Dante Gabriel Rossetti,
The M's at Ems,
a pen drawing
England, AD 1869
William Morris reading to his wife Jane in the
bath
The designer and writer William Morris
(1834-1896) accompanied his wife Jane to the German spa town of Ems
in order to improve her health. This drawing of the couple by
Rossetti was enclosed in a letter to Jane with the comment
'The accompanying
cartoon
will prepare you for the worst - which ever that may be, the seven
tumblers or the 7 volumes'. In other words, drinking vast
quantities of spa water was likely to be less traumatic than
listening to William Morris reading from his lengthy new book
The Earthly Paradise
(published 1868).
Rossetti
had met Jane Morris (née Burden) in Oxford when she was seventeen.
He and William Morris were painting Arthurian murals in the
debating chamber of the Oxford Union. She became a close friend of
Rossetti and one of the models he employed most frequently. Around
the time that he drew The M's at
Ems, Jane was modelling, in a very similar
pose, for his oil painting La Pia de'
Tolomei (Museum of Art in the University of
Kansas, Lawrence). Her collection of comical drawings by Rossetti
and Burne-Jones, mostly making fun of her husband, William Morris,
were given to The British Museum by her daughter
May.
V. Surtees, The paintings and drawings of (Oxford, 1971)
L. Parry (ed.), William Morris (London, Victoria and Albert Museum, 1996)
J.A Gere, Pre-Raphaelite drawings in the (London, The British Museum Press, 1994)