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<h1> THE TWO PATHS </h1>
<h2> By John Ruskin </h2>
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<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> THE TWO PATHS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> THE TWO PATHS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> LECTURE I. — THE DETERIORATIVE POWER OF
CONVENTIONAL ART OVER NATIONS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> LECTURE II. — THE UNITY OF ART. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> LECTURE III. — MODERN MANUFACTURE AND
DESIGN. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> LECTURE IV. — INFLUENCE OF IMAGINATION IN
ARCHITECTURE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> LECTURE V. — THE WORK OF IRON, IN NATURE,
ART, AND POLICY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> APPENDICES. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> APPENDIX II. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> APPENDIX III. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> APPENDIX IV. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> APPENDIX V. </SPAN></p>
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<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </SPAN></p>
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<h1> THE TWO PATHS. </h1>
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<p><SPAN name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PREFACE. </h2>
<p>The following addresses, though spoken at different times, are
intentionally connected in subject; their aim being to set one or two main
principles of art in simple light before the general student, and to
indicate their practical bearing on modern design. The law which it has
been my effort chiefly to illustrate is the dependence of all noble
design, in any kind, on the sculpture or painting of Organic Form.</p>
<p>This is the vital law; lying at the root of all that I have ever tried to
teach respecting architecture or any other art. It is also the law most
generally disallowed.</p>
<p>I believe this must be so in every subject. We are all of us willing
enough to accept dead truths or blunt ones; which can be fitted harmlessly
into spare niches, or shrouded and coffined at once out of the way, we
holding complacently the cemetery keys, and supposing we have learned
something. But a sapling truth, with earth at its root and blossom on its
branches; or a trenchant truth, that can cut its way through bars and
sods; most men, it seems to me, dislike the sight or entertainment of, if
by any means such guest or vision may be avoided. And, indeed, this is no
wonder; for one such truth, thoroughly accepted, connects itself strangely
with others, and there is no saying what it may lead us to.</p>
<p>And thus the gist of what I have tried to teach about architecture has
been throughout denied by my architect readers, even when they thought
what I said suggestive in other particulars. "Anything but that. Study
Italian Gothic?—perhaps it would be as well: build with pointed
arches?—there is no objection: use solid stone and well-burnt brick?—
by all means: but—learn to carve or paint organic form ourselves!
How can such a thing be asked? We are above all that. The carvers and
painters are our servants—quite subordinate people. They ought to be
glad if we leave room for them."</p>
<p>Well: on that it all turns. For those who will not learn to carve or
paint, and think themselves greater men because they cannot, it is wholly
wasted time to read any words of mine; in the truest and sternest sense
they can read no words of mine; for the most familiar I can use—"form,"
"proportion," "beauty," "curvature," "colour"—are used in a sense
which by no effort I can communicate to such readers; and in no building
that I praise, is the thing that I praise it for, visible to them.</p>
<p>And it is the more necessary for me to state this fully; because so-
called Gothic or Romanesque buildings are now rising every day around us,
which might be supposed by the public more or less to embody the
principles of those styles, but which embody not one of them, nor any
shadow or fragment of them; but merely serve to caricature the noble
buildings of past ages, and to bring their form into dishonour by leaving
out their soul.</p>
<p>The following addresses are therefore arranged, as I have just stated, to
put this great law, and one or two collateral ones, in less mistakeable
light, securing even in this irregular form at least clearness of
assertion. For the rest, the question at issue is not one to be decided by
argument, but by experiment, which if the reader is disinclined to make,
all demonstration must be useless to him.</p>
<p>The lectures are for the most part printed as they were read, mending only
obscure sentences here and there. The parts which were trusted to
extempore speaking are supplied, as well as I can remember (only with an
addition here and there of things I forgot to say), in the words, or at
least the kind of words, used at the time; and they contain, at all
events, the substance of what I said more accurately than hurried journal
reports. I must beg my readers not in general to trust to such, for even
in fast speaking I try to use words carefully; and any alteration of
expression will sometimes involve a great alteration in meaning. A little
while ago I had to speak of an architectural design, and called it
"elegant," meaning, founded on good and well "elected" models; the printed
report gave "excellent" design (that is to say, design <i>excellingly</i>
good), which I did not mean, and should, even in the most hurried
speaking, never have said.</p>
<p>The illustrations of the lecture on iron were sketches made too roughly to
be engraved, and yet of too elaborate subjects to allow of my drawing them
completely. Those now substituted will, however, answer the purpose nearly
as well, and are more directly connected with the subjects of the
preceding lectures; so that I hope throughout the volume the student will
perceive an insistance upon one main truth, nor lose in any minor
direction of inquiry the sense of the responsibility which the acceptance
of that truth fastens upon him; responsibility for choice, decisive and
conclusive, between two modes of study, which involve ultimately the
development, or deadening, of every power he possesses. I have tried to
hold that choice clearly out to him, and to unveil for him to its farthest
the issue of his turning to the right hand or the left. Guides he may find
many, and aids many; but all these will be in vain unless he has first
recognised the hour and the point of life when the way divides itself, one
way leading to the Olive mountains—one to the vale of the Salt Sea.
There are few cross roads, that I know of, from one to the other. Let him
pause at the parting of THE TWO PATHS.</p>
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<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE TWO PATHS </h2>
<h3> <i>BEING</i> </h3>
<p>LECTURES ON ART, AND ITS APPLICATION TO DECORATION AND MANUFACTURE
DELIVERED IN 1858-9.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LECTURE I. — THE DETERIORATIVE POWER OF CONVENTIONAL ART OVER NATIONS. </h2>
<p><i>An Inaugural Lecture, Delivered at the Kensington Museum, January,
1858.</i></p>
<p>[Note: A few introductory words, in which, at the opening of this lecture,
I thanked the Chairman (Mr. Cockerell), for his support on the occasion,
and asked his pardon for any hasty expressions in my writings, which might
have seemed discourteous towards him, or other architects whose general
opinions were opposed to mine, may be found by those who care for
preambles, not much misreported, in the <i>Building Chronicle;</i> with
such comments as the genius of that journal was likely to suggest to it.]</p>
<p>As I passed, last summer, for the first time, through the north of
Scotland, it seemed to me that there was a peculiar painfulness in its
scenery, caused by the non-manifestation of the powers of human art. I had
never travelled in, nor even heard or conceived of such a country before;
nor, though I had passed much of my life amidst mountain scenery in the
south, was I before aware how much of its charm depended on the little
gracefulnesses and tendernesses of human work, which are mingled with the
beauty of the Alps, or spared by their desolation. It is true that the art
which carves and colours the front of a Swiss cottage is not of any very
exalted kind; yet it testifies to the completeness and the delicacy of the
faculties of the mountaineer; it is true that the remnants of tower and
battlement, which afford footing to the wild vine on the Alpine
promontory, form but a small part of the great serration of its rocks; and
yet it is just that fragment of their broken outline which gives them
their pathetic power, and historical majesty. And this element among the
wilds of our own country I found wholly wanting. The Highland cottage is
literally a heap of gray stones, choked up, rather than roofed over, with
black peat and withered heather; the only approach to an effort at
decoration consists in the placing of the clods of protective peat
obliquely on its roof, so as to give a diagonal arrangement of lines,
looking somewhat as if the surface had been scored over by a gigantic
claymore.</p>
<p>And, at least among the northern hills of Scotland, elements of more
ancient architectural interest are equally absent. The solitary peel-
house is hardly discernible by the windings of the stream; the roofless
aisle of the priory is lost among the enclosures of the village; and the
capital city of the Highlands, Inverness, placed where it might ennoble
one of the sweetest landscapes, and by the shore of one of the loveliest
estuaries in the world;—placed between the crests of the Grampians
and the flowing of the Moray Firth, as if it were a jewel clasping the
folds of the mountains to the blue zone of the sea,—is only
distinguishable from a distance by one architectural feature, and exalts
all the surrounding landscape by no other associations than those which
can be connected with its modern castellated gaol.</p>
<p>While these conditions of Scottish scenery affected me very painfully, it
being the first time in my life that I had been in any country possessing
no valuable monuments or examples of art, they also forced me into the
consideration of one or two difficult questions respecting the effect of
art on the human mind; and they forced these questions upon me eminently
for this reason, that while I was wandering disconsolately among the moors
of the Grampians, where there was no art to be found, news of peculiar
interest was every day arriving from a country where there was a great
deal of art, and art of a delicate kind, to be found. Among the models set
before you in this institution, and in the others established throughout
the kingdom for the teaching of design, there are, I suppose, none in
their kind more admirable than the decorated works of India. They are,
indeed, in all materials capable of colour, wool, marble, or metal, almost
inimitable in their delicate application of divided hue, and fine
arrangement of fantastic line. Nor is this power of theirs exerted by the
people rarely, or without enjoyment; the love of subtle design seems
universal in the race, and is developed in every implement that they
shape, and every building that they raise; it attaches itself with the
same intensity, and with the same success, to the service of superstition,
of pleasure or of cruelty; and enriches alike, with one profusion on
enchanted iridescence, the dome of the pagoda, the fringe of the girdle
and the edge of the sword.</p>
<p>So then you have, in these two great populations, Indian and Highland—
in the races of the jungle and of the moor—two national capacities
distinctly and accurately opposed. On the one side you have a race
rejoicing in art, and eminently and universally endowed with the gift of
it; on the other you have a people careless of art, and apparently
incapable of it, their utmost effort hitherto reaching no farther than to
the variation of the positions of the bars of colour in square chequers.
And we are thus urged naturally to enquire what is the effect on the moral
character, in each nation, of this vast difference in their pursuits and
apparent capacities? and whether those rude chequers of the tartan, or the
exquisitely fancied involutions of the Cashmere, fold habitually over the
noblest hearts? We have had our answer. Since the race of man began its
course of sin on this earth, nothing has ever been done by it so
significative of all bestial, and lower than bestial degradation, as the
acts the Indian race in the year that has just passed by. Cruelty as
fierce may indeed have been wreaked, and brutality as abominable been
practised before, but never under like circumstances; rage of prolonged
war, and resentment of prolonged oppression, have made men as cruel before
now; and gradual decline into barbarism, where no examples of decency or
civilization existed around them, has sunk, before now, isolated
populations to the lowest level of possible humanity. But cruelty
stretched to its fiercest against the gentle and unoffending, and
corruption festered to its loathsomest in the midst of the witnessing
presence of a disciplined civilization,— these we could not have
known to be within the practicable compass of human guilt, but for the
acts of the Indian mutineer. And, as thus, on the one hand, you have an
extreme energy of baseness displayed by these lovers of art; on the other,—as
if to put the question into the narrowest compass—you have had an
extreme energy of virtue displayed by the despisers of art. Among all the
soldiers to whom you owe your victories in the Crimea, and your avenging
in the Indies, to none are you bound by closer bonds of gratitude than to
the men who have been born and bred among those desolate Highland moors.
And thus you have the differences in capacity and circumstance between the
two nations, and the differences in result on the moral habits of two
nations, put into the most significant—the most palpable—the
most brief opposition. Out of the peat cottage come faith, courage, self-
sacrifice, purity, and piety, and whatever else is fruitful in the work of
Heaven; out of the ivory palace come treachery, cruelty, cowardice,
idolatry, bestiality,—whatever else is fruitful in the work of Hell.</p>
<p>But the difficulty does not close here. From one instance, of however
great apparent force, it would be wholly unfair to gather any general
conclusion—wholly illogical to assert that because we had once found
love of art connected with moral baseness, the love of art must be the
general root of moral baseness; and equally unfair to assert that, because
we had once found neglect of art coincident with nobleness of disposition,
neglect of art must be always the source or sign of that nobleness. But if
we pass from the Indian peninsula into other countries of the globe; and
from our own recent experience, to the records of history, we shall still
find one great fact fronting us, in stern universality—namely, the
apparent connection of great success in art with subsequent national
degradation. You find, in the first place, that the nations which
possessed a refined art were always subdued by those who possessed none:
you find the Lydian subdued by the Mede; the Athenian by the Spartan; the
Greek by the Roman; the Roman by the Goth; the Burgundian by the Switzer:
but you find, beyond this—that even where no attack by any external
power has accelerated the catastrophe of the state, the period in which
any given people reach their highest power in art is precisely that in
which they appear to sign the warrant of their own ruin; and that, from
the moment in which a perfect statue appears in Florence, a perfect
picture in Venice, or a perfect fresco in Rome, from that hour forward,
probity, industry, and courage seem to be exiled from their walls, and
they perish in a sculpturesque paralysis, or a many-coloured corruption.</p>
<p>But even this is not all. As art seems thus, in its delicate form, to be
one of the chief promoters of indolence and sensuality,—so, I need
hardly remind you, it hitherto has appeared only in energetic
manifestation when it was in the service of superstition. The four
greatest manifestations of human intellect which founded the four
principal kingdoms of art, Egyptian, Babylonian, Greek, and Italian, were
developed by the strong excitement of active superstition in the worship
of Osiris, Belus, Minerva, and the Queen of Heaven. Therefore, to speak
briefly, it may appear very difficult to show that art has ever yet
existed in a consistent and thoroughly energetic school, unless it was
engaged in the propagation of falsehood, or the encouragement of vice.</p>
<p>And finally, while art has thus shown itself always active in the service
of luxury and idolatry, it has also been strongly directed to the
exaltation of cruelty. A nation which lives a pastoral and innocent life
never decorates the shepherd's staff or the plough-handle, but races who
live by depredation and slaughter nearly always bestow exquisite ornaments
on the quiver, the helmet, and the spear.</p>
<p>Does it not seem to you, then, on all these three counts, more than
questionable whether we are assembled here in Kensington Museum to any
good purpose? Might we not justly be looked upon with suspicion and fear,
rather than with sympathy, by the innocent and unartistical public? Are we
even sure of ourselves? Do we know what we are about? Are we met here as
honest people? or are we not rather so many Catilines assembled to devise
the hasty degradation of our country, or, like a conclave of midnight
witches, to summon and send forth, on new and unexpected missions, the
demons of luxury, cruelty, and superstition?</p>
<p>I trust, upon the whole, that it is not so: I am sure that Mr. Redgrave
and Mr. Cole do not at all include results of this kind in their
conception of the ultimate objects of the institution which owes so much
to their strenuous and well-directed exertions. And I have put this
painful question before you, only that we may face it thoroughly, and, as
I hope, out-face it. If you will give it a little sincere attention this
evening, I trust we may find sufficiently good reasons for our work, and
proceed to it hereafter, as all good workmen should do, with clear heads,
and calm consciences.</p>
<p>To return, then, to the first point of difficulty, the relations between
art and mental disposition in India and Scotland. It is quite true that
the art of India is delicate and refined. But it has one curious character
distinguishing it from all other art of equal merit in design—<i>it
never represents a natural fact</i>. It either forms its compositions out
of meaningless fragments of colour and flowings of line; or if it
represents any living creature, it represents that creature under some
distorted and monstrous form. To all the facts and forms of nature it
wilfully and resolutely opposes itself; it will not draw a man, but an
eight-armed monster; it will not draw a flower, but only a spiral or a
zigzag.</p>
<p>It thus indicates that the people who practise it are cut off from all
possible sources of healthy knowledge or natural delight; that they have
wilfully sealed up and put aside the entire volume of the world, and have
got nothing to read, nothing to dwell upon, but that imagination of the
thoughts of their hearts, of which we are told that "it is only evil
continually." Over the whole spectacle of creation they have thrown a veil
in which there is no rent. For them no star peeps through the blanket of
the dark—for them neither their heaven shines nor their mountains
rise—for them the flowers do not blossom— for them the
creatures of field and forest do not live. They lie bound in the dungeon
of their own corruption, encompassed only by doleful phantoms, or by
spectral vacancy.</p>
<p>Need I remind you what an exact reverse of this condition of mind, as
respects the observance of nature, is presented by the people whom we have
just been led to contemplate in contrast with the Indian race? You will
find upon reflection, that all the highest points of the Scottish
character are connected with impressions derived straight from the natural
scenery of their country. No nation has ever before shown, in the general
tone of its language—in the general current of its literature—so
constant a habit of hallowing its passions and confirming its principles
by direct association with the charm, or power, of nature. The writings of
Scott and Burns—and yet more, of the far greater poets than Burns
who gave Scotland her traditional ballads,—furnish you in every
stanza—almost in every line—with examples of this association
of natural scenery with the passions; [Note: The great poets of Scotland,
like the great poets of all other countries, never write dissolutely,
either in matter or method; but with stern and measured meaning in every
syllable. Here's a bit of first-rate work for example:</p>
<p>"Tweed said to Till,<br/>
'What gars ye rin sae still?'<br/>
Till said to Tweed,<br/>
'Though ye rin wi' speed,<br/>
And I rin slaw,<br/>
Whar ye droon ae man,<br/>
I droon twa.'"]<br/></p>
<p>but an instance of its farther connection with moral principle struck me
forcibly just at the time when I was most lamenting the absence of art
among the people. In one of the loneliest districts of Scotland, where the
peat cottages are darkest, just at the western foot of that great mass of
the Grampians which encircles the sources of the Spey and the Dee, the
main road which traverses the chain winds round the foot of a broken rock
called Crag, or Craig Ellachie. There is nothing remarkable in either its
height or form; it is darkened with a few scattered pines, and touched
along its summit with a flush of heather; but it constitutes a kind of
headland, or leading promontory, in the group of hills to which it belongs—a
sort of initial letter of the mountains; and thus stands in the mind of
the inhabitants of the district, the Clan Grant, for a type of their
country, and of the influence of that country upon themselves. Their sense
of this is beautifully indicated in the war-cry of the clan, "Stand fast,
Craig Ellachie." You may think long over those few words without
exhausting the deep wells of feeling and thought contained in them—the
love of the native land, the assurance of their faithfulness to it; the
subdued and gentle assertion of indomitable courage—I <i>may</i>
need to be told to stand, but, if I do, Craig Ellachie does. You could not
but have felt, had you passed beneath it at the time when so many of
England's dearest children were being defended by the strength of heart of
men born at its foot, how often among the delicate Indian palaces, whose
marble was pallid with horror, and whose vermilion was darkened with
blood, the remembrance of its rough grey rocks and purple heaths must have
risen before the sight of the Highland soldier; how often the hailing of
the shot and the shriek of battle would pass away from his hearing, and
leave only the whisper of the old pine branches—"Stand fast, Craig
Ellachie!"</p>
<p>You have, in these two nations, seen in direct opposition the effects on
moral sentiment of art without nature, and of nature without art. And you
see enough to justify you in suspecting—while, if you choose to
investigate the subject more deeply and with other examples, you will find
enough to justify you in <i>concluding</i>—that art, followed as
such, and for its own sake, irrespective of the interpretation of nature
by it, is destructive of whatever is best and noblest in humanity; but
that nature, however simply observed, or imperfectly known, is, in the
degree of the affection felt for it, protective and helpful to all that is
noblest in humanity.</p>
<p>You might then conclude farther, that art, so far as it was devoted to the
record or the interpretation of nature, would be helpful and ennobling
also.</p>
<p>And you would conclude this with perfect truth. Let me repeat the
assertion distinctly and solemnly, as the first that I am permitted to
make in this building, devoted in a way so new and so admirable to the
service of the art-students of England—Wherever art is practised for
its own sake, and the delight of the workman is in what he <i>does</i> and
<i>produces</i>, instead of what he <i>interprets</i> or <i>exhibits</i>,
—there art has an influence of the most fatal kind on brain and
heart, and it issues, if long so pursued, in the <i>destruction both of
intellectual power</i> and <i>moral principal</i>; whereas art, devoted
humbly and self- forgetfully to the clear statement and record of the
facts of the universe, is always helpful and beneficent to mankind, full
of comfort, strength, and salvation.</p>
<p>Now, when you were once well assured of this, you might logically infer
another thing, namely, that when Art was occupied in the function in which
she was serviceable, she would herself be strengthened by the service, and
when she was doing what Providence without doubt intended her to do, she
would gain in vitality and dignity just as she advanced in usefulness. On
the other hand, you might gather, that when her agency was distorted to
the deception or degradation of mankind, she would herself be equally
misled and degraded—that she would be checked in advance, or
precipitated in decline.</p>
<p>And this is the truth also; and holding this clue you will easily and
justly interpret the phenomena of history. So long as Art is steady in the
contemplation and exhibition of natural facts, so long she herself lives
and grows; and in her own life and growth partly implies, partly secures,
that of the nation in the midst of which she is practised. But a time has
always hitherto come, in which, having thus reached a singular perfection,
she begins to contemplate that perfection, and to imitate it, and deduce
rules and forms from it; and thus to forget her duty and ministry as the
interpreter and discoverer of Truth. And in the very instant when this
diversion of her purpose and forgetfulness of her function take place—forgetfulness
generally coincident with her apparent perfection—in that instant, I
say, begins her actual catastrophe; and by her own fall—so far as
she has influence—she accelerates the ruin of the nation by which
she is practised.</p>
<p>The study, however, of the effect of art on the mind of nations is one
rather for the historian than for us; at all events it is one for the
discussion of which we have no more time this evening. But I will ask your
patience with me while I try to illustrate, in some further particulars,
the dependence of the healthy state and power of art itself upon the
exercise of its appointed function in the interpretation of fact.</p>
<p>You observe that I always say <i>interpretation</i>, never <i>imitation</i>.
My reason for so doing is, first, that good art rarely imitates; it
usually only describes or explains. But my second and chief reason is that
good art always consists of two things: First, the observation of fact;
secondly, the manifesting of human design and authority in the way that
fact is told. Great and good art must unite the two; it cannot exist for a
moment but in their unity; it consists of the two as essentially as water
consists of oxygen and hydrogen, or marble of lime and carbonic acid.</p>
<p>Let us inquire a little into the nature of each of the elements. The first
element, we say, is the love of Nature, leading to the effort to observe
and report her truly. And this is the first and leading element. Review
for yourselves the history of art, and you will find this to be a manifest
certainty, that <i>no great school ever yet existed which had not for
primal aim the representation of some natural fact as truly as possible</i>.
There have only yet appeared in the world three schools of perfect art—schools,
that is to say, that did their work as well as it seems possible to do it.
These are the Athenian, [Note: See below, the farther notice of the real
spirit of Greek work, in the address at Bradford.] Florentine, and
Venetian. The Athenian proposed to itself the perfect representation of
the form of the human body. It strove to do that as well as it could; it
did that as well as it can be done; and all its greatness was founded upon
and involved in that single and honest effort. The Florentine school
proposed to itself the perfect expression of human emotion—the
showing of the effects of passion in the human face and gesture. I call
this the Florentine school, because, whether you take Raphael for the
culminating master of expressional art in Italy, or Leonardo, or Michael
Angelo, you will find that the whole energy of the national effort which
produced those masters had its root in Florence; not at Urbino or Milan. I
say, then, this Florentine or leading Italian school proposed to itself
human expression for its aim in natural truth; it strove to do that as
well as it could—did it as well as it can be done—and all its
greatness is rooted in that single and honest effort. Thirdly, the
Venetian school propose the representation of the effect of colour and
shade on all things; chiefly on the human form. It tried to do that as
well as it could—did it as well as it can be done—and all its
greatness is founded on that single and honest effort.</p>
<p>Pray, do not leave this room without a perfectly clear holding of these
three ideas. You may try them, and toss them about afterwards, as much as
you like, to see if they'll bear shaking; but do let me put them well and
plainly into your possession. Attach them to three works of art which you
all have either seen or continually heard of. There's the (so-called)
"Theseus" of the Elgin marbles. That represents the whole end and aim of
the Athenian school—the natural form of the human body. All their
conventional architecture—their graceful shaping and painting of
pottery—whatsoever other art they practised—was dependent for
its greatness on this sheet-anchor of central aim: true shape of living
man. Then take, for your type of the Italian school, Raphael's "Disputa
del Sacramento;" that will be an accepted type by everybody, and will
involve no possibly questionable points: the Germans will admit it; the
English academicians will admit it; and the English purists and
pre-Raphaelites will admit it. Well, there you have the truth of human
expression proposed as an aim. That is the way people look when they feel
this or that—when they have this or that other mental character: are
they devotional, thoughtful, affectionate, indignant, or inspired? are
they prophets, saints, priests, or kings? then—whatsoever is truly
thoughtful, affectionate, prophetic, priestly, kingly—<i>that</i>
the Florentine school tried to discern, and show; <i>that</i> they have
discerned and shown; and all their greatness is first fastened in their
aim at this central truth—the open expression of the living human
soul. Lastly, take Veronese's "Marriage in Cana" in the Louvre. There you
have the most perfect representation possible of colour, and light, and
shade, as they affect the external aspect of the human form, and its
immediate accessories, architecture, furniture, and dress. This external
aspect of noblest nature was the first aim of the Venetians, and all their
greatness depended on their resolution to achieve, and their patience in
achieving it.</p>
<p>Here, then, are the three greatest schools of the former world exemplified
for you in three well-known works. The Phidian "Theseus" represents the
Greek school pursuing truth of form; the "Disputa" of Raphael, the
Florentine school pursuing truth of mental expression; the "Marriage in
Cana," the Venetian school pursuing truth of colour and light. But do not
suppose that the law which I am stating to you—the great law of
art-life—can only be seen in these, the most powerful of all art
schools. It is just as manifest in each and every school that ever has had
life in it at all. Wheresoever the search after truth begins, there life
begins; wheresoever that search ceases, there life ceases. As long as a
school of art holds any chain of natural facts, trying to discover more of
them and express them better daily, it may play hither and thither as it
likes on this side of the chain or that; it may design grotesques and
conventionalisms, build the simplest buildings, serve the most practical
utilities, yet all it does will be gloriously designed and gloriously
done; but let it once quit hold of the chain of natural fact, cease to
pursue that as the clue to its work; let it propose to itself any other
end than preaching this living word, and think first of showing its own
skill or its own fancy, and from that hour its fall is precipitate—its
destruction sure; nothing that it does or designs will ever have life or
loveliness in it more; its hour has come, and there is no work, nor
device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom in the grave whither it goeth.</p>
<p>Let us take for example that school of art over which many of you would
perhaps think this law had but little power—the school of Gothic
architecture. Many of us may have been in the habit of thinking of that
school rather as of one of forms than of facts—a school of
pinnacles, and buttresses, and conventional mouldings, and disguise of
nature by monstrous imaginings—not a school of truth at all. I think
I shall be able, even in the little time we have to-night, to show that
this is not so; and that our great law holds just as good at Amiens and
Salisbury, as it does at Athens and Florence.</p>
<p>I will go back then first to the very beginnings of Gothic art, and before
you, the students of Kensington, as an impanelled jury, I will bring two
examples of the barbarism out of which Gothic art emerges, approximately
contemporary in date and parallel in executive skill; but, the one, a
barbarism that did not get on, and could not get on; the other, a
barbarism that could get on, and did get on; and you, the impanelled jury,
shall judge what is the essential difference between the two barbarisms,
and decide for yourselves what is the seed of life in the one, and the
sign of death in the other.</p>
<p>The first,—that which has in it the sign of death,—furnishes
us at the same time with an illustration far too interesting to be passed
by, of certain principles much depended on by our common modern designers.
Taking up one of our architectural publications the other day, and opening
it at random, I chanced upon this piece of information, put in rather
curious English; but you shall have it as it stands—</p>
<p>"Aristotle asserts, that the greatest species of the beautiful are Order,
Symmetry, and the Definite."</p>
<p>I should tell you, however, that this statement is not given as
authoritative; it is one example of various Architectural teachings, given
in a report in the <i>Building Chronicle</i> for May, 1857, of a lecture
on Proportion; in which the only thing the lecturer appears to have proved
was that,—</p>
<p>The system of dividing the diameter of the shaft of a column into parts
for copying the ancient architectural remains of Greece and Rome, adopted
by architects from Vitruvius (circa B.C. 25) to the present period, as a
method for producing ancient architecture, <i>is entirely useless</i>, for
the several parts of Grecian architecture cannot be reduced or subdivided
by this system; neither does it apply to the architecture of Rome.</p>
<p>Still, as far as I can make it out, the lecture appears to have been one
of those of which you will just at present hear so many, the protests of
architects who have no knowledge of sculpture—or of any other mode
of expressing natural beauty—<i>against</i> natural beauty; and
their endeavour to substitute mathematical proportions for the knowledge
of life they do not possess, and the representation of life of which they
are incapable.[Illustration] Now, this substitution of obedience to
mathematical law for sympathy with observed life, is the first
characteristic of the hopeless work of all ages; as such, you will find it
eminently manifested in the specimen I have to give you of the hopeless
Gothic barbarism; the barbarism from which nothing could emerge—for
which no future was possible but extinction. The Aristotelian principles
of the Beautiful are, you remember, Order, Symmetry, and the Definite.
