| Charles Robert Leslie - 1845 - 404 strani
...VIII. 1824. Academy, and indeed it forms a decided feature, and its light cannot be put out, becaufe it is the light of nature, the mother of all that is valuable in poetry, painting, or any thing elfe where an appeal to the foul is required. The language of the heart is the only one that... | |
| Robert George Windsor-Clive earl of Plymouth - 1903 - 300 strani
...he writes a few days afterwards, "is liked at the Academy; indeed, it forms a decided feature, and its light cannot be put out, because it is the light...else where an appeal to the soul is required. The language of the heart is the only one that is universal, and Sterne says that he disregards all rules... | |
| Mary Sturge Gretton - 1911 - 344 strani
...evidently satisfactory to its author, for in informing Fisher of the welcome it has received, he adds - " Its light cannot be put out, because it is the light...anything else where an appeal to the soul is required. But my execution annoys most of them, and all the scholastic ones. Perhaps the sacrifices make for... | |
| Mary Sturge Gretton - 1905 - 338 strani
...its author, for in informing Fisher of the welcome it has received, he adds : " Its light cannot l>e put out, because it is the light of nature, the mother...anything else where an appeal to the soul is required. But my execution annoys most of them, and all the scholastic ones. Perhaps the sacrifices make for... | |
| Mary Schell Hoke Bacon - 1908 - 482 strani
...never put such a thing into a picture in my life." In painting one picture many times he declared, " Its light cannot be put out because it is the light of nature." A Frenchman called attention to one of his pictures thus: "Look at these landscapes by an Englishman.... | |
| Mary Schell Hoke Bacon, Dolores Bacon - 1908 - 468 strani
...never put such a thing into a picture in my life." In painting one picture many times he declared, " Its light cannot be put out because it is the light of nature." A Frenchman called attention to one of his pictures thus: "Look at these landscapes by an Englishman.... | |
| Arthur Bensley Chamberlain - 1909 - 102 strani
...more praise than as a rule fell to his works. " Its light cannot be put out," he wrote to Fisher, " because it is the light of nature, the mother of all...anything else where an appeal to the soul is required . . . But my execution annoys most of them, and all the scholastic ones. Perhaps the sacrifices I make... | |
| Alexander M. Ross - 1986 - 220 strani
...of the picturesque." A little later, writing to Dr. Fisher, he could also say of this picture that "it is the light of nature, the mother of all that...anything else where an appeal to the soul is required." 4 Constable obviously saw nothing incongruous about admitting that a painting as spiritually vibrant... | |
| John Constable - 1964 - 340 strani
...gay & frivolous Parisians. My picture is liked at the Academy. Indeed it forms a decided feature and its light cannot be put out, because it is the light...else — where an appeal to the soul is required. The language of the heart is the only one that is universal — and Sterne says that he disregards all... | |
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