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by Edward Nudelman
Member since:
January 17, 2006

The Pre-Raphaelite Germ

July 30, 2007 08:53 AM EDT (Updated: July 30, 2007 11:23 AM EDT)
views: 363 | rating: 9.9/10 (82 votes) | comments: 103

 

POETRY CENTRAL  Volume 3, Number 2  ~ The Pre-Raphaelite Germ 

 

fileId:3096224744294062;size:inter;In the mid-1800's a group of artists and poets, including Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William Holman Hunt and J.E. Millais, founded the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (PRB) with their initial publication, The Germ.  The groundbreaking periodical only survived for four spectacular issues between January and April of 1850.  However, its influence on the art and literary community in England as well as the Continent was striking.  This seminal vehicle for a new interpretation and expression of art in literature and the applied-arts displayed the poetry of William Michael and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Thomas Woolner, James Collinson, and Christina Rossetti, as well as essays by Ford Madox Brown, Coventry Patmore, and others. 

 

The periodical, subtitled thoughts towards nature in art and literature, was an attempt to marry art, in the form of book illustration, and poetry.  William Michael Rossetti, in an introduction to a 1901 facsimile edition put it this way:

 

 

…it was [The Germ]  intended to enunciate the principles of those who, in the true spirit of Art, enforce a rigid adherence to the simplicity of Nature either in Art or Poetry, and consequently regardless whether emanating from practical Artists, or from those who have studied nature in the Artist's School.

 

 

W.M. Rossetti, further explained that the depiction of nature in and through art was to be their “paramount storehouse of materials for objects to be represented.”  The artists and poets of the PRB studied nature, the representation of it in ideas, and the delineation of nature as seen through allegories and symbols.

  

 fileId:3096224744294061;size:inter;

Woodcut illustration by Edward Burne-Jones for the renowned 1896 edition of Chaucer's Tales.  Burne-Jones, though not an "official" member of the PRB, was one of many artists of the period who associated with the Pre-Raphaelites and illustrated the books and poetry of the PRB.  Burne-Jones contributed hundreds of woodcut illustrations in this tour-de-force.  First editions of the work sell for over $100,000 on the auction block.

 

 

PRB artists and poets wanted to free themselves from the restrictions and mechanizations of the incipient Industrial Revolution as well as norms in art that became part of the institutionalized and commercialized "industry" of art.  Their poetry was filled with rich imagery and symbolism.  Rarely did a poem provide a contemporary context or a narrator, but rather aimed to address universal ideas, images and feelings.  The Pre-Raphaelites drew heavily on the lore of mythology and the historical-literary archive of such classics as King Arthur, Norse and Greek Legends, Medieval culture, as well as romantic characters and poems in literature (Ophelia, Persephone, Eve of St. Agnes)  They painted vividly colored pastoral and metaphorical paintings often illustrating a classical poem or legend.  The Pre-Raphaelite poets formed their own distinctive voice, calling for a return to a more simplistic, contemplative life.


fileId:3096224744294059;size:inter;Probably Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s most famous book illlustration, “The Maids of Elfin-mere,” is a hauntingly beautiful etching of three young women with their arms outstretched.  It appeared in the 1855 edition of The Music Master by William Allingham.  DGR was very upset with the woodcut when he saw the first proofs, feeling it had inadequately expressed his line.  He only begrudgingly let it be published.  Many of the Pre-Raphaelites pursued the non-lucrative avenue of producing woodcut illustrations for the poetry books of the period.  Most prolific of those artists were the celebrated William Holman Hunt and J.E. Millais, both founding members of the PRB.  As well, these two, along with D.G. Rossetti, Ford Madox Brown and Edward Burne-Jones avidly painted full-size oils with vivid colors and graphic representation.  The best known and acclaimed of all the poets in the group was indisputably Dante Rossetti.  His poems are often very long and heady, but a careful reading will review a genius in his verse.  Here is a shorter poem which uncommonly (for DGR) speaks of peace in his world of torment, high stress, and eventual drug addiction.
 

