The True and the Beautiful in Nature, Art, Morals, and Religion: Selected from the Works of John Ruskin [...]J. Wiley, 1864 - 452 Seiten |
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Seite xviii
... respect due to honest , hopeless , helpless imbecility . There is something exalted in the innocence of their feeble- mindedness ; one cannot suspect them of partiality , for it implies feeling ; nor of prejudice , for it implies some ...
... respect due to honest , hopeless , helpless imbecility . There is something exalted in the innocence of their feeble- mindedness ; one cannot suspect them of partiality , for it implies feeling ; nor of prejudice , for it implies some ...
Seite xxiii
... respecting their works ; and to point out the kind of merit which , however deficient in some respects , those works possess beyond the possibility of dispute . " Mr. Ruskin here says no more than Schiller had said before him : - " With ...
... respecting their works ; and to point out the kind of merit which , however deficient in some respects , those works possess beyond the possibility of dispute . " Mr. Ruskin here says no more than Schiller had said before him : - " With ...
Seite xxviii
... respecting it , which is important to our present subject . " First : it was never independent of associated thought . Almost as soon as I could see or hear , I had got reading enough to give me associations with all kinds of scenery ...
... respecting it , which is important to our present subject . " First : it was never independent of associated thought . Almost as soon as I could see or hear , I had got reading enough to give me associations with all kinds of scenery ...
Seite 5
... respect as in all others , that men are alienated from the life of God , " through the ignorance that is in them , having the understanding darkened , because of the hardness of their hearts , and so being past feeling , give themselves ...
... respect as in all others , that men are alienated from the life of God , " through the ignorance that is in them , having the understanding darkened , because of the hardness of their hearts , and so being past feeling , give themselves ...
Seite 7
... respects , is the ideal of the object . We must be modest and cautious in the pronouncing of positive opinions on the subject of beauty ; for every one of us has peculiar sources of enjoyment necessarily opened to him in certain scenes ...
... respects , is the ideal of the object . We must be modest and cautious in the pronouncing of positive opinions on the subject of beauty ; for every one of us has peculiar sources of enjoyment necessarily opened to him in certain scenes ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
appearance arch architect architecture artists beauty beneath blue bough building character Christ chrysoprase church clouds color creature dark death deep delicate delight Divine earth evil expression faith fear feeling foam fulness give glory God's Gothic Gothic architecture grace grass heart heaven hills hollow human idea ideal imagination intellect JOHN RUSKIN kind Lamp Laocoon less light lines look lower marble marble church Masaccio mean mind Mino da Fiesole mist mountain nature ness never noble observe ornament painter painting passing passions Paul Veronese peculiar perfect Perugino picture pine pleasure poor man's Bible present pure purity purple racter rational architecture rocks roof sculpture seen sense shadow snow spirit stone Stones of Venice strange stream strength things thought tion Titian trees truth utmost vapor Venetian schools Venice waves whole wind word