. UU eynell LIBRARY University of California Irvine Ptf JOHN RUSKIN BY X^L C. 7T MRS. MEYNELL NEW YORK DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY 1900 Copyright, 1900, BY I)oni>, MKAD AND COMPANY. Contents PAGE I. INTRODUCTION i II. MODERN PAINTERS (FIRST VOLUME) .... 9 III. MODERN PAINTERS (SECOND VOLUME) ... 36 IV. MODERN PAINTERS (THIRD AND FOURTH VOL- UMES) 46 V. MODERN PAINTERS (FIFTH VOLUME) .... 64 VI. THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE ... 79 VII. THE STONES OF VENICE 98 VIII. PRE-RAPHAELITISM 117 IX. LECTURES ON ARCHITECTURE AND PAINTING . 121 X. ELEMENTS OF DRAWING 125 XI. THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF ART 129 XII. THE Two PATHS 133 XIII. UNTO THIS LAST 145 XIV. SESAME. AND LILIES 158 XV. THE CROWN OF WILD OLIVE 171 XVI. TIME AND TIDE BY WEARE AND TYNE . . . 175 XVII. THE QUEEN OF THE AIR 181 XVIII. LECTURES ON ART 186 XIX. ARATRA PENTELICI 200 XX. THE EAGLE'S NEST 205 XXI. ARIADNE FLORENTINA 217 XXII. VAL D'ARNO 225 XXIII. DEUCALION 233 XXIV. PROSERPINA 240 XXV. GUIDE BOOKS 247 XXVI. FORS CLAVIGERA 259 XXVII. PR^TERITA 273 CHRONOLOGY 283 v Modern English Writers MATTHEW ARNOLD . . . Professor SAINTSBURY. R. L. STEVENSON . L. COPE CORNFORD. JOHN RUSKIN Mrs. MEYNELL. TENNYSON ..... ANDREW LANG. GEORGE ELIOT .... SIDNEY LEE. BROWNING C. H. HERFORD. FROUDE JOHN OLIVER HOBBES. HUXLEY EDWARD CLODD. THACKERAY CHARLES WHIBLEY. DICKENS W. E. HENLEY. ** Other Volumes -will be announced in due course. DEDICATED TO LIEUT.-GENERAL SIR W. F. BUTLER, K.C.B. " A British Officer who is singularly of one mind with me on matters regarding the nation's honour" PREFACE TO RUSKIN'S " BIBLE OF AMIENS." JOHN RUSKIN CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION JOHN RUSKIN'S life was not only centred, but limited, by the places where he was born and taught, and by the things he loved. The London suburb and the English lake-side for his homes, Oxford for his place first of study and then of teaching, usually one beaten road by France, Switzerland, and Italy for his annual journeys these closed the scene of his dwell- ings and travellings. There was a water-colour drawing by his father that interested him when he was a little boy in muslin and a sash (as Northcote painted him, with his own chosen " blue hills " for a background), and this drawing hung over his bed when he died ; the evenings of his last days were passed in the chair wherein he preached in play a sermon be- fore he could well pronounce it. The nursery lessons and the household ways of the home on Herne Hill partly remained with him, reverend and unquestion- able, to his last day. And yet the student of the work done in this quiet life of repetitions is somewhat shaken from the steadfastness of study by two things multitude and movement. The multitude is in the 2 JOHN RUSKIN thoughts of this great and original mind, and the movement is the world's. Ruskin's enormous work has never had steady auditors or spectators : it may be likened to a sidereal sky beheld from an earth upon the wing. Many, innumerable, are the points that seem to shift and journey, to the shifting eye. Partly it was he himself who altered his readers ; and partly they changed with the long change of a nation ; and partly they altered with successive and recurrent moods. John Ruskin wrote first for his contem- poraries, young men ; fifty years later he wrote for the same readers fifty years older, as well as for their sons. And hardly has a mob of Shakespeare's shown more sudden, unanimous, or clamorous versions and reversions of opinion than those that have acclaimed and rejected, derided and divided, his work, once to ban and bless, and a second time to bless and ban. Political economy in 1860 had but one orthodoxy, which was that of "Manchester"; scientifically, it held competition in production and in distribution, with the removal (as far as was possible to coherent human society) of all intervention of explicit social legislation, to be favourable to the wealth of nations ; and ethically it held that if only the world would leave opposing egoisms absolutely free, and would give self-interest the opportunity of perfection, a violent, hostile, mechanical equity and justice would come to pass. Only let men resolve never to relax or cede for the sake of forbearance or compassion, and the Manchester system would be found to work for good. In 1860 it was much in favour of this doctrine that INTRODUCTION. 3 itself and all its workings were alike unbeautiful to mind and eye. Men might regret the vanishing beauty of the world, but they were convinced that it was the ugly thing that was "useful," and that, as it did not attract, it would not deceive. Before the clos- ing of the century all men changed their mind. But when Ruskin warned them that scientifically their " orthodox " economy made for an intolerable poverty, that ethically it aimed at making men less human, and that practically it could never, while man was no less than man, have the entire and universal freedom of action upon which its hope of ultimate justice de- pended ; when he recommended a more organic and less mechanical equity he was hooted to silence. Ruskin first commended the rejoining together of art and handicraft, put asunder in the decline of the " Renaissance " ; and for this too he was generally derided, because men were sure that the ugly thing was the useful and the comfortable. John Ruskin would show them that it was neither of these, but they would have it that he was showing them merely that it was ugly. That is, he was accused of teach- ing sentimentality in public economy and in art, whereas his teaching dealt with human character and ultimate utility. But the moving world has rejected his teaching more violently after fifty years, in two things more momentous than the rest : it has gone further in that enquiry as to the origin of the ideas of moral good and evil against which Ruskin warned it in the words of Carlyle ; and it has multiplied its luxuries. By 4 JOHN RUSKIN these two actions it has effectually rejected the teach- ing of Ruskin. " The moving world " : assuredly this great thinker gave years of thought to the discovery of moral causes for the enormous losses of mankind, and did not sufficiently confess the obscure motive power of change. Byzantine architecture was overcome by Gothic, not only because Gothic was strongly north- western, but because it was new ; Gothic was sup- planted by the Renaissance, not only because Gothic was enfeebled, but because the Renaissance was new. He saw the beauty of the hour with eyes and heart so full of felicity that he cried, " Stay, thou art so fair ! " It never stayed, passing by the law but how shall we dare to call that a law whereof we know not the cause, the end, or the sanctions ? Let us rather, ig- norant yet vigilant, call it the custom of the uni- verse. John Ruskin himself has told us his life in exquisite detail. He underwent in childhood a strict discipline, common in those times, had no toys, was " whipped," was compelled to a self-denial that he perceived his elders did not practise upon themselves. It was the asceticism of the day, reserved for the innocent. Charles Dickens did more than any man to make the elderly ashamed of it. Raskin's mother kept the training of the child in her own hands, and subjected him and herself to a hardly credible humiliation by the reading aloud, in alternate verses, of the whole Bible, Lcvitical Law and all, beginning again at Genesis when the Apocalypse was finished. She was INTRODUCTION 5 her husband's senior, and, like him, of the Evangelical sect. She dedicated this her only child "to the Lord " before his birth, and when his genius appeared hoped he would be a bishop. He obeyed her, tended and served her, till at ninety years old she died. John Ruskin's father was a Scottish wine-merchant, well educated and liberally interested in the arts. He married his first cousin, daughter of an inn-keeper at Croydon, prospered greatly in trade by his partnership with Telford and Domecq, and rose in the world. His sister was married to a tanner at Perth ; his wife's sister to a baker at Croydon. His son, born at 54 Hunter Street, Brunswick Square, on February 8, 1819, took his first little journeys on his visits to these aunts. The child remembered the street home, but it was in his Herne Hill home and in the Herne Hill garden that he became possessed of the antiquities of childhood. The boy learnt, in his companionship with his father and mother, to love Scott, Rogers, and Byron, and he remained nobly docile to the admirations of his dear elders. Otherwise, one should have needed to quote some phrase of his own to define the feebleness of the Italy ) the cold corruption of heart of Don Juan, the inventory of nature's beauties versified by Scott. Rus- kin was impulsive ; sometimes he loved a thing first seen more than he was to love it later ; but generally he loved the customs of his sweet childhood. He read with a tutor a nonconformist minister, Dr. Andrews, the father of the lady who became Coventry Patmore's first wife ; matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford, in 1836, where he won theNewdigate prize (Sahette and 6 JOHN RUSKIN Eltphanta the subject) in 1839, became Honorary Student of Christ Church and Honorary Fellow of Corpus Christi, and Slade Professor (Chair of Fine Arts founded by Felix Slade) in 1870, to be three times re-elected. His boyish education had been furthered by annual journeys with his father and mother, first in Britain, on wine-selling business, and then abroad, always in a travelling carriage. The three used to set out in May of all these years ; and the last journey was in 1859, in Germany. Early in his teens the boy fell in love with the daughter of his father's partner, Mr. Domecq, and suffered a decline of health in his disappointment. But the friendship with Turner (if that could be called a friendship which seemed to have such strange reserves) was the central fact of his life as a young man. The little family took up its abode in a larger and more worldly house, 163 Denmark Hill, in 1843. I" 1848 Ruskin married, most unfortunately; his wife left him a few years later, the marriage was legally annulled, and he lived again, as though he were a boy, with his parents. More than twenty years later a lady who had been his girlish disciple and whom he had long loved, but who seemed unable to decide for or against a marriage with him, died estranged. This solitary life was consoled during all its middle and later terms by the affection of his cousin, Mrs. Arthur Severn, who had lived with his mother in her widowhood, and bore him company, with her husband and children, until his death in his home at Brant- wood, C'oniston, on the loth of January, 1900. INTRODUCTION 7 John Ruskin had been a writer from his babyhood. The first expectation was of the poetic genius, but his poems were never more than mediocre. His prose asserted itself quickly, for he was only twenty-four when the first volume of Modern Painters was pub- lished. His renunciation of the sectarian religion of his parents will be told further on. He was always essentially religious, but he passed, during the later maturity of his mind, through some years of doubt as to authoritative doctrine, returning to definite beliefs in course of time. His Oxford and other series of lec- tures, and the undertaking of the St. George's Com- pany, will be touched upon in this volume in their place amongst his works. Of those works I have attempted the analysis, slight and brief, but essential, with quotations from beautiful and indispensable pages. I intend the following essay to be principally a hand- book of Ruskin. In his central or later-central years John Ruskin was a thin and rather tall man, very English (Scottish in fact, but I mean to indicate the physique that looks conspicuous on the Continent), active and light, with sloping shoulders ; he had a small face with large features, the eyebrows, nose, and under-lip prominent ; his eyes were blue, and the blue tie by the peculiar property of a strong blue to increase a neighbouring lesser blue, instead of quenching it made them look the bluest of all blue eyes. He had the r in the throat, the r of the Parisians, which gives a certain weakness to English speech ; and in lecturing he had a rather clerical inflexion. He was a disciple (as in his rela- 8 JOHN RUSKIN tion to Carlyle and later to Professor Norton), a mas- ter, a pastor, a chivalrous servant to the young and weak, but too anxious, too lofty, to be in the equal sense a friend. He was broken by sorrow long before he died. His purposes had been, for the time, defeated. His final renunciation of the Slade Professorship (he had resigned it before for one interval in a time of deep grief ) was due to the vote passed to establish a physiological laboratory (to establish, that is, vivisection) at the museum at Oxford ; he took this for a sign of the contradiction of the world. He has left his museum at Sheffield, a linen industry at Keswick, and handloom weaving at Langdale, fairly successful, the Turner drawings arranged ( at indescribable labour ) in the National Gallery, and his public gifts. But much of his work that was not the written word passed, like the drawing-lessons he had given to working-men at their classes in Great Ormond Street and in the fields, in 1857. But it was not failure or rejection, or even partial and futile acceptance, that finally and interiorly bowed him. " Your poor John Ruskin " (his signa- ture in writing to one who loved and understood him) was the John Ruskin who never pardoned himself for stopping short of the whole renunciation of a Saint Francis. Lonely and unhappy does the student per- ceive him to have been who was one of the greatest of great men of all ages ; but the student who is most cut to the heart by that perception is compelled to wish him to have been not less but more a man sacri- ficed. CHAPTER II "MODERN PAINTERS" THE FIRST VOLUME (1843) " THE picture which is looked to for an interpreta- tion of nature is invaluable, but the picture which is taken as a substitute for nature had better be burned." John Ruskin began to write Modern Painters in order to teach men how they should see Turner to be like nature, whereas the " critics " of that day called him unnatural. The " critics " of our days would leave that word to their wives and daughters. But it was a word for the best reviews in the middle of the cen- tury. In order to prove this delicate point as to the interpretation of nature and its value, John Ruskin, then very young, wrote the first half of the first vol- ume, and the discussion of Turner follows, with the universal digressions that make of this volume and its fellows a work at once of unity of motive, and of multitudinous variety. The first volume is written with extreme explicatory labour. Having thought out a certain difficult thesis, the writer bends every power to the task of communication. What he has to im- pose is no state or grace or affection, what he has to communicate is no conjecture, nor does he make his way by that attractive divination of authorship which is companionable, now at fault, now halting, now 9 IO JOHN RUSKIN leading with confidence a new and untried way. No more than a treatise of science is this work designed to bid the reader to that table of entertainment, the art of English prose. It is only at intervals, and at the end of a clause of explanation, that this author, who has excited so many enthusiasms, some futile and some worthy, by an over-abundant eloquence a pure style but somewhat prodigal adorns his argu- ment with a cadence, a group of beautiful warm words, as it were alight and in time, " musical " and " pictorial," the vital, just, and brilliant phrase that afterwards took the nation. The argument is difficult difficult in the prolonged study made by him who wrought it from the begin- ning to the end, most difficult to present sufficiently in a brief commentary such as this. What Ruskin had to prove was that a few greatly admired masters Salvator Rosa, Caspar Poussin, and Claude, espe- cially, were inferior as painters of landscape to a certain number of English artists at work about the middle of the nineteenth century ; but their inferiority also to the earlier masters whose landscape was but an accessory, and to the Venetians of the great school of colour, whose landscape has been mistaken for arbi- trary decoration, makes so large an incident of the work that the title becomes questionable. Modern Painter* proved to be a great apology for the art of the past, and of all periods of the past, for Gainsbor- ough profits splendidly : the antithesis disappears. Salvator Rosa, Caspar Poussin, and Claude have, be- sides, ceased (thanks to Ruskin's own teaching) to " MODERN PAINTERS " II have the importance that the critics of sixty years ago assigned to them ; their names do not stand, in our thoughts to-day, opposed conspicuously to those of later men now long dead, and brought, in our view, near to those predecessors by the perspective of time. The slight anomaly of the name Modern Painters is increased for us now ; but that name represents much that is of significance. The admiration of Salvator Rosa and the contempt of Turner, the fact that Claude was a seventeenth century painter and Turner was new, are things important in the history of the authorship of Modern Painters. Let it be noted here that a writer to whom was committed by one of the principal reviews the criticism of art in 1842 preferred a Mr. Lee to Gainsborough " he is superior to him always in subject, composition, and variety " not with an irresponsible preference, but with the prefer- ence of a connoisseur, "subject, composition, and variety," not being things whereof the first comer is able so to print opinions. " Shade of Gains- borough ! " says Ruskin " deep-though ted, solemn Gainsborough, forgive us for rewriting this sentence." Lee was a painter more insular than it is permitted to a painter to be, piecemeal and literal, and very cold in colour; "well-intentioned, simple, free from affec- tation," and doing his work " with constant reference to nature," says the preface to the second edition of Modern Painters, but lacking " those technical quali- ties which are more especially the object of an artist's admiration." This phrase is quoted here because it is one of many that should keep the reader straight in 12 JOHN RUSKIN the following of the doctrine of this book. A reader who had spared himself the pains of close following might think Ruskin to have taught that " well-inten- tioned " work bearing a " constant reference to na- ture " had nearly all the qualities, whereas in this passage he declares it to have, virtually, none. The evil of the ancient landscape art (Ruskin per- sistently calls it ancient, but let the reader bear in mind that he is in the act of comparing it with more ancient as well as with modern) " lies, I believe," says this preface to the second edition, " In the painter's taking upon him to modify God's works at his pleasure, casting the shadow of himself on all he sees. We shall not pass through a single gallery of old art without hearing this topic of praise confidently advanced. The sense of artificialness, . the clumsiness of combination by which the meddling of man is made evident, and the feebleness of his hand branded on the inorganisation of his monstrous creature, are advanced as a proof of in- ventive power." We ought to note the word " inorganisation." For we shall be willing to take it from Ruskin that the painter convicted of that is the one condemned ; he who destroys in order to reconstruct produces inor- ganised work, and work therefore without vitality. But a certain foreseen and judicial re-arrangement of natural facts a new but indestructive relation proves that very organic quality, and is defended, not once or twice, but a hundred times in the teaching of Mod- ern Painters. And only by exquisitely close reading "MODERN PAINTERS" 13 can we distinguish and reconcile, so as to take this defence and also what follows : "In his observations on the foreground of the San Pietro Martire, Sir Joshua advances, as matter of praise, that the plants are discriminated 'just as much as was necessary for variety, and no more.' Had this foreground been occupied by a group of animals, we should have been surprised to be told that the lion, the serpent, and the dove . . . were distinguished from each other just as much as was necessary for variety, and no more. ... If the distinctive forms of animal life are meant for our reverent ob- servance, is it likely that those of vegetable life are made merely to be swept away ? " (In this case Sir Joshua, according to Modern Painters, was wrong even as to facts, and Titian, like Raphael, was accurate in his foreground flowers.) Sir Joshua separates, says Ruskin, " as chief . enemies, the details and the whole, which an artist cannot be great unless he reconciles." " Details perfect in unity, and contributing to a final purpose, are the sign of the production of a consummate master." This is surely a passage of singular difficulty. Truth to nature the statement of no falsehood and the doing of no destructive violence is an intelligible condition of the art whereof this is the apostolate ; but detail ? Is detail, or explicit recognition of minor facts, really the " sign of the production of a consummate mas- ter " ? " Details contributing to a final purpose " seems to be a phrase permitting the ignoring of details that do not contribute. And what does the Impres- 14 JOHN RUSKIN sionist ask more than this ? A powerful artist, says Ruskin in a previous sentence, " necessarily looks upon complete parts as the very sign of error, weak- ness, and ignorance." Once for all, this should an- swer the common and careless reading of Modern Painters and the rest. Leaving the question of detail, then, aside, or leav- ing it, if once for all is hardly possible, for a time, we shall do justice to Ruskin's teaching by choosing from his most dogmatic pages the following passages that bear upon the larger question of truth : " When there are things in the foreground of Sal- vator, of which I cannot pronounce whether they be granite, or slate, or tufa, I affirm that there is in them neither harmonious union nor simple effect, but simple monstrosity. . . . The elements of brutes can only mix in corruption, the elements of inorganic na- ture only in annihilation. We may, if we choose, put together centaur monsters : but they must still be half man, half horse ; they cannot be both man and horse, nor either man or horse." And this: " That only should be considered a picture in which the spirit, not the materials, observe, but the animat- ing emotion, of many . . . studies is concen- trated and exhibited by the aid of long-studied, pain- fully chosen forms ; idealised in the right sense of the word, not by audacious liberty of that faculty of de- grading God's works which man calls his * imagina- tion,' but by perfect assertion of entire knowledge wrought out with that noblest industry which concentrates profusion into point, and transforms ac- "MODERN PAINTERS" 15 cumulation into structure. . . . There is ... more ideality in a great artist's selection and treatment of roadside weeds and brook-worn pebbles than in all the struggling caricature of the meaner mind, which heaps its foreground with colossal columns, and heaves impossible mountains into the encumbered sky." Those columns and those mountains get no respect from any one at present, but it must not be forgotten that the book before us was in part written to over- throw them. All this is from the later-written preface. We come next to Modern Painters, Part I. Section I, the earliest important page of one of the greatest authors of our incomparable literature. It is a laborious page, in great part filled by one sentence explaining that public opinion can hardly be right upon matters of art until, with the lapse of time, it shall have accepted guidance. The same chapter declares war explicitly upon the " old masters " in landscape, and the reader has to add to the names of Salvator Rosa, Caspar Poussin, and Claude, those of Cuyp, Berghem, Both, Ruysdael, Hobbema, Teniers (in landscape), Paul Potter, Canaletto, " and the various Van somethings and Back somethings, more especially and malignantly those who have libelled the sea." In the chapter, soon following, " On Ideals of Power," is to be espe- cially noted the just thought : " It is falsely said of great men that they waste their lofty powers on unworthy objects. The object cannot be unworthy of the power which it brings into exertion, because nothing can be accom- l6 JOHN RUSKIN plished by a greater power which can be accomplished by a less, any more than bodily strength can be ex- erted where there is nothing to resist it. ... Be it remembered, then, Power is never wasted." (Ruskin, at this time and ever after, used " which " where " that " would be both more correct and less inelegant. He probably had the habit from him who did more than any other to disorganise the English language that is, Gibbon.) The chapter on " Imitation " is in part addressed to the correction of a half-educated pleasure, since then generally relinquished even by the half-educated, and even in the case of popular pictures. Amid much that is less valuable, the reader finds this obvious but excellent distinction : " A marble figure does not look like what it is not : it looks like marble, and like the form of a man. It does not look like a man, which it is not, but like the form of a man, which it is. ... The chalk out- line of the bough of a tree on paper is not an imita- tion ; it looks like chalk and paper not like wood, and that which it suggests to the mind is not properly said to be like the form of a bough, it is the form of a bough." The contrast is, of course, with work in colour, and it is finely made, with the conclusion, for all the arts alike, " Ideas of truth are the foundation, and ideas of imitation the destruction, of art." On the chapter " Of Ideas of Relation" the criticism of thirty years ago, led by France on the initiative of Theophile Gautier, and generally proclaimed by a generation "MODERN PAINTERS" 17 now nearly dispossessed, joined issue with Ruskin. He teaches that art has its highest exercise in "the invention of such incidents and thoughts as can be expressed in words as well as on canvas, and are totally independent of any means of art but such as may serve for the bare suggestion of them." Let me give the instance cited in the text : " The principal object in the foreground of Turner's 4 Building of Carthage ' is a group of children sailing toy boats. The exquisite choice of this incident, as expressive of the ruling passion which was to be the source of future greatness, in preference to the tumult of busy stonemasons or arming soldiers, is quite as appreciable when it is told as when it is seen, it has nothing to do with the technical difficulties of paint- ing : a scratch of the pen would have conveyed the idea. . . . Claude, in subjects of the same kind, commonly introduces people carrying red trunks with iron locks about ; the intellect can have no occupation here ; we must look to the imitation or to nothing. Consequently, Turner rises above Claude in the very instant of the conception of his picture." Are we really required to connect this foreground in- cident essentially with the " conception " of Turner's picture ? And how about Turner's pictures wherein no such unlandscape-like accessory occurs ? Ruskin was, it is evident in a score of places, no musician. How should a musician consent to the judgment that his art should do its highest and most musicianly work in uttering thoughts that another art might have served ? Is not an absolute melody, or an absolute musical phrase, or a harmony Batti^ batti. 