Goblin Market & Other Poems


So, as I had hoped, I did go back to Browseabout Books and pick up a copy of  Goblin Market and Other Poems.

And yes, the title poem is about goblins. And sex. Kinky sex, too.

And there’s some kind of Victorian moral in there, but it gets subverted.

There is the ‘good’ sister Lizzie (shades of the smart, tough minded Elizabeth ‘Lizzie’ Bennett?) and the ‘bad’ sister Laura (the sister/sister dichotomy, usually turned on its head a bit, appears in some other poems, notable Cousin Kate [yes, it’s technically cousins, but don’t quibble about these little things with me]).

The goblins are heard hawking delicious fruits in the forest, a sound heard from, as it were, just around the corner. It is already assumed that this is one of those temptations one should avoid.

Lizzie clutches Laura, encouraging her to hide from the goblins with ‘With clasping arms and cautioning lips,/With tingling cheeks and fingertips.’ This should give you a hint that everything in this poem will sound (at least to my ears) sexually charged.

The goblins are ugly, of course, but the way they are depicted… well, to use a reference folks from my generation will understand, I would say that the goblins of the movie Labyrinth are based on this. There is no David Bowie with his tall, lean form and aggressive/ambiguous sexuality, but that combination of terror and desire is definitely there.

What’s more, Lizzie tells her sister not to ‘peep’ and ‘goblin men.‘ The emphasis is mine. They are men – not creatures or monsters, but men. Men implies many things, but combined with the word ‘peep’ (peeping through keyholes into the bathroom), you can see these are not just mischievous imps, but grown things, with something (adult genitalia?) to peep at.

Laura succumbs to temptation. What happens next? Laura ‘sucked their fruit globes,’ drank honey ‘stronger than man-rejoicing wine’ and ‘sucked until her lips were sore.’ Is this even being disguised? Tell me this isn’t a young woman discovering the joys of heterosexual sex (and possibly rejecting lesbian sexuality in rejecting the cautions of her sister’s lips). And she pays not with money (she doesn’t have any), but with a lock of her hair and a single tear. In other words, this is not a monetary transaction, but a bodily one.

So, the ‘bad’ sister eats the fruit and then proceeds to wither away, mainly because she cannot hear the goblins anymore, they no longer appear to her (she is damaged goods, having given up her fruit chastity, so the goblin men are no longer interested).

Lizzie finally goes to find the goblins, who still want to sell her their fruit because she is untainted. But she wants to pay with money, rather than with part of herself, and also wants to give the fruit to her sister, not eat it herself right then and there.

The goblins react by ‘Tearing her gown and soiling her stocking.’ They ‘clutched her hair,’ and tried to ‘cram’ their fruit between her lips, but she stood firm ‘Like a royal virgin town.’ Good lord, it’s a barely disguised attempted rape. This is actually treading on territory mined by the Marquis de Sade in his novels Justine and Juliette.

The juice from the goblin’s fruit is now smeared on her lips and face, though she hasn’t swallowed any, so she goes home to Laura and cries:

Hug me, kiss me, suck my juices
Squeezed from goblin fruits for you,
Goblin pulp and goblin dew.
Eat me, drink me, love me;

While Laura kisses her ‘with hungry mouth,’ these fruits of men are no longer tasteful, but burn her mouth and taste vile. But, it also enables her to recover from her malaise and they two of them go on to marry (men, of course) and have kids.

But what are we to make of this?

There’s a moral, certainly, about not succumbing to temptation, but after that, it gets very confusing. Maybe it’s a religious thing, like those Christian women poets of the baroque who made solitary (non-eucharistic) communion with Christ sound like an erotic experience.

In which case, Lizzie is a martyr redeeming Laura after having submitted to torture by the pagan goblins.

Now I’m just waiting for a real Rossetti scholar to tell me how I’m wrong (which I’m sure I am – I haven’t done much textual analysis in a long time).

Tuesday Morning Staff Meeting – Murder The Rainbow


Romantic scientists.

Define ‘good walk.’

Injured writing.

It’s never a simple answer.

Monday Morning Staff Meeting – Back To Work


I’ve beenn on vacation, in case you hadn’t noticed…

I’ve suffered from some of these.

Suggested surrealisms.

