Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 November 2011
I Have been looking about for a house for the wife and kids, and whither do you guess my eye is turned now? Kelmscott, a little village about two miles above Radcott Bridge—a heaven on earth; an old stone Elizabethan house like Water Eaton, and such a garden! close down on the river, a boat house and all things handy. I am going down there again on Saturday with Rossetti and my wife: Rossetti because he thinks of sharing it with us if the thing looks likely.…
[William Morris to C. J. Faulkner, 17 May 1871]
page 98 note 1 William Morris to Mrs. Coronio, 25 Nov. (1872): ‘…Another quite selfish business is that Rossetti has set himself down at Kelmscott as if he never meant to go away; and not only does that keep me from my harbour of refuge (because it is really a farce our meeting when we can help it) but also he has all sorts of ways so unsympathetic with the sweet simple old place, that I feel his presence there as a kind of slur on it: this is very unreasonable though when one thinks why one took the place, and how this year it has really answered that purpose: nor do I think I should feel this about it if he had not been so unromantically discontented with it and the whole thing, which made me very angry and disappointed.…’
page 98 note 2 Henderson, Philip (ed.), Letters of William Morris, Sec. (Longman 1958), lxviGoogle Scholar.
page 103 note 1 This is summarized at p. 115 below.
page 106 note 1 Henderson, Philip (ed.), Letters of William Morris, xlvi–xlviiGoogle Scholar.
page 106 note 2 The text here printed is abridged: the full text is in the Society's archives.
page 110 note 1 The items that, from the brevity of their description, seem to be of no particular[significance are omitted from this transcript of the Memorandum which, for the rest, is here printed without correction. A verbatim copy is in the archives of the Society of Antiquaries.