Page:Victoria, with a description of its principal cities, Melbourne and Geelong.djvu/258

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Smith, Elder and Co. Math of P)t. 'gmUu. MODERN PAINTERS. Imperial Svo. Vol. L Fifth Edition^ ISs. cloth. Vol. II. Fourth Edition, lOs. ed. cloth. " Mr. Rnskin'B work will send the painter more than ever to the study of nature ; wUl train men who have always heen delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere admU«rs will learn how to criticise : thus a pubUc will be educated.** — Blackwood'M Magaxine. " A senerous and impassioned review of the w<^kB of living painters. A hearty and earnest work, mil of deep thought, and developing great and striking trutha in KeL"—BrUiah (iuairterly Review, "A very extraordinary and delightftil book, fUl of truth and goodness, of power and beauty."— ilTorM BriiUh Review, THE STONE?' OF VENICE. Novo complete in Three Vohanes, Imperial 8tM>, with Fiffy'three FUdes and numerous Woodcuts, drawn by the AuOior. Price 51. I5s. 6d.y in embossed cloth, with top^edge gilt. EACH VOLUME MAY BE HAD SEPARATELY, VIZ.— Vol. I. Thb Foitkpations, irtM 21 Plates, price 21. 2s. Vol. II. Thb Sba Stobibs, with 20 Plates, price 21. 2s. Vol.. in. The Fajll, with 12 Plates, price IL Us. ed. " This book is one which, perhaps, no other man could have wntten, and one fbr which the world ought to be and will be thankftil. It is in the highest degree eloquent, acute, stimulathur to thought, and fertile in suggestion. It shows a power of practical criticism which, when fixed on a definite ottlect, nothing absurd or evil can withstand ; and a power of appreciation which has restored treasures of beauty to mankind. It will, we are convinced, elevate taste and intellect, raise the tone of moral feeling, kindle benevolence towards men, and increase the lore and fear of Qnd"— Timet, '* The * Stones of Venice* is the production of an earnest, religious, progressive, and inibrmed mind. The author of this essay on architecture has condensed into it a poetic apprehension, the firuit of awe of Qod, and delight in nature; a knowledge, love, and Just estimate of art; a holding fest to fisct and repudiation of hearsay ; an historic breadth, and a fearless challenge of existing social problems, whose union we know not where to find paralleled."— tSfpeefo^or. " No one who has visited Venice can read thia book without having a richer glow thrown over his remembrances of that city * and fbr those who have not, Mr. Ruskin paints it with a firmness of outline and vividness of colouring that will bring it belbre the imagination with Uie force of reality.'*— ^«rary Gazette.

    • This work shows that Mr. Rusktn*s powers of composition and criticism were never In

greater force. His eloquence is as rich, his enthusiasm as hearty, his sympathy for all that is high and noble in art as keen as ever. The book, like all he writes, is manly and high-minded, and, as usual, keeps the attention alive to the la8t.**-^(7iMirdiafi. THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE. Second Edition, with Fourteen Plates drawn by the Author. Imperial Svo, II. Is. doth.

    • By the ' Seven Lamps of Architecture,' we understand Mr. Ruskin to mean the seven

fundamental and cardinal laws, the observance of and obedience to which are indispensable to the architect, who would deserve the name. The polltioian, the moralist, the divine, will find in it ample store of instructive matter, as well as the artist. The author of this work belongs to a class of thinkers of whom we have too few among xu.**—Bxaminer,

    • Mr. Rnskin's book bears so unmistakeably the marks of keen and accurate observation, of

a true and subfle Judgment and refined sense of beauty. Joined with so much earnestness, ao noble a sense of the purposes and bnsiness of art, and such a command of rich and glowing language, that it cannot but tell powerfhlly in producing a more religious view of the uses of architecture, and a deeper insight into its artistic prind^es." — Ovardian.

    • A lively, poetical, and thoughtfiil book; rich tai refined criticism and glowtag eloquenoe.

Mr. Ruakin's poetry is always to the purpose of his doctrines, and alwayi the vehicle of aeate thought and profermd fbeling."- /VoMr*)! Magatine. Digitized by Google