 

 

Lost on Both Sides, by Dante Gabriel Rossetti  

 

As when two men have loved a woman well,

Each hating each, through Love's and Death's deceit;

Since not for either this stark marriage-sheet

And the long pauses of this wedding bell;

Yet o'er her grave the night and day dispel

At last their feud forlorn, with cold and heat;

Nor other than dear friends to death may fleet

The two lives left that most of her can tell:

So separate hopes, which in a soul had wooed

The one same Peace, strove with each other long,

And Peace before their faces perished since:

So through that soul, in restless brotherhood,

They roam together now, and wind among

Its bye-streets, knocking at the dusty inns.

 

 

Christina Rossetti, Dante's and William's sister, was an extremely gifted poet.  Unlike the long, enigmatic and cerebral poems of Dante, Christina's voice was soft, sensitive, and full of the pathos and conflict that she experienced in her close association with the PRB.  CR had a very vibrant faith in God which came out in her poetry in a marvelous free and moving counterpoint, unlike some of the more overtly "religious" poetry of the period.  The following poem, entitled Aloof, is a masterpiece of poetic ambivalence with a strong assertive current of honesty saturating every line:

 

 

The irresponsive silence of the land,

The irresponsive sounding of the sea,

Speak both one message of one sense to me:--

Aloof, aloof, we stand aloof, so stand

Thou too aloof, bound with the flawless band

Of inner solitude; we bind not thee;

But who from thy self-chain shall set thee free?

What heart shall touch thy heart? What hand thy hand?

And I am sometimes proud and sometimes meek,

And sometimes I remember days of old

When fellowship seem'd not so far to seek,

And all the world and I seem'd much less cold,

And at the rainbow's foot lay surely gold,

And hope felt strong, and life itself not weak.

 

The opening number of The Germ begins with a wonderful, lengthy poem by Thomas Woolner, one of the four founding members of the PRB.  It is illustrated with a stunning woodcut etching by William Holman Hunt, another founding member.  It is a split illustration, with the upper panel showing a lady picking flowers near a river with her lover pulling her back.  The lower panel shows the lover collapsed on his lover's grave, with a procession of nuns passing behind him.  Here are the first two stanzas of the poem:

 

My Beautiful Lady, by Thomas Woolner (first two stanzas)

I love my lady; she is very fair;

Her brow is white, and bound by simple hair;

Her spirit sits aloof, and high,

Altho' it looks thro' her soft eye

Sweetly and tenderly.

 

As a young forest, when the wind drives thro',

My life is stirred when she breaks on my view.

Altho' her beauty has such power,

Her soul is like the simple flower

Trembling beneath a shower.

  

It’s difficult to place The Pre-Raphaelites in the order and scale of art movements throughout history.  Some decry their idealized representation of the human figure as evidenced in many of Rossetti’s over-romanticized paintings.  Others have criticized their narrow and focused view.  Most, however, agree that these kinds of narrow assessments sadly misrepresent the effect and value of their art.  It was, first and foremost, a reactionary, if not revolutionary movement by a few very gifted artists who wanted to exercise their individuality in an area where that kind of action was vehemently opposed by the institutions in place.  Putting it simply, William Rossetti captured the early motives of the founders in this way:

 

The Preraphaelite Brothers entertained a deep respect and a sincere affection for the works of some of the artists who had preceded Raphael; and they thought that they should more or less be following the lead of those artists if they themselves were to develop their own individuality, disregarding school-rules.  This was the sum and substance of their “Preraphaelitism."

(please find nine examples of pre-raphaelite art in the photo cache, upper right)

 

References used in this essay (click on the colored link):

The Germ, The British Library.  facsimiles of original pages 

Introduction to the 1901 edition of Germ by WM Rossetti  

The Victorian Web

Poems of Dante Gabriel and Christina Rossetti, Poemhunter.com

The Pre-Raphaelites.  From, The Archive. 

Edward Burne-Jones, by Bob Speel. 

Images reproduced here are in the public domain.  

  ____________________________________________

Written by Edward Nudelman, Books Correspondent for POETRY CENTRAL

Keep up with Ed’s other posting and Gather activity by joining his Gather network-just click here and select the orange “Connect” button on the left-hand side of the page.

You can also find also find a convenient index to all of the POETRY CENTRAL articles published on the Books Channel by simply clicking here.

