Massachusetts Quarterly Review, 1 tomasCoolidge & Wiley, 1848 |
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56 psl.
... things can be separated . Such was the progress of a pure religion among the Jews , of a pure art among the Greeks . In their early progress the two were always most intimately united , but after a certain culminating point had been ...
... things can be separated . Such was the progress of a pure religion among the Jews , of a pure art among the Greeks . In their early progress the two were always most intimately united , but after a certain culminating point had been ...
57 psl.
... things are in a state of decline , the small class of cultivated men become the heirs and depositaries of those treasures of art which were formerly the free property of all . This age , immediately succeeding what may be called the ...
... things are in a state of decline , the small class of cultivated men become the heirs and depositaries of those treasures of art which were formerly the free property of all . This age , immediately succeeding what may be called the ...
58 psl.
... things never done nor attempted before . That this phase is not the high- est , and that the author with a vivid insight into a part , is incapable of a just view of the whole , would seem probable , even to one who did not know what ...
... things never done nor attempted before . That this phase is not the high- est , and that the author with a vivid insight into a part , is incapable of a just view of the whole , would seem probable , even to one who did not know what ...
60 psl.
... things ? To recur to our classification of admirers and critics of Art ; we can perceive that our first great class is the most important to Art . The finished connoisseur may know and appreciate all that is best in what has gone before ...
... things ? To recur to our classification of admirers and critics of Art ; we can perceive that our first great class is the most important to Art . The finished connoisseur may know and appreciate all that is best in what has gone before ...
61 psl.
Things of the same kind may be compared , but an original work of art is different in kind from any thing that has gone before . The Venus de Medici and Mr. Powers ' statue cannot be compared , except in certain external particulars ...
Things of the same kind may be compared , but an original work of art is different in kind from any thing that has gone before . The Venus de Medici and Mr. Powers ' statue cannot be compared , except in certain external particulars ...
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