Silence is often seen as passive—a withdrawal from the world. But
as Christina Rossetti reveals through her poetry, silence can also be
active, chosen, and imbued with deep emotional and spiritual meaning.
Whether it symbolizes fortitude, yearning, or martyrdom, Rossetti’s
silences offer a window into the human heart. Here are a few of the
“types of silence” she invokes.
SILENCE IN THE
FACE OF SUFFERING
“A long stern
silence” in the face of a storm, while others “clung together…
and some wept.” The silence Rossetti evokes in Repining is
the silence of fortitude, of not speaking in the face of fear
and suffering; of enduring and hoping without requiring of others a
kind of sharing. Silence can be an act of strength—a refusal to
express emotion or reveal one’s inner life. Through silence, one
can hoard interiority. Silence can be a badge of pride, a signal of
the sufficiency of self.
Of course, the
sufferer can endure in silence for too long, turning fortitude into a
virtue taken to the point of weakness. After all, barring others’
insights is isolating. Take the case of the princess of “The
Prince’s Progress,” whose “heart sat silent through the noise /
And concourse of the street” through all the years as the prince
dallied. His deferral of their potential joy was suffered in silence
until it was “Too late for live, too late for joy, / Too late, too
late!” The silent heart “was starving all this while.” The
Prince’s Progress might lead us to view silence as folly.
Unprotesting endurance can backfire. Silence can be deadly. And yet
Rossetti also sees this silence as a signal of the princess’s
purity; her willingness to endure for the sake of love is read more
as a virtue than a vice.
SILENCE OF
YEARNING
As we saw in a previous post, Rossetti has a yen for the silences of loss
and longing. She explores both as an attribute of age in the
final sonnet of Monna Innominata. Once youth and beauty are
both gone, she asks, what remains for the agèd? Naught but
The longing of a heart pent up forlorn
A
silent heart whose silence loves and longs;
The
silence of a heart which sang its songs
While
youth and beauty made a summer morn,
Silence
of love that cannot sing again.
(14th
sonnet, Monna Innominata)
The singing is
now over, irrevocably cast in the past tense. Only the remembrances
of former times remain to the narrator. Loss and longing are
intertwined. This is not so much the enduring or long-suffering heart
of The Prince’s Progress as it is a heart silent through the
practices of inner stillness. With this silence, the poet suggests,
love can invoked, its memory stirring a kind of aching wistfulness
which can be treasured and tallied, counting up the successes of the
past. Simultaneously, however, this silence is the silencing of the
voice; the externalities of voiced love are no longer available to
the speaker. Of the outer and inner worlds, only the inner remains to
the speaker.
SILENCE AND SOUND
Sound and silence
can intermingle, as they do in natural settings. Rossetti’s
narrator goes on an emotive journey in An Old-World Thicket,
but not until the stillness of the woods does rage change to despair,
then self-pity, then weariness, then yearning, as the excesses of
emotion gradually fall away. Only then do the sounds of nature
penetrate the narrator’s attention:
Without, within me,
music seemed to be;
Something not
music, yet most musical,
Silence and
sound in heavenly harmony.
The silence of
nature is restorative, it brings sunsets and beauty, a return of
visual awareness of the splendors of the world. The silence of nature
is, in some ways, found inside its sounds; the eco-acoustical
landscape heals, where the human self-obsessions of the regular world
had merely “piled care upon my care.” Silence can be the answer
to what ails us; silence can be found, unironically, in the
witterings of nature. Eric Kagge would agree: “The silence around
us may contain a lot, but the most interesting kind of silence is the
one that lies within.”
Sound, even human
sound, can also create (temporary) silence. The men of Maiden-Song
are silenced by the music that they hear, as was the “herdsman
from the vale,” enchanted with the merry songs of Meggan, who drew
him in as she “piped a merry note,” and then “sang the heart
out of his breast.” So too the result of May’s singing, that
“labyrinth of throbs, / Pauses, cadence; / Clear-noted as a
dropping brook, / Soft-noted like the bees.” He was transformed;
“He hung breathless on her breath; / Speechless, who listened well;
/ Could not speak or think or wish / Till silence broke the spell.”
