§ 14. Another character of the imagination is equally constant, and, to our 
present inquiry, of yet greater importance. It is eminently a weariable 
faculty, eminently delicate, and incapable of bearing fatigue; so that if we 
give it too many objects at a time to employ itself upon, or very grand ones for 
a long time together, it fails under the effort, becomes jaded, exactly as the 
limbs do by bodily fatigue, and incapable of answering any farther appeal till 
it has had rest. And this is the real nature of the weariness which is so often 
felt in travelling, from seeing too much. It is not that the monotony and number 
of the beautiful things seen have made them valueless, but that the imaginative 
power has been overtaxed; and, instead of letting it rest, the traveller, 
wondering to find himself dull, and incapable of admiration, seeks for something 
more admirable, excites, and torments,art oil paintings online, and drags the poor fainting imagination 
up by the shoulders: "Look at this, and look at that, and this more wonderful 
still!"—until the imaginative faculty faints utterly away, beyond all farther torment or 
pleasure, dead for many a day to come; and the despairing prodigal takes to 
horse-racing in the Campagna, good now for nothing else than that; whereas, if 
the imagination had only been laid down on the grass, among simple things, and 
left quiet for a little while, it would have come to itself gradually, recovered 
its strength and color, and soon been fit for work again. So that, whenever the 
imagination is tired, it is necessary to find for it something, not more 
admirable but less admirable; such as in that weak state it can deal 
with; then give it peace, and it will recover. art oil paintings for sale
§ 15. I well recollect the walk on which I first found out this; it was on 
the winding road from Sallenche, sloping up the hills towards St. Gervais, one 
cloudless Sunday afternoon. The road circles softly between bits of rocky bank 
and mounded pasture; little cottages and chapels gleaming out from among the 
trees at every turn. Behind me, some leagues in length, rose the jagged range of 
the mountains of the Réposoir; on the other side of the valley, the mass of the 
Aiguille de Varens, heaving its seven thousand feet of cliff into the air at a 
single effort, its gentle gift of waterfall, the Nant d'Arpenaz, like a pillar 
of cloud at its feet; Mont Blanc and all its aiguilles, one silver flame, in 
front of me; marvellous blocks of mossy granite and dark glades of pine around 
me; but I could enjoy nothing, and could not for a long while make out what was 
the matter with me, until at last I discovered that if I confined myself to one 
thing,—and that a little thing,oil painting reproductions,—a tuft of moss, or a single crag at the top of 
the Varens, or a wreath or two of foam at the bottom of the Nant d'Arpenaz, I 
began to enjoy it directly, because then I had mind enough to put into the 
thing, and the enjoyment arose from the quantity of the imaginative energy I 
could bring to bear upon it; but when I looked at or thought of all together, 
moss, stones, Varens, Nant d'Arpenaz, and Mont Blanc, I had not mind enough to 
give to all, and none were of any value. The conclusion which would have been 
formed, upon this, by a German philosopher, would have been that the Mont Blanc 
was of no value; that he and his imagination only were of value; that the 
Mont Blanc, in fact, except so far as he was able to look at it, could not be 
considered as having any existence. But the only conclusion which occurred to me as 
reasonable under the circumstances (I have seen no ground for altering it since) 
was, that I was an exceedingly small creature, much tired, and, at the moment, 
not a little stupid, for whom a blade of grass, or a wreath of foam, was quite 
food enough and to spare, and that if I tried to take any more, I should make 
myself ill. Whereupon, associating myself fraternally with some ants, who were 
deeply interested in the conveyance of some small sticks over the road, and 
rather, as I think they generally are, in too great a hurry about it, I returned 
home in a little while with great contentment, thinking how well it was ordered 
that, as Mont Blanc and his pine forests could not be everywhere, nor all the 
world come to see them, the human mind, on the whole, should enjoy itself most 
surely in an ant-like manner, and be happy and busy with the bits of stick and 
grains of crystal that fall in its way to be handled, in daily duty. oil paintings
§ 16. It follows evidently from the first of these characters of the 
imagination, its dislike of substance and presence, that a picture has in some 
measure even an advantage with us in not being real. The imagination rejoices in 
having something to do, springs up with all its willing power, flattered and 
happy; and ready with its fairest colors and most tender pencilling, to prove 
itself worthy of the trust, and exalt into sweet supremacy the shadow that has 
been confided to its fondness. And thus, so far from its being at all an object 
to the painter to make his work look real, he ought to dread such a consummation 
as the loss of one of its most precious claims upon the heart. So far from 
striving to convince the beholder that what he sees is substance,cheap oil paintings, his mind 
should be to what he paints as the fire to the body on the pile, burning away 
the ashes, leaving the unconquerable shade—an immortal dream. So certain is 
this, that the slightest local success in giving the deceptive appearance of 
reality—the imitation, for instance, of the texture of a bit of wood, with its 
grain in relief—will instantly destroy the charm of a whole picture; the 
imagination feels itself insulted and injured, and passes by with cold contempt; 
nay, however beautiful the whole scene may be, as of late in much of our highly 
wrought painting for the stage, the mere fact of its being deceptively real is 
enough to make us tire of it; we may be surprised and pleased for a moment, but the imagination 
will not on those terms be persuaded to give any of its help, and, in a quarter 
of an hour, we wish the scene would change. paintings for sale
 
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