Here you have the three, in perfection, applied to the ideal of an angel,
in a psalter of the eighth century, existing in the library of St. John's
College, Cambridge.[Note: I copy this woodcut from Westwood's
"Palaeographia Sacra."]</p>
<p>Now, you see the characteristics of this utterly dead school are, first
the wilful closing of its eyes to natural facts;—for, however
ignorant a person may be, he need only look at a human being to see that
it has a mouth as well as eyes; and secondly, the endeavour to adorn or
idealize natural fact according to its own notions: it puts red spots in
the middle of the hands, and sharpens the thumbs, thinking to improve
them. Here you have the most pure type possible of the principles of
idealism in all ages: whenever people don't look at Nature, they always
think they can improve her. You will also admire, doubtless, the exquisite
result of the application of our great modern architectural principle of
beauty—symmetry, or equal balance of part by part; you see even the
eyes are made symmetrical—entirely round, instead of irregular,
oval; and the iris is set properly in the middle, instead of—as
nature has absurdly put it—rather under the upper lid. You will also
observe the "principle of the pyramid" in the general arrangement of the
figure, and the value of "series" in the placing of dots.</p>
<p>From this dead barbarism we pass to living barbarism—to work done by
hands quite as rude, if not ruder, and by minds as uninformed; and yet
work which in every line of it is prophetic of power, and has in it the
sure dawn of day. You have often heard it said that Giotto was the founder
of art in Italy. He was not: neither he, nor Giunta Pisano, nor Niccolo
Pisano. They all laid strong hands to the work, and brought it first into
aspect above ground; but the foundation had been laid for them by the
builders of the Lombardic churches in the valleys of the Adda and the
Arno. It is in the sculpture of the round arched churches of North Italy,
bearing disputable dates, ranging from the eighth to the twelfth century,
that you will find the lowest struck roots of the art of Titian and
Raphael. [Note: I have said elsewhere, "the root of <i>all</i> art is
struck in the thirteenth century." This is quite true: but of course some
of the smallest fibres run lower, as in this instance.] I go, therefore,
to the church which is certainly the earliest of these, St. Ambrogio, of
Milan, said still to retain some portions of the actual structure from
which St. Ambrose excluded Theodosius, and at all events furnishing the
most archaic examples of Lombardic sculpture in North Italy. I do not
venture to guess their date; they are barbarous enough for any date.</p>
<p>We find the pulpit of this church covered with interlacing patterns,
closely resembling those of the manuscript at Cambridge, but among them is
figure sculpture of a very different kind. It is wrought with mere
incisions in the stone, of which the effect may be tolerably given by
single lines in a drawing. Remember, therefore, for a moment—as
characteristic of culminating Italian art—Michael Angelo's fresco of
the "Temptation of Eve," in the Sistine chapel, and you will be more
interested in seeing the birth of Italian art, illustrated by the same
subject, from St. Ambrogio, of Milan, the "Serpent beguiling Eve." [Note:
This cut is ruder than it should be: the incisions in the marble have a
lighter effect than these rough black lines; but it is not worth while to
do it better.]</p>
<p>Yet, in that sketch, rude and ludicrous as it is, you have the elements of
life in their first form. The people who could do that were sure to get
on. For, observe, the workman's whole aim is straight at the facts, as
well as he can get them; and not merely at the facts, but at the very
heart of the facts. A common workman might have looked at nature for his
serpent, but he would have thought only of its scales. But this fellow
does not want scales, nor coils; he can do without them; he wants the
serpent's heart—malice and insinuation;—and he has actually
got them to some extent. So also a common workman, even in this barbarous
stage of art, might have carved Eve's arms and body a good deal better;
but this man does not care about arms and body, if he can only get at
Eve's mind—show that she is pleased at being flattered, and yet in a
state of uncomfortable hesitation. And some look of listening, of
complacency, and of embarrassment he has verily got:— note the eyes
slightly askance, the lips compressed, and the right hand nervously
grasping the left arm: nothing can be declared impossible to the people
who could begin thus—the world is open to them, and all that is in
it; while, on the contrary, nothing is possible to the man who did the
symmetrical angel—the world is keyless to him; he has built a cell
for himself in which he must abide, barred up for ever— there is no
more hope for him than for a sponge or a madrepore.</p>
<p>I shall not trace from this embryo the progress of Gothic art in Italy,
because it is much complicated and involved with traditions of other
schools, and because most of the students will be less familiar with its
results than with their own northern buildings. So, these two designs
indicating Death and Life in the beginnings of mediaeval art, we will take
an example of the <i>progress</i> of that art from our northern work. Now,
many of you, doubtless, have been interested by the mass, grandeur, and
gloom of Norman architecture, as much as by Gothic traceries; and when you
hear me say that the root of all good work lies in natural facts, you
doubtless think instantly of your round arches, with their rude cushion
capitals, and of the billet or zigzag work by which they are surrounded,
and you cannot see what the knowledge of nature has to do with either the
simple plan or the rude mouldings. But all those simple conditions of
Norman art are merely the expiring of it towards the extreme north. Do not
study Norman architecture in Northumberland, but in Normandy, and then you
will find that it is just a peculiarly manly, and practically useful, form
of the whole great French school of rounded architecture. And where has
that French school its origin? Wholly in the rich conditions of sculpture,
which, rising first out of imitations of the Roman bas-reliefs, covered
all the façades of the French early churches with one continuous arabesque
of floral or animal life. If you want to study round-arched buildings, do
not go to Durham, but go to Poictiers, and there you will see how all the
simple decorations which give you so much pleasure even in their isolated
application were invented by persons practised in carving men, monsters,
wild animals, birds, and flowers, in overwhelming redundance; and then
trace this architecture forward in central France, and you will find it
loses nothing of its richness—it only gains in truth, and therefore
in grace, until just at the moment of transition into the pointed style,
you have the consummate type of the sculpture of the school given you in
the west front of the Cathedral of Chartres. From that front I have chosen
two fragments to illustrate it. [Note: This part of the lecture was
illustrated by two drawings, made admirably by Mr. J. T. Laing, with the
help of photographs from statues at Chartres. The drawings may be seen at
present at the Kensington Museum: but any large photograph of the west
front of Chartres will enable the reader to follow what is stated in the
lecture, as far as is needful.]</p>
<p>These statues have been long, and justly, considered as representative of
the highest skill of the twelfth or earliest part of the thirteenth
century in France; and they indeed possess a dignity and delicate charm,
which are for the most part wanting in later works. It is owing partly to
real nobleness of feature, but chiefly to the grace, mingled with
severity, of the falling lines of excessively <i>thin</i> drapery; as well
as to a most studied finish in composition, every part of the
ornamentation tenderly harmonizing with the rest. So far as their power
over certain tones of religious mind is owing to a palpable degree of
non-naturalism in them, I do not praise it—the exaggerated thinness
of body and stiffness of attitude are faults; but they are noble faults,
and give the statues a strange look of forming part of the very building
itself, and sustaining it—not like the Greek caryatid, without
effort—nor like the Renaissance caryatid, by painful or impossible
effort—but as if all that was silent and stern, and withdrawn apart,
and stiffened in chill of heart against the terror of earth, had passed
into a shape of eternal marble; and thus the Ghost had given, to bear up
the pillars of the church on earth, all the patient and expectant nature
that it needed no more in heaven. This is the transcendental view of the
meaning of those sculptures. I do not dwell upon it. What I do lean upon
is their purely naturalistic and vital power. They are all portraits—unknown,
most of them, I believe, —but palpably and unmistakeably portraits,
if not taken from the actual person for whom the statue stands, at all
events studied from some living person whose features might fairly
represent those of the king or saint intended. Several of them I suppose
to be authentic: there is one of a queen, who has evidently, while she
lived, been notable for her bright black eyes. The sculptor has cut the
iris deep into the stone, and her dark eyes are still suggested with her
smile.</p>
<p>There is another thing I wish you to notice specially in these statues
—the way in which the floral moulding is associated with the
vertical lines of the figure. You have thus the utmost complexity and
richness of curvature set side by side with the pure and delicate parallel
lines, and both the characters gain in interest and beauty; but there is
deeper significance in the thing than that of mere effect in composition;
significance not intended on the part of the sculptor, but all the more
valuable because unintentional. I mean the close association of the beauty
of lower nature in animals and flowers, with the beauty of higher nature
in human form. You never get this in Greek work. Greek statues are always
isolated; blank fields of stone, or depths of shadow, relieving the form
of the statue, as the world of lower nature which they despised retired in
darkness from their hearts. Here, the clothed figure seems the type of the
Christian spirit—in many respects feebler and more contracted—but
purer; clothed in its white robes and crown, and with the riches of all
creation at its side.</p>
<p>The next step in the change will be set before you in a moment, merely by
comparing this statue from the west front of Chartres with that of the
Madonna, from the south transept door of Amiens. [Note: There are many
photographs of this door and of its central statue. Its sculpture in the
tympanum is farther described in the Fourth Lecture.]</p>
<p>This Madonna, with the sculpture round her, represents the culminating
power of Gothic art in the thirteenth century. Sculpture has been gaining
continually in the interval; gaining, simply because becoming every day
more truthful, more tender, and more suggestive. By the way, the old
Douglas motto, "Tender and true," may wisely be taken up again by all of
us, for our own, in art no less than in other things. Depend upon it, the
first universal characteristic of all great art is Tenderness, as the
second is Truth. I find this more and more every day: an infinitude of
tenderness is the chief gift and inheritance of all the truly great men.
It is sure to involve a relative intensity of disdain towards base things,
and an appearance of sternness and arrogance in the eyes of all hard,
stupid, and vulgar people—quite terrific to such, if they are
capable of terror, and hateful to them, if they are capable of nothing
higher than hatred. Dante's is the great type of this class of mind. I say
the first inheritance is Tenderness— the second Truth, because the
Tenderness is in the make of the creature, the Truth in his acquired
habits and knowledge; besides, the love comes first in dignity as well as
in time, and that is always pure and complete: the truth, at best,
imperfect.</p>
<p>To come back to our statue. You will observe that the arrangement of this
sculpture is exactly the same as at Chartres—severe falling drapery,
set off by rich floral ornament at the side; but the statue is now
completely animated: it is no longer fixed as an upright pillar, but bends
aside out of its niche, and the floral ornament, instead of being a
conventional wreath, is of exquisitely arranged hawthorn. The work,
however, as a whole, though perfectly characteristic of the advance of the
age in style and purpose, is in some subtler qualities inferior to that of
Chartres. The individual sculptor, though trained in a more advanced
school, has been himself a man of inferior order of mind compared to the
one who worked at Chartres. But I have not time to point out to you the
subtler characters by which I know this.</p>
<p>This statue, then, marks the culminating point of Gothic art, because, up
to this time, the eyes of its designers had been steadily fixed on natural
truth—they had been advancing from flower to flower, from form to
form, from face to face,—gaining perpetually in knowledge and
veracity—therefore, perpetually in power and in grace. But at this
point a fatal change came over their aim. From the statue they now began
to turn the attention chiefly to the niche of the statue, and from the
floral ornament to the mouldings that enclosed the floral ornament. The
first result of this was, however, though not the grandest, yet the most
finished of northern genius. You have, in the earlier Gothic, less
wonderful construction, less careful masonry, far less expression of
harmony of parts in the balance of the building. Earlier work always has
more or less of the character of a good solid wall with irregular holes in
it, well carved wherever there is room. But the last phase of good Gothic
has no room to spare; it rises as high as it can on narrowest foundation,
stands in perfect strength with the least possible substance in its bars;
connects niche with niche, and line with line, in an exquisite harmony,
from which no stone can be removed, and to which you can add not a
pinnacle; and yet introduces in rich, though now more calculated
profusion, the living element of its sculpture: sculpture in the
quatrefoils—sculpture in the brackets— sculpture in the
gargoyles—sculpture in the niches—sculpture in the ridges and
hollows of its mouldings,—not a shadow without meaning, and not a
light without life. [Note: The two <i>transepts</i> of Rouen Cathedral
illustrate this style. There are plenty of photographs of them. I take
this opportunity of repeating what I have several times before stated, for
the sake of travellers, that St. Ouen, impressive as it is, is entirely
inferior to the transepts of Rouen Cathedral.] But with this very
perfection of his work came the unhappy pride of the builder in what he
had done. As long as he had been merely raising clumsy walls and carving
them like a child, in waywardness of fancy, his delight was in the things
he thought of as he carved; but when he had once reached this pitch of
constructive science, he began to think only how cleverly he could put the
stones together. The question was not now with him, What can I represent?
but, How high can I build—how wonderfully can I hang this arch in
air, or weave this tracery across the clouds? And the catastrophe was
instant and irrevocable. Architecture became in France a mere web of
waving lines,—in England a mere grating of perpendicular ones.
Redundance was substituted for invention, and geometry for passion; tho
Gothic art became a mere expression of wanton expenditure, and vulgar
mathematics; and was swept away, as it then deserved to be swept away, by
the severer pride, and purer learning, of the schools founded on classical
traditions.</p>
<p>You cannot now fail to see, how, throughout the history of this wonderful
art—from its earliest dawn in Lombardy to its last catastrophe in
France and England—sculpture, founded on love of nature, was the
talisman of its existence; wherever sculpture was practised, architecture
arose—wherever that was neglected, architecture expired; and,
believe me, all you students who love this mediaeval art, there is no hope
of your ever doing any good with it, but on this everlasting principle.
Your patriotic associations with it are of no use; your romantic
associations with it—either of chivalry or religion—are of no
use; they are worse than useless, they are false. Gothic is not an art for
knights and nobles; it is an art for the people: it is not an art for
churches or sanctuaries; it is an art for houses and homes: it is not an
art for England only, but an art for the world: above all, it is not an
art of form or tradition only, but an art of vital practice and perpetual
renewal. And whosoever pleads for it as an ancient or a formal thing, and
tries to teach it you as an ecclesiastical tradition or a geometrical
science, knows nothing of its essence, less than nothing of its power.</p>
<p>Leave, therefore, boldly, though not irreverently, mysticism and symbolism
on the one side; cast away with utter scorn geometry and legalism on the
other; seize hold of God's hand and look full in the face of His creation,
and there is nothing He will not enable you to achieve.</p>
<p>Thus, then, you will find—and the more profound and accurate your
knowledge of the history of art the more assuredly you will find—that
the living power in all the real schools, be they great or small, is love
of nature. But do not mistake me by supposing that I mean this law to be
all that is necessary to form a school. There needs to be much superadded
to it, though there never must be anything superseding it. The main thing
which needs to be superadded is the gift of design.</p>
<p>It is always dangerous, and liable to diminish the clearness of
impression, to go over much ground in the course of one lecture. But I
dare not present you with a maimed view of this important subject: I dare
not put off to another time, when the same persons would not be again
assembled, the statement of the great collateral necessity which, as well
as the necessity of truth, governs all noble art.</p>
<p>That collateral necessity is <i>the visible operation of human intellect
in the presentation of truth, </i>the evidence of what is properly called
design or plan in the work, no less than of veracity. A looking-glass does
not design—it receives and communicates indiscriminately all that
passes before it; a painter designs when he chooses some things, refuses
others, and arranges all.</p>
<p>This selection and arrangement must have influence over everything that
the art is concerned with, great or small—over lines, over colours,
and over ideas. Given a certain group of colours, by adding another colour
at the side of them, you will either improve the group and render it more
delightful, or injure it, and render it discordant and unintelligible.
"Design" is the choosing and placing the colour so as to help and enhance
all the other colours it is set beside. So of thoughts: in a good
composition, every idea is presented in just that order, and with just
that force, which will perfectly connect it with all the other thoughts in
the work, and will illustrate the others as well as receive illustration
from them; so that the entire chain of thoughts offered to the beholder's
mind shall be received by him with as much delight and with as little
effort as is possible. And thus you see design, properly so called, is
human invention, consulting human capacity. Out of the infinite heap of
things around us in the world, it chooses a certain number which it can
thoroughly grasp, and presents this group to the spectator in the form
best calculated to enable him to grasp it also, and to grasp it with
delight.</p>
<p>And accordingly, the capacities of both gatherer and receiver being
limited, the object is to make <i>everything that you offer helpful</i>
and precious. If you give one grain of weight too much, so as to increase
fatigue without profit, or bulk without value—that added grain is
hurtful; if you put one spot or one syllable out of its proper place, that
spot or syllable will be destructive—how far destructive it is
almost impossible to tell: a misplaced touch may sometimes annihilate the
labour of hours. Nor are any of us prepared to understand the work of any
great master, till we feel this, and feel it as distinctly as we do the
value of arrangement in the notes of music. Take any noble musical air,
and you find, on examining it, that not one even of the faintest or
shortest notes can be removed without destruction to the whole passage in
which it occurs; and that every note in the passage is twenty times more
beautiful so introduced, than it would have been if played singly on the
instrument. Precisely this degree of arrangement and relation must exist
between every touch [Note: Literally. I know how exaggerated this
statement sounds; but I mean it,—every syllable of it.—See
Appendix IV.] and line in a great picture. You may consider the whole as a
prolonged musical composition: its parts, as separate airs connected in
the story; its little bits and fragments of colour and line, as separate
passages or bars in melodies; and down to the minutest note of the whole—down
to the minutest <i>touch</i>,—if there is one that can be spared—that
one is doing mischief.</p>
<p>Remember therefore always, you have two characters in which all greatness
of art consists:—First, the earnest and intense seizing of natural
facts; then the ordering those facts by strength of human intellect, so as
to make them, for all who look upon them, to the utmost serviceable,
memorable, and beautiful. And thus great art is nothing else than the type
of strong and noble life; for, as the ignoble person, in his dealings with
all that occurs in the world about him, first sees nothing clearly,—looks
nothing fairly in the face, and then allows himself to be swept away by
the trampling torrent, and unescapable force, of the things that he would
not foresee, and could not understand: so the noble person, looking the
facts of the world full in the face, and fathoming them with deep faculty,
then deals with them in unalarmed intelligence and unhurried strength, and
becomes, with his human intellect and will, no unconscious nor
insignificant agent, in consummating their good, and restraining their
evil.</p>
<p>Thus in human life you have the two fields of rightful toil for ever
distinguished, yet for ever associated; Truth first—plan or design,
founded thereon; so in art, you have the same two fields for ever
distinguished, for ever associated; Truth first—plan, or design,
founded thereon.</p>
<p>Now hitherto there is not the least difficulty in the subject; none of you
can look for a moment at any great sculptor or painter without seeing the
full bearing of these principles. But a difficulty arises when you come to
examine the art of a lower order, concerned with furniture and
manufacture, for in that art the element of design enters without,
apparently, the element of truth. You have often to obtain beauty and
display invention without direct representation of nature. Yet, respecting
all these things also, the principle is perfectly simple. If the designer
of furniture, of cups and vases, of dress patterns, and the like,
exercises himself continually in the imitation of natural form in some
leading division of his work; then, holding by this stem of life, he may
pass down into all kinds of merely geometrical or formal design with
perfect safety, and with noble results.[Note: This principle, here
cursorily stated, is one of the chief subjects of inquiry in the following
Lectures.] Thus Giotto, being primarily a figure painter and sculptor, is,
secondarily, the richest of all designers in mere mosaic of coloured bars
and triangles; thus Benvenuto Cellini, being in all the higher branches of
metal work a perfect imitator of nature, is in all its lower branches the
best designer of curve for lips of cups and handles of vases; thus
Holbein, exercised primarily in the noble art of truthful portraiture,
becomes, secondarily, the most exquisite designer of embroideries of robe,
and blazonries on wall; and thus Michael Angelo, exercised primarily in
the drawing of body and limb, distributes in the mightiest masses the
order of his pillars, and in the loftiest shadow the hollows of his dome.
But once quit hold of this living stem, and set yourself to the designing
of ornamentation, either in the ignorant play of your own heartless fancy,
as the Indian does, or according to received application of heartless
laws, as the modern European does, and there is but one word for you—Death:—death
of every healthy faculty, and of every noble intelligence, incapacity of
understanding one great work that man has ever done, or of doing anything
that it shall be helpful for him to behold. You have cut yourselves off
voluntarily, presumptuously, insolently, from the whole teaching of your
Maker in His Universe; you have cut yourselves off from it, not because
you were forced to mechanical labour for your bread—not because your
fate had appointed you to wear away your life in walled chambers, or dig
your life out of dusty furrows; but, when your whole profession, your
whole occupation— all the necessities and chances of your existence,
led you straight to the feet of the great Teacher, and thrust you into the
treasury of His works; where you have nothing to do but to live by gazing,
and to grow by wondering;—wilfully you bind up your eyes from the
splendour— wilfully bind up your life-blood from its beating—wilfully
turn your backs upon all the majesties of Omnipotence—wilfully
snatch your hands from all the aids of love, and what can remain for you,
but helplessness and blindness,—except the worse fate than the being
blind yourselves—that of becoming Leaders of the blind?</p>
<p>Do not think that I am speaking under excited feeling, or in any
exaggerated terms. I have written the words I use, that I may know what I
say, and that you, if you choose, may see what I have said. For, indeed, I
have set before you tonight, to the best of my power, the sum and
substance of the system of art to the promulgation of which I have devoted
my life hitherto, and intend to devote what of life may still be spared to
me. I have had but one steady aim in all that I have ever tried to teach,
namely—to declare that whatever was great in human art was the
expression of man's delight in God's work.</p>
<p>And at this time I have endeavoured to prove to you—if you
investigate the subject you may more entirely prove to yourselves—that
no school ever advanced far which had not the love of natural fact as a
primal energy. But it is still more important for you to be assured that
the conditions of life and death in the art of nations are also the
conditions of life and death in your own; and that you have it, each in
his power at this very instant, to determine in which direction his steps
are turning. It seems almost a terrible thing to tell you, that all here
have all the power of knowing at once what hope there is for them as
artists; you would, perhaps, like better that there was some unremovable
doubt about the chances of the future—some possibility that you
might be advancing, in unconscious ways, towards unexpected successes—some
excuse or reason for going about, as students do so often, to this master
or the other, asking him if they have genius, and whether they are doing
right, and gathering, from his careless or formal replies, vague flashes
of encouragement, or fitfulnesses of despair. There is no need for this—no
excuse for it. All of you have the trial of yourselves in your own power;
each may undergo at this instant, before his own judgment seat, the ordeal
by fire. Ask yourselves what is the leading motive which actuates you
while you are at work. I do not ask you what your leading motive is for
working—that is a different thing; you may have families to support—parents
to help—brides to win; you may have all these, or other such sacred
and pre-eminent motives, to press the morning's labour and prompt the
twilight thought. But when you are fairly <i>at</i> the work, what is the
motive then which tells upon every touch of it? If it is the love of that
which your work represents—if, being a landscape painter, it is love
of hills and trees that moves you—if, being a figure painter, it is
love of human beauty and human soul that moves you—if, being a
flower or animal painter, it is love, and wonder, and delight in petal and
in limb that move you, then the Spirit is upon you, and the earth is
yours, and the fulness thereof. But if, on the other hand, it is petty
self-complacency in your own skill, trust in precepts and laws, hope for
academical or popular approbation, or avarice of wealth,—it is quite
possible that by steady industry, or even by fortunate chance, you may win
the applause, the position, the fortune, that you desire;— but one
touch of true art you will never lay on canvas or on stone as long as you
live.</p>
<p>Make, then, your choice, boldly and consciously, for one way or other it
<i>must</i> be made. On the dark and dangerous side are set, the pride
which delights in self-contemplation—the indolence which rests in
unquestioned forms—the ignorance that despises what is fairest among
God's creatures, and the dulness that denies what is marvellous in His
working: there is a life of monotony for your own souls, and of misguiding
for those of others. And, on the other side, is open to your choice the
life of the crowned spirit, moving as a light in creation—
discovering always—illuminating always, gaining every hour in
strength, yet bowed down every hour into deeper humility; sure of being
right in its aim, sure of being irresistible in its progress; happy in
what it has securely done—happier in what, day by day, it may as
securely hope; happiest at the close of life, when the right hand begins
to forget its cunning, to remember, that there never was a touch of the
chisel or the pencil it wielded, but has added to the knowledge and
quickened the happiness of mankind.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LECTURE II. — THE UNITY OF ART. </h2>
<h3> <i>Part of an Address delivered at Manchester, 14th March, 1859.</i> </h3>
<p>[Note: I was prevented, by press of other engagements, from preparing this
address with the care I wished; and forced to trust to such expression as
I could give at the moment to the points of principal importance; reading,
however, the close of the preceding lecture, which I thought contained
some truths that would bear repetition. The whole was reported, better
than it deserved, by Mr. Pitman, of the <i>Manchester Courier</i>, and
published nearly verbatim. I have here extracted, from the published
report, the facts which I wish especially to enforce; and have a little
cleared their expression; its loose and colloquial character I cannot now
help, unless by re-writing the whole, which it seems not worth while to
do.]</p>
<p>It is sometimes my pleasant duty to visit other cities, in the hope of
being able to encourage their art students; but here it is my pleasanter
privilege to come for encouragement myself. I do not know when I have
received so much as from the report read this evening by Mr. Hammersley,
bearing upon a subject which has caused me great anxiety. For I have
always felt in my own pursuit of art, and in my endeavors to urge the
pursuit of art on others, that while there are many advantages now that
never existed before, there are certain grievous difficulties existing,
just in the very cause that is giving the stimulus to art—in the
immense spread of the manufactures of every country which is now attending
vigorously to art. We find that manufacture and art are now going on
always together; that where there is no manufacture there is no art. I
know how much there is of pretended art where there is no manufacture:
there is much in Italy, for instance; no country makes so bold pretence to
the production of new art as Italy at this moment; yet no country produces
so little. If you glance over the map of Europe, you will find that where
the manufactures are strongest, there art also is strongest. And yet I
always felt that there was an immense difficulty to be encountered by the
students who were in these centres of modern movement. They had to avoid
the notion that art and manufacture were in any respect one. Art may be
healthily associated with manufacture, and probably in future will always
be so; but the student must be strenuously warned against supposing that
they can ever be one and the same thing, that art can ever be followed on
the principles of manufacture. Each must be followed separately; the one
must influence the other, but each must be kept distinctly separate from
the other.</p>
<p>It would be well if all students would keep clearly in their mind the real
distinction between those words which we use so often, "Manufacture,"
"Art," and "Fine Art." "MANUFACTURE" is, according to the etymology and
right use of the word, "the making of anything by hands,"—directly
or indirectly, with or without the help of instruments or machines.
Anything proceeding from the hand of man is manufacture; but it must have
proceeded from his hand only, acting mechanically, and uninfluenced at the
moment by direct intelligence.</p>
<p>Then, secondly, ART is the operation of the hand and the intelligence of
man together; there is an art of making machinery; there is an art of
building ships; an art of making carriages; and so on. All these, properly
called Arts, but not Fine Arts, are pursuits in which the hand of man and
his head go together, working at the same instant.</p>
<p>Then FINE ART is that in which the hand, the head, and the <i>heart</i> of
man go together.</p>
<p>Recollect this triple group; it will help you to solve many difficult
problems. And remember that though the hand must be at the bottom of
everything, it must also go to the top of everything; for Fine Art must be
produced by the hand of man in a much greater and clearer sense than
manufacture is. Fine Art must always be produced by the subtlest of all
machines, which is the human hand. No machine yet contrived, or hereafter
contrivable, will ever equal the fine machinery of the human fingers.
Thoroughly perfect art is that which proceeds from the heart, which
involves all the noble emotions;—associates with these the head, yet
as inferior to the heart; and the hand, yet as inferior to the heart and
head; and thus brings out the whole man.</p>
<p>Hence it follows that since Manufacture is simply the operation of the
hand of man in producing that which is useful to him, it essentially
separates itself from the emotions; when emotions interfere with machinery
they spoil it: machinery must go evenly, without emotion. But the Fine
Arts cannot go evenly; they always must have emotion ruling their
mechanism, and until the pupil begins to feel, and until all he does
associates itself with the current of his feeling, he is not an artist.
But pupils in all the schools in this country are now exposed to all kinds
of temptations which blunt their feelings. I constantly feel discouraged
in addressing them because I know not how to tell them boldly what they
ought to do, when I feel how practically difficult it is for them to do
it. There are all sorts of demands made upon them in every direction, and
money is to be made in every conceivable way but the right way. If you
paint as you ought, and study as you ought, depend upon it the public will
take no notice of you for a long while. If you study wrongly, and try to
draw the attention of the public upon you,—supposing you to be
clever students—you will get swift reward; but the reward does not
come fast when it is sought wisely; it is always held aloof for a little
while; the right roads of early life are very quiet ones, hedged in from
nearly all help or praise. But the wrong roads are noisy,—vociferous
everywhere with all kinds of demand upon you for art which is not properly
art at all; and in the various meetings of modern interests, money is to
be made in every way; but art is to be followed only in <i>one</i> way.
That is what I want mainly to say to you, or if not to you yourselves
(for, from what I have heard from your excellent master to-night, I know
you are going on all rightly), you must let me say it through you to
others. Our Schools of Art are confused by the various teaching and
various interests that are now abroad among us. Everybody is talking about
art, and writing about it, and more or less interested in it; everybody
wants art, and there is not art for everybody, and few who talk know what
they are talking about; thus students are led in all variable ways, while
there is only one way in which they can make steady progress, for true art
is always and will be always one. Whatever changes may be made in the
customs of society, whatever new machines we may invent, whatever new
manufactures we may supply, Fine Art must remain what it was two thousand
years ago, in the days of Phidias; two thousand years hence, it will be,
in all its principles, and in all its great effects upon the mind of man,
just the same. Observe this that I say, please, carefully, for I mean it
to the very utmost. <i>There is but one right way of doing any given thing
required of an artist</i>; there may be a hundred wrong, deficient, or
mannered ways, but there is only one complete and right way. Whenever two
artists are trying to do the same thing with the same materials, and do it
in different ways, one of them is wrong; he may be charmingly wrong, or
impressively wrong—various circumstances in his temper may make his
wrong pleasanter than any person's right; it may for him, under his given
limitations of knowledge or temper, be better perhaps that he should err
in his own way than try for anybody else's—but for all that his way
is wrong, and it is essential for all masters of schools to know what the
right way is, and what right art is, and to see how simple and how single
all right art has been, since the beginning of it.</p>
<p>But farther, not only is there but one way of <i>doing</i> things rightly,
but there is only one way of <i>seeing</i> them, and that is, seeing the
whole of them, without any choice, or more intense perception of one point
than another, owing to our special idiosyncrasies. Thus, when Titian or
Tintoret look at a human being, they see at a glance the whole of its
nature, outside and in; all that it has of form, of colour, of passion, or
of thought; saintliness, and loveliness; fleshly body, and spiritual
power; grace, or strength, or softness, or whatsoever other quality, those
men will see to the full, and so paint, that, when narrower people come to
look at what they have done, every one may, if he chooses, find his own
special pleasure in the work. The sensualist will find sensuality in
Titian; the thinker will find thought; the saint, sanctity; the colourist,
colour; the anatomist, form; and yet the picture will never be a popular
one in the full sense, for none of these narrower people will find their
special taste so alone consulted, as that the qualities which would ensure
their gratification shall be sifted or separated from others; they are
checked by the presence of the other qualities which ensure the
gratification of other men. Thus, Titian is not soft enough for the
sensualist, Correggio suits him better; Titian is not defined enough for
the formalist,—Leonardo suits him better; Titian is not pure enough
for the religionist,—Raphael suits him better; Titian is not polite
enough for the man of the world,—Vandyke suits him better; Titian is
not forcible enough for the lovers of the picturesque,— Rembrandt
suits him better. So Correggio is popular with a certain set, and Vandyke
with a certain set, and Rembrandt with a certain set. All are great men,
but of inferior stamp, and therefore Vandyke is popular, and Rembrandt is
popular, [Note: And Murillo, of all true painters the narrowest, feeblest,
and most superficial, for those reasons the most popular.] but nobody
cares much at heart about Titian; only there is a strange under-current of
everlasting murmur about his name, which means the deep consent of all
great men that he is greater than they— the consent of those who,
having sat long enough at his feet, have found in that restrained harmony
of his strength there are indeed depths of each balanced power more
wonderful than all those separate manifestations in inferior painters:
that there is a softness more exquisite than Correggio's, a purity loftier
than Leonardo's, a force mightier than Rembrandt's, a sanctity more solemn
even than Raffaelle's.</p>
<p>Do not suppose that in saying this of Titian, I am returning to the old
eclectic theories of Bologna; for all those eclectic theories, observe,
were based, not upon an endeavour to unite the various characters of
nature (which it is possible to do), but the various narrownesses of
taste, which it is impossible to do. Rubens is not more vigorous than
Titian, but less vigorous; but because he is so narrow-minded as to enjoy
vigour only, he refuses to give the other qualities of nature, which would
interfere with that vigour and with our perception of it. Again, Rembrandt
is not a greater master of chiaroscuro than Titian;— he is a less
master, but because he is so narrow-minded as to enjoy chiaroscuro only,
he withdraws from you the splendour of hue which would interfere with
this, and gives you only the shadow in which you can at once feel it.</p>
<p>Now all these specialties have their own charm in their own way: and there
are times when the particular humour of each man is refreshing to us from
its very distinctness; but the effort to add any other qualities to this
refreshing one instantly takes away the distinctiveness, and therefore the
exact character to be enjoyed in its appeal to a particular humour in us.
