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     id="a.56-1849"
     metatype="web.poem"
     workcode="56-1849">
   <ramheader>
      <filedesc>
         <titlestmt>
            <title>Johannes Ronge</title>
            <author>Dante Gabriel Rossetti</author>

         </titlestmt>
         <editionstmt>
            <edition>1</edition>
         </editionstmt>
         <extent/>


         <notesstmt/>
      </filedesc>
      <encodingdesc/>
      <profiledesc>
         <date>1849?</date>
         <classification>
            <scheme type="">
               <keyword/>
               <keyword/>
            </scheme>
         </classification>
         <subject/>
         <form>
            <rhyme>couplet</rhyme>
            <meter>iambic tetrameter</meter>
            <genre>dramatic monologue</genre>
         </form>
         <addressee/>
         <model>
            <name/>
            <note/>
         </model>
         <repainting>
            <date/>
            <desc/>
         </repainting>
         <source>
            <listcitn>
               <citnliterary>
                  <bibl/>
                  <note/>
               </citnliterary>
               <citntranslationoriginal>
                  <bibl/>
                  <note/>
               </citntranslationoriginal>
               <citnpictorial>
                  <title/>
                  <artist/>
                  <location/>
                  <bibl/>
                  <note/>
               </citnpictorial>
               <citnmythic>
                  <name/>
                  <culture/>
                  <bibl/>
                  <note/>
               </citnmythic>
               <citnhistorical>
                  <event/>
                  <place/>
                  <date/>
                  <bibl/>
                  <note/>
               </citnhistorical>
               <citnautobiographical>
                  <name/>
                  <place/>
                  <date/>
                  <bibl/>
                  <note/>
               </citnautobiographical>
               <citnscenic>
                  <place/>
                  <date/>
                  <bibl/>
                  <note/>
               </citnscenic>
            </listcitn>
         </source>
         <commentaries>
            <head>Commentary</head>
            <section type="intro">
               <head>Introduction</head>
               <p>One of several important and recently discovered early DGR poems, this piece is an encomium to the 
    excommunicated priest from Prussian Silesia, Johannes Von Rönge (1813-1887), who became active in the 
    Christian kindergarten movement and who, with his wife Bertha, opened the first kindergarten in England in 
    1851.  Outraged at the corruption of 
the bishop of Trier and the Catholic Church generally, he broke away and founded his own church of so-called 
New Catholics.  It was democratically organized and pursued a &#8220;rational religion&#8221;, throwing off many 
key Romish practices, including priestly celibacy, oral confession, and indulgences.  After his excommunication 
in 1844, he and his wife Bertha moved to London.  They were intimate with the 
    Rossetti household and obviously shared many of the anti-papal atitudes of Gabriele Rossetti. Always 
    politically active, Von Rönge worked for the failed revolution in Germany in 1848, after which he helped to
coordinate various dissident groups into a single community of &#8220;Free Thinkers&#8221; 
    (<hi rend="i">Freireligiöse</hi>).</p>
               <p>The poem is a dramatic monologue spoken by an English woman whose religious impulses and desires have
        gone unsatisfied until she discovers Von Rönge's (1846) autobiography.  The naive style of the 
        poem is interesting and suggests that DGR may be using Blake, in particular the 
        <bibl>
                     <xref doc="a.">
                        <title level="wrk">
                           <hi rend="i">Songs of Innocence</hi>
                        </title>
                     </xref>
                  </bibl>, as 
    an index of the woman's character; and Browning,  as a model for shaping a poem's style to match the 
        psychology of the speaker (see the commentary for the related early dramatic monologue <xref doc="a.55-1849.raw">
                     <title level="wrk">&#8220;Dominus Fredericus (Rich Peace)&#8221;</title>
                  </xref>).</p>
               <p>The poem is closely related to a number of significant early DGR writings only recovered in 2006 from 
        manuscripts in South Africa.  The most important of these works is the Joachimite dramatic monologue 
        <xref doc="a.55-1849.raw">
                     <title level="wrk">
        &#8220;Dominus Fredericus (Rich Peace)&#8221;</title>
                  </xref> and the two closely related dramatic monologues 
        <xref doc="a.57-1849.raw">
                     <title level="wrk">
            &#8220;Sunday Morning. Catholic Church&#8221;</title>
                  </xref> and <xref doc="a.58-1849.raw">
                     <title level="wrk">
                &#8220;Sunday Morning: Protestant Church&#8221;</title>
                  </xref>.</p>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="texthistcomp">
               <head>Textual History: Composition</head>
               <p>The precise date of the poem is not known but the physical characteristics of the manuscript, the 
    handwriting, and the subject matter make it an early work.  It could have been written as early as 1847, when 
    DGR first became acquainted with Blake's work (a year after the publication of the translation of 
    Rönge's autobiography, 
    which the speaker has read &#8220;with heart elate&#8221; (line 3). A slightly later date is 
    perhaps more likely.  The poem is written on the same pale blue paper as 
    <xref doc="a.55-1849.raw">
                     <title level="wrk">
        &#8220;Dominus Fredericus (Rich Peace)&#8221;</title>
                  </xref>
               </p>
            </section>
            <section type="texthistrev">
               <head>Textual History: Revision</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="prodhist">
               <head>Production History</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="recepthist">
               <head>Reception</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="icon">
               <head>Iconographic</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="printhist">
               <head>Printing History</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="pictorial">
               <head>Pictorial</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="historical">
               <head>Historical</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="literary">
               <head>Literary</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="translation">
               <head>Translation</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="autobio">
               <head>Autobiographical</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="biblio">
               <head>Bibliographic</head>
               <p>
                  <bibl>
                     <author>Johannes Rönge</author>, <xref doc="a.">
                        <title level="bk">
                           <hi rend="i">The Autobiography and Justification of Johannes Von Ronge</hi>
                        </title>
                     </xref>
                  </bibl> 
                  <bibl>
                     <author>Johannes Rönge</author>, <xref doc="a.">
                        <title level="bk">
                           <hi rend="i">The holy coat of Treves, and the new German-Catholic church</hi>
                        </title>
                     </xref>
                  </bibl>
               </p>
            </section>
         </commentaries>
         <linenotes>
            <basis>
               <xref doc="a.56-1849.sangms.rad">South African National Gallery</xref> manuscript
</basis>
            <lines n="12-13">
               <gloss>See the ballad <xref doc="a.">
                     <title level="bk">&#8220;The Birth of St. George</title>
                  </xref> (in <bibl>
                     <author>Percy</author>, <xref doc="a.">
                        <title level="bk">
                           <hi rend="i">Reliques of Ancient English Poetry</hi>
                        </title>
                     </xref>
                  </bibl>).  St. George is spirited away and raised by &#8220;The weïrd lady of 
        the woods&#8221; (line 47) after the death of St. George's mother in childbirth.
</gloss>
            </lines>
            <lines n="">
               <gloss>
        </gloss>
            </lines>
    
         </linenotes>
      </profiledesc>
      <revisiondesc/>
   </ramheader>
   <readingtext>
      <xref doc="a.56-1849.sangms.rad">South African National Gallery</xref> manuscript
</readingtext>
   <viewingimage/>
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         <title>Johannes Ronge</title>
         <author>Dante Gabriel Rossetti</author>
         <artist/>
         <editor/>
         <date>1847?</date>
         <medium/>
         <repro>0</repro>
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