Art and Forbidden Fruit: Hidden Passion in the Life of William Morris

Art and Forbidden Fruit: Hidden Passion in the Life of William Morris

by John Le Bourgeois
Art and Forbidden Fruit: Hidden Passion in the Life of William Morris

Art and Forbidden Fruit: Hidden Passion in the Life of William Morris

by John Le Bourgeois

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Overview

William Morris is one of the most admired figures of the Victorian era. Studies of his Art and his life fill the shelves of libraries. Yet for all this accessibility, an air of uncertainty has always clouded his image. Since Morris's death, biographers and scholars have portrayed the artist as a victim, bound to an adulterous wife. In Art and Forbidden Fruit, John Le Bourgeois lifts this veil of appearances, and shows the truth about Morris's life. In a close analysis of Morrisis poetry and biography, the author asserts the early existence of an emotional attachment between William Morris and his sister Emma, and how she became the principal source of his inspiration. Le Bourgeois follows the paths of Morris the artist and Morris the man, and points out the links between the poetis love for his sister and his evolution as an artist. Art and Forbidden Fruit provides a highly original biography of William Morris that offers a new perspective on his life and a fresh interpretation of hisart by a specialist.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780718830595
Publisher: The Lutterworth Press
Publication date: 09/28/2006
Pages: 152
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.17(h) x (d)

About the Author

Quentin performed his PhD study within the research project Ancestral Mounds.In his research he dealt with groups of barrows and their position within the landscape. Through extensive GIS-analyses he attempted to shed some light on the choice of location for the placement of the burial monuments. Why were they placed there, what could be seen from that location, and how did this develop through time?

Table of Contents


Preface     5
Acknowledgements     6
He felt the separation keenly     7
Do you keep your child-love, Brother?     13
Think how long I have worshipped you, looked on the world through your eyes     21
How Sir Palomydes loved La Belle Iseult with exceeding great love out of measure     29
There comes no sleep nor any love; Ah me! I shiver with delight     41
As for me, I choke and grow quite faint to see My lady moving graciously     47
She stayed me, and cried "Brother!" our lips met     55
And think how it be if they were gone not to return     63
They have hopes that they are not conscious of     71
As my twin sister, young of years was she and slender     77
How can I help it, not knowing whether I am on my head or my heels     83
The world goes on, beautiful and strange and dreadful and worshipful     91
Do you know them? - Greedy gamblers on the Stock Exchange     99
They lie in prison for it, work in mines, are exiled, and ruined for it     109
We got pleasure into our work; then we became conscious of that pleasure     117
A childish heart there loved me once, and lo I took his love and cast his love away     127
Note on Sources     135
Index     137
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