Missingness

John Bayley

  • Christina Rossetti: A Biography by Frances Thomas
    Virago, 448 pp, £9.99, February 1994, ISBN 1 85381 681 7

The sad ballad has always given satisfaction, whether it was a Last Goodnight, or seeing your love dressed all in white, but come back only from the grave. The Victorians revelled in it. Stephen Foster’s audience grieved for Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair, the lost one ‘who comes not again’. The big Romantics all had their more portentous versions, from Lucy ceasing to be, to Shelley’s solipsistic sad heart, filled with grief ‘but with delight/No more, oh nevermore’. Poe’s sardonic raven enunciated ‘Nevermore’ as a standard formula. Tennyson’s most popular poem mourned for the touch of a vanished hand.

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Vol. 16 No. 6 · 24 March 1994 » John Bayley » Missingness (print version)
pages 18-19 | 2842 words