â¦
Georgiana BurneâJones, Memorials.
â¦
Doughty and Wahl, Letters, vol. 1.
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Fredeman, Pre-Raphaelitism
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Kelvin, The Collected Letters of
William Morris, vol. I.
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Mackail,
Life of William Morris.
This collection contains 1 text or image, including:
The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine text
Scholarly Commentary
Guest Editor: PC Fleming
IntroductionÂ
Edward Burne-Jones (1833-1898) reviewed Thackerayâs The Newcomes for the first issue of The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine. His praise of Thackerayâs âwonderfully faithful picture of the great world as it passes daily before us, many-sided, deeply intricateâ (51) echoes the principles espoused by the PRB, which Burne-Jones would have been familiar with from his and Morrisâs reading of The Germ. In this review, Burne-Jones expresses âdeepest reverence for such great names as Tennyson and Holman Hunt, Ruskin and Carlyle, and Kingsleyâ (53) all of whom, with the exception of Hunt, would be the subject of separate essays in later issues of The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine.
Burne-Jonesâs praise of Rossetti in this essay would have far-reaching consequences for the Magazine. Burne-Jones calls Rossettiâs illustration for Allinghamâs âThe Maids of Elfen-mereâ âthe most beautiful drawing for an illustration I have ever seenâ, and asks âWhy is the author of the Blessed Damozel, and the story of Chiaro, so seldom on the lips of men? If only we could hear him oftener, live in the light of his power a little longerâ (60). Rossetti wrote to Allingham in March to say âThat notice in The Oxford and Cambridge Mag. was the most gratifying thing by far that ever happened to meâbeing unmistakably genuineâ (Letters, 292). Although all contributions to the magazine were anonymous, by March Rossetti knew who had written this piece, and it was Burne-Jonesâs praise that led directly to Rossettiâs involvement with the Magazine. While copies of The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine were sent to Tennyson and Ruskin, Rossettiâs response was unsolicited.
Textual History: CompositionÂ
Burne-Jones must have written this essay in the fall of 1855. He and Morris had first heard of Rossetti in 1854, in Ruskinâs âEdinburgh Lectures,â and they saw several PRB works in Paris on their trip to the continent in 1855 (Mackail 39). They had read The Germ before the trip, and delighted particularly in âThe Blessed Damozelâ and âHand and Soul,â the two works mentioned in this essay. During the same trip, Morris wrote to Cormell Price, saying he had bought a copy of The Newcomes (Kelvin 22), though possibly Burne-Jones was already familiar with the novel, which had been serialzed in 1853-1855.
Burne-Jones met Rossetti following a meeting of the Working Menâs College in London in December, 1855, but the essay would certainly have gone to press by that time.
Printing HistoryÂ
First printed in The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine , January, 1856. Reprinted in Bibelot, IV (October 1898), 321-359 (Fredeman 155).