Christina Rossetti was born in
London, one of four children of Italian parents. Her father
was the poet Gabriele Rossetti; her brother Dante Gabriel
Rossetti also became a poet and a painter. Rossetti's first
poems were written in 1842 and printed in the private press
of her grandfather. In 1850, under the pseudonym Ellen
Alleyne, she contributed seven poems to the Pre-Raphaelite
journal The Germ, which had been founded by her brother
William Michael and his friends.
Rossetti is best known for her ballads and her mystic
religious lyrics. Her poetry is marked by symbolism and
intense feeling. Rossetti's best-known work, Goblin Market
and Other Poems, was published in 1862. The collection
established Rossetti as a significant voice in Victorian
poetry. The Prince's Progress and Other Poems, appeared in
1866 followed by Sing-Song, a collection of verse for
children, in 1872 (with illustrations by Arthur Hughes).
By the 1880s, recurrent bouts of Graves' disease, a thyroid
disorder, made Rossetti an invalid, and ended her attempts
to work as a governess. While the illness restricted her
social life, she continued to write poems. Among her later
works are A Pageant and Other Poems (1881), and The Face of
the Deep (1892). Rossetti also wrote religious prose works,
such as Seek and Find (1879), Called To Be Saints (1881)
and The Face of the Deep (1892). In 1891, Rossetti
developed cancer, of which she died in London on December
29, 1894. Rossetti's brother, William Michael, edited her
collected works in 1904, but the Complete Poems were not
published before 1979.
Christina Rossetti is increasingly being reconsidered a
major Victorian poet. She has been compared to Emily
Dickinson but the similarity is more in the choice of
spiritual topics than in poetic approach, Rossetti's poetry
being one of intense feelings, her technique refined within
the forms established in her time.
(http://www.poets.org)
