I purpose at present to speak only of four of the more current opinions
respecting beauty, for of the errors connected with the pleasurableness of proportion, and of the expression of right feelings in the countenance, I
shall have opportunity to treat in the succeeding chapters; (compare Ch. VI. Ch.
XVI.)
Those erring or inconsistent positions which I would at once dismiss are, the
first, that the beautiful is the true, the second, that the beautiful is the
useful, the third, that it is dependent on custom, and the fourth, that it is
dependent on the association of ideas. oil painting online
To assert that the beautiful is the true, appears, at first, like asserting
that propositions are matter, and matter propositions. But giving the best and
most rational interpretation we can, and supposing the holders of this strange
position to mean only that things are beautiful which appear what they indeed
are, and ugly which appear what they are not, we find them instantly
contradicted by each and every conclusion of experience. A stone looks as truly
a stone as a rose looks a rose, and yet is not so beautiful; a cloud may look
more like a castle than a cloud, and be the more beautiful on that account. The
mirage of the desert is fairer than its sands; the false image of the under
heaven fairer than the sea. I am at a loss to know how any so untenable a
position could ever have been advanced; but it may, perhaps, have arisen from
some confusion of the beauty of art with the beauty of nature, and from an
illogical expansion of the very certain truth, that nothing is beautiful in art,
which, professing to be an imitation, or a statement, is not as such in some
sort true. oil painting online
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