Two forms of darkness are there. One is Night ..
And one is Blindness.
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, Doubt
PROLOGUE
Wounds of the heart are often fatal,
but not necessarily so.
Henry Gray FRS, Gray’s Anatomy
Chapter 1
Why did you let your eyes so rest on me,
And hold your breath between?
In all the ages this can never be
As if it had not been.
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, A Moment
Chapter 2
Come let me talk with thee, allotted part
Of immortality – my own deep heart!
Maria Jane Jewsbury, To My Own Heart
Chapter 3
Eyes with the glow and hue of wine
Like yours, can daze a man outright
Emily Pfeiffer, A Rhyme for the Time
Chapter 4
Sleep on content, as sleeps the patient rose.
Walk boldly on the white untrodden snows,
The winter is the winter’s own release.
Helen Jackson, January
PART 1
The heart is the central organ of the entire system
and consists of a hollow muscle;
by its contraction the blood is pumped to all parts of the body
through a complicated series of tubes ..
Henry Gray FRS, Gray’s Anatomy
Chapter 5
‘Tis a strange mystery, the power of words!
Life is in them, and death. A word can send
The crimson colour hurrying to the cheek,
Hurrying with many meanings, or can turn
The current cold and deadly to the heart.
Letitia Elizabeth Landon, The Power of Words
Chapter 6
Thou shalt have fame! – Oh, mockery! give the reed
From storms a shelter – give the drooping vine
Something round which its tendrils may entwine
Give the parch’d flower a rain-drop, and the meed
Of love’s kind words to woman! Worthless fame!
Felicia Hemans, Properzia Rossi
Chapter 7
Still she flees, and ever fiercer tear the hungry hounds behind.
Still she flees, and ever faster follow there the huntsmen on …
Amy Levy, Run to Death
Chapter 8
She was a careless, fearless girl ..
Kindhearted in the main,
But somewhat heedless with her tongue,
And apt at causing pain.
Christina Rossetti, Jessie Cameron
Chapter 9
The pale queen’s honour!
A low laugh scathing and sereing
A mumbling as made by the dead in the tombs .
Jean Ingelow, The Sleep of Sigismund
Chapter 10
The ground is hollow in the path of mirth …
Felicia Hemans, The Festal Hour
Chapter 11
But should the play
Prove piercing earnest,
Should the glee glaze
In death’s stiff stare,
Would not the fun
Look too expensive?
Would not the jest
Have crawled too far?
Emily Dickinson, LV
Chapter 12
I, who should have known,
Forereckoned mischief!
Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Aurora Leigh
Chapter 13
But when thy friends are in distress,
Thou’lt laugh and chuckle ne’er the less ..
Joanna Baillie, A Mother to her Waking Infant
Chapter 14
Low lies she in her grave!
Speak not to me of pleasure,
For her I could not save.
Christina Rossetti, Despair
PART 2
The arteries undergo enormous ramification in their course
throughout the body,
and end in very minute vessels, called arterioles, which in
their turn open
into a close-meshed network of microscopic vessels, termed
capillaries.
Henry Gray FRS, Gray’s Anatomy
Chapter 15
Who spoke of evil, when young feet were flying
In fairy rings around the echoing hall?
Felicia Hemans, Pauline
Chapter 16
We must arise and go:
The world is cold without
And dark and hedged about
With mystery and enmity and doubt,
But we must go …
Charlotte Mew, The Call
Chapter 17
Is this a stupid thing to say
Not having spent with you one day?
No matter; I shall never touch your hair
Or hear the little tick behind your breast ..
Charlotte Mew, On the Road to the Sea
Chapter 18
Well of blackness, all defiling,
Full of flattery and reviling,
Ah, what mischief hast thou wrought
Out of what was airy thought,
What beginnings and what ends,
Making and dividing friends!
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, The Contents of an Ink Bottle
Chapter 19
Yes; I was tired, but not at heart;
No-that beats full of sweet content,
For now I have my natural part
Of action with adventure blent;
Cast forth on the wide world with thee,
And all my once waste energy
To weighty purpose bent.
