Reading the sonnet autobiographically, Baum (page 126) notes that “the Lady whose name is Hope may be the New Beloved [i.e., Mrs.Morris]” or DGR's dead wife: “The ambiguity. . .would be characteristic of Rossetti”. Referencing DGR's wife, the sonnet is in Baum's view recollective, “an expression of Rossetti's hesitation and postponement of his marriage, with the reconciliation of old and new hope which accompanied his decision”. What Baum leaves unsaid, though it is implicit in his reading, is that this “Hope of mine” (9) is the reconciliation of all of DGR's ambiguous and dislocated love relations and lovers. Lines 9-10 are especially relevant in this respect, for they manipulate the language so that the two chief distinctions operating in the poem—Love and Hope, Old Love and New Beloved—are joined through the remarkable conceit governing all of the sonnet and epitomized in the rhetoric of the sestet's prayer. That is to say, the speaker expresses the hope that he desires to be realized, the supreme loving desire that sustains his persistent hope.
The sonnet is closely paired with
Two copies are held in the Library of Congress: a
First published in the 1881 Ballads and Sonnets
The sonnet recalls the penultimate sonnet in Dante's Vita Nuova
DGR Designer and Writer
House of Life