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Bring roses for Castara's breast —
Nay, no more roses bring.
Let be the rose where she blooms best
Castara's followed Spring.
I know a path with poppies red,
Milk-white with blossomed May,
Linden and birch meet overhead:
And that's Castara's way.
O well befall thee, happy way —
Fair fall thy poppies red!
Be thy skies blue though ours are gray
And all our roses dead.
For, O our poppies all are white —
And life's a weary thing,
Since, taking from our eyes the light,
Castara's followed Spring.
Nora Hopper Chesson’s Castara’s Flitting is a hauntingly beautiful elegy that weaves together themes of loss, cyclical renewal, and the ephemeral nature of beauty. Through its delicate imagery and mythic undertones, the poem transcends mere lamentation, instead offering a meditation on the intersection between human grief and the natural world. While ostensibly a farewell to a departed beloved (the titular Castara), the poem also engages with broader cultural and philosophical questions about mortality, seasonal change, and the persistence of memory. This essay will explore the poem’s historical and cultural context, its use of literary devices, its central themes, and its emotional resonance, while also considering possible influences from mythology and earlier poetic traditions.
Nora Hopper Chesson (1871–1906) was an Irish poet whose work often drew upon Celtic folklore and myth, blending them with a late-Victorian sensibility for melancholy and romanticism. Castara’s Flitting was published in her 1896 collection Ballads in Prose, a work that reflects her fascination with the supernatural and the elegiac. The poem’s title itself is suggestive: "Castara" is not a common name, and its usage here may be an allusion to the 17th-century poet William Habington’s Castara (1634), a sequence of love poems dedicated to his wife. By invoking this name, Chesson situates her poem within a tradition of lyric poetry that idealizes the beloved while also signaling her departure—both physically and metaphorically.
The late 19th century was a period marked by a preoccupation with death and the afterlife, influenced by the Aesthetic and Decadent movements, as well as the lingering effects of Romanticism. Chesson’s work, while not explicitly Decadent, shares with these movements an interest in beauty tinged with sorrow. Additionally, her Irish heritage likely informed her poetic sensibility, particularly in the way she blends natural imagery with a sense of mythic inevitability—a hallmark of Celtic literary traditions.
Chesson’s poem is rich in symbolic imagery, with flowers serving as the primary motif. The opening lines—
Bring roses for Castara's breast —
Nay, no more roses bring.
—immediately establish a tension between presence and absence. The roses, traditional symbols of love and beauty, are no longer fitting tributes because Castara has "followed Spring." This phrase suggests that she has either died or departed in a manner that aligns her with the season of renewal, rendering earthly flowers redundant. The shift from roses to poppies is particularly significant: poppies, often associated with sleep and death (as in Ophelia’s garland in Hamlet or the opium-induced dreams of Decadent poetry), mark Castara’s new path.
The contrast between colors—red poppies, white May blossoms, blue skies—creates a vivid sensory landscape that underscores the poem’s emotional duality. The living world Castara has entered is one of vibrancy ("poppies red," "skies blue"), while the mourners’ world is drained of color ("our poppies all are white," "our roses dead"). This chromatic symbolism reinforces the divide between life and death, presence and absence.
Another striking device is the personification of the natural world. The path Castara takes is not merely described but addressed directly:
O well befall thee, happy way —
Fair fall thy poppies red!
This apostrophe imbues the landscape with agency, as if it is complicit in her journey. The speaker’s blessing of the path ("well befall thee") suggests a resigned acceptance, even as grief lingers.
At its core, Castara’s Flitting is a poem about transience—not just of human life, but of beauty and joy. The recurring motif of seasons (Spring, May) situates Castara’s departure within a cyclical framework. Unlike traditional elegies that fixate on irrevocable loss, Chesson’s poem hints at a kind of transcendence: Castara has not ceased to exist but has instead "followed Spring," becoming part of a perpetual renewal.
This idea aligns with mythological traditions in which figures associated with vegetation (Persephone, Adonis) undergo cyclical deaths and rebirths. While Chesson does not explicitly reference these myths, the poem’s imagery invites such comparisons. Castara’s journey—through a path lined with poppies and blossoms—evokes the descent into an otherworld, perhaps akin to the Celtic Tír na nÓg or the Greek Elysium.
The emotional weight of the poem lies in its juxtaposition of mourning and acquiescence. The speaker does not rail against fate but instead acknowledges the inevitability of Castara’s departure:
Be thy skies blue though ours are gray
And all our roses dead.
This acceptance is neither wholly despairing nor consoling; it occupies an ambiguous space, much like the liminality of death itself.
Chesson’s poem can be fruitfully compared to other Victorian elegies, such as Tennyson’s In Memoriam or Christina Rossetti’s Remember. Like Rossetti, Chesson employs floral symbolism to meditate on loss, though her tone is less resigned and more mythically inflected. Tennyson’s struggle with grief and doubt finds an echo in Chesson’s contrast between the mourners’ "weary" existence and Castara’s vibrant new realm.
From a philosophical standpoint, the poem engages with the Romantic notion of nature as a repository of the sublime. The speaker’s grief is mitigated—but not erased—by the knowledge that Castara exists in a more beautiful world. This duality reflects the Victorian tension between faith and doubt, between the desire for immortality and the stark reality of mortality.
What makes Castara’s Flitting so affecting is its restraint. There is no melodrama, only a quiet, almost ethereal, mourning. The poem’s brevity and lyrical simplicity belie its depth, allowing the reader to project their own losses onto its framework. The final lines—
Since, taking from our eyes the light,
Castara's followed Spring.
—capture the essence of elegy: not just sorrow for the departed, but the enduring shadow their absence casts on the living.
In the end, Chesson’s poem is less about death than about transformation. Castara has not vanished but migrated, becoming one with the seasonal rhythms she now inhabits. The speaker’s world may be bleaker for her absence, but the poem itself—like the path lined with poppies—offers a way forward, a means of reconciling grief with the eternal return of Spring.
Through its mythic resonance, delicate imagery, and emotional nuance, Castara’s Flitting stands as a testament to Chesson’s skill as a poet and to the enduring power of elegy to articulate the ineffable.
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