| John Ruskin - 1875 - 204 páginas
...and broken peace. HEBNE HILL, 5th December. 1874. FRONDES AGRESTES. SECTION I. PRINCIPLES OF ART. 1. PERFECT taste is the faculty of receiving the greatest...attractive to our moral nature in its purity and perfection ; but why we receive pleasure from some forms and colours and not from others, is no more to be asked... | |
| John Ruskin - 1875 - 206 páginas
...and broken peace. HEBNE HILL, 5th December, 1874. FKONDES AGRESTES. SECTION I. PRINCIPLES OF ART. 1. PERFECT taste is the faculty of receiving the greatest...attractive to our moral nature in its purity and perfection ; but why we receive pleasure from some forms and colours and not from others, is no more to be asked... | |
| John Ruskin - 1875 - 200 páginas
...and broken peace HERNE HILL, 5th December, 1874. FRONDES AGRESTES. SECTION" I. PRINCIPLES OF ART. 1. PERFECT taste is the faculty of receiving the greatest...attractive to our moral nature in its purity and perfection ; but why we receive pleasure from some forms and colours and not from others, is no more to be asked... | |
| George Harris - 1876 - 588 páginas
...manners and customs of mankind, or in works of art and of science." — Ltrliim and Hurtcnxia, p. 11. " Perfect taste is the faculty of receiving the greatest...to our moral nature in its purity and perfection." — Rvikin. Molern Painters, vol. i. pt. ia 1, c. 0. " Taste, properly so called, is the instinctive... | |
| John Ruskin - 1878 - 524 páginas
...disputed i 2. Definition of word. Perfect taste is the faculty of receiving the term " taste." ., , , ,, the greatest possible pleasure from those material...pleasure from any other sources, has false or bad taste. And it is thus that the term " taste" is to be Ltween taote ami distinguished from that of "judgment,"... | |
| David Jayne Hill - 1878 - 312 páginas
...needless, for it would be nothing more than the active and passive powers in cooperation. (4) Ruskin says : " Perfect taste is the faculty of receiving...to our moral nature in its purity and perfection." This is not strictly a definition of taste, but a description of the noblest taste. The definition... | |
| William Walker - 1879 - 306 páginas
...cannot do better than quote, as far as possible, his words, — ' Perfect taste is the faculty for receiving the greatest possible pleasure from those...pleasure from any other sources has false or bad taste.' If an object, a form, or a colour be right, it is right, independently of our intuitive choice or '... | |
| William Walker - 1880 - 168 páginas
...' is the faculty for receiving the greatest possible pleasure from those material sources which arc attractive to our moral nature, in its purity and...wants taste ; he who receives pleasure from any other source, has false or bad taste.' If an object, a form, or a colour, be right, it is right whether we... | |
| Henrietta Louisa Lear - 1881 - 104 páginas
...blessings ! XCIIL "pERFECT taste is the faculty of Perfect J- receiving the greatest possible taste. pleasure from those material sources which are attractive to our moral nature in its purity and perfection ; but why we receive pleasure from some forms and colours, and not from others, is no more to be asked... | |
| Henrietta Louisa Lear - 1882 - 232 páginas
...churlish ignorance -*- -*- for ever shutting out from our doors heavenly blessings ! XCIII. TDERFECT taste is the faculty of receiving -*- the greatest...attractive to our moral nature in its purity and perfection ; but why we receive pleasure from some forms and colours, and not from others, is no more to be asked... | |
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