Our enjoyment arose from a weakness meeting a weakness, from a partiality
in the painter fitting to a partiality in us, and giving us sugar when we
wanted sugar, and myrrh when we wanted myrrh; but sugar and myrrh are not
meat: and when we want meat and bread, we must go to better men.</p>
<p>The eclectic schools endeavoured to unite these opposite partialities and
weaknesses. They trained themselves under masters of exaggeration, and
tried to unite opposite exaggerations. That was impossible. They did not
see that the only possible eclecticism had been already accomplished;—the
eclecticism of temperance, which, by the restraint of force, gains higher
force; and by the self-denial of delight, gains higher delight. This you
will find is ultimately the case with every true and right master; at
first, while we are tyros in art, or before we have earnestly studied the
man in question, we shall see little in him; or perhaps see, as we think,
deficiencies; we shall fancy he is inferior to this man in that, and to
the other man in the other; but as we go on studying him we shall find
that he has got both that and the other; and both in a far higher sense
than the man who seemed to possess those qualities in excess. Thus in
Turner's lifetime, when people first looked at him, those who liked rainy,
weather, said he was not equal to Copley Fielding; but those who looked at
Turner long enough found that he could be much more wet than Copley
Fielding, when he chose. The people who liked force, said that "Turner was
not strong enough for them; he was effeminate; they liked De Wint,—nice
strong tone;—or Cox—great, greeny, dark masses of colour—solemn
feeling of the freshness and depth of nature;—they liked Cox—Turner
was too hot for them." Had they looked long enough they would have found
that he had far more force than De Wint, far more freshness than Cox when
he chose,—only united with other elements; and that he didn't choose
to be cool, if nature had appointed the weather to be hot. The people who
liked Prout said "Turner had not firmness of hand—he did not know
enough about architecture—he was not picturesque enough." Had they
looked at his architecture long, they would have found that it contained
subtle picturesquenesses, infinitely more picturesque than anything of
Prout's. People who liked Callcott said that "Turner was not correct or
pure enough—had no classical taste." Had they looked at Turner long
enough they would have found him as severe, when he chose, as the greater
Poussin;—Callcott, a mere vulgar imitator of other men's high
breeding. And so throughout with all thoroughly great men, their strength
is not seen at first, precisely because they unite, in due place and
measure, every great quality.</p>
<p>Now the question is, whether, as students, we are to study only these
mightiest men, who unite all greatness, or whether we are to study the
works of inferior men, who present us with the greatness which we
particularly like? That question often comes before me when I see a strong
idiosyncrasy in a student, and he asks me what he should study. Shall I
send him to a true master, who does not present the quality in a prominent
way in which that student delights, or send him to a man with whom he has
direct sympathy? It is a hard question. For very curious results have
sometimes been brought out, especially in late years, not only by students
following their own bent, but by their being withdrawn from teaching
altogether. I have just named a very great man in his own field—Prout.
We all know his drawings, and love them: they have a peculiar character
which no other architectural drawings ever possessed, and which no others
can possess, because all Prout's subjects are being knocked down or
restored. (Prout did not like restored buildings any more than I do.)
There will never be any more Prout drawings. Nor could he have been what
he was, or expressed with that mysteriously effective touch that peculiar
delight in broken and old buildings, unless he had been withdrawn from all
high art influence. You know that Prout was born of poor parents—that
he was educated down in Cornwall;—and that, for many years, all the
art- teaching he had was his own, or the fishermen's. Under the keels of
the fishing-boats, on the sands of our southern coasts, Prout learned all
that he needed to learn about art. Entirely by himself, he felt his way to
this particular style, and became the painter of pictures which I think we
should all regret to lose. It becomes a very difficult question what that
man would have been, had he been brought under some entirely wholesome
artistic influence, He had immense gifts of composition. I do not know any
man who had more power of invention than Prout, or who had a sublimer
instinct in his treatment of things; but being entirely withdrawn from all
artistical help, he blunders his way to that short-coming representation,
which, by the very reason of its short-coming, has a certain charm we
should all be sorry to lose. And therefore I feel embarrassed when a
student comes to me, in whom I see a strong instinct of that kind: and
cannot tell whether I ought to say to him, "Give up all your studies of
old boats, and keep away from the sea-shore, and come up to the Royal
Academy in London, and look at nothing but Titian." It is a difficult
thing to make up one's mind to say that. However, I believe, on the whole,
we may wisely leave such matters in the hands of Providence; that if we
have the power of teaching the right to anybody, we should teach them the
right; if we have the power of showing them the best thing, we should show
them the best thing; there will always, I fear, be enough want of
teaching, and enough bad teaching, to bring out very curious erratical
results if we want them. So, if we are to teach at all, let us teach the
right thing, and ever the right thing. There are many attractive qualities
inconsistent with rightness;—do not let us teach them,—let us
be content to waive them. There are attractive qualities in Burns, and
attractive qualities in Dickens, which neither of those writers would have
possessed if the one had been educated, and the other had been studying
higher nature than that of cockney London; but those attractive qualities
are not such as we should seek in a school of literature. If we want to
teach young men a good manner of writing, we should teach it from
Shakspeare,—not from Burns; from Walter Scott,— and not from
Dickens. And I believe that our schools of painting are at present
inefficient in their action, because they have not fixed on this high
principle what are the painters to whom to point; nor boldly resolved to
point to the best, if determinable. It is becoming a matter of stern
necessity that they should give a simple direction to the attention of the
student, and that they should say, "This is the mark you are to aim at;
and you are not to go about to the print-shops, and peep in, to see how
this engraver does that, and the other engraver does the other, and how a
nice bit of character has been caught by a new man, and why this odd
picture has caught the popular attention. You are to have nothing to do
with all that; you are not to mind about popular attention just now; but
here is a thing which is eternally right and good: you are to look at
that, and see if you cannot do something eternally right and good too."</p>
<p>But suppose you accept this principle: and resolve to look to some great
man, Titian, or Turner, or whomsoever it may be, as the model of
perfection in art;—then the question is, since this great man
pursued his art in Venice, or in the fields of England, under totally
different conditions from those possible to us now—how are you to
make your study of him effective here in Manchester? how bring it down
into patterns, and all that you are called upon as operatives to produce?
how make it the means of your livelihood, and associate inferior branches
of art with this great art? That may become a serious doubt to you. You
may think there is some other way of producing clever, and pretty, and
saleable patterns than going to look at Titian, or any other great man.
And that brings me to the question, perhaps the most vexed question of all
amongst us just now, between conventional and perfect art. You know that
among architects and artists there are, and have been almost always, since
art became a subject of much discussion, two parties, one maintaining that
nature should be always altered and modified, and that the artist is
greater than nature; they do not maintain, indeed, in words, but they
maintain in idea, that the artist is greater than the Divine Maker of
these things, and can improve them; while the other party say that he
cannot improve nature, and that nature on the whole should improve him.
That is the real meaning of the two parties, the essence of them; the
practical result of their several theories being that the Idealists are
always producing more or less formal conditions of art, and the Realists
striving to produce in all their art either some image of nature, or
record of nature; these, observe, being quite different things, the image
being a resemblance, and the record, something which will give information
about nature, but not necessarily imitate it.</p>
<p>[Note: The portion of the lecture here omitted was a recapitulation of
that part of the previous one which opposed conventional art to natural
art.]</p>
<hr />
<p>You may separate these two groups of artists more distinctly in your mind
as those who seek for the pleasure of art, in the relations of its colours
and lines, without caring to convey any truth with it; and those who seek
for the truth first, and then go down from the truth to the pleasure of
colour and line. Marking those two bodies distinctly as separate, and
thinking over them, you may come to some rather notable conclusions
respecting the mental dispositions which are involved in each mode of
study. You will find that large masses of the art of the world fall
definitely under one or the other of these heads. Observe, pleasure first
and truth afterwards, (or not at all,) as with the Arabians and Indians;
or, truth first and pleasure afterwards, as with Angelico and all other
great European painters. You will find that the art whose end is pleasure
only is pre-eminently the gift of cruel and savage nations, cruel in
temper, savage in habits and conception; but that the art which is
especially dedicated to natural fact always indicates a peculiar
gentleness and tenderness of mind, and that all great and successful work
of that kind will assuredly be the production of thoughtful, sensitive,
earnest, kind men, large in their views of life, and full of various
intellectual power. And farther, when you examine the men in whom the
gifts of art are variously mingled, or universally mingled, you will
discern that the ornamental, or pleasurable power, though it may be
possessed by good men, is not in itself an indication of their goodness,
but is rather, unless balanced by other faculties, indicative of violence
of temper, inclining to cruelty and to irreligion. On the other hand, so
sure as you find any man endowed with a keen and separate faculty of
representing natural fact, so surely you will find that man gentle and
upright, full of nobleness and breadth of thought. I will give you two
instances, the first peculiarly English, and another peculiarly
interesting because it occurs among a nation not generally very kind or
gentle.</p>
<p>I am inclined to think that, considering all the disadvantages of
circumstances and education under which his genius was developed, there
was perhaps hardly ever born a man with a more intense and innate gift of
insight into nature than our own Sir Joshua Reynolds. Considered as a
painter of individuality in the human form and mind, I think him, even as
it is, the prince of portrait painters. Titian paints nobler pictures, and
Vandyke had nobler subjects, but neither of them entered so subtly as Sir
Joshua did into the minor varieties of human heart and temper; arid when
you consider that, with a frightful conventionality of social habitude all
around him, he yet conceived the simplest types of all feminine and
childish loveliness;—that in a northern climate, and with gray, and
white, and black, as the principal colours around him, he yet became a
colourist who can be crushed by none, even of the Venetians;—and
that with Dutch painting and Dresden china for the prevailing types of art
in the saloons of his day, he threw himself at once at the feet of the
great masters of Italy, and arose from their feet to share their throne—I
know not that in the whole history of art you can produce another instance
of so strong, so unaided, so unerring an instinct for all that was true,
pure, and noble.</p>
<p>Now, do you recollect the evidence respecting the character of this man,—the
two points of bright peculiar evidence given by the sayings of the two
greatest literary men of his day, Johnson and Goldsmith? Johnson, who, as
you know, was always Reynolds' attached friend, had but one complaint to
make against him, that he hated nobody:— "Reynolds," he said, "you
hate no one living; I like a good hater!" Still more significant is the
little touch in Goldsmith's "Retaliation." You recollect how in that poem
he describes the various persons who met at one of their dinners at St.
James's Coffee-house, each person being described under the name of some
appropriate dish. You will often hear the concluding lines about Reynolds
Quoted—</p>
<p>"He shifted his trumpet," &c;—<br/></p>
<p>less often, or at least less attentively, the preceding ones, far more
important—</p>
<p>"Still born to improve us in every part—<br/>
His pencil our faces, his <i>manners our heart;</i>"<br/></p>
<p>and never, the most characteristic touch of all, near the beginning:—</p>
<p>"Our dean shall be venison, just fresh from the plains;<br/>
Our Burke shall be tongue, with a garnish of brains.<br/>
To make out the dinner, full certain I am,<br/>
That Rich is anchovy, and Reynolds is <i>lamb</i>."<br/></p>
<p>The other painter whom I would give you as an instance of this gentleness
is a man of another nation, on the whole I suppose one of the most cruel
civilized nations in the world—the Spaniards. They produced but one
great painter, only one; but he among the very greatest of painters,
Velasquez. You would not suppose, from looking at Velasquez' portraits
generally, that he was an especially kind or good man; you perceive a
peculiar sternness about them; for they were as true as steel, and the
persons whom he had to paint being not generally kind or good people, they
were stern in expression, and Velasquez gave the sternness; but he had
precisely the same intense perception of truth, the same marvellous
instinct for the rendering of all natural soul and all natural form that
our Reynolds had. Let me, then, read you his character as it is given by
Mr. Stirling, of Kier:—</p>
<p>"Certain charges, of what nature we are not informed, brought against him
after his death, made it necessary for his executor, Fuensalida, to refute
them at a private audience granted to him by the king for that purpose.
After listening to the defence of his friend, Philip immediately made
answer: 'I can believe all you say of the excellent disposition of Diego
Velasquez.' Having lived for half his life in courts, he was yet capable
both of gratitude and generosity, and in the misfortunes, he could
remember the early kindness of Olivares. The friend of the exile of
Loeches, it is just to believe that he was also the friend of the
all-powerful favourite at Buenretiro. No mean jealousy ever influenced his
conduct to his brother artists; he could afford not only to acknowledge
the merits, but to forgive the malice, of his rivals. His character was of
that <i>rare and happy kind, in which high intellectual power is combined
with indomitable strength of will, and a winning sweetness of temper</i>,
and which seldom fails to raise the possessor above his fellow-men, making
his life a</p>
<p>'laurelled victory, and smooth success<br/>
Be strewed before his feet.'"<br/></p>
<p>I am sometimes accused of trying to make art too moral; yet, observe, I do
not say in the least that in order to be a good painter you must be a good
man; but I do say that in order to be a good natural painter there must be
strong elements of good in the mind, however warped by other parts of the
character. There are hundreds of other gifts of painting which are not at
all involved with moral conditions, but this one, the perception of
nature, is never given but under certain moral conditions. Therefore, now
you have it in your choice; here are your two paths for you: it is
required of you to produce conventional ornament, and you may approach the
task as the Hindoo does, and as the Arab did,—without nature at all,
with the chance of approximating your disposition somewhat to that of the
Hindoos and Arabs; or as Sir Joshua and Velasquez did, with, not the
chance, but the certainty, of approximating your disposition, according to
the sincerity of your effort—to the disposition of those great and
good men.</p>
<p>And do you suppose you will lose anything by approaching your conventional
art from this higher side? Not so. I called, with deliberate measurement
of my expression, long ago, the decoration of the Alhambra "detestable,"
not merely because indicative of base conditions of moral being, but
because merely as decorative work, however captivating in some respects,
it is wholly wanting in the real, deep, and intense qualities of
ornamental art. Noble conventional decoration belongs only to three
periods. First, there is the conventional decoration of the Greeks, used
in subordination to their sculpture. There are then the noble conventional
decoration of the early Gothic schools, and the noble conventional
arabesque of the great Italian schools. All these were reached from above,
all reached by stooping from a knowledge of the human form. Depend upon it
you will find, as you look more and more into the matter, that good
subordinate ornament has ever been rooted in a higher knowledge; and if
you are again to produce anything that is noble, you must have the higher
knowledge first, and descend to all lower service; condescend as much as
you like,—condescension never does any man any harm,—but get
your noble standing first. So, then, without any scruple, whatever branch
of art you may be inclined as a student here to follow,—whatever you
are to make your bread by, I say, so far as you have time and power, make
yourself first a noble and accomplished artist; understand at least what
noble and accomplished art is, and then you will be able to apply your
knowledge to all service whatsoever.</p>
<p>I am now going to ask your permission to name the masters whom I think it
would be well if we could agree, in our Schools of Art in England, to
consider our leaders. The first and chief I will not myself presume to
name; he shall be distinguished for you by the authority of those two
great painters of whom we have just been speaking—Reynolds and
Velasquez. You may remember that in your Manchester Art Treasures
Exhibition the most impressive things were the works of those two men—
nothing told upon the eye so much; no other pictures retained it with such
a persistent power. Now, I have the testimony, first of Reynolds to
Velasquez, and then of Velasquez to the man whom I want you to take as the
master of all your English schools. The testimony of Reynolds to Velasquez
is very striking. I take it from some fragments which have just been
published by Mr. William Cotton—precious fragments—of
Reynolds' diaries, which I chanced upon luckily as I was coming down here:
for I was going to take Velasquez' testimony alone, and then fell upon
this testimony of Reynolds to Velasquez, written most fortunately in
Reynolds' own hand-you may see the manuscript. "What <i>we</i> are all,"
said Reynolds, "attempting to do with great labor, Velasquez does at
once." Just think what is implied when a man of the enormous power and
facility that Reynolds had, says he was "trying to do with great labor"
what Velasquez "did at once."</p>
<p>Having thus Reynolds' testimony to Velasquez, I will take Velasquez'
testimony to somebody else. You know that Velasquez was sent by Philip of
Spain to Italy, to buy pictures for him. He went all over Italy, saw the
living artists there, and all their best pictures when freshly painted, so
that he had every opportunity of judging; and never was a man so capable
of judging. He went to Rome and ordered various works of living artists;
and while there, he was one day asked by Salvator Rosa what he thought of
Raphael. His reply, and the ensuing conversation, are thus reported by
Boschini, in curious Italian verse, which, thus translated by Dr.
Donaldson, is quoted in Mr. Stirling's Life of Velasquez:—</p>
<p>"The master" [Velasquez] "stiffly bowed his figure tall<br/>
And said, 'For Rafael, to speak the truth—<br/>
I always was plain-spoken from my youth—<br/>
I cannot say I like his works at all.'<br/>
<br/>
"'Well,' said the other" [Salvator], 'if you can run down<br/>
So great a man, I really cannot see<br/>
What you can find to like in Italy;<br/>
To him we all agree to give the crown.'<br/>
<br/>
"Diego answered thus: 'I saw in Venice<br/>
The true test of the good and beautiful;<br/>
First in my judgment, ever stands that school,<br/>
And Titian first of all Italian men is.'"<br/>
<br/>
"<i>Tizian ze quel die porta la bandiera</i>"<br/></p>
<p>Learn that line by heart and act, at all events for some time to come,
upon Velasquez' opinion in that matter. Titian is much the safest master
for you. Raphael's power, such as it characters in his mind; it is
"Raphaelesque," properly so called; but Titian's power is simply the power
of doing right. Whatever came before Titian, he did wholly as it <i>ought</i>
to be done. Do not suppose that now in recommending Titian to you so
strongly, and speaking of nobody else to-night, I am retreating in anywise
from what some of you may perhaps recollect in my works, the enthusiasm
with which I have always spoken of another Venetian painter. There are
three Venetians who are never separated in my mind—Titian, Veronese,
and Tintoret. They all have their own unequalled gifts, and Tintoret
especially has imagination and depth of soul which I think renders him
indisputably the greatest man; but, equally indisputably, Titian is the
greatest painter; and therefore the greatest painter who ever lived. You
may be led wrong by Tintoret [Note: See Appendix I.—"Right and
Wrong."] in many respects, wrong by Raphael in more; all that you learn
from Titian will be right. Then, with Titian, take Leonardo, Rembrandt,
and Albert Dürer. I name those three masters for this reason: Leonardo has
powers of subtle drawing which are peculiarly applicable in many ways to
the drawing of fine ornament, and are very useful for all students.
Rembrandt and Dürer are the only men whose actual work of hand you can
have to look at; you can have Rembrandt's etchings, or Dürer's engravings
actually hung in your schools; and it is a main point for the student to
see the real thing, and avoid judging of masters at second-hand. As,
however, in obeying this principle, you cannot often have opportunities of
studying Venetian painting, it is desirable that you should have a useful
standard of colour, and I think it is possible for you to obtain this. I
cannot, indeed, without entering upon ground which might involve the
hurting the feelings of living artists, state exactly what I believe to be
the relative position of various painters in England at present with
respect to power of colour. But I may say this, that in the peculiar gifts
of colour which will be useful to you as students, there are only one or
two of the pre-Raphaelites, and William Hunt, of the old Water Colour
Society, who would be safe guides for you: and as quite a safe guide,
there is nobody but William Hunt, because the pre-Raphaelites are all more
or less affected by enthusiasm and by various morbid conditions of
intellect and temper; but old William Hunt—I am sorry to say "old,"
but I say it in a loving way, for every year that has added to his life
has added also to his skill—William Hunt is as right as the
Venetians, as far as he goes, and what is more, nearly as inimitable as
they. And I think if we manage to put in the principal schools of England
a little bit of Hunt's work, and make that somewhat of a standard of
colour, that we can apply his principles of colouring to subjects of all
kinds. Until you have had a work of his long near you; nay, unless you
have been labouring at it, and trying to copy it, you do not know the
thoroughly grand qualities that are concentrated in it. Simplicity, and
intensity, both of the highest character;— simplicity of aim, and
intensity of power and success, are involved in that man's unpretending
labour.</p>
<p>Finally, you cannot believe that I would omit my own favourite, Turner. I
fear from the very number of his works left to the nation, that there is a
disposition now rising to look upon his vast bequest with some contempt. I
beg of you, if in nothing else, to believe me in this, that you cannot
further the art of England in any way more distinctly than by giving
attention to every fragment that has been left by that man. The time will
come when his full power and right place will be acknowledged; that time
will not be for many a day yet: nevertheless, be assured—as far as
you are inclined to give the least faith to anything I may say to you, be
assured—that you can act for the good of art in England in no better
way than by using whatever influence any of you have in any direction to
urge the reverent study and yet more reverent preservation of the works of
Turner. I do not say "the exhibition" of his works, for we are not
altogether ripe for it: they are still too far above us; uniting, as I was
telling you, too many qualities for us yet to feel fully their range and
their influence;— but let us only try to keep them safe from harm,
and show thoroughly and conveniently what we show of them at all, and day
by day their greatness will dawn upon us more and more, and be the root of
a school of art in England, which I do not doubt may be as bright, as
just, and as refined as even that of Venice herself. The dominion of the
sea seems to have been associated, in past time, with dominion in the arts
also: Athens had them together; Venice had them together; but by so much
as our authority over the ocean is wider than theirs over the Ægean or
Adriatic, let us strive to make our art more widely beneficent than
theirs, though it cannot be more exalted; so working out the fulfilment,
in their wakening as well as their warning sense, of those great words of
the aged Tintoret:</p>
<p>"Sempre si fa il mare maggiore."<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LECTURE III. — MODERN MANUFACTURE AND DESIGN. </h2>
<h3> <i>A Lecture delivered at Bradford, March, 1859</i>. </h3>
<p>It is with a deep sense of necessity for your indulgence that I venture to
address you to-night, or that I venture at any time to address the pupils
of schools of design intended for the advancement of taste in special
branches of manufacture. No person is able to give useful and definite
help towards such special applications of art, unless he is entirely
familiar with the conditions of labour and natures of material involved in
the work; and indefinite help is little better than no help at all. Nay,
the few remarks which I propose to lay before you this evening will, I
fear, be rather suggestive of difficulties than helpful in conquering
them: nevertheless, it may not be altogether unserviceable to define
clearly for you (and this, at least, I am able to do) one or two of the
more stern general obstacles which stand at present in the way of our
success in design; and to warn you against exertion of effort in any vain
or wasteful way, till these main obstacles are removed.</p>
<p>The first of these is our not understanding the scope and dignity of
Decorative design. With all our talk about it, the very meaning of the
words "Decorative art" remains confused and undecided. I want, if
possible, to settle this question for you to-night, and to show you that
the principles on which you must work are likely to be false, in
proportion as they are narrow; true, only as they are founded on a
perception of the connection of all branches of art with each other.</p>
<p>Observe, then, first—the only essential distinction between
Decorative and other art is the being fitted for a fixed place; and in
that place, related, either in subordination or command, to the effect of
other pieces of art. And all the greatest art which the world has produced
is thus fitted for a place, and subordinated to a purpose. There is no
existing highest-order art but is decorative. The best sculpture yet
produced has been the decoration of a temple front—the best
painting, the decoration of a room. Raphael's best doing is merely the
wall- colouring of a suite of apartments in the Vatican, and his cartoons
were made for tapestries. Correggio's best doing is the decoration of two
small church cupolas at Parma; Michael Angelo's of a ceiling in the Pope's
private chapel; Tintoret's, of a ceiling and side wall belonging to a
charitable society at Venice; while Titian and Veronese threw out their
noblest thoughts, not even on the inside, but on the outside of the common
brick and plaster walls of Venice.</p>
<p>Get rid, then, at once of any idea of Decorative art being a degraded or a
separate kind of art. Its nature or essence is simply its being fitted for
a definite place; and, in that place, forming part of a great and
harmonious whole, in companionship with other art; and so far from this
being a degradation to it—so far from Decorative art being inferior
to other art because it is fixed to a spot—on the whole it may be
considered as rather a piece of degradation that it should be portable.
Portable art—independent of all place—is for the most part
ignoble art. Your little Dutch landscape, which you put over your
sideboard to-day, and between the windows tomorrow, is a far more
contemptible piece of work than the extents of field and forest with which
Benozzo has made green and beautiful the once melancholy arcade of the
Campo Santo at Pisa; and the wild boar of silver which you use for a seal,
or lock into a velvet case, is little likely to be so noble a beast as the
bronze boar who foams forth the fountain from under his tusks in the
market-place of Florence. It is, indeed, possible that the portable
picture or image may be first-rate of its kind, but it is not first-rate
because it is portable; nor are Titian's frescoes less than first-rate
because they are fixed; nay, very frequently the highest compliment you
can pay to a cabinet picture is to say—"It is as grand as a fresco."</p>
<p>Keeping, then, this fact fixed in our minds,—that all art <i>may</i>
be decorative, and that the greatest art yet produced has been decorative,—we
may proceed to distinguish the orders and dignities of decorative art,
thus:—</p>
<p>I. The first order of it is that which is meant for places where it cannot
be disturbed or injured, and where it can be perfectly seen; and then the
main parts of it should be, and have always been made, by the great
masters, as perfect, and as full of nature as possible.</p>
<p>You will every day hear it absurdly said that room decoration should be by
flat patterns—by dead colours—by conventional monotonies, and
I know not what. Now, just be assured of this—nobody ever yet used
conventional art to decorate with, when he could do anything better, and
knew that what he did would be safe. Nay, a great painter will always give
you the natural art, safe or not. Correggio gets a commission to paint a
room on the ground floor of a palace at Parma: any of our people—bred
on our fine modern principles—would have covered it with a diaper,
or with stripes or flourishes, or mosaic patterns. Not so Correggio: he
paints a thick trellis of vine-leaves, with oval openings, and lovely
children leaping through them into the room; and lovely children, depend
upon it, are rather more desirable decorations than diaper, if you can do
them—but they are not quite so easily done. In like manner Tintoret
has to paint the whole end of the Council Hall at Venice. An orthodox
decorator would have set himself to make the wall look like a wall—Tintoret
thinks it would be rather better, if he can manage it, to make it look a
little like Paradise;— stretches his canvas right over the wall, and
his clouds right over his canvas; brings the light through his clouds—all
blue and clear—zodiac beyond zodiac; rolls away the vaporous flood
from under the feet of saints, leaving them at last in infinitudes of
light—unorthodox in the last degree, but, on the whole, pleasant.</p>
<p>And so in all other cases whatever, the greatest decorative art is wholly
unconventional—downright, pure, good painting and sculpture, but
always fitted for its place; and subordinated to the purpose it has to
serve in that place.</p>
<p>II. But if art is to be placed where it is liable to injury—to wear
and tear; or to alteration of its form; as, for instance, on domestic
utensils, and armour, and weapons, and dress; in which either the ornament
will be worn out by the usage of the thing, or will be cast into altered
shape by the play of its folds; then it is wrong to put beautiful and
perfect art to such uses, and you want forms of inferior art, such as will
be by their simplicity less liable to injury; or, by reason of their
complexity and continuousness, may show to advantage, however distorted by
the folds they are cast into.</p>
<p>And thus arise the various forms of inferior decorative art, respecting
which the general law is, that the lower the place and office of the
thing, the less of natural or perfect form you should have in it; a zigzag
or a chequer is thus a better, because a more consistent ornament for a
cup or platter than a landscape or portrait is: hence the general
definition of the true forms of conventional ornament is, that they
consist in the bestowal of as much beauty on the object as shall be
consistent with its Material, its Place, and its Office.</p>
<p>Let us consider these three modes of consistency a little.</p>
<p>(A.) Conventionalism by cause of inefficiency of material.</p>
<p>If, for instance, we are required to represent a human figure with stone
only, we cannot represent its colour; we reduce its colour to whiteness.
That is not elevating the human body, but degrading it; only it would be a
much greater degradation to give its colour falsely. Diminish beauty as
much as you will, but do not misrepresent it. So again, when we are
sculpturing a face, we can't carve its eyelashes. The face is none the
better for wanting its eyelashes—it is injured by the want; but
would be much more injured by a clumsy representation of them.</p>
<p>Neither can we carve the hair. We must be content with the conventionalism
of vile solid knots and lumps of marble, instead of the golden cloud that
encompasses the fair human face with its waving mystery. The lumps of
marble are not an elevated representation of hair—they are a
degraded one; yet better than any attempt to imitate hair with the
incapable material.</p>
<p>In all cases in which such imitation is attempted, instant degradation to
a still lower level is the result. For the effort to imitate shows that
the workman has only a base and poor conception of the beauty of the
reality—else he would know his task to be hopeless, and give it up
at once; so that all endeavours to avoid conventionalism, when the
material demands it, result from insensibility to truth, and are among the
worst forms of vulgarity. Hence, in the greatest Greek statues, the hair
is very slightly indicated—not because the sculptor disdained hair,
but because he knew what it was too well to touch it insolently. I do not
doubt but that the Greek painters drew hair exactly as Titian does. Modern
attempts to produce finished pictures on glass result from the same base
vulgarism. No man who knows what painting means, can endure a painted
glass window which emulates painter's work. But he rejoices in a glowing
mosaic of broken colour: for that is what the glass has the special gift
and right of producing. [Note: See Appendix II., Sir Joshua Reynolds's
disappointment.]</p>
<p>(B.) Conventionalism by cause of inferiority of place.</p>
<p>When work is to be seen at a great distance, or in dark places, or in some
other imperfect way, it constantly becomes necessary to treat it coarsely
or severely, in order to make it effective. The statues on cathedral
fronts, in good times of design, are variously treated according to their
distances: no fine execution is put into the features of the Madonna who
rules the group of figures above the south transept of Rouen at 150 feet
above the ground; but in base modern work, as Milan Cathedral, the
sculpture is finished without any reference to distance; and the merit of
every statue is supposed to consist in the visitor's being obliged to
ascend three hundred steps before he can see it.</p>
<p>(C.) Conventionalism by cause of inferiority of office.</p>
<p>When one piece of ornament is to be subordinated to another (as the
moulding is to the sculpture it encloses, or the fringe of a drapery to
the statue it veils), this inferior ornament needs to be degraded in order
to mark its lower office; and this is best done by refusing, more or less,
the introduction of natural form. The less of nature it contains, the more
degraded is the ornament, and the fitter for a humble place; but, however
far a great workman may go in refusing the higher organisms of nature, he
always takes care to retain the magnificence of natural lines; that is to
say, of the infinite curves, such as I have analyzed in the fourth volume
of "Modern Painters." His copyists, fancying that they can follow him
without nature, miss precisely the essence of all the work; so that even
the simplest piece of Greek conventional ornament loses the whole of its
value in any modern imitation of it, the finer curves being always missed.
Perhaps one of the dullest and least justifiable mistakes which have yet
been made about my writing, is the supposition that I have attacked or
despised Greek work. I have attacked Palladian work, and modern imitation
of Greek work. Of Greek work itself I have never spoken but with a
reverence quite infinite: I name Phidias always in exactly the same tone
with which I speak of Michael Angelo, Titian, and Dante. My first
statement of this faith, now thirteen years ago, was surely clear enough.
"We shall see by this light three colossal images standing up side by
side, looming in their great rest of spirituality above the whole world
horizon. Phidias, Michael Angelo, and Dante,—from these we may go
down step by step among the mighty men of every age, securely and
certainly observant of diminished lustre in every appearance of
restlessness and effort, until the last trace of inspiration vanishes in
the tottering affectation or tortured insanities of modern times."
("Modern Painters," vol. ii., p. 253.) This was surely plain speaking
enough, and from that day to this my effort has been not less continually
to make the heart of Greek work known than the heart of Gothic: namely,
the nobleness of conception of form derived from perpetual study of the
figure; and my complaint of the modern architect has been not that he
followed the Greeks, but that he denied the first laws of life in theirs
as in all other art.</p>
<p>The fact is, that all good subordinate forms of ornamentation ever yet
existent in the world have been invented, and others as beautiful can only
be invented, by men primarily exercised in drawing or carving the human
figure. I will not repeat here what I have already twice insisted upon, to
the students of London and Manchester, respecting the degradation of
temper and intellect which follows the pursuit of art without reference to
natural form, as among the Asiatics: here, I will only trespass on your
patience so far as to mark the inseparable connection between
figure-drawing and good ornamental work, in the great European schools,
and all that are connected with them.</p>
<p>Tell me, then, first of all, what ornamental work is usually put before
our students as the type of decorative perfection? Raphael's arabesques;
are they not? Well, Raphael knew a little about the figure, I suppose,
before he drew them. I do not say that I like those arabesques; but there
are certain qualities in them which are inimitable by modern designers;
and those qualities are just the fruit of the master's figure study. What
is given the student as next to Raphael's work? Cinquecento ornament
generally. Well, cinquecento generally, with its birds, and cherubs, and
wreathed foliage, and clustered fruit, was the amusement of men who
habitually and easily carved the figure, or painted it. All the truly fine
specimens of it have figures or animals as main parts of the design.</p>
<p>"Nay, but," some anciently or mediævally minded person will exclaim, "we
don't want to study cinquecento. We want severer, purer conventionalism."