1 8 JOHN RUSKIN the opening notes of Parsifal, This is My Body from liach's St. Matthew, or the chords of PurcelFs Winter aloof not far, but different from the several worlds of the other arts ? The man who has not music in his soul may perhaps be a man debarred from thought that is not, in some sense, literature ; the other arts, albeit distinct enough, may not have the power that music has to prove the distinction in the ear that is able to hear. Therefore he who has not the car lacks the strongest of the proofs that the arts are not interchangeable. The able eye will not do so much. To advance such a conjecture here may be something like presumption, but it is intended to explain one of the few faults or weak places in the great body of doctrine of Modern Painters. The least thoughtful reader has by rote the accusation against Ruskin that his teaching on art abounds in errors and u inconsistencies." The present writer finds no such abundance of faults in the great argument. There, however, is one. From the chapter on " Ideas of Power " may be cited the admirable explanation of the conviction of power produced in all minds, ignorant and educated, by the "sketch," or by the beginning. " The first five chalk touches bring a head into existence out of nothing. No five touches in the whole course of the work will ever do so much as these." Toward completion the decrease of respective effect continues. We ought not, Ruskin tells us, to prefer this sensation of power to the intellectual estimate of power that comes as the work is developed. Those who take, "MODERN PAINTERS" 19 without the necessary care for precise meanings what he has said elsewhere against Michelangiolo should check their own exaggeration by the sentence in which he judges that master to be the only father of art from whose work we get both the sensation and the intellectual estimate of power, and equally. The chapter " Of Ideas of Truth " entangles us once again in the intricacies of this argument. " No falsehood," it assures us, was ever beautiful. But granting that the beautiful centaur is not in this subtle sense a falsehood, does the same dispensation hold good in the case of a brown shadow a fictitious brown shadow, even cast upon a twilight road in order that a bright cloud may be seen to shine ? The painter has not nature's materials wherewith to make his picture match hers; and that her foreground is light whilst yet her cloud shines does not make the same relation possible to man, who does not hold the pencils of light. Truth as it is in a paint-box can be but relative. This is the obvious protest of every reader. Nay, does not Ruskin himself justify Rubens who out of gaiety and vitality of heart and not be- cause of awful devotion to one beautiful and hardly accessible thing, like the luminosity of a cloud puts the sun in one part of the sky and draws the sun- beams from another, and, again, casts shadows at right angles to the light ? " Bold and frank licences " he names these no worse ; albeit with this fine warn- ing : " The young artist must keep in mind that the painter's greatness consists not in his taking, but in his atoning for, them." It remains for him who 2O JOHN RUSK.IN would enter into the matter to follow the argument of Modern Painters as its author presents it and as no summary comment is able to represent it. Let it only be added here that the reason Ruskin giv;s for the abhorrence of " falsehood " that nature is im- measurably superior to all that the human mind can conceive seems to be precisely a reason why man might be content with one or two truths at a time and reverently glad of the means (fictitious shadow amongst them) of securing the one or two ; not in disorganisation, but in the unity of, as it were, a dazzled pictorial vision, confessing its limitations by fewness, and its love of natural facts by closing with the few. If Turner was so supreme an artist as to have stolen that fire from heaven which is the light, why still there are painters who have not it and yet have not deserved to die. But to say so of Turner would be a mere trick of speech. Not even he had more than a paint-box ; but doubtless he was the most divine landscape painter that ever lived. And his great panegyrist magnifies him for the sake of that natural truth whereof he writes: "To him who does not search it out it is darkness, as it is to him who does, infinity." The chapter on "The Relative Importance of Truths" intends to prove, " if it be not self-evident," that " generality gives importance to the subject, and limitation or particularity to the predicate," and proves it by admirable reasoning. From " Truths of Col- our" might be cited something difficult to reconcile with Ruskin's judgment elsewhere in favour of the "MODERN PAINTERS" 21 Tuscan colourists (local-colourists, that is) and against the chiaroscurists, even Rembrandt. But here and in other places it is barely just to bear in mind the age of the writer of the first volume of Modern Painters, and the half century following during which he thought out incessantly the same themes. Wonderful was this mind of four and twenty ; it would have been mon- strous had it undergone none of the change that comes of mental experience, and of a pushing-on in the un- dertaken way. And this brings us to the end of the first seven chapters of this first volume chapters of principles, which are applied with a large sweep of allusion to the works of all schools. When, in the course of this most interesting section, we find fidelity of detail again commended, let us remember that neglect of the spirit and truth as well as of the letter of natural things was characteristic of the English painters be- fore this book itself did so much to alter the manner of our school. We are used now to the English landscape that is the " corrupt following " of this apostle, Ruskin, and is full of literal detail ; but it did not exist when Modern Painters was written. It was necessary to tell people accustomed to a brown tree and a tapering stem that Raphael, Titian, Ghir- landajo, and Perugino painted little mallows, straw- berries, and all wayside things with devotion and precision, that Masaccio drew a true mountain, that the Umbrians painted true skies, that Giotto traced the form of a rock, and the Venetians of a tree, in their right anatomy. It was insular then to be coarse 22 JOHN RUSKIN and general ; and the teaching of detail was liberal education. The chapter on " Application " is re- markable for its generosity. Austere had been the principles in the setting forth, but the applications give absolution, I know not quite how consciously, assuredly not arbitrarily, but sometimes to the reader's wonder, seeing what has gone before. A noble con- vention is excused, and the passion of one man is ac- knowledged to be sudden and of another to be slow. It is rarely indeed that the application of the stren- uous principles is made by Ruskin to condemn any man altogether, if that man have genius ; the final reference is to that ; pardon is for the great, and the court of judgment that grants it cannot publish its rules. The Dutch painters are unhouseled, and so is Domenichino. The work of that Bolognese is named by Ruskin not failure, but " perpetration and com- mission." The painter of the second greatest picture in the world, as the connoisseur, during a century or two, held the "Communion of St. Jerome" to be, is here declared " palpably incapable of doing anything good, great, or right." He who said this, studying Domenichino for himself, a student twenty-three years old or less, against the world, held a " consistency " and knew it. And, of course, the landscape painters already named Caspar Poussin, Canalctto, and the rest arc unforgiven. It is through a series of criti- cisms on the Royal Academy of the " Forties " that we come at last to the detail of the work of Turner. At the outset Ruskin traces the foundation of Turner's greatness in his painting of things intimate " MODERN PAINTERS " 23 and long loved. The Yorkshire downs taught him, for instance, the masses of mountain drawing. With something that looks like rashness Ruskin says of any landscape painter that " if he attempt to impress on his landscapes any other spirit than that he has felt, and to make them the landscapes of other times, it is all over with him, at least in the degree in which such reflected moonshine takes the place of the genuine light of the present day." If in some other place such a judgment as this is to be reconciled with the praise of Turner's " Building of Carthage," it is not here. (That picture is, in effect, renounced later on, as, in colour, unworthy of the master.) Moreover, when a great exception is made to the general peril of taking inspirations from afar or from antiquity, in the fine phrase : " Nicola Pisano got nothing but good, the modern French nothing but evil, from the study of the antique ; but Nicola Pisano had a God and a character " ; how is this to be taken as a warn- ing by a student who is not a Frenchman and who has not abandoned the faith than he too has a God and a character ? Yet it is spoken by Ruskin as a warning, nearly as a menace. The study of the deal- ing of Turner with France, Switzerland, and Italy, which follows, and of their dealings with his growing power, is an exquisite one, notwithstanding some cer- tain paradoxes exquisite in regard to that beautiful and diverse Europe, and in regard to the genius. Ruskin says, perhaps, too little rather than too much of the un-Italian spirit of the Italy of Turner's work : 11 1 recollect no instance of Turner's drawing a cypress 24 JOHN RUSKIN except in general terms." The man, I may add, who possessed not, among the many spirits of the woods, the special spirit of the cypress, assuredly could not spiritually paint the country of the hill-village, the belfry, the gold-white simple walls, the pure and re- mote sky pricked with delicate and upright forms on the hill-edge, the country of soft dust and of old col- ours, the country of poverty, which is Italy. An opulent and an elegant Italy of balustrades and gar- dens, and, if one may venture to say so, a country of the ideal past, seems to be Turner's. Of the poplars, of the rivers, of the large skies and the flat valleys of France, Turner became the son by singular sympathy. Ruskin describes the adoption in a brief and lovely passage on the beauties of that domestic France. He tells us that Turner's rendering of Switzerland was generally deficient, but this seems to be said rather on a theory, and we cannot forget the entire praise and wonder bestowed elsewhere on the drawings of Swiss and Savoyard mountains. The " changes introduced by Turner in the received system of art " shall be given in the words of Modern Painters, the page being one of the most important in the work : " It was impossible for him, with all his keen and long-disciplined perceptions, not to feel that the real colour of nature had never been attempted by any school ; and that though conventional representations had been given by the Venetians of sunlight and twi- light by invariably rendering the whites golden and the blues green, yet of the actual, joyous, pure, roseate "MODERN PAINTERS" 25 hues of the external world no record had ever been given. He saw also that the finish and specific gran- deur of nature had been given, but her fulness, space, and mystery, never ; and he saw that the great land- scape-painters had always sunk the lower middle tints of nature in extreme shade, bringing the entire melody of colour as many degrees down as their possible light was inferior to nature's; and that in so doing a gloomy principle had influenced them even in their choice of subject. For the conventional colour he substituted a pure straightforward rendering of fact, as far as was in his power ; and that not of such fact as had been be- fore even suggested, but of all that is most brilliant, beautiful, and inimitable ; he went to the cataract for its iris, to the conflagration for its flames, asked of the sea its intensest azure, of the sky its clearest gold. For the limited space and defined forms of elder landscape he substituted the quantity and the mystery of the vast- est scenes of earth ; and for the subdued chiaroscuro he substituted first a balanced diminution of opposition throughout the scale, and afterwards . . . attempted to reverse the old principle, taking the lowest portion of the scale truly, and merging the upper part in high light. Innovations so daring and so various could not be introduced without corresponding peril ; the diffi- culties that lay in his way were more than any human intellect could altogether surmount." I will stop upon a detail of this passage, of which the whole technical significance is important, the dic- tion being of great precision, to say that the reader ought to make himself master of all that Ruskin means by " the scale." Any man who. has thought about any picture must be aware of " the scale," and must recognise its limited relations in painting as the source of a difficulty or rather an impossibility and as 26 JOHN RUSKIN therefore the justification of a convention : not an arbitrary convention, but a convention commanded, directed, and controlled by certain truths, and by cer- tain beauties salient amongst those truths. And it is because Ruskin makes the most profound and the most searching confession the best of all possible confes- sions of the convention of relations whereof a painter has to make his picture, that a reader, even with all good will to be taught, may be doubtful, at the end, whether Modern Painters does in fact succeed in prov- ing one way to be blessed and the other banned. But I repeat, this is to be studied at first hand from the book. And the book, entering upon Section 1 1, does justice, once for all, to the painters of tone, even Salvator Rosa and Caspar Poussin, and to what they achieved, according to their scheme of relations. Albeit the chapter on " Tone " is one of the most technical it is one of the most interesting. In regard to Turner on this matter, 11 In his power of associating cold with warm light no one has ever approached or even ventured into the same field with him. The old masters, content with one simple tone, sacrificed to its unity all the exquisite gradations and varied touches of relief and change by which nature unites her hours with each other. They give the warmth of the sinking sun, overwhelming all things in its gold, but they do not give those grey passages about the horizon where, seen through its dying light, the cool and the gloom of night gather themselves for their victory." The chapter on " Colour " opens with a very famous page in which the Alban Mount, the Cam- "MODERN PAINTERS" 27 pagna, and La Riccia, fresh in the sun from a stormy shower, is compared with Caspar Poussin's landscape. Despite its beauty, and certainly because of some of its beauties, it cannot, I venture to think, take a clas- sic place, and I have not extracted it. It is multitu- dinous as the scene it describes the enormous and various scenery of the sky after storm, and that of the woods, the mountains, the plain, and the far sea. Not one vain or vacant or lifeless or superfluous word is to be found therein ; all is abundance, life, and sight, and the diction is as instant as it is pure. The effort of this description, whereby, in the end, the reader is little moved and yet a little wearied, renews the obsti- nate question whether it may not be that so many of nature's wonders, as well as so many of a fine author's wonders, are too many for one picture, one page. Not in arrogance, but in humility, might the painter de- tach one luminous truth of natural fact so that it might be the inspiration of his work, and that work be no portrait of inimitable things, but a beautiful thing of its own kind, owing its beauty to one beauty of nature's. It is true that to try for the organic all is more glorious ; the few, the one perhaps, did so by genius Turner. But those who are less than Turner and have been taught that they ought to try for all have made bad pictures. And even this master of literature, trying for all in this splendid description, has not made a good page. It is in regard to this power over numerous truth this most solitary power over numerous truth that Rus- kin says of the master: 28 JOHN RUSKIN " Turner, and Turner only, would follow and ren- der . . . that mystery of decided line, that dis- tinct, sharp, visible, but unintelligible and inextrica- ble richness, which, examined part by part, is to the eye nothing but confusion and defeat, which, taken as a whole, is all unity, symmetry, and truth." Ruskin shows us, in another place, how each of the touches of nature is unique and diverse, so that though we cannot tell what such or such a touch may be, yet we know " it cannot be any thing " ; while even the most dexterous distances of Salvator or Poussin " pretend to secrecy without having any- thing to conceal, and are ambiguous, not from the concentration of meaning, but from the want of it." This excellent sentence is from those greatly scientific chapters on "Truth of Colour," "Truth of Chiaro- scuro," " Truth of Space " as dependent on the focus of the eye, wherein also we read that " Nature is never distinct and never vacant, . . . always mysterious, but always abundant ; you always see something, but you never see all " ; that the Italians were vacant, and the Dutch distinct, " Nature's rule being . . . 'you shall never be able to count the bricks, but you shall never see a dead wall ' " ; and that " Turner introduced a new era in landscape art by showing that the foreground might be sunk for the distance, and that it was possible to express im- mediate proximity to the spectator without giving anything like completeness to the forms of the near objects." This, Turner accomplished, not by " slurred or soft lines (always the sign of vice in art), but by a "MODERN PAINTERS" 29 decisive imperfection, a firm, but partial, assertion of form, which the eye feels indeed to be close home to it, and yet cannot rest upon, nor cling to, nor en- tirely understand." And let the following passages be quoted from the chapters on " Colour " and " Shadow " before we pass to the chapters on " Skies " and " Mountains " : u The ordinary tinsel and trash . with which the walls of our Academy are half covered ... is based on a system of col- our beside which Turner's is as Vesta to Cotytto the chastity of fire to the foulness of earth." " There is scarcely an artist of the present day . . . who does not employ more pure and raw colour than Turner." Then follows the memorable judgment on colour : " I think that the first approach to vicious- ness of colour ... is commonly indicated chiefly by a prevalence of purple and absence of yel- low " ; for Ruskin makes us aware of the almost se- cret gold of fine colour. Rubens and Turner had, like nature, yellow and black as a " fundamental op- position." In the chapter " Of Truth of Chiaro- scuro " Ruskin writes : " If we have to express vivid light, our first aim must be to get the shadows sharp and visible ; and this is not to be done by blackness, . . . but by keeping them perfectly flat, keen, and even. A very pale shadow, if it be kept flat, if it conceal the details of the object it crosses, if it be grey and cold com- pared with their colour, and very sharp-edged, will be far more conspicuous, and make everything out of it look a great deal more like sunlight than a shadow ten times its depth, shaded off at the edge, and con-, 30 JOHN RUSK.IN founded with the colour of the object on which it falls. Now the old masters of the Italian school . . . directly reverse the principle ; they blacken their shadows till the picture becomes quite appalling, and everything in it is invisible ; but they make a point of losing their edges, and carrying them off by gradation." Turner will keep the shadows " clear and distinct, and make them felt as shadows, though they are so faint that, but for their decisive forms, we should not have observed them for darkness at all." Turner's shadows are, like nature's, shot with light. "Words are not accurate enough, nor delicate enough, to express or trace the constant, all-pervading influence of the finer and vaguer shadows throughout his works, that thrilling influence which gives to the light they leave its passion and its power." Three chapters record the study of the three re- gions of cloud the " neglected upper sky " (neg- lected until Turner drew the cirrus), the middle cloud, and the rain-cloud. There is the noblest pleas- ure in the writer's confession that he has to find the same words in describing a foreground of nature's and a foreground of Turner's, and that delight is sensi- bly expressed in the paragraphs on the real and authentic skies, closing with Turner, who had more knowledge of all essential truth u in every wreath of vapour than composed the whole stock of heavenly informa- tion which lasted Cuyp and Claude their lives." Turner has infinity in forms of cloud, too mysterious in wave of cloud and light to be tested by the "MODERN PAINTERS" 31 eye : infinity outsoaring the mere numbers achieved by lesser painters. " For . . . the greatest num- ber is no nearer to infinity than the least, if it be defi- nite number," while infinity is reached by the mere hints of the variety and obscurity of truth. This is in the upper heavens; the lower heavens of the rain- cloud have been the material of nearly all the bad pictures in all the schools : the two windy Gaspar Poussins in our National Gallery, for example : " Massive concretions of ink and indigo, wrung and twisted very hard, apparently in a vain effort, to get some moisture out of them ; bearing up coura- geously and successfully against a wind whose effects on the trees in the foreground can be accounted for only on the supposition that they are all of the india- rubber species." But Ruskin gives some praise to modern artists Cox and De Wint and Copley Fielding " before we ascend the solitary throne." After the heavens come the heavenly mountains, whereof, at this early age, Ruskin had studied the whole organisation, to find it, with a rapture of recog- nition, confessed in the work of Turner and suggested in every lightest line. In these chapters the subject is less closely a piece of reasoning than in the hard, urgent, and busy first chapters, upon which I have dwelt at length because of their singular importance ; but the motive is still explanation, demonstration ; the paragraph is hard at work, and only at the closes do we find the relaxation of beauty. In this book Ruskin 32 JOHN RUSKIN does not precisely decorate his construction j he rather adds ornament with a punctual afterthought, and it is doubtless these buoyant and conspicuous flowers of prose that took the eye of the public and gained so much and so prompt admiration for Modern Painters. But throughout these chapters the sense of vitality increases. It is as though the searching grasp upon the essential history, law, and spirit of things gave him a natural security, so that rising from the past of the streams, the origin of the clouds, and the roots of the mountains, his intelligence is, as it were, bound to understand or conceive no other ranges of hills or clouds than those which are lifted on the earth and in the skies according to inevitable law. That is, the mountains of Salvator Rosa may have, as he says, " holes in them but no valleys ; protuberances and ex- crescences, but no parts " ; but Ruskin, student of the profound nature of the rocks, shows us authentic valleys, and knows the parts of the mountains as frag- ments of the unity of the earth. In the beautiful chapter " Of the Foreground " it is worth noting, oc- curs a brief phrase characteristic of the prose a der- ogation not so much from Johnson as from Gibbon that was the common language of letters, the refuse of an English style, profusely ready to the hand of every writer in the middle of the century, and en- cumbered the way even of one who was to purge the refuse from so many kinds of floors : u A steep bank of loose earth . . . exposed to the weather, contains in it . . . features capable of giving high gratification to a careful observer." " MODERN PAINTERS " 33 As a suggestion of the study of organic simplicity this fine chapter on foreground is rich in a sense of drawing which the reader takes from the strong fingers of the writer. Capable of this hold upon the forms, the growth, the perspectives, the floor of the world, and the ranks of all erections, that hand could cer- tainly not refrain from the gesture of contempt before the foregrounds of Salvator Rosa, all emphatic and all inorganic. With indignation and wit their condem- nation is flicked at them in twenty examples. But in the following chapters " Of Truth of Water," there is of course less of organic design and more of the painter's vision of inorganic and various unity, except in the pages that treat, with a mathematical calculation, of reflections. This section of his work, Ruskin tells us, he approached despondently, because, whilst he could understand why men admired Salvator's rocks, Claude's foregrounds, Hobbema's trees, and whilst he perceived in these things " a root which seems right and legitimate," he knew not what the sea of nature could be in the eyes of men who admired the seas of Backhuysen. It is curious to see how in this essay on the painting of waters the faith in the perfectibility I wish I knew a word to express rather the capability-of-per- petual-progress-in-a-direction-of-perfection ; let me take perfectibility with that meaning how the faith in this energy and single direction of human things, which inspires Ruskin's political economy, mountain drawing, and foreground painting, and compels him to work for the replies to unanswerable questions, renders 34 JOHN RUSKIN him ill-satisfied with the simple and single painting of calm waters, which painters of moderate powers are able to do artistically, giving keen pleasure thereby, but giving it easily, and urges him to study rather the painting of the broken sea, the shifting surface, and the cataract. The question arises in the reader's mind yet again whether this noble teaching, which would, if it were possible, make another Turner, has not in fact made, in the lower places, many bad painters. And yet his refutation of the bad painters of a quite different kind those whom his teaching did not make and could not make and his immediate appeal to the nature they disintegrated by the shatter- ing effect of their negligence and the insolence of their reconstruction, are true master's work in this section on the sea, and in that which follows, on vegetation. Such is the lesson on the passage of the cataract from the spring to the fall, when the parabolic curve ceases, whereas the false painters carry that curve to the end and make their water look active where it should be wildly subject to gravitation. Such is the study of the waves seen, from the sea shoreward, not as successive breakers, but as the self-same water repeating its crash with the perturbed spirit of the sea. Such also is the study of the top of the nodding wave when " the water swings and jumps along the ridge like a shaken chain." Such is the history of the growth of a tree, and the statement of the laws of its delimitation of outline, and of its angles, which the wildest wind that ever blew on earth cannot take out, though from a twig but an inch thick, whereas Caspar Poussin's wind " MODERN PAINTERS " 35 stretches the branches in curves. Of his sea-chapter, Ruskin himself says in a note : " It is a good study of wild weather; but utterly feeble in comparison to the few words by which any of the great poets will describe sea. . . . There is nothing in sea de- scription, detailed, like Dickens's storm in l David Cop- perfield.' " In this book, as in others, Ruskin (perhaps, as I have suggested, for lack of music, and in default, therefore, of a sense of the separateness of an art that imitates nothing) spends the riches of his mind upon the perpetual, and in some kind insoluble, ques- tion as to the imitation and selection of nature in painting. Upon this he has said many things con- tending things as even a careful student may hold, contrary things as the careless will continue to think. May we not regret the arduous thought spent upon an ambiguous dispute that is nearly an ambiguous quarrel ? If he had been learned in music, an art wherein such contention finds no place, would he have made it the centre of his argument on painting ? CHAPTER III " MODERN PAINTERS " THE SECOND VOLUME (1846) " THE Second Volume of Modern Painters which, though in affected language, yet with sincere and very deep feeling, expresses the first and fundamental law respecting human contemplation of the natural phe- nomena under whose influence we exist that they can only be seen with their properly belonging joy and interpreted up to the measure of proper human intelligence, when they are accepted as the work and the gift of a Living Spirit greater than our own " so runs Ruskin's description of this book. It passes to the study of the Theoretic Faculty, and teaches us to account for the beauty we are formed to perceive by referring it to the attributes of God. In front of this essay stands a moral apology for art, as accessory