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  1. Poet Christina Rossetti was born in 1830, the youngest child in an extraordinarily gifted family. Her father, the Italian poet and political exile Gabriele Rossetti, immigrated to England in 1824 and established a career as a Dante scholar and teacher of Italian in London.

  2. 28 de may. de 2017 · Christina Rossetti: la poesia come ribellione intellettuale e strumento di emancipazione. La letteratura inglese del XIX secolo è ricca di autori eccezionali. Dai grandi romanzieri come Charles Dickens e Wilkie Collins, passando ai g poeti romantici, l’Ottocento ha visto anche l’affermazione di intellettuali femminili che grazie alla ...

  3. Christina Rossetti was born in 1830, the youngest of four children, and one of her brothers was the Pre-Raphaelite poet and artist, Dante Gabriel Rossetti. She was educated at home, shared her brother’s creative interests and contributed to their childhood family journals. Just before her eighteenth birthday she accepted a proposal of ...

  4. Christina Rossetti, a pivotal Victorian poet, is best known for ‘Goblin Market and Other Poems,’ published in 1862.Educated at home, she drew inspiration from John Keats and others, which fueled her diverse literary creations, from ballads to sonnets.

  5. Summary. ‘ Goblin Market ’ by Christina Rossetti describes the adventures of two sisters, Laura and Lizzie, and their encounter with goblin merchants. In the first lines of ‘Goblin Market,’ the poet describes the calls and cries of the goblin men as they try to attract customers to buy their fruits.

  6. 2 de ene. de 2017 · Christina Rossetti (1830-94) is primarily known for a handful of classic poems, but she wrote more than a handful of great ones. Below we’ve selected ten of Rossetti’s finest poems and written a short paragraph introducing each of them. 1. ‘ Remember ’. Remember me when I am gone away, Gone far away into the silent land;

  7. Curious Laura chose to linger. Wondering at each merchant man. One had a cat’s face, One whisk’d a tail, One tramp’d at a rat’s pace, One crawl’d like a snail, One like a wombat prowl’d obtuse and furry, One like a ratel tumbled hurry skurry. She heard a voice like voice of doves.

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