â¦
Sharp, DGR: A Record and a Study, 150.
â¦
Surtees, A Catalogue Raisonné, vol. 1,
23 (no. 60).
â¦
Treuherz, Prettijohn, Becker, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 173.
â¦
Sharp, DGR: A Record and a Study, 150.
â¦
Surtees, A Catalogue Raisonné, vol. 1,
23 (no. 60).
â¦
Treuherz, Prettijohn, Becker, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 173.
This collection contains 2 texts and images, including:
Ashmolean Museum watercolour
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
If the literary allusion to Sir Walter Scott is indeed being referenced by the picture (see commentary below), the watercolour is making an oblique prayer âThat Love may still be Lord of allâ.
Production HistoryÂ
The watercolour is dated âCarlisle 1853â, which references his visit to the city at the end of June 1853, when on a walking tour with William Bell Scott. According to Madox Brown, DGR âpainted it in two evenings at W. B. Scott's at Newcastleâ, shortly after the visit to Carlisle (see Surtees, A Catalogue Raisonné, vol. 1, 23 ).
LiteraryÂ
The picture is generally in debt to DGR's passion, particularly at this time, for border ballads (see the commentary for The Ballad of Fair Annie ). Sharp comments that the title comes âfrom the motto line, âThe sun shines red on Carlisle wallââ, but the picture has no such motto line. However, the line âThe sun shines fair on Carlisle wallâ is quite apt for the picture, if indeed DGR meant to recall it, as Sharp's comment (which may simply be a misquotation) suggests. The line is the refrain in the ballad sung by Albert Graeme in one of DGR's favorite poems, The Lay of the Last Minstrel (Canto VI stanza xi). The ballad tells the story of the death of a pair of true lovers.