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Complete Poetical Works of Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Page 47

by Dante Gabriel Rossetti


  CANZONE: A DISPUTE WITH DEATH

  CINO DA PISTOIA: TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  SONNET: HE INTERPRETS DANTE’S DREAM, RELATED IN THE FIRST SONNET OF THE VITA NUOVA

  TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  SONNET: HE CONCEIVES OF SOME COMPENSATION IN DEATH

  TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  CANZONE: ON THE DEATH OF BEATRICE PORTINARI

  MADRIGAL: TO HIS LADY SELVAGGIA VERGIOLESI; LIKENING HIS LOVE TO A SEARCH FOR GOLD

  SONNET: TO LOVE, IN GREAT BITTERNESS

  SONNET: DEATH IS NOT WITHOUT HUT WITHIN HIM

  SONNET: A TRANCE OF LOVE

  SONNET: OF THE GRAVE OF SELVAGGIA, ON THE MONTE DELLA SAMBUCA

  CANZONE: HIS LAMENT FOR SELVAGGIA

  TO GUIDO CAVALCANTI

  SONNET: HE OWES NOTHING TO GUIDO AS A POET

  SONNET. HE IMPUGNS THE VERDICTS OF DANTE’S COMMEDIA

  LIST OF POEMS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER

  A-D E-H I-L M-O P-S T-V W-Z

  A DARK DAY

  A DAY OF LOVE

  A DEATH-PARTING

  A FAREWELL

  A LAST CONFESSION (REGNO LOMBARDO-VENETO, 1848)

  A LITTLE WHILE

  A MARRIAGE OF ST KATHARINE, BY THE SAME IN THE HOSPITAL OF ST JOHN AT BRUGES

  A MATCH WITH THE MOON

  A NEW YEAR’S BURDEN

  A SEA-SPELL

  A SUPERSCRIPTION

  A VENETIAN PASTORAL, BY GIORGIONE IN THE LOUVRE (1850 VERSION)

  A VENETIAN PASTORAL, BY GIORGIONE IN THE LOUVRE (1870 VERSION)

  A VIRGIN AND CHILD, BY HANS MEMMELING IN THE ACADEMY OF BRUGES

  A YOUNG FIR-WOOD

  ADIEU

  AFTER THE FRENCH LIBERATION OF ITALY

  AFTER THE GERMAN SUBJUGATION OF FRANCE, 1871

  ALAS, SO LONG!

  AN ALLEGORICAL DANCE OF WOMEN, BY ANDREA MANTEGNA IN THE LOUVRE

  AN OLD SONG ENDED

  ANONYMOUS: OF TRUE AND FALSE SINGING

  ANTIPHONY

  ARDOUR AND MEMORY

  ASPECTA MEDUSA

  ASTARTE SYRIACA

  AT THE SUN-RISE IN 1848

  AUTUMN IDLENESS

  AUTUMN SONG

  AVE

  BALLATA: CONCERNING A SHEPHERD-MAID

  BALLATA: HE PERCEIVES THAT HIS HIGHEST LOVE IS GONE FROM HIM

  BALLATA: HE REVEALS, IN A DIALOGUE, HIS INCREASING LOVE FOR MANDETTA

  BALLATA: HE WILL GAZE UPON BEATRICE

  BALLATA: IN EXILE AT SARZANA

  BALLATA: OF A CONTINUAL DEATH IN LOVE

  BALLATA: OF HIS LADY AMONG OTHER LADIES

  BARREN SPRING

  BEAUTY AND THE BIRD

  BEAUTY’S PAGEANT

  BODY’S BEAUTY

  BRIDAL BIRTH

  BROKEN MUSIC

  CANZONE: A DISPUTE WITH DEATH

  CANZONE: A SONG AGAINST POVERTY

  CANZONE: A SONG OF FORTUNE

  CANZONE: HE BESEECHES DEATH FOR THE LIFE OF BEATRICE

  CANZONE: HE LAMENTS THE PRESUMPTION AND INCONTINENCE OF HIS YOUTH

  CANZONE: HIS LAMENT FOR SELVAGGIA

  CANZONE: ON THE DEATH OF BEATRICE PORTINARI

  CASSANDRA

  CHIMES

  CINO DA PISTOIA TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  CINO DA PISTOIA TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  CINO DA PISTOIA: TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  CLOUD AND WIND

