The Book of the CartoonsHoulston and Hughes, 1840 - 185 pages |
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Page 7
... delightful province of the realms of intellect . Raffaelle Sanzio was born in the city of Urbino , in Italy , in the year 1483. His earliest master , if we except his father , Giovanni Sanzio , or di Santi , was Pietro of Perugia , a ...
... delightful province of the realms of intellect . Raffaelle Sanzio was born in the city of Urbino , in Italy , in the year 1483. His earliest master , if we except his father , Giovanni Sanzio , or di Santi , was Pietro of Perugia , a ...
Page 22
... delight the spectator , or extort unthinking admiration by superficial and alluring beauties . Without any of the obvious artifices of arrangement - without striking brilliancy of colour , or violent contrasts of light and shade ...
... delight the spectator , or extort unthinking admiration by superficial and alluring beauties . Without any of the obvious artifices of arrangement - without striking brilliancy of colour , or violent contrasts of light and shade ...
Page 32
... delight . The picturesque and unscrupulous character of the Romish religion has allowed , without censure , the pictorial representation of God , as the Father -the I AM , the Primal Fount of Deity . From making this attempt , if a ...
... delight . The picturesque and unscrupulous character of the Romish religion has allowed , without censure , the pictorial representation of God , as the Father -the I AM , the Primal Fount of Deity . From making this attempt , if a ...
Page 50
... delight of our earliest youth ; and have again an especial charm when , in advancing age , our sympathy revives for the calm , the unexciting , and contemplative , which among the strong impulses and urgent necessities of the inter ...
... delight of our earliest youth ; and have again an especial charm when , in advancing age , our sympathy revives for the calm , the unexciting , and contemplative , which among the strong impulses and urgent necessities of the inter ...
Page 67
... summer , cold expelling , Whose distant periods freeze away delight , — Ah , that I lost your bright and fostering beams , To plunge my soul in these congealed streams ! " tain them ? For , first , it was not THE CHARGE TO PETER . 67.
... summer , cold expelling , Whose distant periods freeze away delight , — Ah , that I lost your bright and fostering beams , To plunge my soul in these congealed streams ! " tain them ? For , first , it was not THE CHARGE TO PETER . 67.
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Common terms and phrases
action admiration Ananias and Sapphira apostle appear artist attention attitude awful BARNABAS AT LYSTRA beauty Cartoons character CHARGE TO PETER Christ Christian church composition contrast countenance Cupid and Psyche Cyprus daugh DEATH OF ANANIAS delight denote depicted designed disciples divine drapery DRAUGHT OF FISHES effect emotions engraved executed expression exquisite favourable fearful effect feeling figure genius gospel grace Hampton Court hand head heaven Holy honour human illustrious immediately individual intercolumniations Jews Leo X less lictors light limbs look magnificent Masaccio means ment mind MIRACULOUS DRAUGHT moral nature nexion object observed occasion painter Paradise Regained Paul and Barnabas peculiar pencil perfect persons PETER AND JOHN picture PREACHING AT ATHENS present proconsul racter Raffaelle's regard remarkable represented RICKERBY sacrifice Saviour scarcely sentiment Sergius Paulus solemn sons of Zebedee sorbed SORCERER STRUCK BLIND spectator spirit tapestry taste temple thou tion truth whole youth
Popular passages
Page 164 - May we know what this new doctrine, whereof thou speakest, is? 20 For thou bringest certain strange things to our ears: we would know therefore what these things mean. 21 (For all the Athenians, and strangers which were there, spent their time in nothing else, but either to tell or to hear some new thing...
Page 63 - He spake of love, such love as spirits feel In worlds whose course is equable and pure ; No fears to beat away, no strife to heal, The past...
Page 116 - Whoso hath this world's good, and seeth his brother have need, and shutteth up his compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in him ? 1 St.
Page 116 - My children, let us not love in word, but in deed and in truth.
Page 144 - And when the people saw what Paul had done, they lifted up their voices, saying in the speech of Lycaonia, The gods are come down to us, in the likeness of men.
Page 55 - What trust— to one that truth itself defied ? What good in him that did his God forswear ? O sin of sins, of ills the very worst ! O matchless wretch ! O caitiff most accurs'd ! " Could servile fear of rend'ring nature's due, Which growth in years was shortly like to claim, So thrall my love that I should thus eschew A vowed death, and miss so fair an aim ? Die, die, disloyal wretch ! thy life detest : For, saving thine, thou hast forsworn the best. " Ah life ! sweet drop, drown'd in a sea of sours...
Page 30 - A similar holy fear seized Simon, by reason of the draught of fishes ; therefore he said, Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord ; but Jesus said unto him, Fear not, Luke v.
Page 66 - Darts of disdain and angry checks did yield. & 6 0 sacred eyes ! the springs of living light, The earthly heavens where angels joy to dwell, <-• How could you deign to view my deathful plight, Or let your heavenly beams look on my hell ? But those unspotted eyes encounter'd mine, As spotless sun doth on the dunghill shine.
Page 12 - Magi. 3, 4 & 5. The Slaughter of the Innocents. 6. The Presentation in the Temple. 7. The Miraculous Draught of Fishes. 8. St Peter receiving the Keys. 9. The Descent of Christ into Limbus. 10. The Resurrection. 11. Noli me Tangere. 12. Christ at Emmaus. 13. The Ascension, 14. The Descent of the Holy Ghost. 15. The Martyrdom of St Stephen. 16. The Conversion of St Paul. 17. Paul and Barnabas at Lystra. 18. Paul Preaching at Athens.
Page 180 - THE NEW TESTAMENT IN GREEK; Chiefly from the TEXT of MILL; with COPIOUS ENGLISH NOTES.