Sunday, August 18, 2019
Themes Presented in Goblin Market by Christina Rossetti Essay -- Gobli
Themes Presented in Goblin Market by Christina Rossetti    Christina Rossetti's used her poetry to express herself; her work  exhibits many autobiographical elements and from it the reader can  discern Rossetti's emotions, beliefs and her comments on the society  she lived in. As a female poet it would have been improper for  Rossetti to deal directly with these issues though and so her ideas  are masked through appearing to be children's poetry and having simple  meanings. 'Goblin Market' superficially appears to a moral story about  two sisters one of whom gives way to the temptation of the goblins  forbidden fruits but through her poetic techniques Rossetti manages to  embody her fears and desires.    One of the desires Rossetti appears to have in this poem is for a  relationship similar to that of Lizzie and Laura; the closing lines of  the poem express the joys of having a sister "To fetch one if one goes  astray", but Rossetti had only brothers. This theme of friendship is  crucial to the plot of the poem and maybe Rossetti yearns for someone  she can feel close to. Rossetti shows the difference between the love  Laura has for the goblins fruits and the love between the sisters  through the use of parallelism. While Laura "sucked" the goblins'  fruits "until her lips were sore" showing Laura's greed as she gives  way to temptation and gives a strongly physical image, Lizzie calling  "Hug me, kiss me, suck my juices / Squeezed from goblin fruits for  you" brings to mind Lizzie's self-sacrifice - the difference of  Laura's lust for the juices and Lizzie's love for her sister is  apparent. The image by Rossetti describing the sisters "Like two  pigeons in one nest" creates a strong impression of the closeness  between the two s...              ...n coming  before love in Rossetti's life.    'Goblin Market' contains many of the key themes that appear throughout  Rossetti's poetry. In typical Rossettian style it appears almost  superfluous on first reading but subtexts hidden within it. The casual  rhyming scheme suggests that the work is a aimed at being children's  poetry but the issues it deals with are distinctly adult. Early in the  poem Laura is described as "rearing her glossy head" and much later on  Lizzie is referred to as being stubborn as a "horse"; this  demonstrates that through repetition and subtle parallels Rossetti  manages to show how both sisters are so similar and yet so far apart.  Christina Rossetti's use of poetic devices allows 'Goblin Market' to  work on several levels allowing her to write poetry both acceptable to  the society she lived in while also allowing her to express herself.                        
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