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Christina Rossetti (1830–1894)

Author of Goblin Market

136+ Works 5,490 Members 64 Reviews 35 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Portrait of Christina Rossetti, by her brother Dante Gabriel Rossetti (Public domain ; Wikipedia)

Works by Christina Rossetti

Goblin Market (1862) 844 copies, 15 reviews
Christina Rossetti: Selected Poems (1992) 668 copies, 6 reviews
The Complete Poems (1995) 591 copies, 2 reviews
Rossetti: Poems (1993) 292 copies, 2 reviews
Sing-Song (Dover Children's Classics) (1872) 271 copies, 1 review
Poems and Prose (1994) 210 copies, 1 review
Goblin Market [Phoenix 60p Paperbacks] (1996) 125 copies, 2 reviews
Christina's Carol (2021) 93 copies, 1 review
What Can I Give Him? (1985) — Author — 63 copies, 2 reviews
Color: A Poem (1992) 55 copies
Commonplace (1870) 54 copies, 2 reviews
Blooming Beneath the Sun (2019) 53 copies, 3 reviews
The Essential Poetry Collection (2020) — Contributor — 46 copies
Fly Away, Fly Away Over the Sea (1991) 42 copies, 1 review
What Is Pink? (1971) 41 copies
The Poetry of Christina Rossetti (2019) 30 copies, 1 review
Verses (1895) 16 copies
Maude (1976) 14 copies
Love Poems (1994) 12 copies
To Read and Dream (2025) 10 copies
Doves and Pomegranates (1969) 9 copies
The Skylark (First Poems) (1991) 7 copies
Florilegio (1997) 6 copies
Adding: a poem (1964) 6 copies
The Goblin Market and Other Poems (2019) 6 copies, 2 reviews
New Selected Poems (2020) 3 copies
Mix a Pancake (2001) 3 copies, 1 review
Liefdessonnetten (2004) 2 copies
Poems (2022) 2 copies
Donne d'amore (2011) 1 copy
Story Clouds 1 copy
Hurt No Living Thing (1987) 1 copy
The Poetry 1 copy
The Pancake (2009) 1 copy
Sonnets 1 copy
Speaking likenesses (2015) 1 copy

