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Georgiana BurneâJones, Memorials.
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Gordon, âOxford and Cambridge Magazineâ.
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Houghton, The Wellesley Index, pp. 723-731.
⦠âJohn Nichol.â In Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
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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 review of Sydney Dobellâs âEngland in the Time of Warâ and George MacDonaldâs âWithin and Withoutâ is by John Nichol (1833-1894). It was his only contribution to The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine. Nichol was a well-known scholar later in his life, and a friend of Swinburneâs. He published books on Byron, Carlyle, and Bacon, among others.
Nichol was at Oxford with Morris and Burne-Jones, but was not a member of their âsetâ. Neither Mackail nor Georgiana Burne-Jones mentions him at all, nor does Walter Gordon in his critical edition of the Magazine; he attributes this essay to Georgiana. The Wellesley Index corrects the error, citing as primary evidence the fact that this essay was reprinted in an 1860 collection of Nicholâs essays (731).
It was in the December issue that the entries in the magazine were categorized as either essays, poems, tales, or notices of books, and the latter is by far the smallest category, with only six entries (two by Heeley.) Though there were two published in the January issue, there were none between July and November. This makes it all the more surprising that this essay, Nicholâs first and only contribution, would be categorized as a notice, rather than an essay. His is the only work in this category to discuss two works, by different authors, and he is more critical of his subjects than the other reviewers in the Magazine. His review is generally positive, but the amount of negative criticism is surprising, given the other reviews in the Magazine and Cormell Priceâs statement in his diary that he, Burne-Jones, and Morris had agreed in 1855 âthere is to be no shewing off, no quips, no sneers, no lampooning in our Magazineâ (Mackail 81).
Nichol begins by lamenting the number of bad plays recently produced, then proceeds to point out the defects of Dobellâs early books; of âBalderâ, he says âWe close the book with a feeling of fatigue, and think we would rather have [Burns or Browning], than the whole mass of it.â But if he is critical of Dobellâs earlier books, he admires the volume he is reviewing, âEngland in Time of War.â He praises Dobell for eschewing politics in his poetry, and for reducing the affectation and âwild ejaculationâ that detracted from his earlier works. Still, Nichol faults Dobell for occasional âfalse expression and absurd application,â and although the review is on the whole favorable, such criticisms set this essay apart from the other essays in the Magazine, which are always laudatory, and whose praise is generally untapered.
Nichol was acquainted with Dobell before this essay was published. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography dates the beginning of their friendship to 1854, when Nichol was editing the Glasgow University Album. He would later write the introductions to his Poems (1875) and Thoughts on Art, Philosophy and Religion (1876).
In reviewing MacDonaldâs work, Nichol praises him for his portrayal of the characters, claiming that although it is a dramatic monologue, not a drama, it does have the rudiments necessary for a stage play. Nichol is not so hard on MacDonald as he is on Dobell, and he spends most of the essay summarizing the plot of âWithin and Without,â which he praises as a âgrand sermon on the abundantly sustaining power of confidence in one Omnipotent.â But his praise is still not entirely free from criticism, and he canât resist faulting MacDonald for his over-refinement of imagery that would have better been left to the readerâs imagination.
Printing HistoryÂ
First printed in The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine , December, 1856.