. Ariadne florentina; six lectures on wood and metal engraving, with appendix; given before the University of Oxford in Michaelmas term, 1872. . he virgin-tribute paid by howling TroyTo the sea monster, f Theseus is the Attic Hercules, however; andTroy may have been a sort of house of call formythical monsters, in the view of midland shep-herds. * Explained as a game still played by the shepherds,cowkeepers, etc., in the midland counties,■j- See Iliad, 20, 145. / APPENDIX. ARTICLE I. NOTES ON THE PRESENT STATE OF ENGRAVINGIN ENGLAND. 229. I HAVE long deferred the completion ofthis book, becaus


. Ariadne florentina; six lectures on wood and metal engraving, with appendix; given before the University of Oxford in Michaelmas term, 1872. . he virgin-tribute paid by howling TroyTo the sea monster, f Theseus is the Attic Hercules, however; andTroy may have been a sort of house of call formythical monsters, in the view of midland shep-herds. * Explained as a game still played by the shepherds,cowkeepers, etc., in the midland counties,■j- See Iliad, 20, 145. / APPENDIX. ARTICLE I. NOTES ON THE PRESENT STATE OF ENGRAVINGIN ENGLAND. 229. I HAVE long deferred the completion ofthis book, because I had hoped to find timeto show, in some fulness, the grounds for myconviction that engraving, and the study of it,since the development of the modern finishedschool, have been ruinous to European know-ledge of art. But I am more and more busiedin what I believe to be better work, and canonly with extreme brevity state here the con-clusions of many years thought. These, in several important particulars, havebeen curiously enforced on me by the careless-ness shown by the picture dealers about thecopies from Turner which it has cost 0R£DERE OSIGNORDESIGNORICHENEILOFrrtRb^OK^GOI SINPM SOLO£CHE CVfiDtlRBGCl TVTTl INOSTRI ERRORlSTANDOASSiBBPE SVNfLS^/PtRNO CHOTl!ASCHCLTaVNPoCHO£:) vK i REGGl NCI ORt AlTlSS ryv/voCOITVOAA^OKECHEITAKTO DCIC15S/AO >ro Obsdiente Domino vcci hominis. ARTICLE I. 257 Ward and me * fifteen years of study togetherto enable ourselves to make. They are onlycopies, say they, — nobody will look atthem. 230. It never seems to occur even to themost intelligent persons that an engraving alsois only a copy, and a copy done with refusalof colour, and with disadvantage of means inrendering shade. But just because this utterlyinferior copy can be reduplicated, and intro-duces a different kind of skill, in anothermaterial, people are content to lose all thecomposition, and all the charm, of the original,—so f


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjec, booksubjectengraving