| George J. Leonard - 1995 - 269 Seiten
...systematic dis-figuration for himself of everything he had previously thought wonderful in real life: 'The most beautiful forms have something about them...it is not every eye that perceives these blemishes. ..." In reply, Wordsworth and Ruskin trained one to develop an opposite "power" to find the miracle... | |
| John Barrell - 1995 - 384 Seiten
...particular; for Reynolds, 'all the objects which are exhibited to our view by nature . . . will be found to have their blemishes and defects. The most beautiful...something about them like weakness, minuteness, or imperfection.'27 They are imperfect insofar as they do not exhibit the general character, not of their... | |
| George E. Marcus, Fred R. Myers - 1995 - 396 Seiten
...wrote, All the objects which are exhibited to our view by nature, upon close examination will be found to have their blemishes and defects. The most beautiful...something about them like weakness, minuteness or imperfections. But it is not every eye that perceives these blemishes. It must be any eye long used... | |
| Inga Bryden - 1998 - 312 Seiten
...kind. All the objects which are exhibited to our view by nature, upon close examination will be found to have their blemishes and defects. The most beautiful...these blemishes. It must be an eye long used to the comparison of these forms; and which, by a long habit of observing what any set of objects of the same... | |
| Nicholas Cook - 2007 - 368 Seiten
...[15]): All objects which are exhibited to our view by nature, upon close examination will be found to have their blemishes and defects. The most beautiful...about them like weakness, minuteness, or imperfection. . . . [The painter] corrects nature by herself, her imperfect state by her more perfect. His eye being... | |
| 1823 - 940 Seiten
...individual objects which are exhibited to our view by nature, upon close examination, will be found 2 A W Jj { fV " n)HI%{ o Hg in ̉ 0 ^"|г ƒ... @rb | + Kk Ɲa` Ya t eTS2T Hw $s ޏX$ ∱׆ L ĩ ; which alone can discern what any set of objects of the same kind has in common, and what each wants... | |
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