Charlotte Brontë, The Wood
Chapter 20
I have forged me in sevenfold heats
A shield from foes and lovers,
And no one knows the heart that beats
Beneath the shield that covers.
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, The Shield
Chapter 21
From sleepless beds unquiet spirits rise,
And cunning wags put on their borrow’d guise
And harmless plotters slyly take the road
Joanna Baillie, An Address to the Night – A Joyful Mind
Chapter 22
… a stunted child,
Her sunk eyes sharpened with precocious care .
Christina Rossetti, Behold, I Stand At the Door and Knock
Chapter 23
And there is neither false nor true;
But in a hideous masquerade
All things dance on …
Amy Levy, Magdalene
Chapter 24
A silent envy nursed within,
A selfish, souring discontent
Pride-born, the devil’s sin.
Christina Rossetti, The Lowest Room
Chapter 25
in truth now have you seen
Ever anywhere such beauty, such a stature, such a mien?
She may be queen of devils but she’s every inch a queen.
Christina Rossetti, Look On This Picture and On This
Chapter 26
And I walked as if apart
From myself, when I could stand,
And I pitied my own heart,
As if I held it in my hand …
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Bertha in the Lane
Chapter 27
He looks for war, his heart is ready,
His thoughts are bitter, he will not bow.
Jean Ingelow, At One Again
Chapter 28
Away, away with loving then,
With hoping and believing;
For what should follow,
But grieving, grieving?
Anne Evans, Outcry
Chapter 29
I have been a witch’s prey,
Art mine enemy now by day,
Thou fell Fear? There comes an end
To the day; thou canst not wend
After me where I shall fare …
Jean Ingelow, At One Again
Chapter 30
But if I can cheat my heart with the old comfort,
that love can be forgotten,
is it not better?
Adah Isaacs Menken, Myself
Chapter 31
The rat is the concisest tenant.
He pays no rent,
Repudiates the obligation,
On schemes intent.
Emily Dickinson, The Rat
Chapter 32
And all our observations ran
On Art and Letters,
Life and Man. Proudly we sat, we two, on high,
Throned in our Objectivity;
Scarce friends, not lovers (each avers),
But sexless, safe Philosophers.
Amy Levy, Philosophy
Chapter 33
By slow degrees it broke on her slow sense ..
That she too in that Eden of delight
Was out of place, and, like the silly kid,
Still did most mischief where she meant most love.
A thought enough to make a woman mad.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Aurora Leigh
Chapter 34
Death sets a thing significant
The eye had hurried by …
Joanna Baillie, London
Chapter 35
By that gate I entered lone
A fair city of white stone
Yet I heard no human sound;
All was still and silent round
As a city of the dead.
Christina Rossetti, The Dead City
Chapter 36
And on his shield a bleeding heart he bore…
Mary Tighe, Psyche
Chapter 37
…the work was done; the new-made king
Had risen, and set his feet upon his realm,
And it acknowledged him.
Jean Ingelow, A Story of Doom
PART 3
If the epicardium and the subjacent fat are removed from a
heart
which has been subjected to prolonged boiling ..
the superficial fibres of the ventridles will be exposed.
Henry Gray FRS
Gray’s Anatomy
Chapter 38
I’ve scanned you with a scrutinizing gaze,
Resolved to fathom these your secret ways:
But, sift them as I will,
Your ways are secret still.
Christina Rossetti, The Queen of Hearts
Chapter 39
I’ll have no traffic with the personal thought
In art’s pure temple.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
Aurora Leigh
Chapter 40
But I, who am seventeen next year,
Some nights, in bed, have grown cold to hear
That lonely passion of the rain
Which makes you think of being dead,
And of somewhere living to lay your head
As if you were a child again,
Crying for one thing, known and near
Your empty heart, to still the hunger and the fear
That pelts and beats with it against the pane.
Charlotte Mew, The Fête
Chapter 41
But there comes an idealess lad,
With a strut, and a stare, and a smirk …
Constance Naden, Natural Selection
Chapter 42
Well, he had some right
On his side probably; men always have,
Who go absurdly wrong.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Aurora Leigh
Chapter 43
Then cease by stern reproof to load
Fresh sorrows on the opprest;
Strew not with thorns his rugged road
Who fainting pants for rest.
