The Quarterly Review, Volume 69William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) John Murray, 1841 |
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Page 142
... ogee line . Let the reader follow the curve of a Gothic arch slowly , and he will find that the moment his eye has passed the apex , it has a natural tend- ency not only to continue it , but to continue it with an effort to mount upward ...
... ogee line . Let the reader follow the curve of a Gothic arch slowly , and he will find that the moment his eye has passed the apex , it has a natural tend- ency not only to continue it , but to continue it with an effort to mount upward ...
Page 143
... ogee ; in the type from which it is drawn , that is , in the line followed by the eye in tracing the pointed arch , the eye will traverse either the interior , that is the concave side of the curve , or the convex . If it traverses the ...
... ogee ; in the type from which it is drawn , that is , in the line followed by the eye in tracing the pointed arch , the eye will traverse either the interior , that is the concave side of the curve , or the convex . If it traverses the ...
Page 144
... ogee , may be further con- firmed by observing that the employment of this peculiar foliage in crockets accompanies the ogee in its purest forms ; is in itself the result of a gradual growth ; and died away with the intro- duction of ...
... ogee , may be further con- firmed by observing that the employment of this peculiar foliage in crockets accompanies the ogee in its purest forms ; is in itself the result of a gradual growth ; and died away with the intro- duction of ...
Contents
Collection des Mémoires relatifs à lHistoire de France | 3 |
Objections to and Remarks upon Mr Sergeant Tal | 7 |
Incidents of Travel in Central America Chiapas | 52 |
Copyright | |
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Adams ancient appears arch architecture architrave ascending beautiful Bishop of Beauvais building capital punishment carbonic acid Catherwood Central America Chajul character Christian church Copan cornice curve CXXXVII death distance doubt Egyptian English fact favour fear feeling feet fish genius give Gothic Gothic architecture Grecian Guatimala hand heart Holy honour hope imagination Indians intellectual interest isthmus of Panama Joan labour less liberty light literary Lord Lucretia LXIX Margaret ment mind moral mountains natural never Nicaragua object observed ogee ornaments Palenque peculiar pediment perhaps plain poet poetical poetry political present principle Quiché Quirigua readers Rienzi Roman Roman architecture ruined cities seemed seen side sonnet spirit Stephens stone style supposed Temple thought tion told travellers trees truth Uxmal wall whole Wordsworth writings