FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   167   168   169   170   171   172   173   174   175   176   >>  
ill life, I believe, that ever existed. [77] The order in which I place these masters does not in the least imply superiority or inferiority. I wrote their names down as they occurred to me; putting Rossetti's last because what I had to say of him was connected with other subjects; and one or another will appear to you great, or be found by you useful, according to the kind of subjects you are studying. [78] This is especially the case in the St. Cecily, Rossetti's first illustration to the "Palace of Art," which would have been the best in the book had it been well engraved. The whole work should be taken up again, and done by line engraving, perfectly; and wholly from Pre-Raphaelite designs, with which no other modern work can bear the least comparison. [79] The praise I have given incidentally to Flaxman's sculpture in the "Seven Lamps," and elsewhere, refers wholly to his studies from Nature, and simple groups in marble, which were always good and interesting. Still, I have overrated him, even in this respect; and it is generally to be remembered that, in speaking of artists whose works I cannot be supposed to have specially studied, the errors I fall into will always be on the side of praise. For, of course, praise is most likely to be given when the thing praised is above one's knowledge; and, therefore, as our knowledge increases, such things may be found less praiseworthy than we thought. But blame can only be justly given when the thing blamed is below one's level of sight; and, practically, I never do blame anything until I have got well past it, and am certain that there is demonstrable falsehood in it. I believe, therefore, all my blame to be wholly trust-worthy, having never yet had occasion to repent of one depreciatory word that I have ever written, while I have often found that, with respect to things I had not time to study closely, I was led too far by sudden admiration, helped, perhaps, by peculiar associations, or other deceptive accidents; and this the more, because I never care to check an expression of delight, thinking the chances are, that, even if mistaken, it will do more good than harm; but I weigh every word of blame with scrupulous caution. I have sometimes erased a strong passage of blame from second editions of my books; but this was only when I fo
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   167   168   169   170   171   172   173   174   175   176   >>  



Top keywords:

praise

 

wholly

 
subjects
 

things

 

respect

 
knowledge
 

Rossetti

 
praised
 
thought
 

praiseworthy


justly
 

blamed

 

practically

 

demonstrable

 

increases

 

closely

 

chances

 

mistaken

 

thinking

 
delight

expression
 

scrupulous

 

editions

 
passage
 
strong
 

caution

 

erased

 
accidents
 

deceptive

 

depreciatory


repent
 

written

 

occasion

 
worthy
 

helped

 

peculiar

 

associations

 

admiration

 

sudden

 
falsehood

groups

 
studying
 

connected

 
engraved
 
Palace
 

Cecily

 
illustration
 

masters

 

existed

 
superiority