This story is by Richard Watson Dixon (1833-1900), who had been the first to suggest the idea of
a magazine. Dixon attended
King Edwardâs School with Burne-Jones, and entered Oxford the same year as
him and Morris. He was also a poet, though he did not publish any verse
in The Oxford and Cambridge
Magazine.
Dixonâs narrative is more conventional than the other tales in the January
issue of the Magazine. There is nothing unusual about the narratorâs love for his
friendâs betrothed, the fatherâs hesitancy regarding his daughterâs marriage, or the vision of the ghost-ship that
prophecies Margaretâs death. But this
conventionality is one of the strengths of the story, and Dixon weaves
these familiar tropes into a compelling narrative.
Dixon read this story to the rest of the brotherhood in 1855, to apparently
bland reviews (Memorials 125).
This collection contains 1 text or image, including:
The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine text
Scholarly Commentary
Guest Editor: PC Fleming
IntroductionÂ
This story is by Richard Watson Dixon (1833-1900), who had been the first to suggest the idea of a magazine. Dixon attended King Edwardâs School with Burne-Jones, and entered Oxford the same year as him and Morris. He was also a poet, though he did not publish any verse in The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine.
Dixonâs narrative is more conventional than the other tales in the January issue of the Magazine. There is nothing unusual about the narratorâs love for his friendâs betrothed, the fatherâs hesitancy regarding his daughterâs marriage, or the vision of the ghost-ship that prophecies Margaretâs death. But this conventionality is one of the strengths of the story, and Dixon weaves these familiar tropes into a compelling narrative.
Dixon read this story to the rest of the brotherhood in 1855, to apparently bland reviews (Memorials 125).
Printing HistoryÂ
First printed in The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine, January, 1856.