Associated Works

Eric Carle's Animals Animals (1989) — Contributor — 2,683 copies, 31 reviews
The Making of a Poem: A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms (2000) — Contributor — 1,468 copies, 9 reviews
The Best Poems of the English Language: From Chaucer Through Robert Frost (2004) — Contributor — 1,249 copies, 3 reviews
Sing a Song of Popcorn: Every Child's Book of Poems (1988) — Contributor — 1,176 copies, 27 reviews
Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama (1995) — Contributor, some editions — 1,012 copies, 7 reviews
Favorite Poems of Childhood (1992) — Contributor — 936 copies, 2 reviews
English Poetry, Volume III: From Tennyson to Whitman (2004) — Contributor — 704 copies, 1 review
The Nation's Favourite Poems (1996) — Contributor, some editions — 688 copies, 8 reviews
The Best Loved Poems of Jacqueline Kennedy-Onassis (2001) — Contributor — 624 copies, 11 reviews
The Victorian Fairytale Book (1988) — Contributor — 539 copies, 2 reviews
The Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature, Volumes 1-2 (1955) — Contributor — 523 copies, 4 reviews
Women in Praise of the Sacred: 43 Centuries of Spiritual Poetry by Women (1994) — Contributor — 385 copies, 5 reviews
In the Nursery (My Book House) (1932) — Contributor — 345 copies
The Family Read-Aloud Christmas Treasury (1989) — Contributor — 328 copies
The Penguin Book of Women Poets (1978) — Contributor — 317 copies
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 4th Edition, Volume 2 (1979) — Contributor — 270 copies, 1 review
The Penguin Book of Homosexual Verse (1983) — Contributor — 256 copies, 3 reviews
Wise Women: Over Two Thousand Years of Spiritual Writing by Women (1996) — Contributor — 229 copies, 1 review
The Big Book of Classic Fantasy (2019) — Contributor — 223 copies, 3 reviews
Erotica: Women's Writing from Sappho to Margaret Atwood (1990) — Contributor — 182 copies
Beyond the Looking Glass: Extraordinary Works of Fairy Tale & Fantasy (1985) — Contributor — 182 copies, 7 reviews
The Faber Book of Beasts (1997) — Contributor — 169 copies, 1 review
A Literary Christmas: An Anthology (2013) — Contributor — 160 copies, 5 reviews
An American Album: One Hundred and Fifty Years of Harper's Magazine (2000) — Contributor — 145 copies, 1 review
Poems of Early Childhood (Childcraft) (1923) — Contributor — 134 copies, 1 review
Poems to See By: A Comic Artist Interprets Great Poetry (2020) — Contributor — 130 copies, 33 reviews
The Standard Book of British and American Verse (1932) — Contributor — 129 copies, 1 review
Answering Back: Living Poets Reply to the Poetry of the Past (2007) — Contributor — 119 copies, 1 review
Beastly Verse (2014) — Contributor — 100 copies, 8 reviews
Storytelling and Other Poems (1949) — Contributor — 99 copies, 2 reviews
Told Under the Christmas Tree (1941) — Contributor — 94 copies, 3 reviews
The Treasury of the Fantastic (2001) — Contributor — 89 copies, 3 reviews
The Everyman Anthology of Poetry for Children (1994) — Contributor — 79 copies
The Mammoth Book of Fairy Tales (1997) — Contributor — 68 copies
Our Haunted Shores: Tales from the Coasts of the British Isles (2022) — Contributor — 67 copies, 2 reviews
Modern English Readings (1942) — Contributor — 60 copies
When Dark Comes Dancing: A Bedtime Poetry Book (1983) — Contributor — 58 copies, 1 review
Demi's Secret Garden (1993) — Contributor — 54 copies, 1 review
Victorian Love Stories: An Oxford Anthology (1996) — Contributor — 53 copies, 1 review
The Virago Book of Christmas (2002) — Contributor — 51 copies, 1 review
The Faber Book of Christmas (1996) — Contributor — 50 copies, 1 review
366 Goodnight Stories (1983) — Contributor — 50 copies
Images of Beauty (1989) — Contributor — 48 copies, 1 review
A Golden Land (1958) — Contributor — 46 copies, 1 review
The Virago Book of Such Devoted Sisters (1993) — Contributor — 45 copies
The Victorian age: prose, poetry, and drama (1938) — Contributor — 40 copies, 1 review
Fairy Poems (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets Series) (2023) — Contributor — 34 copies
The Easter Book of Legends and Stories (1963) — Contributor — 34 copies
Bright Poems for Dark Days: An Anthology for Hope (2021) — Contributor — 32 copies