Tips for reading your poetry.

Weekend Reading – There Are An Infinite Number Of Turtles


Turtles all the way down.

Will the real nights please stand up?

Camus’ desert.

Can coffeeshops overthrow governments? Maybe.

Thursday Staff Meeting – Reduced Sentences


Redemption through reading.

You’d have to be crazy to collect modern art.

The meaning of a minotaur.

But doesn’t Henry Rollins have a point?

A philosophical boxing match.

Gore Vidal


I confess that I never read much Gore Vidal, but when he signed my copy of his Judgement of Paris (a novel about a handsome young man/cipher) at the West Hollywood Book Festival and he was exceedingly polite and friendly.

What Is Arsene Wenger Doing?


So. I like the statement of intent, wrapping up deals for the powerful, physical striker Olivier Giroud; for the talented and tricky striker cum winger Lukas Podolski; and, it seems, for the crafty, tactical winger/attacking midfielder Santi Cazorla.

Those are all signs of intent from Arsenal to become a real force in the Premier League and a real threat to win cups and titles. But…

Anyone else notice that their biggest problem last season was at fullback?

And while Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has been busy stocking his team with more tricky attackers, Newcastle locked down a deal for French right back Mathieu Debuchy, Barcelona signed left back Jordi Alba, and Manchester United has the inside line on Everton’s Leighton Baines, who can patrol the entire left flank like a young Roberto Carlos.

Arsenal had better do something or they really will miss that Champion’s League spot this coming season.

Midweek Staff Meeting – Heroes


Who’s your hero?

Confronting the bulldozer.

An ambassador of poetry.

He’s right. It is the best book ever written about political campaigns.

Tuesday Morning Staff Meeting – Who Are You Concerned About?


The Village Voice Bookshop is gone.

Concerned about James Schulyer.

Too many poets miss the point, Adrienne Rich seemed to be saying.

Poets is at war with itself! No, actually, it’s just another piece on the validity of MFA programs by Seth Abramson one of the MFA’s big supporters.

And this article explains what Abramson is saying far better than Abramson did. Unless he misunderstands Abramson, in which he case he is explaining it very, very badly.

Pre-Raphaelite Poetry


It all started when Diane Rehm was talking about the novel Possession on her radio show, which I was listening to on my way to visit my sister in Delaware. I had begun but not finished the novel, but I knew that the two Victorian poets in the novel were based on Robert Browning and Christina Rossetti.

That evening, we went down to Rehoboth Beach and stopped in Browseabout Books. That particular bookshop is actually 75% useless beach knick knacks, but their poetry section, while small, had a nice, wide array of those cheap Dover Thrift editions.

I weighed in my hand Pre-Raphaelity Poetry: An Anthology (Rossetti was a Pre-Raphaelite poet and featured in the anthology) and Goblin Market and Other Poems (which is either an expression of female erotic desire in a society unwilling to accept such, or else it’s about goblins) by Christina Rossetti. I went for the former, a decision which I initially regretted, the latter being fifty cents cheaper and also being exclusively about the poet I was inspired to read. However, as I dug in, I changed my tune slightly.

Normally, I am not much for rhyming poetry, but most of the Pre-Raphaelites were interesting and even avant-garde in their rhyme schemes (though not in the head ache inducing way of Gerard Manley Hopkins). I read straight through all of Christian (though not Dante) Rossetti’s poetry and – and this is what made the book worthwhile – Swinburne.

I had downloaded some Swinburne onto my nook, but poetry is frankly awful to read on an e-reader. The devices simply aren’t made to deal with line breaks.

Being finally able to read some in its proper format was very enjoyable.

The lush, ethereal eroticism of the two writers was something spectacular and I firmly believe that, instead of whatever they’re given, young girls between the ages of thirteen and eighteen should be slipped copies of Rossetti and told not to let their parents or teachers know it or else they’ll get in trouble. Because, and I don’t mean this in a demeaning way (obviously, I also enjoyed it), but it’s the sort of poetry that girls of a certain would (I think) appreciate.

But next time I see my sister, I still think I’ll get Goblin Market and Other Poems.

Incidentally, I picked up Possession when I got home and discovered that it had been too long since I read it, so I’ve started over from the beginning.