to the " human dignity and heavenward duty " of man- kind, informing the spirit of the artist by " the incor- ruptible and earnest pride which no applause, no rep- robation, can blind to its shortcomings, or beguile of its hope." Spirituality and morality have done ill to forego their divine claim to that art whereto they had a right not only of authority but of very origin and essence. And in the literally divine gift of art is im- plied the responsibility of choice, so that men are 36 "MODERN PAINTERS" 37 bound to authentic and incorrupt beauty in art as they are bound to justice in action. The happiness which the senses and their spirit take in the good which they contemplate and follow is itself, by its very energy, a sure rule of choice ; " it clasps what it loves so hard, that it crushes it if it be hollow." And this happi- ness, far too high to be called " aesthetic," Ruskin names the Theoretic Faculty. " We must advance, as we live on, from what is brilliant to what is pure, and from what is promised to what is fulfilled, and from what is our strength to what is our crown, only observing in all things how that which is indeed wrong, and to be cut up from the root, is dislike [of natural things] and not affection." Beauty is " the bread of the soul," for which vir- ginal hunger is renewed every morning. And good genius was infallibly imaginative in the days before men had " begun to bring to the cross foot their sys- tems instead of their sorrow." From this noble doc- trine to the conclusion that a false and impious man could not be a great imaginative painter (a judgment that has been cast in Ruskin's teeth a thousand times), the logic of a young man carried him, not in haste indeed but with the current of deliberate and inten- tional decision. " I do not think," said Socrates, " that any one who should now hear us, even though he were a comic poet, would say that I talk idly or discourse on matters that concern me not " ; but the comic, or more properly the derisive, humour of Eng- lish writers has not forborne to accuse Ruskin of that 38 JOHN RUSK.IN which Socrates had confidence would be forborne in his own regard : to charge with vanity an inquiry that concerned man and the honour of his works. And if the question has been held so vain, what common contempt has not mocked the answer framed in the too instant need that a great mind had to be satisfied ! In preparation of his task of referring what we see to be beautiful to what we believe to be Eternal, Rus- kin stays upon the old speculation as to the nature of the beauty that so delights our discerning senses as to cause us to refer the felicity to qualities of God. Among attempted " definitions " of beauty (which are descriptions rather than definitions) he does not cite the scholastic sentence u Splendour of Truth," which would have pleased him had he known it, but which does not explain why the aspect of truth is only sometimes splendid ; he does quote the vaguer " kind of felicity " of Bacon, which fails to explain the kind. " Nothing is more common," Ruskin says in the following volume, " than to hear people who desire to be thought philosophical, declare that 4 beauty is truth ' and 4 truth is beauty.' I would most earnestly beg every sensible person who hears such an assertion made, to nip the germinating philosopher in his am- biguous bud ; and beg him, if he really believes his own assertion, never henceforward to use two words for the same thing." The succeeding chapters on 44 Unity," " Infinity," " Repose," " Moderation," are masterly in thought, with passages close and fine, as that which discovers the " reason of the agreeable- ness " of a curve that it u divides itself infinitely by " MODERN PAINTERS " 39 its changes of direction " ; that which asserts " the inseparable dependence " of spirits on each other's being, and their " essential and perfect depending on their Creator's " ; and the noble page on " Unity " : Subjectional Unity of things submitted to the same influence, which is that of clouds in the wind ; Unity of Origin, which is that of branches of a tree ; Unity of Sequence, which is that of continued lines or the notes following to make a melody ; and Unity of Membership, " which is the unity of things sep- arately imperfect in a perfect whole," as in the notes joining to make a harmony, and, in spiritual creatures, their essential life of happiness in the Creator Spirit. Inordinate variety (such as that of the colouring of some tropical birds) is a defect of the beauty of Unity. The dark background is presented to us (and here Ruskin seems perilously to strain a principle in the application) as a denial of the beauty of Infinity. "I think if there be any one grand division, by which it is at all possible to set the productions of painting, so far as their mere plan or system is con- cerned, on our right and left hands, it is this of light and dark background, of heaven light or of object light." The abruptness and confidence of the theological assertions, Ruskin protests in a note, became painful to him in after years, but their matter is involved in every thought of this essay. Nothing else is retracted in the revision except something of the veneration given to Michelangiolo, of the love given to Raphael 4O JOHN RUSK.IN and to Francia, and of a young man's love of the for- est and the wild landscape, in impatience of the lovely country of agriculture. The latter part of the second volume is principally a treatise on " Imagination " Associative, Penetra- tive, and Contemplative a great work of true intel- lectual passion ; and the poverty of any words that try to present the argument by way of mere sketch must discourage me from the attempt ; howbeit the task I have set myself throughout is no less than this almost impossible summary, the reader will do well to be more than ever on his guard in order to take the citations as signs and fragments of the perfect life of the work. Let it be said at once that no man could think out the multitude of truths without the use of opposing phrases. It would have been well if in the subsequent revision for later issues (especially the thorough revision of 1883) Ruskin had altered the mere diction of the doctrine as to choice in art. The reader must be warned not to put this amongst the reputed " inconsistencies " until he has read the fourth volume, where the paradox is explained. The real " inconsistencies " are few, and only a reader baffled by the consistency (and there is nothing so exacting, so difficult, so various, as the consistency of a com- plete theory, nothing so overwhelming to a slothful student) has ever diverted himself by counting them. At the outset Ruskin encounters by another of those originally paltry accidents that are of use the defini- tion of Imagination by Dugald Stewart, who does not know imagination from composition, or rccomposi- "MODERN PAINTERS" 41 tion, and thinks imagination in landscape to consist in the imaginary landscape of gathering or colloca- tion. It is not this, as no one needs to be told to- day, but we owe our knowledge in great part to Rus- kin's contention; and the word imagination itself (originally " aesthetic," or sensual, and defective) is what it is now by his own act of transformation. Imagination does not combine, but is pre-engaged upon more vital work. In fact the chapter on Im- agination Associative does some of its most effectual work in its witty history of the drawing of a tree by a painter without imagination : " We will suppose him, for better illustration of the point in question, to have good feeling and correct knowledge of the nature of trees. He probably lays on his paper such a general form as he knows to be characteristic of the tree to be drawn, and such as he believes will fall in agreeably with the other masses of his picture. . . . When this form is set down, he assuredly finds it has done something he did not intend it to do. It has mimicked some prominent line, or overpowered some necessary mass. He be- gins pruning and changing, and, after several experi- ments, succeeds in obtaining a form which does no material mischief to any other. To this form he pro- ceeds to attach a trunk, and, working probably on a received notion or rule (for the unimaginative painter never works without a principle) that tree-trunks ought to lean first one way and then the other as they go up, and ought not to stand under the middle of the tree, he sketches' a serpentine form of requisite pro- priety ; when it has gone up far enough that is, till it looks disagreeably long, he will begin to ramify it j 42 JOHN RUSKIN and if there be another tree in the picture with two large branches, he knows that this, by all the laws of composition, ought to have three or four, or some different number ; and because he knows that if three or four branches start from the same point they will look formal, therefore he makes them start from points one above another; and because equal dis- tances are improper, therefore they shall start at un- equal distances. When they are fairly started, he knows they must undulate or go backwards and for- wards, which accordingly he makes them do at ran- dom ; and because he knows that all forms ought to be contrasted, he makes one bend down while the other three go up. The three that go up, he knows, must not go up without interfering with each other, and so he makes two of them cross. He thinks it also proper that there should be variety of character in them ; so he makes the one that bends down grace- ful and flexible, and, of the two that cross, he splinters one and makes a stump of it. He repeats the process among the more complicated minor boughs, until coming to the smallest, he thinks further care un- necessary, but draws them freely, and by chance. Having to put on the foliage, he will make it flow properly in the direction of the tree's growth ; he will make all the extremities graceful, but will be tor- mented by finding them come all alike, and at last will be obliged to spoil a number of them altogether in order to obtain opposition. They will not, how- ever, be united in this their spoliation, but will remain uncomfortably separate and individually ill-tempered. He consoles himself by the reflection that it is unnat- ural for all of them to be equally perfect. Now, I suppose that through the whole of this process he has been able to refer to his definite memory or concep- tion of nature for every one of the fragments he has successively added." " MODERN PAINTERS " 43 Ruskin's own tree-drawing stem-drawing especially has an extraordinary power ; so has his word, living with the life of the tree, as when he tells you of the lower bough stretched towards you with somewhat of the action of an open hand, palm upwards, and the fingers a little bent. The penetrative form of the imaginative faculty, he tells us, is proved in its dealing with matter and with spirit. It takes a grasp of things by the heart, seizes outward things from within, and refers them " to that inner secret spring of which the hold is never lost " by ^schylus, Homer, Dante, or Shakespeare. " How did Shakespeare know that Virgilia could not speak ? " Contemplative imagination is Shelley's faculty ; in painting, it presents the generic or symbolical form of things capable of various accidents ; and no fidelity of surface imitation, such as Landseer's, can atone for the loss of the larger relations of light or colour, for example brought about by lack of imaginative vision. Contemplative imagination is able, having climbed the sycamore, and waiting, to perceive " the Divine form among the mortal crowd " ; how much more it knows in the breaking of bread cannot be told. " Though we cannot, while we feel deeply, reason shrewdly, yet I doubt if, except when we feel deeply, we can ever comprehend fully." (One wishes it were lawful, in quoting, to leave out such a futile word as the " ever " in this sentence.) And the in- tellect is said to sit, in the hour of imagination, upon " its central throne." Incidentally we have this keen point made of one of the differences of imagination 44 JOHN RUSKIN and fancy : fancy is sequent and mobile herself deals with the mobility (I suppose mobility rather than action, wherewith imagination is mightily con- cerned) of things ; and perhaps I may add that Keats judged more wisely than he knew of the rather common fancy occupying him for the moment when he wrote " Ever let the fancy roam ; Pleasure never is at home." Doubtless imaginative joy is everywhere supremely at home. " For the moment," I say for the brief mo- ment; contemplative imagination is in Keats in large and intense perfection. " Ideal " and " Real " are words that represent an- other subject of old thought whereon most men have opinions. Let me say briefly (since this may now be said more briefly than when Ruskin said it) that the doctrine of Modern Painters would have us to con- demn that generalising which is a combination, an as- sembling of individual characters, and is impotent ; and that it would have us to seek the ideal of each individual, by the mental study of the hieroglyphics of his sacred history, and by the hard working por- traiture, " the necessary and sterling basis of all ideal art," practised by Raphael, Titian, Tintoretto, Ghir- landajo, Masaccio, John Bellini; and not by Guido or the Caracci. The lack of the individual ideal, with the triviality of accessories, has filled the English Academy " with such a school of portraiture as must make the people of the nineteenth century the shame "MODERN PAINTERS" 45 of their descendants, and the butt of all time." In treating of the vital and ideal beauty of man Ruskin says that the purity of flesh-painting depends on the intensity and warmth of its colour. The second volume, finally, is very distinctly, and indeed suddenly, patched with the style of Hooker, whom Ruskin had studied with full imitative inten- tion. But the normal and working style is purely of its own day as his genius renewed the day and the hour that is, it is fresh, full-charged, and exact ; and as unlike anything in the past ages as it is unlike the more hesitating, gradated, and reinforced propriety learned by some later English from some later French writers. CHAPTER IV " MODERN PAINTERS " THE THIRD AND FOURTH VOLUMES (1856) THE third volume was written after ten years. Turner had died too soon to receive the amends of the first volume for the rash blame that had embittered his life; and from the irreparable cruelty Ruskin's heart had taken the wound that the young heart ac- cepts from the world ; but there were, in their meas- ure, men whom it was not too late to praise, and the generous fear lest one or two true painters should be denied their due until they also had passed from the communion of men upon earth led Ruskin somewhat far in his praises of modern painters who were not Turners. As a prelude stands an essay "Touching the Grand Style," in controversy with Sir Joshua Reynolds and with Dr. Johnson, his ally. It is with no irreverence towards the master whose painting was a refutation of everything shallow that he took in hand to speak or read, and with no irreverence to Johnson, that a reader, fresh from the searching thought of Ruskin, confesses the Discourse here examined to be an instance of the commonplace thinking of the eighteenth century commonplace (let the paradox be allowed) to the degree of falsity. Loose reasoning in exact English is here, as where Sir Joshua says that 46 " MODERN PAINTERS " 47 the Grand Style of Michelangiolo, "the Homer of painting," " has the least of common nature," whereas it is common and general nature that Sir Joshua's doctrine of the Grand Style does logically allow, and the distinction of individual character that it forbids. If the comparison with Homer were a just one, then the heroic or impossible in art must be mingled (as Ruskin proves), with the very unheroic and quite pos- sible, with details of cookery, amongst others; and having shown the figure of his hero, the painter ought to " spend the greater part of his time (as Homer the greater number of his verses) in elaborating the pat- tern on his shield." Moreover Sir Joshua and the Doctor think they have profoundly shaken the original idea of beauty by the eighteenth-century device of ex- plaining beauty by custom : " If the whole world," they say, " should agree that Yes and No should change their meanings, Yes would then deny and No would affirm." As though the arbitrary sign of a word had any but a conventional relation to the thing signified ; and as though the Yes answered to the question " Do two and two make four ? " could be changed for No in its significance, even if the sound of it were No ! In regard to dignity Ruskin says: " Paul Veronese opposes the dwarf to the soldier, and the negress to the queen ; Shakespeare places Caliban beside Miranda and Autolycus beside Perdita; but the vulgar idealist withdraws his beauty to the safety of the saloon, and his innocence to the seclu- sion of the cloister, ... he has neither courage 48 JOHN RUSKIN to front the monster, nor wit enough to furnish the knave." Ruskin finds the great style to be the style of a great painter, and knows that no good will can bring it to pass. The reader may remember that it is written in the Pb&do, " There are, say those who preside at the mysteries, many wand-bearers, but few inspired." The recurrence of the dispute as to detail, if ever to be lamented, is hardly so in this third volume, wherein it produces some memorable sayings; for example, that touches, seeming coarse when near the eye, are put on by a fine painter with the calculation wherewith an archer draws his bow according to the distance, " the spectator seeing nothing but the strain of the strong arm " ; and that " the best drawing in- volves a wonderful perception and expression of indis- tinctness." But alas ! how shall I attain to know, in two pictures, the indistinctness that is merely indis- tinctness from that which is wonderfully perceived to be indistinct ? If, a little further, we must submit to have it said of the tender Rembrandt that he sacrifices to one light and its relations " the expression of every character . . . which depends on tenderness of shape or tint," we submit for the pleasure of reading, in contrast, of Veronese's "delicate air" and "great system of spacious truth." " He unites all ... in tenderest balance, noting in each hair's-breadth of colour, not merely what its Tightness or wrongness is in itself, but what its relation is . . . ; restraining, for truth's sake, " MODERN PAINTERS " 49 his exhaustless energy, reigning back, for truth's sake, his fiery strength ; veiling, before truth, the vanity of brightness ; penetrating, for truth, the discouragement of gloom." After the true and the false " Grand Styles " come considerations of true and false ideals ; and I take from a page on the latter this witty passage : " A modern German, without invention, . . . seeing a rapid in a river, will immediately devote the remainder of the day to the composition of dialogues between amorous water nymphs and un- happy mariners ; while the man of true invention, power, and sense will, instead, set himself to consider whether the rocks in the river could have their points knocked off, or the boats upon it be made with stronger bottoms. . . . The various forms of false idealism have so entangled the modern mind, often called, I suppose ironically, practical." Compare with this the permission given, two pages later, to the true imagination to create for itself " fairies and naiads, and other such fictitious creatures." How shall the reader be taught to feel, with Ruskin, an infallible moral indignation against this naiad and an infallible moral delight in that ? It seems to me impossible. One falls back upon the sure if inex- plicable private judgment : " this ideal poem is genius- work and beautiful, and that ideal poem is not." But in confessing despair of learning the lesson as a lesson (it is taught, with all power, purpose, and insistence, by Ruskin, as a lesson) I disclaim the insolence of re- proaching him with that moral passion which was to 5O JOHN RUSKIN his mind most intelligible, most necessary, and an- gelically just. " Purist Idealism," " Naturalist Idealism," and " Grotesque Idealism " in their right forms are studied next, with some repetition, but also with almost over- whelming variety. Ruskin adds to his words on the authentic imagination these, which, when they are heard, confer the vision and the power: "Write the things which thou hast seen, and the things which are." To the imagination he commits the study of general things, of special things, and of unique things in their multitudes. "The choice as well as the vision is manifested to Homer," he says in another place, touching on the controversy that runs through- out. In a passage which has truth in a most strange aspect, he avers that without choice a great painter may paint vain and paltry things " at a sorrowful level, somewhat above vulgarity. It is only when the minor painter takes them on his easel that they be- come things for the universe to be ashamed of." The chapter on the Grotesque is altogether delightful and wonderful. Grotesque art is that which "arises from healthful but irrational play of the imagination, or from irregular and accidental contemplation of ter- rible things, or from the confusion of the imagination by the presence of truths which it cannot wholly grasp " ; in the last case it is " altogether noble." u How is it to be distinguished from the false and vicious grotesque which results from idleness instead of noble rest ; from malice, instead of the solemn con- templation of the necessary evil; and from general "MODERN PAINTERS" 51 degradation of the human spirit, instead of its sub- jection, or confusion, by thoughts too high for it ? " Ruskin admits that " the vague and foolish incon- sistencies of undisciplined dream " might be mistaken for " the compelled inconsistencies of thought "; and he teaches us the difference in one of the best, most unmistakable, most imaginative, and most conclusive of all the lessons in his books that of the two griffins. The drawings of the Roman griffin, from the temple of Antoninus and Faustina, and of the Lombard griffin, from the Cathedral of Verona, are by his own hand. The " classical " griffin has technical mastery of composition, collocation, combination the secondary qualities in no little beauty, but Ruskin takes the man who wrought it through the experiment and piece- meal of his work as but now he took a bad draughts- man through his tree with exquisite dramatic sense of the man's mind and action, most wittily, with a wit of the very fingers. He shows how the lion and the eagle, put together, have been missed in the winged creature with its trivial eye, and its foot on the top of a flower. Let the reader remember that this griffin was famous, and that no one had perceived the Lom- bardic griffin until Ruskin studied him. No piecemeal is in this winged creature. u He is not merely a bit of lion and a bit of eagle, but whole lion incorporate with whole eagle." He has the carnivorous teeth, u and the peculiar hanging of the jaw at the back, which marks the flexible mouth " ; he has no cocked ears, like the other, to catch the wind in flight (Ruskin 52 JOHN RUSKIN says that the classical griffin would have an ear-ache when he u got home " a phrase of u heart-easing mirth ") ; he the Lombard has the throat, the strength, the indolence of the lion : " he has merely got a poisonous winged dragon to hold, and for such a little matter as that, he may as well do it lying down." With the utmost dramatic sense is the grasp on the dragon told in this fine page, to which the reader is bound to have recourse if he would know true griffinism at all. " Composing legalism does nothing else than err." The passionate imagination knows not how to transgress. From the chapters on " Finish " let us clearly learn that what Ruskin calls by this name is life no less. His illustrations of Claude's and Constable's tree- drawing and of the real ajid vital growth of trees are to this point ; and nowhere is the extraordinary power of his own hand more manifest than in the plate "Strength of Old Pine." None but his word would describe his work. " The Use of Pictures " (a very knot of reasoning) and a brief history of the human spirit of the artist, antique and modern, bring us to the famous " Pathetic Fallacy." This fallacy is a fiction (wanton, fanciful, imaginative, or more purely passionate) in our reading of natural things according to the feeling of our own hearts. Obviously it is chiefly poetry that is here in question ; and the reader should understand that Ruskin is not writing of poets who are no poets; he admits two orders of poets, but no third, as doubtless a musician would admit two orders of musicians two very arts of music, two "MODERN PAINTERS" 53 muses but no third ; and he places agreeing therein with the greater number of critics one order higher than the other, as a musician need not do in contem- plating his own double-peaked hill. Ruskin makes an admirable opposition of the image without fallacy of Dante to the image with fallacy of Coleridge ; paus- ing for a moment (only a moment, for the chapter is intended to treat chiefly of noble and passionate fal- lacy) at the fallacy which is not poetic at all because it is assigned, as by Pope, to the wrong passion, and is cold. But I confess all this reasoning on poetry seems to fail not impotently, but with vital effort, and because of some prohibition from the beginning of the task to fail to prove or even to demonstrate anything we do not know, or to disprove anything we feel. A whole chapter further on, for instance, shows Walter Scott to be better than a sentimentalist, better than a poet who works with difficulty, better than a poet who is self-conscious, better as a poet-seer than a mere poet-thinker, and moreover a thorough representative of his time by his love of nature, of the past, of colour, and of the picturesque, by his sadness and lack of personal faith, and so forth. But at the end of the argument we shall not have been persuaded to take Scott to be a poet possessed of the spirit of poetry. The essay, however, though a vain persua- sion, is an excellent commentary ; take the sentence, for example, which explains how we have pleasure in Kingsley's fallacious " cruel foam, " not because the words " fallaciously describe foam, but because they faithfully describe sorrow." The chapter has been 54 JOHN RUSKIN popular, for it reaches none of the inner concentra- tions of thought that make Modern Painters arduous reading to a real reader. The chapter following, on " Classical Landscape," deals also with poetry. To the question whether the modern with his fancy does not see something in nature that Homer could not see, Ruskin replies that the Greek had his own feeling that of faith and not of fallacy. u He never says the waves rage, or the waves are idle. But he says there is somewhat in, and greater than, the waves, which rages, and is idle, and that he calls a god." Nor will Ruskin consent to have Homer's Hera, cuffing the contentious Artemis about the ears, too much inter- preted. Let no one think to explain away " my real, running, beautiful, beaten Diana, into a moon behind clouds." Happy too, by its phrase, in the finely elaborate contrast of the antique and the modern spirit, is this passage on the Greek and the gods: " To ask counsel of them, to obey them, to sacri- fice to them, to thank them for all good, this was well ; but to be utterly downcast before them, or not to tell them his mind in plain Greek if they seemed to him to be conducting themselves in an ungodly manner this would not be well." And happy in thought is a passage on the modern who accepts sympathy from nature that he does not believe in, and gives her sympathy that he does not believe in (but should this part of the phrase be so positive as the other ?), whereas the Greek had no sympathy at all with " actual wave and woody fibre." "MODERN PAINTERS" 55 The exquisite chapter on "The Plelds " traces the history of the landscape of vegetation, ancient and mediaeval, discovers the first sky in an illuminated manuscript and the first leaf in its borders how it un- folded there ; and tracks the change in the human spirit in regard to the forest, wherein the man of the Middle Ages looked to meet with an enemy in am- bush or a bear, whereas the ancient " expected to meet one or two gods, but no banditti " ; and " The Rocks " is a magnificent study of mountains as man beheld them in the ancient world