"Beautiful deep-red hair that fell in soft heavy wings" - Georgiana Burne Jones on Elizabeth Siddal's hair.
DG Rossetti Regina Cordium 1860 Lizzie's Wedding portrait - Wikimedia Commons |
Elizabeth Siddal Plaiting her Hair- DG Rossetti - CC-NY-NC-ND 3.0 unported https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artwork-n04629 |
To assuage his feelings of guilt, he placed the only manuscript of his unpublished poetry alongside her in the coffin. Lizzie was reportedly pregnant at the time of her death. Seven years later in 1869 , regretting his previous impulse, Rossetti arranged the notorious exhumation of his late wife's remains at Highgate cemetery to retrieve his poetry. According to reports of those present at the exhumation, Lizzie's gleaming hair had grown and filled the coffin adding to the myth of Elizabeth Siddal. No wonder then , that her hair is described as iconic and possibly “ the most famous hair of the 19th century”.
After Rossetti's death, his niece gave the lock of Lizzie's hair to an American scholar. It is now at the University of Delaware . Lizzie's lock of hair, and Rossetti's handwritten note can be viewed in the online exhibition from the Victorian Passions collection at the University of Delaware:
For further background on the discovery of the lock: https://www.udel.edu/udaily/2019/october/lizzie-siddal-pre-raphaelite-muse-winterthur-lock-hair-art-history/
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