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            <title>The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine </title>
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            <head>Commentary</head>
            <section type="intro">
               <head>Introduction</head>
               <p>
                  <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="per">The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl> ran for twelve months, from January to December, 1856. It was created by a &#8220;set&#8221; of Oxford undergraduates who called themselves the Brotherhood. The group was led by William Morris (1834-1896), Edward Burne-Jones (1833-1898), and William Fulford (1831-1882). The other founding members were Cormell Price (1835-1902), Richard Watson Dixon (1833-1900), Henry MacDonald, Charles Joseph Faulkner (1834-1892), and, at Cambridge, Wilfred Heeley (1833-1876). With the exception of Morris and Faulkner, all had attended King Edward&#8217;s School in Birmingham.</p>
               <p>All of the members of the brotherhood, except Faulkner, had come to the university planning
      to enter the clergy. But by 1856 their plans had changed. In 1854 the group had started weekly
      Shakespeare readings in each others&#8217; rooms (Mackail 47), and they quickly expanded their
      reading to include contemporary writers like Tennyson, Kingsley, Browning, and Ruskin. By their third year at Oxford, the group&#8217;s focus had become secular and aesthetic, rather than religious.</p>
               <p>Morris came of age in 1855, and received an annual disposition of £900 (Mackail 49).
      Though for a brief period he considered using the money to found a monastery, Morris&#8217;s
      familiarity with writers like Carlyle and Ruskin, and his contact with the other members of
      the Brotherhood, especially Price and Faulkner, had made him aware of the pressing need for
      social reform (Mackail 64). He and Burne-Jones came across a copy of <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <xref doc="a.ap4.g415.raw">
                           <title level="per">The Germ</title>
                        </xref>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl> in the spring of
      1855 (<hi rend="i">Memorials</hi> 122), and it was soon decided that the best way to use Morris&#8217;s inheritance was to found a magazine combining social reform with aesthetic investigation.</p>
               <p>Dixon was the first to suggest the idea of a magazine (Mackail 68), but the rest of the
      Brotherhood eagerly supported it. Fulford, Morris, and Burne-Jones traveled to France in the
      summer of 1855, visiting churches and gathering material that would later find its way into
      the magazine. They had originally planned to call the magazine &#8220;The
      Brotherhood,&#8221; and Morris&#8217;s letters to Price during this period use that title (see
      Kelvin 13). After the three men returned to Oxford, the group began meeting to discuss the
      details of the magazine, and the kinds of works to be included. Price wrote at the time,
      &#8220;It is unanimously agreed that there shall be no shewing off, no quips, no sneers, no
      lampooning in our Magazine . . . [the contents will be] mainly Tales, Poetry, friendly critiques and social articles&#8221; (<hi rend="i">Memorials</hi> 116). The magazine stayed fairly consistent with these early goals. There are no political articles, and the reviews are rarely negative.</p>
               <p>The Brotherhood ultimately settled on the title <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="per">The
     Oxford and Cambridge Magazine</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl>, though the Magazine was edited at Oxford,
      and most of the submissions were from Oxford men. Heeley was the only member of the original group at
      Cambridge, but he recruited other Cambridge men, most notably Vernon Lushington (1832-1912)
      and his twin brother Godfrey (1832-1907). </p>
               <p>The first few issues fed off the excitement the
      group felt at sharing their ideas with the public, but their energies waned later in the year.
      Morris edited the first issue, but passed the task on to Fulford in early January, paying him
      £100 (Mackail 88). Heeley married in September and left for India, and in July Morris
      and Burne-Jones moved in together in London. Morris began working for Street&#8217;s architecture
      firm, and Burne-Jones began painting under Rossetti (Mackail 102). Morris continued to write,
      and contributed to all but two issues of the Magazine (<xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.June.rad">June</xref> and <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.November.rad">November</xref>), but Burne-Jones&#8217;s last contribution was to the June issue.</p>
               <p>
                  <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="per">The
      Oxford and Cambridge Magazine</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl> certainly owes a debt to <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <xref doc="a.ap4.g415.raw">
                           <title level="per">The Germ</title>
                        </xref>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl>, but it is in many
      important ways an entirely different kind of magazine. The Morris Brotherhood&#8217;s aims were more
      secular than the PRB&#8217;s, and they saw the magazine as an agent of social change, rather than a
      vehicle for espousing specific aesthetic theories. Cormell Price&#8217;s works, such as his essays
      on <xref doc="a.PriceFaulkner001.raw">dangerous occupations</xref> and on <xref doc="a.Price002.raw">Elizabeth Gaskell</xref>, explicitly call for social reform, and
      criticism of English society is evident in many of the other articles. </p>
               <p>This is not to say that the Morris Brotherhood did not have aesthetic goals as well. The
      longest of the entries, a five-part <xref doc="a.VLushington001.raw">essay on Carlyle</xref>
      written by Vernon Lushington, combines aesthetic and social commentary, as does Fulford&#8217;s
      essay on <xref doc="a.Fulford006.raw">Plato and Bacon</xref>. Other important essays, like
      <xref doc="a.Fulford001.raw">Fulford&#8217;s on Tennyson</xref> and <xref doc="a.Burne-Jones002.raw">Burne-Jones&#8217;s on Thackeray</xref>, are focused entirely on