and in the altered ages. Ruskin gives modern man, with his love of breeze, of shadows, of the ruling and dividing clouds, over to the gibe of Aristophanes that he would " speak in- geniously concerning smoke," that he disbelieves in Jupiter, and crowns the whirlwind. Exquisite play is mingled with all the philosophy of these historic chapters. A summary but splendid history of colour in the arts a spiritual history of the colours man has loved opens the question treated at length by other pens long after Modern Painters was written of the sense of colour in Antiquity; and the study re- turns to Turner, the man who was first in the es- sentially modern painting of nature in place of the human form, as Bacon was first in the modern study of nature instead of the human mind. But in " The Moral of Landscape " Turner himself and all lovers of nature are arraigned with extreme austerity to justify, or rather to excuse, that passion for landscape where- with some of the greatest of human intellects have not been charged ; and it is only after a meditation, 56 JOHN RUSKIN full of misgiving, nay, of suffering, and courage, and after trying all things all human wandering, from that of the truant schoolboy studying nature despite of duty and discipline, to that of the poet, astray on one of the infinite ways, in one of the infinite direct- tions, of loss it is only then that this teacher permits himself to bless the human love of nature. With u trembling hope " and the profound decision that is to be won from the heart of hearts of a dreadful doubt, he calls finally upon the love and knowledge of landscape to mend specifically the foolish spirit of a century bent upon " annihilating time and space by steam " (as people said in 1850 but the saying was confessedly mere rhetoric, and certainly a vulgar kind), whereas time is what wisdom would seek to gain, and space is full of beauty upon which wisdom would be glad to pause. The volume closes with a little history of " The Teachers of Turner," which compares Scott, neglected as a boy, with Turner, educated a little in the for- malism of a low degree of classical knowledge, which did, in fact, show the way to larger interests. Albeit Turner had to await his opportunity to steal from the Egerian wells to the Yorkshire streams, and " from Homeric rocks, with laurels at the top and caves at the bottom " to Alpine precipices carrying the pine, yet he gained something from the restraint, and was thereafter able to watch with pleasure "the staying of the silver fountain [the garden fountain] at its ap- pointed height in the sky " as well as to pore with delight upon the unbound river. But, ordered, as a "MODERN PAINTERS" 57 boy, to draw elevations of Renaissance buildings, and commissioned as a youth to draw Palladian mansions for their owners, Turner never loved or understood architecture; whereas Scott, if he learnt little of it, liked it heartily. " A forced admiration of Claude and a fond admiration of Titian," and of all the great Venetian landscape, are traced by Ruskin in Turner's early work ; with Cuyp Turner matched himself in emulation, and he suffered injury from the example of Vandevelde. Then follow some vigorous pages about Claude. " Tenderness of perception and sincerity of purpose " Ruskin attributes to him ; and confesses that he it was who first set the sun in heaven. But Claude's way of misunderstanding " the main point " is proved by Ruskin in the case of ^Eneas drawing his bow, from the Liber Veritatis. From the ending of this volume, which refers to the Crimean War, the reader should carry two phrases briefer and more concentrated than is usual with an author so bent on exposition. One is " the sunlight of deathbeds," and the other (on the sudden faults of nations) " For great, accumulated . . t . cause, their foot slides in due time." And this is memorable as the note of a watcher of public things : " I noticed that there never came news of the ex- plosion of a powder-barrel . . . but the Parlia- ment lost confidence immediately in the justice of the war ; reopened the question whether we ever should have engaged in it, and remained in a doubtful and repentant state of mind until one of the enemy's powder-barrels blew up also." 58 JOHN RUSKIN Defending himself against the not unrighteous charge that he not only neglected but scorned German philosophy, Ruskin avers, in his Appendix, that he is right to condemn "by specimen": " He who seizes all that he plainly discerns to be valuable, and never is unjust but when he cannot honestly help /'/, will soon be enviable in his possessions, and venerable in his equity." The humorous phrase takes us on many years, to Fiction Fair and Foul, in the Nineteenth Century, where Ruskin related his refusal to be troubled to read a certain novel he had heard praised; the "situation" of the story, they told him, was that of two people who had "compromised themselves in a boat"; foul and foolish. Not without pain or incredulity has the reader to learn that the passage so ridiculed is the flight and the return of Maggie Tulliver. Injustice may be as inevitable as "stumbling or being sick," but evitable was the proclamation of this stray, un- instructed, and unjustified judgment. The pardon of these implicit injustices surely depends upon their privacy, upon the silence that is not irrevocable, and on the secrecy wherewith a man keeps his own counsel as to his prejudice. The volumes are less difficult reading as the work goes forward, and the fourth has had ten readers for one reader of the earlier three. Partly for this cause the page on the Calais tower (placed in the late edition at the beginning of the volume) became famous : it evoked what its author calls the weak enthusiasms of "MODERN PAINTERS" 59 those who missed the essential beauty because they thought themselves elected to admire the " style." It is a passage of a chapter directed to correct and chastise that popular ideal of the " picturesque " abroad and the " neat " at home wherewith many thousands go and come across the Channel. " The large neglect, the noble unsightliness of it ; the record of its years written so visibly, yet without sign of weakness or decay ; its stern wasteness and gloom, eaten away by the Channel winds, and over- grown by the bitter sea grasses ; its slates and tiles all shaken and rent, and yet not falling ; its desert of brickwork full of bolts, and holes, and ugly fissures, and yet strong, like a bare brown rock ; its careless- ness of what any one thinks or feels about it, putting forth no claim, having no beauty or desirableness, pride, nor grace ; yet neither asking for pity ; not, as ruins are, useless and piteous, feebly or fondly gar- rulous of better days ; but useful still, going through its own daily work as some old fisherman beaten grey by storm, yet drawing his daily nets ; so it stands, with no complaint about its past youth, in blanched and meagre massiveness and serviceableness, gathering human souls together underneath it; the sound of its bells for prayer still rolling through its rents ; and the grey peak of it seen far across the sea, principal of the three that rise above the waste of surfy sand and hillocked shore the lighthouse for life, and the belfry for labour, and this for patience and praise." Appropriate to the time, fifty years ago, is the re- buke that follows of the painter who went in search of " fallen cottage, deserted village, blasted heath, mouldering castle," joyful sights to him alone of 6O JOHN RUSK.IN mankind, so that they did but " show jagged angles of stone and timber " ; true, he mingled with his pleasures a slight tragical feeling, "a vague desire to live in cottages," a partly romantic, partly humble, sympathy. Ruskin showed him his own triviality in contrast with the sympathy of genius which was Turner's. Tintoret had a like genius, but without humour. Veronese had such a sympathy, but without tragedy. Rubens wants grace and mystery. In Turner alone Ruskin finds the complete sympathy ; failing only as he was human. From the immeasurably various opened world before such a genius Turner chose great things, not contenting himself with the personal impression that might make odds and ends dear to him, as Ruskin's young pre-Raphaelites were doing, leaving the noble things to be made into "vignettes for annuals," or to be painted vilely. Surely the surviv- ing slander that Ruskin would have his disciples to " select nothing and to neglect nothing " might have been silenced once for all by the note to this same page, which proves him to have directed none but the preparatory studies of young learners by that celebrated phrase. Nor is any controversy possible in face of another page of this volume : " If a painter has inventive power he is to treat his subject [by] . . . giving not the actual facts of it, but the impression it made on his mind." Ruskin supplied his future opponents with this word and with this thought which they brandished and "MODERN PAINTERS" 61 vaunted on their side of some supposed controversy. In truth, he allows a "great inventive landscape painter" to do what he likes, to give not the image, but the spirit of a place, to go down into a jumbled and formless lower valley of the Alps with his mind full of the terrors of a pass above ; and in that power of impression to transform the rocks. But let the uninventive beware of the paltry work of composing ; let him learn to make portraits of places, and record for us the battlefield for the sake of strategy, the castle before it moulders away, the abbey before it is pulled to the ground, the beast before it is extinct, the topography of Venice before the city is destroyed ; that is art enough for him. But, unfortunately, he is not to be trusted for facts ; and Ruskin finds that the dull Canaletto, far from making a picture, cannot so much as record exactly where a house stood. If any one shall say, moreover, that by this or that invention Turner did wrong inventively, Ruskin replies, " The dream said not so to Turner." The succeeding chapters are a long lesson on the initial and unending difficulties of illumination, and of the degrees of pictorial vision, from which I must quote no more than this on relations or " values " : "Despise the earth; fix your eyes on its gloom, and forget its loveliness ; and we do not thank you for your languid or despairing perception of brightness in heaven. But rise up actively from the earth, learn what there is in it, know its colour and form and if after that you can say c heaven is bright,' it will be a precious truth." 62 JOHN RUSKIN And this from the study of colour as more than all else a painter's business : " The student may be led into folly by philosophers, and into falsehood by purists ; but he is always safe if he holds the hand of a colourist." And this, on Mystery: " All distinct drawing must be bad drawing, and nothing can be right till it is unintelligible. . . . Excellence of the highest kind, without ob- scurity, cannot exist." Assuredly, without difficulty from the objections of modern readers, who are convinced already, Rusk in controls by means of these truths his own doctrine of detail. It is the perception of mystery that the greatest of all masters have added to the perception of truth Turner, Tintoret, and Paul Veronese, mys- terious painters, whose perception, " first as to what is to be done, and then of the means of doing it, is so colossal that I always feel in the presence of their pictures just as other people would in that of a super- natural being." The student should weigh well the words u perception of mystery " and all that they im- ply, as distinct from " power of dispelling mystery " or any such phrase. All invention, moreover, all mys- tery, and all intricacy must close in a simple and nat- ural pictorial vision, which would be like a child's if it were not more comprehensive. Finally, " The right of being obscure is not one to be lightly claimed." From this point the fourth volume of " MODERN PAINTERS " 63 Modern Painters becomes chiefly a direct study of na- ture, a study indescribably rich but not to be followed by notes and summaries. An exception there is in the digression on the character and conditions of the Valais peasantry, in " Mountain Gloom," a chapter full of poignant thoughts. Some fault of reasoning may be detected in the attribution to their religion of a peculiar melancholy in these people, whereas to the same cause a different effect must be referred amongst the equally unworldly countrymen of Lombardy, and whereas Ruskin himself, after writing with bitterness of this religious source of sorrow, goes on to show that he and they and all of us have cause enough of grief without it. Exquisite is the sad record of the work of the husbandman without books, or thoughts, or attainments, or rest at his small crops on the ledges of these divine mountain-sides, where " the meadows run in and out like inlets of lake among the harvested rocks, sweet with perpetual streamlets." The historical digression, in " Mountain Glory," studies the mountains in their relation to the history of the mind of man, as the answering aspect of man towards the mountains was studied in an earlier page ; and here again I lose the proof of the argument. Ruskin seems to compel the presence of the moun- tains to account for contrary things, rises and falls, in the history of Italian painting. And the accompany- ing inquiry as to the mountain influence upon literary power seems to be one of the few enterprises of this courageous mind that do not altogether justify them- selves ; but even here how much splendour of thought ! CHAPTER V " MODERN PAINTERS " THE FIFTH VOLUME (i860) THE last volume of this enormous work of thought, imagination, sincerity, and devotion is chiefly a con- tinuation of the study of natural landscape, of form in the leaf, anatomy in the branch ; of the play of these creatures of earth with the light from the skies, and the unimaginable shadows that " stumble over everything they come across" a world of its own that of the experimental shadow ! This volume is a study of the whole garden : " How have we ravaged instead of kept it ! " and of the unalterable skies. The more intent the study is, the more impassioned a look of adoration at arm's length, a kiss at close quarters. The large sense of vegetation, that unsuf- fering creature, with its youth, age, death perpetually rehearsed, grows yet more poetic when it is the little will of the bud to grow to a pinnacle that Ruskin looks into, with his incomparably lovely botany. He tells us of the trees that are builders with the shield, and of those that are builders with the sword, accord- ing to the manner in which they defend their buds ; he tells us what, measured month by month, is the year's work, and, by the periodicity of the life of vegetation itself, what is the age's ; how the young 64 " MODERN PAINTERS " 65 leaves, "like the young bees," keep out of each other's way. The exquisite science of the book is for the service of art, for the aspect of the leaf in na- ture, and for the praise of the leaf-drawing of Titian and Holbein, and for the refutation of the leaf-draw- ing of Ruysdael and Hobbema. Ruskin shows us, in boughs, the will, fire, and fantasy of growth measured by the strong law of nervous life and strong law of material attraction, the height of a tree controlled by the gravitation that sinks the fall of lead. He shows us the whole mathematical truths of actual and of pictorial balance in wild asymmetric nature and in Turner; and the incoherence, the lack of equilibrium, in the dull-leaved branch of Salva- tor Rosa ; and how the false work lacks wit as well as poise. He proves to us the conditions of the leaf-bearing bough harmony, obedience, distress (or difficulty), and happy inequality. Ruskin has said that he was content with himself for one thing he had done justice to the pine. But he has done justice also to the oak, and to the poplar. Something that belongs to the special leaf, to the division of the twigs, to the definite design that by their tips all the twigs and branches together draw as the figure of the tree, something that is peculiar to the complexion of the leaf and to its green, and is the spirit of the woods, abides about the names of all trees in these pages. " Between the earth and man arose the leaf. Be- tween the heaven and man arose the cloud. His life being partly as the falling leaf, and partly as the fly- ing vapour." 66 JOHN RUSKIN But the chapters on clouds here following u Cloud Balancings," "Cloud Flocks," "Cloud Chariots," " The Angel of the Sea " are not only scientific studies of clouds carried further than those in the first volume, and observations multiplied, but are probably intended to mend the former work as literature. The page of sixteen years before had been rather abruptly patched with decorated and splendid passages ; the page of the last volume is more glorious, the words are more abundant. Ruskin himself has half dis- owned the eloquence in the writing of the earlier volumes, but in truth this fifth volume outdoes all that had gone before. The purpose, nevertheless, is as severe as ever ; here, as throughout this long task " the investigation of the beauty of the visible world " it was always, as Ruskin says in regard to the reader, " accuracy I asked of him, not sympathy ; patience, not zeal ; apprehension, not sensation." The following part of this volume deals with cer- tain laws of art, such as that of composition, not fully treated elsewhere. And here again we seem to be cast back upon the single law of Genius. As Ruskin banned " every kind of falsity," yet allowed Rubens to make an horizon aslant with the drift of a stormy picture, and praised Vandyck for his grey roses ; so, as to composition, he tells us that no ex- pression, truth to nature, nor sentiment can win him to look at a picture twice if it is ill composed, yet the composition cannot be prescribed by law ; it is to be as a great painter makes it. The reader will, of course, understand that " composition " in this chap- "MODERN PAINTERS" 67 ter and " composition " in the great chapters on the " Faculties of the Imagination " must be taken with separate meanings ; in the latter case a false compo- sition is implied. Ruskin has, needless to say, studied the true composition of his great painters as deeply as their other qualities, and he gives a technical lesson thereon in " The Law of Help," starting from the contrast of the decomposition which is death and the composition which is natural life, and showing true pictorial composition to be coherence, unity, and vi- tality itself. " In true composition, everything not only helps everything else a little, but helps with its utmost power. . . . Not a line, not a spark of colour, but is doing its very best." And this should correct the doubts of those who have repeated that Ruskin teaches finish to be " an added truth." He never meant thereby a piecemeal truth; for what is added in a fine picture is added, he tells us in this chapter, inevitably and in unity ; and even when he represents a true artist asking himself where, in his picture, he can " crowd in " another detail, an- other thought, to think this to be an afterthought or a later detail would be to misinterpret Ruskin's whole body of teaching. Inferior artists, he says, are afraid of finish not because they have unity, but because they have it not. Nor have they the deed, which is the act of purpose. The greatest deed is creation, and the creation of life. In " The Law of Perfect- ness " we have the fruit of an additional study of 68 JOHN RUSKIN Titian " the winter was spent mainly in trying to get at the mind of Titian " especially in his execu- tion of colour; that is, the ground, the working in, the striking over of colours. "The Dark Mirror" sums up the four landscape orders of Europe : Heroic (Titian) ; Classical (Nicolo Poussin) ; Pastoral (Cuyp) ; Contemplative (Turner) ; and two spurious forms : Picturesque and Hybrid. The reader has to resign himself to the banishment from Ruskin's thought of all the great French landscape. Once or twice he names French modern work with horror as something deathly ; but what he knows, if anything, of the young Corot, for example, or of Millet, one cannot so much as conjecture. For Venetian art he claims a share of the Greek spirit which is able to look with- out shrinking into the darkness, unentangled in the melancholy war of the northern souls of Holbein and Durer, unconquered by the evil that not only en- tangled but possessed Salvator. Therefore one chap- ter is called " The Lance of Pallas " and the other " The Wings of the Lion," and both deal with the race and character of Titian. A courageous "but not very hopeful or cheerful faith " (and this, in spite of the gaiety of interest which is Mr. Meredith's, might be a phrase of this last-named master's teach- ing) is that which is " rewarded by clear practical success and splendid intellectual power." And this was in the highest degree Shakespeare's ; for although "at the close of Shakespeare's tragedy nothing re- mains but dead march and clothes of burial," yet he was able to endure that close. It was also that of the "MODERN PAINTERS" 69 Greek tragedy, with this difference in the sorrow that it is connected with sin by the Greek and not by Shakespeare ; and this difference in the close that with the Greek there is a promise of divine triumph and rising again. Serene is Homer's spirit, with an added cheerfulness of his own, and practical hope in present things. " The gods have given us at least this glorious body and this righteous conscience." Therefrom came conquest ; and the destroying, op- pressing, slaying, and betraying gods turned kind ; Artemis guarded their flocks, and Phoebus, " lord of the three great spirits of life Care, Memory, and Melody " turned healer. Ruskin shows us the Ve- netians also courageous, but a little sadder on the sur- face, a little less serious beneath, having arisen from, and partly rejected, asceticism. Seizing truth of col- our as only he can, he makes us understand much by telling us that they sunburn all their hermits to a splendid brown. And he tells us of the dealings of the sea with this people that despised agriculture and had no gardens, but a " perpetual May " of the wa- ters. Nay, not a perpetual May ; we may join issue with Ruskin as to the seasons of the sea. Did even he, who knew better than to follow the fashion, and who went to the Alps when the gentians were blue did even he not know the May that kindles the Adri- atic and is not perpetual, or it would not be May ? But how exquisitely is this written of the Venetian yO JOHN RUSKIN citizen, with its allusions to certain Greeks to Anac- reon, to Aristophanes, and to Hippias Major: " No swallow chattered at his window, nor, nestled under his golden roofs, claimed the sacredness of his mercy; no Pythagorean fowl taught him the blessings of the poor, nor did the grave spirit of poverty rise at his side to set forth the delicate grace and honour of lowly life. No humble thoughts of grasshopper sire had he, like the Athenian; no gratitude for gifts of olive; no childish care for figs, any more than thistles." As usual Ruskin betakes himself to the religion of the Venetians; the most he knows of it was told him in the nursery at Herne Hill; submitting to this, and to the cruel passing-over, as something non-existent, of the enormous work of one faculty of religion Compassion that changed the face of nations, we shall hear in this chapter great things, nobly said, about the Venetian soul of man. It is a pity that half a page of refutation should be wasted in condescension to so vulgar an English modern opinion as that the Venetian lord painted on his knees was a hypocrite. But the worldly end of this religious art and majestic intellect (Titian was not less religious than Tintoret, but " the religion of Titian is like that of Shakespeare occult behind his magnificent equity") came to pass and is accounted for by Ruskin after his own subtle way : " In its roots of power and modes of work ; in its belief, its breadth, and its judgment, I find the Venetian mind perfect ; wholly noble in its sources, it was wholly unworthy in its purposes." "MODERN PAINTERS" 71 The Venetian believed in the religion, but " he de- sired the delight." It is difficult to the reader thus to divide source from purpose. When Ruskin says that Titian painted the Assumption " because " he "enjoyed rich masses of red and blue, and faces flushed with sunlight," I confess I need to be told that this " because " refers to purpose and not to source. Is there not, finally, something omitted in this history of Venetian art as also in the histories of Florentine, and of Greek, and of Northern, and of French, and of Lombard, and of all arts whereof Ruskin has written the vicissitudes and is not this the law of movement and of alteration ? He goes far, goes deep, goes close, to explain the inevitable change which comes about perhaps through no action that man can know by searching or can arrest for an hour. The following chapter, " Diirer and Salvator," is upon art reconciled to sorrow, and upon the " Resur- rection of Death " of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. First of Salvator Rosa, " the condemned Salvator," the bearer of the last signs of the spiritual life in the art of Europe, who named himself " Despiser of wealth and of death." "Two grand scorns," says Ruskin, but " the question is not for man what he can scorn but what he can love." Diirer, on the other hand, was quiet, riding in fortitude with Death, like his own Knight. Claude and Caspar Poussin, " classical," but incapable of the Greek or the Roman spirit, renounced the labour and sorrow whereto man is born and so became ornamental, renounced the pursuit of wealth and so became pastoral and pretended 72 JOHN RUSKIN to study nature ; they made selections from amongst the gods. In their works "Minerva rarely presents herself, except to be insulted by the judgment of Paris." And in this chapter occurs the last elaborate passage on Claude, the man of " fine feeling for beauty of form and considerable tenderness of percep- tion," whose " aerial effects are unrivalled," and whose seas are "the most beautiful in old art "; but who was an artist without passion. For its humour I must quote the description of Claude's " St. George and the Dragon " : "A beautiful opening in woods by a riverside; a pleasant fountain . . . and rich vegetation. . The dragon is about the size of ten bramble leaves, and is being killed by the remains of a lance in his throat, curling his tail in a highly of- fensive and threatening manner. St. George, not- withstanding, on a prancing horse, brandishes his sword, at about thirty yards' distance from the offen- sive animal. A semicircular shelf of rocks encircles the foreground, by which the theatre of action is di- vided into pit and boxes. Some women and children having descended unadvisedly into the pit are helping each other out of it again. ... A prudent per- son of rank has taken a front scat in the boxes, crosses his legs, leans his head on his hand; two attendants stand in graceful attitudes behind him, and two more walk away under the trees, conversing on general subjects." As to Claude's "Worship of the Golden Calf," ** in order better to express the desert of Sinai, the river is much larger, and the vegetation softer. Two " MODERN PAINTERS " 73 people, uninterested in idolatrous ceremonies, are rowing in a pleasure-boat on the river." Poussin's "strong but degraded mind" is the subject of graver phrases j all he does well has been better done by Titian ; he also in his manner is condemned for lack of passion. The pastoral landscape, more properly so- called Cuyp and Teniers the type of its painters was lower yet, destitute not of spiritual character only, but of spiritual thought. Cuyp can paint sun- light, but paints unthoughtfully. " Nothing happens in his pictures, except some indifferent person's ask- ing the way of somebody else, who, by his cast of countenance, seems not likely to know it." Paul Potter " does not care even for sheep, but only for wool." " Titian could have put issues of life and death into the face of a man asking his way ; nay, into the back of him. . . . He has put a whole scheme of dogmatic theology into a row of bishops' backs at the Louvre. And for dogs, Velasquez has made some of them nearly as grand as his surly Kings." It is in the same chapter that Ruskin speaks of the trivial sentiment and caricature of Landseer, who "gave up the true nature of the animal" for the sake of a jest. And by this