Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Christina Rossetti
- Winter; my Secret
- Secrecy
- "I tell my
secret? No
indeed, not I"
- First line, I in position of
power, starts and ends with
I directing the secret
inwards to oneself, the no
shuts the question down
- Selfhood- bookended like
wrapping herself up in the secret
of herself- value of privacy
- Implies secrets have a value-
exchange and worth - entail
the power to disclose-
ownership of the secret itself
is the power
- Only, my
secret's mine
and I wont tell
- Power and
strength on the
self- emphasis
on mine
(ownership)
- "Leave the truth untested still"
- "Perhaps my secret
I may say,/ or you
may guess"
- evokes fairy tales
such as
Rumpalstillskin
that implies
guessing will grant
access
- Temptation
- "And you're too
curious; fie! You
want to hear it?"
- short, teasing tone
with an abrupt ending -
shuts it down again
- "Perhaps there's
none/suppose
there is no secret
after all/but only
just my fun"
- She takes the secret
away- makes reader more
curious-playful/less
serious
- Sensationalism
- Today is a nipping
day, a biting day;/in
which one wants a
shall,' a veil, a cloak
and other wraps
- Let the
draughts
come
whistling
thro' my
doors
- "Perhaps some languid
summer day/ when
drowsy sing less and less
and golden fruit is
ripening to excess"
- Decadence-
the same as
in the Goblin
Market-
something
which can
decay/rot as
well
- conceal and reveal
- "a veil, a cloak and
other wraps/ I
cannot ope to
everyone who taps"
- "Come bounding and
surrounding me/come
buffeting, astounding
me/nipping and clipping
tho' my wraps and all"
- Mirrors the
Goblin's actions
towards Lizzie -
sensationalist
- come bounding
is a command like
the Goblin's
"come by"
- "I wear my mask for
warmth; whoever
shows/whose nose to
Russian snows/to be
pecked at by every wind
that blows?"
- the mask is
self-servicing as
well protecting -
keeps her self
protected as well
as keeping others
out
- nose/snows-
childlike rhyme
scheme- playful
- Russian snows- war
connotations- nature of
what she is protecting
herself from- gender
undertones
- Poetic technique
- Voice is asking
questions and so
is in direct
communication
with the reader
- "Both flirtacious and
deeply resonant"- Isabelle
Armstrong
- is winter
the setting
or the
secret of
the poem-
It maps
seasonal
changes
- as though
she is in
dialogue
with
someone
who is
silent
- Always involving someone else
- Untypical of Rossetti's
other poetry which is
preoccupied with
death/self-abnegation-
whereas this is
playful/teasing
- wearing the mask for protection
from winter but also stops
intimacy with the reader-an
anti-confessional/anti-romantic
poem, not self-expressive
- goes against the idea the poem should
reveal the deep, interior truth of the self
- ends in tautology- my secret is secret
- the language of
self-protection if
similar to Lizzie's
resistance to the
Goblins
- the colon seperates
winter as
something needing
elaboration- the
subject matter of
the poem - requires
a pause
- Form- couplets
and triplets
increasing the pace
at which the poem
is read
(anticipation) eg:
snows, shows,
blows - speed at
which she wants to
hide her secret and
notion that the
person she is
talking to is
persistent.
- Internal rhyme-
froze, blows, snows
/bounding,
surrounding,
astounding-
increased pace.
- meter is iambic- reflecting the
conversational and expressional
style of speaker even as she tried
to hide behind a mask - ensures
rhyming sounds are always
stressed eg: S sound in snowed-
sibilance
- first paragraph- stress
on words of temptation
- Punctuation- question
marks, semi colons (create
a caesurae - hesitation)-
reflects speaker's decision
to tell his secret or not
- Versus the Artist
poem- one is public
other is self/private
- In An Artist's Studio
- Gender
- "A saint, an angel/ every
canvas means/ the same
one meaning/neither
more nor less"
- Irony- calling her a
saint/angel- not
necessarily a positive
thing
- unsubstancial ideology
- "He feeds upon her face
by day and night/and
she with true kind eyes
looks back on him"
- consumption-
living off
someone else
- irony- personifying a form of
passivity, clichés, easy symbols
of feminity- she's unchanging
because she's not real
- "Fair as the moon and
joyful as the light:/ not one
with waiting, not with
sorrow dim;/ not as she is,
but was when hope shone
bright:/ not as she is but as
she fills his dream"
- Objectifying/reflecting on the
'type' of women- there are
variations of superficial details
but are all representing the
'male gaze' - the title of the
poem is also through the male
gaze
- poetics of negation and
renunciation- repetition
of not; but also negates
the negation with the
word 'but'- makes her
sound helpless in her
false representation- not
a true portrayal
- Representation
- "One face looks out from all his
canvases, / One self same figure sits or
walks or leans"
- Disparity between
the real self and its
projected image- not
clear what real
feminity would look
like it: through a
woman's eyes
- "That mirror gave back all her loveliness"
- Secrecy
- "We found
her hidden
just behind
those
screens"
- the true woman is
hiding behind the
canvas-
womanhood is
often
hidden/concealed
- Sensationlism
- "A Queen in opal or
in ruby dress,;
nameless girl in
freshest summer
greens"
- Poetic tecnique
- Rossetti uses
typical poetic
forms to
articulate
more
transgressive
messages
- Petrarchan sonnet-
ABBA, ABBA, CDC, DCE-
Octave, Sestet, Volta -
turn on the line "he
feeds upon her face"-
change in tone- more
violent
- Consistent
ideas through
different styles
and tones-
compare to
Goblin Market
- Critical
- Stephanie. L. Johnson
- "move back and forth between representations of the
material and immaterial so fluidly that we cannot distinguish
between psychological and physical states or between desire
for what is beyond the self and for the self."
- Helena Michie
- the "linguistic codes that create the gap between the
reader and the Victorian heroine's body" simultaneously
enclosing and disclosing it