What will you have? Egyptian ornament? Why, the whole mass of it is made
up of multitudinous human figures in every kind of action—and
magnificent action; their kings drawing their bows in their chariots,
their sheaves of arrows rattling at their shoulders; the slain falling
under them as before a pestilence; their captors driven before them in
astonied troops; and do you expect to imitate Egyptian ornament without
knowing how to draw the human figure? Nay, but you will take Christian
ornament—purest mediaeval Christian—thirteenth century! Yes:
and do you suppose you will find the Christian less human? The least
natural and most purely conventional ornament of the Gothic schools is
that of their painted glass; and do you suppose painted glass, in the fine
times, was ever wrought without figures? We have got into the way, among
our other modern wretchednesses, of trying to make windows of leaf
diapers, and of strips of twisted red and yellow bands, looking like the
patterns of currant jelly on the top of Christmas cakes; but every
casement of old glass contained a saint's history. The windows of Bourges,
Chartres, or Rouen have ten, fifteen, or twenty medallions in each, and
each medallion contains two figures at least, often six or seven,
representing every event of interest in the history of the saint whose
life is in question. Nay, but, you say those figures are rude and quaint,
and ought not to be imitated. Why, so is the leafage rude and quaint, yet
you imitate that. The coloured border pattern of geranium or ivy leaf is
not one whit better drawn, or more like geraniums and ivy, than the
figures are like figures; but you call the geranium leaf idealized—why
don't you call the figures so? The fact is, neither are idealized, but
both are conventionalized on the same principles, and in the same way; and
if you want to learn how to treat the leafage, the only way is to learn
first how to treat the figure. And you may soon test your powers in this
respect. Those old workmen were not afraid of the most familiar subjects.
The windows of Chartres were presented by the trades of the town, and at
the bottom of each window is a representation of the proceedings of the
tradesmen at the business which enabled them to pay for the window. There
are smiths at the forge, curriers at their hides, tanners looking into
their pits, mercers selling goods over the counter—all made into
beautiful medallions. Therefore, whenever you want to know whether you
have got any real power of composition or adaptation in ornament, don't be
content with sticking leaves together by the ends,—anybody can do
that; but try to conventionalize a butcher's or a greengrocer's, with
Saturday night customers buying cabbage and beef. That will tell you if
you can design or not.</p>
<p>I can fancy your losing patience with me altogether just now. "We asked
this fellow down to tell our workmen how to make shawls, and he is only
trying to teach them how to caricature." But have a little patience with
me, and examine, after I have done, a little for yourselves into the
history of ornamental art, and you will discover why I do this. You will
discover, I repeat, that all great ornamental art whatever is founded on
the effort of the workman to draw the figure, and, in the best schools, to
draw all that he saw about him in living nature. The best art of pottery
is acknowledged to be that of Greece, and all the power of design
exhibited in it, down to the merest zigzag, arises primarily from the
workman having been forced to outline nymphs and knights; from those
helmed and draped figures he holds his power. Of Egyptian ornament I have
just spoken. You have everything given there that the workman saw; people
of his nation employed in hunting, fighting, fishing, visiting, making
love, building, cooking—everything they did is drawn, magnificently
or familiarly, as was needed. In Byzantine ornament, saints, or animals
which are types of various spiritual power, are the main subjects; and
from the church down to the piece of enamelled metal, figure,—figure,—figure,
always principal. In Norman and Gothic work you have, with all their quiet
saints, also other much disquieted persons, hunting, feasting, fighting,
and so on; or whole hordes of animals racing after each other. In the
Bayeux tapestry, Queen Matilda gave, as well as she could,—in many
respects graphically enough,—the whole history of the conquest of
England. Thence, as you increase in power of art, you have more and more
finished figures, up to the solemn sculptures of Wells Cathedral, or the
cherubic enrichments of the Venetian Madonna dei Miracoli. Therefore, I
will tell you fearlessly, for I know it is true, you must raise your
workman up to life, or you will never get from him one line of
well-imagined conventionalism. We have at present no good ornamental
design. We can't have it yet, and we must be patient if we want to have
it. Do not hope to feel the effect of your schools at once, but raise the
men as high as you can, and then let them stoop as low as you need; no
great man ever minds stooping. Encourage the students, in sketching
accurately and continually from nature anything that comes in their way—still
life, flowers, animals; but, above all, figures; and so far as you allow
of any difference between an artist's training and theirs, let it be, not
in what they draw, but in the degree of conventionalism you require in the
sketch.</p>
<p>For my own part, I should always endeavour to give thorough artistical
training first; but I am not certain (the experiment being yet untried)
what results may be obtained by a truly intelligent practice of
conventional drawing, such as that of the Egyptians, Greeks, or thirteenth
century French, which consists in the utmost possible rendering of natural
form by the fewest possible lines. The animal and bird drawing of the
Egyptians is, in their fine age, quite magnificent under its conditions;
magnificent in two ways—first, in keenest perception of the main
forms and facts in the creature; and, secondly, in the grandeur of line by
which their forms are abstracted and insisted on, making every asp, ibis,
and vulture a sublime spectre of asp or ibis or vulture power. The way for
students to get some of this gift again (<i>some</i> only, for I believe
the fulness of the gift itself to be connected with vital superstition,
and with resulting intensity of reverence; people were likely to know
something about hawks and ibises, when to kill one was to be irrevocably
judged to death) is never to pass a day without drawing some animal from
the life, allowing themselves the fewest possible lines and colours to do
it with, but resolving that whatever is characteristic of the animal shall
in some way or other be shown. [Note: Plate 75 in Vol. V. of Wilkinson's
"Ancient Egypt" will give the student an idea of how to set to work.] I
repeat, it cannot yet be judged what results might be obtained by a nobly
practised conventionalism of this kind; but, however that may be, the
first fact,—the necessity of animal and figure drawing, is
absolutely certain, and no person who shrinks from it will ever become a
great designer.</p>
<p>One great good arises even from the first step in figure drawing, that it
gets the student quit at once of the notion of formal symmetry. If you
learn only to draw a leaf well, you are taught in some of our schools to
turn it the other way, opposite to itself; and the two leaves set opposite
ways are called "a design:" and thus it is supposed possible to produce
ornamentation, though you have no more brains than a looking-glass or a
kaleidoscope has. But if you once learn to draw the human figure, you will
find that knocking two men's heads together does not necessarily
constitute a good design; nay, that it makes a very bad design, or no
design at all; and you will see at once that to arrange a group of two or
more figures, you must, though perhaps it may be desirable to balance, or
oppose them, at the same time vary their attitudes, and make one, not the
reverse of the other, but the companion of the other.</p>
<p>I had a somewhat amusing discussion on this subject with a friend, only
the other day; and one of his retorts upon me was so neatly put, and
expresses so completely all that can either be said or shown on the
opposite side, that it is well worth while giving it you exactly in the
form it was sent to me. My friend had been maintaining that the essence of
ornament consisted in three things:—contrast, series, and symmetry.
I replied (by letter) that "none of them, nor all of them together, would
produce ornament. Here"—(making a ragged blot with the back of my
pen on the paper)—"you have contrast; but it isn't ornament: here,
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,"—(writing the numerals)—"You have series;
but it isn't ornament: and here,"—(sketching a rough but symmetrical
"stick- figure" sketch of a human body at the side)—"you have
symmetry; but it isn't ornament."</p>
<p>My friend replied:—</p>
<p>"Your materials were not ornament, because you did not apply them. I send
them to you back, made up into a choice sporting neckerchief:"</p>
<p>Symmetrical figure Unit of diaper.<br/>
Contrast Corner ornaments.<br/>
Series Border ornaments.<br/></p>
<p>"Each figure is converted into a harmony by being revolved on its two
axes, the whole opposed in contrasting series."</p>
<p>My answer was—or rather was to the effect (for I must expand it a
little, here)—that his words, "because you did not apply them,"
contained the gist of the whole matter;—that the application of
them, or any other things, was precisely the essence of design; the non-
application, or wrong application, the negation of design: that his use of
the poor materials was in this case admirable; and that if he could
explain to me, in clear words, the principles on which he had so used
them, he would be doing a very great service to all students of art.</p>
<p>"Tell me, therefore (I asked), these main points:</p>
<p>"1. How did you determine the number of figures you would put into the
neckerchief? Had there been more, it would have been mean and ineffective,—a
pepper-and-salt sprinkling of figures. Had there been fewer, it would have
been monstrous. How did you fix the number?</p>
<p>"2. How did you determine the breadth of the border and relative size of
the numerals?</p>
<p>"3. Why are there two lines outside of the border, and one only inside?
Why are there no more lines? Why not three and two, or three and five? Why
lines at all to separate the barbarous figures; and why, if lines at all,
not double or treble instead of single?</p>
<p>"4. Why did you put the double blots at the corners? Why not at the angles
of the chequers,—or in the middle of the border?</p>
<p>"It is precisely your knowing why <i>not</i> to do these things, and why
to do just what you have done, which constituted your power of design; and
like all the people I have ever known who had that power, you are entirely
unconscious of the essential laws by which you work, and confuse other
people by telling them that the design depends on symmetry and series,
when, in fact, it depends entirely on your own sense and judgment."</p>
<p>This was the substance of my last answer—to which (as I knew
beforehand would be the case) I got no reply; but it still remains to be
observed that with all the skill and taste (especially involving the
architect's great trust, harmony of proportion), which my friend could
bring to bear on the materials given him, the result is still only—a
sporting neckerchief—that is to say, the materials addressed, first,
to recklessness, in the shape of a mere blot; then to computativeness in a
series of figures; and then to absurdity and ignorance, in the shape of an
ill-drawn caricature—such materials, however treated, can only work
up into what will please reckless, computative, and vulgar persons,—that
is to say, into a sporting neckerchief. The difference between this piece
of ornamentation and Correggio's painting at Parma lies simply and wholly
in the additions (somewhat large ones), of truth and of tenderness: in the
drawing being lovely as well as symmetrical— and representative of
realities as well as agreeably disposed. And truth, tenderness, and
inventive application or disposition are indeed the roots of ornament—not
contrast, nor symmetry.</p>
<p>It ought yet farther to be observed, that <i>the nobler the materials, the
less their symmetry is endurable</i>. In the present case, the sense of
fitness and order, produced by the repetition of the figures, neutralizes,
in some degree, their reckless vulgarity; and is wholly, therefore,
beneficent to them. But draw the figures better, and their repetition will
become painful. You may harmlessly balance a mere geometrical form, and
oppose one quatrefoil or cusp by another exactly like it. But put two
Apollo Belvideres back to back, and you will not think the symmetry
improves them. <i>Whenever the materials of ornament are noble, they must
be various</i>; and repetition of parts is either the sign of utterly bad,
hopeless, and base work; or of the intended degradation of the parts in
which such repetition is allowed, in order to foil others more noble.</p>
<p>Such, then, are a few of the great principles, by the enforcement of which
you may hope to promote the success of the modern student of design; but
remember, none of these principles will be useful at all, unless you
understand them to be, in one profound and stern sense, useless. [Note: I
shall endeavour for the future to put my self- contradictions in short
sentences and direct terms, in order to save sagacious persons the trouble
of looking for them.]</p>
<p>That is to say, unless you feel that neither you nor I, nor any one, can,
in the great ultimate sense, teach anybody how to make a good design.</p>
<p>If designing <i>could</i> be taught, all the world would learn: as all the
world reads—or calculates. But designing is not to be spelled, nor
summed. My men continually come to me, in my drawing class in London,
thinking I am to teach them what is instantly to enable them to gain their
bread. "Please, sir, show us how to design." "Make designers of us." And
you, I doubt not, partly expect me to tell you to-night how to make
designers of your Bradford youths. Alas! I could as soon tell you how to
make or manufacture an ear of wheat, as to make a good artist of any kind.
I can analyze the wheat very learnedly for you—tell you there is
starch in it, and carbon, and silex. I can give you starch, and charcoal,
and flint; but you are as far from your ear of wheat as you were before.
All that can possibly be done for any one who wants ears of wheat is to
show them where to find grains of wheat, and how to sow them, and then,
with patience, in Heaven's time, the ears will come—or will perhaps
come—ground and weather permitting. So in this matter of making
artists—first you must find your artist in the grain; then you must
plant him; fence and weed the field about him; and with patience, ground
and weather permitting, you may get an artist out of him—not
otherwise. And what I have to speak to you about, tonight, is mainly the
ground and the weather, it being the first and quite most material
question in this matter, whether the ground and weather of Bradford, or
the ground and weather of England in general,—suit wheat.</p>
<p>And observe in the outset, it is not so much what the present
circumstances of England are, as what we wish to make them, that we have
to consider. If you will tell me what you ultimately intend Bradford to
be, perhaps I can tell you what Bradford can ultimately produce. But you
must have your minds clearly made up, and be distinct in telling me what
you do want. At present I don't know what you are aiming at, and possibly
on consideration you may feel some doubt whether you know yourselves. As
matters stand, all over England, as soon as one mill is at work, occupying
two hundred hands, we try, by means of it, to set another mill at work,
occupying four hundred. That is all simple and comprehensive enough—but
what is it to come to? How many mills do we want? or do we indeed want no
end of mills? Let us entirely understand each other on this point before
we go any farther. Last week, I drove from Rochdale to Bolton Abbey;
quietly, in order to see the country, and certainly it was well worth
while. I never went over a more interesting twenty miles than those
between Rochdale and Burnley. Naturally, the valley has been one of the
most beautiful in the Lancashire hills; one of the far away solitudes,
full of old shepherd ways of life. At this time there are not,—I
speak deliberately, and I believe quite literally,—there are not, I
think, more than a thousand yards of road to be traversed anywhere,
without passing a furnace or mill.</p>
<p>Now, is that the kind of thing you want to come to everywhere? Because, if
it be, and you tell me so distinctly, I think I can make several
suggestions to-night, and could make more if you give me time, which would
materially advance your object. The extent of our operations at present is
more or less limited by the extent of coal and ironstone, but we have not
yet learned to make proper use of our clay. Over the greater part of
England, south of the manufacturing districts, there are magnificent beds
of various kinds of useful clay; and I believe that it would not be
difficult to point out modes of employing it which might enable us to turn
nearly the whole of the south of England into a brickfield, as we have
already turned nearly the whole of the north into a coal-pit. I say
"nearly" the whole, because, as you are doubtless aware, there are
considerable districts in the south composed of chalk renowned up to the
present time for their downs and mutton. But, I think, by examining
carefully into the conceivable uses of chalk, we might discover a quite
feasible probability of turning all the chalk districts into a limekiln,
as we turn the clay districts into a brickfield. There would then remain
nothing but the mountain districts to be dealt with; but, as we have not
yet ascertained all the uses of clay and chalk, still less have we
ascertained those of stone; and I think, by draining the useless inlets of
the Cumberland, Welsh, and Scotch lakes, and turning them, with their
rivers, into navigable reservoirs and canals, there would be no difficulty
in working the whole of our mountain districts as a gigantic quarry of
slate and granite, from which all the rest of the world might be supplied
with roofing and building stone.</p>
<p>Is this, then, what you want? You are going straight at it at present; and
I have only to ask under what limitations I am to conceive or describe
your final success? Or shall there be no limitations? There are none to
your powers; every day puts new machinery at your disposal, and increases,
with your capital, the vastness of your undertakings. The changes in the
state of this country are now so rapid, that it would be wholly absurd to
endeavour to lay down laws of art education for it under its present
aspect and circumstances; and therefore I must necessarily ask, how much
of it do you seriously intend within the next fifty years to be coal-pit,
brickfield, or quarry? For the sake of distinctness of conclusion, I will
suppose your success absolute: that from shore to shore the whole of the
island is to be set as thick with chimneys as the masts stand in the docks
of Liverpool: and there shall be no meadows in it; no trees; no gardens;
only a little corn grown upon the housetops, reaped and threshed by steam:
that you do not leave even room for roads, but travel either over the
roofs of your mills, on viaducts; or under their floors, in tunnels: that,
the smoke having rendered the light of the sun unserviceable, you work
always by the light of your own gas: that no acre of English ground shall
be without its shaft and its engine; and therefore, no spot of English
ground left, on which it shall be possible to stand, without a definite
and calculable chance of being blown off it, at any moment, into small
pieces.</p>
<p>Under these circumstances, (if this is to be the future of England,) no
designing or any other development of beautiful art will be possible. Do
not vex your minds, nor waste your money with any thought or effort in the
matter. Beautiful art can only be produced by people who have beautiful
things about them, and leisure to look at them; and unless you provide
some elements of beauty for your workmen to be surrounded by, you will
find that no elements of beauty can be invented by them.</p>
<p>I was struck forcibly by the bearing of this great fact upon our modern
efforts at ornamentation in an afternoon walk, last week, in the suburbs
of one of our large manufacturing towns. I was thinking of the difference
in the effect upon the designer's mind, between the scene which I then
came upon, and the scene which would have presented itself to the eyes of
any designer of the middle ages, when he left his workshop. Just outside
the town I came upon an old English cottage, or mansion, I hardly know
which to call it, set close under the hill, and beside the river, perhaps
built somewhere in the Charles's time, with mullioned windows and a low
arched porch; round which, in the little triangular garden, one can
imagine the family as they used to sit in old summer times, the ripple of
the river heard faintly through the sweetbrier hedge, and the sheep on the
far-off wolds shining in the evening sunlight. There, uninhabited for many
and many a year, it had been left in unregarded havoc of ruin; the
garden-gate still swung loose to its latch; the garden, blighted utterly
into a field of ashes, not even a weed taking root there; the roof torn
into shapeless rents; the shutters hanging about the windows in rags of
rotten wood; before its gate, the stream which had gladdened it now
soaking slowly by, black as ebony, and thick with curdling scum; the bank
above it trodden into unctuous, sooty slime: far in front of it, between
it and the old hills, the furnaces of the city foaming forth perpetual
plague of sulphurous darkness; the volumes of their storm clouds coiling
low over a waste of grassless fields, fenced from each other, not by
hedges, but by slabs of square stone, like gravestones, riveted together
with iron.</p>
<p>That was your scene for the designer's contemplation in his afternoon walk
at Rochdale. Now fancy what was the scene which presented itself, in his
afternoon walk, to a designer of the Gothic school of Pisa—Nino
Pisano, or any of his men.</p>
<p>On each side of a bright river he saw rise a line of brighter palaces,
arched and pillared, and inlaid with deep red porphyry, and with
serpentine; along the quays before their gates were riding troops of
knights, noble in face and form, dazzling in crest and shield; horse and
man one labyrinth of quaint colour and gleaming light—the purple,
and silver, and scarlet fringes flowing over the strong limbs and clashing
mail, like sea-waves over rocks at sunset. Opening on each side from the
river were gardens, courts, and cloisters; long successions of white
pillars among wreaths of vine; leaping of fountains through buds of
pomegranate and orange: and still along the garden-paths, and under and
through the crimson of the pomegranate shadows, moving slowly, groups of
the fairest women that Italy ever saw—fairest, because purest and
thoughtfullest; trained in all high knowledge, as in all courteous art—in
dance, in song, in sweet wit, in lofty learning, in loftier courage, in
loftiest love—able alike to cheer, to enchant, or save, the souls of
men. Above all this scenery of perfect human life, rose dome and
bell-tower, burning with white alabaster and gold; beyond dome and
bell-tower the slopes of mighty hills, hoary with olive; far in the north,
above a purple sea of peaks of solemn Apennine, the clear, sharp-cloven
Carrara mountains sent up their steadfast flames of marble summit into
amber sky; the great sea itself, scorching with expanse of light,
stretching from their feet to the Gorgonian isles; and over all these,
ever present, near or far— seen through the leaves of vine, or
imaged with all its march of clouds in the Arno's stream, or set with its
depth of blue close against the golden hair and burning cheek of lady and
knight,—that untroubled and sacred sky, which was to all men, in
those days of innocent faith, indeed the unquestioned abode of spirits, as
the earth was of men; and which opened straight through its gates of cloud
and veils of dew into the awfulness of the eternal world;—a heaven
in which every cloud that passed was literally the chariot of an angel,
and every ray of its Evening and Morning streamed from the throne of God.</p>
<p>What think you of that for a school of design?</p>
<p>I do not bring this contrast before you as a ground of hopelessness in our
task; neither do I look for any possible renovation of the Republic of
Pisa, at Bradford, in the nineteenth century; but I put it before you in
order that you may be aware precisely of the kind of difficulty you have
to meet, and may then consider with yourselves how far you can meet it. To
men surrounded by the depressing and monotonous circumstances of English
manufacturing life, depend upon it, design is simply impossible. This is
the most distinct of all the experiences I have had in dealing with the
modern workman. He is intelligent and ingenious in the highest degree—subtle
in touch and keen in sight: but he is, generally speaking, wholly
destitute of designing power. And if you want to give him the power, you
must give him the materials, and put him in the circumstances for it.
Design is not the offspring of idle fancy: it is the studied result of
accumulative observation and delightful habit. Without observation and
experience, no design— without peace and pleasurableness in
occupation, no design—and all the lecturings, and teachings, and
prizes, and principles of art, in the world, are of no use, so long as you
don't surround your men with happy influences and beautiful things. It is
impossible for them to have right ideas about colour, unless they see the
lovely colours of nature unspoiled; impossible for them to supply
beautiful incident and action in their ornament, unless they see beautiful
incident and action in the world about them. Inform their minds, refine
their habits, and you form and refine their designs; but keep them
illiterate, uncomfortable, and in the midst of unbeautiful things, and
whatever they do will still be spurious, vulgar, and valueless.</p>
<p>I repeat, that I do not ask you nor wish you to build a new Pisa for them.
We don't want either the life or the decorations of the thirteenth century
back again; and the circumstances with which you must surround your
workmen are those simply of happy modern English life, because the designs
you have now to ask for from your workmen are such as will make modern
English life beautiful. All that gorgeousness of the middle ages,
beautiful as it sounds in description, noble as in many respects it was in
reality, had, nevertheless, for foundation and for end, nothing but the
pride of life—the pride of the so-called superior classes; a pride
which supported itself by violence and robbery, and led in the end to the
destruction both of the arts themselves and the States in which they
nourished.</p>
<p>The great lesson of history is, that all the fine arts hitherto—having
been supported by the selfish power of the noblesse, and never having
extended their range to the comfort or the relief of the mass of the
people—the arts, I say, thus practised, and thus matured, have only
accelerated the ruin of the States they adorned; and at the moment when,
in any kingdom, you point to the triumphs of its greatest artists, you
point also to the determined hour of the kingdom's decline. The names of
great painters are like passing bells: in the name of Velasquez, you hear
sounded the fall of Spain; in the name of Titian, that of Venice; in the
name of Leonardo, that of Milan; in the name of Raphael, that of Rome. And
there is profound justice in this; for in proportion to the nobleness of
the power is the guilt of its use for purposes vain or vile; and hitherto
the greater the art, the more surely has it been used, and used solely,
for the decoration of pride, [Note: Whether religious or profane pride,—chapel
or banqueting room,—is no matter.] or the provoking of sensuality.
Another course lies open to us. We may abandon the hope—or if you
like the words better—we may disdain the temptation, of the pomp and
grace of Italy in her youth. For us there can be no more the throne of
marble—for us no more the vault of gold—but for us there is
the loftier and lovelier privilege of bringing the power and charm of art
within the reach of the humble and the poor; and as the magnificence of
past ages failed by its narrowness and its pride, ours may prevail and
continue, by its universality and its lowliness.</p>
<p>And thus, between the picture of too laborious England, which we imagined
as future, and the picture of too luxurious Italy, which we remember in
the past, there may exist—there will exist, if we do our duty—an
intermediate condition, neither oppressed by labour nor wasted in vanity—the
condition of a peaceful and thoughtful temperance in aims, and acts, and
arts.</p>
<p>We are about to enter upon a period of our world's history in which
domestic life, aided by the arts of peace, will slowly, but at last
entirely, supersede public life and the arts of war. For our own England,
she will not, I believe, be blasted throughout with furnaces; nor will she
be encumbered with palaces. I trust she will keep her green fields, her
cottages, and her homes of middle life; but these ought to be, and I trust
will be enriched with a useful, truthful, substantial form of art. We want
now no more feasts of the gods, nor martyrdoms of the saints; we have no
need of sensuality, no place for superstition, or for costly insolence.
Let us have learned and faithful historical painting—touching and
thoughtful representations of human nature, in dramatic painting; poetical
and familiar renderings of natural objects and of landscape; and rational,
deeply-felt realizations of the events which are the subjects of our
religious faith. And let these things we want, as far as possible, be
scattered abroad and made accessible to all men.</p>
<p>So also, in manufacture: we require work substantial rather than rich in
make; and refined, rather than splendid in design. Your stuffs need not be
such as would catch the eye of a duchess; but they should be such as may
at once serve the need, and refine the taste, of a cottager. The
prevailing error in English dress, especially among the lower orders, is a
tendency to flimsiness and gaudiness, arising mainly from the awkward
imitation of their superiors. [Note: If their superiors would give them
simplicity and economy to imitate, it would, in the issue, be well for
themselves, as well as for those whom they guide. The typhoid fever of
passion for dress, and all other display, which has struck the upper
classes of Europe at this time, is one of the most dangerous political
elements we have to deal with. Its wickedness I have shown elsewhere
(Polit. Economy of Art, p. 62, <i>et seq.</i>); but its wickedness is, in
the minds of most persons, a matter of no importance. I wish I had time
also to show them its danger. I cannot enter here into political
investigation; but this is a certain fact, that the wasteful and vain
expenses at present indulged in by the upper classes are hastening the
advance of republicanism more than any other element of modern change. No
agitators, no clubs, no epidemical errors, ever were, or will be, fatal to
social order in any nation. Nothing but the guilt of the upper classes,
wanton, accumulated, reckless, and merciless, ever overthrows them Of such
guilt they have now much to answer for—let them look to it in time.]
It should be one of the first objects of all manufacturers to produce
stuffs not only beautiful and quaint in design, but also adapted for
every-day service, and decorous in humble and secluded life. And you must
remember always that your business, as manufacturers, is to form the
market, as much as to supply it. If, in shortsighted and reckless
eagerness for wealth, you catch at every humour of the populace as it
shapes itself into momentary demand—if, in jealous rivalry with
neighbouring States, or with other producers, you try to attract attention
by singularities, novelties, and gaudinesses—to make every design an
advertisement, and pilfer every idea of a successful neighbour's, that you
may insidiously imitate it, or pompously eclipse —no good design
will ever be possible to you, or perceived by you. You may, by accident,
snatch the market; or, by energy, command it; you may obtain the
confidence of the public, and cause the ruin of opponent houses; or you
may, with equal justice of fortune, be ruined by them. But whatever
happens to you, this, at least, is certain, that the whole of your life
will have been spent in corrupting public taste and encouraging public
extravagance. Every preference you have won by gaudiness must have been
based on the purchaser's vanity; every demand you have created by novelty
has fostered in the consumer a habit of discontent; and when you retire
into inactive life, you may, as a subject of consolation for your
declining years, reflect that precisely according to the extent of your
past operations, your life has been successful in retarding the arts,—tarnishing
the virtues, and confusing the manners of your country.</p>
<p>But, on the other hand, if you resolve from the first that, so far as you
can ascertain or discern what is best, you will produce what is best, on
an intelligent consideration of the probable tendencies and possible
tastes of the people whom you supply, you may literally become more
influential for all kinds of good than many lecturers on art, or many
treatise-writers on morality. Considering the materials dealt with, and
the crude state of art knowledge at the time, I do not know that any more
wide or effective influence in public taste was ever exercised than that
of the Staffordshire manufacture of pottery under William Wedgwood, and it
only rests with the manufacturer in every other business to determine
whether he will, in like manner, make his wares educational instruments,
or mere drugs of the market. You all should, be, in a certain sense,
authors: you must, indeed, first catch the public eye, as an author must
the public ear; but once gain your audience, or observance, and as it is
in the writer's power thenceforward to publish what will educate as it
amuses—so it is in yours to publish what will educate as it adorns.
Nor is this surely a subject of poor ambition. I hear it said continually
that men are too ambitious: alas! to me, it seems they are never enough
ambitious. How many are content to be merely the thriving merchants of a
state, when they might be its guides, counsellors, and rulers—wielding
powers of subtle but gigantic beneficence, in restraining its follies
while they supplied its wants. Let such duty, such ambition, be once
accepted in their fulness, and the best glory of European art and of
European manufacture may yet be to come. The paintings of Raphael and of
Buonaroti gave force to the falsehoods of superstition, and majesty to the
imaginations of sin; but the arts of England may have, for their task, to
inform the soul with truth, and touch the heart with compassion. The steel
of Toledo and the silk of Genoa did but give strength to oppression and
lustre to pride: let it be for the furnace and for the loom of England, as
they have already richly earned, still more abundantly to bestow, comfort
on the indigent, civilization on the rude, and to dispense, through the
peaceful homes of nations, the grace and the preciousness of simple
adornment, and useful possession.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LECTURE IV. — INFLUENCE OF IMAGINATION IN ARCHITECTURE </h2>
<p><i>An Address Delivered to the Members of the Architectural Association,
in Lyon's Inn Hall, 1857.</i></p>
<p>If we were to be asked abruptly, and required to answer briefly, what
qualities chiefly distinguish great artists from feeble artists, we should
answer, I suppose, first, their sensibility and tenderness; secondly,
their imagination; and thirdly, their industry. Some of us might, perhaps,
doubt the justice of attaching so much importance to this last character,
because we have all known clever men who were indolent, and dull men who
were industrious. But though you may have known clever men who were
indolent, you never knew a great man who was so; and, during such
investigation as I have been able to give to the lives of the artists
whose works are in all points noblest, no fact ever looms so large upon me—no
law remains so steadfast in the universality of its application, as the
fact and law that they are all great workers: nothing concerning them is
matter of more astonishment than the quantity they have accomplished in
the given length of their life; and when I hear a young man spoken of, as
giving promise of high genius, the first question I ask about him is
always—</p>
<p>Does he work?</p>
<p>But though this quality of industry is essential to an artist, it does not
in anywise make an artist; many people are busy, whose doings are little
worth. Neither does sensibility make an artist; since, as I hope, many can
feel both strongly and nobly, who yet care nothing about art. But the
gifts which distinctively mark the artist—<i>without</i> which he
must be feeble in life, forgotten in death—<i>with</i> which he may
become one of the shakers of the earth, and one of the signal lights in
heaven—are those of sympathy and imagination. I will not occupy your
time, nor incur the risk of your dissent, by endeavouring to give any
close definition of this last word. We all have a general and sufficient
idea of imagination, and of its work with our hands and in our hearts: we
understand it, I suppose, as the imaging or picturing of new things in our
thoughts; and we always show an involuntary respect for this power,
wherever we can recognize it, acknowledging it to be a greater power than
manipulation, or calculation, or observation, or any other human faculty.
