Essays and Studies, Issue 72 |
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Page ix
... artist no more than is conceded as an unquestionable right to critics who are clear from any charge of good or bad ... artists of different and even of opposite schools , may have failed to make me a good critic of their art , but can ...
... artist no more than is conceded as an unquestionable right to critics who are clear from any charge of good or bad ... artists of different and even of opposite schools , may have failed to make me a good critic of their art , but can ...
Page xi
... artists , or critics , held together by a contract for the exchange of reciprocal flattery , except a society of the same kind whose bond of union should be a compact of detraction , a confederacy of malignities , an alliance for the ...
... artists , or critics , held together by a contract for the exchange of reciprocal flattery , except a society of the same kind whose bond of union should be a compact of detraction , a confederacy of malignities , an alliance for the ...
Page 41
... art , the one question is not what you mean but what you do . Therefore , as I have said elsewhere , the one primary requisite of art is artistic worth ; " art for art's sake first , and then all things shall be added L'ANNÉE TERRIBLE . 41.
... art , the one question is not what you mean but what you do . Therefore , as I have said elsewhere , the one primary requisite of art is artistic worth ; " art for art's sake first , and then all things shall be added L'ANNÉE TERRIBLE . 41.
Page 42
... artist , shall be taken away even that which he has ; whatever merit of aspiration , sentiment , sincerity , he may naturally possess , admirable and serviceable as in other lines of work it might have been and yet may be , is here ...
... artist , shall be taken away even that which he has ; whatever merit of aspiration , sentiment , sincerity , he may naturally possess , admirable and serviceable as in other lines of work it might have been and yet may be , is here ...
Page 43
... artist on any plea the license to infringe in the least article the letter of this law , to overlook or overpass it in the pursuit of any foreign purpose , we do not refuse to him the liberty of bringing within the range of it any ...
... artist on any plea the license to infringe in the least article the letter of this law , to overlook or overpass it in the pursuit of any foreign purpose , we do not refuse to him the liberty of bringing within the range of it any ...
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Common terms and phrases
admirable Æschylus ALFRED CONCANEN Arnold artist beauty better breath BRET HARTE Byron charm clear cloth extra Coleridge colour critical Crown 8vo Cyclops Dante delight divine Duchess of Malfi Edited English evil exquisite eyes face faith faultless fiery figure fire flower force Ford fresh genius gilt give glory grace grave hair hand harmony head heaven JAMES PAYN JAMES RICE JUSTIN MCCARTHY Keats labour less light lips living lyric man's master memory metre mind Molière nature never noble once OUIDA painter passion pathos perfect Philistine picture play poem poet poetic poetry Portrait praise pure Rossetti scene seems sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's side sketch song soul sound spirit splendid splendour stanza strength strong student style subtle sweet tender things thought Titian touch tragedy tragic truth verse Victor Hugo WILKIE COLLINS wind words worth
Popular passages
Page 10 - German Popular Stories. Collected by the Brothers GRIMM, and Translated by EDGAR TAYLOR. Edited with an Introduction by JOHN RUSKIN. With 22 Illustrations after the inimitable designs of GEORGE CRUIKSHANK. Both Series Complete. " The illustrations of this volume . . . are of quite sterling and admirable art, of a class precisely parallel in elevation to the character of the tales which they illustrate; and the original etchings, as / have before said in the Appendix to my ' Elements of Drawing* were...
Page 291 - Could you on this fair mountain leave to feed, And batten on this moor? Ha! have you eyes? You cannot call it love; for at your age The heyday in the blood is tame, it's humble, And waits upon the judgment; and what judgment Would step from this to this?
Page 15 - Lamb's Complete Works, in Prose and Verse, reprinted from the Original Editions, with many Pieces hitherto unpublished. Edited, with Notes and Introduction, by RH SHEPHERD. With Two Portraits and Facsimile of a Page of the
Page 18 - And he spread it before me ; and it was written within and without : and there was written therein lamentations, and mourning, and woe.
Page 13 - Works by : The Hygiene of the Skin. A Concise Set of Rules for the Management of the Skin: with Directions for Diet, Wines, Soaps, Baths, &c.
Page 137 - Is it so small a thing To have enjoyed the sun, To have lived light in the spring, To have loved, to have thought, to have done; To have advanced true friends, and beat down baffling foes...
Page 11 - Shelley's Early Poems, and Queen Mab, with Essay by LEIGH HUNT. Shelley's Later Poems: Laon and Cythna, &c. Shelley's Posthumous Poems, the Shelley Papers, &c. Shelley's Prose Works, including A Refutation of Deism, Zastrozzi, St. Irvyne, &c.
Page 28 - Signboards : Their History. With Anecdotes of Famous Taverns and Remarkable Characters. By JACOB LARWOOD and JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN. With nearly too Illustrations.
Page 1 - Advertising, A History of, from the Earliest Times. Illustrated by Anecdotes, Curious Specimens, and Notices of Successful Advertisers. By HENRY SAMPSON. Crown 8vo, with Coloured Frontispiece and Illustrations, cloth gilt, 7s. 6d. Agony Column (The) of " The Times,
Page 26 - Illustrations. Magician's Own Book : Performances with Cups and Balls, Eggs, Hats, Handkerchiefs, &c. All from Actual Experience. Edited by WH CREMER.