AÆneid, The,122-124,144Æschylus,262Agamemnon, Browning’s,124Allingham, William,42,48,70Amiens Cathedral, article on, by Morris,34,36-39Amis and Amile, translation by Morris,229Archbishop of Canterbury,177Aristophanes,262Arnold, Matthew,149Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society, The,191Art Worker’s Guild, The,192Atalanta in Calydon, Swinburne’s,229Athenæum, The,152BBagehot, Walter, quoted,36Ballads and Narrative Poems, Rossetti’s,229Batchelor, Mr.,221Bax, E. Belfort,218Beata Beatrix, picture by Rossetti,55Beauty of Life, The, Morris’s lecture on,65Belgium,110Beowulf, The Tale of,230,231,262Besant, Mrs.,180Bethel, Alfred, article on, by Morris,34Bible, the,262Biblia Innocentium, Mackail’s,228Bibliographical Society, The,192Birkbeck Hill, Dr.,47,73Birmingham Society of Artists, lecture to,62Blackburn,168Blake, William,263“Bloody Sunday,”179Boccaccio,263Book of Wisdom and Lies, The,230Borrow, George,263British Museum, the woodblocks of Kelmscott Press in possession of,235Brown, Madox,113Browning, Robert, his poems,37,39,40,57-59Bryant, William Cullen, his translation ofThe Odysseycompared with Morris’s translation,142Bulgaria,146Burne-Jones, Edward,1;his first meeting with Morris,23,24;the beginning of his art,26;his trip with Morris and Fulford through Northern France,26,27;his decision to leave college and study art,27;his admiration for Rossetti,26,27et seq.Bury Wood,15,16Byron,236CCambridge University Library,221Canterbury Cathedral, Morris’s early visit to,6Canterbury Tales, The,115Captain Singleton,263Carlyle, Thomas,24,150,263Carmagnole, The, song,178Carpets,89Catterson-Smith, R.,233Catullus,262Chants for Socialists,218Chartres,27Chaucer,115,116,119,137,231-234,237,238,256,262Chaucer type, the,224Child Christopher and Goldilands the Fair,231Chingford Hotel,15Chiswick Press, the,33,205,206Clarke, William,166Clay Road,15Cockerell, S. C.,234Coleridge’sPoems, selection from, by Morris,232,263Colonel Jack,263Colour, Morris’s opinions on,83,84,92Commonweal, The, organ of the Socialist League,175,183,185,195,201,203,209,210,218Crane, Walter,175,192,229DDaily Chronicle, The, Morris’s letters to, concerning Epping Forest,12-18;letter by Morris on Socialism,186-189Daily News, The, quotation from,146-148Daisy Chain, The, its influence on Morris,24Dante,262Day, Lewis,31,78Defence of Guenevere, The,54,59,228Democratic Federation, the,157,168,170,174,180De Vinne, Th., on the Kelmscott Press,224Dickens, Charles,263Dixon, Canon,34Dream of John Ball, A,195,201-203,228Dumas, Alexandre,263Dürer,261Dyes, Morris’s preferences in,91EEarthly Paradise, The,59,115,116-120,144,219,233Eastern Question Association, The,148Edda, The,262Ellis, F. S.,221-232,237English Illustrated Magazine, The,218Epistola de Contemptu Mundi,230Epping Forest, Morris’s early familiarity with,7,11;his letters concerning its destruction,11-18Erewhon, Kingsley’s,163Eve of Crecy, poem by Morris,55Exeter College,193Exile, The,262Eyrbyggja Saga, The,144FFair Mead Bottom,15Farringdon Road,101,177Faulkner, Charles,47,70,73,108,111,263Floure and the Leafe, The,233Forman, Buxton,205,206Freeman, E. A.,149Froissart,57,233GGerm, The,33Gertha’s Lovers,36Ghirlandata, The, picture by Rossetti,55Giotto,261Gisli,109Glasgow,168Glittering Plain, The,221,229,246,248Godefrey of Boloyne, Caxton’s history of,228Golden Legend, Caxton’s,221,223,227,228Golden type, the,221Goldilocks and Goldilocks,7,228Good King Wenceslas, ballad printed at the