Collected Poetry and Prose First Edition by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Jerome McGann – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 9780300098020, 0300098022
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 0300098022
ISBN 13: 9780300098020
Author: Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Jerome McGann
A major poet, writer, and painter, Dante Gabriel Rossetti was seen as the dominating cultural presence in the second half of the nineteenth century. He founded the Pre-Raphaelite movement, revised and reimagined Blakes project of marrying images and texts, and was a shaping influence on Modernist aesthetic ideas and practices. His translations are original poetical works in their own right. Jerome McGann, a leading figure in nineteenth- and twentieth-century scholarship, presents a generous selection of Rossettis poetry, prose, and original translations. The collection, which includes important writings unavailable in any edition of Rossetti ever printed, is accompanied by McGanns learned and critically incisive commentaries and notes.
Table of contents:
Part One Poems (1870, 1881)
The Blessed Damozel
Sister Helen
Stratton Water
The Staff and the Scrip
Ave
Dante at Verona
Troy Town
Eden Bower
The Card-Dealer
Love’s Nocturne
The Stream’s Secret
Jenny
The Portrait
My Sister’s Sleep
A Last Confession
The Burden of Nineveh
An Old Song Ended
Aspecta Medusa (For a Picture)
The Bride’s Prelude
A New-Year’s Burden
Even So
THREE TRANSLATIONS FROM FRANÇOIS VILLON,
A Ballad of Dead Ladies To Death, of His Lady His Mother’s Service to Our Lady
John of Tours. Old French My Father’s Close. Old French Beauty (A Combination from Sappho)
Part Tive The House of Life (1870, 1881)
THE SONNETS (1881)
[Sonnet on the Sonnet]Part I. Youth and Change
I. Love Enthroned
II. Bridal Birth (1870)
III. Love’s Testament (1870)
IV. Lovesight (1870)
V. Heart’s Hope
VI. The Kiss (1870)
VIa. Nuptial Sleep (1870)
VII. Supreme Surrender (1870)
VIII. Love’s Lovers
IX. Passion and Worship (1870)
X. The Portrait (1870)
XI. The Love Letter (1870)
XII. The Lovers’ Walk
XIII. Youth’s Antiphony
XIV. Youth’s Spring Tribute
XV. The Birth-Bond (1870)
XVI. A Day of Love (1870)
XVII. Beauty’s Pageant
XVIII. Genius in Beauty
XIX. Silent Noon
XX. Gracious Moonlight
XXI. Love-Sweetness (1870)
XXII. Heart’s Haven
XXIII. Love’s Baubles (1870)
XXIV. Pride of Youth
XXV. Winged Hours (1870)
XXVI. Mid-Rapture
XXVII. Heart’s Compass
XXVIII. Soul-Light
XXIX. The Moonstar
XXX. Last Fire
XXXI. Her Gifts
XXXII. Equal Troth
33 Venus the victor
XXXIV. The Dark Glass
XXXV. The Lamp’s Shrine
XXXVI. Life-in-Love (1870)
XXXVII. The Love-Moon (1870)
XXXVIII. The Morrow’s Message (1870)
XXXIX. Sleepless Dreams (1870)
XI.. Severed Selves
XII. Through Death to Love
XIII. Hope Overtaken
XLIII. Love and Hope
XLIV. Cloud and Wind
XIV. Secret Parting (1870)
XLVI. Parted Love (1870)
XLVII. Broken Music (1870)
XLVIII. Death-in-Love (1870)
XLIX. Willowwood. I (1870)
I. Willowwood. II (1870)
I.I. Willowwood. III (1870)
I.II. Willowwood. IV (1870)
I.III. Without Her
LIV. Love’s Fatality
L.V. Stillborn Lowe (1870)
I.VI. True Woman. I. Herself
L.VII. True Woman. II. Her Love
L.VIII. True Woman. III. Her Heaven