If we see an old woman spinning at the fireside, and distributing her
thread dexterously from the distaff, we respect her for her manipulation—if
we ask her how much she expects to make in a year, and she answers
quickly, we respect her for her calculation—if she is watching at
the same time that none of her grandchildren fall into the fire, we
respect her for her observation—yet for all this she may still be a
commonplace old woman enough. But if she is all the time telling her
grandchildren a fairy tale out of her head, we praise her for her
imagination, and say, she must be a rather remarkable old woman. Precisely
in like manner, if an architect does his working-drawing well, we praise
him for his manipulation—if he keeps closely within his contract, we
praise him for his honest arithmetic—if he looks well to the laying
of his beams, so that nobody shall drop through the floor, we praise him
for his observation. But he must, somehow, tell us a fairy tale out of his
head beside all this, else we cannot praise him for his imagination, nor
speak of him as we did of the old woman, as being in any wise out of the
common way, a rather remarkable architect. It seemed to me, therefore, as
if it might interest you to-night, if we were to consider together what
fairy tales are, in and by architecture, to be told—what there is
for you to do in this severe art of yours "out of your heads," as well as
by your hands.</p>
<p>Perhaps the first idea which a young architect is apt to be allured by, as
a head-problem in these experimental days, is its being incumbent upon him
to invent a "new style" worthy of modern civilization in general, and of
England in particular; a style worthy of our engines and telegraphs; as
expansive as steam, and as sparkling as electricity.</p>
<p>But, if there are any of my hearers who have been impressed with this
sense of inventive duty, may I ask them first, whether their plan is that
every inventive architect among us shall invent a new style for himself,
and have a county set aside for his conceptions, or a province for his
practice? Or, must every architect invent a little piece of the new style,
and all put it together at last like a dissected map? And if so, when the
new style is invented, what is to be done next? I will grant you this
Eldorado of imagination—but can you have more than one Columbus? Or,
if you sail in company, and divide the prize of your discovery and the
honour thereof, who is to come after you clustered Columbuses? to what
fortunate islands of style are your architectural descendants to sail,
avaricious of new lands? When our desired style is invented, will not the
best we can all do be simply—to build in it?— and cannot you
now do that in styles that are known? Observe, I grant, for the sake of
your argument, what perhaps many of you know that I would not grant
otherwise—that a new style <i>can</i> be invented. I grant you not
only this, but that it shall be wholly different from any that was ever
practised before. We will suppose that capitals are to be at the bottom of
pillars instead of the top; and that buttresses shall be on the tops of
pinnacles instead of at the bottom; that you roof your apertures with
stones which shall neither be arched nor horizontal; and that you compose
your decoration of lines which shall neither be crooked nor straight. The
furnace and the forge shall be at your service: you shall draw out your
plates of glass and beat out your bars of iron till you have encompassed
us all,—if your style is of the practical kind,—with endless
perspective of black skeleton and blinding square,—or if your style
is to be of the ideal kind—you shall wreathe your streets with
ductile leafage, and roof them with variegated crystal—you shall
put, if you will, all London under one blazing dome of many colours that
shall light the clouds round it with its flashing, as far as to the sea.
And still, I ask you, What after this? Do you suppose those imaginations
of yours will ever lie down there asleep beneath the shade of your iron
leafage, or within the coloured light of your enchanted dome? Not so.
Those souls, and fancies, and ambitions of yours, are wholly infinite;
and, whatever may be done by others, you will still want to do something
for yourselves; if you cannot rest content with Palladio, neither will you
with Paxton: all the metal and glass that ever were melted have not so
much weight in them as will clog the wings of one human spirit's
aspiration.</p>
<p>If you will think over this quietly by yourselves, and can get the noise
out of your ears of the perpetual, empty, idle, incomparably idiotic talk
about the necessity of some novelty in architecture, you will soon see
that the very essence of a Style, properly so called, is that it should be
practised <i>for ages</i>, and applied to all purposes; and that so long
as any given style is in practice, all that is left for individual
imagination to accomplish must be within the scope of that style, not in
the invention of a new one. If there are any here, therefore, who hope to
obtain celebrity by the invention of some strange way of building which
must convince all Europe into its adoption, to them, for the moment, I
must not be understood to address myself, but only to those who would be
content with that degree of celebrity which an artist may enjoy who works
in the manner of his forefathers;—which the builder of Salisbury
Cathedral might enjoy in England, though he did not invent Gothic; and
which Titian might enjoy at Venice, though he did not invent oil painting.
Addressing myself then to those humbler, but wiser, or rather, only wise
students who are content to avail themselves of some system of building
already understood, let us consider together what room for the exercise of
the imagination may be left to us under such conditions. And, first, I
suppose it will be said, or thought, that the architect's principal field
for exercise of his invention must be in the disposition of lines,
mouldings, and masses, in agreeable proportions. Indeed, if you adopt some
styles of architecture, you cannot exercise invention in any other way.
And I admit that it requires genius and special gift to do this rightly.
Not by rule, nor by study, can the gift of graceful proportionate design
be obtained; only by the intuition of genius can so much as a single tier
of façade be beautifully arranged; and the man has just cause for pride,
as far as our gifts can ever be a cause for pride, who finds himself able,
in a design of his own, to rival even the simplest arrangement of parts in
one by Sanmicheli, Inigo Jones, or Christopher Wren.</p>
<p>Invention, then, and genius being granted, as necessary to accomplish
this, let me ask you, What, after all, with this special gift and genius,
you <i>have</i> accomplished, when you have arranged the lines of a
building beautifully?</p>
<p>In the first place you will not, I think, tell me that the beauty there
attained is of a touching or pathetic kind. A well-disposed group of notes
in music will make you sometimes weep and sometimes laugh. You can express
the depth of all affections by those dispositions of sound: you can give
courage to the soldier, language to the lover, consolation to the mourner,
more joy to the joyful, more humility to the devout. Can you do as much by
your group of lines? Do you suppose the front of Whitehall, a singularly
beautiful one ever inspires the two Horse Guards, during the hour they sit
opposite to it, with military ardour? Do you think that the lovers in our
London walk down to the front of Whitehall for consolation when mistresses
are unkind; or that any person wavering in duty, or feeble in faith, was
ever confirmed in purpose or in creed by the pathetic appeal of those
harmonious architraves? You will not say so. Then, if they cannot touch,
or inspire, or comfort any one, can your architectural proportions amuse
any one? Christmas is just over; you have doubtless been at many merry
parties during the period. Can you remember any in which architectural
proportions contributed to the entertainment of the evening? Proportions
of notes in music were, I am sure, essential to your amusement; the
setting of flowers in hair, and of ribands on dresses, were also subjects
of frequent admiration with you, not inessential to your happiness. Among
the juvenile members of your society the proportion of currants in cake,
and of sugar in comfits, became subjects of acute interest; and, when such
proportions were harmonious, motives also of gratitude to cook and to
confectioner. But did you ever see either young or old amused by the
architrave of the door? Or otherwise interested in the proportions of the
room than as they admitted more or fewer friendly faces? Nay, if all the
amusement that there is in the best proportioned architecture of London
could be concentrated into one evening, and you were to issue tickets for
nothing to this great proportional entertainment;—how do you think
it would stand between you and the Drury pantomine?</p>
<p>You are, then, remember, granted to be people of genius—great and
admirable; and you devote your lives to your art, but you admit that you
cannot comfort anybody, you cannot encourage anybody, you cannot improve
anybody, and you cannot amuse anybody. I proceed then farther to ask, Can
you inform anybody? Many sciences cannot be considered as highly touching
or emotional; nay, perhaps not specially amusing; scientific men may
sometimes, in these respects, stand on the same ground with you. As far as
we can judge by the results of the late war, science helps our soldiers
about as much as the front of Whitehall; and at the Christmas parties, the
children wanted no geologists to tell them about the behaviour of bears
and dragons in Queen Elizabeth's time. Still, your man of science teaches
you something; he may be dull at a party, or helpless in a battle, he is
not always that; but he can give you, at all events, knowledge of noble
facts, and open to you the secrets of the earth and air. Will your
architectural proportions do as much? Your genius is granted, and your
life is given, and what do you teach us?—Nothing, I believe, from
one end of that life to the other, but that two and two make four, and
that one is to two as three is to six.</p>
<p>You cannot, then, it is admitted, comfort any one, serve or amuse any one,
nor teach any one. Finally, I ask, Can you be of <i>Use</i> to any one?
"Yes," you reply; "certainly we are of some use—we architects—in
a climate like this, where it always rains." You are of use certainly;
but, pardon me, only as builders—not as proportionalists. We are not
talking of building as a protection, but only of that special work which
your genius is to do; not of building substantial and comfortable houses
like Mr. Cubitt, but of putting beautiful façades on them like Inigo
Jones. And, again, I ask—Are you of use to any one? Will your
proportions of the façade heal the sick, or clothe the naked? Supposing
you devoted your lives to be merchants, you might reflect at the close of
them, how many, fainting for want, you had brought corn to sustain; how
many, infected with disease, you had brought balms to heal; how widely,
among multitudes of far-away nations, you had scattered the first seeds of
national power, and guided the first rays of sacred light. Had you been,
in fine, <i>anything</i> else in the world <i>but</i> architectural
designers, you might have been of some use or good to people. Content to
be petty tradesmen, you would have saved the time of mankind;—rough-handed
daily labourers, you would have added to their stock of food or of
clothing. But, being men of genius, and devoting your lives to the
exquisite exposition of this genius, on what achievements do you think the
memories of your old age are to fasten? Whose gratitude will surround you
with its glow, or on what accomplished good, of that greatest kind for
which men show <i>no</i> gratitude, will your life rest the contentment of
its close? Truly, I fear that the ghosts of proportionate lines will be
thin phantoms at your bedsides—very speechless to you; and that on
all the emanations of your high genius you will look back with less
delight than you might have done on a cup of cold water given to him who
was thirsty, or to a single moment when you had "prevented with your bread
him that fled."</p>
<p>Do not answer, nor think to answer, that with your great works and great
payments of workmen in them, you would do this; I know you would, and
will, as Builders; but, I repeat, it is not your <i>building</i> that I am
talking about, but your <i>brains</i>; it is your invention and
imagination of whose profit I am speaking. The good done through the
building, observe, is done by your employers, not by you—you share
in the benefit of it. The good that <i>you</i> personally must do is by
your designing; and I compare you with musicians who do good by their
pathetic composing, not as they do good by employing fiddlers in the
orchestra; for it is the public who in reality do that, not the musicians.
So clearly keeping to this one question, what good we architects are to do
by our genius; and having found that on our proportionate system we can do
no good to others, will you tell me, lastly, what good we can do to <i>ourselves</i>?</p>
<p>Observe, nearly every other liberal art or profession has some intense
pleasure connected with it, irrespective of any good to others. As
lawyers, or physicians, or clergymen, you would have the pleasure of
investigation, and of historical reading, as part of your work: as men of
science you would be rejoicing in curiosity perpetually gratified
respecting the laws and facts of nature: as artists you would have delight
in watching the external forms of nature: as day labourers or petty
tradesmen, supposing you to undertake such work with as much intellect as
you are going to devote to your designing, you would find continued
subjects of interest in the manufacture or the agriculture which you
helped to improve; or in the problems of commerce which bore on your
business. But your architectural designing leads you into no pleasant
journeys,—into no seeing of lovely things,—no discerning of
just laws,—no warmths of compassion, no humilities of veneration, no
progressive state of sight or soul. Our conclusion is—must be—that
you will not amuse, nor inform, nor help anybody; you will not amuse, nor
better, nor inform yourselves; you will sink into a state in which you can
neither show, nor feel, nor see, anything, but that one is to two as three
is to six. And in that state what should we call ourselves? Men? I think
not. The right name for us would be—numerators and denominators.
Vulgar Fractions.</p>
<p>Shall we, then, abandon this theory of the soul of architecture being in
proportional lines, and look whether we can find anything better to exert
our fancies upon?</p>
<p>May we not, to begin with, accept this great principle—that, as our
bodies, to be in health, must be <i>generally</i> exercised, so our minds,
to be in health, must be <i>generally</i> cultivated? You would not call a
man healthy who had strong arms but was paralytic in his feet; nor one who
could walk well, but had no use of his hands; nor one who could see well,
if he could not hear. You would not voluntarily reduce your bodies to any
such partially developed state. Much more, then, you would not, if you
could help it, reduce your minds to it. Now, your minds are endowed with a
vast number of gifts of totally different uses—limbs of mind as it
were, which, if you don't exercise, you cripple. One is curiosity; that is
a gift, a capacity of pleasure in knowing; which if you destroy, you make
yourselves cold and dull. Another is sympathy; the power of sharing in the
feelings of living creatures, which if you destroy, you make yourselves
hard and cruel. Another of your limbs of mind is admiration; the power of
enjoying beauty or ingenuity, which, if you destroy, you make yourselves
base and irreverent. Another is wit; or the power of playing with the
lights on the many sides of truth; which if you destroy, you make
yourselves gloomy, and less useful and cheering to others than you might
be. So that in choosing your way of work it should be your aim, as far as
possible, to bring out all these faculties, as far as they exist in you;
not one merely, nor another, but all of them. And the way to bring them
out, is simply to concern yourselves attentively with the subjects of each
faculty. To cultivate sympathy you must be among living creatures, and
thinking about them; and to cultivate admiration, you must be among
beautiful things and looking at them.</p>
<p>All this sounds much like truism, at least I hope it does, for then you
will surely not refuse to act upon it; and to consider farther, how, as
architects, you are to keep yourselves in contemplation of living
creatures and lovely things.</p>
<p>You all probably know the beautiful photographs which have been published
within the last year or two of the porches of the Cathedral of Amiens. I
hold one of these up to you, (merely that you may know what I am talking
about, as of course you cannot see the detail at this distance, but you
will recognise the subject.) Have you ever considered how much sympathy,
and how much humour, are developed in filling this single doorway [Note:
The tympanum of the south transcept door; it is to be found generally
among all collections of architectural photographs] with these sculptures
of the history of St. Honoré (and, by the way, considering how often we
English are now driving up and down the Rue St. Honoré, we may as well
know as much of the saint as the old architect cared to tell us). You know
in all legends of saints who ever were bishops, the first thing you are
told of them is that they didn't want to be bishops. So here is St.
Honoré, who doesn't want to be a bishop, sitting sulkily in the corner; he
hugs his book with both hands, and won't get up to take his crosier; and
here are all the city aldermen of Amiens come to <i>poke</i> him up; and
all the monks in the town in a great puzzle what they shall do for a
bishop if St. Honoré won't be; and here's one of the monks in the opposite
corner who is quite cool about it, and thinks they'll get on well enough
without St Honoré,—you see that in his face perfectly. At last St.
Honoré consents to be bishop, and here he sits in a throne, and has his
book now grandly on his desk instead of his knees, and he directs one of
his village curates how to find relics in a wood; here is the wood, and
here is the village curate, and here are the tombs, with the bones of St.
Victorien and Gentien in them.</p>
<p>After this, St. Honoré performs grand mass, and the miracle occurs of the
appearance of a hand blessing the wafer, which occurrence afterwards was
painted for the arms of the abbey. Then St. Honoré dies; and here is his
tomb with his statue on the top; and miracles are being performed at it—a
deaf man having his ear touched, and a blind man groping his way up to the
tomb with his dog. Then here is a great procession in honour of the relics
of St. Honoré; and under his coffin are some cripples being healed; and
the coffin itself is put above the bar which separates the cross from the
lower subjects, because the tradition is that the figure on the crucifix
of the Church of St. Firmin bowed its head in token of acceptance, as the
relics of St. Honoré passed beneath.</p>
<p>Now just consider the amount of sympathy with human nature, and observance
of it, shown in this one bas-relief; the sympathy with disputing monks,
with puzzled aldermen, with melancholy recluse, with triumphant prelate,
with palsy-stricken poverty, with ecclesiastical magnificence, or
miracle-working faith. Consider how much intellect was needed in the
architect, and how much observance of nature before he could give the
expression to these various figures—cast these multitudinous
draperies—design these rich and quaint fragments of tombs and altars—weave
with perfect animation the entangled branches of the forest.</p>
<p>But you will answer me, all this is not architecture at all—it is
sculpture. Will you then tell me precisely where the separation exists
between one and the other? We will begin at the very beginning. I will
show you a piece of what you will certainly admit to be a piece of pure
architecture; [Note: See Appendix III., "Classical Architecture."] it is
drawn on the back of another photograph, another of these marvellous
tympana from Notre Dame, which you call, I suppose, impure. Well, look on
this picture, and on this. Don't laugh; you must not laugh, that's very
improper of you, this is classical architecture. I have taken it out of
the essay on that subject in the "Encyclopædia Britannica."</p>
<p>Yet I suppose none of you would think yourselves particularly ingenious
architects if you had designed nothing more than this; nay, I will even
let you improve it into any grand proportion you choose, and add to it as
many windows as you choose; the only thing I insist upon in our specimen
of pure architecture is, that there shall be no mouldings nor ornaments
upon it. And I suspect you don't quite like your architecture so "pure" as
this. We want a few mouldings, you will say—just a few. Those who
want mouldings, hold up their hands. We are unanimous, I think. Will, you,
then, design the profiles of these mouldings yourselves, or will you copy
them? If you wish to copy them, and to copy them always, of course I leave
you at once to your authorities, and your imaginations to their repose.
But if you wish to design them yourselves, how do you do it? You draw the
profile according to your taste, and you order your mason to cut it. Now,
will you tell me the logical difference between drawing the profile of a
moulding and giving <i>that</i> to be cut, and drawing the folds of the
drapery of a statue and giving <i>those</i> to be cut. The last is much
more difficult to do than the first; but degrees of difficulty constitute
no specific difference, and you will not accept it, surely, as a
definition of the difference between architecture and sculpture, that
"architecture is doing anything that is easy, and sculpture anything that
is difficult."</p>
<p>It is true, also, that the carved moulding represents nothing, and the
carved drapery represents something; but you will not, I should think,
accept, as an explanation of the difference between architecture and
sculpture, this any more than the other, that "sculpture is art which has
meaning, and architecture art which has none."</p>
<p>Where, then, is your difference? In this, perhaps, you will say; that
whatever ornaments we can direct ourselves, and get accurately cut to
order, we consider architectural. The ornaments that we are obliged to
leave to the pleasure of the workman, or the superintendence of some other
designer, we consider sculptural, especially if they are more or less
extraneous and incrusted—not an essential part of the building.</p>
<p>Accepting this definition, I am compelled to reply, that it is in effect
nothing more than an amplification of my first one—that whatever is
easy you call architecture, whatever is difficult you call sculpture. For
you cannot suppose the arrangement of the place in which the sculpture is
to be put is so difficult or so great a part of the design as the
sculpture itself. For instance: you all know the pulpit of Niccolo Pisano,
in the baptistry at Pisa. It is composed of seven rich <i>relievi</i>,
surrounded by panel mouldings, and sustained on marble shafts. Do you
suppose Niccolo Pisano's reputation—such part of it at least as
rests on this pulpit (and much does)—depends on the panel mouldings,
or on the relievi? The panel mouldings are by his hand; he would have
disdained to leave even them to a common workman; but do you think he
found any difficulty in them, or thought there was any credit in them?
Having once done the sculpture, those enclosing lines were mere child's
play to him; the determination of the diameter of shafts and height of
capitals was an affair of minutes; his <i>work</i> was in carving the
Crucifixion and the Baptism.</p>
<p>Or, again, do you recollect Orcagna's tabernacle in the church of San
Michele, at Florence? That, also, consists of rich and multitudinous
bas-reliefs, enclosed in panel mouldings, with shafts of mosaic, and
foliated arches sustaining the canopy. Do you think Orcagna, any more than
Pisano, if his spirit could rise in the midst of us at this moment, would
tell us that he had trusted his fame to the foliation, or had put his
soul's pride into the panelling? Not so; he would tell you that his spirit
was in the stooping figures that stand round the couch of the dying
Virgin.</p>
<p>Or, lastly, do you think the man who designed the procession on the portal
of Amiens was the subordinate workman? that there was an architect over <i>him</i>,
restraining him within certain limits, and ordering of him his bishops at
so much a mitre, and his cripples at so much a crutch? Not so. <i>Here</i>,
on this sculptured shield, rests the Master's hand; <i>this</i> is the
centre of the Master's thought; from this, and in subordination to this,
waved the arch and sprang the pinnacle. Having done this, and being able
to give human expression and action to the stone, all the rest—the
rib, the niche, the foil, the shaft—were mere toys to his hand and
accessories to his conception: and if once you also gain the gift of doing
this, if once you can carve one fronton such as you have here, I tell you,
you would be able—so far as it depended on your invention—to
scatter cathedrals over England as fast as clouds rise from its streams
after summer rain.</p>
<p>Nay, but perhaps you answer again, our sculptors at present do not design
cathedrals, and could not. No, they could not; but that is merely because
we have made architecture so dull that they cannot take any interest in
it, and, therefore, do not care to add to their higher knowledge the poor
and common knowledge of principles of building. You have thus separated
building from sculpture, and you have taken away the power of both; for
the sculptor loses nearly as much by never having room for the development
of a continuous work, as you do from having reduced your work to a
continuity of mechanism. You are essentially, and should always be, the
same body of men, admitting only such difference in operation as there is
between the work of a painter at different times, who sometimes labours on
a small picture, and sometimes on the frescoes of a palace gallery.</p>
<p>This conclusion, then, we arrive at, <i>must</i> arrive at; the fact being
irrevocably so:—that in order to give your imagination and the other
powers of your souls full play, you must do as all the great architects of
old time did—you must yourselves be your sculptors. Phidias, Michael
Angelo, Orcagna, Pisano, Giotto,—which of these men, do you think,
could not use his chisel? You say, "It is difficult; quite out of your
way." I know it is; nothing that is great is easy; and nothing that is
great, so long as you study building without sculpture, can be <i>in</i>
your way. I want to put it in your way, and you to find your way to it.
But, on the other hand, do not shrink from the task as if the refined art
of perfect sculpture were always required from you. For, though
architecture and sculpture are not separate arts, there is an
architectural <i>manner</i> of sculpture; and it is, in the majority of
its applications, a comparatively easy one. Our great mistake at present,
in dealing with stone at all, is requiring to have all our work too
refined; it is just the same mistake as if we were to require all our book
illustrations to be as fine work as Raphael's. John Leech does not sketch
so well as Leonardo da Vinci; but do you think that the public could
easily spare him; or that he is wrong in bringing out his talent in the
way in which it is most effective? Would you advise him, if he asked your
advice, to give up his wood-blocks and take to canvas? I know you would
not; neither would you tell him, I believe, on the other hand, that
because he could not draw as well as Leonardo, therefore he ought to draw
nothing but straight lines with a ruler, and circles with compasses, and
no figure- subjects at all. That would be some loss to you; would it not?
You would all be vexed if next week's <i>Punch</i> had nothing in it but
proportionate lines. And yet, do not you see that you are doing precisely
the same thing with <i>your</i> powers of sculptural design that he would
be doing with his powers of pictorial design, if he gave you nothing but
such lines. You feel that you cannot carve like Phidias; therefore you
will not carve at all, but only draw mouldings; and thus all that
intermediate power which is of especial value in modern days,—that
popular power of expression which is within the attainment of thousands,—and
would address itself to tens of thousands,—is utterly lost to us in
stone, though in ink and paper it has become one of the most desired
luxuries of modern civilization.</p>
<p>Here, then, is one part of the subject to which I would especially invite
your attention, namely, the distinctive character which may be wisely
permitted to belong to architectural sculpture, as distinguished from
perfect sculpture on one side, and from mere geometrical decoration on the
other.</p>
<p>And first, observe what an indulgence we have in the distance at which
most work is to be seen. Supposing we were able to carve eyes and lips
with the most exquisite precision, it would all be of no use as soon as
the work was put far above the eye; but, on the other hand, as beauties
disappear by being far withdrawn, so will faults; and the mystery and
confusion which are the natural consequence of distance, while they would
often render your best skill but vain, will as often render your worst
errors of little consequence; nay, more than this, often a deep cut, or a
rude angle, will produce in certain positions an effect of expression both
startling and true, which you never hoped for. Not that mere distance will
give animation to the work, if it has none in itself; but if it has life
at all, the distance will make that life more perceptible and powerful by
softening the defects of execution. So that you are placed, as workmen, in
this position of singular advantage, that you may give your fancies free
play, and strike hard for the expression that you want, knowing that, if
you miss it, no one will detect you; if you at all touch it, nature
herself will help you, and with every changing shadow and basking sunbeam
bring forth new phases of your fancy.</p>
<p>But it is not merely this privilege of being imperfect which belongs to
architectural sculpture. It has a true privilege of imagination, far
excelling all that can be granted to the more finished work, which, for
the sake of distinction, I will call,—and I don't think we can have
a much better term—"furniture sculpture;" sculpture, that is, which
can be moved from place to furnish rooms.</p>
<p>For observe, to that sculpture the spectator is usually brought in a
tranquil or prosaic state of mind; he sees it associated rather with what
is sumptuous than sublime, and under circumstances which address
themselves more to his comfort than his curiosity. The statue which is to
be pathetic, seen between the flashes of footmen's livery round the
dining-table, must have strong elements of pathos in itself; and the
statue which is to be awful, in the midst of the gossip of the drawing-
room, must have the elements of awe wholly in itself. But the spectator is
brought to <i>your</i> work already in an excited and imaginative mood. He
has been impressed by the cathedral wall as it loomed over the low
streets, before he looks up to the carving of its porch—and his love
of mystery has been touched by the silence and the shadows of the
cloister, before he can set himself to decipher the bosses on its
vaulting. So that when once he begins to observe your doings, he will ask
nothing better from you, nothing kinder from you, than that you would meet
this imaginative temper of his half way;—that you would farther
touch the sense of terror, or satisfy the expectation of things strange,
which have been prompted by the mystery or the majesty of the surrounding
scene. And thus, your leaving forms more or less undefined, or carrying
out your fancies, however extravagant, in grotesqueness of shadow or
shape, will be for the most part in accordance with the temper of the
observer; and he is likely, therefore, much more willingly to use his
fancy to help your meanings, than his judgment to detect your faults.</p>
<p>Again. Remember that when the imagination and feelings are strongly
excited, they will not only bear with strange things, but they will <i>look</i>
into <i>minute</i> things with a delight quite unknown in hours of
tranquillity. You surely must remember moments of your lives in which,
under some strong excitement of feeling, all the details of visible
objects presented themselves with a strange intensity and insistance,
whether you would or no; urging themselves upon the mind, and thrust upon
the eye, with a force of fascination which you could not refuse. Now, to a
certain extent, the senses get into this state whenever the imagination is
strongly excited. Things trivial at other times assume a dignity or
significance which we cannot explain; but which is only the more
attractive because inexplicable: and the powers of attention, quickened by
the feverish excitement, fasten and feed upon the minutest circumstances
of detail, and remotest traces of intention. So that what would at other
times be felt as more or less mean or extraneous in a work of sculpture,
and which would assuredly be offensive to the perfect taste in its moments
of languor, or of critical judgment, will be grateful, and even sublime,
when it meets this frightened inquisitiveness, this fascinated
watchfulness, of the roused imagination. And this is all for your
advantage; for, in the beginnings of your sculpture, you will assuredly
find it easier to imitate minute circumstances of costume or character,
than to perfect the anatomy of simple forms or the flow of noble masses;
and it will be encouraging to remember that the grace you cannot perfect,
and the simplicity you cannot achieve, would be in great part vain, even
if you could achieve them, in their appeal to the hasty curiosity of
passionate fancy; but that the sympathy which would be refused to your
science will be granted to your innocence: and that the mind of the
general observer, though wholly unaffected by the correctness of anatomy
or propriety of gesture, will follow you with fond and pleased
concurrence, as you carve the knots of the hair, and the patterns of the
vesture.</p>
<p>Farther yet. We are to remember that not only do the associated features
of the larger architecture tend to excite the strength of fancy, but the
architectural laws to which you are obliged to submit your decoration
stimulate its <i>ingenuity</i>. Every crocket which you are to crest with
sculpture,—every foliation which you have to fill, presents itself
to the spectator's fancy, not only as a pretty thing, but as a <i>problematic</i>
thing. It contained, he perceives immediately, not only a beauty which you
wished to display, but a necessity which you were forced to meet; and the
problem, how to occupy such and such a space with organic form in any
probable way, or how to turn such a boss or ridge into a conceivable image
of life, becomes at once, to him as to you, a matter of amusement as much
as of admiration. The ordinary conditions of perfection in form, gesture,
or feature, are willingly dispensed with, when the ugly dwarf and ungainly
goblin have only to gather themselves into angles, or crouch to carry
corbels; and the want of skill which, in other kinds of work would have
been required for the finishing of the parts, will at once be forgiven
here, if you have only disposed ingeniously what you have executed
roughly, and atoned for the rudeness of your hands by the quickness of
your wits.</p>
<p>Hitherto, however, we have been considering only the circumstances in
architecture favourable to the development of the <i>powers</i> of
imagination. A yet more important point for us seems, to me, the place
which it gives to all the <i>objects</i> of imagination.</p>
<p>For, I suppose, you will not wish me to spend any time in proving, that
imagination must be vigorous in proportion to the quantity of material
which it has to handle; and that, just as we increase the range of what we
see, we increase the richness of what we can imagine. Granting this,
consider what a field is opened to your fancy merely in the subject matter
which architecture admits. Nearly every other art is severely limited in
its subjects—the landscape painter, for instance, gets little help
from the aspects of beautiful humanity; the historical painter, less,
perhaps, than he ought, from the accidents of wild nature; and the pure
sculptor, still less, from the minor details of common life. But is there
anything within range of sight, or conception, which may not be of use to
<i>you</i>, or in which your interest may not be excited with advantage to
your art? From visions of angels, down to the least important gesture of a
child at play, whatever may be conceived of Divine, or beheld of Human,
may be dared or adopted by you: throughout the kingdom of animal life, no
creature is so vast, or so minute, that you cannot deal with it, or bring
it into service; the lion and the crocodile will couch about your shafts;
the moth and the bee will sun themselves upon your flowers; for you, the
fawn will leap; for you, the snail be slow; for you, the dove smooth her
bosom; and the hawk spread her wings toward the south. All the wide world
of vegetation blooms and bends for you; the leaves tremble that you may
bid them be still under the marble snow; the thorn and the thistle, which
the earth casts forth as evil, are to you the kindliest servants; no dying
petal, nor drooping tendril, is so feeble as to have no more help for you;
no robed pride of blossom so kingly, but it will lay aside its purple to
receive at your hands the pale immortality. Is there anything in common
life too mean,—in common too trivial,—to be ennobled by your
touch? As there is nothing in life, so there is nothing in lifelessness
which has not its lesson for you, or its gift; and when you are tired of
watching the strength of the plume, and the tenderness of the leaf, you
may walk down to your rough river shore, or into the thickest markets of
your thoroughfares, and there is not a piece of torn cable that will not
twine into a perfect moulding; there is not a fragment of cast-away
matting, or shattered basket-work, that will not work into a chequer or
capital. Yes: and if you gather up the very sand, and break the stone on
which you tread, among its fragments of all but invisible shells you will
find forms that will take their place, and that proudly, among the starred
traceries of your vaulting; and you, who can crown the mountain with its
fortress, and the city with its towers, are thus able also to give beauty
to ashes, and worthiness to dust.</p>
<p>Now, in that your art presents all this material to you, you have already
much to rejoice in. But you have more to rejoice in, because all this is
submitted to you, not to be dissected or analyzed, but to be sympathized
with, and to bring out, therefore, what may be accurately called the moral
part of imagination. We saw that, if we kept ourselves among lines only,
we should have cause to envy the naturalist, because he was conversant
with facts; but you will have little to envy now, if you make yourselves
conversant with the feelings that arise out of his facts. For instance,
the naturalist coming upon a block of marble, has to begin considering
immediately how far its purple is owing to iron, or its whiteness to
magnesia; he breaks his piece of marble, and at the close of his day, has
nothing but a little sand in his crucible and some data added to the
theory of the elements. But <i>you</i> approach your marble to sympathize
with it, and rejoice over its beauty. You cut it a little indeed; but only
to bring out its veins more perfectly; and at the end of your day's work
you leave your marble shaft with joy and complacency in its perfectness,
as marble. When you have to watch an animal instead of a stone, you differ
from the naturalist in the same way. He may, perhaps, if he be an amiable
naturalist, take delight in having living creatures round him;—still,
the major part of his work is, or has been, in counting feathers,
separating fibres, and analyzing structures. But <i>your</i> work is
always with the living creature; the thing you have to get at in him is
his life, and ways of going about things. It does not matter to you how
many cells there are in his bones, or how many filaments in his feathers;
what you want is his moral character and way of behaving himself; it is
just that which your imagination, if healthy, will first seize—just
that which your chisel, if vigorous, will first cut. You must get the
storm spirit into your eagles, and the lordliness into your lions, and the
tripping fear into your fawns; and in order to do this, you must be in
continual sympathy with every fawn of them; and be hand-in-glove with all
the lions, and hand-in-claw with all the hawks. And don't fancy that you
will lower yourselves by sympathy with the lower creatures; you cannot
sympathize rightly with the higher, unless you do with those: but you have
to sympathize with the higher, too— with queens, and kings, and
martyrs, and angels. Yes, and above all, and more than all, with simple
humanity in all its needs and ways, for there is not one hurried face that
passes you in the street that will not be impressive, if you can only
fathom it. All history is open to you, all high thoughts and dreams that
the past fortunes of men can suggest, all fairy land is open to you—no
vision that ever haunted forest, or gleamed over hill-side, but calls you
to understand how it came into men's hearts, and may still touch them; and
all Paradise is open to you—yes, and the work of Paradise; for in
bringing all this, in perpetual and attractive truth, before the eyes of
your fellow-men, you have to join in the employment of the angels, as well
as to imagine their companies.</p>
<p>And observe, in this last respect, what a peculiar importance, and
responsibility, are attached to your work, when you consider its
permanence, and the multitudes to whom it is addressed. We frequently are
led, by wise people, to consider what responsibility may sometimes attach
to words, which yet, the chance is, will be heard by few, and forgotten as
soon as heard. But none of <i>your</i> words will be heard by few, and
none will be forgotten, for five or six hundred years, if you build well.
