People best remembered wallpaper and furniture designs of William Morris, British painter, craftsman, and social reformer, whose poetry includes Sigurd the Volsung, the epic in 1876.
The Pre-Raphaelite brotherhood and the Arts and Crafts Movement associated William Morris, an English architect, textile, artist, writer, and Marxist. Morris wrote and published fiction and translations of ancient and medieval texts throughout his life. He worked his known The Defence of Guenevere and Other Poems (1858).
William Morris, an important figure in the emergence, founded the Socialist league in 1884 but broke with the movement over goals and methods before the end of 1880s, that decade.
He founded the press of Kelmscott in 1891 and devoted much of the rest of his life. People consider the edition, masterpiece of Kelmscott of 1896 of the Works, book of Geoffrey Chaucer.
William Morris is an almost legendary figure, founder of the arts and crafts movement, spiritus rector of the pre raphaelite brotherhood, art nouveau artist and founder of the precursor to the National Trust. He was also a prolific author and this collection features three of his most prominent fictional works. "A Dream of John Ball"is a depiction of an episode in the peasant wars of the middle ages, "The Pilgrims of Hope"is an epic poem set in the struggles of the Paris Commune, ans "News from Nowhere" is the account of time travel to the "communist world" in the year 2003. As a writer Morris kills all literary appeal by following his pre raphaelite fascination with style over substance. The Author of the (very instructive) preface goes out of his way in explaining how Morris is the one true English communist, however his communist views are as practical as Ruskin's notions of female body hair. For Morris communism is turning back the time to a kind of Tolkien's "Shire" where happy little men live in well designed little houses and favor rowing boats over noisy motorized steamers. This naivety may make his art so intricate but don't befit the politically engaged literature Morris aspires to.
I read these bits rather quickly as they'd been recommended by my girlfriend who was interested in Morris as a decorative artist. I thought them a bit over-romanticized.