mature judgment the reader should correct a passage of praise in an earlier volume. In the chapter that contrasts Wouvermans and Angelico, Ruskin tells us how he finds it impossible to " lay hold of the temper " of some of the Dutch painters, workmanlike though they are. Wouvermans 74 JOHN RUSKIN and Berghem are amongst the masters of the u hybrid landscape," intended to combine the attractions of the other schools, but they have a "clay-cold, ice-cold incapacity of understanding what pleasure meant." Music, dancing, hunting, boating, fishing, bathing, and child-play are sprinkled in a picture of Wouver- mans, but the fishing and bathing go on close together ; no one turns to look at the hunting , hart and hind gallop across the middle of the river touching bottom, but a man dives at the edge where it is deep ; the dancing has no spring ; the buildings are part ruin, part villa. Ruskin holds this paralysis of dramatic invention to be the consequence of the desire to please sensual patrons by offering them " inventoried articles of pleasure." " Unredeemed carnal appetite " seems to the reader a somewhat violent sentence for this cold incontinence of incident, this trifling of convention, but Ruskin has never allowed trifling to be a trifle, whether in art or in life. The study of Angelico, master of the Purist school (" I have guarded my readers from over-estimating that school ") opposes spirituality to this luxury about which the reader has perhaps his doubts. As for Angelico, a dramatic or imaginative movement of some embracing angel amongst his groups seems to me to save him, barely, from weakness ; and it is doubtful whether we may name any weak thing as typically spiritual. Ruskin goes back to Turner in the chapter called " The Two Boyhoods," which paints the Venice of the young Giorgione, and the Maiden Lane, the Chelsea, the Covent Garden, and Thames side of the " MODERN PAINTERS " 75 London child. The description of Venice is some- what too gorgeous. It is hardly possible for any one who knows Italy to imagine her at any time all ala- baster, bronze, and marble, splendidly draped. But like this untempered Venice of fancy is Ruskin's page. It is one of the beautiful passages that I do not ex- tract, marking only with pleasure the quiet phrase that explains how no weak walls, low-roofed cottage, or straw-built shed could be built over those " tremulous streets." Turner's only drawing of an English clergy- man is excellently described, and Turner in the fogs, Turner among the ships, Turner in the outer ways of the trampled market. Ever after, his foregrounds had " a succulent cluster or two of green-grocery at the corners." But the England of his day did graver things to him even than the nurturing of this great childhood in squalor. Ruskin gives us the exposition of the first picture painted by Turner with his whole strength the Garden of the Hesperides of 1806, as a great religious picture of that opening century, and its religion the triumph of the dragon of Mammon or Covetousness, sleepless, human-voiced, /'/ gran nemico of Dante, set by Turner in a paradise of smoke, con- ceived by the painter's imaginative intellect as iron- hearted, with a true bony contour, organic, but like a glacier. And as an earlier chapter had ended : " This " (the labour, that is, of Albert Diirer), " is indeed the labour which is crowned with laurel and has the wings of the eagle. It was reserved for an- other country to prove . . . the labour which is crowned with fire and has the wings of the bat " ; so 76 JOHN RUSK.IN this sad chapter on the " Nereid's Guard " closes with the fulfilment of the menace ; the " other country " and the other age were Turner's. Ruskin's beloved painter was also, like Salvator himself, in part over- come of evil. And when he fought his way to nature and the skies, painting sun-colour as Claude and Cuyp had painted but sunshiny the world not only rejected but reviled him. " One fair dawn or sunset obedi- ently beheld " would have set it right, and justified his painting of the coloured Apollo. His critics shouted, " Perish Apollo. Bring us back Python." " And Python came," adds Ruskin, " came literally as well as spiritually ; all the perfect beauty and conquest which Turner wrought is already withered." This refers to the destruction that has come so soon upon the very material of Turner's work wrecked, faded, and defiled, yet even so better than any other land- scape painting unmarred. No man, before Turner, had painted clouds scarlet. " Hesperid ./Egle and Erytheia [the blushing one] fade into the twilights of four thousand years unconfessed." And in this new page on the great subject of colour Ruskin teaches us that albeit form is of incalculably greater importance, an error in colour is graver than an error in form, because of relation ; the form be- longs to the thing it defines, the colour to the thing and to all about it ; to deal falsely with the colour u breaks the harmony of the day." I do not know a more luminous thought on colour than this, even in these shining pages. Few have been the supreme colourists: Titian, Giorgionc, Veronese, Tintoret, "MODERN PAINTERS" 77 Correggio, Reynolds, and Turner, as Ruskin counts them seven ; whereas of the other qualities or powers of art the great masters have been many. Under the title of " Peace " the last great chapter of this great work closes, not peacefully, but with passionate grief. Turner had been dead nearly twenty years, but the cruelty of the " criticism " that had made his life lonely and painful had never ceased to wound his friend. " There never was yet . . . isolation of a great spirit so utterly desolate. . . . My own admira- tion was wild in enthusiasm, but it gave him no ray of pleasure ; he could not make me at that time under- stand his main meanings ; he loved me, but cared nothing for what I said, and was always trying to hinder me from writing, because it gave pain to his fellow-artists. . . . To censure Turner was acutely sensitive. . . . He knew that however little his higher power could be seen, he had at least done as much as ought to have saved him from wan- ton insult, and the attacks upon him in his later years were to him not merely contemptible in their igno- rance, but amazing in their ingratitude." Let the reader bear in mind that it is was precisely in the first year that showed a Royal Academy without any pictures of Turner's that the " Times " had learnt to call them " works of inspiration." It is charac- teristic of Ruskin that he cannot take the customary comfort and say that Turner learnt in the sorrow he underwent what he had not learnt in the joy he missed ; the last pages of Modern Painters protest against 78 JOHN RUSKIN this form of commonplace. They utter, finally, one of many menaces against a world intent upon gain, and negligent of art and nature. Men in England had learnt, say these mournful closing sentences, not to say in their hearts " There is no God," but to say aloud, '-There is a foolish God " ; " His orders will not work " ; " Faith, generosity, honesty, zeal, and self-sacrifice are poetical phrases " ; and "The power of man is only power of prey : otherwise than the spider, he cannot design ; otherwise than the tiger, he cannot feed." CHAPTER VI "THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE" (1849) THIS was the first illustrated book published by Rus- kin. The illustrated volumes of Modern Painters followed it closely with their splendid cloud and tree drawing. In the Seven Lamps the etchings are of course architectural, but they are etchings of a living stone. A vitality of construction, of time, of shadow and light, and of the power and weight of stone are in these plates, overbitten and not altogether technically successful as they are ; I speak of those of the first edition, afterwards withdrawn. Ruskin made his draw- ings from windows, lofts and ladders, holding on as he might, and bit the plates hurriedly on his journey home. The book was an incident of the third volume of Modern Painters a pause upon the topic of archi- tecture, but a pause as it were in haste and full of some of the most intent and urgent labour of John Rus- kin's life. There was no need for despatch when primroses were to be outlined, or when a lax, random weaving of grasses grown to the flower in June was to be woven again with a delicate pencil : for another year would make amends for any possible lapse of purpose or interruption of work, yielding new flowers to take the place of the old. A student of vegetation 79 8O JOHN RUSKIN may " wake, and learn the world, and sleep again," not lying in wait for changes, but confident of that repetition which makes nature old and mystical to memory, and of that renewal which makes her young and simple to hope a mother to the spirit and a child to the eye. The painter of mountains will not be de- frauded by years of the ancient line upon the sky. The linked memories of all generations are not long enough, in all, to outwatch and to record a change in a little hill. He may be blind, or mad, or absent, but the shape of a bay will await his light, his reason, or his return. Not so with the student of ancient build- ings, who would arrest the action of time, and who therefore must make his own hour of labour elastic with application and with vigilance ; albeit mere time, Ruskin tells us, unbuilds so slowly that if men took pains, they might repair his action not by the futile effort of " restoration " but by honest proppings and shorings that should confess their own date and pur- pose and make no confusions in the history of con- struction. It is not the unbuilding of time, therefore, that presses the student, but the destruction wrought with violence by man, contemptuous and impatient of the work of the past, or confident that he can do some- thing better with the stones unset and set up in an- other fashion. Ruskin was obliged to delay the third volume of Modern Painters while he made his draw- ings of that which no eye should see and no hand should copy again. A note to the preface of The Seven Lamps tells us that the writer's " whole time has been lately occupied in taking drawings from one side "THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE" 81 of buildings, of which the masons were knocking down the other." The book, taking its place as an interlude in what was the continuous work of the young " Graduate of Oxford," takes its place also as a book definite in motive, justified by the unity of the matter, the re- sponsibility of the purpose, and the fulness of prepara- tion the conscience and conviction need hardly be named ; but The Seven Lamps of Architecture is, more than some of its followers, one book from beginning to end. It has the unity of abundant matter, the unity, that is, which need not break boundaries al- though it stretches and enlarges them with fulness, but holds together, amply, easily, containing with patience the urgence of a throng of thoughts. And the subject has its own unity of time, inasmuch as the dominating centre of the book is the work of a certain half-century. We shall find nothing more characteristic of Ruskin than this incident of the fifty years in question. Let me describe them, though roughly enough, to the reader, by means of Ruskin's own discovery that they were the years in which the stonemason, setting his work of Gothic tracery between man and the heavens, thought equally of the form of the light he revealed by his window and of the form of the stone whereby he revealed it. The eyes of that stonemason's father had been chiefly intent upon the opening, the star; the form of it had been in his fancy ; and in the men- tal councils of invention the shape of this exterior light, as his work was about to define it, had been the 8l JOHN RUSKIN president image. The son of that stonemason, on the other hand the half-century being past thought in the foremost place of the shape of his beautiful stone; beautiful it was, but not more beautiful than his whose fortune it was to live in the great half-century, and whose act it was to do the work that made the half- century great. This latter the stone-sculptor of the fifty years here set in the midst designing a star of sky and designing the starred stone with the dignity of equal invention, made the window that is mani- festly the noblest. Ruskin, with singular sight and singular insight, perceives the manner, the cause, the past, the future, and the value of that window and gives it an historical place and sanction. There is no child that does not lie staring at the wall and fancy- ing that a wall-paper design seems now to take the shape enclosed by lines and anon the shape of the in- tervals instead ; and Ruskin's eye saw the tracery simply, impartially, and without preoccupation, like a child's and saw it with the mason's eye moreover, and with the discerning spirit of a master of theory. The reader might be tempted to urge this incident beyond its proper significance as an architectural or historical discovery but he can hardly be wrong in appreciating the passage for its authorship authorship, that is, and all that it implies of character, nature, and special and manifold fitness for the work of the book. To proceed to the expository task. The Seven Lamps of Architecture are : The Lamp of Sacrifice ; The Lamp of Truth ; The Lamp of Power j The Lamp of Beauty; The Lamp of Life; "THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE" 83 The Lamp of Memory ; The Lamp of Obedience. On the cloth-cover of the original edition, designed by Ruskin after the arabesques of the pavement of San Miniato, above Florence foliage, birds, and beasts arranged by counter-change are embossed seven other words of kindred meaning : Religio ; Observ- antia; Auctoritas ; Fides; Obedientia; Memoria; Spiritus. The volume is divided into unequal chap- ters, headed with the English titles already stated. The first has in greatest measure the signs of the author's yet unmitigated youth. It is not so much the work of an untamed spirit as that of a spirit wear- ing certain bonds with all its will, a thousand times convinced, and that from the first infancy. There is the tone of a man troubled to convey his indignation by terms adequate, in the passage wherein he threatens the English nation with sensible visitation of divine wrath upon her honour, her commerce, and her arts as a retribution for the measure whereby a place in her legislature had been "impiously conceded to the Romanist." All this was not only disclaimed but unsaid in succeeding editions. Childhood with its passions the polemic passion of a spiritual and intel- lectual home-boy is one of the most tumultuous of fresh passions was still in a sense in Ruskin's heart during the writing of The Seven Lamps. ' In some things he made, as we shall hear him tell later in Fors Clavigera, a definite change ; he, for one, could not live under the stress of doctrines that obliged and ad- mitted of no transaction, and yet actually suffered daily transaction at the hands of their professors. He 84 JOHN RUSKIN had thought every moment committed to crime that was not spent in rescuing men from eternal reproba- tion; the choice was now thrust upon him: should he devote his years and moments directly, theologic- ally, and immediately, or should he mitigate his con- viction of the instant stress of obligation ? How he answered the question may be judged from the fact that he addressed himself to the mediate work of art. "The Lamp of Sacrifice " needs not from a com- mentator to-day the definition that was due when The Seven Lamps was written. Manifestly, this author's works have both enriched the minds of Englishmen with ideas and have accustomed them to the appre- hension of ideas. What he has thought and pro- nounced abides with us, as it were, both in mechan- ical suspension and in chemical solution. He has charged us with his teachings, and has modified our intelligence. Thus, many of his pages seem now to be over-anxiously expository that were not so when he composed them. In this matter he stands between the old age and the new. Briefly, he suggests in this chapter a delicate distinction between sacrifice and waste ; between that work upon partially concealed ornament, which is the continuation of visible orna- ment, and thus justifies the surmise of the eye and keeps a promise, and work bestowed carelessly or with ignorance as to how to " make it tell," or with heartless contempt of the value of human effort. This last is the subject of a " nice balance." From art that is purely wasted on the one hand, and from art (or art so-called) that is purely exhibitory, on the other, the " THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE " 85 right spirit of sacrifice is absent. Hard work is ap- proved " all old work nearly has been hard work." As usual, the examples are exceedingly interesting. We are taught to respect the economy of the bas-re- liefs of San Zeno at Verona, with their rich work well in sight, and the simplicity of the still lovely work of the arcade above, the various distances being treated not by a difference in degree of beauty in decoration, but by a difference in the quality of design. And so forth with a series of instances that yield all their significance to the sight and insight of Ruskin's intel- lectual eyes. It follows from this doctrine of sacrifice that rich ornament (the natural flower of Gothic) is praised with an ardour by which a reader to-day may be slow to be enkindled ; he has, without intending it, perhaps gradually grown to love simplicity, albeit conscious that it is vulgar ornament and not fine that has made plain masonry to seem so attractive. But under Ruskin's teaching this tendency must be cor- rected, and in fact sacrificed. Many a modern man finds a charm in a blank strong wall that he knows is more than any negative merit ought to have for him. Such simplicities, he has to learn, " Are but the rests and monotones of the art ; it is to its far happier, far higher, exultation that we owe those fair fronts of variegated mosaic, charged with wild fancies and dark hosts of imagery, thicker and quainter than ever filled the depth of midsummer dream ; those vaulted gates, trellised with close leaves ; these window-labyrinths of twisted tracery and starry light ; those misty masses of multitudinous pinnacle 86 JOHN RUSK.IN and diademed tower ; the only witnesses, perhaps, that remain to us of the faith and fear of nations. All else for which the builders sacrificed has passed away all their living interest, and aims, and achievements. We know not for what they laboured, and we see no evidence of their reward. Victory, wealth, authority, happiness all have departed, though bought by many a bitter sacrifice. But of them, and their life and their toil upon the earth, one reward, one evidence, is left to us in those grey heaps of deep-wrought stone. They have taken with them to the grave their powers, their honours, and their errors ; but they have left us their adoration." This splendid passage is itself a Gothic architecture of style. It closes the section of " The Lamp of Sacrifice." The second chapter opens with a page of even higher beauty, in honour of the authority of Truth, the terrible virtue that has no borderland (so Ruskin was doubtless taught in his childhood ; and so he teaches with his manly voice, thunderous). But who that has dealt, unprejudiced, with the common matters of the conscience will be able to cry assent to such a doctrine ? Can the angler who deceives a fish, or the physician who deceives a lunatic, dare to aver with Ruskin that " Truth regards with the same severity the lightest and the boldest violations of its law"; that it is the one quality "of which there are no degrees " ; that whereas " there are some faults slight in the sight of love, some errors slight in the estimate of wisdom, truth forgives no insult, and en- dures no stain " ? Assuredly by no such rhetoric is this one virtue to be separated from the rest her "THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE" 87 proper company who share with her their own in- evitable difficulty and doubt. But it is not to be wondered at that having said so much Ruskin should find it necessary to reassure his readers against any possible scruple as to the lawfulness of making art look like nature. This, however, as a scruple of the moral conscience, need not detain us. Incidentally to the same subject he does not abate of his estimate of Eng- land as " a nation distinguished for its general upright- ness and faith," although the English " admit into their architecture more of prudence, concealment, and de- ceit than any other [people] of this or of past time." Much more significance, by the way, had on a former page been attributed to the poor " exhibitory " shams of the modern Italians ; the English fault is arbitrarily treated as an inconsistency, the Italian, equally arbi- trarily, as a consistency quick with essential impli- cations. Quite removed from these provocations to controversy, and easily detachable from the ethical question so insistently discussed, is a passage of characteristic beauty descriptive of the imaginative il- lusion of the cupola of Parma, where Correggio has made a space of some thirty feet diameter " look like a cloud-wrapt opening in the seventh heaven, crowded with a rushing sea of angels." Ruskin mitigated his admiration of Correggio in after years. A little later comes the page on tracery, on one salient passage whereof I have already dwelt; and here is another ex- quisite example of this incomparably sensitive per- ception. The tracery of the later French Gothic window had grown exceedingly delicate; severe and 88 JOHN RUSKIN pure it was still, nevertheless, and the material man- ifestly stiff. Yet " At the close of the period of pause, the first sign of serious change was like a low breeze, passing through the emaciated tracery, and making it tremble. It began to undulate like the threads of a cobweb lifted by the wind. It lost its essence as a structure of stone. . . . The architect was pleased with this new fancy. ... In a little time the bars of tracery were caused to appear to the eye as if they had been woven together like a net." Of chief importance in the chapter dedicated to "The Lamp of Power" is Ruskin's teaching upon the value and weight of shadows. He bids the young architect learn the habit of thinking in shadow : u Let him design with the sense of heat and cold upon him ; let him cut out the shadows, as men dig wells in un- watered plains." Let him see that the light " is bold enough not to be dried up by twilight, " and the shadow "deep enough not to be dried like a shallow pool by a noon-day sun." Magnificent image ! An- other example of power, intellectually apprehended with a historian's philosophy, is in Ruskin's study of that Gothic of rejection, the Venetian, which began in the luxuriance wherein other architectures have ex- pired, which laid aside Byzantine ornaments one by one, fixed its own forms " by laws more and more severe," and " stood forth, at last, a model of domestic Gothic, so grand, so complete, so nobly systematised, that, to my mind, there never existed an architecture with so stern a claim to our reverence." This judg- " THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE " 89 ment also was partly renounced afterwards in favour of early Lombard work. Two distinct characters in architecture had been treated in the earlier chapters (with what complex consistency of teaching, what abundance of thought, and what experimental examples, this mere indication of the subject and direction of the work does not pretend to express) : the one, the impression archi- tecture receives from human power; the other, the image it bears of the natural creation. And it is this likeness to the " natural creation " that is the subject of the fourth chapter, " The Lamp of Beauty." The sanction of all the beauty of art, its authority, its appeal, its origin, its paragon, abide, as all readers of Ruskin have been told by him in a hundred places, in natural fact. " Beyond a certain point, and that a very low one, man cannot advance in the invention of beauty, without directly imitating natural form." Furthermore, the frequency of a form in nature is, in a sense carefully understood, the measure of its beauty. In other words, that which is, in its order and place, frequent, easily visible, very manifest, not subject to the concealing counsels of nature in organic and inorganic ' depths caverns or living anatomy that is most natural and most beautiful, and the model of decorative art. " By frequency I mean that lim- ited and isolated frequency which is characteristic of all perfection . . . as a rose is a common flower, but yet there are not so many roses on a tree as there are leaves." Throughout the argument the teacher has searched out his way sometimes by quick, some- QO JOHN RUSKIN times by hard, thinking : but never in haste, and never suppressing any part or step of the sincere proc- esses of thought. And immediately upon this eager but steady inquiry into the sanction of artistic beauty comes the passage that surprised the world, in con- demnation of the Greek fret ; and with it one of those keen discoveries that make Ruskin's research so brilliant the discovery that there is a likeness to natural form in the fret, for it is an image of the crystals of bismuth ; but that this crystallisation is seldom visible, little known, and not even perfectly natural, inasmuch it is brought to pass by artificial means, the mental being seldom or never found in pure condition. But the crystals of salt have a form known to almost every man, and it is the crytallisa- tion of common salt that sets the example of another design in right lines used throughout the Lombard churches and drawn with extraordinary beauty by the author, rich with shadow. As a result of the same kind of casuistic insight (I put the word casuistic to its right use) Ruskin condemns the portcullis and all heraldic decoration especially when, as usual, it is repeated. The arms are an announcement, and have their place, but what they have to tell if is an imperti- nence to tell a score of times. Nor is a motto deco- rative, " since, of all things unlike nature, the forms of letters are perhaps the most so." With the same sincere ingenuity (here quite unstrained) he explains the vileness of the ribbon and its unlikeness to grass and sea-weed with their anatomy, gradation, direction, and allotted size of separate creatures. The ribbon "THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE" 91 has " no strength, no languor. It cannot wave, in the true sense, but only flutter; it cannot bend, but only turn and be wrinkled." We are urged to con- demn the ribbons of Raphael, and do so heartily, even the ribbons that tie " Ghiberti's glorious bronze flowers," and all the multitudes of scrolls in so far as they are used for decoration. Let me add this ex- quisite phrase (from a somewhat paradoxical passage) in description of that Mediaeval treatment of drapery which began to restore, while it altered, the Antique buoyancy : " The motion of the figure only bent into a softer line the stillness of the falling veil, fol- lowed by it like a slow cloud by drooping rain : only in links of lighter undulation it followed the dances of the angels." The warning against false decorations is necessarily a warning also against decoration misplaced. It was spoken in 1849. Fifty years later and more, the world has become full of violations. Nothing spoken by this voice, which spoke after close thought and with singular authority, has been disobeyed with a more general and more national consent. Ruskin pronounced the law that " things belonging to pur- poses of active and occupied life " should not be dec- orated. The answer of the public is the Greek moulding on shop-fronts, the decoration of the tem- ple multiplied in the railway-station, on the counter, in the office ; until for disgust we no longer see it, and are but aware of some superfluity that is depress- ing, degraded, vulgar, dishonouring, and tedious we care not what. The country has treated with prac- 92 JOHN RUSKIN tical contempt the humorous and generous instructor who in his youth would have much enjoyed " going through the streets of London, pulling down these brackets and friezes and large names, restoring to the tradesmen the capital they had spent in architecture, and putting them on honest and equal terms, each with his name in black letters over his door." Symmetry, proportion, and colour form the subjects of important passages in " The Lamp of Beauty." Vertical