Mary Tighe, To _____
Chapter 44
… weary mummers, taking off the mask,
discern that face themselves forgot anon
and, sitting in the lap of sheltering night,
learn their own secrets from her …
Augusta Webster, Medea in Athens
Chapter 45
To do good seemed so much his business,
That, having done it, she was fain to think,
Must fill up his capacity for joy.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Aurora Leigh
Chapter 46
I dreamed, and saw a modern Hell, more dread
Than Dante’s pageant; not with gloom and glare,
But all new forms of madness and despair
Filled it with complex tortures, some Earth-bred
From thine own Earth and from its happiest lot
Thy lust for pain may draw full nourishment.
Constance Naden, The Pessimist’s Vision
Chapter 47
… these blotched souls are eager to infect,
And blow their bad breath in a sister’s face
As if they got some ease by it.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Aurora Leigh
Chapter 48
Sometimes, as young things will, she vexes me,
Wayward, or too unheeding, or too blind.
Like aimless birds that, flying on a wind,
Strike slant against their own familiar tree .
Augusta Webster
Mother and Daughter
Chapter 49
And in her lurid eyes there shone
The dying flame of life’s desire,
Made mad because its hope was gone,
And kindled at the leaping fire
Of jealousy, and fierce revenge,
And strength that could not change nor tire.
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge
The Other Side of a Mirror
Chapter 50
Love, Love, that art more strong than Hate,
More lasting and more full of art;
O blessèd Love, return, return,
Brighten the flame that needs must burn.
Christina Rossetti
What Sappho Would Have Said Had
Her Leap Cured Instead of Killing Her
Chapter 51
A wondrous thing
to be so separate having been so near
near by hate last and once by so strong love.
Augustus Webster
Medea in Athens
Chapter 52
I deck myself with silks and jewelry,
I plume myself like any mated dove;
They praise my rustling show, and never see
My heart is breaking for a little love ..
Christina Rossetti
L.E.L
Chapter 53
Sweet is the swamp with its secrets,
Until we meet a snake …
Emily Dickinson
XIX: A Snake
Chapter 54
… masks in flocks and shoals;
Flesh-and-bloodless hazy masks surround there,
Ever wavering orbs and poles…
Christina Rossetti
A Castle Builder’s World
Chapter 55
.. no, dull heart, you were too small,
Thinking to hide the ugly doubt behind that hurried
puzzled little smile:
Only the shade, was it, you saw? but still the shade of
something vile ..
Charlotte Mew
Ne Me Tangito
Chapter 56
Sense failed in the mortal strife:
Like the watch-tower of a town
Which an earthquake shatters down,
Like a lightning-stricken mast…
Christina Rossetti, Goblin Market
Chapter 57
Slouch back to your haunts of crime.
Ye do not know me, neither do ye see me.
Adah Isaacs Menken
Judith
PART 4
Fibres of the Ventridles.
These are arranged in an exceedingly complex manner,
and the accounts given by various anatomists differ
considerably.
Henry Gray FRS
Gray’s Anatomy
Chapter 58
O shame!
To utter the thought into flame
Which burns at your heart.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
A Curse for a Nation
Chapter 59
Presentiment is that long shadow on the lawn
Indicative that suns go down;
The notice to the startled grass
That darkness is about to pass.
Emily Dickinson
XVI
Chapter 60
Oh, give me the friend from whose warm faithful breast
The sigh breathes responsive to mine .
Mary Tighe
A Faithful Friend Is the Medicine of Life
Chapter 61
Thus drive thou hence the phantoms; cleanse my soul!
Thou sweet enchantress, with the magic spells!
Mathilde Blind
To Hope
Chapter 62
He left her, but she followed him-
She thought he could not bear,
When she had left her home for him,
To look on her despair.
Letitia Elizabeth Landon
She Sat Alone Beside Her Hearth
Chapter 63
Behold the agony
In that most hidden chamber of the heart,
Where darkly sits remorse ..
