Before the Mirror

whitegirl2Christine 1977 Shannon

Above is my late sister, Christine Rosamond Benton, who rendered painting of beautiful Pre-Raphaelite Women signed with her middle name. Christine is with her daughter, Shannon. The Pre-Raphaelite Poet Swinburne wrote a poem that was inspired by Whistler’s painting.  I used to wrote poems about my finished work. Swinburne also wrote ‘Rosamond at Woodstock’ and ‘Year of the Rose’.

http://www.poetryexplorer.net/poem.php?id=10131393

In 1862 Whistler had met the English poet Algernon Charles Swinburne, with whom he developed a close friendship.The relationship between the two was mutually beneficial. Inspired by Whistler’s Little White Girl, Swinburne wrote a poem with the title Before the Mirror. Before the painting went on exhibition at the Royal Academy, Whistler pasted the poem written on gold leaf onto the frame.The idea of decorating a painting’s frame with a poem was one Whistler had gotten from Rossetti, who had similarly pasted a golden paper with one of his poems on the frame of his 1849 painting The Girlhood of Mary.[16] To Whistler, this poem underlined his idea of the autonomous nature of the painted medium. It showed that painters were more than mere illustrators, and that visual art could be an inspiration for poetry, not just the other way around.

 

 
 

(Verses Written under a Picture)

I

WHITE rose in red rose-garden

  Is not so white;
Snowdrops that plead for pardon
  And pine for fright
Because the hard East blows         5
Over their maiden rows
  Grow not as this face grows from pale to bright.
Behind the veil, forbidden,
  Shut up from sight,
Love, is there sorrow hidden,         10
  Is there delight?
Is joy thy dower or grief,
White rose of weary leaf,
  Late rose whose life is brief, whose loves are light?
Soft snows that hard winds harden         15
  Till each flake bite,
Fill all the flowerless garden
  Whose flowers took flight
Long since, when summer ceased,
And men rose up from feast,         20
  And warm west wind grew east, and warm day night.
II

‘Come snow, come wind or thunder

  High up in air,
I watch my face, and wonder
  At my bright hair;         25
Nought else exalts or grieves
The rose at heart, that heaves
  With love of her own leaves and lips that pair.
‘She knows not loves that kiss’d her
  She knows not where.         30
Art thou the ghost, my sister,
  White sister there,
Am I the ghost, who knows?
My hand, a fallen rose,
  Lies snow-white on white snows, and takes no care.         35
‘I cannot see what pleasures
  Or what pains were;
What pale new loves and treasures
  New years will bear;
What beam will fall, what shower,         40
What grief or joy for dower;
  But one thing knows the flower; the flower is fair.’
III

Glad, but not flush’d with gladness,

  Since joys go by;
Sad, but not bent with sadness,         45
  Since sorrows die;
Deep in the gleaming glass
She sees all past things pass,
  And all sweet life that was lie down and lie.
There glowing ghosts of flowers         50
  Draw down, draw nigh;
And wings of swift spent hours
  Take flight and fly;
She sees by formless gleams,
She hears across cold streams,         55
  Dead mouths of many dreams that sing and sigh.
Face fallen and white throat lifted,
  With sleepless eye
She sees old loves that drifted,
  She knew not why,         60
Old loves and faded fears
Float down a stream that hears
  The flowing of all men’s tears beneath the sky.

The Year Of The Rose

 

From the depths of the green garden-closes
Where the summer in darkness dozes
Till autumn pluck from his hand
An hour-glass that holds not a sand;
From the maze that a flower-belt encloses
To the stones and sea-grass on the strand
How red was the reign of the roses
Over the rose-crowned land!

The year of the rose is brief;
From the first blade blown to the sheaf,
From the thin green leaf to the gold,
It has time to be sweet and grow old,
To triumph and leave not a leaf
For witness in winter’s sight
How lovers once in the light
Would mix their breath with its breath,
And its spirit was quenched not of night,
As love is subdued not of death.

In the red-rose land not a mile
Of the meadows from stile to stile,
Of the valleys from stream to stream,
But the air was a long sweet dream
And the earth was a sweet wide smile
Red-mouthed of a goddess, returned
From the sea which had borne her and burned,
That with one swift smile of her mouth
Looked full on the north as it yearned,
And the north was more than the south.

For the north, when winter was long,
In his heart had made him a song,
And clothed it with wings of desire,
And shod it with shoon as of fire,
To carry the tale of his wrong
To the south-west wind by the sea,
That none might bear it but he
To the ear of the goddess unknown
Who waits till her time shall be
To take the world for a throne.

In the earth beneath, and above
In the heaven where her name is love,
She warms with light from her eyes
The seasons of life as they rise,
And her eyes are as eyes of a dove,
But the wings that lift her and bear
As an eagle’s, and all her hair
As fire by the wind’s breath curled,
And her passage is song through the air,
And her presence is spring through the world.

So turned she northward and came,
And the white-thorn land was aflame
With the fires that were shed from her feet,
That the north, by her love made sweet,
Should be called by a rose-red name;
And a murmur was heard as of doves,
And a music beginning of loves
In the light that the roses made,
Such light as the music loves,
The music of man with maid.

But the days drop one upon one,
And a chill soft wind is begun
In the heart of the rose-red maze
That weeps for the roseleaf days
And the reign of the rose undone
That ruled so long in the light,
And by spirit, and not by sight,
Through the darkness thrilled with its breath,
Still ruled in the viewless night,
As love might rule over death.

The time of lovers is brief;
From the fair first joy to the grief
That tells when love is grown old,
From the warm wild kiss to the cold,
From the red to the white-rose leaf,
They have but a season to seem
As rose-leaves lost on a stream
That part not and pass not apart
As a spirit from dream to dream,
As a sorrow from heart to heart.

From the bloom and the gloom that encloses
The death-bed of Love where he dozes
Till a relic be left not of sand
To the hour-glass that breaks in his hand;
From the change in the grey garden-closes
To the last stray grass of the strand,
A rain and ruin of roses
Over the red-rose land.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.