Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Literature / GoblinMarket

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/first_edition_illustration.jpg]]
2 [[caption-width-right:350: ''"We must not look at goblin men, we must not buy their fruits. Who knows upon what soil they fed, their hungry thirsty roots?"'']]
3
4->''"MORNING and evening\
5Maids heard the goblins cry:\
6'Come buy our orchard fruits,\
7Come buy, come buy:..'"''
8-->-- '''Christina Rossetti''', ''Goblin Market''
9
10''Goblin Market'' is a NarrativePoem by British Victorian poet Creator/ChristinaRossetti, originally published in 1862. Simply put, it tells the story of a girl who eats some forbidden fruit (sold by "goblin men") and suffers as a result, until her sister comes to her aid. It can be read "straight" as a poetic fairy tale or fantasy narrative (as expressed by William Michael Rossetti, her brother), but it can also be read as an allegory. Allegorical interpretations vary widely, ranging from the power of sisterhood, temptation and redemption, or even feminine sexuality. The poem makes heavy use of alliteration, musical rhyme, and mouth-watering detail. It's the sort of poem that benefits from being read aloud.
11
12The poem debuted in Rossetti's first volume of poems ''Goblin Market and Other Poems''. Creator/DanteGabrielRossetti, her brother and founder of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, provided illustrations for the poem.
13
14''Goblin Market'' was adapted into a musical by Polly Pen and Peggy Harmon. Some of the songs can be found on Youtube.
15
16You can read [[http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/crossetti/gobmarket.html the poem here]]; this page includes D.G. Rossetti's illustrations.
17----
18!! This poem provides examples of:
19* AddedAlliterativeAppeal: Alliteration appears in some parts of the poem, like "They stood stock still upon the moss"
20* AlliterativeList: "Chuckling, clapping, crowing".
21* AnAesop: The poem ends with a clear Aesop about sisterhood, but there might be other morals present.
22* BabiesEverAfter: We don't know anything about the fathers (marriage isn't the most important relationship here) but the babies are there and it's a happy thing.
23* BazaarOfTheBizarre: The all-encompassing danger is an enchanted fruit-stall run nightly by animal-featured goblins.
24* ComingOfAgeStory: One interpretation of the poem is that it is about the transition from childhood to adulthood.
25* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: If it does, you're not alone. It's pretty common to read the fruit as some kind of sexual metaphor.
26* EarnYourHappyEnding: The goblin merchants try to force Lizzie to eat their fruit, but she does not consume any of it. She returns, drenched in juice and pulp, to her sister, who eats the pulp and juice. It tastes horrible, but she ultimately recovers.
27* FeministFantasy: Another interpretation, or rather, a feminist religious allegory, about a female savior who redeems the fallen.
28* FoodChains: Don't eat the fruit, okay?
29* FoodPorn: In one of the earlier modern examples of this trope, Rosetti goes into great detail about the fruit, including its various qualities and colours.
30* ForbiddenFruit: Literally and allegorically, because Laura's consumption of the fruit can be seen as a retelling of the Christian narrative of the fall.
31* HeroicSacrifice: "For your sake I have braved the glen / And had to do with goblin merchant men."
32* ImpossiblyDeliciousFood: The goblins' fruit is ''wicked'' good. So good, in fact, that anyone who eats it loses the appetite for anything else and quickly begins wasting away. Curiously enough, the only cure for this affliction is fruit juice from the same source.
33* IncorruptiblePurePureness: Lizzie's strategy for saving Laura ends up ''depending'' on her ability to resist temptation.
34* {{Mesodiplosis}}:
35** The fifth and sixth lines start the product listing for the titular market, with "and" being the middle of those lines, probably to lengthen the lines beyond the unusually short 2 word lines for a poem.
36--->Apples and quinces,\
37Lemons and oranges,\
38Plump unpeck'd cherries,\
39Melons and raspberries,
40** Noting how some sold fruits are good to the senses, with "and" as a divider, even as phrases are not separated by a comma.
41--->Sweet to tongue and sound to eye;
42* OurGoblinsAreDifferent: They're little beast-men who tempt maidens at twilight.
43* RapidAging: Seemingly what happens to Jeanie and [[spoiler:Laura]], with loss of vitality and graying hair.
44* SnowMeansDeath: Jeanie died in winter, during the first snowfall.

Top