Art of painting. Essays on English church musicT. Cadell and W. Davies, 1811 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 55
Página 26
... mind ; Untaught to relish , yet too proud to learn , He scorns the grace his dulness can't discern . Hence reason to caprice resigns the stage , 61 And hence that maxim of the ancient Sage , Sed rerum ut pollens ars cognitione ...
... mind ; Untaught to relish , yet too proud to learn , He scorns the grace his dulness can't discern . Hence reason to caprice resigns the stage , 61 And hence that maxim of the ancient Sage , Sed rerum ut pollens ars cognitione ...
Página 44
... mind display ! Can colours catch them , or can lines pourtray ? Who shall our pigmy pencils arm with might To seize the soul , and force her into sight ? Jove , Jove alone ; his highly - favour'd few Alone can call such miracles to view ...
... mind display ! Can colours catch them , or can lines pourtray ? Who shall our pigmy pencils arm with might To seize the soul , and force her into sight ? Jove , Jove alone ; his highly - favour'd few Alone can call such miracles to view ...
Página 65
... mind ; Be there each line in truth ideal drawn , Or ere a colour on the canvass dawn ; Then as the work proceeds , that work submit To sight instinctive , not to doubting wit ; The eye each obvious error swift descries , Hold then the ...
... mind ; Be there each line in truth ideal drawn , Or ere a colour on the canvass dawn ; Then as the work proceeds , that work submit To sight instinctive , not to doubting wit ; The eye each obvious error swift descries , Hold then the ...
Página 66
... mind Veer not with every critic's veering wind , Or e'er submit thy genius to the rules Of prating fops , or self - important fools ; Enough if from the learn'd applause be won ; Who doat on random praises , merit none . a By Nature's ...
... mind Veer not with every critic's veering wind , Or e'er submit thy genius to the rules Of prating fops , or self - important fools ; Enough if from the learn'd applause be won ; Who doat on random praises , merit none . a By Nature's ...
Página 67
... mind . When shines the morn , when in recruited course The spirits flow , devote their active force To every nicer part of thy design , 645 650 " But pass no idle day without a line : 460 Fructibus utque suus nunquam est sapor , atque ...
... mind . When shines the morn , when in recruited course The spirits flow , devote their active force To every nicer part of thy design , 645 650 " But pass no idle day without a line : 460 Fructibus utque suus nunquam est sapor , atque ...
Términos y frases comunes
Accent admirable Albert Durer Andrea Anthem antient Antwerp appear Artist atque Author Bagnacavallo beauty called Caracci charms Chaunt Church Music colorum colours Composer composition Correggio defect detto Discant Domenichino drapery Essay expression figures forms Francesco Fresnoy genius Giacomo Giottino Giov Girolamo give grace Guercino Guido harmony History Florence idea imitation instrument invention kind Landsc learned light and shade Ludovico Carracci manner master Melody Michael Angelo mind mode modern Nature noble Note ornamental Painter Parma passions Paul Veronese perfect performed picture Pietro Pietro Perugino pleasing poem Poet poetical Poetry Portraits practice principal produced Prospero Fontana Psalmody Psalms quæ Raffaelle reader Rome Rubens rules sentiment shadows Simon Vouet singing Sir John Hawkins solemn Studied under Excelled style syllable taste thing tion Titian tragedy translation true Udina Venice Verse Virgil Vocal whole words
Pasajes populares
Página 312 - Anon they move In perfect phalanx to the Dorian mood Of flutes and soft recorders...
Página 209 - Preserved; but I must bear this testimony to his memory, that the passions are truly touched in it, though, perhaps there is somewhat to be desired both in the grounds of them, and in the height and elegance of expression ; but nature is there, which is the greatest beauty.
Página 308 - The interim of unsweating themselves regularly and convenient rest before meat may both with profit and delight be taken up in recreating and composing their travailed spirits with the solemn and divine harmonies of music, heard or learned either while the skilful organist plies his grave and fancied descant in lofty fugues or the whole symphony with artful and unimaginable touches adorn and grace the well-studied chords of some choice composer — sometimes the lute or soft organ-stop waiting on...
Página 200 - Painter should be conformable to the text of ancient authors, to the custom and the times ;" and this is exactly the same in Poetry : Homer and Virgil are to be our guides in the Epic ; Sophocles and Euripides in Tragedy ; in all things we are to imitate the customs and the times of those persons and things which we represent : not to make new rules of the Drama, as Lopez de Vega has attempted unsuccessfully to do, but to be content to follow our masters, who understood nature better than we.
Página 23 - The tuneful page with speaking picture charm. What to the ear sublimer rapture brings, That strain alone the genuine Poet sings ; That form alone where glows peculiar grace, The genuine Painter condescends to trace : 10 No sordid theme will verse or paint admit, Unworthy colours, if unworthy wit.
Página 224 - Oh lasting as those colours may they shine, Free as thy stroke, yet faultless as thy line, New graces yearly like thy works display, Soft without weakness, without glaring gay ; Led by some rule that guides, but not constrains ; And finish 'd more through happiness than pains.
Página 200 - ... 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.
Página 203 - Shouts of applause ran ringing through the field, To see the son the vanquish'd father shield : All, fired with noble emulation, strive, And with a storm of darts to distance drive The Trojan chief; who held at bay, from far On his Vulcanian orb sustain'd the war.
Página 57 - Fiercely in front, some tenderly retire. ' Vain is the hope by colouring to display The bright effulgence of the noontide ray, Or paint the full-orb'd ruler of the skies 495 With pencils dipp'd in dull terrestrial dyes...
Página 212 - It is an ugly woman in a rich habit, set out with jewels: nothing can become her. But granting the design to be moderately good, it is like an excellent complexion with indifferent features ; the white and red well mingled on the face, make what was before but passable appear beautiful.