       aesthetic concerns.</p>
               <p>Because the Brotherhood met often to discuss their views on art and
      literature, and to read each others&#8217; work, it is not surprising that several common themes are
      evident across the various essays. The most prominent is the view, probably drawn from reading
      Ruskin
      and Carlyle, that all artistic mediums &#8212; poetry, painting, architecture, music
      &#8212; are unified, and should, in Heeley&#8217;s words, be &#8220;used for bettering of our moral
      nature&#8221; (<xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.March.rad" from="176"/>176). This idea is evident in many of the essays, including <xref doc="a.VLushington001.raw">Lushington&#8217;s on Carlyle</xref>, <xref doc="a.Fulford001.raw">Fulford&#8217;s on Tennyson</xref>, <xref doc="a.Burne-Jones004.raw">Burne-Jones&#8217;s on Ruskin</xref>, and <xref doc="a.Heeley004.raw">Heeley&#8217;s on Macaulay</xref>.</p>
               <p>There are also remarkable consistencies among the stories in the Magazine. Nearly all use
      some kind of dream motif, and most have a medieval setting. Important background texts for the
      stories in the Magazine include Malory&#8217;s <hi rend="i">
                     <title>Morte d&#8217;Arthur</title>
                  </hi>,
      Ruskin&#8217;s <hi rend="i">
                     <title>Stones of Venice</title>
                  </hi>, and Benjamin Thorpe&#8217;s <hi rend="i">
                     <title>Northern Mythology</title>
                  </hi>.</p>
            </section>
            <section type="texthistcomp">
               <head>Textual History: Composition</head>
               <p>Much critical discussion about <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="per">The Oxford and
     Cambridge Magazine</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl> has focused on the authorship of the works. With the
      exception of an <xref doc="a.Heeley002.raw">essay by Heeley</xref> in January and <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.December.rad" from="775">Georgiana&#8217;s poem</xref> in
     December, all of the works were published
      anonymously, as was usual in many Victorian periodicals. <hi rend="i">
                     <title level="wrk">The
      Wellesley Index</title>
                  </hi>, the best source for determining the authors of works in
      Victorian periodicals, is generally accurate, but a few entries are speculations, and some are
      misleading. For those works of which Morris is suspected to be the author, Eugene LeMire&#8217;s
      introduction to <hi rend="i">
                     <title level="wrk">The Hollow Land</title>
                  </hi> is the best
      source. Both discuss in detail the main sources of evidence, and the contested articles.</p>
            </section>
            <section type="texthistrev">
               <head>Textual History: Revision</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="prodhist">
               <head>Production History</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="recepthist">
               <head>Reception</head>
               <p>Copies of the first issue were sent to Tennyson and Ruskin, both of whom responded favorably
      (Mackail 89-90). But the most important reply was from Dante Gabriel Rossetti, whom
      Burne-Jones had praised in his <xref doc="a.Burne-Jones002.raw">essay on Thackeray&#8217;s <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="wrk">The Newcomes</title>
                     </hi>
                  </xref>. Rossetti, whom Burne-Jones met
      at the Working Men&#8217;s college in 1855 (Mackail 100), would contribute three poems to the
      Magazine. Over the course of the Magazine&#8217;s publication, both Morris and Burne-Jones became
      close friends with Rossetti, and Walter Gordon attributes the Magazine&#8217;s decline to this
      friendship. Morris later dedicated <hi rend="i">
                     <title level="wrk">The Defense of Guenevere</title>
                  </hi> (1858), in which he included most of the poems published in the Magazine, to Rossetti.</p>
               <p>The London Press reviewed each issue of <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="per">The Oxford and
     Cambridge Magazine</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl>. The reviews began as positive, but became less so with
      subsequent issues. Several other periodicals &#8212; including <hi rend="i">
                     <title level="per">The Athenaeum</title>
                  </hi>, <hi rend="i">
                     <title level="per">The Guardian</title>
                  </hi>, and the <hi rend="i">
                     <title level="per">Saturday Review</title>
                  </hi> &#8212; printed notices of the Magazine&#8217;s publication. <hi rend="i">
                     <title level="per">The Athenaeum</title>
                  </hi> and the <hi rend="i">
                     <title level="per">Spectator</title>
                  </hi> were the only periodicals to print negative reviews of the Magazine (Gordon 63-65).</p>
      
            </section>
            <section type="icon">
               <head>Iconographic</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="printhist">
               <head>Printing History</head>
               <p>Although many of the individual works in <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="per">The Oxford
     and Cambridge Magazine</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl> were later reprinted elsewhere, the Magazine was
      printed only once, and was not revised. At least three cancel leaves were printed, <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.January.cancel.rad">one in January</xref> and <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.August.cancel.rad">two in August</xref> . F. G. Stephens and George Bell had plans to publish a facsimile edition of the Magazine around the turn of the century (LeMire vii) but the edition was never produced</p>
               <p> 750 copies of the <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.January.rad">January issue</xref> were printed, and an additional 250 were called for. But many of these were presentation copies, and by the end of the year sales of the Magazine had dropped considerably, leaving a large stock of unsold copies (Mackail 89).</p>
