| William Hall - 1881 - 300 pages
[ Sorry, this page's content is restricted ] | |
| William Hall - 1881 - 306 pages
...not under the influence of a suitable effect. Thus a cottage or a village scene requires a soft or a simple admixture of tones, calculated to produce pleasure...indenting on the mind a reverential and permanent expression, and giving at once a corresponding and unequivocal grandeur to the pictures. Much depends... | |
| David Cox - 1922 - 190 pages
...awakening all the delightful sensations of the bosom, without trenching on the nobler provinces of feeling. On the contrary, the structures of greatness and antiquity...character of awful sublimity, suited to the dignity of the subject ; indenting on the mind a reverential and permanent impression, and giving, at once, a corresponding... | |
| Esther Meynell - 1946 - 200 pages
[ Sorry, this page's content is restricted ] | |
| Trenchard Cox - 1947 - 144 pages
[ Sorry, this page's content is restricted ] | |
| |