Christina Rossetti Poetry - Main links and themes

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  • Created by: becky.65
  • Created on: 15-05-17 15:58

A Birthday

  • 'My heart is link a singing bird' - freedom; romantic image; springtime - new life
  • 'Whose nest is in a water'd shoot' - safety and firtility ; growing and nourished by the water; purity
  • 'My heart is an apple-tree' - life; Garden of Eden; innocence
  • 'thickset fruit' - feels so joyful she can nourish others; joy is in all seasons; her love is natural
  • 'My heart is like a rainbow shell' - Gods promise to Noah; new life
  • 'Hang it with vair and purple dyes' - killing nature; love it so strong it can be destructive; love has brought more riches to her life
  • 'the birthday of my life' - reborn; Second Coming of Christ; her love for Christ is worth more than riches

Main themes:

  • Overpowering love - anaphora
  • Love is natural and rare
  • The riches religion gives you

Links to other poems

  •  Soeur Louise de la Misericorde - love of Christ is stronger than all
  • Up-Hill - the promise of salvation 
  • Twice - the permanent love of Christ
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Song : (When I am dead, my dearest)

  • 'Nor shady cypress tree' - mourning/everlasting
  • 'Be the green grass above me' - suggests body and soul remains in grave; eliminates idea of heaven
  • 'I shall not hear the nightingale' - bird with a mournful song
  • 'And dreaming through the twilight' - barrier between life and death; waiting for Jesus' Second Coming
  • 'That doth not rise nor set' - heaven is so bright the sun is not needed
  • 'And haply may forget' - blurring of memory; uncertainty of afterlife

Main themes:

  • Uncertainty of afterlife
  • Ironic poetic imagery
  • Loss of memory

Links to other poems:

  • Shut Out - unable to connect with religion
  • In the Round Tower at Jhansi - uncertainty of death
  • Echo - loss of memory
  • From The Antique - finality of death
  • Remember - ironic poetic imagery
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Maude Clare

  • 'But he was not so pale as you, Nor I so pale as Nell' - foreshadow of doomed marriage
  • 'To bless the hearth, to bless the board, To bless the marriage-bed' - stand in the way of domestic life/intimacy 
  • 'That day we waded ankle-deep/For lilies in the beck' - phallic imagery; would have been seen as a fallen women in Victorian era; dead love
  • ' "Lady" he said - "Maude Clare" ' - cerzura, overcome with emotion; weak male voice who destroyed women
  • 'For he's my lord for better and worse' - echoes words of marriage; juxtaopsition of Maude Clare
  • 'I'll love him till he loves me best' - limitations of a women's place in society; driven to compete for men's love

Main themes:

  • Place of women in society 
  • Restraint of free expression - rhyme scheme
  • Exposure of society's conventions

Links to other poems:

  • Goblin Market - place of women in society 
  • Soeur Louise - Victorian standards for women
  • Shut Out - cast away for not following societies rules
  • In the Round Tower at Jhansi - focus on relationship
  • From The Antique - expectation of women
  • No, Thank you, John - strong female voice
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Soeur Louise de la Mesericorde

  • 'Now dust and dying embers mock my fire' - previous life wasn't important; intensity of past life; still some desire left over
  • 'Oh vanity of vanities, desire!' - liturgical diction, life is empty apart from God; hard to control desires
  • 'Longing and love, pangs of a perished pleasure' - plosive, dangers of love and desire
  • 'love's deathbed, trickles, trickles' - juxtapostion, destruction love causes; coming down from sexual high
  • 'my rose of life gone all to prickles' - innocence was destroyed by past life; Christs' crown of thorns
  • 'Stunting my hope which might have strained up higher' - sins made it harder to get to heaven
  • 'Turning my garden plot to barren mire' - unable to reach Garden of Eden because of desires

Main themes:

  • Comfort in religion
  • Destruction that love causes
  • The struggle of desires that women have to deal with

