This spirited verse letter from Hunt to William Smith Williams (1800-1875), hitherto unknown, is important and interesting in a number of respects. It is one of several verse letters written by Hunt during the founding years of the PRB that are preserved in the Rossetti/Wahl collection in the library of the South African National Gallery.
The letter is a kind of genial aesthetic manifesto in which Hunt lays out his Pre-Raphaelite ideas about truth to nature. The mild paganism of the poem underscores what he always insisted, that the movement which he and DGR founded was not, in his mind, oriented toward Christianity. (His comments in the poem (lines 239-244) on Collinson's ascetic picture The Novitiate
The concluding lines (204ff.) discuss the recent activities of the Cyclographic Society, the successor to the Sketching Club that DGR joined in 1843 and the precursor to the PRB that flourished briefly in 1848 until it fell apart in September. (As Hunt observes, “it flags/ Considerably” (204-205) in the August when Hunt wrote this poem.) The society was founded by Richard Burchett and N. E. Green (in Fredeman's words) “to supplement the instruction available in the various art schools and. . .training divisions of the Academy” (The P. R. B. Journal
Faust: Gretchen and Mephistopheles in the Church
Lear and Cordelia
The Novitiate
Like his
The manuscript poem has never been printed.
The letter is clearly influenced by Hunt's reading of Keats, and especially early poems like Endymion
The P. R. B. Journal