Not until the end of the song, HER silence, does HIS muted state
change. Her song controls his voice, pushing him (temporarily) into
voicelessness. And the third maiden, Margaret, used her singing as a
force for power:
So
Margaret sang her sisters home
In
their marriage mirth;
Sang
free birds out of the sky,
Beasts
along the earth,
Sang
up fishes of the deep—
All
breathing things that move –
Sang
from far and sang from near
To
her lovely love;
Sang
together friend and foe;
Sang
a golden-bearded king
Straightway
to her feet,
Sang
him silent where he knelt
In
eager anguish sweet.
(C.
Rossetti, Maiden-Song)
The challenge, of
course, is that the power of song is only powerful in the moment;
power reverts to the powerful once the song is ended: “But when the
clear voice died away, / When the longest echoes died, / He stood up
like a royal man / And claimed her for his bride.” Song may
ensorcell in its magical moment, making silent the powerful and
moving them into a profound space of awe, once the magic itself has
faded into silence, the world goes on with its habitual practices.
(Maiden-Song)
THE SILENCE OF
PURITY
Martyrs may be
silent in Rossetti’s world; in I Have Fought the Good Fight
she contrasts the roaring crowd’s “Crying out for vengeance,
crying out for blood” with the silence of the sainted; even when
confronted with betrayal and the horrors of the lion’s gaping maw,
the interlocutor has the silence of inner peace: He hears the
crowd’s shouting “in silence, and was not afraid / While for the
mad people silently I prayed.” His silence is virtue, an opposition
to the mob, and a signal of a divinely-inspired faith.
Silence, she
points out in “Then shall ye shout” (from Songs for
Strangers and Pilgrims), can also be anticipatory. As with
music, it is not always our turn; “Keep silence with a good hear /
While silence fits our part”; we must, she says “Keep silence,
counting time / To strike in at the chime.” Attention is not always
our to own; silence can be a gift to the communal realm.
DISCOMFORTING
SILENCES
Silence is not
always positive; it is part of envy and of shame. “…her words
reproved / A silent envy nursed within, / A selfish,
souring discontent, Pride-born, the devil’s sin.” (The
Lowest Room) It can also be the silence of overweening grief, a
refusal of comfort “…I would not look or speak / Would not cheer
up at all. / My tears were like to fall,” and, feigning sleep “no
one knew I wept.” The secret kept, no one can provide comfort to
those who wield silence like a shield. Not until the narrator yields
to sound, that “something in her voice” that reaches past the
silence into expressive sorrow, can comfort come (The Iniquity of
the Fathers Upon the Children). Silence also belongs to the
haughty (Sonnet From the Psalms); the refusal to ask for
“man’s help, nor kneel that he may bless” is a refusal of
community, a choice of isolation.
Silence is also
the language of despair; the narrator in Mirage who
hangs his “harp upon a tree… wrung and snapt,” all for the sake
of a dream-image. The broken heart is silent, and “Life, and the
world, and mine own self, are changed / For a dream’s sake.” A
misunderstanding can lead, in other words, to hopelessness. The
broken harp strings are shattered hopes; happiness was only ever
imagined. Silence can also be the language of rejection, as
with the maid of Under Willows. She merely “stood silent and
still,” though it was a sunny June day, and her suitor “passed by
and whistled a tune.” That silent rejection, however, will be
answered by a lonely death: “Though she live to be old, so old, /
She shall die at last.”
Similarly, in The
Dying Man to His Betrothed, the silence of the betrothed at her
fiancé’s deathbed is one of a presentiment of grief; her
silence goes with her weeping and her paleness as signals of her
overwrought state. And yet, while her silence is rejected by the
dying man -- “One word – tis all I ask of thee… Speak out, that
I may know thy will” – it is, at the end of the poem, he who
rejects her comforts in favor of religious transformation. Her
silence becomes the silence of memory; he sees mercy for himself
while leaving her the silence of her loss. Silence here is a
discomforting gift – both hers to him, as she tries to control
her emotions and not burden him, and his to her, as he leaves her
with the silence of an absent and erased future together.
In an age of
constant communication, Rossetti’s exploration of silence feels
indulgent, even nostalgic. Her poems remind modern readers that
silence, whether chosen or imposed, can be a powerful response to
suffering, love, and loss. And in such silences, we may find
strength—or risk of isolation—or find ourselves immersed in the
eco-acoustical quiet where contemplation best resides. Silences,
in other words, have contexts as well as meanings.
Poetic texts from
(and assessments based on) The Poetical Works of Christina
Georgina Rossetti, Macmillan and Co, 1904,
https://books.google.com/books?id=C_k_VgeqssMC