The works of sir Joshua Reynolds. To which is prefixed an account of the life and writings of the author, by E. Malone, 3. köide |
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... QUÆ MIHI IPSI DESUNT . CICERO . VOLUME THE THIRD . LONDON : PRINTED FOR T. CADELL , JUN . AND W. DAVIES , IN THE STRAND , By H. Baldwin and Son , New Bridge - Street . EIAN 26 NOV 1956 LIBRARY CONTENTS OF THE THIRD VOLUME 1801 .
... QUÆ MIHI IPSI DESUNT . CICERO . VOLUME THE THIRD . LONDON : PRINTED FOR T. CADELL , JUN . AND W. DAVIES , IN THE STRAND , By H. Baldwin and Son , New Bridge - Street . EIAN 26 NOV 1956 LIBRARY CONTENTS OF THE THIRD VOLUME 1801 .
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... quæ digna sui , revolutaque lustrant Tempora , quærendis consortibus argumentis . Denique quæcunq ; in cœlo , terrâque , marique Longius in tempus durare , ut pulchra merentur , 25 19 15 To each exalted deed , which dares to claim The ...
... quæ digna sui , revolutaque lustrant Tempora , quærendis consortibus argumentis . Denique quæcunq ; in cœlo , terrâque , marique Longius in tempus durare , ut pulchra merentur , 25 19 15 To each exalted deed , which dares to claim The ...
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... quæ non modo noverit esse ; Illud apud veteres fuit unde notabile dictum , " Nil Pictore malo securius atque Poetâ . " Cognita amas , et amata cupis , sequerisq ; cu pita ; Passibus assequeris tandem quæ fervidus urges : 45 Love wakes ...
... quæ non modo noverit esse ; Illud apud veteres fuit unde notabile dictum , " Nil Pictore malo securius atque Poetâ . " Cognita amas , et amata cupis , sequerisq ; cu pita ; Passibus assequeris tandem quæ fervidus urges : 45 Love wakes ...
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... quæ pulchra decent ; non omnia casus Qualiácumque dabunt , etiamve simillima veris : Nam quamcumque modo servili haud sufficit ipsam Naturam exprimere ad vivum : sed ut arbiter artis , s Seliget ex illâ tantùm pulcherrima Pictor ...
... quæ pulchra decent ; non omnia casus Qualiácumque dabunt , etiamve simillima veris : Nam quamcumque modo servili haud sufficit ipsam Naturam exprimere ad vivum : sed ut arbiter artis , s Seliget ex illâ tantùm pulcherrima Pictor ...
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... normam haud possimus in arte Ponere , ( cum nequeant quæ sunt pulcherrima dici , ) II . De Speculatione et II . Of Theory and Prac- tice . VOL . III . D Praxi . Yet will she strive some leading rules to draw From THE ART OF PAINTING . 33.
... normam haud possimus in arte Ponere , ( cum nequeant quæ sunt pulcherrima dici , ) II . De Speculatione et II . Of Theory and Prac- tice . VOL . III . D Praxi . Yet will she strive some leading rules to draw From THE ART OF PAINTING . 33.
Common terms and phrases
admirable Æneas Albert Durer ancient Andrea Antonio Antonio da Correggio Antwerp Apelles appear ART OF PAINTING Artist atque beauty called Caracci Caravaggio charms colorum colours composition correctness Correggio detto Domenichino Domenico drapery Epic expression figures finishing forms Francesco Fresnoy genius Giacomo Giov Girolamo give glow grace Guercino Guido hand Hannibal harmony hero His.Por History Bologna History History Rome idea Il Bronzino imitated judgement Julio Romano Landsc light and shade Ludovico Carracci manner master Michael Angelo mind Nature noble NOTE ornamental Painted Country Painter Paris Parma passions Paul Brill Paul Veronese perfect picture Pietro Pietro Perugino pleasing Poem Poet Poetry Portraits practice precept principal Prospero Fontana quæ Quæque Rafaëlle Raffaelle Rome Rubens rules Sculpture shadow Sienna Studied under Excelled style taste things thro tint Tintoret tion Titian Tragedy translation Venice Veronese VERSE Virgil whole Wroon Zeuxis Zucchero
Popular passages
Page 288 - Bid her be all that cheers or softens life, The tender sister, daughter, friend, and wife: Bid her be all that makes mankind adore ; Then view this marble, and be vain no more ! Yet still her charms in breathing paint engage; 55 Her modest cheek shall warm a future age.
Page 289 - Oh lasting as those colours may they shine, Free as thy stroke, yet faultless as thy line ; New graces yearly like thy works display, 65 Soft without weakness, without glaring gay; Led by some rule, that guides, but not constrains ; And finish'd more through happiness than pains.
Page 268 - is the gift of Jupiter;" and, to speak in the same heathen language, We call it the gift of our Apollo, not to be obtained by pains or study, if we are not born to it : for the motions which are studied are never so natural as those which break out in the height of a real passion.
Page 285 - THIS verse be thine, my friend! nor thou refuse This from no venal or ungrateful Muse. Whether thy hand strike out some free design, Where life awakes, and dawns at every line, Or blend in beauteous tints the colour'd mass, And from the canvass call the mimic face...
Page 256 - A happy genius is the gift of nature : it depends on the influence of the stars, say the astrologers ; on the organs of the body, say the naturalists ; it is the particular gift of heaven say the divines, both christians and heathens. How to improve it, many books can teach us ; how to obtain it, none ; that nothing can be done without it, all agree : Tu nihil invita dices faciesve Minerva. Without invention a Painter is but a copier, and a Poet but a plagiary of others.
Page 255 - ... gives us pleasure, a lively imitation of it, either in poetry or painting, must of necessity produce a much greater : for both these arts, as I said before, are not only true imitations of nature, but of the best nature, of that which is wrought up to a nobler pitch. They present us with images more perfect than the life in any individual, and we have the pleasure to see all the scattered beauties of nature united by a happy chemistry without its deformities or faults. They are imitations of...
Page 249 - ... may be applied what Hippocrates says of Physic, as I find him cited by an eminent French critic. " Medicine has long subsisted in the world; the principles of it are certain, and it has a certain way; by both which there has been found, in the course of many ages, an infinite number of things, the experience of which has confirmed its usefulness and goodness. All that is wanting to the perfection of this Art, will...
Page 268 - To express the passions which are seated on the heart by outward signs," is one great precept of the painters, and very difficult to perform. In poetry the same passions and motions of the mind are to be expressed ; and in this consists the principal difficulty, as well as the excellency of that art. " This," says my author, " is the gift of Jupiter;" and, to speak in the same heathen language, we call it the gift of our Apollo, not to be obtained by pains or study, if we are not born to it : for...
Page 236 - ... excited in us. Such in Painting are the warts and moles, which, adding a likeness to the face, are not, therefore, to be omitted ; but these produce no loathing in us ; but how far to proceed, and where to stop, is left to the judgment of the Poet and the Painter. In Comedy there is somewhat more of the worse likeness to be taken...
Page 280 - A work may be over-wrought, as well as under-wrought ; too much labour often takes away the spirit by adding to the polishing, so that there remains nothing but a dull correctness, a piece without any considerable faults, but with few beauties ; for when the spirits are drawn off, there is nothing but a caput mortuum.