You will talk to all who pass by; and all those little sympathies, those
freaks of fancy, those jests in stone, those workings-out of problems in
caprice, will occupy mind after mind of utterly countless multitudes, long
after you are gone. You have not, like authors, to plead for a hearing, or
to fear oblivion. Do but build large enough, and carve boldly enough, and
all the world will hear you; they cannot choose but look.</p>
<p>I do not mean to awe you by this thought; I do not mean that because you
will have so many witnesses and watchers, you are never to jest, or do
anything gaily or lightly; on the contrary, I have pleaded, from the
beginning, for this art of yours, especially because it has room for the
whole of your character—if jest is in you, let the jest be jested;
if mathematical ingenuity is yours, let your problem be put, and your
solution worked out, as quaintly as you choose; above all, see that your
work is easily and happily done, else it will never make anybody else
happy; but while you thus give the rein to all your impulses, see that
those impulses be headed and centred by one noble impulse; and let that be
Love—triple love—for the art which you practise, the creation
in which you move, and the creatures to whom you minister.</p>
<p>I. I say, first, Love for the art which you practise. Be assured that if
ever any other motive becomes a leading one in your mind, as the principal
one for exertion, except your love of art, that moment it is all over with
your art. I do not say you are to desire money, nor to desire fame, nor to
desire position; you cannot but desire all three; nay, you may—if
you are willing that I should use the word Love in a desecrated sense—love
all three; that is, passionately covet them, yet you must not covet or
love them in the first place. Men of strong passions and imaginations must
always care a great deal for anything they care for at all; but the whole
question is one of first or second. Does your art lead you, or your gain
lead you? You may like making money exceedingly; but if it come to a fair
question, whether you are to make five hundred pounds less by this
business, or to spoil your building, and you choose to spoil your
building, there's an end of you. So you may be as thirsty for fame as a
cricket is for cream; but, if it come to a fair question, whether you are
to please the mob, or do the thing as you know it ought to be done; and
you can't do both, and choose to please the mob, it's all over with you—there's
no hope for you; nothing that you can do will ever be worth a man's glance
as he passes by. The test is absolute, inevitable—Is your art first
with you? Then you are artists; you may be, after you have made your
money, misers and usurers; you may be, after you have got your fame,
jealous, and proud, and wretched, and base: but yet, <i>as long as you
won't spoil your work</i>, you are artists. On the other hand—Is
your money first with you, and your fame first with you? Then, you may be
very charitable with your money, and very magnificent with your money, and
very graceful in the way you wear your reputation, and very courteous to
those beneath you, and very acceptable to those above you; but you are <i>not
artists</i>. You are mechanics, and drudges.</p>
<p>II. You must love the creation you work in the midst of. For, wholly in
proportion to the intensity of feeling which you bring to the subject you
have chosen, will be the depth and justice of our perception of its
character. And this depth of feeling is not to be gained on the instant,
when you want to bring it to bear on this or that. It is the result of the
general habit of striving to feel rightly; and, among thousands of various
means of doing this, perhaps the one I ought specially to name to you, is
the keeping yourselves clear of petty and mean cares. Whatever you do,
don't be anxious, nor fill your heads with little chagrins and little
desires. I have just said, that you may be great artists, and yet be
miserly and jealous, and troubled about many things. So you may be; but I
said also that the miserliness or trouble must not be in your hearts all
day. It is possible that you may get a habit of saving money; or it is
possible, at a time of great trial, you may yield to the temptation of
speaking unjustly of a rival,—and you will shorten your powers arid
dim your sight even by this;—but the thing that you have to dread
far more than any such unconscious habit, or—any such momentary fall—is
the <i>constancy of small emotions</i>;—the anxiety whether Mr.
So-and-so will like your work; whether such and such a workman will do all
that you want of him, and so on;—not wrong feelings or anxieties in
themselves, but impertinent, and wholly incompatible with the full
exercise of your imagination.</p>
<p>Keep yourselves, therefore, quiet, peaceful, with your eyes open. It
doesn't matter at all what Mr. So-and-so thinks of your work; but it
matters a great deal what that bird is doing up there in its nest, or how
that vagabond child at the street corner is managing his game of
knuckle-down. And remember, you cannot turn aside from your own interests,
to the birds' and the children's interests, unless you have long before
got into the habit of loving and watching birds and children; so that it
all comes at last to the forgetting yourselves, and the living out of
yourselves, in the calm of the great world, or if you will, in its
agitation; but always in a calm of your own bringing. Do not think it
wasted time to submit yourselves to any influence which may bring upon you
any noble feeling. Rise early, always watch the sunrise, and the way the
clouds break from the dawn; you will cast your statue-draperies in quite
another than your common way, when the remembrance of that cloud motion is
with you, and of the scarlet vesture of the morning. Live always in the
springtime in the country; you do not know what leaf-form means, unless
you have seen the buds burst, and the young leaves breathing low in the
sunshine, and wondering at the first shower of rain. But above all,
accustom yourselves to look for, and to love, all nobleness of gesture and
feature in the human form; and remember that the highest nobleness is
usually among the aged, the poor, and the infirm; you will find, in the
end, that it is not the strong arm of the soldier, nor the laugh of the
young beauty, that are the best studies for you. Look at them, and look at
them reverently; but be assured that endurance is nobler than strength,
and patience than beauty; and that it is not in the high church pews,
where the gay dresses are, but in the church free seats, where the widows'
weeds are, that you may see the faces that will fit best between the
angels' wings, in the church porch.</p>
<p>III. And therefore, lastly, and chiefly, you must love the creatures to
whom you minister, your fellow-men; for, if you do not love them, not only
will you be little interested in the passing events of life, but in all
your gazing at humanity, you will be apt to be struck only by outside
form, and not by expression. It is only kindness and tenderness which will
ever enable you to see what beauty there is in the dark eyes that are sunk
with weeping, and in the paleness of those fixed faces which the earth's
adversity has compassed about, till they shine in their patience like
dying watchfires through twilight. But it is not this only which makes it
needful for you, if you would be great, to be also kind; there is a most
important and all-essential reason in the very nature of your own art. So
soon as you desire to build largely, and with addition of noble sculpture,
you will find that your work must be associative. You cannot carve a whole
cathedral yourself—you can carve but few and simple parts of it.
Either your own work must be disgraced in the mass of the collateral
inferiority, or you must raise your fellow-designers to correspondence of
power. If you have genius, you will yourselves take the lead in the
building you design; you will carve its porch and direct its disposition.
But for all subsequent advancement of its detail, you must trust to the
agency and the invention of others; and it rests with you either to
repress what faculties your workmen have, into cunning subordination to
your own; or to rejoice in discovering even the powers that may rival you,
and leading forth mind after mind into fellowship with your fancy, and
association with your fame.</p>
<p>I need not tell you that if you do the first—if you endeavour to
depress or disguise the talents of your subordinates—you are lost;
for nothing could imply more darkly and decisively than this, that your
art and your work were not beloved by you; that it was your own prosperity
that you were seeking, and your own skill only that you cared to
contemplate. I do not say that you must not be jealous at all; it is
rarely in human nature to be wholly without jealousy; and you may be
forgiven for going some day sadly home, when you find some youth,
unpractised and unapproved, giving the life-stroke to his work which you,
after years of training, perhaps, cannot reach; but your jealousy must not
conquer—your love of your building must conquer, helped by your
kindness of heart. See—I set no high or difficult standard before
you. I do not say that you are to surrender your pre-eminence in <i>mere</i>
unselfish generosity. But I do say that you must surrender your
pre-eminence in your love of your building helped by your kindness; and
that whomsoever you find better able to do what will adorn it than you,—that
person you are to give place to; and to console yourselves for the
humiliation, first, by your joy in seeing the edifice grow more beautiful
under his chisel, and secondly, by your sense of having done kindly and
justly. But if you are morally strong enough to make the kindness and
justice the first motive, it will be better;—best of all, if you do
not consider it as kindness at all, but bare and stern justice; for,
truly, such help as we can give each other in this world is a <i>debt</i>
to each other; and the man who perceives a superiority or a capacity in a
subordinate, and neither confesses, nor assists it, is not merely the
withholder of kindness, but the committer of injury. But be the motive
what you will, only see that you do the thing; and take the joy of the
consciousness that, as your art embraces a wider field than all others—and
addresses a vaster multitude than all others—and is surer of
audience than all others—so it is profounder and holier in
Fellowship than all others. The artist, when his pupil is perfect, must
see him leave his side that he may declare his distinct, perhaps opponent,
skill. Man of science wrestles with man of science for priority of
discovery, and pursues in pangs of jealous haste his solitary inquiry. You
alone are called by kindness,— by necessity,—by equity, to
fraternity of toil; and thus, in those misty and massive piles which rise
above the domestic roofs of our ancient cities, there was—there may
be again—a meaning more profound and true than any that fancy so
commonly has attached to them. Men say their pinnacles point to heaven.
Why, so does every tree that buds, and every bird that rises as it sings.
Men say their aisles are good for worship. Why, so is every mountain glen,
and rough sea-shore. But this they have of distinct and indisputable
glory,—that their mighty walls were never raised, and never shall
be, but by men who love and aid each other in their weakness;—that
all their interlacing strength of vaulted stone has its foundation upon
the stronger arches of manly fellowship, and all their changing grace of
depressed or lifted pinnacle owes its cadence and completeness to sweeter
symmetries of human soul.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LECTURE V. — THE WORK OF IRON, IN NATURE, ART, AND POLICY. </h2>
<h3> <i>A Lecture Delivered at Tunbridge Wells, February, 1858.</i> </h3>
<p>When first I heard that you wished me to address you this evening, it was
a matter of some doubt with me whether I could find any subject that would
possess any sufficient interest for you to justify my bringing you out of
your comfortable houses on a winter's night. When I venture to speak about
my own special business of art, it is almost always before students of
art, among whom I may sometimes permit myself to be dull, if I can feel
that I am useful: but a mere talk about art, especially without examples
to refer to (and I have been unable to prepare any careful illustrations
for this lecture), is seldom of much interest to a general audience. As I
was considering what you might best bear with me in speaking about, there
came naturally into my mind a subject connected with the origin and
present prosperity of the town you live in; and, it seemed to me, in the
out-branchings of it, capable of a very general interest. When, long ago
(I am afraid to think how long), Tunbridge Wells was my Switzerland, and I
used to be brought down here in the summer, a sufficiently active child,
rejoicing in the hope of clambering sandstone cliffs of stupendous height
above the common, there used sometimes, as, I suppose, there are in the
lives of all children at the Wells, to be dark days in my life—days
of condemnation to the pantiles and band—under which calamities my
only consolation used to be in watching, at every turn in my walk, the
welling forth of the spring over the orange rim of its marble basin. The
memory of the clear water, sparkling over its saffron stain, came back to
me as the strongest image connected with the place; and it struck me that
you might not be unwilling, to-night, to think a little over the full
significance of that saffron stain, and of the power, in other ways and
other functions, of the steelly element to which so many here owe
returning strength and life;—chief as it has been always, and is yet
more and more markedly so day by day, among the precious gifts of the
earth.</p>
<p>The subject is, of course, too wide to be more than suggestively treated;
and even my suggestions must be few, and drawn chiefly from my own fields
of work; nevertheless, I think I shall have time to indicate some courses
of thought which you may afterwards follow out for yourselves if they
interest you; and so I will not shrink from the full scope of the subject
which I have announced to you—the functions of Iron, in Nature, Art,
and Policy.</p>
<p>Without more preface, I will take up the first head.</p>
<p>I. IRON IN NATURE.—You all probably know that the ochreous stain,
which, perhaps, is often thought to spoil the basin of your spring, is
iron in a state of rust: and when you see rusty iron in other places you
generally think, not only that it spoils the places it stains, but that it
is spoiled itself—that rusty iron is spoiled iron.</p>
<p>For most of our uses it generally is so; and because we cannot use a rusty
knife or razor so well as a polished one, we suppose it to be a great
defect in iron that it is subject to rust. But not at all. On the
contrary, the most perfect and useful state of it is that ochreous stain;
and therefore it is endowed with so ready a disposition to get itself into
that state. It is not a fault in the iron, but a virtue, to be so fond of
getting rusted, for in that condition it fulfils its most important
functions in the universe, and most kindly duties to mankind. Nay, in a
certain sense, and almost a literal one, we may say that iron rusted is
Living; but when pure or polished, Dead. You all probably know that in the
mixed air we breathe, the part of it essentially needful to us is called
oxygen; and that this substance is to all animals, in the most accurate
sense of the word, "breath of life." The nervous power of life is a
different thing; but the supporting element of the breath, without which
the blood, and therefore the life, cannot be nourished, is this oxygen.
Now it is this very same air which the iron breathes when it gets rusty.
It takes the oxygen from the atmosphere as eagerly as we do, though it
uses it differently. The iron keeps all that it gets; we, and other
animals, part with it again; but the metal absolutely keeps what it has
once received of this aerial gift; and the ochreous dust which we so much
despise is, in fact, just so much nobler than pure iron, in so far as it
is <i>iron and the air.</i> Nobler, and more useful—for, indeed, as
I shall be able to show you presently—the main service of this
metal, and of all other metals, to us, is not in making knives, and
scissors, and pokers, and pans, but in making the ground we feed from, and
nearly all the substances first needful to our existence. For these are
all nothing but metals and oxygen—metals with breath put into them.
Sand, lime, clay, and the rest of the earths—potash and soda, and
the rest of the alkalies—are all of them metals which have undergone
this, so to speak, vital change, and have been rendered fit for the
service of man by permanent unity with the purest air which he himself
breathes. There is only one metal which does not rust readily; and that,
in its influence on Man hitherto, has caused Death rather than Life; it
will not be put to its right use till it is made a pavement of, and so
trodden under foot.</p>
<p>Is there not something striking in this fact, considered largely as one of
the types, or lessons, furnished by the inanimate creation? Here you have
your hard, bright, cold, lifeless metal—good enough for swords and
scissors—but not for food. You think, perhaps, that your iron is
wonderfully useful in a pure form, but how would you like the world, if
all your meadows, instead of grass, grew nothing but iron wire—if
all your arable ground, instead of being made of sand and clay, were
suddenly turned into flat surfaces of steel—if the whole earth,
instead of its green and glowing sphere, rich with forest and flower,
showed nothing but the image of the vast furnace of a ghastly engine—a
globe of black, lifeless, excoriated metal? It would be that,—probably
it was once that; but assuredly it would be, were it not that all the
substance of which it is made sucks and breathes the brilliancy of the
atmosphere; and as it breathes, softening from its merciless hardness, it
falls into fruitful and beneficent dust; gathering itself again into the
earths from which we feed, and the stones with which we build;— into
the rocks that frame the mountains, and the sands that bind the sea.</p>
<p>Hence, it is impossible for you to take up the most insignificant pebble
at your feet, without being able to read, if you like, this curious lesson
in it. You look upon it at first as if it were earth only. Nay, it
answers, "I am not earth—I am earth and air in one; part of that
blue heaven which you love, and long for, is already in me; it is all my
life—without it I should be nothing, and able for nothing; I could
not minister to you, nor nourish you—I should be a cruel and
helpless thing; but, because there is, according to my need and place in
creation, a kind of soul in me, I have become capable of good, and helpful
in the circles of vitality."</p>
<p>Thus far the same interest attaches to all the earths, and all the metals
of which they are made; but a deeper interest, and larger beneficence
belong to that ochreous earth of iron which stains the marble of your
springs. It stains much besides that marble. It stains the great earth
wheresoever you can see it, far and wide—it is the colouring
substance appointed to colour the globe for the sight, as well as subdue
it to the service of man. You have just seen your hills covered with snow,
and, perhaps, have enjoyed, at first, the contrast of their fair white
with the dark blocks of pine woods; but have you ever considered how you
would like them always white—not pure white, but dirty white—the
white of thaw, with all the chill of snow in it, but none of its
brightness? That is what the colour of the earth would be without its
iron; that would be its colour, not here or there only, but in all places,
and at all times. Follow out that idea till you get it in some detail.
Think first of your pretty gravel walks in your gardens, yellow and fine,
like plots of sunshine between the flower- beds; fancy them all suddenly
turned to the colour of ashes. That is what they would be without iron
ochre. Think of your winding walks over the common, as warm to the eye as
they are dry to the foot, and imagine them all laid down suddenly with
gray cinders. Then pass beyond the common into the country, and pause at
the first ploughed field that you see sweeping up the hill sides in the
sun, with its deep brown furrows, and wealth of ridges all a-glow, heaved
aside by the ploughshare, like deep folds of a mantle of russet velvet—fancy
it all changed suddenly into grisly furrows in a field of mud. That is
what it would be without iron. Pass on, in fancy, over hill and dale, till
you reach the bending line of the sea shore; go down upon its breezy beach—watch
the white foam flashing among the amber of it, and all the blue sea
embayed in belts of gold: then fancy those circlets of far sweeping shore
suddenly put into mounds of mourning—all those golden sands turned
into gray slime, the fairies no more able to call to each other, "Come
unto these yellow sands;" but, "Come unto these drab sands." That is what
they would be, without iron.</p>
<p>Iron is in some sort, therefore, the sunshine and light of landscape, so
far as that light depends on the ground; but it is a source of another
kind of sunshine, quite as important to us in the way we live at present—sunshine,
not of landscape, but of dwelling-place.</p>
<p>In these days of swift locomotion I may doubtless assume that most of my
audience have been somewhere out of England—have been in Scotland,
or France, or Switzerland. Whatever may have been their impression, on
returning to their own country, of its superiority or inferiority in other
respects, they cannot but have felt one thing about it—the
comfortable look of its towns and villages. Foreign towns are often very
picturesque, very beautiful, but they never have quite that look of warm
self-sufficiency and wholesome quiet, with which our villages nestle
themselves down among the green fields. If you will take the trouble to
examine into the sources of this impression, you will find that by far the
greater part of that warm and satisfactory appearance depends upon the
rich scarlet colour of the bricks and tiles. It does not belong to the
neat building—very neat building has an uncomfortable rather than a
comfortable look—but it depends on the <i>warm</i> building; our
villages are dressed in red tiles as our old women are in red cloaks; and
it does not matter how worn the cloaks, or how bent and bowed the roof may
be, so long as there are no holes in either one or the other, and the
sobered but unextinguishable colour still glows in the shadow of the hood,
and burns among the green mosses of the gable. And what do you suppose
dyes your tiles of cottage roof? You don't paint them. It is nature who
puts all that lovely vermilion into the clay for you; and all that lovely
vermilion is this oxide of iron. Think, therefore, what your streets of
towns would become—ugly enough, indeed, already, some of them, but
still comfortable-looking— if instead of that warm brick red, the
houses became all pepper-and- salt colour. Fancy your country villages
changing from that homely scarlet of theirs which, in its sweet suggestion
of laborious peace, is as honourable as the soldiers' scarlet of laborious
battle—suppose all those cottage roofs, I say, turned at once into
the colour of unbaked clay, the colour of street gutters in rainy weather.
That's what they would be, without iron.</p>
<p>There is, however, yet another effect of colour in our English country
towns which, perhaps, you may not all yourselves have noticed, but for
which you must take the word of a sketcher. They are not so often merely
warm scarlet as they are warm purple;—a more beautiful colour still:
and they owe this colour to a mingling with the vermilion of the deep
grayish or purple hue of our fine Welsh slates on the more respectable
roofs, made more blue still by the colour of intervening atmosphere. If
you examine one of these Welsh slates freshly broken, you will find its
purple colour clear and vivid; and although never strikingly so after it
has been long exposed to weather, it always retains enough of the tint to
give rich harmonies of distant purple in opposition to the green of our
woods and fields. Whatever brightness or power there is in the hue is
entirely owing to the oxide of iron. Without it the slates would either be
pale stone colour, or cold gray, or black.</p>
<p>Thus far we have only been considering the use and pleasantness of iron in
the common earth of clay. But there are three kinds of earth which in
mixed mass and prevalent quantity, form the world. Those are, in common
language, the earths of clay, of lime, and of flint. Many other elements
are mingled with these in sparing quantities; but the great frame and
substance of the earth is made of these three, so that wherever you stand
on solid ground, in any country of the globe, the thing that is mainly
under your feet will be either clay, limestone, or some condition of the
earth of flint, mingled with both.</p>
<p>These being what we have usually to deal with, Nature seems to have set
herself to make these three substances as interesting to us, and as
beautiful for us, as she can. The clay, being a soft and changeable
substance, she doesn't take much pains about, as we have seen, till it is
baked; she brings the colour into it only when it receives a permanent
form. But the limestone and flint she paints, in her own way, in their
native state: and her object in painting them seems to be much the same as
in her painting of flowers; to draw us, careless and idle human creatures,
to watch her a little, and see what she is about—that being on the
whole good for us,—her children. For Nature is always carrying on
very strange work with this limestone and flint of hers: laying down beds
of them at the bottom of the sea; building islands out of the sea; filling
chinks and veins in mountains with curious treasures; petrifying mosses,
and trees, and shells; in fact, carrying on all sorts of business,
subterranean or submarine, which it would be highly desirable for us, who
profit and live by it, to notice as it goes on. And apparently to lead us
to do this, she makes picture-books for us of limestone and flint; and
tempts us, like foolish children as we are, to read her books by the
pretty colours in them. The pretty colours in her limestone-books form
those variegated marbles which all mankind have taken delight to polish
and build with from the beginning of time; and the pretty colours in her
flint-books form those agates, jaspers, cornelians, bloodstones, onyxes,
cairngorms, chrysoprases, which men have in like manner taken delight to
cut, and polish, and make ornaments of, from the beginning of time; and
yet, so much of babies are they, and so fond of looking at the pictures
instead of reading the book, that I question whether, after six thousand
years of cutting and polishing, there are above two or three people out of
any given hundred, who know, or care to know, how a bit of agate or a bit
of marble was made, or painted.</p>
<p>How it was made, may not be always very easy to say; but with what it was
painted there is no manner of question. All those beautiful violet
veinings and variegations of the marbles of Sicily and Spain, the glowing
orange and amber colours of those of Siena, the deep russet of the Rosso
antico, and the blood-colour of all the precious jaspers that enrich the
temples of Italy; and, finally, all the lovely transitions of tint in the
pebbles of Scotland and the Rhine, which form, though not the most
precious, by far the most interesting portion of our modern jewellers'
work;—all these are painted by nature with this one material only,
variously proportioned and applied—the oxide of iron that stains
your Tunbridge springs.</p>
<p>But this is not all, nor the best part of the work of iron. Its service in
producing these beautiful stones is only rendered to rich people, who can
afford to quarry and polish them. But Nature paints for all the world,
poor and rich together: and while, therefore, she thus adorns the
innermost rocks of her hills, to tempt your investigation, or indulge your
luxury,—she paints, far more carefully, the outsides of the hills,
which are for the eyes of the shepherd and the ploughman. I spoke just now
of the effect in the roofs of our villages of their purple slates: but if
the slates are beautiful even in their flat and formal rows on
house-roofs, much more are they beautiful on the rugged crests and flanks
of their native mountains. Have you ever considered, in speaking as we do
so often of distant blue hills, what it is that makes them blue? To a
certain extent it is distance; but distance alone will not do it. Many
hills look white, however distant. That lovely dark purple colour of our
Welsh and Highland hills is owing, not to their distance merely, but to
their rocks. Some of their rocks are, indeed, too dark to be beautiful,
being black or ashy gray; owing to imperfect and porous structure. But
when you see this dark colour dashed with russet and blue, and coming out
in masses among the green ferns, so purple that you can hardly tell at
first whether it is rock or heather, then you must thank your old
Tunbridge friend, the oxide of iron.</p>
<p>But this is not all. It is necessary for the beauty of hill scenery that
Nature should colour not only her soft rocks, but her hard ones; and she
colours them with the same thing, only more beautifully. Perhaps you have
wondered at my use of the word "purple," so often of stones; but the
Greeks, and still more the Romans, who had profound respect for purple,
used it of stone long ago. You have all heard of "porphyry" as among the
most precious of the harder massive stones. The colour which gave it that
noble name, as well as that which gives the flush to all the rosy granite
of Egypt—yes, and to the rosiest summits of the Alps themselves—is
still owing to the same substance—your humble oxide of iron.</p>
<p>And last of all:</p>
<p>A nobler colour than all these—the noblest colour ever seen on this
earth—one which belongs to a strength greater than that of the
Egyptian granite, and to a beauty greater than that of the sunset or the
rose—is still mysteriously connected with the presence of this dark
iron. I believe it is not ascertained on what the crimson of blood
actually depends; but the colour is connected, of course, with its
vitality, and that vitality with the existence of iron as one of its
substantial elements.</p>
<p>Is it not strange to find this stern and strong metal mingled so
delicately in our human life, that we cannot even blush without its help?
Think of it, my fair and gentle hearers; how terrible the alternative—sometimes
you have actually no choice but to be brazen- faced, or iron-faced!</p>
<p>In this slight review of some of the functions of the metal, you observe
that I confine myself strictly to its operations as a colouring element. I
should only confuse your conception of the facts, if I endeavoured to
describe its uses as a substantial element, either in strengthening rocks,
or influencing vegetation by the decomposition of rocks. I have not,
therefore, even glanced at any of the more serious uses of the metal in
the economy of nature. But what I wish you to carry clearly away with you
is the remembrance that in all these uses the metal would be nothing
without the air. The pure metal has no power, and never occurs in nature
at all except in meteoric stones, whose fall no one can account for, and
which are useless after they have fallen: in the necessary work of the
world, the iron is invariably joined with the oxygen, and would be capable
of no service or beauty whatever without it.</p>
<p>II. IRON IN ART.—Passing, then, from the offices of the metal in the
operations of nature to its uses in the hands of man, you must remember,
in the outset, that the type which has been thus given you, by the
lifeless metal, of the action of body and soul together, has noble
antitype in the operation of all human power. All art worthy the name is
the energy—neither of the human body alone, nor of the human soul
alone, but of both united, one guiding the other: good craftsmanship and
work of the fingers, joined with good emotion and work of the heart.</p>
<p>There is no good art, nor possible judgment of art, when these two are not
united; yet we are constantly trying to separate them. Our amateurs cannot
be persuaded but that they may produce some kind of art by their fancy or
sensibility, without going through the necessary manual toil. That is
entirely hopeless. Without a certain number, and that a very great number,
of steady acts of hand—a practice as careful and constant as would
be necessary to learn any other manual business—no drawing is
possible. On the other side, the workman, and those who employ him, are
continually trying to produce art by trick or habit of fingers, without
using their fancy or sensibility. That also is hopeless. Without mingling
of heart-passion with hand-power, no art is possible. [Note: No fine art,
that is. See the previous definition of fine art at p. 38.] The highest
art unites both in their intensest degrees: the action of the hand at its
finest, with that of the heart at its fullest.</p>
<p>Hence it follows that the utmost power of art can only be given in a
material capable of receiving and retaining the influence of the subtlest
touch of the human hand. That hand is the most perfect agent of material
power existing in the universe; and its full subtlety can only be shown
when the material it works on, or with, is entirely yielding. The chords
of a perfect instrument will receive it, but not of an imperfect one; the
softly bending point of the hair pencil, and soft melting of colour, will
receive it, but not even the chalk or pen point, still less the steel
point, chisel, or marble. The hand of a sculptor may, indeed, be as subtle
as that of a painter, but all its subtlety is not bestowable nor
expressible: the touch of Titian, Correggio, or Turner, [Note: See
Appendix IV., "Subtlety of Hand."] is a far more marvellous piece of
nervous action than can be shown in anything but colour, or in the very
highest conditions of executive expression in music. In proportion as the
material worked upon is less delicate, the execution necessarily becomes
lower, and the art with it. This is one main principle of all work.
Another is, that whatever the material you choose to work with, your art
is base if it does not bring out the distinctive qualities of that
material.</p>
<p>The reason of this second law is, that if you don't want the qualities of
the substance you use, you ought to use some other substance: it can be
only affectation, and desire to display your skill, that lead you to
employ a refractory substance, and therefore your art will all be base.
Glass, for instance, is eminently, in its nature, transparent. If you
don't want transparency, let the glass alone. Do not try to make a window
look like an opaque picture, but take an opaque ground to begin with.
Again, marble is eminently a solid and massive substance. Unless you want
mass and solidity, don't work in marble. If you wish for lightness, take
wood; if for freedom, take stucco; if for ductility, take glass. Don't try
to carve leathers, or trees, or nets, or foam, out of marble. Carve white
limbs and broad breasts only out of that.</p>
<p>So again, iron is eminently a ductile and tenacious substance—
tenacious above all things, ductile more than most. When you want
tenacity, therefore, and involved form, take iron. It is eminently made
for that. It is the material given to the sculptor as the companion of
marble, with a message, as plain as it can well be spoken, from the lips
of the earth-mother, "Here's for you to cut, and here's for you to hammer.
