§ 15. Farther. The human beauty, which, whether in its bodily being or in imagined divinity,
had become, for the reasons we have seen, the principal object of culture and
sympathy to these Greeks, was, in its perfection, eminently orderly,
symmetrical, and tender. Hence, contemplating it constantly in this state, they
could not but feel a proportionate fear of all that was disorderly, unbalanced,
and rugged. Having trained their stoutest soldiers into a strength so delicate
and lovely, that their white flesh,cheap oil paintings, with their blood upon it, should look like
ivory stained with purple;and having always around them, in the motion and majesty of this beauty, enough
for the full employment of their imagination, they shrank with dread or hatred
from all the ruggedness of lower nature,—from the wrinkled forest bark, the
jagged hill-crest, and irregular, inorganic storm of sky; looking to these for
the most part as adverse powers, and taking pleasure only in such portions of
the lower world as were at once conducive to the rest and health of the human
frame, and in harmony with the laws of its gentler beauty. art oil paintings
§ 16. Thus, as far as I recollect, without a single exception, every Homeric
landscape, intended to be beautiful, is composed of a fountain, a meadow, and a
shady grove. This ideal is very interestingly marked, as intended for a perfect
one, in the fifth book of the Odyssey; when Mercury himself stops for a moment,
though on a message, to look at a landscape "which even an immortal might be
gladdened to behold." This landscape consists of a cave covered with a running
vine, all blooming into grapes, and surrounded by a grove of alder, poplar, and
sweet-smelling cypress. Four fountains of white (foaming) water, springing in
succession (mark the orderliness),original oil paintings, and close to one another, flow away in
different directions, through a meadow full of violets and parsley (parsley, to
mark its moisture, being elsewhere called "marsh-nourished," and associated with
the lotus);the air is perfumed not only by these violets and by the sweet cypress, but by
Calypso's fire of finely chopped cedar wood, which sends a smoke as of incense,
through the island; Calypso herself is singing; and finally, upon the trees are
resting, or roosting, owls, hawks, and "long-tongued sea-crows." Whether these last are
considered as a part of the ideal landscape, as marine singing-birds, I know
not; but the approval of Mercury appears to be elicited chiefly by the fountains
and violet meadow. oil paintings
§ 17. Now the notable things in this description are, first, the evident
subservience of the whole landscape to human comfort, to the foot, the taste, or
the smell; and, secondly, that throughout the passage there is not a single
figurative word expressive of the things being in any wise other than plain
grass, fruit or flower. I have used the term "spring" of the fountains, because,
without doubt, Homer means that they sprang forth brightly, having their source
at the foot of the rocks (as copious fountains nearly always have); but Homer
does not say "spring," he says simply flow, and uses only one word for "growing
softly," or "richly," of the tall trees, the vine, and the violets. There is,
however, some expression of sympathy with the sea-birds; he speaks of them in
precisely the same terms, as in other places of naval nations, saying they "have
care of the works of the sea." buy oil paintings online
§ 18. If we glance through the references to pleasant landscape which occur
in other parts of the Odyssey, we shall always be struck by this quiet
subjection of their every feature to human service, and by the excessive
similarity in the scenes. Perhaps the spot intended, after this, to be most
perfect, may be the garden of Alcinous, where the principal ideas are, still
more definitely, order, symmetry, and fruitfulness; the beds being duly ranged
between rows of vines, which, as well as the pear, apple, and fig-trees, bear
fruit continually, some grapes being yet sour, while others are getting black;
there are plenty of "orderly square beds of herbs," chiefly leeks, and
two fountains, one running through the garden, and one under the pavement of the
palace to a reservoir for the citizens. Ulysses, pausing to contemplate this
scene, is described nearly in the same terms as Mercury pausing to contemplate
the wilder meadow; and it is interesting to observe, that, in spite of all
Homer's love of symmetry, the god's admiration is excited by the free fountains,
wild violets, and wandering vine; but the mortal's, by the vines in rows, the
leeks in beds, and the fountains in pipes. frames for oil paintings
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