L.IX. Love’s Last Gift
Part II. Change and Fate
I.X. Transfigured Life
I.XI. The Song-Throe
I.XII. The Soul’s Sphere
I.XIII. Inclusiveness (1870)
I.XIV. Ardour and Memory
L.XV. Known in Vain
I.XVI. The Heart of the Night
I.XVII. The Landmark (1870)
I.XVIII. A Dark Day (1870)
I.XIX. Autumn Idleness (1870)
I.XX. The Hill Summit (1870)
I.XXI. The Choice. I (1870)
1.XXII. The Choice. II (1870)
I.XXIII. The Choice. III (1870)
LXXIV. Old and New Art. Ι. St. Luke the Painter (1870)
L.XXV. Old and New Art. II. Not as These
LXXVI. Old and New Art. III. The Husbandman
I.XXVII. Soul’s Beauty (1870)
I.XXVIII. Body’s Beauty (1870)
1.XXIX. The Monochord (1870)
I.XXX. From Dawn to Noon
I.XXXI. Memorial Thresholds
I.XXXII. Hoarded Joy (1870)
83 Barren Spring (1870)
1.XXXIV. Farewell to the Glen (1870)
I.XXXV. Vain Virtues (1870)
I.XXXVI. Lost Days (1870)
LXXXVII. Death’s Songsters (1870)
88 Hero’s Lamp
LXXXIX. The Trees of the Garden
XC. “Retro me, Sathana!” (1870)
XCI. Lost on Both Sides (1870)
XCII. The Sun’s Shame. I (1870)
XCIII. The Sun’s Shame. II
XCIV. Michelangelo’s Kiss
XCV. The Vase of Life (1870)
XCVI. Life the Beloved
XCVII. A Superscription (1870)
XCVIII. He and I (1870)
XCIX. Newborn Death. I (1870)
C. Newborn Death. II (1870)
CI. The One Hope (1870)
THE SONGS (1870)
I. Love-Lily
II. First Love Remembered
III. Plighted Promise
IV. Sudden Light
V. A Little While
VI. The Song of the Bower
VII. Penumbra
VIII. The Woodspurge
IX. The Honeysuckle
X. A Young Fir-Wood
XI. The Sea-Limits
For “Our Lady of the Rocks” by Leonardo da Vinci
For a Venetian Pastoral by Giorgione (In the Louvre)
For an Allegorical Dance of Women by Andrea Mantegna (In the Louvre)
For “Ruggiero and Angelica” by Ingres
For “The Wine of Circe” by Edward Burne-Jones
Mary’s Girlhood (For a Picture)
The Passover in the Holy Family (For a Drawing)
Mary Magdalene at the Door of Simon the Pharisee (For a Drawing)
Cassandra (For a Drawing)
Venus Verticordia (For a Picture)
Pandora (For a Picture)
On Refusal of Aid between Nations
On the “Vita Nuova” of Dante
Dantis Tenebrae (In Memory of My Father)
A Match with the Moon
The Holy Family, by Michelangelo (In the National Gallery)
For Spring, by Sandro Botticelli (In the Accademia of Florence)
“Found” (For a Picture)
A Sea-Spell (For a Picture)
Fiammetta (For a Picture)
The Day-Dream (For a Picture)
Astarte Syriaca (For a Picture)
Proserpina (For a Painting)
Proserpina (For a Picture)
The Beautiful Hand (For a Painting)
The Beautiful Hand (For a Picture)
Part Four Ballads and Lyrics (1881)
Rose Mary
The White Ship
Soothsay
Spheral Change
Sunset Wings
Insomnia
The Cloud Confines
Part Five The Early Italian Poets (1861, 1874)
PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION (1861)
Canzone. Of the Gentle Heart (Guido Guinicelli)
Of His Lady in Heaven (Jacopo da Lentino)
Of His Lady, and of Her Portrait (Jacopo da Lentino)
Song. Of His Dead Lady (Giacomo Pugliesi)
How He Dreams of His Lady (Bonaggiunto Urbiciani, da Lucca)
His Portrait of His Lady, Angiola of Verona (Fazio degli Uberti)
The New Life (Dante Alighieri)
“To every heart which the sweet pain doth move”
“All ye that pass along Love’s trodden way”
“Weep, Lovers, sith Love’s very self doth weep”