Shape this, and twist that. What is solid and simple, carve out; what is
thin and entangled, beat out. I give you all kinds of forms to be
delighted in;—fluttering leaves as well as fair bodies; twisted
branches as well as open brows. The leaf and the branch you may beat and
drag into their imagery: the body and brow you shall reverently touch into
their imagery. And if you choose rightly and work rightly, what you do
shall be safe afterwards. Your slender leaves shall not break off in my
tenacious iron, though they may be rusted a little with an iron autumn.
Your broad surfaces shall not be unsmoothed in my pure crystalline marble—no
decay shall touch them. But if you carve in the marble what will break
with a touch, or mould in the metal what a stain of rust or verdigris will
spoil, it is your fault—not mine."</p>
<p>These are the main principles in this matter; which, like nearly all other
right principles in art, we moderns delight in contradicting as directly
and specially as may be. We continually look for, and praise, in our
exhibitions the sculpture of veils, and lace, and thin leaves, and all
kinds of impossible things pushed as far as possible in the fragile stone,
for the sake of showing the sculptor's dexterity. [Note: I do not mean to
attach any degree of blame to the effort to represent leafage in marble
for certain expressive purposes. The later works of Mr. Munro have
depended for some of their most tender thoughts on a delicate and skilful
use of such accessories. And in general, leaf sculpture is good and
admirable, if it renders, as in Gothic work, the grace and lightness of
the leaf by the arrangement of light and shadow —supporting the
masses well by strength of stone below; but all carving is base which
proposes to itself <i>slightness</i> as an aim, and tries to imitate the
absolute thinness of thin or slight things, as much modern wood carving
does, I saw in Italy, a year or two ago, a marble sculpture of birds'
nests.] On the other hand, we <i>cast</i> our iron into bars—brittle,
though an inch thick—sharpen them at the ends, and consider fences,
and other work, made of such materials, decorative! I do not believe it
would be easy to calculate the amount of mischief done to our taste in
England by that fence iron-work of ours alone. If it were asked of us by a
single characteristic, to distinguish the dwellings of a country into two
broad sections; and to set, on one side, the places where people were, for
the most part, simple, happy, benevolent, and honest; and, on the other
side, the places where at least a great number of the people were
sophisticated, unkind, uncomfortable, and unprincipled, there is, I think,
one feature that you could fix upon as a positive test: the uncomfortable
and unprincipled parts of a country would be the parts where people lived
among iron railings, and the comfortable and principled parts where they
had none. A broad generalization, you will say! Perhaps a little too
broad; yet, in all sobriety, it will come truer than you think. Consider
every other kind of fence or defence, and you will find some virtue in it;
but in the iron railing none. There is, first, your castle rampart of
stone—somewhat too grand to be considered here among our types of
fencing; next, your garden or park wall of brick, which has indeed often
an unkind look on the outside, but there is more modesty in it than
unkindness. It generally means, not that the builder of it wants to shut
you out from the view of his garden, but from the view of himself: it is a
frank statement that as he needs a certain portion of time to himself, so
he needs a certain portion of ground to himself, and must not be stared at
when he digs there in his shirt- sleeves, or plays at leapfrog with his
boys from school, or talks over old times with his wife, walking up and
down in the evening sunshine. Besides, the brick wall has good practical
service in it, and shelters you from the east wind, and ripens your
peaches and nectarines, and glows in autumn like a sunny bank. And,
moreover, your brick wall, if you build it properly, so that it shall
stand long enough, is a beautiful thing when it is old, and has assumed
its grave purple red, touched with mossy green.</p>
<p>Next to your lordly wall, in dignity of enclosure, comes your close-set
wooden paling, which is more objectionable, because it commonly means
enclosure on a larger scale than people want. Still it is significative of
pleasant parks, and well-kept field walks, and herds of deer, and other
such aristocratic pastoralisms, which have here and there their proper
place in a country, and may be passed without any discredit.</p>
<p>Next to your paling, comes your low stone dyke, your mountain fence,
indicative at a glance either of wild hill country, or of beds of stone
beneath the soil; the hedge of the mountains—delightful in all its
associations, and yet more in the varied and craggy forms of the loose
stones it is built of; and next to the low stone wall, your lowland hedge,
either in trim line of massive green, suggested of the pleasances of old
Elizabethan houses, and smooth alleys for aged feet, and quaint labyrinths
for young ones, or else in fair entanglement of eglantine and virgin's
bower, tossing its scented luxuriance along our country waysides;—how
many such you have here among your pretty hills, fruitful with black
clusters of the bramble for boys in autumn, and crimson hawthorn berries
for birds in winter. And then last, and most difficult to class among
fences, comes your handrail, expressive of all sorts of things; sometimes
having a knowing and vicious look, which it learns at race-courses;
sometimes an innocent and tender look, which it learns at rustic bridges
over cressy brooks; and sometimes a prudent and protective look, which it
learns on passes of the Alps, where it has posts of granite and bars of
pine, and guards the brows of cliffs and the banks of torrents. So that in
all these kinds of defence there is some good, pleasant, or noble meaning.
But what meaning has the iron railing? Either, observe, that you are
living in the midst of such bad characters that you must keep them out by
main force of bar, or that you are yourself of a character requiring to be
kept inside in the same manner. Your iron railing always means thieves
outside, or Bedlam inside; it <i>can</i> mean nothing else than that. If
the people outside were good for anything, a hint in the way of fence
would be enough for them; but because they are violent and at enmity with
you, you are forced to put the close bars and the spikes at the top.</p>
<p>Last summer I was lodging for a little while in a cottage in the country,
and in front of my low window there were, first some beds of daisies, then
a row of gooseberry and currant bushes, and then a low wall about three
feet above the ground, covered with stone-cress. Outside, a corn-field,
with its green ears glistening in the sun, and a field path through it,
just past the garden gate. From my window I could see every peasant of the
village who passed that way, with basket on arm for market, or spade on
shoulder for field. When I was inclined for society, I could lean over my
wall, and talk to anybody; when I was inclined for science, I could
botanize all along the top of my wall— there were four species of
stone-cress alone growing on it; and when I was inclined for exercise, I
could jump over my wall, backwards and forwards. That's the sort of fence
to have in a Christian country; not a thing which you can't walk inside of
without making yourself look like a wild beast, nor look at out of your
window in the morning without expecting to see somebody impaled upon it in
the night.</p>
<p>And yet farther, observe that the iron railing is a useless fence—it
can shelter nothing, and support nothing; you can't nail your peaches to
it, nor protect your flowers with it, nor make anything whatever out of
its costly tyranny; and besides being useless, it is an insolent fence;—it
says plainly to everybody who passes—"You may be an honest person,—but,
also, you may be a thief: honest or not, you shall not get in here, for I
am a respectable person, and much above you; you shall only see what a
grand place I have got to keep you out of—look here, and depart in
humiliation."</p>
<p>This, however, being in the present state of civilization a frequent
manner of discourse, and there being unfortunately many districts where
the iron railing is unavoidable, it yet remains a question whether you
need absolutely make it ugly, no less than significative of evil. You must
have railings round your squares in London, and at the sides of your
areas; but need you therefore have railings so ugly that the constant
sight of them is enough to neutralise the effect of all the schools of art
in the kingdom? You need not. Far from such necessity, it is even in your
power to turn all your police force of iron bars actually into drawing
masters, and natural historians. Not, of course, without some trouble and
some expense; you can do nothing much worth doing, in this world, without
trouble, you can get nothing much worth having without expense. The main
question is only—what is worth doing and having:—Consider,
therefore, if this be not. Here is your iron railing, as yet, an
uneducated monster; a sombre seneschal, incapable of any words, except his
perpetual "Keep out!" and "Away with you!" Would it not be worth some
trouble and cost to turn this ungainly ruffian porter into a well-educated
servant; who, while he was severe as ever in forbidding entrance to
evilly-disposed people, should yet have a kind word for well-disposed
people, and a pleasant look, and a little useful information at his
command, in case he should be asked a question by the passers-by?</p>
<p>We have not time to-night to look at many examples of ironwork; and those
I happen to have by me are not the best; ironwork is not one of my special
subjects of study; so that I only have memoranda of bits that happened to
come into picturesque subjects which I was drawing for other reasons.
Besides, external ironwork is more difficult to find good than any other
sort of ancient art; for when it gets rusty and broken, people are sure,
if they can afford it, to send it to the old iron shop, and get a fine new
grating instead; and in the great cities of Italy, the old iron is thus
nearly all gone: the best bits I remember in the open air were at Brescia;—fantastic
sprays of laurel- like foliage rising over the garden gates; and there are
a few fine fragments at Verona, and some good trellis-work enclosing the
Scala tombs; but on the whole, the most interesting pieces, though by no
means the purest in style, are to be found in out-of-the-way provincial
towns, where people do not care, or are unable, to make polite
alterations. The little town of Bellinzona, for instance, on the south of
the Alps, and that of Sion on the north, have both of them complete
schools of ironwork in their balconies and vineyard gates. That of
Bellinzona is the best, though not very old—I suppose most of it of
the seventeenth century; still it is very quaint and beautiful. Here, for
example, are two balconies, from two different houses; one has been a
cardinal's, and the hat is the principal ornament of the balcony; its
tassels being wrought with delightful delicacy and freedom; and catching
the eye clearly even among the mass of rich wreathed leaves. These tassels
and strings are precisely the kind of subject fit for ironwork—noble
in ironwork, they would have been entirely ignoble in marble, on the
grounds above stated. The real plant of oleander standing in the window
enriches the whole group of lines very happily.</p>
<p>The other balcony, from a very ordinary-looking house in the same street,
is much more interesting in its details. It is shown in the plate as it
appeared last summer, with convolvulus twined about the bars, the
arrow-shaped living leaves mingled among the leaves of iron; but you may
see in the centre of these real leaves a cluster of lighter ones, which
are those of the ironwork itself. This cluster is worth giving a little
larger to show its treatment. Fig. 2 (in Appendix V.) is the front view of
it: Fig. 4, its profile. It is composed of a large tulip in the centre;
then two turkscap lilies; then two pinks, a little conventionalized; then
two narcissi; then two nondescripts, or, at least, flowers I do not know;
and then two dark buds, and a few leaves. I say, dark buds, for all these
flowers have been coloured in their original state. The plan of the group
is exceedingly simple: it is all enclosed in a pointed arch (Fig. 3,
Appendix V.): the large mass of the tulip forming the apex; a six-foiled
star on each side; then a jagged star; then a five-foiled star; then an
unjagged star or rose; finally a small bud, so as to establish relation
and cadence through the whole group. The profile is very free and fine,
and the upper bar of the balcony exceedingly beautiful in effect;—none
the less so on account of the marvellously simple means employed. A thin
strip of iron is bent over a square rod; out of the edge of this strip are
cut a series of triangular openings—widest at top, leaving
projecting teeth of iron (Appendix, Fig. 5); then each of these projecting
pieces gets a little sharp tap with the hammer in front, which beaks its
edge inwards, tearing it a little open at the same time, and the thing is
done.</p>
<p>The common forms of Swiss ironwork are less naturalistic than these
Italian balconies, depending more on beautiful arrangements of various
curve; nevertheless, there has been a rich naturalist school at Fribourg,
where a few bell-handles are still left, consisting of rods branched into
laurel and other leafage. At Geneva, modern improvements have left
nothing; but at Annecy, a little good work remains; the balcony of its old
hôtel de ville especially, with a trout of the lake —presumably the
town arms—forming its central ornament.</p>
<p>I might expatiate all night—if you would sit and hear me—on
the treatment of such required subject, or introduction of pleasant
caprice by the old workmen; but we have no more time to spare, and I must
quit this part of our subject—the rather as I could not explain to
you the intrinsic merit of such ironwork without going fully into the
theory of curvilinear design; only let me leave with you this one distinct
assertion—that the quaint beauty and character of many natural
objects, such as intricate branches, grass, foliage (especially thorny
branches and prickly foliage), as well as that of many animals, plumed,
spined, or bristled, is sculpturally expressible in iron only, and in iron
would be majestic and impressive in the highest degree; and that every
piece of metal work you use might be, rightly treated, not only a superb
decoration, but a most valuable abstract of portions of natural forms,
holding in dignity precisely the same relation to the painted
representation of plants, that a statue does to the painted form of man.
It is difficult to give you an idea of the grace and interest which the
simplest objects possess when their forms are thus abstracted from among
the surrounding of rich circumstance which in nature disturbs the
feebleness of our attention. In Plate 2, a few blades of common green
grass, and a wild leaf or two—just as they were thrown by nature,—are
thus abstracted from the associated redundance of the forms about them,
and shown on a dark ground: every cluster of herbage would furnish fifty
such groups, and every such group would work into iron (fitting it, of
course, rightly to its service) with perfect ease, and endless grandeur of
result.</p>
<p>III. IRON in POLICY.—Having thus obtained some idea of the use of
iron in art, as dependent on its ductility, I need not, certainly, say
anything of its uses in manufacture and commerce; we all of us know
enough,—perhaps a little too much—about <i>them</i>. So I pass
lastly to consider its uses in policy; dependent chiefly upon its tenacity—
that is to say, on its power of bearing a pull, and receiving an edge.
These powers, which enable it to pierce, to bind, and to smite, render it
fit for the three great instruments, by which its political action may be
simply typified; namely, the Plough, the Fetter, and the Sword.</p>
<p>On our understanding the right use of these three instruments, depend, of
course, all our power as a nation, and all our happiness as individuals.</p>
<p>I. THE PLOUGH.—I say, first, on our understanding the right use of
the plough, with which, in justice to the fairest of our labourers, we
must always associate that feminine plough—the needle. The first
requirement for the happiness of a nation is that it should understand the
function in this world of these two great instruments: a happy nation may
be defined as one in which the husband's hand is on the plough, and the
housewife's on the needle; so in due time reaping its golden harvest, and
shining in golden vesture: and an unhappy nation is one which,
acknowledging no use of plough nor needle, will assuredly at last find its
storehouse empty in the famine, and its breast naked to the cold.</p>
<p>Perhaps you think this is a mere truism, which I am wasting your time in
repeating. I wish it were.</p>
<p>By far the greater part of the suffering and crime which exist at this
moment in civilized Europe, arises simply from people not understanding
this truism—not knowing that produce or wealth is eternally
connected by the laws of heaven and earth with resolute labour; but hoping
in some way to cheat or abrogate this everlasting law of life, and to feed
where they have not furrowed, and be warm where they have not woven.</p>
<p>I repeat, nearly all our misery and crime result from this one
misapprehension. The law of nature is, that a certain quantity of work is
necessary to produce a certain quantity of good, of any kind whatever. If
you want knowledge, you must toil for it: if food, you must toil for it;
and if pleasure, you must toil for it. But men do not acknowledge this
law, or strive to evade it, hoping to get their knowledge, and food, and
pleasure for nothing; and in this effort they either fail of getting them,
and remain ignorant and miserable, or they obtain them by making other men
work for their benefit; and then they are tyrants and robbers. Yes, and
worse than robbers. I am not one who in the least doubts or disputes the
progress of this century in many things useful to mankind; but it seems to
me a very dark sign respecting us that we look with so much indifference
upon dishonesty and cruelty in the pursuit of wealth. In the dream of
Nebuchadnezzar it was only the <i>feet</i> that were part of iron and part
of clay; but many of us are now getting so cruel in our avarice, that it
seems as if, in us, the <i>heart</i> were part of iron, and part of clay.</p>
<p>From what I have heard of the inhabitants of this town, I do not doubt but
that I may be permitted to do here what I have found it usually thought
elsewhere highly improper and absurd to do, namely, trace a few Bible
sentences to their practical result.</p>
<p>You cannot but have noticed how often in those parts of the Bible which
are likely to be oftenest opened when people look for guidance, comfort,
or help in the affairs of daily life, namely, the Psalms and Proverbs,
mention is made of the guilt attaching to the <i>Oppression</i> of the
poor. Observe: not the neglect of them, but the <i>Oppression</i> of them:
the word is as frequent as it is strange. You can hardly open either of
those books, but somewhere in their pages you will find a description of
the wicked man's attempts against the poor: such as—"He doth ravish
the poor when he getteth him into his net."</p>
<p>"He sitteth in the lurking places of the villages; his eyes are privily
set against the poor."</p>
<p>"In his pride he doth persecute the poor, and blesseth the covetous, whom
God abhorreth."</p>
<p>"His mouth is full of deceit and fraud; in the secret places doth he
murder the innocent. Have the workers of iniquity no knowledge, who eat up
my people as they eat bread? They have drawn out the sword, and bent the
bow, to cast down the poor and needy."</p>
<p>"They are corrupt, and speak wickedly concerning oppression."</p>
<p>"Pride compasseth them about as a chain, and violence as a garment."</p>
<p>"Their poison is like the poison of a serpent. Ye weigh the violence of
your hands in the earth."</p>
<p>Yes: "Ye weigh the violence of your hands:"—weigh these words as
well. The last things we ever usually think of weighing are Bible words.
We like to dream and dispute over them; but to weigh them, and see what
their true contents are—anything but that. Yet, weigh these; for I
have purposely taken all these verses, perhaps more striking to you read
in this connection, than separately in their places, out of the Psalms,
because, for all people belonging to the Established Church of this
country these Psalms are appointed lessons, portioned out to them by their
clergy to be read once through every month. Presumably, therefore,
whatever portions of Scripture we may pass by or forget, these at all
events, must be brought continually to our observance as useful for
direction of daily life. Now, do we ever ask ourselves what the real
meaning of these passages may be, and who these wicked people are, who are
"murdering the innocent?" You know it is rather singular language this!—rather
strong language, we might, perhaps, call it— hearing it for the
first time. Murder! and murder of innocent people!— nay, even a sort
of cannibalism. Eating people,—yes, and God's people, too—eating
<i>My</i> people as if they were bread! swords drawn, bows bent, poison of
serpents mixed! violence of hands weighed, measured, and trafficked with
as so much coin! where is all this going on? Do you suppose it was only
going on in the time of David, and that nobody but Jews ever murder the
poor? If so, it would surely be wiser not to mutter and mumble for our
daily lessons what does not concern us; but if there be any chance that it
may concern us, and if this description, in the Psalms, of human guilt is
at all generally applicable, as the descriptions in the Psalms of human
sorrow are, may it not be advisable to know wherein this guilt is being
committed round about us, or by ourselves? and when we take the words of
the Bible into our mouths in a congregational way, to be sure whether we
mean merely to chant a piece of melodious poetry relating to other people—(we
know not exactly to whom)—or to assert our belief in facts bearing
somewhat stringently on ourselves and our daily business. And if you make
up your minds to do this no longer, and take pains to examine into the
matter, you will find that these strange words, occurring as they do, not
in a few places only, but almost in every alternate psalm and every
alternate chapter of proverb, or prophecy, with tremendous reiteration,
were not written for one nation or one time only; but for all nations and
languages, for all places and all centuries; and it is as true of the
wicked man now as ever it was of Nabal or Dives, that "his eyes are set
against the poor."</p>
<p>Set <i>against</i> the poor, mind you. Not merely set <i>away</i> from the
poor, so as to neglect or lose sight of them, but set against, so as to
afflict and destroy them. This is the main point I want to fix. your
attention upon. You will often hear sermons about neglect or carelessness
of the poor. But neglect and carelessness are not at all the points. The
Bible hardly ever talks about neglect of the poor. It always talks of <i>oppression</i>
of the poor—a very different matter. It does not merely speak of
passing by on the other side, and binding up no wounds, but of drawing the
sword and ourselves smiting the men down. It does not charge us with being
idle in the pest-house, and giving no medicine, but with being busy in the
pest-house, and giving much poison.</p>
<p>May we not advisedly look into this matter a little, even tonight, and ask
first, Who are these poor?</p>
<p>No country is, or ever will be, without them: that is to say, without the
class which cannot, on the average, do more by its labour than provide for
its subsistence, and which has no accumulations of property laid by on any
considerable scale. Now there are a certain number of this class whom we
cannot oppress with much severity. An able-bodied and intelligent workman—sober,
honest, and industrious, will almost always command a fair price for his
work, and lay by enough in a few years to enable him to hold his own in
the labour market. But all men are not able-bodied, nor intelligent, nor
industrious; and you cannot expect them to be. Nothing appears to me at
once more ludicrous and more melancholy than the way the people of the
present age usually talk about the morals of labourers. You hardly ever
address a labouring man upon his prospects in life, without quietly
assuming that he is to possess, at starting, as a small moral capital to
begin with, the virtue of Socrates, the philosophy of Plato, and the
heroism of Epaminondas. "Be assured, my good man,"—you say to him,—"that
if you work steadily for ten hours a day all your life long, and if you
drink nothing but water, or the very mildest beer, and live on very plain
food, and never lose your temper, and go to church every Sunday, and
always remain content in the position in which Providence has placed you,
and never grumble nor swear; and always keep your clothes decent, and rise
early, and use every opportunity of improving yourself, you will get on
very well, and never come to the parish."</p>
<p>All this is exceedingly true; but before giving the advice so confidently,
it would be well if we sometimes tried it practically ourselves, and spent
a year or so at some hard manual labour, not of an entertaining kind—ploughing
or digging, for instance, with a very moderate allowance of beer; nothing
hut bread and cheese for dinner; no papers nor muffins in the morning; no
sofas nor magazines at night; one small room for parlour and kitchen; and
a large family of children always in the middle of the floor. If we think
we could, under these circumstances, enact Socrates or Epaminondas
entirely to our own satisfaction, we shall be somewhat justified in
requiring the same behaviour from our poorer neighbours; but if not, we
should surely consider a little whether among the various forms of the
oppression of the poor, we may not rank as one of the first and likeliest—the
oppression of expecting too much from them.</p>
<p>But let this pass; and let it be admitted that we can never be guilty of
oppression towards the sober, industrious, intelligent, exemplary
labourer. There will always be in the world some who are not altogether,
intelligent and exemplary; we shall, I believe, to the end of time find
the majority somewhat unintelligent, a little inclined to be idle, and
occasionally, on Saturday night, drunk; we must even be prepared to hear
of reprobates who like skittles on Sunday morning better than prayers; and
of unnatural parents who send their children out to beg instead of to go
to school.</p>
<p>Now these are the kind of people whom you <i>can</i> oppress, and whom you
do oppress, and that to purpose,—and with all the more cruelty and
the greater sting, because it is just their own fault that puts them into
your power. You know the words about wicked people are, "He doth ravish
the poor when he getteth him <i>into his net</i>." This getting into the
net is constantly the fault or folly of the sufferer—his own
heedlessness or his own indolence; but after he is once in the net, the
oppression of him, and making the most of his distress, are ours. The nets
which we use against the poor are just those worldly embarrassments which
either their ignorance or their improvidence are almost certain at some
time or other to bring them into: then, just at the time when we ought to
hasten to help them, and disentangle them, and teach them how to manage
better in future, we rush forward to <i>pillage</i> them, and force all we
can out of them in their adversity. For, to take one instance only,
remember this is literally and simply what we do, whenever we buy, or try
to buy, cheap goods— goods offered at a price which we know cannot
be remunerative for the labour involved in them. Whenever we buy such
goods, remember we are stealing somebody's labour. Don't let us mince the
matter. I say, in plain Saxon, STEALING—taking from him the proper
reward of his work, and putting it into our own pocket. You know well
enough that the thing could not have been offered you at that price,
unless distress of some kind had forced the producer to part with it. You
take advantage of this distress, and you force as much out of him as you
can under the circumstances. The old barons of the middle ages used, in
general, the thumbscrew to extort property; we moderns use, in preference,
hunger or domestic affliction: but the fact of extortion remains precisely
the same. Whether we force the man's property from him by pinching his
stomach, or pinching his fingers, makes some difference anatomically;—
morally, none whatsoever: we use a form of torture of some sort in order
to make him give up his property; we use, indeed, the man's own anxieties,
instead of the rack; and his immediate peril of starvation, instead of the
pistol at the head; but otherwise we differ from Front de Buf, or Dick
Turpin, merely in being less dexterous, more cowardly, and more cruel.
More cruel, I say, because the fierce baron and the redoubted highwayman
are reported to have robbed, at least by preference, only the rich; <i>we</i>
steal habitually from the poor. We buy our liveries, and gild our
prayer-books, with pilfered pence out of children's and sick men's wages,
and thus ingeniously dispose a given quantity of Theft, so that it may
produce the largest possible measure of delicately distributed suffering.</p>
<p>But this is only one form of common oppression of the poor—only one
way of taking our hands off the plough handle, and binding another's upon
it. This first way of doing it is the economical way—the way
preferred by prudent and virtuous people. The bolder way is the
acquisitive way:—the way of speculation. You know we are considering
at present the various modes in which a nation corrupts itself, by not
acknowledging the eternal connection between its plough and its pleasure;—by
striving to get pleasure, without working for it. Well, I say the first
and commonest way of doing so is to try to get the product of other
people's work, and enjoy it ourselves, by cheapening their labour in times
of distress: then the second way is that grand one of watching the chances
of the market;—the way of speculation. Of course there are some
speculations that are fair and honest— speculations made with our
own money, and which do not involve in their success the loss, by others,
of what we gain. But generally modern speculation involves much risk to
others, with chance of profit only to ourselves: even in its best
conditions it is merely one of the forms of gambling or treasure hunting;
it is either leaving the steady plough and the steady pilgrimage of life,
to look for silver mines beside the way; or else it is the full stop
beside the dice-tables in Vanity Fair —investing all the thoughts
and passions of the soul in the fall of the cards, and choosing rather the
wild accidents of idle fortune than the calm and accumulative rewards of
toil. And this is destructive enough, at least to our peace and virtue.
But is usually destructive of far more than <i>our</i> peace, or <i>our</i>
virtue. Have you ever deliberately set yourselves to imagine and measure
the suffering, the guilt, and the mortality caused necessarily by the
failure of any large-dealing merchant, or largely-branched bank? Take it
at the lowest possible supposition- count, at the fewest you choose, the
families whose means of support have been involved in the catastrophe.
Then, on the morning after the intelli- gence of ruin, let us go forth
amongst them in earnest thought; let us use that imagination which we
waste so often on fictitious sorrow, to measure the stern facts of that
multitudinous distress; strike open the private doors of their chambers,
and enter silently into the midst of the domestic misery; look upon the
old men, who had reserved for their failing strength some remainder of
rest in the evening-tide of life, cast helplessly back into its trouble
and tumult; look upon the active strength of middle age suddenly blasted
into incapacity—its hopes crushed, and its hardly earned rewards
snatched away in the same instant—at once the heart withered, and
the right arm snapped; look upon the piteous children, delicately
nurtured, whose soft eyes, now large with wonder at their parents' grief,
must soon be set in the dimness of famine; and, far more than all this,
look forward to the length of sorrow beyond—to the hardest labour of
life, now to be undergone either in all the severity of unexpected and
inexperienced trial, or else, more bitter still, to be begun again, and
endured for the second time, amidst the ruins of cherished hopes and the
feebleness of advancing years, embittered by the continual sting and taunt
of the inner feeling that it has all been brought about, not by the fair
course of appointed circumstance, but by miserable chance and wanton
treachery; and, last of all, look beyond this—to the shattered
destinies of those who have faltered under the trial, and sunk past
recovery to despair. And then consider whether the hand which has poured
this poison into all the springs of life be one whit less guiltily red
with human blood than that which literally pours the hemlock into the cup,
or guides the dagger to the heart? We read with horror of the crimes of a
Borgia or a Tophana; but there never lived Borgias such as live now in the
midst of us. The cruel lady of Ferrara slew only in the strength of
passion—she slew only a few, those who thwarted her purposes or who
vexed her soul; she slew sharply and suddenly, embittering the fate of her
victims with no foretastes of destruction, no prolongations of pain; and,
finally and chiefly, she slew, not without remorse, nor without pity. But
<i>we,</i> in no storm of passion—in no blindness of wrath,—we,
in calm and clear and untempted selfishness, pour our poison—not for
a few only, but for multitudes;—not for those who have wronged us,
or resisted,—but for those who have trusted us and aided:—we,
not with sudden gift of merciful and unconscious death, but with slow
waste of hunger and weary rack of disappointment and despair;—we,
last and chiefly, do our murdering, not with any pauses of pity or
scorching of conscience, but in facile and forgetful calm of mind—and
so, forsooth, read day by day, complacently, as if they meant any one else
than ourselves, the words that forever describe the wicked: "The <i>poison
of asps</i> is under their lips, and their <i>feet are swift to shed
blood.</i>"</p>
<p>You may indeed, perhaps, think there is some excuse for many in this
matter, just because the sin is so unconscious; that the guilt is not so
great when it is unapprehended, and that it is much more pardonable to
slay heedlessly than purposefully. I believe no feeling can be more
mistaken, and that in reality, and in the sight of heaven; the callous
indifference which pursues its own interests at any cost of life, though
it does not definitely adopt the purpose of sin, is a state of mind at
once more heinous and more hopeless than the wildest aberrations of
ungoverned passion. There may be, in the last case, some elements of good
and of redemption still mingled in the character; but, in the other, few
or none. There may be hope for the man who has slain his enemy in anger;
hope even for the man who has betrayed his friend in fear; but what hope
for him who trades in unregarded blood, and builds his fortune on
unrepented treason?</p>
<p>But, however this may be, and wherever you may think yourselves bound in
justice to impute the greater sin, be assured that the question is one of
responsibilities only, not of facts. The definite result of all our modern
haste to be rich is assuredly, and constantly, the murder of a certain
number of persons by our hands every year. I have not time to go into the
details of another—on the whole, the broadest and terriblest way in
which we cause the destruction of the poor—namely, the way of luxury
and waste, destroying, in improvidence, what might have been the support
of thousands; [Note: The analysis of this error will be found completely
carried out in my lectures on the political economy of art. And it is an
error worth analyzing; for until it is finally trodden under foot, no
healthy political, economical, or moral action is <i>possible</i> in any
state. I do not say this impetuously or suddenly, for I have investigated
this subject as deeply; and as long, as my own special subject of art; and
the principles of political economy which I have stated in those lectures
are as sure as the principles of Euclid. Foolish readers doubted their
certainty, because I told them I had "never read any books on Political
Economy" Did they suppose I had got my knowledge of art by reading books?]
