The next day, as Laura and Lizzie go about their housework, Laura dreamily longs for the coming meeting with the goblins. The sisters go to sleep in their shared bed. Laura dismisses her sister's worries, and plans to return the next night to get more fruits for herself and Lizzie. Strangely, no grass grows over Jeanie's grave. At home, Laura tells her sister of the delights she indulged in, but Lizzie is "full of wise upbraidings," reminding Laura of Jeanie, another girl who partook of the goblin fruits, and then died at the beginning of winter after a long and pathetic decline. Once finished, she returns home in an ecstatic trance, carrying one of the seeds. Laura gorges on the delicious fruit in a sort of bacchic frenzy. (Rossetti hints that the "goblin men" resemble animals with faces like wombats or cats, and with tails.) Longing for the goblin fruits but having no money, the impulsive Laura offers to pay a lock of her hair and "a tear more rare than pearl." On this evening, Laura, intrigued by their strangeness, lingers at the stream after her sister goes home. As the poem begins, the sisters hear the calls of the goblin merchants selling their fantastic fruits in the twilight. Goblin Market tells the adventures of two close sisters, Laura and Lizzie, with the river goblins.Īlthough the sisters seem to be quite young, they live by themselves in a house, and draw water every evening from a stream.
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