Links to other poems:

  • Goblin Market and Maude Clare - dangers of desires
  • A Birthday - divine love of Christ
  • Good Friday - Christ will always have faith even in your doubt
  • Echo - lost love
  • No, Thank You, John - women are not controlled
4 of 13

Shut Out

  • 'The door was shut. I looked between/Its iron bars' - gates to heaven; caesura creates firmness of exclusion as does the iron bars
  • 'My garden' - paradise after being washed by Christ
  • 'A shadowless spirit kept the gate' - boundary of life and death
  • 'Blinded with tears' - inability to percieve God
  • 'violet bed' - death
  • 'but not the best' - the world is only a shadow of the Garden of Eden

Main themes:

  • Exclusion from happiness
  • Destruction of the possibility of life
  • Liminality 

Links to other poems:

  • Song - unable to connect to Christ
  • Maude Clare - excluded for not following socities standards
  • Soeur Louise - desire causes destruction
5 of 13

Good Friday

  • 'Am I a stone, and not a sheep' - questioning faith; innocence of Christ
  • 'And yet not weep' - distressing image of Christ who is innocent dying for mans sins
  • 'exceeding grief lamented Thee' - women were right to mourn in the way they wanted to
  • 'Sun and Moon' - everything was affected by Christ's crucifixtion
  • 'hid their faces in a starless sky' - disruptive significance
  • 'I, only I' - iambic foot; confined by inability to feel part of something greater than herself
  • 'smite a rock' - break her inability to feel; find her religion

Main themes:

  • Unable to connect with religion
  • Acceptance of crucifixtion
  • Permanant love of Christ

Links to other poems:

  • Twice - permanent love of Christ
  • Up-Hill - God is always there
  • Soeur Louise - religion reminds them how to feel
6 of 13

Up-Hill

  • 'Does the road wind up-hill all the way' - life is hard from birth to death
  • 'for the night a resting-place?' - period between death and the Second Coming of Christ 
  • 'Then must I knock' - Christian confession before admitted to heaven 
  • 'They will not keep you standing at that door' - echoes the Bible; acceptance of Jesus in the human heart
  • 'beds for all who come' - echoes what Christ says about heaven

Main themes:

  • Journey of life
  • Acceptance into heaven
  • Faith in Christ no matter what

Links to other poems:

  • A Birthday - promise of salvation
  • Soeur Louise and Good Friday - Christ will always have belief in you
  • Remember - journey of life to resting place
7 of 13

In the Round Tower at Jhansi

  • 'A hundred, a thousand to one; even so' - starts media res; building urgency created by anapaest followed by an iamb
  • 'The swarming howling wretches below/ Gained and gained and gained' - patriotic persepective; urcency
  • 'Skene looked at his pale young wife' - Pre-Raphelite beauty; turns into mythical story
  • 'Young, stong and so full of life' - triad creates sympathy
  • 'Close the pistol to her brow' - mixture of love and death; romanticises their situation
  • 'God forgive them this!' - presents suicide as heroic - change the church's ideas
  • 'Courage, dear, I am not loth' - unattributed dialogue reflected ambiguity of situation
  • 'Good-bye' -- 'Good-bye' - uncertainty of voice, merging as though they are one; cycle of life, closure

Main themes:

  • Urgency
  • Mixture of love and death
  • Perspective

Links to other poems:

  • Maude Clare - focus on persective of relationship
  • Remember - sacrifice of personal desire
8 of 13

Echo

  • 'Come to me in the silence of the night' - finality of death; echo as there is no one to reply
  • 'Come in the speaking silence of a dream' - oxymoron; uncertainty of what she wants
  • 'As sunlight on a stream' - movement towards her; wants her lover to return
  • 'Where thirsting longing eyes/Watch the slow door' - emotional deprevation, no security of Paradise; unable to reach heaven
  • 'Come back to me in dreams, that I might give/Pulse for pulse, breath for breath' - give the lover life through passion, regrets of how she treated lover when they were alive