equality, against which a young architect ought to be warned in his elementary lesson, Ruskin found to be usual in Modern Gothic ; it has not be- come less so in Gothic more modern still. He would have symmetry to belong to horizontal, and propor- tion to vertical, division ; symmetry being obviously connected with the idea of balance, which is only lateral. Colour on a building should be that of an organised creature, and the colours of an organised creature are visibly independent (this word must serve for lack of a better) of the form of its limbs. It is arbitrary, and has a plan of .its own the plan of colour. Ruskin would not have us give to separate mouldings separate colours, nor even to leaves or figures one colour and to the ground an- other. And in general " the best place for colour is on broad surfaces, not on spots of interest in form." When the colouring is brought to pass by the natural hue of blocks of marble, the chequers are not to be harmonised or fitted to the forms of the windows. As in the Doge's Palace, the front should look as if the surface had first been finished, and the windows "THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE" 93 then cut out of it. This rule of beauty is distinctly also a rule of power. It is, needless to say, a point of architectural controversy, and the doctrine of Rus- kin on colour has been held in horror. He has on his side the Byzantine builders with their perdurable colouring by incrustation, and against him Antiquity and most of the northern Gothic schools. Then follows the page on Giotto's tower, model of propor- tion, design, and colour, " coloured like a morning cloud and chased like a sea shell " : " And if this be, as I believe it, the model and mirror of perfect architecture, is there not something to be learned by looking back to the early life of him who raised it ? I said that the power of human mind had its growth in the Wilderness ; much more must the love and the conception of that beauty whose every line and hue we have seen to be, at the least, a faded image of God's daily work, and an arrested ray of some star of creation, be given chiefly in the places which He has gladdened by planting the fir tree and the pine. Not within the walls of Florence, but among the far away fields of her lilies, was the child trained who was to raise the headstone of Beauty above her towers of watch and war. Remember all that he became ; count the sacred thoughts with which he filled the heart of Italy ; ask those who followed him what they learned at his feet; and when you have numbered his labours, and received their testi- mony, if it seem to you that God had verily poured out upon this His servant no common nor restrained portion of His Spirit, and that he was indeed a King among the children of men, remember also that the legend upon his crown was that of David's : * I took thee from the sheep-cote, and from following the sheep.' " 94 JOHN RUSKIN " No inconsiderable part of the essential character of Beauty depends on the expression of vital energy in organic things, or on the subjection to such energy of things naturally passive and powerless." This is amongst the opening sentences of u The Lamp of Life," and the theme is rich in the hands of the most vital of writers. Even readers in whose ears this eloquence is too much inflected, too full of wave, too much moved in its beauty to be a perfect style, must confess a vitality that makes the vivacity of other authors seem but a trivial agitation. Ruskin always carried that rich internal burden, a vast capacity of sincerity. Others may have been entirely sincere; and he could be no more than entirely sincere. And yet what a difference in the degree of integrity ! And the measure of this capacity for truth is the measure of vitality. It is by force of life that Ruskin hoped, in these early works of his, and by force of life that he so despaired in the later works as almost to per- suade himself, for very grief, that he cared no longer for the miseries of cities, but was glad to enjoy his days in peace. The passage on dead architecture is an example of the profound misgiving that has beset all prophets, a distrust of the world and of its final work ; it is also a passage of literature that has cost much. Among corrupted styles Ruskin has tolerance of that which is animated and unafraid the Flamboyant design of France. And because the question of life is locked (when the sculpture is that of natural form) in the question of finish, the student should consult these " THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE " 95 sayings : " Sculpture is not the mere cutting of the form of anything in stone ; it is the cutting of the effect of it. The sculptor must paint with his chisel ; half his touches are not to realise, but to put power into, the form." "The Lamp of Life," with its several arguments and its essential significance, is a solemn chapter appealing directly to the obligations of immortal man; "The Lamp of Memory," a most delicate one, in which the author is all but compelled to say somewhat more than he could stand to, and yet unsays no more than a note will answer. Except the page in which he had bidden men to refrain from decorating a railway station (a page that filled the artistic public with an incredulous surprise, where- from they have hardly yet recovered, though, to do them justice, it did not cause them to pause in any cast-iron work they might have been about), perhaps nothing in The Seven Lamps has been found so mem- orable by the greater number of readers as the passage that declares Ruskin's lack of delight in an Alpine landscape transposed in fancy to the western hemis- phere. "The flowers in an instant lost their light, the river its music." " Yet not all their light, nor all its music," says the note. What then ? Never was a thought more certainly doubtful, double, de- niable, undeniable. Ruskin's description of that landscape a description which, of course, depends for its cogency in the argument upon the fact that it takes no note of the historical interest of the Alps is a finished work, exquisite with study of leaf and language, but yet not effective in proportion to its 96 JOHN RUSKIN own beauty and truth. Ruskin wrote it in youth, in the impulse of his own discovery of language, and of all that English in its rich modern freshness could do under his mastery and it is too much, too charged, too anxious. Some sixty lines of u word-painting " are here ; and they are less than this line of a poet: " Sunny eve in some forgotten place." This refraining phrase is of more avail to the imagi- nation than the splendid subalpine landscape of The Seven Lamps. Another page of this chapter has also become famous that which begins, " Do not let us talk then of Restoration. The thing is a lie from be- ginning to end." The last lamp is that of Obedience. (Many years later, in Fan Clavigera, Ruskin confesses that he had much ado to keep the Lamps to seven, they would so easily become eight or nine on his hands.) It contains, among much fruit of thought, the author's definite counsel to the world as to the choice among the logical and mature styles of Euro- pean architecture. He forbids any infantine or any barbarous style, " however Herculean their infancy, or majestic their outlawry, such as our own Norman, or the Lombard Romanesque." Of the four that arc to choose from the Pisan Romanesque, the early Gothic of the Western Italian Republics, the Venetian Gothic, and the English earliest decorated the architect is urged to learn the laws so surely that he may finally win the right of exercising his own liberty and inven- tion. And a manifold meditation on obedience closes "THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE" 97 with another recollection of early religious menace and expectation : " I have paused, not once or twice, as I wrote, and often have checked the course of what might other- wise have been importunate persuasion, as the thought has crossed me, how soon all Architecture may be vain, except that which is not made with hands. There is something ominous in the light which has enabled us to look back with disdain upon the ages among whose lovely vestiges we have been wandering. I could smile when I hear the hopeful exultation of many, at the new reach of worldly science, and vigour of worldly effort ; as if we were again at the begin- ning of days. There is thunder on the horizon as well as dawn. The sun was risen upon the earth when Lot entered Zoar." A reader with the world-pitying heart of the world of our later day is dismayed at the severity and at the calm of this universal threat. The visionary beauty of the phrase has none of that grief which is heard in the vaticination of another prophetic author, Coventry Patmore, who yet menaced not the whole world but one degenerate land, foretelling the day when " A dim heroic nation, long since dead, The foulness of her agony forgot " England shall be remembered only by her then dead language " the bird-voice and the blast of her omnil- oquent tongue." CHAPTER VII "THE STONES OF VENICE" (1851-1853) RUSKIN, penetrated with a sense of the " baseness of the schools of architecture and nearly every other art, which have for three centuries been predominant in Europe," wrote this book principally in order to convict those base schools, locally, in their central degradation. Locally, because in Venice, and in Venice only, could the Renaissance be effectually reached, judged, and sentenced. " Destroy its claims to admiration there " (when Ruskin began his work they were triumphant) " and it can assert them no- where else." He intended to make the Stones of Venice touchstones, and to detect, " by the moulder- ing of her marble, poison more subtle than ever was betrayed by the rending of her crystal." And be- yond this one of the most interesting and definite motives that ever urged the making of a book stands the inevitable argument of his life : " Men are in- tended, without excessive difficulty ... to know good things from bad." The work is thus local because the u festering lily " of Shakespeare had its unique foulness in Venice. That city had been in an early age of her long history the central meeting-place of the Lombard from the north and the Arab from the south over the wreck 98 " THE STONES OF VENICE " 99 of the Roman empire. It was through this fruitful encounter that the Ducal Palace became " the central building of the world." All European architecture derives from Greece, through Rome, and the condi- tions of place and of race bring to pass the all-unique variety of derivation. In Venice the variety was also all-important ; and Ruskin begins the study of the art in its rise, greatness, decline, and last corruption, by a brief but large history of this nation, standing, as a sea-nation, a ruin between Tyre (no more than a memory) and England still imperial. He divides the national life of Venice, between the nine hundred years from her foundation (421 A. D.) and the five hundred years of her decline and fall, by the measure called the Serrar del Consiglio, which finally and fatally distinguished the nobles from the commonalty, and withdrew the power from the people and the Doge alike. " Ah, well done, Venice ! Wisdom this, indeed ! " had been Ruskin's note to Sansovino's summary of the constitution of Venice before the Serrar del Consiglio : " She found means to commit the government not to one, not to few, not to many, but to the many good, to the few better, and to the best one." Ruskin places the beginning of the de- cline in 1418 ; so that even her religious painters came later, and her great school about a century later, more or less. The sensitive arts of architecture and sculpture seem to have taken the mortal hurt more quickly than the art of painting, incorrupt in Venice later than elsewhere by reason of the life of its in- comparable colour. In the introductory chapter, IOO JOHN RUSKIN " The Quarry/' Ruskin gives us that instance of the tombs of the two Doges which is an example of the great essential contention of the book. The one tomb, not primitive, not altogether fine, an early fif- teenth-century work, has a nobility yet unforegone; the other, half a century later, is the tomb of Andrea Vendramin, the most costly ever bestowed on a Vene- tian monarch, praised by popular taste and authorita- tive criticism with all their superlatives, while the other was contemned. Climbing to see more of this later effigy, which he perceived to be ignoble, Ruskin found that the much vaunted sculptured hand, in sight, had no fellow but a block, and so with the aged brow, wrinkled only where it might be seen, the aged cheek, smooth, and also distorted, where it lay out of sight. Ruskin would have had nothing but praise for treatment of sculpture according to the position of the effigy ; but this was another matter : u Who, with a heart in his breast, could have stayed his hand, as he reached the bend of the grey forehead, and measured out the last veins of it as so much the zecchin ? " It was not necessary that Ruskin should follow up this sculptor and find him condemned for forgery; his own sentence strikes close enough. The lesson on architecture that follows is offered to a reader who is to be taught to build and to dec- orate, and who, in order thereto, is to be set free from the poor fiction is it even so much ? has it life enough for feigning ? that the decorations of the 41 THE STONES OF VENICE" IOI modern world are delightful to man. " Do you seri- ously imagine," asks our teacher, " that any living soul in London likes triglyphs ? . . . Greeks did : English people never did, and never will." " The first thing we have to ask of decoration is that it should indicate strong liking. . . . The old Lombard architects liked hunting : so they cov- ered their work with horses and hounds. The base Renaissance architects liked masquing and fiddling; so they covered their work with comic masks and musical instruments. Even that was bet- ter than our English way of liking nothing and pro- fessing to like triglyphs." Ruskin calls upon us for deliberate question and upright answer as to our affections. But first comes the long historical lesson on con- struction : on the wall, which is so built that it is not " dead wall " ; on the pier, the base, the shaft, with a special emphasis upon the transition from the actual to the apparent cluster, illustrated by plans ; on arch masonry, the arch load, the roof, and the buttress. Of all this, obviously, no indication in this summary is possible. The introductory lesson on decoration is another version of the often-repeated teaching on natural form : " All the lovely forms of the ' universe . . . whence to choose, and all the lovely lines that bound their substance or guide their motion. . . There is material enough in a single flower for the ornament of a score of cathedrals : but suppose we were satisfied with less exhaustive appliance, and built IO2 JOHN RUSKIN a score of cathedrals each to illustrate a single flower ? that would be better than trying to invent new styles, I think. There is quite difference of style enough, between a violet and a hare-bell, for all reasonable purposes." Who can read such a passage and not have gained a new felicity ? We owe the exquisite thought and phrase (at least in regard to its occasion) to that folly of the time wherein the book was written the hope that a new kind of architecture was to come to pass through the initiative of the Crystal Palace. John Ruskin consents to pause and refute that idle boast. " The earth hath bubbles as the water hath," he says of the Sydenham " palace," " and this is of them." To return to this inexhaustible theme of the natural form ; Ruskin opposes Garnett, a writer who com- mends art (as writers on art have done at least every ten years since then) for its correction of nature. Art, according to Garnett, is to criticise nature by her own rules gathered from all her works, and he quotes the saying recorded of Raphael, " that the artist's object was to make things not as nature made them but as nature would make them." Ruskin replies : " I had thought that, by this time, we had done with that stale . . . and misunderstood saying. Raffaelle was a painter of humanity, and assuredly there is something the matter with human- ity, a few dovrebbe's more or less, wanting in it. We have most of us heard of original sin, and may per- haps, in our modest moments, conjecture that we are "THE STONES OF VENICE" 103 not quite what God, or Nature, would have us to be. Raffaelle bad something to mend in humanity : I should have liked to have seen him mending a daisy, or a pease-blossom, or a moth." Then follows a page on the succession of the waves of the irregular sea. Not one of these hits " the great ideal shape," the corrected shape, nor will if we watch them for a thousand years. In the appendix to the first volume we may read much theology of Ruskin's own writing and of his father's, directed against the idea of a teaching Church, and showing him to be so docile a son as to follow his father not only in regard to " eternal inter- ests " but also in regard to temporal prosperity. If you care little for the first, says the elder Ruskin in effect, you must needs care for the second, and Prot- estantism means the wealth of nations. Not many years later, when he wrote Unto this Last, John Ruskin had thought his own thoughts on the wealth of nations, and his father was amongst the dismayed readers. A more valuable page of the appendix is that which declares the rapid judgment to which Ruskin intends by Stones of Venice to train the reader or rather for which he intends to set the reader free to be attainable in painting as well as in architec- ture. We ought by a side-glance, as we walk down a gallery, to tell a good painting ; because, as in archi- tecture structure and expression are united, so in painting are execution and expression. Who will say, after this, that Ruskin sought too much for sym- bolism and allusion and the less pictorial characters IO4 JOHN RUSK.IN of art ? " The business of a painter is to paint." He gave years of his life to Veronese, in whom the emotions were altogether subordinate. In fact Ruskin is the most liberal and universal of all lovers and critics of art, having eyes for all manners as for all matters : u A man long trained to love the monk's visions of Angelico turns in proud and ineffable disgust from the first work of Rubens ... he encounters across the Alps. ... He has forgotten that while An- gelico prayed and wept . . . there was different work doing in the dank fields of Flanders ; wild seas to be banked out ; hard ploughing and har- rowing of the frosty clay ; careful breeding of stout horses and fat cattle, . . . rough affections and sluggish imaginations, fleshy, substantial, iron-shod humanities. . . . And are we to suppose there is no nobility in Rubens ? masculine and universal sym- pathy with all this ? . . . On the other hand, a man trained ... in our Sir Joshua school, will not and cannot allow that there is any art at all in the technical work of Angelico. . . . We have been taught in England to think there can be no virtue but in a loaded brush and rapid hand , but . . . there is art also in the delicate point and in the hand which trembles as it moves, not because it is more liable to err but because there is more danger in its error." In the second volume the study of St. Mark's is prefaced by that of the churches of Torcello and of Murano, those ancient villages whence in part Venice received her people. It is in the marble-mosaic Murano pavement of 1 140 " one of the most precious monu- ments in Italy " that the eye which replied with the "THE STONES OF VENICE" 105 splendour of its gift of vision to the splendour of the Venetian brush discovered the first Venetian colour. As to Byzantine building Ruskin teaches us the im- portance of this fact that it is a style of " confessed incrustation," and shows us how far this fact carries. Venice on her islands, hard by a sandy and marshy coast, and in traffic with the East, built with the meaner materials and faced them with the marbles of her commerce. Her coloured architecture became rather flat, rather small, as well as precious, carrying porphyry, alabaster, and gold, and later the less perdurable but more precious colours of her painters. Incrustation is obviously " the only permanent chromatic decora- tion possible," as we know who trace with mixed feelings the vestiges of the Gothic painter at Bourges and at Winchester, in chocolate and green. Here, at St. Mark's, is no opaque surface-painting of the paint- er's mixing, but the colour of nature in jasper and marble, into which the light makes some way : " mar- bles that half refuse and half yield to the sunshine, Cleopatra-like, their c bluest veins to kiss.' " Certain characters of construction and of decoration are im- plied by incrustation : for example, the delicacy that is to distinguish the plinths and cornices used for bind- ing this rich armature from those that are essential parts of the solid building ; the abandonment of nearly all expression in the body of the building, except that of strength, so that the Byzantine building shows no anxiety to disturb open surfaces ; the solidity of the shafts, however precious in material, as an instinctive amends for the thinness of the precious surface on the IO6 JOHN RUSKIN walls ; and the consequent variable size of the shafts, as rubies in a carcanet have the differences proper to their single values, and the emeralds of two ear-rings are not absolutely alike ; shallow cutting of the dec- oration, so that here are none of the hollows and hiding-places proper to the stone-work of the north. On this serene and sunny construction the decorator worked as one who traces a tine drawing, subduing and controlling figure and drapery to the surface of his film of marble. Little have they read this book who currently discuss the fanaticism of Ruskin in the matter of " truth," and charge him with so bigoted a love of integrity as to forbid the use of a marble sur- face on a construction of commoner substance ; an architect accuses him of this to-day as easily as a painter to-morrow will aver that Ruskin did not per- mit him to choose what he would record, but com- pelled him to record all that was before him. It is as the chief of the lovers of colour that Ruskin is the apologist of an incrusted church simply condemned as 41 ugly " by the taste of the guides of the world that St. Mark's which was to him "a confusion of de- light," a " chain of language and life," that St. Mark's which he read, not in Gothic darkness and effort, but clearly, with the clearness of white dome and sky. No sign of carelessness of heart, to him, was the col- our of Venice, but a solemn investiture. As to the form, I may do no more here than record the little spray of leaves he draws on a page of Stones of Venice, with a subtle difference in the progression of the pro- portions amongst the seven leaves ; and when you are "THE STONES OF VENICE" 107 penetrated with the grace of these single things in their inter-relation, you read that these are the pro- portions of the facade of St. Mark's. Who but he has given a reader such a happy moment ? And as for the Byzantine spirit, he cries, of St. Mark's, " No city had such a Bible." He perceives in it " That mighty humanity, so perfect and so proud, that hides no weakness beneath the mantle, and gains no greatness from the diadem ; the majesty of thought- ful form, on which the dust of gold and flame of jew- els are dashed, as the sea-spray upon the rock, and still the great Manhood seems to stand bare against the sky." The following section, on the nature of Gothic, is one of the most important chapters of Ruskin's archi- tectural work. Let it be remembered that he chose the Gothic of Venice for the sake of its local succession to this local Byzantine work. But he prefaces the lesson with a study of universal Gothic, the Gothic of such almost abstract quality as would be difficult to define, even as red would be difficult to describe to one who had not seen it, but who must be told that it was the col- our mingled with blue to make this violet, and with yellow to make yonder orange. Universal Gothic, like other great architecture, began with artless utter- ance. " It is impossible to calculate the enormous loss of power in modern days owing to the imperative re- quirement that art shall be methodical and learned." IO8 JOHN RUSKIN For there will always be " more intellect than there can be education." But Gothic was in a special man- ner the work of the savage intellect, of the inventor, the intellectual workman ; it has not the same word to repeat, but the perpetual novelty of life. And, to the Gothic workman, living foliage no longer the mere " explanatory accessory " of Lombardic or Ro- manesque sculpture became " a subject of intense affection. " Here is an incomparable Ruskin thought : the love of change, he tells us, that was in the char- acter of the Gothic sculptor, restless in following the hunt or the battle, u is at once soothed and satisfied as it watches the wandering of the tendril, and the bud- ding of the flower." And here a Ruskin phrase, also in its place incomparable : u Greek and Egyptian or- nament is either mere surface engraving ... or its lines are flowing, lithe, and luxuriant. . . . But the Gothic ornament stands out in prickly inde- pendence, and frosty fortitude, jutting into crockets, and freezing into pinnacles." In the same chapter is, amongst others, an admirable page upon redundance as a quality, not, needless to say, of all fine Gothic, but of the Gothic that is most full of all Gothic qualities, and especially the Gothic quality of humility : " That humility which is the very life of the Gothic school is shown not only in the imperfection, but in the accumulation, of ornament." With the selfsame care are the many Gothic con- structions of Venice discovered by Ruskin's research as the few Byzantine ; nearly all, except the Ducal Palace, suffer from "the continual juxtaposition of the "THE STONES OF VENICE" 109 Renaissance palaces; . . . they exhaust their own life by breathing it into the Renaissance cold- ness." The Ducal Palace, according to Ruskin, was a work of sudden Gothic. It is unlike the true transitional work done between the final cessation of pure Byzantine building, about 1300, and its own date 1320 to 1350. The struggle between Byzan- tine and Gothic (formed on the mainland) had been one of equals, equally organised and vital. Ruskin shows us the brilliant contest, with here and there a bit of true Gothic tangled and taken prisoner till its friends should come up and sustain it. And of the Gothic victory the English reader (Ruskin writes, in spite of all, for the ultra-English reader, the insular, the suburban, the very churchwarden) should note that the Venetian houses were the refined and ornate dwellings of " a nation as laborious, as practical, as brave, and as prudent as ourselves. ... At Venice, . . . Vicenza, Padua, and Verona the traveller may ascertain, by actual experience, the effect which would be produced upon the comfort and luxury of daily life by the revival of Gothic architecture " ; he may see the unruined traceries against the summer sky, or " may close the casements fitted to their unshaken shafts against such wintry winds as would have made an English house vibrate to its foundations." " I trust," said Ruskin, and his lesson has in part been learnt since then, " that there will come a time when the English people may see the folly of building basely and insecurely." The reader is led then at last to the Ducal Palace, and, in 110 JOHN RUSK.IN honour of its sculptures, to a chapter on that great book of the Virtues as the Christian Venice honoured them ; from that chapter I must save this sentence on Plato that the " moral virtues may be found in his writings defined in the most noble manner, as a great painter defines his figures, without outlines." When Gothic architecture came to the conquest of Byzantine in Venice, both were noble ; but when, in a later age, the Renaissance architecture attacked the Gothic, neither was purely noble. Ruskin shows us that " unless luxury had enervated and subtlety falsified the Gothic forms, Roman traditions could not have prevailed against them." The corrupt Gothic had become luxurious ; " in some of the best Gothic . . . there is hardly an inch of stone left unsculptured " ; but the decadent Gothic is at once extravagant and jaded. Against this degraded architecture " came the Renaissance armies ; and their first