   

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Comments: 103

Kim K. Borders U.S. Jul 30, 2007, 9:07am EDT
Edward,

Great article.

However the Pre-Raphaelites are perceived, they did call for a return to craftsmanship and eschewed the values of the Industrial Revolution. Perhaps they did idealize the human figure, but they did it so beautifully!

Thanks for posting.

Kim
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Aaron Lazar, (author of LeGarde Mysteries) Jul 30, 2007, 9:08am EDT
Fascinating study, Ed! Wow. Thank you!
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ann c. Jul 30, 2007, 9:17am EDT
Very informative, thanks.
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Teresa W. Jul 30, 2007, 9:17am EDT
Another wonderful article!
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elizabeth d. Jul 30, 2007, 9:22am EDT
Thanks, I enjoyed this, bo Drury
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Ernie (Author of DESTINY OF THE DIVAS) Johnson Jul 30, 2007, 9:22am EDT
This is quite an article eD. tHANKS...! Have a great time at daughter's wedding.
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Genine Hopkins Jul 30, 2007, 9:23am EDT
I have studied this time period in college, but as with many courses, there is always something left out, and apparently this was one of them. Thanks so much for sharing as well as providing the links!
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Chris Kline Jul 30, 2007, 9:23am EDT
Very informative, thanks for letting me know about this one.
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Erin F. Jul 30, 2007, 9:30am EDT
Interesting. I like that you drew on the poems as examples within your essay. Your description of the woodcut etching that went with "My Beautiful Lady" makes me want to find the rest of the poem. Thanks!
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anne h. Jul 30, 2007, 9:33am EDT
Quite interesting and informative..thanks
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Dan B. Jul 30, 2007, 9:35am EDT
goshalmighty!!!
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Katharine M. Jul 30, 2007, 9:35am EDT
Thank you for the wonderful article! I absolutely adore the Pre-Raphaelites. I also love Christina Georgina Rossetti. Excellent!

Have a great time at the wedding!
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Elizabeth "I'm Pro-Accordion and I Vote!" B. Jul 30, 2007, 9:35am EDT
Lovely work, Ed.
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Cheryl R. Jul 30, 2007, 9:39am EDT
Thank you Edward for adding to my education. Now, I find I must study Raphael in order to see where the preraphaelites decided he'd abandoned nature and simplicity. The simplicity of connection in the world is so complex.
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Gina O. Jul 30, 2007, 9:40am EDT
Like traveling back in time for a moment!
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Seshu BSR C. Jul 30, 2007, 9:42am EDT
Thanks for sharing Edward. Very enlightening.
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William Dotani Jul 30, 2007, 9:43am EDT
Thank you for this history. I have some of Dante Gabriel Rossetti's poems in a book I picked up in a used book store maybe 20 years ago. I thought he had a wife who also wrote poetry.
I love the romantic language often found in English, Irish and Italian verse of the 19th century. It's like stepping into a fairy tale universe, although themes may be solemn. I also love the lyrical rhyme schemes, which are too often missing from modern verse. I shall read some of the Rossetti poetry again tonight, if I can find this book.
I found a book called 'Major Poets: English and American' at a yard sale. It was published in 1954. I've been entranced with William Butler Yeats and was studying The Wild Swans at Coole yesterday. At 25 cents, this book was a bargain.
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Ishbel R. Jul 30, 2007, 9:53am EDT
I love the pre-raphaelites - including Christina Rosetti's poetry.
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Carol P. Jul 30, 2007, 9:54am EDT
Awesome article.

Congrats on your daughter's wedding. What a wonderful celebration. I am so happy for you..and her.
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Richard Hay Jul 30, 2007, 9:59am EDT
Dear Edward,

I will dig into this much more deeply, and with much relish, later, but, since you are "swearing off" for 10 days, I felt called to respond immediately.

What is startling in this "Germ" movement is that it is pretty much what "classical or traditional" haiku targets -- offering through "art" (word picturea) a new way of looking at and so seeing "Nature," and the Life that underlies both (and all else, for that matter).

What I also find extremely interesting is that what has evolved on the blog I've been doing for the last two months, with respect to "marrying images [some natural and some unnatural or man-made(although if man is a product of nature than anything that comes through him could be said to be natural)]" to the haiku, seems to have a similar agenda.