  CZAR ALEXANDER THE SECOND

  DANTE ALIGHIERI

  DANTE ALIGHIERI

  DANTE ALIGHIERI TO CINO DA PISTOIA

  DANTE ALIGHIERI TO GUIDO CAVALCANTI

  DANTE ALIGHIERI’S The New Life (La Vita Nuova)

  DANTE AT VERONA

  DANTIS TENEBRÆ

  DAWN ON THE NIGHT-JOURNEY

  DEATH’S SONGSTERS

  DEATH-IN-LOVE

  DENNIS SHAND

  DOWN STREAM

  DURING MUSIC

  EDEN BOWER

  ENGLISH MAY

  EQUAL TROTH

  EVEN SO

  FAREWELL TO THE GLEN

  FAZIO DEGLI UBERTI

  FIAMMETTA

  FIN DI MAGGIO

  FIRST LOVE REMEMBERED

  FIVE ENGLISH POETS

  FOR ‘AN ANNUNCIATION EARLY GERMAN’

  FOR ‘OUR LADY OF THE ROCKS’ BY LEONARDO DA VINCI

  FOR ‘SPRING’ BY SANDRO BOTTICELLI IN THE ACCADEMIA OF FLORENCE

  FOR ‘THE HOLY FAMILY’ BY MICHELANGELO IN THE NATIONAL GALLERY

  FOR ‘THE WINE OF CIRCE’ BY EDWARD BURNE JONES

  FOUND

  FRA GUITTONE D’AREZZO

  FRANCESCA DA RIMINI

  FRANCO SACCHETTI

  FROM DAWN TO NOON

  FROM PART I: POETS CHIEFLY BEFORE DANTE

  FROM PART II: DANTE AND HIS CIRCLE Introduction to the Vita Nuova

  FROM THE CLIFFS: NOON (1850 VERSION)

  GENIUS IN BEAUTY

  GIACOMINO PUGLIESI

  GIOVENTÛ E SIGNORIA - YOUTH AND LORDSHIP

  GRACIOUS MOONLIGHT

  GUIDO CAVALCANTI

  GUIDO CAVALCANTI TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  GUIDO CAVALCANTI TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  GUIDO GUINICELLI

  GUIDO ORLANDI TO GUIDO CAVALCANTI

  HE AND I

  HEART OF THE NIGHT

  HEART’S COMPASS

  HEART’S HAVEN

  HEART’S HOPE

  HER GIFTS

  HERO’S LAMP*

  HIS MOTHER’S SERVICE TO OUR LADY

  HIS PORTRAIT OF HIS LADY, ANGIOLA OF VERONA

  HIS TALK WITH CERTAIN PEASANT GIRLS

  HOARDED JOY

  HOPE OVERTAKEN

  I. HERSELF

  I. ST. LUKE THE PAINTER

  I. THOMAS CHATTERTON

  II. HER LOVE

  II. NOT AS THESE

  II. WILLIAM BLAKE

  III. HER HEAVEN

  III. SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE

  III. THE HUSBANDMEN

  INCLUSIVENESS

  INSOMNIA

  INTRODUCTORY SONNET

  IV. JOHN KEATS

  JACOPO DA LENTINO

  JENNY

  JOHN OF TOURS

  KNOWN IN VAIN

  LA BELLA MANO (ENGLISH)

  LA BELLA MANO (ITALIAN)

  LA PIA

  LAST FIRE

  LIFE THE BELOVED

  LIFE-IN-LOVE

  LOST DAYS

  LOST ON BOTH SIDES

  LOVE AND HOPE

  LOVE ENTHRONED

  LOVE’S BAUBLES

  LOVE’S FATALITY

  LOVE’S LAST GIFT

  LOVE’S LOVERS

  LOVE’S NOCTURN

  LOVE-LILY

  LOVESIGHT

  LOVE-SWEETNESS

  MADRIGAL: TO HIS LADY SELVAGGIA VERGIOLESI; LIKENING HIS LOVE TO A SEARCH FOR GOLD

  MARY MAGDALENE AT THE DOOR OF SIMON THE PHARISEE

  MARY’S GIRLHOOD

  MEMORIAL THRESHOLDS

  MEMORY

  MICHELANGELO’S KISS

  MID-RAPTURE

  MNEMOSYNE

  MY FATHER’S CLOSE

  MY SISTER’S SLEEP (1850 VERSION)

  MY SISTER’S SLEEP (1870 VERSION)