Kelmscott Press,4,5Gothic Architecture, lecture by Morris,228Green, J. R.,149Grettir,109Grimm,263Gudrun,109HHammersmith,97,107,108,176,181,257Hammersmith Socialist Society, The,185,189Hand and Soul, Rossetti’s,231Hardy Norseman’s Home of Yore,149Havre,27Heir of Redclyffe, The,24Herodotus,262Herrick’sPoems,231Hesiod,262High Beach,17History of Florence, Arezzo’s,220History of Oversea, translated by Morris,230Historyes of Troye, Caxton’s,223,228Hollow Land, The,36,40Homer,262Hornbeams, Morris’s liking for,13House of the Wolfings, The,195,203-205,207,239,246Huckleberry Finn,263Hughes, Arthur,49Hugo, Victor,263IIceland, Morris’s first voyage to,108-110;second voyage,110Idylls of the King, Tennyson’s,126,136Irish National League, The,180JJorrocks, Mr.,263Justice, organ of the Democratic Federation,168,169KKalevala,262Keats, John,24,27,34,229,238,263Kelmscott Church,258Kelmscott House,108,221Kelmscott Books, prices of,238Kelmscott Manor House,101-108Kelmscott Press, The,177,219-239,255King’s Lesson, A,203Kingsley, Charles,24,25Koburger, Anthony,223LLang, Andrew,122-124Laudes Beatæ Mariæ Virginis,233Laxdæla Saga, The,116Lechlade,101Leeds,168Leicester,168Leonardo,261Lesser Arts, The, lecture by Morris on,94Life and Death of Jason, The,114,231,238Life of Cardinal Wolsey, Cavendish’s,228Linnell, Alfred,180,181Looking Backward, Bellamy’s,209Loughton,15Love is Enough,120-122,219,234Lovers of Gudrun, The,116Lowell, J. R., quoted,57,229Lucretius,262MMabinogion,263Mackail, Mr.,24,33,62,71,97,110,111,120,122,150,191,193,229,263Maeterlinck, Morris compared to,57Madox-Brown, Ford,70Magnusson, Mr.,108,125Mahabbarata,262Making the Best of It, lecture by Morris on house-decoration,83Manchester,168Marlborough College, Morris a student in,6,9Marshall, Peter Paul,70Maud, Tennyson’s,228Meinhold, William,229Men and Women, Browning’s, reviewed by Morris,34,39Merton Abbey,175,190Milton,263Moll Flanders,263Monk Wood,15Morris, May (Mrs. Sparling), daughter of Wm. Morris,177Morris, Mrs., wife of William Morris,51,53,59,66Morris and Co.,69;formation of the firm,69;prospectus of,71,72;dissolution of,111-113Morte d’Arthur, painting from, at Oxford Union,49,263Murray, Fairfax,230NNature of the Gothic, The,160,228Newcomes, The, quotation from,30Newman, Jno.,25News from Nowhere,98,102;quotation from,103-107,163-165,195,200,209-212,213,238,258Nibelungen Lied,262Njal,109OOdyssey, The,142-144,210Old Story Retold, An, seeA King’s LessonOmar Khayyam,262Orbeliani, Sulkhan-Saba,230Order of Chivalry, The, Caxton’s translation of,228Ordination of Knighthood, Morris’s translation of,228Ovid,262Oxford,191;Morris’s life at,1-29;abuses at,22-23,31,41,168,193Oxford and Cambridge Magazine, The,33Oxford Union, paintings for,49-52,54PPall-Mall Gazette, The,189,261Paper used at Kelmscott Press,222Patmore, Coventry, on Oxford Union paintings,52,120Penitential Psalms, The,230Pennell, Joseph,181Percyvelle of Gales, Syr,231Piers Plowman,262Pilgrims of Hope, The, poem by Morris,195-201Pilgrim’s Progress,263Plato,262Pliny, Jensen’s220Poems, Keats’s,229Poems, Shakespeare’s,228Poems by the Way,7,227Pollen, J. Hungerford,49Praise of My Lady, poem by Morris,52,53Prinsep, Valentine,49Prioress’s Tale, The, Burne-Jones’s paintings from,47Professorship of Poetry at Oxford, Morris declines,149Proserpine, picture by Rossetti,54Pugin,31QQueen Square, Morris’s residence in,97,101Quest, The, article by Morris in,102RRaphael,261Rapunzel, poem by Morris,57Red Lion