And particularly so, since seeking images in nature to illustrate the same "Point" the haiku points to has caused me to become much more meditative and/or present to "what is, here and now" (a large component of which is the natural world that I tend to ignore as a function of being "lost in thought" most of the time).

Rich
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Monika V. Jul 30, 2007, 10:01am EDT
Great article...Thanks for sharing.
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Edward Nudelman Jul 30, 2007, 10:02am EDT
Thanks to all! And I appreciate your well-wishing on our daughter's wedding.

William, that sounds like some pretty good bookhounding. I think you're probably referrring to Christina Rossetti, who is commonly thought of as Dante's wife, but she is his sister. I don't believe DG's wife wrote any poetry...

Cheryl, yes, I agree, studying the history of art, especially in the Renaissance period is an extremely interesting and enlightening pursuit
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Ludie Gee Jul 30, 2007, 10:02am EDT
Superb and extremely informative and well researched - Thank you Ed.
congratulations to the bride and groom and the happy families. Enjoy your break.
sincerely "L"
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Edward Nudelman Jul 30, 2007, 10:04am EDT
Thanks Ludo!

Richard, that is a fascinating comparison, the short, word-sparing haiku with the propositions of the PRB's... yes, I can see that very clearly. Thanks for the great comment.
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Kenneth R. Besser Jul 30, 2007, 10:05am EDT
Something new and different every day.
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Bill's Spirit Jul 30, 2007, 10:05am EDT
Love the history lesson.

Safe Journeys and Matrimonial Blessings
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Denise- Marie Jul 30, 2007, 10:12am EDT
Excellent , informative and interesting... something I can certainly return to read , during the next ten days.
Congratulations to you, and your daughter . Best of luck!
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J B. Jul 30, 2007, 10:17am EDT
Thanks Ed, this article pulls together so many things I enjoy - history, art, and writing. I was unaware of a lot of this information and enjoyed learning from your article. Man, some of the artwork as well as written selections you have chosen here take my breath away.

Thanks and happy wedding days!
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Dan R. Jul 30, 2007, 10:20am EDT
First, Congrats on your Daughter's wedding.

This is a very interesting article, and shows some of the ideas they embraced. I looked up more on this group, as I had never heard of them before.

http://www.victorianweb.org/painting/prb/prbov.html
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Carol Roach Jul 30, 2007, 10:33am EDT
very good article, I enjoyed and learned alot. I never had any formal education into the study of poetry.
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Old Crow (straight, but not narrow) Jul 30, 2007, 10:45am EDT
Good luck with the wedding, I hope everything goes well.
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ELLEN B. Jul 30, 2007, 10:54am EDT
Have a wonderful time at the wedding, and enjoy your time away. What a nice gift to leave us with, something to learn and research. Thanks and God bless you and yours, Ellen B
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Carole D. Jul 30, 2007, 10:54am EDT
Very interesting... I hope to dig further on this. Thank you for yet another quality piece.
Enjoy your travels!
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Faith H. Jul 30, 2007, 11:05am EDT
This sounds fascinating, I will return to it over and over to absorb.
Happy travels and happy wedding celebration, Ed and family!
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Beryl Singleton Bissell Jul 30, 2007, 11:14am EDT
A brilliant and compact journey into a fascinating movement and time in art and literature. Thanks Ed. And ... have a blast at your daughter's wedding.
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robert w. Jul 30, 2007, 11:26am EDT
A very interesting and informative article, and some beautiful poems.
Thank you Edward. Have a wonderful time at your daughter's wedding.
We'll miss you. God bless, rpw
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jessie voigts Jul 30, 2007, 11:28am EDT
lovely, ed. i love their stuff, esp the art part. it was so much fun to read this! happy wedding!
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Clifford H Colpitts Jr Jul 30, 2007, 11:30am EDT
Thanks Great article.
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Jerri H. Jul 30, 2007, 11:50am EDT
Wow....great article!! We will miss you while you are gone.
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Marvel S. Jul 30, 2007, 11:55am EDT
Awesome article about the Pre-Raphaelites! I have a degree in Art History and I really enjoyed this! Thanks :-)
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Peter, who hasn't changed icons. That's Jason G. Jul 30, 2007, 12:29pm EDT
Excellent article, replete with information that ties the period together very well for me. There was also an article on them in one of the recent Smithsonian magazines.
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Mary C. Jul 30, 2007, 12:43pm EDT
Another thought-provoking article.
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Donna K. Jul 30, 2007, 12:48pm EDT
Thank you for the wonderful article! The pre-Raphaelites as a reactionary artistic movement intrigues me, since my artist friend and I discussed art history often and he didn't like them too much. He thought they were "twee", a slang term for "overly sentimental" with the Brits. I enjoy the pre-Raphaelites for their unique voices. In their time they were quite outside the norm of the art world and I find that interesting.

