Thus, then, we have in some sort enumerated those evil signs which are most
necessary to be shunned in the seeking of ideal beauty,though it is not the knowledge of them, but the dread and hatred of them, which will
effectually aid the painter; as on the other hand it is not by mere admission of
the loveliness of good and holy expression that its subtile characters are to be
traced. Raffaelle himself,
oil painting for sale, questioned on this subject, made doubtful answer; he
probably could not trace through what early teaching, or by what dies of emotion
the image had been sealed upon his heart. Our own Bacon, who well saw the
impossibility of reaching it by the combination of many separate beauties, yet
explains not the nature of that "kind of felicity" to which he attributes
success. I suppose those who have conceived and wrought the loveliest things,
cheap oil painting, have done so by no theorizing, but in simple labor of love, and could not, if
put to a bar of rationalism, defend all points of what they had done, but
painted it in their own delight, and to the delight of all besides, only always
with that respect of conscience and "fear of swerving from that which is right,
which maketh diligent observers of circumstances the loose regard whereof is the
nurse of vulgar folly, no less than Solomon's attention thereunto was of natural
furtherances the most effectual to make him eminent above others, for he gave
good heed, and pierced everything to the very ground."
abstract oil painting
With which good heed, and watching of the instants when men feel warmly and
rightly, as the Indians do for the diamond in their washing of sand, and that
with the desire and hope of finding true good in men, and not with the ready
vanity that sets itself to fiction instantly, and carries its potter's wheel
about with it always, (off which there will come only clay vessels of regular shape after all,)
instead of the pure mirror that can show the seraph standing by the human
body—standing as signal to the heavenly land:with this heed and this charity, there are
none of us that may not bring down that lamp upon his path of which Spenser
sang:—
"That beauty is not, as fond men misdeem
An outward show of
things, that only seem;
But that fair lamp, from whose celestial ray
That light proceeds, which kindleth lover's fire,
Shall never be
extinguished nor decay.
But when the vital spirits do expire,
Unto her
native planet shall retire,
For it is heavenly born and cannot die,
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