â¦
Boos, âStructure of Morris's Talesâ.
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Georgiana BurneâJones,
Memorials.
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Mackail, J. W. Life of William Morris .
â¦
Boos, âStructure of Morris's Talesâ.
â¦
Georgiana BurneâJones,
Memorials.
â¦
Mackail, J. W. 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
This tale was William Morris's (1834-1896) first contribution to The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine, and his first published story. Morris visited Belgium and North France in 1854, and he and Burne-Jones spent the summer of 1855 traveling on the continent. Both trips certainly influenced this story, and the closely-related essay âThe Churches of North Franceâ, which appeared in the February issue of the Magazine.
âThe Story of the Unknown Churchâ anticipates several tropes Morris would return to in his later works. The narrator is the long-dead master-mason of a church which itself vanished two hundred years earlier, and the narrative relies primarily on dreams and memories. The clearest images in the story are the gardens around the church and the flowers on the graves, and together these images emphasize the ephemeralality of the church itself. Morris combines these three images (the flowers, the graves, and the church) in the story's final line, as the narrator is found dead âunderneath the last lily of the tombâ (33).
Textual History: CompositionÂ
Dixon reports that Morris read this story to the rest of the Brotherhood before the end of 1855, but was unsure of the exact date (Memorials 125).
Printing HistoryÂ
First printed in The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine, 1856.