Women on Nature (2021) — Contributor — 31 copies
Easter Buds Are Springing: Poems for Easter (1979) — Contributor — 31 copies, 1 review
Nineteenth-Century Women Poets: An Oxford Anthology (1996) — Contributor — 29 copies
Dark of the Moon: Poems of Fantasy and the Macabre (1947) — Contributor — 27 copies, 1 review
A Christmas Cornucopia (2010) — Composer — 26 copies
Masters of British Literature, Volume B (2007) — Contributor — 22 copies
Classic Hymns & Carols (2012) — Contributor — 20 copies
A Quaint and Curious Volume: Tales and Poems of the Gothic (2019) — Contributor — 19 copies, 1 review
100 Story Poems (Hardcover with Dust Jacket) (1951) — Contributor — 19 copies
Classic Fantasy Stories (2024) — Contributor — 18 copies
Christmas Classics: A Treasury for Latter-Day Saints (1995) — Contributor — 16 copies
The Germ: Literary Magazine of the Pre-Raphaelites (1850) — Contributor — 14 copies
White Teeth, Red Blood: Selected Vampiric Verses (2025) — Contributor — 13 copies
In the Bleak Midwinter (2010) — Author — 12 copies, 1 review
The Religion of Beauty: Selections from the Aesthetes (1950) — Contributor — 11 copies
The Best Christmas Album in the World ...Ever! (1996) — Lyricist — 11 copies
Men and Women: The Poetry of Love (1970) — Contributor — 9 copies
Spring World, Awake: Stories, Poems, and Essays (1970) — Contributor — 9 copies
Teen-Age Treasury for Girls (1958) — Contributor — 5 copies, 1 review
Evergreen Stories (1998) — Contributor — 5 copies
The Lost Birds: An Extinction Elegy (2022) — Composer — 4 copies
La poesía inglesa románticos y victorianos — Contributor — 4 copies, 1 review
Winter in the Air (2018) — Composer — 3 copies
Aarteiden kirja. 5 : Nooan arkki (1957) — Contributor — 2 copies
In the bleak midwinter G-7793 — Author — 2 copies
Round about Eight: Poems for Today (1972) — Contributor — 2 copies
Christmas Short Works Collection 2014 (2014) — Contributor — 1 copy
Healing Poetry (2013) 1 copy, 1 review
Christmas Short Works Collection 2008 (2008) — Contributor — 1 copy
Christmas Short Works Collection 2022 (2022) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Rossetti, Christina
Legal name
Rossetti, Christina Georgina
Other names
Alleyne, Ellen
Birthdate
1830-12-05
Date of death
1894-12-29
Gender
female
Education
private tutors
Occupations
poet
artist's model
Organizations
Oxford Movement
Relationships
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel (brother)
Rossetti, William Michael (brother)
Rossetti, Maria Francesca (sister)
Rossetti, Gabriele (father)
Polidori, John William (uncle)
Angeli, Helen Rossetti (niece) (show all 7)
Polidori, Gaetano (maternal grandfather)
Short biography
Christina Rossetti's popularity grew after her death and she is now considered one of the leading English Victorian poets. She was born in London, one of four children of aristocratic Italian parents who had emigrated to the UK after her father Gabriele Rossetti was forced into political exile. At age 12, she wrote her first poems, which were printed in the private press of her grandfather. In 1850, under the pseudonym "Ellen Alleyne," she contributed seven poems to the Pre-Raphaelite journal The Germ, founded by her brother William Michael Rossetti and his friends. By the 1880s, Christina had become an invalid from recurring bouts of thyroid disease, which ended her attempts to work as a governess. However, she continued to write. In 1891, Christina apparently developed cancer, and died three years later. Her work influenced that of other writers such as Virginia Woolf, Gerard Manley Hopkins, and Philip Larkin. Although not a member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Christina was engaged for a time to the painter James Collinson, who was a founder of that group with her brothers Dante Gabriel Rossetti and William Michael, and she sat as a model for several of Dante Gabriel Rossetti's most famous paintings.
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Marylebone, London, England, UK
Places of residence
London, Middlesex, England, UK
Place of death
Bloomsbury, London, England, UK
Burial location
Highgate Cemetery, Highgate, London, England, UK
Map Location
England, UK

