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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/williammorrisphoto.jpg]]
2->''If you want a golden rule that will fit everybody, this is it: Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.''
3-->From a lecture entitled “The Beauty of Life” (1882).
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5William Morris (24 March 1834 – 3 October 1896) was an English designer, artist, writer and socialist.
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7He is perhaps best known today for his design work: he was a major contributor to the revival of traditional textile arts and a major influence on the Arts and Crafts movement.
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9Horrified by the ugliness and soullessness of nineteenth-century industrial capitalism, Morris became a committed UsefulNotes/{{socialis|m}}t. He was a leading figure in the Socialist League (along with Karl Marx’s daughter Eleanor), and he believed his art, which valued beauty, craftsmanship and nature over mass-production and consumerism, to be an extension of this.
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11A prolific poet and prose author, his best known written work is ''Literature/NewsFromNowhere'' (1890), a {{utopia}}n novel depicting the idyllic agrarian society he hoped would be created following a socialist revolution. His pseudo-medieval {{fantas|y}}ies, such as ''Literature/TheWoodBeyondTheWorld'' (1894), ''Literature/TheWaterOfTheWondrousIsles'' (1895), and ''Literature/TheWellAtTheWorldsEnd'' (1896) were a key influence on both Creator/JRRTolkien and Creator/CSLewis.
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13Oh, and he also set up a printing press, translated several [[Literature/TheIcelandicSagas Icelandic sagas]] and founded the movement to protect historic buildings in Britain.
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15----
16!!Works by William Morris with their own pages:
17
18* ''Literature/NewsFromNowhere''
19* ''Literature/TheWellAtTheWorldsEnd''
20
21!!Other works by William Morris contain examples of:
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23* AlliterativeTitle: ''The Wood Beyond the World.'' ''The Well at the World's End.'' ''The Water of the Wondrous Isles.''
24* AntiquatedLinguistics: Morris was fond of using pseudo-medieval English, which can make some of his works a little difficult for modern readers.
25%%* {{Arcadia}}: Often feature in his medievalist romances.
26* AuthorAppeal: {{The Middle Ages}}, Northern Sagas and nature motifs feature frequently in his work.
27* TheDungAges: Averted. Morris adored the Middle Ages, or rather a romanticized version, which he contrasted with the dirty, ugly cities of Victorian England.
28* GoneSwimmingClothesStolen: Birdalone, the heroine of ''The Water of the Wondrous Isles.'' She spends some time afterwards as an InnocentFanserviceGirl.
29%%* TheHerosJourney: The plot of ''The Wood Beyond the World''.
30* ImmortalitySeeker: His narrative poem collection ''The Earthly Paradise'' is framed by the tale of a quest for a land where nobody dies.
31* MisplacedVegetation: Though they take place in a romanticized Medieval Europe, Morris' works like "The Story of the Unknown Church" and "Gertha's Lovers" frequently mention New World crops like corn and sunflowers. Corn would not be introduced to Europe until the 1490's, and sunflowers not until the 1500's.
32* TheQuest: Both ''The Well at the World's End'' and ''The Water of the Wondrous Isles'' are long, rambling examples of this.
33* RomanticismVersusEnlightenment: Romanticism. Oh so very much.
34* TimeTravel: ''Literature/TheDreamOfJohnBall'' involves time travel to the peasant’s revolt of 1381.
35* WorldBuilding: As noted above, his medieval romances were a model for both Creator/JRRTolkien and Creator/CSLewis.
36* YeGoodeOldeDays: Morris liked to paint an idealized image of the Middle Ages.

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