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In Our Time: Culture

Christina Rossetti

In Our Time: Culture

BBC

History

4.6978 Ratings

🗓️ 1 December 2011

⏱️ 42 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the life and work of the Victorian poet Christina Rossetti. Rossetti was born into an artistic family and her siblings included Dante Gabriel, one of the leading lights of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, to whose journal, 'The Germ', Christina contributed poems. She was a devout Anglican all her life and her religious beliefs are a recurring theme in her work. Christina never married, although she was engaged twice - one of her fiancés was the Pre-Raphaelite painter, James Collinson. She spent her time writing and volunteering for charitable works. It is said she even considered going to the Crimea with Florence Nightingale, but in the end ill health prevented her from doing so. Best known for her ballads and long narrative poems, she also wrote some prose and children's verses. Christina was admired by contemporaries including Swinburne, Tennyson and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Her work was to have an influence on later writers such as Virginia Woolf and Gerard Manley Hopkins. Rossetti's poetry has a spirituality and sensitivity that has led to her redisovery in recent decades, not least by feminist critics who praise her powerful and independent poetic voice. With:Dinah BirchProfessor of English Literature and Pro-Vice Chancellor for Research at Liverpool University Rhian WilliamsLecturer in Nineteenth-Century English Literature at the University of GlasgowNicholas ShrimptonEmeritus Fellow of Lady Margaret Hall, University of Oxford Producer: Natalia Fernandez.

Transcript

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0:45.5

Hello in 1872 Christina Rosetti wrote a poem which has since become one of our best loved Christmas carols

0:51.8

It begins in the bleak midwinter, frosty wind

0:55.6

made moan. Earth stood hard as iron, water like a stone. Some of you will be singing

1:01.0

along. This melancholy lyric with its deceptively

1:04.4

simple language and form is characteristic of Rosetti's style, as is its

1:09.0

religious subject matter. She was a divide Anglican, but Christina Rosetti never married, although her life was not devoid of romance.

1:16.5

Her poetry is passionate, sensuous, even erotic, its meaning often ambiguous and laced with mystery.

1:21.5

She came from a celebrated artistic family. Her brother was the

1:25.3

prominent pre-Rafflight Dante Gabriel Rosetti. Today her poetry is perhaps even better known than

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