Members

Discussions

Reviews

73 reviews
Christina was the youngest of the glamorous and talented Rossetti siblings, three-quarter-Italian and brought up in England in the intellectual afterglow of the Byron circle. Apart from being one of the most distinguished women poets of her time (her only real competitor on this side of the Atlantic being Elizabeth Barrett Browning), she's also remembered as the model for many of her big brother's paintings, especially as the Virgin Mary. And, like her brother and the other Pre-Raphaelites, show more she was heavily involved with the Oxford Movement, a religious revival that aimed to restore some lost medieval piety and glamour to Anglicanism, but ended up sending some of its most prominent followers into the arms of Rome. Partly for religious reasons, Christina never married, although she had at least three offers.

Goblin Market and other poems was Christina's first properly-published collection. The title-poem — her best-known piece after "In the bleak midwinter" — is an odd kind of fairy-tale ballad about two sisters who get involved with a bunch of dodgy supernatural fruit-and-veg salesmen, naive on the surface, but full of all kinds of troubling sexual and religious undercurrents when you start to look at it closely — perfect exam-syllabus material, especially since it's written with so much verve and assurance that it's always great fun to re-read. And the girls come out on top in the end, which helps!

The rest of the collection is a bit mixed, but there's a lot of good stuff there. Short lyric poems where the poet imagines herself abandoned by her lover, rejecting a suitor, widowed, marrying in the presence of a former lover's ghost, lamenting the transience of life and the seasons, etc. Possibly there is a little more focus on death than we might be entirely comfortable with as modern readers: there is a remarkable number of poems in which the speaker of the poem turns out to be talking to us from beyond the grave. Not surprising to learn that Christina had some struggles with depression during her life. But some of these poems are among the strongest in the collection, like the sonnets "After Death" and "Dead before death". Or "Sweet Death" in the religious section at the end. And just occasionally there's a wry touch of humour, as in "No, thank you, John", a woman's exasperated complaint to a tedious suitor straight out of a three-volume novel, who thinks he just has to go on proposing to her for her to realise that she loves him.

Another notable long poem is "The convent threshold", which seems to be a kind of pendant to her brother's "Blessed Damozel" — the speaker of the poem is a woman who has been involved in a relationship that has gone wrong in some unspecified but spectacular way involving lots of blood. She has repented and is entering a convent, but on the doorstep she pauses to urge her lover to do the same, so that they can be reunited in Paradise later.
You sinned with me a pleasant sin:
Repent with me, for I repent.
Woe's me the lore I must unlearn!
Woe's me that easy way we went,
So rugged when I would return!

It's fun to re-read these poems after a gap without much exposure to Victorian poetry: sometimes what Rossetti has to say about religious and female experience might seem a little trite and obvious in hindsight, but that probably wasn't the case at the time, and it's clear that she meant every word of it. What remains striking above all is the confidence and strength with which she fits her deceptively simple language into a precision-aligned poetic structure.
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I enjoyed some of Rossetti's shorter poems as I child (not that this is especially long), but was not familiar with this until I heard an extraordinary reading on BBC Radio 4 by Shirley Henderson. (There was an excerpt here, but it's no longer playable.)

It is a hypnotic poem about temptation, salivation, and salvation via sacrifice, told in contrasts: a sensible sister and a weak-willed one, getting gorgeous fruit from hideous goblins. It repeatedly combines religious and carnal imagery.

It show more can happily be read by or to a child, though as an adult, it's impossible to ignore the sensual allusions, starting on the very first page, with the goblins' tempting fare including “plump unpecked cherries”.

The whole story is dripping with the juice of ripe fruit, and the beguiling words of the hideous goblins trying to sell it.

Image: Arthur Rackham’s 1933 illustration is overtly sexual. The first illustrations were by Christina's brother, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, but I prefer Rackham's. (Source)

This story is about the language and imagery more than the plot, but if you don't want spoilers, stop reading now.

Story

Laura and Lizzie are sisters who come across the goblin men in the forest. Lizzie is all-too-aware of the dangers (later, she reminds her sister of how Jeanie wasted away after she “ate their fruits and wore their flowers”), but Lizzie lingers. She has no money, so pays with a lock of her golden hair, which in a mythical world, is clearly dangerous. But she tastes their fruit, and is euphoric at the sensations:
She suck’d until her lips were sore...
And knew not was it night or day.


Lizzie gets home safely, but craves more goblin fruit. Next morning, “the first cock crowed his warning” (Biblical and phallic!). The sisters go about their chores as normal.
At length slow evening came:
They went with pitchers to the reedy brook;
Lizzie most placid in her look,
Laura most like a leaping flame.


Laura listens for the call, and is shocked to realise her pure sister can hear it, but she no longer can.
Day after day, night after night,
Laura kept watch in vain.
In sullen silence of exceeding pain.
She never caught again the goblin cry.
‘Come buy, come buy’.


Just as her sister warned, Laura fades away:
She dwindled, as the fair full moon does turn
To swift decay and burn
Her fire away
”.