My friend is part of the Stuckist movement, a British art movement reactionary in itself to offset the modern Brit Art movement with its emphasis on shocking images or items, and what seems to be the elevation of tawdry or ugly aspects of the human condition. I myself am interested in the Stuckist photographers.

The Stuckists believe in the importance and value of representational painting/art emphasizing what they see in the world with what they feel without the over-emphasis on their own ego and opinion where the Brit Art movement focuses on the celebrity of personalities without any real emphasis on true talent or artistic technique.

Oops! I think my prejudicial opinion is showing!

Congratulations on your daughter's wedding! I hope everyone has a wonderful time and everything goes swimmingly! See you when you get back!
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Mary H. Jul 30, 2007, 12:54pm EDT
I used to love to collect old romantic poetry books...thank you
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Debbie G. Jul 30, 2007, 1:07pm EDT
Very interesting, Ed!
Enjoy the days away and all the wedding festvities. Best wishes for the bride and groom's future.
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Sharon A. Jul 30, 2007, 1:16pm EDT
Thank you Ed.

Yes, I agree with Debbie, enjoy your time away.

The article was fantastic, and I learned something today.
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Jean, just the teensiest bit odd, F. Jul 30, 2007, 1:16pm EDT
An article with a lot of depth, Ed. I enjoyed it thoroughly... May I add my congratulations to the young bride and groom, as well?
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Jann L. Jul 30, 2007, 1:18pm EDT
Thanks so much for this very informative article. I have an 1885 copy of "The Eve of St. Agnes" by Keats and illustrated by Edmund H Garrett. I will look at it again with a much greater appreciation from now on.

I have always enjoyed the art of the PRB but haven't explored much of the poetry. I plan to remedy that within the next while at the Wondering Minstrels website which is where I go first when looking for a particular poem or poet.

I hope you have a wonderful time at your daughter's wedding.
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Granny Janny H. Jul 30, 2007, 1:25pm EDT
Poetry, Art and History too
For this lesson I bow to you
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Sharon R. Jul 30, 2007, 1:33pm EDT
Wonderful history/art lesson. I have always loved the poets from this era. Sometimes have to read more than once, but find something new on each read.
Thank you so much and have a wonderful 'vacation.'
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Beverly P. Jul 30, 2007, 1:47pm EDT
Edward, what a fabulous article! Dante is probably one of my most favorite of all writers and I love his completely "out of the box" ways of thinking and styles. I had no idea about the PBR club/publishing! This is so interesting to find out! Thanks for sharing and for taking the time to write such a wonderful piece!

Good luck with the wedding!
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Beverly P. Jul 30, 2007, 1:48pm EDT
oops.. I meant the PRB... PBR is the bull riders eh?! LOL
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Christina A. Jul 30, 2007, 2:01pm EDT
Very informative! Have a nice vacation and enjoy the wedding!
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P.W. Dowdy Jul 30, 2007, 2:08pm EDT
First, my well wishes to one of your favorite children who is about to embark on the next link of her journey here on earth. I wish her and her intended all the happiness and success marriage can bring.

Second, Ed:

Your voice is like E.F. Hutton's. When you speak, everyone listens. In this piece you demonstrate clarity and pull on readers to wonder what you might tell us next. Never a dull moment or a non-require pause.

The article entertains as well as inform. I learned, and that learning made me want to be on the look-out for the works of this special group of artists.