Felicia Hemans
Arabella Stuart
Chapter 64
.. he was glad to have an ear
That he could grumble to, and half in jest
Rail at entails, deplore the fate of heirs,
And the misfortune of a good estate ..
Jean Ingelow
Brothers, and a Sermon
Chapter 65
Weeds triumphant ranged,
Strangers strolled and spelled
At the lone orthography
Of the elder dead.
Emily Dickinson, XLI: The Forgotten Grave
Chapter 66
One of the children hanging about Pointed at the whole dreadful heap and smiled… There is something terrible about a child. Charlotte Mew In Nunhead Cemetery
Chapter 67
Now he sets me down as vexed. I think I’ve draped myself in woman’s pride To a perfect purpose. Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Aurora Leigh
Chapter 68
The jealous doubt, the burning pain,
That rack the lover’s heart and brain;
The fear that will not own it fear,
The hope that cannot disappear.
Letitia Elizabeth Landon
The Troubadour, Canto 2
Chapter 69
She served him meekly, anxiously,
With love–half faith-
-half fear.
Letitia Elizabeth Landon
She Sat Alone Beside Her Hearth
Chapter 70
While I was fearing it, it came…
Emily Dickinson, XCVIII
Chapter 71
These monsters, set out in the open sun,
Of course throw monstrous shadows: those who think
Awry, will scarce act straightly.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Aurora Leigh
Chapter 72
You face, today … mark me, not
A woman who wants protection. As to a man,
Show manhood, speak out plainly, be precise
With facts and dates.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Aurora Leigh
Chapter 73
My rival his mischief devises
What matter? his treachery’s void.
I scorn him: I know whose the prize is.
May Kendall
The Last Performance
Chapter 74
Yet-sayst thou, spies around us roam ..
That there is risk our mutual blood
May redden in some lonely wood
The knife of treachery?
Charlotte Brontë, The Wood
Chapter 75
It gave your curses strength, it warmed
Your bones the coldest night,
To feel you were not all alone
Again the world to fight.
Emily Pfeiffer
The Witch’s Last Ride
Chapter 76
What inn is this
Where for the night
Peculiar traveller comes?
Emily Dickinson, XXXIV
Chapter 77
You weep:
‘I had such lofty aims.
My soul had yearnings truly great.
Than broken altars, dying flames,
I had deserved a better fate …’
May Kendall, Failures
Chapter 78
Why should I praise thee, blissful Aphrodite?
Thou dost not guide,
Rather with conflict dire my mind divide .
Katherine Bradley and Edith Cooper
Chapter 79
Love never comes but at love’s call.
And pity asks for him in vain;
Because I cannot give you all,
You give me nothing back again.
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge
An Insincere Wish Addressed to a Beggar
Chapter 80
I know not what can ease my pains,
Nor what it is I wish;
The passion at my heart-strings strains
Like a tiger in a leash.
Amy Levy, Oh, Is It Love?
Chapter 81
…golden gates between us stretch.
Truth opens her forbidding eyes …
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge
An Insincere Wish Addressed to a Beggar
Chapter 82
Girls blush sometimes because they are alive,
Half wishing they were dead to save the shame .
They have drawn too near the fire of life, like gnats,
And flare up bodily, wings and all.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Aurora Leigh
Chapter 83
They are all of them so faithless, Their torment is your gain; Would you keep your own heart scathless, Be the one to give the pain. Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Cottage Courtship
Chapter 84
What was my sin, to merit this? Christina Rossetti, Zara
PART 5
At the apex the fibres turn suddenly inwards, into the interior of the ventricle, forming what is called the vortex. Henry Gray FRS Gray’s Anatomy
Chapter 85
I thought my spirit and my heart were tamed To deadness; dead the pangs that agonise. Amy Levy, The Old House
Chapter 86
Oh weary impatient patience of my lot!—Thus with myself: how fares it, Friends, with you? Christina Rossetti, Later Life: A Double Sonnet of Sonnets
Chapter 87
Great loves, to the last, have pulses red;
All great loves that have ever died dropped dead.
