Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Framed, Imprisoned, Overhear
- 1 Gothic Overhearing: Inquisition, Confession, and Accusation in Browning’s Dramatic Monologues
- 2 The Gothic Poetess: Self-Confinement in the Sonnet Cell
- 3 Gothic Shock and Swap: Suspended Bodies and Fluctuating Frames in D. G. Rossetti’s Double Works
- 4 The Cloistered Cleric: Confessional, Confinement, and Hopkins’s Poetics of Wavering
- Conclusion: Emily Brontë’s Udolphics: The Gondal and Non-Gondal Poems
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Gothic Shock and Swap: Suspended Bodies and Fluctuating Frames in D. G. Rossetti’s Double Works
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 June 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Framed, Imprisoned, Overhear
- 1 Gothic Overhearing: Inquisition, Confession, and Accusation in Browning’s Dramatic Monologues
- 2 The Gothic Poetess: Self-Confinement in the Sonnet Cell
- 3 Gothic Shock and Swap: Suspended Bodies and Fluctuating Frames in D. G. Rossetti’s Double Works
- 4 The Cloistered Cleric: Confessional, Confinement, and Hopkins’s Poetics of Wavering
- Conclusion: Emily Brontë’s Udolphics: The Gondal and Non-Gondal Poems
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Emily … went towards the picture, which appeared to be enclosed in a frame of uncommon size, that hung in a dark part of the room. She paused again, and then, with a timid hand, lifted the veil; but instantly let it fall—perceiving that what it had concealed was no picture, and before she could leave the chamber, she dropped senseless to the floor.
Ann Radcliffe, The Mysteries of UdolphoElements of D. G. Rossetti’s early career smack of Gothic intrigue, from brushes with exhumed graves to Bluebeardian jealousy. After his wife Elizabeth Siddal died in 1862, possibly of suicide from a laudanum overdose, Rossetti buried his letters and poems twined with Elizabeth’s hair in her grave at Highgate Cemetery. Seven years later, he infamously had the manuscript volume of his poems exhumed, “add[ing] a touch of the macabre to the life story.” With a nod to Gothic confinement, his well-known paintings such as Water Willow (1871) and Proserpine (1874) perpetuate the romantic fantasy that William Morris jealously kept his wife Jane away from Rossetti, a rival lover, under lock and key at Kelmscott Manor.
Certainly, a fixation on medieval and Gothic themes was a major draw for fans of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. The movement had revived the pleasures of medieval and Gothic romance among young Englishmen like Walter Crane, who reminisced on his early reactions to its enchanting aesthetic:
The curtain had been lifted, and we had a glimpse into a magic world of romance and pictured poetry, peopled with ghosts of “ladies dead and lovely knights,”—a twilight world of dark mysterious woodlands, haunted streams, meads of deep green starred with burning flowers, veiled in a dim and mystic light, and stained with low-toned crimsons and gold, as if indeed one has gazed through the glass of
Magic casements opening on the foam
Of perilous seas in faerylands forlorn.
Yet Rossetti’s later works shifted away from themes of Arthurian and Gothic romance, engaging with Gothic forms in more subtle ways. Distancing himself from the original group of Pre-Raphaelite Brothers from his early career, his later works progressed from works of Mariolatry to large, often full-bodied female portraits.
Rossetti’s paintings of the 1860s often feature portraits of women who are oversized and seemingly ill-proportioned to the frame. These paintings are intensely stylized and aestheticized, set within a wide range of historical contexts.
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- The Gothic Forms of Victorian Poetry , pp. 144 - 209Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2022