More, more, more of this from you.
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Sue P. Jul 30, 2007, 2:41pm EDT
Ed -- Have awonderful furlough!
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Elsie Duggan Jul 30, 2007, 2:48pm EDT
Thank you Ed for another wonderful look at the old poets work and your very informative article. I love reading them. I want to wish you and your family the best of everything during this time of joy in your lives and that your daughter and new husband will have a wonderful life together. This is an exciting time for everyone, a wedding. I wish you all much Happiness.
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Linda R. Jul 30, 2007, 3:03pm EDT
Well written and informative article.

Congratulations to the father of the bride.
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Alisa Kerwood Jul 30, 2007, 3:57pm EDT
good articale have fun at the wedding
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lynn a. Jul 30, 2007, 4:23pm EDT
I really am waiting to see what you tell about next. I loved this. I got all caught up in the art of the time but didn't even really think about the poetry, and now I wonder why, and how could I have not realized. This was really great. I don't know squat about it, I don't think, but I want to know.
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Kathryn E. Jul 30, 2007, 6:08pm EDT
The Pre-Raphaelites are one of my three favorite literary and/or artistic periods, with The Dutch Masters (Rembrandt, mainly), Michaelangelo, the Impressionists and accompanying literary groups such as the Bloomsbury Group, and The Pre-Raphaelites. I will be back later to read this in greater depth.

Christina and Dante Gabriel Rossettii are two of the most overlooked and under-apprecaited artists/literati of the era.
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Mandi -Watch where the chalk-white arrows go. To the place where the sidewalk ends. S.S. Jul 30, 2007, 6:45pm EDT
how on earth do you do this week after week?? This is excellent!

have fun at the wedding!
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Marge H. Jul 30, 2007, 6:59pm EDT
I always learn a lot from these articles of yours Ed. I appreciate the way you organize them. First by "setting the stage," sharing facts, history, and your perceptions, then relevant and related art and poetry, and again sharing your viewpoint. Finally including citations for those that wish to explore further.

Have a wonderful time at your daughter's wedding and a safe trip. Best wishes to the new bride and groom.
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Sissy....... You can feel the crisp clean autumn air Jul 30, 2007, 7:14pm EDT
very interesting Ed. thanks for sharing.
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Magi the magical poet is riding the wind again Jul 30, 2007, 8:04pm EDT
Yet another excellent article in this excellent poetry series, Ed. My very best wishes to the houses united by the wedding.
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Dave J. Jul 30, 2007, 9:22pm EDT
Thanks for an article that was both informative and interesting reading. Excellent job!!
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TK Rosevear Jul 30, 2007, 9:24pm EDT
Beautiful job Ed - Enjoy your 'disconnected' time with your family... See you when you get back.
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pamela r. Jul 30, 2007, 10:08pm EDT
Wonderful Article--very informative. Have a great time at the wedding!
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Celeste R. Jul 30, 2007, 11:09pm EDT
I enjoy all of your articles for their tone and content.
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Carol Roach Jul 31, 2007, 2:12am EDT
I am enjoying this series very much.
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Dan B. Jul 31, 2007, 2:17am EDT
Haaaaay you wildd one you in your traaanquility' cccccoullld rna yield uracills in urrine aand monoatoomic gold bbond wiith phoosphaaate//sssugar spiral mesoisomesomer. Caaany isomerise glucosse aaand cheesus knows how mommas of newmornns beffit f gluccos, huh. I waaas loccccckked away by dr arisstotle. Scott is rellly pissed.
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blue m. Jul 31, 2007, 2:26am EDT
always informative ed ;D thanks
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amanda wallin Jul 31, 2007, 3:06am EDT
Fascinating touch of artistic history that I honestly had little knowledge of. Incredible compilation of poems! Only the best...
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Mark Lange Jul 31, 2007, 3:27am EDT
Awesome posting! Congrats to your daughter and son-in-law!
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tuwanda t. Jul 31, 2007, 8:03am EDT
Thank you . That was just what I needed. 100 for you Ed .
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Tina Coruth Jul 31, 2007, 9:35am EDT
Very interesting! Thank you!
Best wishes to the bride and groom. :-)
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Lisa H. Jul 31, 2007, 9:40am EDT
Very interesting. I love reading articles about things which I know very little/nothing about.
Congrats on your daughter's upcoming nuptials. Enjoy your time with family and friends!
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Sophiya S. Jul 31, 2007, 10:19am EDT
I love Rossetti and other pre-raphaelite artists. Their work was so moving
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vickie f. Jul 31, 2007, 1:19pm EDT
great article, thank you enjoyed the information and the reading
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John F Walter Jul 31, 2007, 5:41pm EDT
Superb article on this key group of artists of the Nineteenth Centure, Ed, who represented a way back to the past just as people were losing sight of their own culture´s high spiritual richness of centuries before in the wake of modernism and its new sense of the urban impression, the fleetingness of daily life. Insofar as the importance and critical place of the PRB, one cannot forget the importance of the seminal art critic at the time, John Ruskin, and his defense of the group´s high ideals, return to symbolic forms of spiritual expression, stylization of language and line in art, in the second half of the century. Ruskin was pivotal in disseminating the group´s principles as well as their influence, which extended later to even the Symboliste and Decadent movement.