“Death, alway cruel, Pity’s foe in chief”
“A day agone, as I rode sullenly”
“Song, tis my will that thou do seek out Love”
“All my thoughts always speak to me of Love”
“Even as the others mock, thou mockest me”
“The thoughts are broken in my memory”
“At whiles (yea oftentimes) I muse over”
“Ladies that have intelligence in love”
“Love and the gentle heart are one same thing”
“My lady carries love within her eyes”
“You that thus wear a modest countenance”
“Canst thou indeed be he that still would sing
“A very pitiful lady, very young”
“I felt a spirit of love begin to stir”
“My lady looks so gentle and so pure”
“For certain he hath seen all perfectness”
“Love hath so long possess’d me for his own”
“The eyes that weep for pity of the heart”
“Stay now with me, and listen to my sighs”
“Whatever while the thought comes over me”
“That lady of all gentle memories”
“Mine eyes beheld the blessed pity spring”
“Love’s pallor and the semblance of deep ruth”
“”The very bitter weeping that ye made”
“A gentle thought there is will often start”
“Woe’s me! by dint of all these sighs that come”
“Ye pilgrim-folk, advancing pensively”
“Beyond the sphere which spreads to widest space”
Sestina. Of the Lady Scrovigni Stone (Dante Alighieri)
Sonnet. A Rapture Concerning His Lady (Guido Cavalcanti)
Ballata. Of His Lady Among Other Ladies (Guido Cavalcanti)
To Guido Orlandi. Sonnet. Of a Consecrated
Image Resembling His Lady (Guido Cavalcanti)
Ballad. Of a Continual Death in Love (Guido Cavalcanti)
To Dante Alighieri. Sonnet. He Conceives of Some Compensation in Death
(Cino from Pistoia)
Song. His Lament for Selvaggia (Cino da Pistoia)
Sonnet. Of All He Would Do (Cecco Angiolieri)
Sonnet. On the Death of His Father
(Cecco Angiolieri)
Sonnet. Of the Star of His Love (Dino Frescobaldi)
To Dante Alighieri. Sonnet. He Commends the Work of Dante’s Life, Then Drawing to Its Close; and Deplores His Own
Deficiencies (Giovanni Quirino)
Of His Last Sight of Fiammetta (Giovanni Boccaccio)
Part Six Other Translations
In the Absence of Becchina (Cecco Angiolieri)
From the Roman de la Rose
Lilith. From Goethe
“I saw the sibyl at Cumae”
Francesca of Rimini (Dante)
Part Seven Prose
Hand and Soul
Saint Agnes of Intercession
The Stealthy School of Criticism
Part Eight Pusthumously Published and Uncollected Writings
Sons Daughters
Another Love
Praise and Prayer
For a Virgin and Child by Hans Memmelinck (In the Academy of Bruges)
For a Marriage of St. Catherine by the Same (In the Hospital of St. John at Bruges)
A TRIP TO PARIS AND BELGIUM
London to Folkstone (Half-past one to half-past five)
Boulogne to Amiens and Paris (3 to 11 p.m.; 3rd class)
The Staircase of Notre Dame, Paris
Place de la Bastille, Paris
On a Handful of French Money
The Can-Can at Valentino’s
To the P.R.B.
At the Station of the Versailles Railway
In the Train, and at Versailles
Last Visit to the Louvre. The Cry of the P.R.B. after a Careful Examination of the Canvases of Rubens, Correggio, et hoc genus omne
Last Sonnets at Paris
“Chins that might serve the new Jerusalem”
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Tags: Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Jerome McGann, Collected Poetry