               <p>The printing of the Magazine indicates that the Brotherhood intended the issues to be bound
      together. The pagination and bibliographic signatures are consecutive, and a <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.December.rad" from="770c">table of contents</xref> published in the December issue lists the titles of all works, under four headings: essays, tales, poems, and notices of books.</p>
               <p>The choice of Chiswick Press is important. Morris would use the same press for <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="wrk">Defense of Guenevere and Other Poems</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl> (1858) and <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="wrk">The Life and Death of Jason</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl> (1867). Still,
       there are minor inconsistencies in the printing: for example, &#8220;medieval&#8221; is
       usually printed with a ligature, but not always (see for example <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.June.rad" from="336">page 336</xref>). Typographic mistakes, like the
       doubling of the word &#8220;no&#8221; on <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.May.rad" from="317">page
       317</xref> and the misspelling of &#8220;Pictures&#8221; on the <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.August.rad" from="cover">August cover</xref> were left uncorrected.</p>
               <p>Bell and Daldy provided advertisements for each issue, on inserts and on the unused pages of the covers.</p>
      
            </section>
            <section type="pictorial">
               <head>Pictorial</head>
               <p>The covers of <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="per">The Oxford and Cambridge
      Magazine</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl>, with ornamental borders designed by Mary
      Byfield (Forman 24), are clearly in imitation of <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <xref doc="a.ap4.g415.raw">
                           <title level="per">The Germ</title>
                        </xref>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl>, as Dante Rossetti
      was quick to notice (see Letters 293). But unlike the PRB&#8217;s magazine, <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="per">The Oxford and Cambridge
       Magazine</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl> was not illustrated.
      Burne-Jones was the official artist of the Brotherhood (see Memorials 122), but the plans to
      included illustrations were deemed too costly (Mackail 89). Instead, reproductions of Thomas
      Woolner&#8217;s medallions of Carlyle and Tennyson were sold separately, advertised in the <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.April.rad" from="insert">April</xref> and <xref doc="a.ap4.o93.1.November.rad" from="insert">November issues</xref>, respectively. They cost 1s each, the same price as the magazine.</p>
               <p>Ornamental letters begin each work. In the first two issues, larger ornaments are used for
      the first entry (13/16 inches; other ornaments 11/16) but this practice was abandoned in
      March. The ornaments were designed by Charles Wittingham&#8217;s daughter, Charlotte (Later
      Mrs. B. F. Stephens (Forman 24).</p>
     
            </section>
            <section type="historical">
               <head>Historical</head>
               <p>One of the features distinguishing <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <title level="per">The Oxford and
     Cambridge Magazine</title>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl> from <bibl>
                     <hi rend="i">
                        <xref doc="a.ap4.g415.raw">
                           <title level="per">The Germ</title>
                        </xref>
                     </hi>
                  </bibl> is the former&#8217;s
      engagement with contemporary world events, notably the Crimean War. Dixon wrote two articles
      about the war [<xref doc="a.Dixon002.raw">1</xref>] [<xref doc="a.Dixon003.raw">2</xref>], and
      Fulford wrote <xref doc="a.Fulford014.raw">a poem</xref> about the battle of Sebastopol.</p>
            </section>
            <section type="literary">
               <head>Literary</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="translation">
               <head>Translation</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="autobio">
               <head>Autobiographical</head>
               <p/>
            </section>
            <section type="biblio">
               <head>Bibliographic</head>
               <p>
                  <bibl>
                     <author>Georgiana Burne&#8211;Jones</author>, <title>
                        <hi rend="i">Memorials</hi>
                     </title>.</bibl>
                  <bibl>
                     <editor>Doughty and Wahl</editor>, <title>Letters</title>, vol. 1.</bibl>
                  <bibl>
                     <author>Forman, H. Buxton</author>. <title level="bk">
                        <hi rend="i">The Books of William Morris.</hi>
                     </title>
                  </bibl>
                  <bibl>
                     <author>Gordon</author>, <title>&#8220;Oxford and Cambridge Magazine&#8221;</title>.</bibl>
                  <bibl>
                     <author>Houghton</author>, <title>
                        <hi rend="i">The Wellesley Index</hi>
                     </title>, pp. <pages>723-731</pages>.</bibl>
                  <bibl>
                     <editor>LeMire, Eugene D.</editor>, ed. <title>
                        <hi rend="i">The Hollow Land</hi>
                     </title>.</bibl>
                  <bibl>
                     <author>MacDonald, F.W</author>. <title level="bk">
                        <hi rend="i">In a Nook with a Book.</hi>
                     </title>
                  </bibl>
                  <bibl>
                     <author>Mackail, J. W</author>. <title>
                        <hi rend="i">Life of William Morris </hi>
                     </title>.</bibl>
                  <bibl>
                     <editor>Kelvin</editor>, <title>
                        <hi rend="i">The Collected Letters of William Morris</hi>
                     </title>, vol. I.</bibl>
               </p>
            </section>
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