Christina Rossetti Religious Poetry
Christina Rossetti Religious Poetry
Christina Rossetti Religious Poetry
Over a career which spanned nearly half a century, Christina Rossetti (1830-94)
produced poetry in a wide range of forms and styles, and she was both lauded by her
contemporaries and influential on the next generation of writers. With the exception
of the astonishing Goblin Market, the title poem to her first volume published in
1862, her poems are usually tightly controlled and use relatively accessible language.
Yet whilst her works may appear straightforward at first, they possess an intellectual
depth which shows Rossetti to be an astute questioner and analyst of her
contemporary world.
A major influence and drive for Rossetti’s writings was her devout religious
belief. As the sister of the painter-poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-82), Rossetti
was at the centre of the Pre-Raphaelite movement in the mid-to-late Victorian
period, a radical group which challenged conventions about art in many ways. She
was sometime model for her brother’s paintings – significantly being painted as the
Virgin Mary in The Girlhood of Mary Virgin (1848-9) and Ecce Ancilla Domini! (1850) –
but she quickly became the movement’s lead poet. Her strong religious beliefs
nevertheless marked her out from the majority of the other Pre-Raphaelites. Indeed,
whilst Dante Gabriel would become more free-thinking and withdraw from
established belief, Christina, along with her sister Maria and their mother Frances,
maintained a strong commitment to High Anglicanism. Worshipping at Christ Church,
Albany Street (London) from the early-1840s, the Rossetti women came under the
influence of the Oxford Movement, with its increased emphasis on rituals such as
confession and communion. Maria would eventually become an Anglican nun in
1873 and Christina would work for some time with the Anglican sisterhood at the St
Mary Magdalene Penitentiary, Highgate, helping prostitutes escape their lives on the
streets by retraining them for domestic service. Moreover, Christina would turn
down two potential suitors, James Collinson and Charles Bagot Cayley, on the
grounds of religious incompatibility.
It is little surprise, then, that much of Rossetti’s poetry has a strong religious
dimension. Many of her poems are overtly concerned with religious issues and it is
fair to argue that all her work, even that which seems to deal with more secular
concerns, has a resonating religious or spiritual drive. Indeed, Rossetti was viewed as
a great spiritual writer in her own day and came to be seen, along with Gerard
Manley Hopkins (1844-89), as one of the great religious poets of the age. Yet
Rossetti’s religion is never simple or unquestioning. Her writings show her constantly
interrogating religious ideas and beliefs, often with a degree of tension and anxiety.
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Certainly, the speakers of Rossetti’s poems repeatedly struggle with religious doubt,
frustration and fear as they seek a reassurance that might never come, or attempt to
understand their sense of exclusion from God or Christ. Writing at a time when
established religious beliefs were being challenged by new developments in science –
particularly the theory of evolution as it was advanced in Charles Darwin’s Origin of
Species (1859) and The Descent of Man (1871) – Rossetti demonstrates one way in
which a key Victorian writer examined the ambiguities of faith in a time of major
change.
‘The World’ is a terrifying sonnet – that poetic form traditionally used to write about
love – where Rossetti emphasises the need to resist being taken in by earthly
temptations. Yet the path to religious salvation is never easy either. In ‘A Better
Resurrection’, for example, also published in the 1862 volume, the speaker
repeatedly emphasises her isolation – ‘Look right, look left, I dwell alone’ (l.4) – and
her alienation from the ‘everlasting hills’ of God’s blessing (l.6). As she says in the
third stanza, her life is ‘like a broken bowl’ which is unable to hold ‘[o]ne drop of
water for my soul’ (ll.17-18) – an image of emptiness and lack of spiritual
sustainability. Yet in the poem’s final lines, there is hope of renewal and
transformation as the speaker calls on Christ to turn the ‘broken bowl’ of herself into
something new:
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Through Christ, the speaker suggests, the human self can be ‘remould[ed]’ and
achieve union with the divine – that ‘Better Resurrection’ of which the title speaks.
As a later poem, ‘Alas My Lord’, published in 1874 indicates, however, this is
something that has to be constantly fought for. Indeed, the difficulty of the process is
clearly articulated in the poem’s opening stanzas:
Alas my Lord,
How should I wrestle all the livelong night
With Thee my God, my Strength and my Delight?
‘Wrestle’, ‘wring’, ‘strain’ – such language indicates the exhausting force and effort
with which Rossetti’s speakers strive to achieve a meaningful relationship with God.
The repeated use of the question format here also emphasises the longing for this
relationship to be affirmed and the fear of ultimately being shut out from salvation.
Certainly, Rossetti’s way of the cross is never easy.
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Of labour you shall find the sum.
Will there be beds for me and all who seek?
Yea, beds for all who come. (ll.1-4; 13-16)
The austere, deceptively simple language here – many of the words are monosyllabic
– typically masks the complexities of religious thought that Rossetti’s poetry often
explores. For the difficult journey of ‘Up-Hill’ is as much a journey to religious
understanding as anything else.
What might be achieved in the desired relationship with Christ or God is seen in
no more celebratory way than in the poem ‘A Birthday’, written in 1857 and again
published in the 1862 volume. It is an intriguing poem where the idea of what is
being celebrated on the ‘Birthday’ is never exactly made explicit. But on one level at
least, the ‘birthday’ is about the re-birth of the self into the next life or into a union
with the divine:
The beautiful ornateness in this poem – which is unusual in Rossetti’s work – piles up
image after image in the style of a Pre-Raphaelite painting or a William Morris
tapestry. The first stanza, with its repeated ‘My heart is like…’ structure, sees the
speaker attempting to find a suitable comparison in nature to describe her
happiness. As the last two lines of this stanza indicate, however, all these
comparisons fail because her ‘heart is gladder than all these’.
In the second stanza, therefore, she issues a series of imperatives – ‘Raise
me… Hang it… Carve it… Work it…’ – in order to construct something more solid and
permanent as an expression of her joy. The elaborate dais is covered with symbols of
spiritual fulfilment – the dove of the Holy Spirit, the fleur-de-lys as symbol of purity,
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the colours purple, gold and silver associated with royalty and the divine. The ‘love’
and the ‘birthday of my life’ which come to the speaker are clearly on one level
meant to represent the final achievement of that long-desired union with Christ. As
such, the exuberance and luxury of the poem are particularly apt as a celebration of
having achieved spiritual fulfilment and moved beyond that struggle, doubt and
anxiety which characterises so many of Rossetti’s intriguing and complex religious
poems across her career.