I know a little garden-close
Set thick with lily and red rose,
Where I would wander if I might
From dewy dawn to dewy night,
And have one with me wandering
-William Morris
from "The Life and Death of Jason" 1867
The term "garden-close"
refers to a garden enclosed by trees or hedges. The site which the
Red House is situated on was covered and surrounded by apple orchards at the time the house was first built. Morris chose the site for the setting of his new wedding home to share with
his wife-to-be, Jane Burden. The house was consciously designed to keep the landscape intact while accommodating Morris' particular
preferences in gardening. Morris and Webb are said to have
thoughtfully planned the garden during or even before the completed
design of the Red House; whereas in the case of other property, the
garden would typically be designed after the house was built.
Like
the house itself, the garden draws heavily from its environment created from both native species and imported species suited to the
landscape, counter to the trend of heated greenhouses to support
unfit, imported plant species. Morris was an ardent critic of many
Victorian gardening practices, and therefore he held particular distaste for
"carpet-bedding".
Though
Morris is largely credited for the design of the garden, Webb also played a key
role in its inception. Like Morris, Webb was as a keen naturalist. In
his plans for the Red House, diagrams illustrating the garden's
arrangement can be seen as well as a list of plant species to be
used. No longer apparent today, it is believed the original stylistic
intent of the garden was to provide Victorians a romantic image of
medieval life as depicted in manuscript illustrations from the 15th
century.
The
house, which would otherwise have looked far more strict and bare, is aesthetically enhanced by the garden, with vegetation covering the site and climbing
up the red brick walls. Originally,
the Red House's conical well, which is often said to sum up the
entire building, was covered by a large trellis full of roses. This
strengthened the notion that the area surrounding the well operated
as an exterior room to the house. Arts & Crafts historian Fiona
MacArthy credits the Red House garden as having embodied the guiding
principles of the Arts and Crafts garden movement years before it
came into full swing.
Morris
viewed the garden not only as a pleasant amenity afforded only to the
wealthy, but as an essential component of human well-being in the
city:
It will be a key to right thinking about gardens if you consider in what kind of places a garden is most desired. In a very beautiful country, especially if it be mountainous, we can do without it well enough; whereas in a flat and dull country we crave after it, and there it is often the very making of the homestead. While in great towns, gardens, both private and public, are positive necessities if the citizens are to live reasonable and healthy lives in body and mind.
-William Morris
from "Hopes and Fears for Art", a collection of his lectures during the late 1870s
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Citation:
Citation:
The Gardens of William Morris (2006), by Jill Douglas-Hamilton, Duchess of Hamilton and Brandon, Penny Hart, John Simmons
"William Morris." The Marxist Archive. Accessed December 6, 2012. http://www.marxists.org/archive/
morris/works/1882/hopes/chapters/chapter4.htm.
"William Morris." W. W. Norton & Company. Accessed December 6, 2012. http://www.wwnorton.com/college/
english/nael/noa/pdf/27636_Vict_U15_Morris.pdf.
Morris and Red House. Accessed December 7, 2012. http://morrisandredhouse.net/garden.htm.
MacCarthy, Fiona. "Garden of Earthly Delights." The Guardian, July 26, 2003, Art and design.
Accessed December 11, 2012. http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2003/jul/26/
art.architecture.
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