  NEAR BRUSSELS - A HALF-WAY PAUSE

  NEWBORN DEATH

  NICCOLO DEGLI ALBIZZI

  NOTEBOOK FRAGMENTS

  NUPTIAL SLEEP

  OF HIS DEAD LADY

  OF HIS LADY’S FACE

  OF THE GENTLE HEART

  OLD AND NEW ART

  ON A FINE DAY

  ON A WET DAY

  ON BURNS

  ON CERTAIN ELIZABETHAN REVIVALS

  ON REFUSAL OF AID BETWEEN NATIONS

  ON THE ‘VITA NUOVA’ OF DANTE

  ON THE SITE OF A MULBERRY-TREE

  ONE GIRL

  PANDORA

  PARTED LOVE

  PARTED PRESENCE

  PASSION AND WORSHIP

  PAX VOBIS (1850 VERSION)

  PENUMBRA

  PLACE DE LA BASTILLE, PARISr />
  PLIGHTED PROMISE

  POEMS BY DANTE ALIGHIERI, GUIDO CAVALCANTI AND CINO DA PISTOIA (from Introduction to Part II)

  POSSESSION

  PRIDE OF YOUTH

  PROLONGED SONNET: HE FINDS FAULT WITH THE CONCEITS OF THE FOREGOING SONNET

  PROSERPINA (ENGLISH)

  PROSERPINA (ITALIAN)

  RALEIGH’S CELL IN THE TOWER

  REDEMPTION

  RETRO ME, SATHANA!