Square,46,71,81Red House, The,61-68,96,97,101,114Rembrandt,261Restoration of ancient buildings,32Reynard the Fox,263Robinson Crusoe,263Robinson, Ralph,213,228Rome,61Roots of the Mountains, The,195,207-209,246Rosamond, Swinburne’s,54Rossetti, Dante Gabriel,1,9,27;Morris’s first meeting with,40-42;his service to Morris,43-46;at Oxford,49-51;and Jane Burden,51;The Defence of Gueneverededicated to,54,55;his part in the formation of the firm “Morris, Marshall, Faulkner, & Co.,”69-74;at Kelmscott,101-103,108;his attitude respecting the dissolution of the firm,111-113;hisHand and Soul,231Rossetti, William,70,112,113Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, The,144Rubens, Jacobus,220Ruin, The,262Ruskin,19,23,24,27,151,160,263SSt. Mark’s Cathedral,154Savernake Forest, Morris’s early familiarity with,7Savonarola,230Schoeffer, Peter,223Scott, Gilbert,31,152Scott, Walter,5,19,263Shahnameh,262Shakespeare,24,137Shaw, Bernard, onNupkins Awakened,31,179Shelley, Percy Bysshe,24,101,230,263Shepherde’s Calender, The,233Sidonia the Sorceress, Lady Wilde’s,228Signs of Change, lectures by Morris,218Sigurd,109Sir Galahad,54Sire Degravaunt,66,234Socialism,162-218Socialism from the Root Up, book by Morris and Bax,218Socialist League, The,175-177,180,182,185Society for Protection of Ancient Buildings, The,153,157Society of Antiquaries,192Sophocles,262Spectator, The, letter from Morris in,252Stanhope, Spencer,49Stanmore Tapestry, The,99Stead, William,263Stevenson, Robert Louis, his letter to his father,9,124Stones of Venice, The,27,160,228Story of the Glittering Plain, The,109,218,227,243Story of Sigur the Volsung, The,125-142,144,146,227,234,238Street, George Edmund,31,42,63Sundering Flood, The,234,239,240,242,257Surts-hellir, cave at,109Svend and his Brethren,36,37Swainslow,256Swinburne, A. C.,229Syr Ysambrace,234TTables Turned, The; or, Nupkins Awakened, farce by Morris,177Tale of the Emperor Constans, The, translated by Morris,230Tale of King Florus and Fair Tehane, translated by Morris,227Taylor, George Warrington, Morris’s business manager,97Tennyson, Alfred,24,177Teutonic Mythology,263Tewkesbury, restoration of the Abbey Church at,152Thackeray, William M.,24Theocritus,262Thousand and One Nights, The,263Three Northern Love-Stories and Other Tales, translations by Morris,125Trafalgar Square,161,179-181Troy Type, The,223,225Tyndall, Prof.,177UUncle Remus,263Upton, Morris’s residence at,62,96Useful Work versus Useless Toil, lecture by Morris,165Utopia, More’s,213-217,228,263VVan Eyck, his motto chosen by Morris,68Velasquez,261Verona,61Viollet-le-Duc,31Virgil,122-124,262Volsunga Saga, The,125Voyage Round the World,263WWagner, Richard,135,141Wake, London Lads!ballad by Morris,148Walker, Emery,22,205,209Wall-papers,81-83Wallace, Alfred, his suggestion that Epping Forest be planted with North American trees,11Walthamstow,3,10Wardrop, Oliver,230Warren, Sir Charles,179Water of the Wondrous Isles, The,233,240,245,248-251Watts-Dunton, Theodore,69Waverley Novels, the, Morris’s early fondness for,3Weaving,85,86Webb, Philip, architect of the Red House,61,70,75,82,111Well at the World’s End, The,232,245,248Westminster Abbey,154,181White Horse, The,30Whitney, Miss Anne,229Whittingham, Charles,33Wilde, Lady,228Women and Roses, Browning’s,39Wood beyond the World, The, Morris’s,7,230,242,252Woodford Hall, home of the Morrises,3Working Men’s College, Burne-Jones’s visit to,40Wyatt, A. J.,230YYonge, Miss,24ZZainer, Gunther,223