assault was in the requirement of universal perfection." The Renaissance workmen lost origi- nality of thought and tenderness of feeling, for the sake of their dexterity of touch and accuracy of knowledge. " The thought and the feeling which they despised departed from them, and they were left to felicitate themselves on their small science and their neat fingering. This is the history of the first attack of the Renaissance upon the Gothic schools. Now do not let me be misunderstood when I speak generally of the evil spirit of the Renaissance. The reader . . . will not find one word but of the most profound reverence for those mighty men who " THE STONES OF VENICE " III could wear the Renaissance armour of proof, and yet not feel it encumber their living limbs Leonardo and Michael Angelo, Ghirlandajo and Masaccio, Titian and Tintoret. But I speak of the Renaissance as an evil time, because, when it saw those men go burning forth into the battle, it mistook their armour for their strength ; and forthwith encumbered with the painful panoply every stripling who ought to have gone forth only with his own choice of three smooth stones out of the brook." Full of significance (I must take but one detail from this history of decline) is the fact that even in the finest examples of early Renaissance, where it was mingled with reminiscences of the Byzantine chro- matic work, the coloured marble was no longer a simple part of the masonry but was framed and repre- sented as hanging by ribbons. Of the central archi- tecture of the Renaissance, the Casa Grimani stands, in Ruskin's noble praises, as the best example. With the Vicenza Town Hall, with St. Peter's, Whitehall, and St. Paul's, this palace represents the building that has been set before the student, from the date of its invention to the day of the writing of the Stones of Venice, as the antagonist of the barbarous genius. None the less was it a sign of the general withdrawal of architecture into " earthliness, out of all that was warm and heavenly." In its central works the Ve- netian Renaissance set up statues of the ancient Ve- netian virtues Temperance and Justice ; but these figures were furnished as neither the left hand of O the one nor the right hand of the other could be seen from below with one hand each. 112 JOHN RUSKIN " Its dragons are covered with marvellous scales, but have no terror or sting in them ; its birds are perfect in plumage, but have no song in them ; its children are lovely of limb, but have no childishness in them." The effigies upon its tombs evaded the thought of death; its figure of the dead first indented the pillow " naturally," then rose on its elbow and looked about it, and finally stepped out of the tomb for public ap- plause, not with virtues, but with fame and victory, for companions. Ruskin takes us, through the stages of corruption, to the curtains and ropes, fringes, tassels, cherubs, the impotence of expression, the passionless folly, of the seventeenth century, more foul in Venice than elsewhere as the thing corrupted had been the best. Infidelity, Pride of State, Pride of System (or the confidence of definitely observable laws that never enabled man to do a great thing, and albeit literature and painting could break through, architecture could not) these were the causes of the derogation of Venice. The rod had blossomed, pride had budded, violence had risen up. The chapter following this on the Roman Renaissance deals with the Grotesque of the Renaissance ; it shows us the mocking head inhuman, weak, and finely finished, carved upon the base of the tower of Santa Maria Formosa, one of many hundreds to be found upon the later buildings. As the grotesque was, to Ruskin's mind, at its noblest in Dante (yet heaven help us, wretched race of man, if Dante's laugh is to be our mirth !) so it was at its thinnest and most malicious "THE STONES OF VENICE" 113 in Renaissance ornament in Venice. That ornament closes the architecture of Europe. But the conclusion of this great book is an appeal not to despair, but to the hope of the race. It is a race still in its infancy, says John Ruskin, if we may take as tokens of puerility its foolish condemnation of the only work of art (Turner's) that was true to the science and truth professed by the age ; its misunder- standing of social and economic principles, so that it preached those impossibilities " liberty " and " equal- ity," and yet in no single nation dared to shut up its custom-houses ; its profession of charity and self-sac- rifice for the practice of individual man and its re- jection thereof for the practice of the State. If man- kind, then, was childish, it might be taught. And how much, in by-ways of opinion, the world did learn from Ruskin, of true learning, may be seen from an incident of this last chapter, in which he rebukes the painters of his day for painting Italy without olive- trees ! This they did because their teachers thought trees ought not to be known from one another, and you certainly cannot make olives like any other tree of the hillside. " The very school which carries its science in the representation of man down to the dissection of the most minute muscle, refuses so much science to the drawing of a tree as shall distinguish one species from another." Then follows a magnifi- cent apology for the barbaric olive as the dome of St. Mark's has it, and this allusion to the trees of the painters : 114 JOHN RUSKIN " A few strokes of the pencil, or dashes of colour, will be enough to enable the imagination to conceive a tree; and in those dashes of colour Sir Joshua Reynolds would have rested, and would have suffered the imag- ination to paint what more it liked for itself, and grow oaks, or olives, or apples, out of the few dashes of colour at its leisure. On the other hand, Hobbema, one of the worst of the realists, smites the imagination on the mouth, and bids it be silent, while he sets to work to paint his oak of the right green." The painters of to-day, worthy the name, paint olives, and the world has been changed in other ways; but it has not begun to restore a great time. For to the book, in so far as it is a book of persua- sion, there is this reply, and against it this contention : that it persuades to that whereto no man nor men can attain by any means they can be persuaded to lay hands upon. The German painters, for example, of the Overbeck school had doubtless a good will to paint as they should, and as Ruskin's teaching would ap- prove. But here is what he very rightly thought of them : 41 1 know not anything more melancholy than the sight of the German cartoon, with its objective side and its subjective side; and mythological division and symbolical division ; its allegorical sense and literal sense ; and ideal point of view and intellectual point of view ; its heroism of well-made armour and knitted brows . . . ; and twenty innocent dashes of the hand of one God-made painter, poor old Bassano or Bonifazio, were worth it all, and worth it ten thou- sand times over." 41 THE STONES OF VENICE" 115 Whereto, then, is the persuasion of this book di- rected ? As a book of history and of meditation on character and art it does its work; but does it not it- self show us that as a book of persuasion it can do no work, for there is no work to be done ? Is a man to be persuaded, convinced, or converted to be such a man as this of Ruskin's description ? " It is no more art to lay on colour delicately than to lay on acid [the acid of the photographer is meant] delicately. It is no more art to use the cornea and retina for the reception of an image than to use a lens and a piece of silvered paper. But the moment that inner part of the man, or rather that entire and only being of the man, of which cornea and retina, fingers and hands, pencils and colours, are all the mere serv- ants and instruments ; that manhood has light in it- self, though the eyeball be sightless, and can gain in strength when the hand and the foot are hewn off and cast into the fire ; the moment this part of the man stands forth with its solemn 4 Behold, it is I,' then the work becomes art indeed." In the preface to the third edition (1874) Ruskin confesses that his book had gained an influence, for Englishmen had begun to mottle their manufactory chimneys with black and red, and to adorn their banks and drapers' shops with Venetian tracery, but the chief purpose of the writing, which was to show the moral corruption as cause of the corruption of art, had been altogether neglected. " As a physician would . . . rather hear that his patient had thrown all his medicine out of the Il6 JOHN RUSKIN window, than that he had sent word to his apothecary to leave out two of its three ingredients, so I would rather, for my own part, that no architects had ever condescended to adopt one of the views suggested in this book." At the close of Stones of Venice he complains once more that all readers praised the style and none the substance. u If . . . I had told, as a more egoistic person would, my own impressions, as thinking those, for- sooth, and not the history of Venice, the most impor- tant business, ... a large number of equally egoistic persons would have instantly felt the sincer- ity of the selfishness, clapped it, and stroked it, and said, 4 That's me.' " The truth he had to tell he declares to have been " denied and detested." Finally, a somewhat whimsical last page is filled with an extract from his diary of 1845, showing that he too could write like a critic of " chiaroscuro and other artistic qualities," but that he kept such obser- vations for the furnishing of his own science rather than for presentation to the public. And in the ap- pendix to Stones of Venice is an invaluable essay on the Venetian pictures. CHAPTER VIII " PRE-RAPHAELITISM WHEN the pictures of the young " pre-Raphaelite brethren " first appeared in the London exhibitions, the newspapers made loud complaints. Of pictures by Millais and Holman Hunt at the Academy the Times said : " These young artists have unfortunately become notorious by addicting themselves to an anti- quated style and an affected simplicity of painting. . We can extend no toleration to a mere senile l imitation of the cramped style, false perspec- tive, and crude colour of remote antiquity. That morbid infatuation which sacrifices truth, beauty, and genuine feeling to mere eccentricity de- serves no quarter at the hands of the public." Rus- kin then wrote to the Times two letters, signed " The Author of Modern Painters," protesting that the pic- tures in question were not false whether in feeling or perspective, that their laboriousness entitled them to more than a hasty judgment, and that great things might be expected of the painters. He blames them for looking too narrowly, and he perceives a flowing 1 The word is " senile " in early and late editions of Ruskin, but it is a strange word wherewith to rate young painters. The ad- jective you can read with your eyes shut, to go with " imitation," is servile." 117 Il8 JOHN RUSKIN and an impulse in nature that outstrips such slow labours as theirs; but his praises of their execution, in its kind, and of their colour, are large. " I have no acquaintance with any of these artists, and very imperfect sympathy with them," says the first letter; the apology was undertaken for the love of natural truth, evidently dear to the new painters. The Times letters were followed immediately by a pamphlet. The pre-Raphaelite brethren, says the preface, had been assailed "with the most scurrilous abuse which I ever recollect seeing issue from the press " (it must be owned that Raskin's angry sentence is ill-written in three places); and the contention that follows is exceedingly interesting for reasons that seem to have escaped its readers. That is, Ruskin has always been represented as the champion of a group of young men of talent. This he was, and a generous one ; he declared their work to be the " most earnest and com- plete " done in Europe since the day of Albert Durer. But the pamphlet is by no means, in its essential argument, the eulogy of young men of talent. It is a frank proposal to young men of industry that they should apply themselves modestly to painting pictures of topographic, historic, scientific, or botanic interest pour seruir. Ruskin is accused of seeing "genius" too readily ; but there could hardly be a more candid declaration (it was too candid to be altogether under- stood) that genius was not to be looked for. The author of Pre-Raphaelitism says in effect that what is to be demanded of a multitude of painters (who can be no more than workmen, and ought to be good " PRE-RAPHAELITISM " I 1 9 workmen) is a trustworthy and useful record of con- temporary things having an unpictorial interest. He says further on : " Many people have found fault with me for not 1 teaching people how to arrange masses ' ; for not 'attributing sufficient importance to composition.' Alas ! I attribute far more importance to it than they do so much importance that I should just as soon think of sitting down to teach a man how to write a Divina Commedia or King Lear, as how to c compose,' in the true sense, a single building or picture." Such a comparison doubtless goes too far, or rather goes wrong, as demonstrations borrowed from each other by the arts must always do ; for certainly there are things to be taught to a painter that have no counterpart in any things possible to teach to a poet. But I quote the passage in sign of the curious conten- tion it reappears in the first Slade lectures that the majority of painters would do well to content them- selves with pictures that are hardly pictures. Noth- ing more humiliating was ever said of modern art; it was so humiliating that no one would consent to un- derstand it; was indeed too humiliating to be just. The pre-Raphaelite pamphlet changes, after the in- troductory page, into a history of the art of Turner. Particularly instructive here is the history of the evolution of Turner's whole art of colour, from the kind of colour-stenography of the beginning ; and excellent also the history of Turner's sympathy, of his ready admirations, of the help he consented to receive from weak painters, such as Claude, and re- 120 JOHN RUSK.IN fused from strong but more false painters, such as Salvator Rosa. " Besides, he had never seen classical life, and Claude was represented to him as a competent au- thority for it. But he had seen mountains and tor- rents, and knew therefore that Salvator could not paint them." In 1800, facing the Continental landscape for him- self, Turner cast Claude and the rest away, once for all, and relied upon his eagle eye, his imagination, and his "gigantic memory." Turner, says Ruskin, for- got himself, and forgot nothing else. The Times letters of 1851 were followed by a letter, in 1854, in praise of Mr. Holman Hunt's " Light of the World " ; and in this place although it belongs to a much later date may also be men- tioned the paper on u The Three Colours of Pre- Raphaelitism " (Nineteenth Century, 1878), memo- rable for the happy passage upon that picture which corrupt criticism used to call the greatest in the world. Ruskin rehearses his former grave accusation of Raphael, that he confused and quenched the " veraci- ties of the life of Christ " ; and adds : " Raphael . . . after profoundly studying the arabesques of Pompeii and of the palace of the Cjcsars, beguiled the tedium, and illustrated the spirituality, of the converse of Moses and Elias with Christ concerning His decease which He should ac- complish at Jerusalem, by placing them, above the Mount of Transfiguration, in the attitudes of two humming-birds on the top of a honeysuckle." CHAPTER IX "LECTURES ON ARCHITECTURE AND PAINTING" (1853) JOHN RUSKIN'S career as a lecturer began at Edin- burgh with a course of two lectures on architecture and two on painting. It was to take him later to the Slade chair at Oxford, to the Oxford Museum, to the Royal Institution, the London Institution, the South Kensing- ton Museum, to Cambridge, Eton, Manchester, Bir- mingham, Liverpool, Kendal, Bradford, Dublin, Tun- bridge Wells, Woolwich, and into the lecture rooms of University College, Christ's Hospital, the Lam- beth School of Art, St. Martin's School of Art, the Working Men's College, the Architectural Associa- tion, the Society of Arts, the Society of Antiquaries and the list is not complete. This first appearance on the platform was made with the utmost charm of address, although the matter was controversial, and controversy followed. " I come before you," a pas- sage in the second lecture avows, " professedly to speak of things forgotten or things disputed." And his opponents joined issue with him on the importance of architectural ornament, on its place, on the union of architect and sculptor in one, and, in general, on the Gothic city. For it was to the Gothic city that Ruskin intended to persuade his Modern Athens. He set forth with a comparison of Edinburgh with Verona the one city whereof the beauty lay without, and 121 122 JOHN RUSK.IN the other whereof it lay without and within. To be beautiful, a town must be domestically beautiful, beau- tiful cumulatively in its dwellings, beautiful success- ively along its streets : " The great concerted music of the streets . . . when turret rises over turret, and casement frowns beyond casement, and tower succeeds to tower along the farthest ridges of the inhabited hills this is a sublimity of which you can at present form no con- ception." "Neither the mind nor the eye," he says else- where, " will accept a new college, or a new hospital, or a new institution, for a city " ; and a fine church in a vile street is nothing but a superstition. There- fore he would rouse the citizens against their Ionic and Corinthian column, repeated without delight ; and defending once again it is central to his teaching the theory of the certainties of beauty, he says : " Examine well the channels of your admiration, and you will find that they are, in verity, as un- changeable as the channels of your heart's blood." Ruskin recommends the pointed window-opening for its greater strength. The common cross lintel is of a form that wastes strength, when it is strong, which, in modern building, is not often. And the pseudo-Greek decoration is wasted as well as the power, by its position at the top of the building. Pediments, stylobates, and architraves are dead. Fine Gothic is as various as nature's foliage, and this "LECTURES ON ARCHITECTURE AND PAINTING" 123 Ruskin illustrates by an exquisite lesson on the leaves of the mountain ash; a sculptor should not repeat his sculpture, as a painter should not paint the same picture. Moreover, fine Gothic ornament is visible ; it is chiefly rich about the doors, it is rough at a height above the eye; only in the degraded Gothic of Milan cathedral are the statues on the roof cut delicately. " Be assured that l handling ' is as great a thing in marble as in paint, and that the power of producing a masterly effect with few touches is as essential in an architect as in a draughtsman." Thus he does not urge upon the modern citizen a costly manner of architecture, but resigns himself, since he must, to the poverty or penury of a society and age strangely given to boast of riches. The Gothic of dwellings is one with the Gothic church ; the apse of Amiens is " but a series of windows sur- mounted by pure gables of open work " ; the spire, the pointed tower of South Switzerland, are but the roof, which ought always to be very visible, made yet more visible. " Have not those words Pinnacle, Turret, Belfry, Spire, Tower, a pleasant sound in all your ears ? Do you think there is any group of words which would thus interest you when the things ex- pressed by them are uninteresting ? " Some expense of controversy seems to be hardly worth while in Ruskin's contention that " ornamenta- 124 JOHN RUSKIN tion is the principal part of architecture considered as a fine art." For when the word "principal" is thoroughly explained, nothing is left in the proposi- tion but what most architects would be willing to accept. " A Gothic cathedral is properly to be defined as a piece of the most magnificent associative sculpture arranged on the noblest principles of building." But this principle is pushed far by Ruskin when he adds that architecture may be defined as " the an of designing sculpture for a particular place and placing it there on the best principles of building." Archi- tecture, said his opponents, is "par excellence the art of proportion." So, rejoined Ruskin, is all art in the world, and none par excellence ; all art depends from the beginning upon proportion for its existence, and Gothic has more proportions than other architecture, having a greater number of members. The final lesson of the lectures is that Gothic with its liberal variety and interest " implies the liberty of the workman." Such a plea Ruskin thought would have won some reply from the modern heart ; but it elicited none. The two lectures on painting deal, the one with Turner and Claude (ground trodden in Modern Painters), and the other with the reforms attempted by the English pre-Raphaelites. CHAPTER X "ELEMENTS OF DRAWING" (1857) THE three Letters to Beginners printed with this title require of the learner a simple discipleship and confidence not blind, for everything is shown him in time, but expectant, and with good reasons for being intellectually predisposed to receive this instruction rather than another. It would be well to warn a student in Ruskin's drawing-class to look well to those reasons and to be sure they are good ; for the teaching is intolerant of mixture with any other methods. That teaching, merely as it stands in this small book lost in the astonishing quantity of its author's labours of the mind proves an entire system of thought and practice, justified by pure principle and by the analysis of the work of masters. But the modern reader may wonder whether, a painter having been duly born, but having yet to be made, he would have a chance of being well made under the guidance of this book. Let no one think that if there were failure it would be the consequence of too literary a quality of instruction, and of the influence of a literary mind ; Ruskin's work in these letters is artist's work, designer's and painter's work ; Ruskin is more sure of the world of bodily vision, more obedient to all its limits in a word, more technical than an ordinary drawing-master in his class would know how to be. 125 126 JOHN RUSK.IN Ruskin teaches his students to look at nature with simple eyes, to trust sight as the sense of the painter, a sense to be kept untampered with, unprompted, and unhampered. In a book on Velasquez, published in the winter of Ruskin's death, by a critic who perhaps would not have consented to quote a precept from Ruskin, nearly a page is devoted to the record of what the writer had been fortunate enough to hear said by a French painter ; and this proves to be but a long statement of what Ruskin taught in a single phrase when he bade the student to seek to recover the in- nocence of the eye. And yet in spite of admirable theory, the frequently recurring praises of William Hunt, the water-colour painter of fruit, add to the reader's uneasiness. On the other hand, the student is taught to perceive the greatness of the greatest masters : " You may look, with trust in their being always right, at Titian, Veronese, Tintoret, Giorgione, John Bellini, and Velasquez. You may look with admira- tion, admitting, however, question of right and wrong, at Van Eyck, Holbein, Perugino, Francia, Angelico, Leonardo da Vinci, Correggio, Vandyck, Rembrandt, Reynolds, Gainsborough, Turner, and the modern pre- Raphaelites." Michelangiolo, Raphael, and Rubens are great masters, but not masters for students; Murillo, Sal- vator, Claude, Gaspar Poussin, Teniers, are danger- ous. "You may look, however, for examples of evil, with safe universality of reprobation, being sure that "ELEMENTS OF DRAWING" 127 everything you see is bad, at Domenichino, the Ca- racci, Bronzino, and the figure pieces of Salvator." In this lesson, the teacher disclaims any intention of placing his great ones higher or lower than one another; it is a lesson for those who go to the gal- leries to learn to work and not only to learn to judge. Let us contrast with this another lesson (this one from the appendix) on things to be studied, whereby the young artist is directed to read the poets Scott, Wordsworth, Keats, Crabbe, Tennyson, the two Brownings, Lowell, Longfellow, and Coventry Pat- more alone amongst the moderns. " Cast Coleridge at once aside, as sickly and useless ; and Shelley as shallow and verbose." Byron is but withheld for a time, with praise of his " magnificence." And we have Patmore the poet of spiritual passion and lofty distinction praised for " quiet modern domestic feel- ing " and a " finished piece of writing." And Shelley " verbose " Adonais verbose, and not Endymion ! All the living poets whom Ruskin praised Browning, Rossetti, and Patmore amongst them had to endure to be praised side by side with Longfellow, and they did not love the association. But in all this strange sentence nothing is less intelligible than the word which commends to the young student urged in the same breath to restrict himself to what is generous, reverend, and peaceful all the writings of Robert Browning. The student is warned to refrain from even noble, even pure, satire, from coldness, and from a sneer; and is yet sent to a poet who gave his imag- 128 JOHN RUSK.IN ination to the invention of infernal hate in the Spanish Cloister, and of the explanations of Mr. Sludge and Bishop Blougram, busily, indefatigably squalid and ignoble, and delighting in derision. This appen- dix must have been written in a perverse mood ; but in the text what exquisite lessons of proportion, and of colour ! For instance, "The eye should feel white as a space of strange, heavenly paleness in the midst of the feeling of colours," and " You must make the black conspicuous, the black should look strange " ; what a sense of the growth of trees, of flowers with their delicate inflections of law, their vital symmetry and asymmetry, and their progress, their relation, from stem to limit of leaf; what a steady nay eternal vision of movement "the animal in its motion, the tree in its growth, the cloud in its course, the moun- tain in its wearing away ! " And in the lesson on colour occurs the humour that might be a woman's or a child's, if woman or child could ever be womanly or childish enough to conceive it it is in a fine pas- sage on the economy of nature : " Sometimes I have really thought her miserliness intolerable ; in a gen- tian, for instance, the way she economises her ultra- marine down in the bell is a little too bad." With Elements of Drawing should be named Elements of Perspective, a series of lessons intended to be read in connection with the first three books of Euclid, signs of yet another intellect the mathematical added to this wonderful spirit. The drawings that accompany Elements of Drawing arc of great beauty. CHAPTER XI "THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF ART" (1857) THIS little volume holds the substance of two lectures given at Manchester. The lecturer exercises here the pleasant art of stimulating his hearers by a paradox, and of following the phrase of surprise by an irrefutable exposition. His theme is the right ex- penditure of public money. He, like the other econ- omists, has to find room, in the national dispensa- tions, for expense upon the arts, and in some sort the luxuries, of life. Christian and ascetic, he has to consent to this use of the fruits of the labours of the poor, as the severe but not ascetic " Manchester " economist also must needs do. Mill, who insists that all unproductive consumption is so much loss and de- struction, evidently arranges for, and tolerates, so much loss and destruction in a certain cause ; he allows the artist to destroy what he consumes. With such permission a purely scientific writer has nothing to do. Like a writer on arithmetic, a writer on polit- ical economy proper states these laws, those causes, and yonder consequences, and is not called upon, as an economist, to approve or disapprove of an act that would disregard the purely economic results. (I shall have to urge the same point in regard to the later work Unto this Last.