Roman Literature in Relation to Roman ArtMacmillan and Company, 1888 - 315 sider |
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Robert Burn. INTRODUCTION . CONTENTS . PAGE I ESSAY I. ROMAN PORTRAIT SCULPTURE 31 ESSAY II . NATIONAL AND HISTORICAL TENDENCY . 68 ESSAY III . COMPOSITE AND COLOSSAL ART ESSAY IV . 102 TECHNICAL FINISH AND LUXURIOUS REFINEMENT 139 ESSAY ...
Robert Burn. INTRODUCTION . CONTENTS . PAGE I ESSAY I. ROMAN PORTRAIT SCULPTURE 31 ESSAY II . NATIONAL AND HISTORICAL TENDENCY . 68 ESSAY III . COMPOSITE AND COLOSSAL ART ESSAY IV . 102 TECHNICAL FINISH AND LUXURIOUS REFINEMENT 139 ESSAY ...
Side 3
... sculpture of their busts and the arch of Severus we see the same influence degrading sculpture . To trace those influences in poetry among writers subsequent to Augustus , and in sculpture among artists subsequent to Trajan is the ...
... sculpture of their busts and the arch of Severus we see the same influence degrading sculpture . To trace those influences in poetry among writers subsequent to Augustus , and in sculpture among artists subsequent to Trajan is the ...
Side 4
... sculpture at Rome , or by comparing PARTHENON FRIEZE . the Medici Venus with the Venus of Melos , what was the sensual feeling encouraged by wealth in a great imperial nation ; or , by comparing the Laocoon with the fighting FARNESE ...
... sculpture at Rome , or by comparing PARTHENON FRIEZE . the Medici Venus with the Venus of Melos , what was the sensual feeling encouraged by wealth in a great imperial nation ; or , by comparing the Laocoon with the fighting FARNESE ...
Side 6
... sculptures , and yielded to his fondness for sensual gratification . It is often hastily concluded that Roman literature and Roman art are not worth our attention . The Romans , it is said , were evidently a nation devoid of the ...
... sculptures , and yielded to his fondness for sensual gratification . It is often hastily concluded that Roman literature and Roman art are not worth our attention . The Romans , it is said , were evidently a nation devoid of the ...
Side 9
... sculpture to a great extent employed itself in deifying men . The influence of the Christian faith at a later time gradually raised this old grovelling Roman materialism ; but sculpture among the Romans never soared high , and painting ...
... sculpture to a great extent employed itself in deifying men . The influence of the Christian faith at a later time gradually raised this old grovelling Roman materialism ; but sculpture among the Romans never soared high , and painting ...
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Æneas Æneid amphitheatres ancient appearance Aqua aqueducts arcades architects atque atrium Augustus Basilica beauty bricks buildings built busts Cæsar capitals Capitoline Catullus chap character Cicero Circus Cloaca Cloaca Maxima Coliseum colonnades colossal columns construction Corinthian decorative Diocletian Domitian domus Doric emperors Eneid Ennius entablature ESSAY expression exterior Farnese Hercules feet Forum Greek Hadrian Hercules heroes Hist Homer Horace houses imitation imperial influence insula Ionic Ionic order Juvenal Latin lines Lucan Lysippus marble Nævius natural Nero Nibby nunc opus ornamental Ovid passages placed Pliny poem poetry Pompeii Porta portico portrait Preller probably quae quam quod Roma Roman architecture Roman art Roman literature Roman poets Rome roof says Scipio sculpture seen shew shewn side Statius statues stone style temple theatres therma tibi tomb Trajan triumphal arches tufa Tuscan vaulted viii Virgil Vitruvius walls δὲ ἐν καὶ τε τὸ τῶν
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Side 177 - She was a Phantom of delight When first she gleamed upon my sight; A lovely Apparition, sent To be a moment's ornament; Her eyes as stars of Twilight fair; Like Twilight's, too, her dusky hair; But all things else about her drawn From May-time and the cheerful Dawn; A dancing Shape, an Image gay, To haunt, to startle, and way-lay.
Side 176 - From her unhasty beast she did alight ; And on the grass her dainty limbs did lay In secret shadow, far from all men's sight From her fair head her fillet she undight, And laid her stole aside ; her...
Side 7 - Sed ego sic statuo, nihil esse in ullo genere tarn pulchrum, quo non pulchrius id sit unde illud ut ex ore aliquo quasi imago exprimatur; quod neque oculis neque auribus neque ullo sensu percipi potest, cogitatione tantum et mente complectimur.
Side 81 - Euandri profugae concubuere boves. fictilibus crevere deis haec aurea templa, nec fuit opprobrio facta sine arte casa ; Tarpeiusque pater nuda de rupe tonabat, et Tiberis nostris advena bubus erat. qua gradibus domus ista Remi se sustulit, olim unus erat fratrum maxima regna focus.
Side 176 - And layd her stole aside : her angels face, As the great eye of Heaven, shyned bright, And made a sunshine in the shady place ; Did never mortal! eye behold such heavenly grace.
Side 91 - En Priamus ! Sunt hic etiam sua praemia laudi ; sunt lacrimae rerum et mentem mortalia tangunt. Solve metus ; feret haec aliquam tibi fama salutem.
Side 23 - Praecipue cum se numeris commendat et arte : Discit enim citius meminitque libentius illud Quod quis deridet, quam quod probat et veneratur.
Side 146 - Upon the whole, it seems to me, that the object and intention of all the Arts is to supply the natural imperfection of things, and often to gratify the mind by realising and embodying what never existed but in the imagination.
Side 27 - Hic vir, hic est, tibi quem promitti saepius audis, 'Augustus Caesar, Divi genus, aurea condet 'Saecula qui rursus Latio, regnata per arva