The poem "An Apple-Gathering" by Christina Rossetti because is powerful and moving. This poem is about the narrator, who, after plucking blossoms from the apple tree, is surprised to find no apples there.
The first quartet shows the narrator, probably because they looked pretty, "plucked pink blossoms from my apple and wore them all evening in my hair." She appeared disappointed and perplexed that there were "no apples there" in the "due season."
Like many of Rossetti's poems, a theme of betrayed love or unfulfilment of love is seen in this poem. She watches all her female friends walk by with full baskets, with neighbours "mocking her" because of her empty basket. The full baskets are teasing her "like a jeer." This is an example of pathetic fallacy. However, other friends are helped by "a stronger hand than hers", like Gertrude. The narrator believes that the love of a man is more important to her than just about anything, including song and the rosiest apples. The lines "A voice talked with her thro' the shadows cool, more sweet to me than song" and "I counted rosiest apples on the earth more sweet to me than song" demonstrate these ideas. At the poem's conclusion, she loitered, and, symbolising her tears, "the dews fell". Her tears fell, as the "latest" person said when they passed her, "the night grew chill" and she was alone.
This poem has an ABAB rhyming scheme,
Alliteration is also used in several lines of the poem. In "plucked pink blossoms from my apple tree," the short and sharp 'p' sound gives the impression of actually plucking the blossom from the tree. "Sweet voiced they sang beneath the sunset sky" is an example of sibilance. The soft 's' showing a soft, happy line - also, the people in that line (Lilian and Lilias) are together, which is the narrator's view of happiness.
Overall, "An Apple-Gathering" by Christina Rossetti is a poem dealing with a young woman's past rejection in love - at the