  ROSE MARY

  ROSE MARY: PART I

  ROSE MARY: PART II

  ROSE MARY: PART III

  RUGGIERO AND ANGELICA, BY INGRES

  SECRET PARTING

  SESTINA: OF THE LADY PIETRA DEGLI SCROVIGNI

  SEVERED SELVES

  SILENT NOON

  SISTER HELEN

  SLEEPLESS DREAMS

  SONG AND MUSIC

  SONNET TO DANTE ALIGHIERI: HE INTERPRETS DANTE’S DREAM, RELATED IN THE FIRST SONNET OF THE VITA NUOVA

  SONNET. HE IMPUGNS THE VERDICTS OF DANTE’S COMMEDIA

  SONNET. HE REBUKES CINO FOR FICKLENESS

  SONNET: A RAPTURE CONCERNING HIS LADY

  SONNET: A TRANCE OF LOVE

  SONNET: DEATH IS NOT WITHOUT HUT WITHIN HIM

  SONNET: GUIDO ANSWERS THE FOREGOING SONNET, SPEAKING WITH SHAME OF HIS CHANGED LOVE

  SONNET: HE ANSWERS DANTE, CONFESSING HIS UNSTEADFAST HEART

  SONNET: HE ANSWERS THE FOREGOING SONNET, AND PRAYS DANTE, IN THE NAME OF BEATRICE, TO CONTINUE HIS GREAT POEM

  SONNET: HE COMPARES ALL THINGS WITH HIS LADY, AND FINDS THEM WANTING

  SONNET: HE CONCEIVES OF SOME COMPENSATION IN DEATH

  SONNET: HE IMAGINES A PLEASANT VOYAGE FOR GUIDO, LAPO GIANNI, AND HIMSELF, WITH THEIR THREE LADIES

  SONNET: HE INTERPRETS DANTE’S DREAM, RELATED IN THE FIRST SONNET OF THE VITA NUOVA

  SONNET: HE OWES NOTHING TO GUIDO AS A POET

  SONNET: HE REBUKES DANTE FOR HIS WAY OF LIFE, AFTER THE DEATH OF BEATRICE

  SONNET: HE REPORTS, IN A FEIGNED VISION, THE SUCCESSFUL ISSUE OF LAPO GIANNI’S LOVE

  SONNET: OF AN ILL-FAVOURED LADY

  SONNET: OF BEATRICE DE’ PORTINARI, ON ALL SAINTS’ DAY

  SONNET: OF BEAUTY AND DUTY

  SONNET: OF HIS PAIN FROM A NEW LOVE

  SONNET: OF THE EYES OF A CERTAIN MANDETTA, OF THOULOUSE, WHICH RESEMBLE THOSE OF HIS LADY JOAN, OF FLORENCE

  SONNET: OF THE GRAVE OF SELVAGGIA, ON THE MONTE DELLA SAMBUCA

  SONNET: ON THE 9TH OF JUNE, 1290

  SONNET: ON THE DETECTION OF A FALSE FRIEND

  SONNET: TO A FRIEND WHO DOES NOT PITY HIS LOVE

  SONNET: TO A NEWLY ENRICHED MAN; REMINDING HIM OF THE WANTS OF THE POOR

  SONNET: TO BRUNETTO LATINI

  SONNET: TO CERTAIN LADIES; WHEN BEATRICE WAS LAMENTING HER FATHER’S DEATH

  SONNET: TO HIS LADY JOAN, OF FLORENCE

  SONNET: TO LOVE, IN GREAT BITTERNESS

  SONNET: TO THE LADY PIETRA DEGLI SCROVIGNI

  SONNET: TO THE SAME LADIES; WITH THEIR ANSWER

  SONNET: WRITTEN IN EXILE

  SONNETHE MISTRUSTS THE LOVE OF LAPO GIANNI

  SOOTHSAY

  SOUL’S BEAUTY

  SOUL-LIGHT

  SPHERAL CHANGE

  SPRING

  STILLBORN LOVE

  STRATTON WATER

  SUDDEN LIGHT

  SUNSET WINGS

  SUPREME SURRENDER

  THE BALLAD OF DEAD LADIES

  THE BIRTH-BOND

  THE BLESSED DAMOZEL (1850 VERSION)

  THE BLESSED DAMOZEL (1870 VERSION)

  THE BRIDE’S PRELUDE

  THE BURDEN OF NINEVEH

  THE CARD-DEALER

  THE CARILLON

  THE CHOICE

  THE CHURCH PORCH I

  THE CHURCH PORCH II

  THE CLOUD, CONFINES

  THE DARK GLASS

  THE DAY-DREAM

  THE HILL SUMMIT

  THE HONEYSUCKLE

  THE KING’S TRAGEDY

  THE KISS

  THE LADY’S LAMENT

  THE LAMP’S SHRINE

  THE LANDMARK

  THE LAST THREE FROM TRAFALGAR AT THE ANNIVERSARY BANQUET, 21ST OCTOBER 187—

  THE LEAF

  THE LOVE-LETTER

  THE LOVE-MOON

  THE LOVERS’ WALK

  THE MIRROR

  THE MONOCHORD

  THE MOONSTAR

  THE MORROW’S MESSAGE

  THE ONE HOPE

  THE ORCHARD-PIT

  THE PASSOVER IN THE HOLY FAMILY

  THE PORTRAIT

  THE PORTRAIT

  THE QUESTION

  THE SEA-LIMITS (1870 VERSION)

  THE SEED OF DAVID

  THE SONG OF THE BOWER

  THE SONG-THROE

  THE SOUL’S SPHERE

  THE STAFF AND SCRIP

  THE STAIRCASE OF NOTRE DAME, PARIS

  THE STREAM’S SECRET

  THE SUN’S SHAME

  THE TREES OF THE GARDEN

  THE VASE OF LIFE

  THE WHITE SHIP: HENRY I OF ENGLAND - 25TH NOVEMBER, 1120

  THE WOODSPURGE

  THE YOUNG GIRL

  THREE SHADOWS

  THREE TRANSLATIONS FROM FRANÇOIS VILLON, 1450

  THROUGH DEATH TO LOVE

  TIBER, NILE, AND THAMES

  TO ART

  TO CINA DA PISTOIA

  TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  TO DANTE ALIGHIERI

  TO DEATH, OF HIS LADY

  TO GUIDO CAVALCANTI

  TO HIS LADY IN HEAVEN

  TO PHILIP BOURKE MARSTON, INCITING ME TO POETIC WORK

  TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY

  TO THOMAS WOOLNER: FIRST SNOW 9 FEBRUARY 1853

  TRANSFIGURED LIFE

  TROY TOWN

  TRUE WOMAN

  UNTIMELY LOST

  V. PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY

  VAIN VIRTUES

  VENUS VERTICORDIA

  VENUS VICTRIX

  VOX ECCLESIAE, VOX CHRISTI

  WELLINGTON’S FUNERAL

  WHEN THE TROOPS WERE RETURNING FROM MILAN

  WILLOWWOOD

  WINGED HOURS

  WINTER

  WITHOUT HER

  WORDS ON THE WINDOW-PANE

  WORLD’S WORTH

  YOUTH AND LORDSHIP

  YOUTH’S SPRING-TRIBUTE

  The Prose

  Cheyne Walk, South-West London, where Rossetti lived with the poet Algernon Charles Swinburne. Rossetti kept a menagerie in the back garden, much to the annoyance of his neighbours. It included a bull, a white peacock, a kangaroo, a raccoon and a wombat that reportedly had a liking for ladies’ hats. Consequently local house leases still forbid the keeping of such creatures.