Helen Hunt Jackson
Dropped Dead
Chapter 88
Behold, how quickly melted from your sight
The promised objects you esteemed so bright ..
Mary Tighe
Sonnet
Chapter 89
The mighty are brought low by many a thing
Too small to name …
Helen Murphy Hunt
Danger
Chapter 90
We lack, yet cannot fix upon the lack:
Not this, nor that; yet somewhat, certainly.
We see the things we do not yearn to see
Around us: and what see we glancing back?
Christina Rossetti
Later Life: A Double Sonnet of Sonnets
Chapter 91
Her hair stood back on either side
A face bereft of loveliness.
It had no envy now to hide
What once no man on earth could guess.
It formed the thorny aureole
Of hard unsanctified distress.
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge
The Other Side of a Mirror
Chapter 92
To-night again the moon’s white mat
Stretches across the dormitory floor
While outside, like an evil cat
The pion prowls down the dark corridor,
Planning, I know, to pounce on me, in spite
For getting leave to sleep in town last night.
Charlotte Mew
The Fête
Chapter 93
My clothes are wet, and my teeth are set, And the way was hard and long… Oh, lift me over the threshold, and let me in at the door! Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, The Witch
Chapter 94
And that was when I thrust you down, And stabbed you twice and twice again, Because you dared take off your crown, And be a man like other men. Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, Mortal Combat
Chapter 95
But this place is grey, And much too quiet. No one here, Why, this is awful, this is fear! Nothing to see, no face. Nothing to hear except your heart beating in space As if the world was ended. Charlotte Mew, Madeleine in Church
Chapter 96
Work man, work woman, since there’s work to do In this beleaguered earth, for head and heart… Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Aurora Leigh
Chapter 97
Was she a wicked girl? What then? She didn’t care a pin! She was not worse than all those men Who looked so shocked in public, when They made and shared her sin. Mathilde Blind, The Message
Chapter 98
Leering at each other, Brother with queer brother; Signalling each other, Brother with sly brother. Christina Rossetti, Goblin Market
Chapter 99
We never know how high we are Till we are called to rise… Emily Dickinson, Aspiration
Chapter 100
But a wild courage sits triumphant there,
The stormy grandeur of a proud despair;
A daring spirit, in its woes elate,
Mightier than death, untameable by fate.
Felicia Hemans,
The Wife of Asdrubal
Chapter 101
My men and women of disordered lives ..
Broke up those waxen masks I made them wear,
With fierce contortions of the natural face-
And cursed me for my tyrannous constraint . .
Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
Aurora Leigh
Chapter 102
. and since you’re proved so vile,
Ay, vile, I say we’ll show it presently ..
you tricked poor Marian Erle,
And set her own love digging its own grave
Within her green hope’s pretty garden-ground..
Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
Aurora Leigh
Chapter 103
Much is finished known or unknown: Lives are finished; time diminished; Was the fallow field left unsown? Will these buds be always unblown? Christina Rossetti, Amen
Chapter 104
Death’s black dust, being blown,
Infiltrated through every secret fold
Of this sealed letter by a puff of fate,
Dried up for ever the fresh-written ink .
Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
Aurora Leigh
Chapter 105
When mysteries shall be revealed; All secrets be unsealed; When things of night, when things of shame, Shall find at last a name… Christina Rossetti, Sooner or Later: Yet at Last
Chapter 106
Bid me defend thee!
Thy danger over-human strength shall lend me,
A hand of iron and a heart of steel,
To strike, to wound, to slay, and not to feel.
Mary Elizabeth Coleridge,
Affection
CODA
The heart continues increasing in weight,
and also in length, breadth and thickness,
up to an advanced period of life:
this increase is more marked in men than in women.
Henry Gray FRS
Gray’s Anatomy
Chapter 107
Oh foolishest fond folly of a heart
Divided, neither here nor there at rest!
That hankers after Heaven, but dings to earth
That neither here nor there knows thorough mirth,
Half-choosing, wholly missing, the good part:
Oh fool among the foolish, in thy quest.
Christina Rossetti
Later Life: A Double Sonnet of Sonnets