The Blessed Damozel

The Blessed Damozel
Artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Year 1875–78
Type oil on canvas
Dimensions 174 cm × 94 cm (69 in × 37 in)
Location Fogg Museum of Art, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts

"The Blessed Damozel" is perhaps the best known poem by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, which was first published in 1850 in the Pre-Raphaelite journal The Germ. Rossetti subsequently revised the poem twice and republished it in 1856, 1870 and 1873. Rossetti also used the same title for some of his best known paintings.[1]

The poem was partially inspired by Poe's "The Raven",[2] with its depiction of a lover grieving on Earth over the death of his loved one. Rossetti chose to represent the situation in reverse. The poem describes the damozel observing her lover from heaven, and her unfulfilled yearning for their reunion in heaven.

The poem also was the inspiration of Claude Debussy's "La damoiselle élue" (1888), a cantata for two soloists, female choir, and orchestra.

The first four stanzas of the poem are inscribed on the frame of the painting.

The blessed damozel leaned out

From the gold bar of Heaven;
Her eyes were deeper than the depth
Of waters stilled at even;
She had three lilies in her hand,
And the stars in her hair were seven.

Her robe, ungirt from clasp to hem,
No wrought flowers did adorn,
But a white rose of Mary's gift,
For service meetly worn;
Her hair that lay along her back
Was yellow like ripe corn.

Herseemed she scarce had been a day
One of God's choristers;
The wonder was not yet quite gone
From that still look of hers;
Albeit, to them she left, her day
Had counted as ten years.

(To one, it is ten years of years.
. . . Yet now, and in this place,
Surely she leaned o'er me—her hair
Fell all about my face. . . .
Nothing: the autumn fall of leaves.
The whole year sets apace.)[1]

Paintings

Replica by Rossetti, 1879, sold to Frederick Leyland. Now at the Lady Lever Art Gallery.

The Blessed Damozel is the only one of Rossetti's paired pictures and poems in which the poem was completed first. Friends and patrons repeatedly urged Rossetti to illustrate his most famous poem,[3] and he finally accepted a commission from William Graham in February 1871. After the work was completed Graham requested a predella, the lower part of the painting on December 31, 1877. His total cost was £1157. Alexa Wilding modelled the damozel in Paradise, Wilfred John Hawtrey modelled the child–angel, and the probable model for the left–hand angel was May Morris. Another later version is in the Lady Lever Art Gallery.

Monna Rosa Mnemosyne (Rossetti) Proserpine (Rossetti painting) Veronica Veronese Lady Lilith
Six Rossetti paintings as hung in Leyland's drawing room, 1892. The Blessed Damozel hangs third from the left.[1] (Click on any painting for its article.)
  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference figure was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Frederick Richards Leyland commissioned eighteen paintings from Rossetti, not counting unfulfilled commissions. Soon after Leyland acquired his first Rossetti painting, he and Rossetti explored the idea of a Rossetti triptych, which was eventually formed with Mnemosyne, an 1879 replica of The Blessed Damozel painted by Rossetti himself, and Proserpine.[4] Three additional Rossetti painting were then hung in Leyland's drawing room, all of which Leyland called "stunners."[5]

Music

Several pieces of music were based on the poem, including those for orchestra by Granville Bantock (1891), Edgar Bainton (1907), Ernest Farrar (1907); for piano by Arnold Bax (1906); for string quartet by Benjamin Burrows (1927); and a 1928 choral by Julius Harrison. A 2007 modern popular song of the same name by Tangerine Dream appears on their album Madcap's Flaming Duty.

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 McGann, Jerome (editor) (2005). "The Blessed Damozel (with predella), Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1875-8". Rossetti Archive. Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, University of Virginia. Retrieved February 16, 2012.
  2. "The Painterly Image in Poetry." The Norton Anthology of English Literature: The Victorian Age. 2009. Norton and Company. 3 Jun 2009.
  3. Treuherz et al. (2003), p. 100
  4. Waking Dreams, p. 204.
  5. Waking Dreams, p. 26 (figure 5).

Sources

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