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After Death

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After Death (in Short Poetry Collection 146 )

The curtains were half drawn, the floor was swept
And strewn with rushes, rosemary and may
Lay thick upon the bed on which I lay,
Where through the lattice ivy-shadows crept.
He leaned above me, thinking that I slept
And could not hear him; but I heard him say,
‘Poor child, poor child’: and as he turned away
Came a deep silence, and I knew he wept.
He did not touch the shroud, or raise the fold
That hid my face, or take my hand in his,
Or ruffle the smooth pillows for my
He did not love me living; but once dead
He pitied me; and very sweet it is
To know he still is warm though I am cold.

1 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 1862

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About the author

Christina Rossetti

346 books567 followers
Christina Georgina Rossetti, sister of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, wrote lyrical religious works and ballads, such as "Up-hill" (1861).

Frances Polidori Rossetti bore this most important women poet writing in nineteenth-century England to Gabriele Rossetti. Despite her fundamentally religious temperament, closer to that of her mother, this youngest member of a remarkable family of poets, artists, and critics inherited many of her artistic tendencies from her father.

Dante made seemingly quite attractive if not beautiful but somewhat idealized sketches of Christina as a teenager. In 1848, James Collinson, one of the minor pre-Raphaelite brethren, engaged her but reverted to Roman Catholicism and afterward ended the engagement.

When failing health and eyesight forced the professor into retirement in 1853, Christina and her mother started a day school, attempting to support the family, but after a year or so, gave it away. Thereafter, a recurring illness, diagnosed as sometimes angina and sometimes tuberculosis, interrupted a very retiring life that she led. From the early 1860s, she in love with Charles Cayley, but according to her brother William, refused to marry him because "she enquired into his creed and found he was not a Christian." Milk-and-water Anglicanism was not to her taste. Lona Mosk Packer argues that her poems conceal a love for the painter William Bell Scott, but there is no other evidence for this theory, and the most respected scholar of the Pre-Raphaelite movement disputes the dates on which Packer thinks some of the more revealing poems were written.

All three Rossetti women, at first devout members of the evangelical branch of the Church of England, were drawn toward the Tractarians in the 1840s. They nevertheless retained their evangelical seriousness: Maria eventually became an Anglican nun, and Christina's religious scruples remind one of Dorothea Brooke in George Eliot's Middlemarch : as Eliot's heroine looked forward to giving up riding because she enjoyed it so much, so Christina gave up chess because she found she enjoyed winning; pasted paper strips over the antireligious parts of Swinburne's Atalanta in Calydon (which allowed her to enjoy the poem very much); objected to nudity in painting, especially if the artist was a woman; and refused even to go see Wagner's Parsifal, because it celebrated a pagan mythology.

After rejecting Cayley in 1866, according one biographer, Christina (like many Victorian spinsters) lived vicariously in the lives of other people. Although pretty much a stay-at-home, her circle included her brothers' friends, like Whistler, Swinburne, F.M. Brown, and Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll). She continued to write and in the 1870s to work for the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. She was troubled physically by neuralgia and emotionally by Dante's breakdown in 1872. The last 12 years of her life, after his death in 1882, were quiet ones. She died of cancer.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Tasneem Kmail.
15 reviews
February 1, 2023
3.5 ⭐

"He did not love me living; but once dead
He pitied me; and very sweet it is
To know he still is warm though I am cold."
Profile Image for ⋆.˚ Ariana ᡣ𐭩ྀིྀི.
640 reviews57 followers
May 21, 2025
He did not love me living; but once dead / He pitied me; and very sweet it is / To know he still is warm though I am cold.

Well, that wouldn’t be my reaction if the man I loved gave me cold shoulder when I was alive yet cried after I died. My petty ass would’ve haunted him instead. But oh well, not everyone wants revenge, now do they?
Profile Image for Andy Hickman.
7,433 reviews52 followers
September 16, 2024
After Death - Wow, POV from the corpse. ".. very sweet it is / To know he still is warm tho' I am cold." ****
Profile Image for John Yelverton.
4,449 reviews40 followers
December 25, 2024
This was a rather morbid poem about a rather disgruntled corpse continuing to notice the goings on around it, and expressing its dissatisfaction at what is occurring.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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