Yet every day, Lizzie is tormented by hearing the goblins' cry.
She “Long’d to buy the fruit to comfort her [Lizzie],
But fear’d to pay too dear.

Nevertheless, eventually she takes a penny, and decides to get what her sister craves. Thus Lizzie has turned from tempted to temptress.

But instead of taking her money, the goblins assault her:
Held her hands and squeezed their fruits
Against her mouth to make her eat
”.
She resits, but is covered in pulp and juice - which she then urges her sister to take:
Eat me, drink me, love me
Is that eucharistic or sexual?
Shaking with anguish fear, and pain,
She [Laura] kiss’d and kiss’d her with a hungry mouth
”.

This time the juice is more like poison to her, yet it is also purgative, and restores her. The power of the love of a pure sister is thus demonstrated, and handed down to their own children.

Image: A moral makes a wholesome ending, by Arthur Rackham (Source)

Contrasts

There is a stark contrast in revulsion at the goblins themselves and the irresistible appeal of their fruit: like drugs and indeed, Victorian attitudes to sex.

Of the goblins:
One tramp’d at a rat's pace...
One like a wombat prowl’d obtuse and furry.

When they sense a victim, their movements are hungry:
Came towards her hobbling,
Flying, running, leaping,
Puffing and blowing,
Chuckling, clapping, crowing.

They fear she might leave without succumbing:
Grunting and snarling...
One call’d her proud,
Cross-grain’d, uncivil;
Their tones wax’d loud,
Their looks were evil…
Barking, mewing, hissing, mocking,
Tore her gown and soil’d her stocking.
”.

And, ah, the fruit:
Bloom-down-cheek’d peaches...
Wild free-born cranberries…
Pears red with basking
Out in the sun,
Plums on their twigs;
Pluck them and suck them,
Pomegranates, figs.


Who would not be tempted - are you Laura or Lizzie?

You can read the whole poem HERE.
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What a work of fantastical whimsy! The poem, hand lettered through the march of bewitching watercolor pages, is at once a celebration and a caution of hedonism and decadence. The illustrations themselves throw the caution to the wind and revel in excess. The characters are many and varied, with expressions that convey the sly sense of humor of their creator. I especially enjoyed the drunkard birds - ravens and then owls - and the steadfast and ever-present otter fisher (fisher otter?)
Goblin Market is wonderful. I'm sure I've read it or had it read to me before, but this was my first slow and thoughtful read through. The story has a clear feminist literary criticism interpretation, and that's not the only path. There are other things it stirs up--scrapes against our deep uncertainties around sexuality, gender identity, the concept of "innocence", sacrifice, redemption, etc. I continued to read into the collection...splendid teenage goth poetry from the 1800s. show more Well-executed in places, but forgettable. Except for Goblin Market, which is exquisite? I would like to revisit Rossetti with someone to guide me through it--teach me to see what I'm missing, and provide a list of the best examples from her work. I think everyone should read Goblin Market slowly, feel it, and then close the book. Recommended. show less

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Associated Authors

William Michael Rossetti Editor, Contributor
Florence Harrison Illustrator
Tomie dePaola Illustrator
Jillian Tamaki Illustrator
Ellen Raskin Illustrator
Laurence Housman Illustrator
Arthur Rackham Illustrator
Charles Vess Introduction
Germaine Greer Introduction
William Morris Illustrator
Martin Ware Illustrator
Omar Rayyan Illustrator
Richard Dadd Cover artist
Dinah Roe Editor
Martin Corner Introduction
Kathryn Hughes Introduction
Andrew Motion Foreword
Oscar Wilde Contributor
Edward Lear Contributor
Emily Dickinson Contributor
Edward John Keats Contributor
Walt Whitman Contributor
William Wordsworth Contributor
John Keats Contributor
Alice Meynell Introduction
Sam Denley Illustrator

Statistics

Works
136
Also by
101
Members
5,490
Popularity
#4,537
Rating
4.0
Reviews
64
ISBNs
228
Languages
9
Favorited
35

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