This essay is by Cormell Price (1835-1902). Price was the youngest member of
the brotherhood, a year behind Morris and Burne-Jones at Oxford. He remained
close friends with both throughout his life, and was the head of the United
Services College while Burne-Jonesâs nephew, Rudyard Kipling, was a student
there.
Price was supposed to accompany Morris and Burne-Jones on their trip to the
continent in the summer of 1855, but he canceled at the last minute
(Mackail 68). Morris wrote often to Price during this trip, giving his
impressions of the PRB paintings he saw in Paris, and several times alluding
to the Magazine (69-71).
In this essay, Price uses George Steevensâs dismissal of some of
Shakespeareâs sonnets as a launching point to discuss the general treatment
of lesser-known works of famous writers. He is
particularly interested in how Shakespeareâs minor poems can be read in a
biographical context. He spends the majority of the essay on Shakespeareâs
sonnets, investigating the identity of the âW. H.â to whom the sonnets are
addressed, and attempting in general to ascertain the dates the sonnets were
composed, and their proper order. The biographical focus recalls Heeleyâs
essay on Sidney.
Also significant in this essay is Priceâs discussion of originality. He
defends Shakespeareâs use of history and legend as a sources for his works,
claiming âThe invention of our ancestors in legend and incident
is our heir-loom; we may vary it in detail, and engraft our own addition,
but its depth will be according to the measure of that manâs power who
handles it, and breathes into it his own spiritâ (118). Price favors
originality of form and treatment over that of theme, and he applies this
idea to painting and architecture, as well as to poetry.
Priceâs
treatment of Shakespeare bears several similarities to Fulfordâs
essay on
Tennyson. Like Fulford, Price links poetry to music, praising the musical
meter of âVenus and Adonisâ. Writing on Tennyson,
Fulford compares poetry to âpainting in wordsâ, and
Price also sees written and material arts as interwoven; he
extends his discussions of poetry into musings on painting and architecture.
Such similarities demonstrate the extent to which the Morris brotherhood
read and commented on each otherâs work. Accounts of their time at Oxford
tell of continual meetings to read and discuss poetry, and through the
essays in the Magazine one sees their theories applied to a remarkable
variety of works, historical and contemporary.
This collection contains 1 text or image, including:
The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine text
Scholarly Commentary
Guest Editor: PC Fleming
IntroductionÂ
This essay is by Cormell Price (1835-1902). Price was the youngest member of the brotherhood, a year behind Morris and Burne-Jones at Oxford. He remained close friends with both throughout his life, and was the head of the United Services College while Burne-Jonesâs nephew, Rudyard Kipling, was a student there.
Price was supposed to accompany Morris and Burne-Jones on their trip to the continent in the summer of 1855, but he canceled at the last minute (Mackail 68). Morris wrote often to Price during this trip, giving his impressions of the PRB paintings he saw in Paris, and several times alluding to the Magazine (69-71).
In this essay, Price uses George Steevensâs dismissal of some of Shakespeareâs sonnets as a launching point to discuss the general treatment of lesser-known works of famous writers. He is particularly interested in how Shakespeareâs minor poems can be read in a biographical context. He spends the majority of the essay on Shakespeareâs sonnets, investigating the identity of the âW. H.â to whom the sonnets are addressed, and attempting in general to ascertain the dates the sonnets were composed, and their proper order. The biographical focus recalls Heeleyâs essay on Sidney.
Also significant in this essay is Priceâs discussion of originality. He defends Shakespeareâs use of history and legend as a sources for his works, claiming âThe invention of our ancestors in legend and incident is our heir-loom; we may vary it in detail, and engraft our own addition, but its depth will be according to the measure of that manâs power who handles it, and breathes into it his own spiritâ (118). Price favors originality of form and treatment over that of theme, and he applies this idea to painting and architecture, as well as to poetry.
Priceâs treatment of Shakespeare bears several similarities to Fulfordâs essay on Tennyson. Like Fulford, Price links poetry to music, praising the musical meter of âVenus and Adonisâ. Writing on Tennyson, Fulford compares poetry to âpainting in wordsâ, and Price also sees written and material arts as interwoven; he extends his discussions of poetry into musings on painting and architecture. Such similarities demonstrate the extent to which the Morris brotherhood read and commented on each otherâs work. Accounts of their time at Oxford tell of continual meetings to read and discuss poetry, and through the essays in the Magazine one sees their theories applied to a remarkable variety of works, historical and contemporary.
Printing HistoryÂ
First printed in The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine , February, 1856.