All the thought which in the course of my studies, I have been able to give to the subject, has led me to conclude that the ideal in Art is but the impressions made upon the mind of the artist by the beautiful or Art subjects in external nature, and that... Le Morte Darthur: Introduction - Page 185by Sir Thomas Malory - 1890Full view - About this book
| University of Missouri - Lectures and lecturing - 1879 - 522 pages
...enjoyment of that higher life which is to begin when our mortal existence shall end. All the thought which in the course of my studies, I have been able to give to the subject, has led me to conclude that the ideal in Art is but the impressions made upon the mind... | |
| Sir Thomas Malory - Arthurian romances - 1890 - 252 pages
...adcognitare, OF acointer. acquyte, v., to acquit; prs., 176 6 ; — OF aquiter. 1 What is said abont the List of Names and Places can be repeated here...refer to pages and lines. In the etymological part AF ie written for Anglo-French ; Л.8., Anglo-Saxon; Goth., Qothic; Icel., Icelandic; Lat., Latin; Late... | |
| Fern Helen Rusk - Biography & Autobiography - 1917 - 206 pages
...attributes of nature which the highest Art can never possess "The Ideal in Art ". .All the thought which in the course of my studies I have been able to give to the subject has led me to conclude that the ideal in Art is but the impressions made upon the mind... | |
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