. Painting, sculpture, and architecture as representative arts : an essay in comparative aesthetics. , is that of man. But his is exactly. FIQ. 46—FIQUKE BY LINES. See pages 90, 97, 9^. the form that is fitted to make the strongest appeal to ourcombined instinctive and reflective, in other words, to ouremotive nature. It seems necessary in this place, therefore, to say some-thing about the representative possibilities of the humanform ; and of this, first, as determined by the blending in REGLLAKITY IX OUTLINES. 97


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