Fredeman, âKey Poemâ 152). After agreeing to Routledge's proposals, âMrs. Holmes Greyâ was printed in the sixth number of The Broadway Annual (February 1868 issue). The publisher's records indicate a run of 30,000 copies. The Broadway Annual lists its places of publication as London and New York, but no records exist to confirm an American printing (Ives 90). âMrs. Holmes Greyâ has since been republished only once, as an appendix to Fredeman's edition of the PRB Journal (1975).
PictorialÂ
Fredeman suggests that âMrs. Holmes Greyâ is stylistically distinct from other pre-Raphaelite poems as it contains âno attempt to introduce purely pictorial elementsâ (159). Even so, at least three illustrations were created for the poem. DGR apparently made two sketches for it, though neither has survived. According to the PRB Journal, DGR began a rough sketch on January 16, 1850, intended to accompany its publication in the fourth number of The Germ (PRBJ 43). When Edmund Routledge agreed to publish it in 1867, he suggested DGR as the illustrator. DGR declined. He did, however, privately make WMR a sketch of the death scene (Rossetti Papers 243).
WMR and Routledge agreed upon Arthur Boyd Houghton to illustrate the poem's coffin scene. This woodcut design was printed in The Broadway Annual on the facing page of âMrs. Holmes Grey.â WMR sent a note of thanks to Houghton who was greatly relieved: he had expected âa ferocious wigging for the illustrationâ from the now-famous WMR (Rossetti Papers 284).
Houghton's illustration places the viewer in a bare room looking over the shoulder of the poem's interlocutor, John Harling, and into the candlelit coffin of Mrs. Holmes Grey, her face and hair barely visible, her gaunt husband standing immediately behind her. With its sightlines converging on the well-lit face in the center, the illustration is suggestive of a contemporary fascination with fallen women, figured in the spectacle of the female corpse.
HistoricalÂ
Thirlwell among other critics has suggested that WMR based his poem on an actual scandal reported in the press, though no specific cases or articles are cited (186, fn25). However, coroner's inquests were legion in the Victorian newspaper and, according to WMR himself, he âsat down to think for a subject for a poem, and, without much trouble, invented oneâ (PRBJ 14).
LiteraryÂ
WMR takes his epigraph from Edgar Poe's short story âThe Black Catâ (1843). Poe held great esteem with the PRB and was even celebrated by Coventry Patmore as the best writer America had produced (PRBJ 31). âThe Black Catâ is a first-person confessional: a man afflicted by alcoholism and his own madness murders first his cat and then his wife; his second cat gives him away to the police. Poe's story relates to âMrs. Holmes Greyâ in at least two provocative ways: in its narrative procedures and in its investigation of the perverse.
As Poe's narrator explains in the first paragraph, âMy purpose is to place before the world, plainly, succinctly, and without comment, a series of mere household eventsâ (597). As Poe draws out the complexities of a domestic tragedy, so too the author of âA Plain Story of Lifeâ devotes his poem to quotidian sensation and almost newspaper-like fidelity. WMR's guiding principle was âstrict actuality and probability of detailâ intent on producing âthe actualities of dialogue and narration.â
These are the methods WMR uses, like Poe, to illuminate the perverse. In his essay âImp of the Perverseâ (1845), Poe identifies âa radical, primitive, irreducible sentimentâ that does not fit into moral or religious cosmologies (826). We can find such a sentiment in both Greys of WMR's poem: Mrs. Holmes Grey is in thrall to Dr. Luton with an irrepressible love that ruins her life; her attachment is linked in several places to mesmeric meetings they attended together during their early acquaintance. Mr. Grey, after sitting with the corpse for some days, resolves to ruin Dr. Luton regardless of the exculpatory evidence and his friend Harling's objections. Perversity also resonates with the interest in unexplained motive forces characteristic of PRB aesthetics. The epigraph from âThe Black Catâ echoes the PRB's declared interests in raw emotion and the first principles in art: âthe primitive impulses of the human heartâ and the âprimary faculties or sentiments [...of] the character of man.â This nexus of perverse psychology and aesthetic principles is the grotesque, which became a perennial sticking point for critics of âMrs. Holmes Greyâ and preraphaelitism itself.
TranslationÂ
Swinburne suggested to WMR that âin France I think even a poor translation, if literal, would be feltâ. He particularly wanted to share it with Flaubert. And so Swinburne promised to translate âMrs. Holmes Greyâ: âI'd do the drudgery myself gladly: I would indeed and submit the translation to you, lest it should prove a âtranslation-treasonââ (Lang 28). However, no such translation seems to exist or was ever published.