  ‘Dante Gabriel Rossetti reading proofs of Sonnets and Ballads to Theodore Watts Dunton in the drawing room at 16 Cheyne Walk’ by Henry Treffry Dunn, 1882

  HAND AND SOUL

  A Short Story

  Rivolsimi in quel lato

  Là ‘nde venia la voce,

  E parvemi una luce

  Che lucca quanto Stella:

  La mia mente era quella.

  Bonaggiunta Urbiciani (1250)

  Before any knowledge of painting was brought to Florence, there were already painters in Lucca, and Pisa, and Arezzo, who feared God and loved the art. The keen, grave workmen from Greece, whose trade it was to sell their own works in Italy and teach Italians to imitate them, had already found rivals of the soil with skill that could forestall their lessons and cheapen their crucifixes and addolorate, more years than is supposed before the art came at all into Florence. The pre-eminence to which Cimabue was raised at once by his contemporaries, and which he still retains to a wide extent even in the modern mind, is to be accounted for, partly by the circumstances under which he arose, and partly by that extraordinary purpose of fortune born with the lives of some few, and through which it is not a little thing fo
r any who went before, if they are even remembered as the shadows of the coming of such an one, and the voices which prepared his way in the wilderness. It is thus, almost exclusively, that the painters of whom I speak are now known. They have left little, and but little heed is taken of that which men hold to have been surpassed; it is gone like time gone, - a track of dust and dead leaves that merely led to the fountain.

  Nevertheless, of very late years and in very rare instances, some signs of a better understanding have become manifest. A case in point is that of the triptic and two cruciform pictures at Dresden, by Chiaro di Messer Bello dell’ Erma, to which the eloquent pamphlet of Dr Aemmster has at length succeeded in attracting the students. There is another still more solemn and beautiful work, now proved to be by the same hand, in the gallery at Florence. It is the one to which my narrative will relate.

  This Chiaro dell’ Erma was a young man of very honourable family in Arezzo; where, conceiving art almost, as it were, for himself, and loving it deeply, he endeavoured from early boyhood towards the imitation of any objects offered in nature. The extreme longing after a visible embodiment of his thoughts strengthened as his years increased, more even than his sinews or the blood of his life; until he would feel faint in sunsets and at the sight of stately persons. When he had lived nineteen years, he heard of the famous Giunta Pisano; and, feeling much of admiration, with, perhaps, a little of that envy which youth always feels until it has learned to measure success by time and opportunity, he determined that he would seek out Giunta, and, if possible, become his pupil.

  Having arrived in Pisa, he clothed himself in humble apparel, being unwilling that any other thing than the desire he had for knowledge should be his plea with the great painter; and then, leaving his baggage at a house of entertainment, he took his way along the street, asking whom he met for the lodging of Giunta. It soon chanced that one of that city, conceiving him to be a stranger and poor, took him into his house, and refreshed him; afterwards directing him on his way.

  When he was brought to speech of Giunta, he said merely that he was a student, and that nothing in the world was so much at his heart as to become that which he had heard told of him with whom he was speaking. He was received with courtesy and consideration, and shown into the study of the famous artist. But the forms he saw there were lifeless and incomplete; and a sudden exultation possessed him as he said within himself, ‘I am the master of this man.’ The blood came at first into his face, but the next moment he was quite pale and fell to trembling. He was able, however, to conceal his emotion; speaking very little to Giunta, but, when he took his leave, thanking him respectfully.

  After this, Chiaro’s first resolve was, that he would work out thoroughly some of his thoughts, and let the world know him. But the lesson which he had now learned, of how small a greatness might win fame, and how little there was to strive against, served to make him torpid, and rendered his exertions less continual. Also Pisa was a larger and more luxurious city than Arezzo; and when, in his walks, he saw the great gardens laid out for pleasure, and the beautiful women who passed to and fro, and heard the music that was in the groves of the city at evening, he was taken with wonder that he had never claimed his share of the inheritance of those years in which his youth was cast. And women loved Chiaro; for, in despite of the burthen of study, he was well-favoured and very manly in his walking; and, seeing his face in front, there was a glory upon it, as upon the face of one who feels a light round his hair.

 

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