When it does not, so much are we accustomed to expect it, that one feels as if there has been a debasement of the Art. It is, fortunately, not possible in this country for any man to defile and defame humanity and still be called an artist; the development... The Pen and the Book - Seite 93von Sir Walter Besant - 1899 - 347 SeitenVollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| Sir Walter Besant - 1884 - 54 Seiten
...not possible in this country for any man to defile and defame humanity and still be called an artist; the development of modern sympathy, the growing reverence...readers, and lend to his work, whether he will or not,_a_moral purpose, so clearly marked that it has become practically a law of English Fiction. We... | |
| Walter Besant - 1884 - 78 Seiten
...not possible in this country for any man to defile and defame humanity and still be called an artist; the development of modern sympathy, the growing reverence for the individual, the ever-widening love of tilings beautiful and the appreciation of lives made beautiful, by devotion and self-denial,'' the... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1887 - 638 Seiten
...possible in this country for any man to defile and defame humanity and still be called an artist ; the development of modern sympathy, the growing reverence...a time of doubt, are all forces which act strongly npon the artist as well as upon his readers, and lend to his work, whether he will or not, a moral... | |
| 1900 - 1034 Seiten
...tragic results of sin, of illicit love, of jealousy, of vice and crime of all sorts. Says Besant : The development of modern sympathy, the growing reverence for the individual, the ever widening love of things beautiful and the appreciation of lives made beautiful by devotion and... | |
| Mackenzie Bell - 1927 - 528 Seiten
...possible in this country for any man to defile and defame humanity and still be called an artist ; the development of modern sympathy, the growing reverence for the individual, the ever- widening love of things beautiful and the appreciation of lives made beautiful by devotion and... | |
| Walter F. Greiner, Fritz Kemmler - 1997 - 282 Seiten
...not possible in this country for any man to defile and defame humanity and still be called an artist; the development of modern sympathy, the growing reverence for the individual, the ever-widening love es of things beautiful and the appreciation of lives made beautiful by devotion and self-denial, the... | |
| Stephen Regan - 2001 - 594 Seiten
...not possible in this country for any man to defile and defame humaniry and still be called an attist; the development of modern sympathy, the growing reverence for the individual, the over-widening love of things beautiful and the appreciation of lives made beautiful by devotion and... | |
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