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Sisterhood In Rossetti’s Poetry

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1 Sisterhood In Rossetti’s Poetry

2 Life for Women in Highgate penitentiary
Belief in the power and viability of the sister community is common in the literature surrounding the Church Penitentiary Movement. Thomas Thellusson Carter, founder and first warden of the Penitentiary at Clewer, believed that penitents ought to meet with as little temptation from the outside world--and their old ways of life--as possible; as a result, the Penitentiary system often took on an almost xenophobic and prison-like attitude, restricting the inmates' movements to within the Penitentiary walls. Such protectiveness and isolation are characteristic of the Church Penitentiary Movement.

3 Highgate Penitentiary

4 In her 1865 diatribe against the Penitentiary system, Penitentiaries and Reformatories, Felicia Skene describes how "[o]ne of the cruellest parts of the system is their rigorous confinement to the house, and total want of exercise in the open air ... it is a fact that not one breath of fresh air is allowed to these poor prisoners through the day; not one half hour is granted them in which to look on the blue sky and the sunshine, and to meet the cool breeze with its invigorating power."

5 But it was not only confinement with which the inmates had to contend
But it was not only confinement with which the inmates had to contend. It was also believed that penitents should at all times be kept under strict observation, and so "penitents were never left without a 'sister present,'" and each inmate's sleeping chamber was placed in such a way that it could be watched by a Sister "whose sleeping chamber [was] so arranged to command it." This close surveillance carried with it sinister undertones of imprisonment, which, to a certain extent, is not surprising.

6 The Penitentiary was, after all, an institution based on transgression; because the nature of the penitents' transgressions was simultaneously sexual, spiritual, and moral, it was believed that, in order for a woman to commit such a break with contemporary standards of conduct, she must be "totally dead to all sense of right."

7 Rossetti’s work in Highgate Penitentiary
Rossetti worked at Highgate Penitentiary on and off from the summer of 1859 until 1870 She wrote “Goblin Market”


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