but if you follow out the subject for yourselves at home—and what I
have endeavoured to lay before you to-night will only be useful to you if
you do—you will find that wherever and whenever men are endeavouring
to <i>make money hastily</i>, and to avoid the labour which Providence has
appointed to be tho only source of honourable profit;—and also
wherever and whenever they permit themselves to <i>spend it luxuriously</i>,
without reflecting how far they are misguiding the labour of others;—there
and then, in either case, they are literally and infallibly causing, for
their own benefit or their own pleasure, a certain annual number of human
deaths; that, therefore, the choice given to every man born into this
world is, simply, whether he will be a labourer, or an assassin; and that
whosoever has not his hand on the Stilt of the plough, has it on the Hilt
of the dagger.</p>
<p>It would also be quite vain for me to endeavour to follow out this evening
the lines of thought which would be suggested by the other two great
political uses of iron in the Fetter and the Sword: a few words only I
must permit myself respecting both.</p>
<p>2. THE FETTER.—As the plough is the typical instrument of industry,
so the fetter is the typical instrument of the restraint or subjection
necessary in a nation—either literally, for its evil-doers, or
figuratively, in accepted laws, for its wise and good men. You have to
choose between this figurative and literal use; for depend upon it, the
more laws you accept, the fewer penalties you will have to endure, and the
fewer punishments to enforce. For wise laws and just restraints are to a
noble nation not chains, but chain mail—strength and defence, though
something also of an incumbrance. And this necessity of restraint,
remember, is just as honourable to man as the necessity of labour. You
hear every day greater numbers of foolish people speaking about liberty,
as if it were such an honourable thing: so far from being that, it is, on
the whole, and in the broadest sense, dishonourable, and an attribute of
the lower creatures. No human being, however great or powerful, was ever
so free as a fish. There is always something that he must, or must not do;
while the fish may do whatever he likes. All the kingdoms of the world put
together are not half so large as the sea, and all the railroads and
wheels that ever were, or will be, invented are not so easy as fins. You
will find, on fairly thinking of it, that it is his Restraint which is
honourable to man, not his Liberty; and, what is more, it is restraint
which is honourable even in the lower animals. A butterfly is much more
free than a bee; but you honour the bee more, just because it is subject
to certain laws which fit it for orderly function in bee society And
throughout the world, of the two abstract things, liberty and restraint,
restraint is always the more honourable. It is true, indeed, that in these
and all other matters you never can reason finally from the abstraction,
for both liberty and restraint are good when they are nobly chosen, and
both are bad when they are basely chosen; but of the two, I repeat, it is
restraint which characterizes the higher creature, and betters the lower
creature: and, from the ministering of the archangel to the labour of the
insect,—from the poising of the planets to the gravitation of a
grain of dust,—the power and glory of all creatures, and all matter,
consist in their obedience, not in their freedom. The Sun has no liberty—a
dead leaf has much. The dust of which you are formed has no liberty. Its
liberty will come—with its corruption.</p>
<p>And, therefore, I say boldly, though it seems a strange thing to say in
England, that as the first power of a nation consists in knowing how to
guide the Plough, its second power consists in knowing how to wear the
Fetter:—</p>
<p>3. THE SWORD.—And its third power, which perfects it as a nation,
consist in knowing how to wield the sword, so that the three talismans of
national existence are expressed in these three short words—Labour,
Law, and Courage.</p>
<p>This last virtue we at least possess; and all that is to be alleged
against us is that we do not honour it enough. I do not mean honour by
acknowledgment of service, though sometimes we are slow in doing even
that. But we do not honour it enough in consistent regard to the lives and
souls of our soldiers. How wantonly we have wasted their lives you have
seen lately in the reports of their mortality by disease, which a little
care and science might have prevented; but we regard their souls less than
their lives, by keeping them in ignorance and idleness, and regarding them
merely as instruments of battle. The argument brought forward for the
maintenance of a standing army usually refers only to expediency in the
case of unexpected war, whereas, one of the chief reasons for the
maintenance of an army is the advantage of the military system as a method
of education. The most fiery and headstrong, who are often also the most
gifted and generous of your youths, have always a tendency both in the
lower and upper classes to offer themselves for your soldiers: others,
weak and unserviceable in a civil capacity, are tempted or entrapped into
the army in a fortunate hour for them: out of this fiery or uncouth
material, it is only a soldier's discipline which can bring the full value
and power. Even at present, by mere force of order and authority, the army
is the salvation of myriads; and men who, under other circumstances, would
have sunk into lethargy or dissipation, are redeemed into noble life by a
service which at once summons and directs their energies. How much more
than this military education is capable of doing, you will find only when
you make it education indeed. We have no excuse for leaving our private
soldiers at their present level of ignorance and want of refinement, for
we shall invariably find that, both among officers and men, the gentlest
and best informed are the bravest; still less have we excuse for
diminishing our army, either in the present state of political events, or,
as I believe, in any other conjunction of them that for many a year will
be possible in this world.</p>
<p>You may, perhaps, be surprised at my saying this; perhaps surprised at my
implying that war itself can be right, or necessary, or noble at all. Nor
do I speak of all war as necessary, nor of all war as noble. Both peace
and war are noble or ignoble according to their kind and occasion. No man
has a profounder sense of the horror and guilt of ignoble war than I have:
I have personally seen its effects, upon nations, of unmitigated evil, on
soul and body, with perhaps as much pity, and as much bitterness of
indignation, as any of those whom you will hear continually declaiming in
the cause of peace. But peace may be sought in two ways. One way is as
Gideon sought it, when he built his altar in Ophrah, naming it, "God send
peace," yet sought this peace that he loved, as he was ordered to seek it,
and the peace was sent, in God's way:—"the country was in quietness
forty years in the days of Gideon." And the other way of seeking peace is
as Menahem sought it when he gave the King of Assyria a thousand talents
of silver, that "his hand might be with him." That is, you may either win
your peace, or buy it:—win it, by resistance to evil;—buy it,
by compromise with evil. You may buy your peace, with silenced
consciences;—you may buy it, with broken vows,—buy it, with
lying words,—buy it, with base connivances,—buy it, with the
blood of the slain, and the cry of the captive, and the silence of lost
souls—over hemispheres of the earth, while you sit smiling at your
serene hearths, lisping comfortable prayers evening and morning, and
counting your pretty Protestant beads (which are flat, and of gold,
instead of round, and of ebony, as the monks' ones were), and so mutter
continually to yourselves, "Peace, peace," when there is No peace; but
only captivity and death, for you, as well as for those you leave unsaved;—and
yours darker than theirs.</p>
<p>I cannot utter to you what I would in this matter; we all see too dimly,
as yet, what our great world-duties are, to allow any of us to try to
outline their enlarging shadows. But think over what I have said, and as
you return to your quiet homes to-night, reflect that their peace was not
won for you by your own hands; but by theirs who long ago jeoparded their
lives for you, their children; and remember that neither this inherited
peace, nor any other, can be kept, but through the same jeopardy. No peace
was ever won from Fate by subterfuge or agreement; no peace is ever in
store for any of us, but that which we shall win by victory over shame or
sin;—victory over the sin that oppresses, as well as over that which
corrupts. For many a year to come, the sword of every righteous nation
must be whetted to save or subdue; nor will it be by patience of others'
suffering, but by the offering of your own, that you ever will draw nearer
to the time when the great change shall pass upon the iron of the earth;—when
men shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into
pruning-hooks; neither shall they learn war any more.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> APPENDICES. </h2>
<h3> APPENDIX I. </h3>
<h3> RIGHT AND WRONG. </h3>
<p>Readers who are using my <i>Elements of Drawing</i> may be surprised by my
saying here that Tintoret may lead them wrong; while in the <i>Elements</i>
he is one of the six men named as being "always right."</p>
<p>I bring the apparent inconsistency forward at the beginning of this
Appendix, because the illustration of it will be farther useful in showing
the real nature of the self-contradiction which is often alleged against
me by careless readers.</p>
<p>It is not only possible, but a frequent condition of human action, to <i>do</i>
right and <i>be</i> right—yet so as to mislead other people if they
rashly imitate the thing done. For there are many rights which are not
absolutely, but relatively right—right only for <i>that</i> person
to do under those circumstances,—not for <i>this</i> person to do
under other circumstances.</p>
<p>Thus it stands between Titian and Tintoret. Titian is always absolutely
Right. You may imitate him with entire security that you are doing the
best thing that can possibly be done for the purpose in hand. Tintoret is
always relatively Right—relatively to his own aims and peculiar
powers. But you must quite understand Tintoret before you can be sure what
his aim was, and why he was then right in doing what would not be right
always. If, however, you take the pains thus to understand him, he becomes
entirely instructive and exemplary, just as Titian is; and therefore I
have placed him among those are "always right," and you can only study him
rightly with that reverence for him.</p>
<p>Then the artists who are named as "admitting question of right and wrong,"
are those who from some mischance of circumstance or short- coming in
their education, do not always do right, even with relation to their own
aims and powers.</p>
<p>Take for example the quality of imperfection in drawing form. There are
many pictures of Tintoret in which the trees are drawn with a few curved
flourishes of the brush instead of leaves. That is (absolutely) wrong. If
you copied the tree as a model, you would be going very wrong indeed. But
it is relatively, and for Tintoret's purposes, right. In the nature of the
superficial work you will find there must have been a cause for it.
Somebody perhaps wanted the picture in a hurry to fill a dark corner.
Tintoret good-naturedly did all he could—painted the figures
tolerably—had five minutes left only for the trees, when the servant
came. "Let him wait another five minutes." And this is the best foliage we
can do in the time. Entirely, admirably, unsurpassably right, under the
conditions. Titian would not have worked under them, but Tintoret was
kinder and humbler; yet he may lead you wrong if you don't understand him.
Or, perhaps, another day, somebody came in while Tintoret was at work, who
tormented Tintoret. An ignoble person! Titian would have been polite to
him, and gone on steadily with his trees. Tintoret cannot stand the
ignobleness; it is unendurably repulsive and discomfiting to him. "The
Black Plague take him—and the trees, too! Shall such a fellow see me
paint!" And the trees go all to pieces. This, in you, would be mere
ill-breeding and ill-temper. In Tintoret it was one of the necessary
conditions of his intense sensibility; had he been capable, then, of
keeping his temper, he could never have done his greatest works. Let the
trees go to pieces, by all means; it is quite right they should; he is
always right.</p>
<p>But in a background of Gainsborough you would find the trees unjustifiably
gone to pieces. The carelessness of form there is definitely purposed by
him;—adopted as an advisable thing; and therefore it is both
absolutely and relatively wrong;—it indicates his being imperfectly
educated as a painter, and not having brought out all his powers. It may
still happen that the man whose work thus partially erroneous is greater
far, than others who have fewer faults. Gainsborough's and Reynolds'
wrongs are more charming than almost anybody else's right. Still, they
occasionally <i>are</i> wrong—but the Venetians and Velasquez,
[Note: At least after his style was formed; early pictures, like the
Adoration of the Magi in our Gallery, are of little value.] never.</p>
<p>I ought, perhaps, to have added in that Manchester address (only one does
not like to say things that shock people) some words of warning against
painters likely to mislead the student. For indeed, though here and there
something may be gained by looking at inferior men, there is always more
to be gained by looking at the best; and there is not time, with all the
looking of human life, to exhaust even one great painter's instruction.
How then shall we dare to waste our sight and thoughts on inferior ones,
even if we could do so, which we rarely can, without danger of being led
astray? Nay, strictly speaking, what people call inferior painters are in
general no painters. Artists are divided by an impassable gulf into the
men who can paint, and who cannot. The men who can paint often fall short
of what they should have done;—are repressed, or defeated, or
otherwise rendered inferior one to another: still there is an everlasting
barrier between them and the men who cannot paint—who can only in
various popular ways pretend to paint. And if once you know the
difference, there is always some good to be got by looking at a real
painter—seldom anything but mischief to be got out of a false one;
but do not suppose real painters are common. I do not speak of living men;
but among those who labour no more, in this England of ours, since it
first had a school, we have had only five real painters;—Reynolds,
Gainsborough, Hogarth, Richard Wilson, and Turner.</p>
<p>The reader may, perhaps, think I have forgotten Wilkie. No. I once much
overrated him as an expressional draughtsman, not having then studied the
figure long enough to be able to detect superficial sentiment. But his
colour I have never praised; it is entirely false and valueless. And it
would tie unjust to English art if I did not here express my regret that
the admiration of Constable, already harmful enough in England, is
extending even into France. There was, perhaps, the making, in Constable,
of a second or third-rate painter, if any careful discipline had developed
in him the instincts which, though unparalleled for narrowness, were, as
far as they went, true. But as it is, he is nothing more than an
industrious and innocent amateur blundering his way to a superficial
expression of one or two popular aspects of common nature.</p>
<p>And my readers may depend upon it, that all blame which I express in this
sweeping way is trustworthy. I have often had to repent of over- praise of
inferior men; and continually to repent of insufficient praise of great
men; but of broad condemnation, never. For I do not speak it but after the
most searching examination of the matter, and under stern sense of need
for it: so that whenever the reader is entirely shocked by what I say, he
may be assured every word is true.[Note: He must, however, be careful to
distinguish blame— however strongly expressed, of some special fault
or error in a true painter,—from these general statements of
inferiority or worthlessness. Thus he will find me continually laughing at
Wilson's tree-painting; not because Wilson could not paint, but because he
had never looked at a tree.] It is just because it so much offends him,
that it was necessary: and knowing that it must offend him, I should not
have ventured to say it, without certainty of its truth. I say
"certainty," for it is just as possible to be certain whether the drawing
of a tree or a stone is true or false, as whether the drawing of a
triangle is; and what I mean primarily by saying that a picture is in all
respects worthless, is that it is in all respects False: which is not a
matter of opinion at all, but a matter of ascertainable fact, such as I
never assert till I have ascertained. And the thing so commonly said about
my writings, that they are rather persuasive than just; and that though my
"language" may be good, I am an unsafe guide in art criticism, is, like
many other popular estimates in such matters, not merely untrue, but
precisely the reverse of the truth; it is truth, like reflections in
water, distorted much by the shaking receptive surface, and in every
particular, upside down. For my "language," until within the last six or
seven years, was loose, obscure, and more or less feeble; and still,
though I have tried hard to mend it, the best I can do is inferior to much
contemporary work. No description that I have ever given of anything is
worth four lines of Tennyson; and in serious thought, my half-pages are
generally only worth about as much as a single sentence either of his, or
of Carlyle's. They are, I well trust, as true and necessary; but they are
neither so concentrated nor so well put. But I am an entirely safe guide
in art judgment: and that simply as the necessary result of my having
given the labour of life to the determination of facts, rather than to the
following of feelings or theories. Not, indeed, that my work is free from
mistakes; it admits many, and always must admit many, from its scattered
range; but, in the long run, it will be found to enter sternly and
searchingly into the nature of what it deals with, and the kind of mistake
it admits is never dangerous, consisting, usually, in pressing the truth
too far. It is quite easy, for instance, to take an accidental
irregularity in a piece of architecture, which less careful examination
would never have detected at all, for an intentional irregularity; quite
possible to misinterpret an obscure passage in a picture, which a less
earnest observer would never have tried to interpret. But mistakes of this
kind—honest, enthusiastic mistakes—are never harmful; because
they are always made in a true direction,—falls forward on the road,
not into the ditch beside it; and they are sure to be corrected by the
next comer. But the blunt and dead mistakes made by too many other writers
on art—the mistakes of sheer inattention, and want of sympathy—are
mortal. The entire purpose of a great thinker may be difficult to fathom,
and we may be over and over again more or less mistaken in guessing at his
meaning; but the real, profound, nay, quite bottomless, and unredeemable
mistake, is the fool's thought—that he had no meaning.</p>
<p>I do not refer, in saying this, to any of my statements respecting
subjects which it has been my main work to study: as far as I am aware, I
have never yet misinterpreted any picture of Turner's, though often
remaining blind to the half of what he had intended: neither have I as yet
found anything to correct in my statements respecting Venetian
architecture; [Note: The subtle portions of the Byzantine Palaces, given
in precise measurements in the second volume of the "Stones of Venice,"
were alleged by architects to be accidental irregularities. They will be
found, by every one who will take the pains to examine them, most
assuredly and indisputably intentional,—and not only so, but one of
the principal subjects of the designer's care.] but in <i>casual
references</i> to what has been quickly seen, it is impossible to guard
wholly against error, without losing much valuable observation, true in
ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, and harmless even when erroneous.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<h2> APPENDIX II. </h2>
<h3> REYNOLDS' DISAPPOINTMENT. </h3>
<p>It is very fortunate that in the fragment of Mason's MSS., published
lately by Mr. Cotton in his "Sir Joshua Reynolds' Notes," [Note: Smith,
Soho Square, 1859.] record is preserved of Sir Joshua's feelings
respecting the paintings in the window of New College, which might
otherwise have been supposed to give his full sanction to this mode of
painting on glass. Nothing can possibly be more curious, to my mind, than
the great painter's expectations; or his having at all entertained the
idea that the qualities of colour which are peculiar to opaque bodies
could be obtained in a transparent medium; but so it is: and with the
simplicity and humbleness of an entirely great man he hopes that Mr.
Jervas on glass is to excel Sir Joshua on canvas. Happily, Mason tells us
the result.</p>
<p>"With the copy Jervas made of this picture he was grievously disappointed.
'I had frequently,' he said to me, 'pleased myself by reflecting, after I
had produced what I thought a brilliant effect of light and shadow on my
canvas, how greatly that effect would be heightened by the transparency
which the painting on glass would be sure to produce. It turned out quite
the reverse.'"</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> APPENDIX III. </h2>
<h3> CLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE. </h3>
<p>This passage in the lecture was illustrated by an enlargement of the
woodcut, Fig. 1; but I did not choose to disfigure the middle of this book
with it. It is copied from the 49th plate of the third edition of the <i>Encyclopædia
Britannica</i> (Edinburgh, 1797), and represents an English farmhouse
arranged on classical principles. If the reader cares to consult the work
itself, he will find in the same plate another composition of similar
propriety, and dignified by the addition of a pediment, beneath the shadow
of which "a private gentleman who has a small family may find
conveniency."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> APPENDIX IV. </h2>
<h3> SUBTLETY OF HAND. </h3>
<p>I had intended in one or other of these lectures to have spoken at some
length of the quality of refinement in Colour, but found the subject would
lead me too far. A few words are, however, necessary in order to explain
some expressions in the text.</p>
<p>"Refinement in colour" is indeed a tautological expression, for colour, in
the true sense of the word, does not exist until it <i>is</i> refined.
Dirt exists,—stains exist,—and pigments exist, easily enough
in all places; and are laid on easily enough by all hands; but colour
exists only where there is tenderness, and can be laid on only by a hand
which has strong life in it. The law concerning colour is very strange,
very noble, in some sense almost awful. In every given touch laid on
canvas, if one grain of the colour is inoperative, and does not take its
full part in producing the hue, the hue will be imperfect. The grain of
colour which does not work is dead. It infects all about it with its
death. It must be got quit of, or the touch is spoiled. We acknowledge
this instinctively in our use of the phrases "dead colour," "killed
colour," "foul colour." Those words are, in some sort, literally true. If
more colour is put on than is necessary, a heavy touch when a light one
would have been enough, the quantity of colour that was not wanted, and is
overlaid by the rest, is as dead, and it pollutes the rest. There will be
no good in the touch.</p>
<p>The art of painting, properly so called, consists in laying on the least
possible colour that will produce the required result, and this
measurement, in all the ultimate, that is to say, the principal,
operations of colouring, is so delicate that not one human hand in a
million has the required lightness. The final touch of any painter
properly so named, of Correggio—Titian—Turner—or
Reynolds—would be always quite invisible to any one watching the
progress of the work, the films of hue being laid thinner than the depths
of the grooves in mother-of-pearl. The work may be swift, apparently
careless, nay, to the painter himself almost unconscious. Great painters
are so organized that they do their best work without effort: but analyze
the touches afterwards, and you will find the structure and depth of the
colour laid mathematically demonstrable to be of literally infinite
fineness, the last touches passing away at their edges by untraceable
gradation. The very essence of a master's work may thus be removed by a
picture- cleaner in ten minutes.</p>
<p>Observe, however, this thinness exists only in portions of the ultimate
touches, for which the preparation may often have been made with solid
colours, commonly, and literally, called "dead colouring," but even that
is always subtle if a master lays it—subtle at least in drawing, if
simple in hue; and farther, observe that the refinement of work consists
not in laying absolutely <i>little</i> colour, but in always laying
precisely the right quantity. To lay on little needs indeed the rare
lightness of hand; but to lay much,—yet not one atom <i>too</i>
much, and obtain subtlety, not by withholding strength, but by precision
of pause,—that is the master's final sign-manual—power,
knowledge, and tenderness all united. A great deal of colour may often be
wanted; perhaps quite a mass of it, such as shall project from the canvas;
but the real painter lays this mass of its required thickness and shape
with as much precision as if it were a bud of a flower which he had to
touch into blossom; one of Turner's loaded fragments of white cloud is
modelled and gradated in an instant, as if it alone were the subject of
the picture, when the same quantity of colour, under another hand, would
be a lifeless lump.</p>
<p>The following extract from a letter in the <i>Literary Gazette</i> of 13th
November, 1858, which I was obliged to write to defend a questioned
expression respecting Turner's subtlety of hand from a charge of
hyperbole, contains some interesting and conclusive evidence on the point,
though it refers to pencil and chalk drawing only:—</p>
<p>"I must ask you to allow me yet leave to reply to the objections you make
to two statements in my catalogue, as those objections would otherwise
diminish its usefulness. I have asserted that, in a given drawing (named
as one of the chief in the series), Turner's pencil did not move over the
thousandth of an inch without meaning; and you charge this expression with
extravagant hyperbole. On the contrary, it is much within the truth, being
merely a mathematically accurate description of fairly good execution in
either drawing or engraving. It is only necessary to measure a piece of
any ordinary good work to ascertain this. Take, for instance, Finden's
engraving at the 180th page of Rogers' poems; in which the face of the
figure, from the chin to the top of the brow, occupies just a quarter of
an inch, and the space between the upper lip and chin as nearly as
possible one-seventeenth of an inch. The whole mouth occupies one-third of
this space, say one- fiftieth of an inch, and within that space both the
lips and the much more difficult inner corner of the mouth are perfectly
drawn and rounded, with quite successful and sufficiently subtle
expression. Any artist will assure you that in order to draw a mouth as
well as this, there must be more than twenty gradations of shade in the
touches; that is to say, in this case, gradations changing, with meaning,
within less than the thousandth of an inch.</p>
<p>"But this is mere child's play compared to the refinement of a first- rate
mechanical work—much more of brush or pencil drawing by a master's
hand. In order at once to furnish you with authoritative evidence on this
point, I wrote to Mr. Kingsley, tutor of Sidney-Sussex College, a friend
to whom I always have recourse when I want to be precisely right in any
matter; for his great knowledge both of mathematics and of natural science
is joined, not only with singular powers of delicate experimental
manipulation, but with a keen sensitiveness to beauty in art. His answer,
in its final statement respecting Turner's work, is amazing even to me,
and will, I should think, be more so to your readers. Observe the
successions of measured and tested refinement: here is No. 1:—</p>
<p>"'The finest mechanical work that I know, which is not optical, is that
done by Nobert in the way of ruling lines. I have a series ruled by him on
glass, giving actual scales from .000024 and .000016 of an inch, perfectly
correct to these places of decimals, and he has executed others as fine as
.000012, though I do not know how far he could repeat these last with
accuracy.'</p>
<p>"This is No. 1 of precision. Mr. Kingsley proceeds to No. 2:—</p>
<p>"'But this is rude work compared to the accuracy necessary for the
construction of the object-glass of a microscope such as Rosse turns out.'</p>
<p>"I am sorry to omit the explanation which follows of the ten lenses
composing such a glass, 'each of which must be exact in radius and in
surface, and all have their axes coincident:' but it would not be
intelligible without the figure by which it is illustrated; so I pass to
Mr. Kingsley's No. 3:—</p>
<p>"'I am tolerably familiar,' he proceeds, 'with the actual grinding and
polishing of lenses and specula, and have produced by my own hand some by
no means bad optical work, and I have copied no small amount of Turner's
work, and <i>I still look with awe at the combined delicacy and precision
of his hand</i>; IT BEATS OPTICAL WORK OUT OF SIGHT. In optical work, as
in refined drawing, the hand goes beyond the eye, and one has to depend
upon the feel; and when one has once learned what a delicate affair touch
is, one gets a horror of all coarse work, and is ready to forgive any
amount of feebleness, sooner than that boldness which is akin to
impudence. In optics the distinction is easily seen when the work is put
to trial; but here too, as in drawing, it requires an educated eye to tell
the difference when the work is only moderately bad; but with "bold" work,
nothing can be seen but distortion and fog: and I heartily wish the same
result would follow the same kind of handling in drawing; but here, the
boldness cheats the unlearned by looking like the precision of the true
man. It is very strange how much better our ears are than our eyes in this
country: if an ignorant man were to be "bold" with a violin, he would not
get many admirers, though his boldness was far below that of ninety-nine
out of a hundred drawings one sees.'</p>
<p>"The words which I have put in italics in the above extract are those
which were surprising to me. I knew that Turner's was as refined as any
optical work, but had no idea of its going beyond it. Mr. Kingsley's word
'awe' occurring just before, is, however, as I have often felt, precisely
the right one. When once we begin at all to understand the handling of any
truly great executor, such as that of any of the three great Venetians, of
Correggio, or Turner, the awe of it is something greater than can be felt
from the most stupendous natural scenery. For the creation of such a
system as a high human intelligence, endowed with its ineffably perfect
instruments of eye and hand, is a far more appalling manifestation of
Infinite Power, than the making either of seas or mountains.</p>
<p>"After this testimony to the completion of Turner's work, I need not at
length defend myself from the charge of hyperbole in the statement that,
'as far as I know, the galleries of Europe may be challenged to produce
one sketch [footnote: A sketch, observe,—not a finished drawing.
Sketches are only proper subjects of comparison with each other when they
contain about the same quantity of work: the test of their merit is the
quantity of truth told with a given number of touches. The assertion in
the Catalogue which this letter was written to defend, was made respecting
the sketch of Rome, No. 101.] that shall equal the chalk study No. 45, or
the feeblest of the memoranda in the 71st and following frames;' which
memoranda, however, it should have been observed, are stated at the 44th
page to be in some respects 'the grandest work in grey that he did in his
life.' For I believe that, as manipulators, none but the four men whom I
have just named (the three Venetians and Correggio) were equal to Turner;
and, as far as I know, none of those four ever put their full strength
into sketches. But whether they did or not, my statement in the catalogue
is limited by my own knowledge: and, as far as I can trust that knowledge,
it is not an enthusiastic statement, but an entirely calm and considered
one. It may be a mistake but it is not a hyperbole."</p>
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<h2> APPENDIX V. </h2>
<p>I can only give, to illustrate this balcony, fac-similes of rough
memoranda made on a single leaf of my note-book, with a tired hand; but it
may be useful to young students to see them, in order that they may know
the difference between notes made to get at the gist and heart of a thing,
and notes made merely to look neat. Only it must be observed that the best
characters of free drawing are always lost even in the most careful
facsimile; and I should not show even these slight notes in woodcut
imitation, unless the reader had it in his power, by a glance at the 21st
or 35th plates in <i>Modern Painters</i> (and yet better, by trying to
copy a piece of either of them), to ascertain how far I can draw or not. I
refer to these plates, because, though I distinctly stated in the preface
that they, together with the 12th, 20th, 34th, and 37th, were executed on
the steel by my own hand, (the use of the dry point in the foregrounds of
the 12th and 21st plates being moreover wholly different from the common
processes of etching) I find it constantly assumed that they were engraved
for me—as if direct lying in such matters were a thing of quite
common usage.</p>
<p>Fig. 2 is the centre-piece of the balcony, but a leaf-spray is omitted on
the right-hand side, having been too much buried among the real leaves to
be drawn.</p>
<p>Fig. 3 shows the intended general effect of its masses, the five-leaved
and six-leaved flowers being clearly distinguishable at any distance.</p>
<p>Fig. 4 is its profile, rather carefully drawn at the top, to show the
tulip and turkscap lily leaves. Underneath there is a plate of iron beaten
into broad thin leaves, which gives the centre of the balcony a gradual
sweep outwards, like the side of a ship of war. The central profile is of
the greatest importance in ironwork, as the flow of it affects the curves
of the whole design, not merely in surface, as in marble carving, but in
their intersections, when the side is seen through the front. The lighter
leaves, <i>b b</i>, are real bindweed.</p>
<p>Fig. 5 shows two of the teeth of the border, illustrating their
irregularity of form, which takes place quite to the extent indicated.</p>
<p>Fig. 6 is the border at the side of the balcony, showing the most
interesting circumstance in the treatment of the whole, namely, the
enlargement and retraction of the teeth of the cornice, as it approaches
the wall. This treatment of the whole cornice as a kind of wreath round
the balcony, having its leaves flung loose at the back, and set close at
the front, as a girl would throw a wreath of leaves round her hair, is
precisely the most finished indication of a good workman's mind to be
found in the whole thing.</p>
<p>Fig. 7 shows the outline of the retracted leaves accurately. It was noted
in the text that the whole of this ironwork had been coloured. The
difficulty of colouring ironwork rightly, and the necessity of doing it in
some way or other, have been the principal reasons for my never having
entered heartily into this subject; for all the ironwork I have ever seen
look beautiful was rusty, and rusty iron will not answer modern purposes.
Nevertheless it may be painted, but it needs some one to do it who knows
what painting means, and few of us do—certainly none, as yet, of our
restorers of decoration or writers on colour.</p>
<p>It is a marvellous thing to me that book after book should appear on this
last subject, without apparently the slightest consciousness on the part
of the writers that the first necessity of beauty in colour is gradation,
as the first necessity of beauty in line is curvature,—or that the
second necessity in colour is mystery or subtlety, as the second necessity
in line is softness. Colour ungradated is wholly valueless; colour
unmysterious is wholly barbarous. Unless it looses itself and melts away
towards other colours, as a true line loses itself and melts away towards
other lines, colour has no proper existence, in the noble sense of the
word. What a cube, or tetrahedron, is to organic form, ungradated and
unconfused colour is to organic colour; and a person who attempts to
arrange colour harmonies without gradation of tint is in precisely the
same category, as an artist who should try to compose a beautiful picture
out of an accumulation of cubes and parallelepipeds.</p>
<p>The value of hue in all illuminations on painted glass of fine periods
depends primarily on the expedients used to make the colours palpitate and
fluctuate; <i>inequality</i> of brilliancy being the <i>condition</i> of
brilliancy, just as inequality of accent is the condition of power and
loveliness in sound. The skill with which the thirteenth century
illuminators in books, and the Indians in shawls and carpets, use the
minutest atoms of colour to gradate other colours, and confuse the eye, is
the first secret in their gift of splendour: associated, however, with so
many other artifices which are quite instinctive and unteachable, that it
is of little use to dwell upon them. Delicacy of organization in the
designer given, you will soon have all, and without it, nothing. However,
not to close my book with desponding words, let me set down, as many of us
like such things, five Laws to which there is no exception whatever, and
which, if they can enable no one to produce good colour, are at least, as
far as they reach, accurately condemnatory of bad colour.</p>
<p>1. ALL GOOD COLOUR IS GRADATED. A blush rose (or, better still, a blush
itself), is the type of rightness in arrangement of pure hue.</p>
<p>2. ALL HARMONIES OF COLOUR DEPEND FOR THEIR VITALITY ON THE ACTION AND
HELPFUL OPERATION OF EVERY PARTICLE OF COLOUR THEY CONTAIN.</p>
<p>3. THE FINAL PARTICLES OF COLOUR NECESSARY TO THE COMPLETENESS OF A COLOUR
HARMONY ARE ALWAYS INFINITELY SMALL; either laid by immeasurably subtle
touches of the pencil, or produced by portions of the colouring substance,
however distributed, which are so absolutely small as to become at the
intended distance infinitely so to the eye.</p>
<p>4. NO COLOUR HARMONY IS OF HIGH ORDER UNLESS IT INVOLVES INDESCRIBABLE
TINTS. It is the best possible sign of a colour when nobody who sees it
knows what to call it, or how to give an idea of it to any one else. Even
among simple hues the most valuable are those which cannot be defined; the
most precious purples will look brown beside pure purple, and purple
beside pure brown; and the most precious greens will be called blue if
seen beside pure green, and green if seen beside pure blue.</p>
<p>5. THE FINER THE EYE FOR COLOUR, THE LESS IT WILL REQUIRE TO GRATIFY IT
INTENSELY. But that little must be supremely good and pure, as the finest
notes of a great singer, which are so near to silence. And a great
colourist will make even the absence of colour lovely, as the fading of
the perfect voice makes silence sacred.</p>
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