Monday, March 21, 2016

The poetry of Julia Margaret Cameron and Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Julia Margaret Cameron

I wanted to share two poems one written by Julia Margaret Cameron and one by her husband Charles Hay Cameron along with two translations of 'Lenore' for this World Poetry Day.  

On a Portrait

Oh, mystery of Beauty! who can tell
Thy mighty influence? who can best descry
How secret, swift, and subtle is the spell
Wherein the music of thy voice doth lie?

Here we have eyes so full of fervent love,
That but for lids behind which sorrow’s touch
Doth press and linger, one could almost prove
That Earth had loved her favourite over much.

A mouth where silence seems to gather strength
From lips so gently closed, that almost say,
“Ask not my story, lest you hear at length
Of sorrows where sweet hope has lost its way.”

And yet the head is borne so proudly high,
The soft round cheek, so splendid in its bloom,
True courage rises thro’ the brilliant eye,
And great resolve comes flashing thro’ the gloom.

Oh, noble painter! more than genius goes
To search the key-note of those melodies,
To find the depths of all those tragic woes,
Tune thy song right and paint rare harmonies.

Genius and love have each fulfilled their part,
And both unite with force and equal grace,
Whilst all that we love best in classic art
Is stamped for ever on the immortal face.

                                Julia Margaret Cameron
September, 1875

(Julia’s poem was printed in the February 1876 edition of Macmillan Magazine)

Charles Hay Cameron by Julia Margaret Cameron

Her husband Charles Hay Cameron, wrote a goodbye poem to his Freshwater friends that was included in one of his surviving letters when he and his wife decided to leave for London:

The English Channel famed in war
The Solent sea and winding Yar
Have cut an islet, yet not quite
An islet from the Isle of Wight,
For ‘twixt the Channel famed in war
And silent sources of the Yar,
Dry land the twentieth of a mile
Unites it to the parent isle.
There dwell, I fronting Afton Down,
With little Yarmouth for my nearest town,
The little Yarmouth where the Yar
Though hindered by its gathering bar
After four miles of winding reach
At length divides the yellow beach,
And meets in Solent’s brine the rills
That southward flow from Hampshire’s hills.
 
Maclise's Illustrations of Leonora, one of two 1847 editions

 Daniel Maclise, R.A. by Maull & Polyblank
albumen carte-de-visite, mid 1860s
 
 In 1847, Julia Margaret Cameron published an illustrated book, ‘Leonora’ translated from German into English. It is based upon a German ballad or poem by Gottfried Burger in 1775. It was a favorite of hers. She asked her friend Daniel Maclise, painter at the time, to illustrate it and he complied. Partaking in the translation process was John Herschel a mathematician and astronomer as well as good friend of hers. He went through the translations with her along with the help of his two daughters who also spoke German.
 
 Introductory page of Leonora translated by Julia Margaret Cameron
illustrated by Daniel Maclise, R.A. 
London, 1847 edition


The story of ‘Leonora’ is a sad one. William, who is engaged to Leonore, has not returned from the Seven Years’ War yet. He had gone to battle in the army of King Frederick. She misses him terribly and longs for his return. She never receives any news or word from him. When the other men return from war without William, she gets very angry with God. This angers her mother saying it is blasphemous to say such things to God and have such feelings. She believes her daughter will be condemned to hell for it. Leonore’s mother tells her that William is probably still in Hungary and she should just forget him.  When a stranger (who looks very much like William) appears at the door late one night asking for Lenore, she gets on horseback with him and rides away to his home to marry him. They are riding so fast, she asks him why and he says, “the dead travel fast.” She replies, “leave the dead alone.” They arrive at the doors of a cemetery as the horse begins to walk through the tombstones. She watches the knight begin to lose his human appearance and she realizes he is the image of Death. He is a skeleton carrying a scythe and an hourglass. William’s skeleton lies next to his grave and shattered armour. The ground beneath Lenore’s feet start to give way while spirits dance around her, “no one is to quarrel with God in Heaven.” 



It seems that ‘Leonore’ was published three years prior in June of 1844 by a young man named Gabriel Charles Rossetti. Hm, could it be good ole’ Rossetti himself? Well, according to his younger brother, William Michael Rossetti it is the one and the same! 
 

Now known as Dante Gabriel Rossetti, he translated Burger’s ballad around June 1844. He wrote it at the age of sixteen in May of that year. He was studying German at the time with Dr. Adolf Heimann, of University College in London who later became a family friend. He never kept up the language nor was he satisfied with his poorly translated version of  ‘Lenore’.

A translator ought to be faithful, but is not bound down to being literal; he is compelled to make various mutual concessions between meaning and rhythm or rhyme; and in especial he must not turn a good poem into a bad one. (The Early Italian Poets by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1861)

A young Rossetti fell in love with Burger’s original ‘Lenore’ romanticizing the sad love story. Not wanting his version to be too overly religious or sad, he downplayed the sadness making it more romantic in tone. He changed the then Protestant religious aspects of the poem into Roman Catholic ones softening the hardened stanzas. He played up the picturesque words and turned his version of ‘Lenore’ into a romantic painting depicted with words.




    “My mother, what is happiness?
    My mother, what is Hell?
    With William is my happiness,—
    Without him is my Hell!
    Spark of my life! down, down to the tomb:
    Die away in the night, die away in the gloom!
    Earth and Heaven, and Heaven and earth,
    Reft of William are nothing worth.”

    Thus grief racked and tore the breast of Lenore,
    And was busy at her brain;
    Thus rose her cry to the Power on high,
    To question and arraign:
    Wringing her hands and beating her breast,—
    Tossing and rocking without any rest;—
    Till from her light veil the moon shone
    thro',
    And the stars leapt out on the dark-
    -ling blue.


  If you would like to read Julia Margaret Cameron's, Leonora  and see all of Daniel Maclise's beautiful illustrations 

If you would like to read Dante Gabriel Rossetti's Lenore it is on Rossetti Archive


3 comments:

Evie said...

That is just fabulous.Never knew that!! Well done sleuth :)

Kimberly Eve said...

Hi Evie,
I never knew that Rossetti also translated Leonore. He just appeared during my research process. It was as if he stood there hands on hips, "Here I am!" I couldn't exactly refuse him ;) Thanks so much for stopping by!

Anonymous said...

Hello, I'm doing a research about Julia Margaret Cameron for the subject history of photography and I just found your blog, is very interesting and helpful. Thank you very much for all the information and knowledge you share!

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