Main themes:

  • Longing
  • Echoes
  • Exclusion from happiness

Links to other poems:

  • Shut Out - unable to reach Paradise 
  • Goblin Market - life through love
  • Remember - threshold of life and death
9 of 13

From The Antique

  • 'It's a weary life, it is, she said' - universal she, write more freely without it being attached to her
  • 'I wish and I wish I were a man' - futilily of her desire, pointless, like a fairytale
  • 'Not a body and not a soul' - only freedom would come from not existing
  • 'Not so much as a grain of dust' - liturgical diction, blasphemes; nihilistic
  • 'Still the world would wag on the same' - dismissive, rejects the world in her anger
  • 'Still the seasons go and come' - even nature is temporary and short-lived
  • 'Would wake and weary and fall asleep' - life has no purpose; if you are not religious then life is empty

Main themes:

  • Unfulfilled existence of women
  • Uncertainty of faith
  • Temporary nature of life

Links to other poems:

  • Song - finality of death
  • Maude Clare  and No, Thank You, John - expectations of women
  • Remember - freedom from society
10 of 13

No, Thank You, John

  • 'I never said I loved you, John' - strength of female voice, chooses her own destiny
  • 'No fault  of mine made me your toast' - disgust with social conventions of women; always to blame
  • 'I dare say Meg or Moll would take' - all passive women are the same; men all see women for just one thing
  • 'Who can't perform the task' - women play a role of passiveness; marriage is a chore and not something to enjoy
  • 'Song-birds of passage, days of youth' - short-lived relationship; image of joy
  • 'I'll wink at your untruth' - pretend the situation never happened; private world exposed
  • 'In open treaty' - clinical detachment; ambiguity of what happened behind closed doors

Main themes:

  • Empowerment of women
  • Reversal of gender roles

Links to other poems:

  • From The Antique - expectations of women
  • Maude Clare - strong female voice
  • Soeur Louise - women can be in control 
11 of 13

Winter: My Secret

  • 'I tell my secret? No indeed, not I' - encloses her secret in her own identity
  • 'And you're too curious' - danger of curiosity
  • 'Suppose there is no secret after all' - general act of concealment
  • 'A veil, a cloak, and other wraps' - facade to maintain a perfect women ideal in Victorian Britian; marriage hides who you truely are
  • 'And let the draughts come whistling thro' my hall' - vunerability if people knew her secret
  • 'Come buffeting, astounding me' - destabilise identity and take advantage of vunerability 
  • 'And golden fruit is ripening to excess' - pregnancy; growing maturity and able to open up to people

Main themes:

  • Identity
  • Curiosity 
  • Seasons
  • Concealment

Links to other poems:

  • Goblin Market - dangers of curiosity 
  • No, Thank You, John - freeing for women
12 of 13

Remember

  • 'Gone far away into the silent land' - liturgical diction of ambiguity of after-life
  • 'When you can no more hold me by the hand' - free from societies conventions; not controlled by men
  • 'Nor I half turn to go yet turning stay' - liminal, theshold of life and death
  • 'It will be late to counsel then or pray' - God cannot bring people back, should not pray for the dead, anglican church idea
  • 'For if the darkness and corruption leave' - how she views the world she is leaving behind; fear but acceptance of death
  • 'Better by far you should forget and smile' - sacrifices her true desire for loved ones to be happy

Main themes:

  • Fear of being forgotten
  • Liturgical diction - Christs' Second Coming
  • Role of women

Links to other poems:

  • Song - ironic imagery
  • From The Antique - freedom from society 
  • In the Round Tower at Jhansi - sacrifice of personal desire
  • Up-Hill - journey to resting place
  • Echo - threshold of life and death
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Comments

ferghhulm28

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Thank you so much these are great 

NathanPri

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this is amazing thanks 

MAli548

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Thank you!!!!

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