I really enjoyed reading this, dear friend. The poems you chose to illustrate the Rossetti brother and sister´s different styles were incredibly apropos, and Christina Rossetti´s ALOOF is one of those great poems I haven´t read and so I was just wowed by her words.
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Janie Hall Jul 31, 2007, 7:44pm EDT
wow!!
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Patty Mayonaise Jul 31, 2007, 8:52pm EDT
how cool!
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tammy b. Aug 1, 2007, 1:16am EDT
Interesting. Thanks. Have a good time.
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Marthajoy A. Aug 1, 2007, 2:29am EDT
Well-organized and well-written, as we would of course expect from you, Edward. An interesting piece of recent history for all of us. (and I'm cooler already!) If I could travel, I would do a lot of it ... go back to Alaska now (been there 4 times already) and interview about dreams, dreams almost forgotten.. Would hire lots of help for taking care of this place,but also give a good proportion to favorite charities as well...
So much to write, so little time...
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Paul J. Aug 1, 2007, 7:53am EDT
Just another WOWSER article. Very well documented and written.

Have a great 10 days off and enjoy the wedding.

We'll be here when you return.

pj
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Missy Cline Aug 1, 2007, 1:57pm EDT
beyond excellent article !
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Fran S. Aug 1, 2007, 8:02pm EDT
wonderful, thought provoking, informatiive..... shall I continue? Thanks for posting, it was very interesting!
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Felicia R. Aug 2, 2007, 4:31am EDT

Free Comments and Graphics at pYzam.com
More Graphics at pYzam.com


For posting this article and sharing it with us... ;o)
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Claudia S. Aug 2, 2007, 10:59am EDT
What a piece of informative writing - think my art education missed a whole movement - first i have heard of it.

Enjoy and blessings on all!
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Lisa Gensheimer Aug 2, 2007, 4:32pm EDT
The ideas from this movement are inspiring. I have just returned from the Ned Smith Center for Nature and Art, in Millersburg, Pa. Though Ned Smith's work is far more literal in its representation, I think it shares a common spirit. Many thanks for your informative story. Very timely for me.
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dee-dee Wishes you the best life has to offer S. Aug 2, 2007, 8:13pm EDT
Wow, this is a great article I have learned a lot from this & you. Congratulations to you and to your daughter getting married. Have a wonderful 10 days vacation.God Bless dee-dee
Thank you for doing all this reserch for us.dee-dee
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Sharon B. Aug 2, 2007, 8:39pm EDT
This is a great article. Very well researched and written. Thanks, Sharon
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Michelle N. Aug 2, 2007, 10:41pm EDT
Thanks so much for this article. The history in it is truly fascinating.
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Jacqueline B. Aug 4, 2007, 3:19pm EDT
Great article. I love this. It is very informative.
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Glenda O. Aug 5, 2007, 1:38am EDT
Thanks for the interesting read....I think the preaphaelite era needs to be added in more art history classes. Its been a missing link to the Raphael Era. I was really intrigued by the wood carvings
Congratulations on your daughters marriage and enjoy your time.........
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