Oh, wow!
Googled arsenic and it seems there’s a problem with it in rice.
No more than a couple of portions a week?
Good Morning Wednesday 13th May 2026
Being asked for an honest opinion
To be really irritated by chefs over praising their own food?
A recent thread was deleted because "it brought nothing useful of beautiful to the site". A reference of course to Morris's advice Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.
I can't see what on earth this has to do with threads on GN. Many of which are just ways to pass the time, gossip or games. So can anyone find a connection between the two or am I right in thinking William Morris is now turning in his grave? Or is this perhaps a new turning for GNHQ and will all posts now be looked at for beauty and usefulness? (Possibly though the new moderator is an intern who has just finished an art degree
)
Oh, wow!
Googled arsenic and it seems there’s a problem with it in rice.
No more than a couple of portions a week?
It can be found in quite a number of common foodstuffs too.
Still? I assume it must be in trace quantities, as it was often added to food in small amounts (too small for the victim to notice) and was definitely fatal. Apparently people used to insure children to pay for funerals, when child mortality was very high and relying on a paupers' funeral was a social disgrace. Before regulation, you could insure with several companies at once, and a number of parents (and so-called baby farmers) realised that real profits could be made. Mary Ann Cotton was probably the most famous example (as played by Joanne Froggatt in Dark Angel), but there were others, and very probably more who were never caught.
And Jane Austen apparently.
I ♥️ Tales of the Unexpected
It killed Napoleon didn’t it?
His wallpaper?
JaneJudge
Callistemon21
What a strange turn this thread has taken.
Killing one's spouse vis the medium of William Morris wallpaper?
I prefer the hammer and rug method myself but why ruin a perfectly good rug..
A frozen leg of lamb then inviting the detectives to dinner is worth a thought.
Arsenic was commonly used in cosmetics too.
It can be found in quite a number of common foodstuffs too.
I didn't say he was a serial killer?
I said that in a course about Victorian serial killers his wallpaper was mentioned in the context if the fact that serial killers (eg Mary Ann Cotton) used arsenic to murder people.
I wish I hadn't bothered now, but I didn't realise that there were rules for chatting on a thread that (I assumed) was never intended to be a genuine discussion about the merits of WM.
Oh, and I see no reason why socialists should not be wealthy. Hiding the fact that their profit-making business interests are responsible for the deaths of many people, on the other hand . . .
Thanks kitty leister, so do you. ?
Ok - why is it becoming a socialist when wealthy a Bad Thing?
I don’t expect Morris set out to fe a serial killer -
Callistemon21
What a strange turn this thread has taken.
Killing one's spouse vis the medium of William Morris wallpaper?
I prefer the hammer and rug method myself but why ruin a perfectly good rug..
Iam, you have excellent taste in hall decoration.
Are we 'supposed to' be discussing Gransnet's choice of what to delete? The thread diverted from that some time ago.
What a strange turn this thread has taken.
MayBeMaw
Oh exaggeration or what?
My post?
I have zero axe to grind with Morris (apart from his awful poems?). I did a course on Victorian serial killers a while ago (a local library thing) and one of the most popular methods of despatching unwanted spouses or inconvenient children was by slow arsenic poisoning, and the business of Morris's arsenic came up as part of that.
I believe it's true, as the person running the course was an expert in the topic, but if you know otherwise, I'll happily agree - I just thought it was interesting in the context of the thread.
Thanks Dinahmo. Giverny and Amiens are on my list for next year, so not too far away from Bois des Moutier for a visit.
That's Water House MayBeMaw which houses the Morris gallery. It is in Walthamstow. Prior to that he lived at Woodford Hall in the much more salubrious Woodford, (just up the road from Walthamsow). The big house is no longer there but there is plaque on the wall of the parish church hall. He had a tutor who was a Master at Forest School, a well regarded private school which I know very well. Waitrose is now just across the road, so you can gather the type of area!
Oh exaggeration or what?
kittylester
And his designs are gorgeous. Why does a person's politics have ant bearing - really.
You might not have found them so gorgeous if you had papered your house with his wallpaper and your family all died. That's not political in itself, but his knowledge that the arsenic that made him a fortune was killing people, and keeping that fact to himself is akin to asbestos companies fighting compensation cases from asbestosis victims, or thalidomide producers doing likewise.
No, it doesn't detract from the designs themselves, and clearly he is not making a profit from them now he's dead, but it certainly tarnished his image. And his poetry is atrocious?
It's very easy to be a Socialist when one has a cushion of wealth.
And his designs are gorgeous. Why does a person's politics have ant bearing - really.
You omit Varian to mention that that Morris came from a wealthy background himself, born in Walthamstow, Essex, to a wealthy middle-class family. He came under the strong influence of medievalism while studying Classics at Oxford.
His socialist principles did not always sit comfortably with his insistence on handmade craftsman- made furniture etc which put it well out of reach of the average working person in his day.
This is the house he lived in in his teens in what is now Lloyd Park in Walthamstow
To think William Morris and Gransnet are poles apart
Um,
William Morris (24 March 1834 – 3 October 1896) was a revolutionary force in Victorian Britain whose work dramatically changed the fashions and ideologies of the era. As a craftsman, designer, poet, printer, socialist, novelist, and environmentalist, Morris was not only influential in his own time, but his legacy remains alive and important today.
Gransnet is the busiest online community and lifestyle site for the over 50s. At its heart is a buzzing forum where users debate the hot topics of the day, support each other through tough times and share a laugh. Brimming with useful content covering everything from beauty to grandparenting, travel to technology, health and moneysaving tips, as well as fantastic competitions, there is something on the site for everyone. Gransnet is recognised as a champion for digital inclusion and is constantly challenging the stereotypes of ‘older people’ in the media.
Like oranges and bananas?
Wasn't there a scandal about Morris's wallpaper poisoning people with arsenic, a fact which he kept hidden as he was a director of an arsenic mine (or arsenic factory or something)?
Not quite as socialist as he liked to appear, it seems.
My settee and chairs when first married were covered in his beautiful Golden lilies in linen.Unknown to me until I saw photos of the children my cousin had exactly the same print in the same colour.
^I often wonder how the middle class ladies who chose his wallpaper and curtain designs in the 1970's and 80's, might have felt about his politics
You underestimate some people, Varian - we got our first sofa - Golden Lily - in 1972 and it did sterling service for many many years until recovering and reupholstering it was going to cost more than as replacement.
And yes, I did know about William and Jane Morris and his mates!
You might be interested in this, if you haven’t seen it already
suzannefagencecooper.blogspot.com/2020/04/at-home-with-jane-william-morris.html
When I was a child my mother had a set of The Children's Encyclopedia printed in the early years of the 20th century, it was full of things to make and do and the style was very Arts and Crafts. It got me permanently hooked on the style. I don't have any William Morris but I have got a lovely John Pearson copper planter that came from my mother's family and I've just treated myself to a stoneware fruit bowl by Martin Brothers of Southall. They used to make grotesque pottery which sells for thousands of pounds but mine is much plainer and way more affordable.
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