} And this is why it is irritat- ing to hear men speak of doing such or such a thing 129 130 JOHN RUSKIN " in spite of the political economists," or " notwith- standing the professors of the dismal science." The calculators of a nation's wealth are simply to state their calculations ; that done, they might be the first to cherish ethical, or political, or human reasons why loss and gain should in such or such a case be disre- garded ; or, on the other hand, they might hold it to be wiser to disregard the results in loss and gain as little as possible. But in either case they would cease for the time to speak purely as economists or calcula- tors. Ruskin, needless to say, unites the two func- tions, as indeed almost all other writers have done. He thinks precisely, and having " done the sum," he passes to the other function, and does the ethical work for which his calculation-has given him material. In these two lectures he plans some order in that strictly unproductive expenditure without which civilisation could hardly endure. The theme of this book is righteous spending, while the theme of Time and Tide is chiefly righteous sparing ; and he has much to say here of the honour and the power of riches and the disgrace (let us say the disgrazia in the Italian sense) of poverty, while in Fan Clavigera he gives a solemn personal assurance solemn and personal even for him that for the rich man there is no safety unless he shall " piously and prudently " dispose himself to become poor. But the poverty he deplores is mani- festly the ignorant and forsaken poverty that no man ought to endure ; the poverty for the love whereof a man of heart despoils himself is the poverty of sim- plicity ; and even the poverty of the simple is to be "THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF ART" 131 sought chiefly in order that there should be none, or less, of the poverty of the forsaken. In this very lecture on the administration of wealth for the foster- ing of art, the nation and the man are warned alike that the spending which would be lawful in a society where none were starving for lack of work ought to be foregone or deferred there where children have no bread. The nation, says in effect the lecturer on " The Political Economy of Art," is as free and as bound, as responsible and as dependent in its inter-rela- tion, as a household, and a nation is governable like a farm. If any one shall say that the similitude is too domestic, the reply shall be that it is not domestic enough. " The real type of a well-organised nation must be presented, not by a farm cultivated by servants who wrought for hire, . . . but by a farm in which the master was a father, and in which all the servants were sons." With a peculiar humour, Ruskin begs his hearers not to be alarmed at the menacing word " fraternity." The French who used it, he declares (for the reas- suring of a Manchester audience) to have gone wrong in their experiment. But the cause of their error he states without irony. It was that they refused to ac- knowledge that fraternity implied a paternity. The world, nevertheless, does not utter the word paternal without burlesque " a paternal government " nor the word fraternal without defiance. It does not 132 JOHN RUSKIN chance that paternity is spoken of threateningly or fraternity with irony ; but this might have been the humour of the commonwealth, instead of the other. Obviously, what Ruskin teaches in the political part of this lecture is the necessity of authority and once the arbitrary tyrannies of primitive society are done away, which is early in all civilisations the nullity of the " liberty " that men have died for with alacrity age by age. Wealth ought not to be acquired by covetousness, nor distributed by prodigality, nor hoarded by avarice, nor increased by competition, nor destroyed by luxury. To none of these forms of egoism should be aban- doned the important economy of money. Ruskin in- sists upon the special responsibility of man for that talent not the talent of wit or intellect or influence with the bishops, but the talent of money literally. In " The Political Economy of Art " the reader should note the fine page upon the destruction of wealth, as well as of art, that is wrought not by the tooth of time : u Fancy what Europe would be now, if the delicate statues and temples of the Greeks, if the broad roads and massy walls of the Romans, if the noble and pathetic architecture of the middle ages had not been ground to the dust by mere human rage." CHAPTER XII "THE TWO PATHS" (1859) THE principal teaching of this volume, ratified by a preface in 1878, is summed up thus : "The law which it has been my effort chiefly to il- lustrate is the dependence of all noble design, in any kind, on the sculpture or painting of Organic Form. This is the vital law : lying at the root of all that I have ever tried to teach respecting architecture or any other art. It is also the law most generally dis- allowed." It is possible that to this book was due much of the impatience and anger spent, the day before yesterday, upon Ruskin's art-theory. By the day before yester- day I mean the time of a flow that has already been succeeded by some ebbing movement, and, in this case, the time between the popularising in England of the "art for art" of the French, about 1880, and the day when the last journalist flagged in the last repetition thereof and it took him nearly twenty years. In October 1899 a fugitive writer in a con- spicuous art-review spoke of " the unutterable bosh written by Ruskin about art " ; and the inferior clown- ishness of that reviewer is only the latest mimicking of the higher clownishness of criticism a little earlier written. 133 134 JOHN RUSKIN The teaching of The Two Paths has been thought out by its author in the very interior intricacies. It is dogmatic in proportion to the difficulty which he certainly knows he found in that inner place, but which he never explicitly confesses. Two paths there are, he teaches, one leading to destruction and the other to life. The one is that of the artist who loves his own skill and seeks first his pleasure in beauty, and the other is that of him who loves nature and studies the beauty of her truth and never lets go his grasp upon the laws of natural living form. Both artists may nay, must draw conventionally at times, and at times must design the mosaic patterns, or the diaper patterns, that ultimately resemble each other, assuredly, from whichever path they are ap- proached. It seems that Ruskin insists upon a differ- ence, even in this ultimate point. And yet the pret- tiest and most ingenious oriental diaper of fret-work (which he denounces) has a suggestion in natural curve, or even in the curve of organic life, as the Lombard ornament (which he approves) has a sugges- tion in natural crystallisation that is, in something other than organic form properly so-called. A similar difficulty occurs to the reader in regard to all " con- vention," however slight. This, however, is a difficulty, as it were, at the end of the argument. At its head Ruskin has placed a difficulty that meets the reader with a very menace. The title of this first lecture is " The Deteriorative Powers of Conventional Art over Nations." The adjective u conventional " seems to mitigate the prcdi- "THE TWO PATHS" 135 cate of this lecture ; but there is no such mitigation in the text, which declares roundly that from the mo- ment when a perfect picture is painted or a perfect statue wrought within a State, that State begins to derogate. Not only is the word " conventional " omitted, but the word " perfect " seems to bar it out. Then comes the tremendous contrast with which Ruskin commands his readers and compels them to attend to what shall follow. Thus it stands : India (then lately guilty of the Mutiny and accused of more evil than she had committed) is a nation possessed of exquisite art, but given over to every infernal passion cruelty and the rest. Scotland is a nation full of the dignity of virtue and possessed of no art whatever except that of arranging lines of colour at right angles in the plaid. Splendid are these pages, with their nobility and temperance of diction in the statement of what is most certainly a disastrous exaggeration. They close with the assertion of a brief and absolute opposition : " Out of the peat cottage come faith, courage, self-sacrifice, purity, and piety . . . ; out of the ivory palace come treachery, cruelty, cowardice, idolatry, bestiality." Who, nevertheless, in calmer thought dare ratify such a sentence ? " Piety " alas ! " Purity " alas, alas ! The judgment on the Hindoo calls for more indignant groans. To pass to the art, however : Indian art " never represents a natural fact," says Ruskin ; but (putting aside the certain truth that it is suggested by natural fact, and that the European " conventional " art is no more than suggested by natural fact) what becomes of his contention that 136 JOHN RUSKIN Indian art is therefore a portent of degradation, in view of the statement on a. previous page that the perfect statue and the perfect picture were also, in Rome and Venice, portents of degradation ? Surely the perfect statue represents a natural fact. And at the end of a close and urgent argument, the reader asks where, then, is Scotland in all this ? The Scot of the cottage does not produce the art taught by organic form which is so nobly described as righteous he produces no art; or stay, he produces the plaid just mentioned, which is much, much less organic than anything in the whole range of Indian design. The curve of an Indian shawl-pattern has a natural inspiration ; what life let alone the noble animal and human life which Ruskin declares to be the highest inspiration of art but what life, however humble, what life of any degree of humbleness, is represented, much less imitated, by the plaid ? To despise life is, Ruskin teaches, the first and ultimate sin. Well, then, asks his reader, are they to be held innocent of that sin who, having before their eyes the living proportion of common plant-growth, and the form of rock, less vital yet erect in all the gravity of natural law, yet turned their eyes away and ruled the lines of their tartan; who, having in sight the soft gloomy purple of their heather and the soft brown of their streams, chose to put that yellow line between that blue and that red the hardest colours of all men's invention ? I want such a phrase as Ruskin alone could give me to denounce the hatred of nature and the contempt of life which the plaid could be " THE TWO PATHS " 137 made to prove. And see what significance he attaches to the mere straying from nature in the Hindoo ! " He draws no plant, but only a spiral." But the Scot loved the plant not enough to draw even a spiral ; he ruled straight lines. If I have treated this book with controversy, it was impossible to do otherwise. But out of its treasures of wisdom take the page in praise of Titian which ends with the passage : " Nobody cares much at heart about Titian ; only there is a strange undercurrent of everlasting murmur about his name, which means the deep consent of all great men that he is greater than they," and so on to the end. For wit take this, from the important section of the lecture on " Modern Manufacture and Design," that partly condemns the usual teaching of symmetry : " If you learn to draw a leaf well, you are taught . to turn it the other way, opposite to itself; and the two leaves set opposite ways are called * a design.' . . . But if once you learn to draw the human figure, you will find that knocking two men's heads together does not necessarily constitute a good design." The incident (in the same lecture) of the sporting handkerchief is full of signs of charming wit. The reader must be referred to the illustration, but let him be assured that Ruskin had the best of it in his con- troversy with his friend. His friend proved to him that series, symmetry, and contrast were the material of design, but used them so cleverly that Ruskin could 138 JOHN RUSKIN show him by his own work how such use could not be taught, measured, or ruled ; and, moreover, used them with so little beauty that Ruskin was able to reply to him that not mere symmetry, but lovely symmetry, was proper to art. For felicity of word read what follows : " Outside the town I came upon an old English cottage, or mansion, I hardly know which to call it, set close under the hill, and beside the river, . . . with mullioned windows and a low arched porch ; round which, in the little triangular garden, one can imagine the family as they used to sit in old summer times, the ripple of the river heard faintly through the sweet-briar hedge, and the sheep on the far-off wolds shining in the evening sunlight. There, uninhabited for many and many a year, it had been left in unre- garded havoc of ruin ; the garden-gate still swung loose to its latch ; the garden, blighted utterly into a field of ashes, not even a weed taking root there ; the roof torn, . . . the shutters hanging about the windows in rags of rotten weed ; before its gate, the stream which had gladdened it now soaking slowly by, black as ebony, and thick with curdling scum ; the bank above it trodden into unctuous, sooty slime ; far in front of it, between it and the old hills, the furnaces of the city foaming forth perpetual plague of sulphurous darkness ; the volumes of their storm clouds coiling low over a waste of grassless fields." That is the circumstance of the designer at Rochdale ; and in such conditions fine design is impossible. This, on the other hand, is the circumstance of the great designer at Pisa : "THE TWO PATHS" 139 " On each side of a bright river he saw rise a line of brighter palaces, arched and pillared, and inlaid with deep red porphyry, and with serpentine ; along the quays, before their gates, were riding troops of knights, noble in face and form, dazzling in crest and shield ; horse and man one labyrinth of quaint colour and gleaming light the purple, and silver, and scarlet fringes flowing over the strong limbs and clashing mail like sea-waves over rocks at sunset. Opening on each side from the river were gardens, courts, and cloisters ; long successions of white pillars among wreaths of vine ; leaping of fountains through buds of pomegranate and orange ; and still along the gar- den-paths, and under and through the crimson of the pomegranate shadows, moving slowly, groups of the fairest women that Italy ever saw fairest, because purest and thoughtfullest ; trained in all high knowledge, as in all courteous art in dance, in song, in sweet wit, in lofty learning, in loftier courage, in loftiest love able alike to cheer, to enchant or save, the souls of men. Above all this scenery of perfect human life, rose dome and bell-tower, burning with white alabaster and gold ; beyond dome and bell-tower the slopes of mighty hills, hoary with olive ; far in the north, above a purple sea of peaks of solemn Apennine, the clear, sharp-cloven Carrara mountains sent up their steadfast flowers of marble summit into amber sky ; the great sea itself, scorching with expanse of light, stretching from their feet to the Gorgonian Isles ; and over all these, ever present, near or far seen through the leaves of vine, or imaged with all its march of clouds in the Arno's stream, or set with its depth of blue close against the golden hair and burning cheek of lady or knight that untroubled and sacred sky, which was to all men, in those days of innocent faith indeed the unquestioned abode of spirits, as the earth was of men, ... a heaven in which every cloud that passed was literally 140 JOHN RUSKIN the chariot of an angel, and every ray of its Evening and Morning streamed from the throne of God." Over-rich, even for its purpose, is a phrase now and then ; but that sentence, " close against the golden hair and burning cheek . . . the untroubled and sacred sky," is purely beautiful. As to the signifi- cance of this contrast (for controversy must have it again), how are we to take it ? Here is Rochdale declared unable to design beautifully because of its internal and surrounding hideousness; India able to design beautifully, with vice, in the midst of beauty ; Pisa able to design beautifully in the midst of beauty, with virtue, according to this golden picture ; Scot- land unable to design beautifully, with virtue, in the midst of beauty. What is the lesson, finally ? And besides this general doubt as to what these several things have to prove to us, there is also a local question. I never stand under that untroubled and sacred sky but with a remembrance of a tower, long fallen, that filled a place in the sunny blue aloft. Many a space of the earth has been a site of the suffering of man ; but here is a space of the very sky that has been a site of human wrongs intolerable. Above, in that delicate air, was the upper chamber of the Tower of Famine ; high in that now vacant and serene space sounded the voice of Ugolino and his sons. Earth has every where her graves ; but no other sky than the Pisan sky holds such a place as this. The world nature is full of unanswerable ques- "THE TWO PATHS" 141 tions. It was a courageous enterprise to answer one of them in this book a great enterprise, a great de- feat. To small minds, and to the vulgar, the desire to reply to those perpetual questions is a matter of daily habit. They have no doubt as to two paths, or as to the destination of each, or the cause of its inclin- ing. But here, for once, is a great mind condemning itself to the disaster of judgment and decision, in its divine good faith. It is hardly credible that the in- tellectual martyrdom of the enterprise of writing The Two Paths should have been hailed with the laughter of the untroubled. So, nevertheless, it has been. Tragedy is not, says Hegel, in the conflict of right with wrong, but in the conflict of right with right. Ruskin was nobly reluctant to confess such a strife, or to be the spectator of such a battle. Hence he must declare two paths. But his own labour of the mind, his book, is, in the sense of Hegel, tragic. For a far better quality of splendid English than the descriptive passage above quoted, I would cite this from the lecture that urges upon architects their great vocation as sculptors : u Is there anything within range of sight, or con- ception, which may not be of use to you ? . Whatever may be conceived of Divine, or beheld of Human, may be dared or adopted by you ; through- out the kingdom of animal life, no creature is so vast, or so minute, that you cannot deal with it, or bring it into service ; the lion and the crocodile will couch about your shafts j the moth and' bee will sun them- 142 JOHN RUSKIN selves upon your flowers; for you, the fawn will leap ; for you, the snail will be slow ; for you, the dove smooth her bosom, and the hawk spread her wings towards the south. All the wide world of vegetation blooms and bends for you ; the leaves tremble that you may bid them be still under the marble snow ; the thorn and the thistle, which the earth casts forth as evil, are to you the kindliest servants; no dying petal, nor drooping tendril, is so feeble as to have no help for you ; no robed pride of blossom so kingly, but it will lay aside its purple to receive at your hands its pale immortality." Again, Ruskin compares the interest of the geolo- gist, of the naturalist, with that of the sculptor, in the things they study. "You must get the storm- spirit into your eagles, and the lordliness into your lions." And again he shows the forms of lifeless things the all but invisible shells that shall lend their shapes to the starred traceries of a cathedral roof, the torn cable that can twine into a perfect moulding : " You who can crown the mountain with its fortress, and the city with its towers, are thus able also to give beauty to ashes and worthiness to dust." He presses the example of the ancient architects : did they em- ploy a subordinate workman as sculptor, ordering of him u bishops at so much a mitre, and cripples at so much a crutch " ? Was the procession on the portal of Amiens wrought so ? Amongst the many sentences that in the course of all Ruskin's books correct his teaching that nothing in nature should be rejected are these : " A looking- glass does not design it receives and communicates "THE TWO PATHS" 143 indiscriminately . . . ; a painter designs when he chooses some things, refuses others, and arranges all." And " Design, properly so called, is human invention, consulting human capacity " (a most admirable defi- nition). " Out of the infinite heap of things around us in the world, it chooses a certain number which it can thoroughly grasp, and presents this group to the spec- tator in the form best calculated to enable him to grasp it also, and to grasp it with delight." Japanese art was unconsidered at the time of the writing of these lectures. One may wonder how would the art, the people, their gentleness, their vices, their monstrous burlesque of human form, the distor- tion, the familiarity, the jeer, the mockery, the malice, the delicate and intent study of natural fact in plants and in birds, the vitality, and especially the love of innocent life, how would the men and their art show under the intricate tests of The Two Paths? Where would Japan stand in that entanglement of India, Scotland, Rochdale, and Pisa ? The last lecture is on " The Work of Iron in Na- ture, Art, and Policy." The history of the colour of iron in the landscape is brilliant writing. The warn- ing against the foolish use of the word " freedom," and against the foolish enthusiasm for the vague idea, repeats what Ruskin has said often : " No human being, however great or powerful, was ever so free as a fish. There is always something that he must, or must not, do." 144 JOHN RUSKIN " In these and all matters you never can reason finally from the abstraction, for both liberty and re- straint are good when they are nobly chosen, . but of the two . . . it is restraint which char- acterises the higher creature, and betters the lower creature ; and, from the ministering of the archangel to the labour of the insect, from the poising of the planets to the gravitation of a grain of dust, the power and glory of all creatures, and all matter, con- sist in their obedience, not in their freedom." CHAPTER XIII "UNTO THIS LAST" (1860) " I REST satisfied with the work, though with noth- ing else that I have done," says John Ruskin in the preface to the first issue after the publication had been stopped in the Cornhill Magazine; and in 1888 he said that he would be content that all the rest of his books should be destroyed rather than this. The book was to give in plain English " it has often been incidentally given in good Greek by Plato and Xenophon, and good Latin by Cicero and Horace " a logical definition of wealth. The first paper, " The Roots of Honour," treats of the wages of labour, and at the outset relieves the reader of the usual burden of deciding whether the interests of em- ployer and labourer are alike or opposed. According to circumstances they may be either. But it is not to the chance of the harmony of interests, nor to the possible equity of opposition of interests not to any chance whatever that Ruskin would entrust the rate of wages. Unlike other writers on economy at that day, he thinks it possible that the rate of wages in industry and agriculture should be fixed by legislation, and fixed irrespectively of the demand for labour. Why has the possibility so long been denied, in face of the fact that for all important and some unimpor- tant labour, wages are so regulated wages of the 146 JOHN RUSKIN prime minister, the bishop, the general, the cabman, the lawyer, the physician ? The difficulty as to good and bad work Ruskin decides thus the good labourer would be employed and the bad would not ; but all employed should have the same wages. This, more- over, is done in the cases of the professions already named. A bad workman should not be permitted to offer his work at half-price, to the probable injury of the good ; it is his freedom to do so, and not regula- tion, that is artificial and unnatural. Education would continuously lessen the number of bad workmen. The second aim of true political economy, and a diffi- cult one, is to maintain employment steadily despite the u sudden and extensive inequalities of demand." But this difficulty, though great, would not be so great if the rushes and relaxations, overwork and idleness alternately, that come of unequal wages, were at an end. There would be a calming-down, and employment would become more equal. Further- more, the labourer might be taught to live and work more steadily, and therefore more evenly, by the counsel of a good employer. And the good employer would be a merchant (for example) who should accept his own function in the spirit of the lawyer, soldier, or pastor should provide by commerce for the na- tion, as those administer law, defend, or teach, not seeking profit in the first place, but rendering in the first place the definite service of providing. The second paper, " The Veins of Wealth," draws the distinction between mercantile economy (as it actually is) and true political economy, the first being " UNTO THIS LAST " 147 that rule of riches which implies poverty that is, relative riches, the riches of individuals or classes ; whereas political economy is the order of riches of the nation, in harmony, not in internal contrasts. The art of becoming rich in the mercantile sense is the art of keeping others poor. Without their poverty, ob- viously, the successful man would have neither servants nor husbandmen at his disposal. " The establishment of the mercantile wealth which consists in a claim upon labour signifies a political diminution of the real wealth which consists in substantial possessions." That is, the man who has become poor, and thus in- debted in labour to the rich, has been unprofitable to the State. If the rich withdraws into idleness, he too becomes unprofitable to the State. The wealth of individuals may be gathered in masses, but whether for good or evil no one can tell by the mere fact of its existence. It tends to gather unequally ; the obvious inequalities of health, character, and ability will have it so. But the sight of a class enriched ought not to beguile a student of economy to think he sees a nation rich. Nor must so John Ruskin teaches the in- equality be left to the exaggerations of the unregulated action of forces. The economists of 1860 would have it that the course of demand and supply cannot be controlled by human laws. " Precisely in the same sense . . . the waters of the world go where they are required. Where the land falls the water flows. . . . But the disposition and administration . . . can be altered by human forethought." 148 JOHN RUSKIN Ruskin then labours to find a rate of wages so just that legislation may approve and enforce it. " The abstract idea of just or due wages is that they will consist in a sum of money which will at any time procure for [the labourer] at least as much labour as he has given. . . . And this equity of payment is, observe, wholly independent of any reference to the number of men who are will- ing to do the work." The smith who gives his skill and a quarter of an hour of his life to forging a horse-shoe has a right to a quarter of an hour of equal life and skill, at least, in payment, when he needs it. Then comes the difficulty of translating this into the kinds of payment the smith will actually desire. But Ruskin believes that the discovery of the right representation of exchange is no more difficult than that of the " maxima and minima of the vulgar economist " ; the cheapest market in which the vulgar economists recommend a man to buy and the dearest in which they advise him to sell have to be groped for, surely, by hard measures. (How right Ruskin is when he says that commercial riches implies poverty is proved by this once respected maxim. The vaunted wealth was not and never could be " political " j for there was necessarily a man selling in the cheapest market and buying in the dearest at every " operation " of the " principle " the principle ! " Buy in the cheapest," &c.) In brief, a just man approaches the just price, as an unjust approaches his " cheapest " and " dearest " markets. Nay, the just " UNTO THIS LAST " 149 man comes easily nearer to the object of his search ; or it would be better to say that there is something for him to come at, whereas the commercial economist touches ground nowhere. " It is easier to determine scientifically what a man ought to have for his work than what his necessities will compel him to take for it. His necessities can only be ascertained by empirical, but his due by ana- lytical, investigation." Neither the just nor the unjust hirer employs two men where only one man is needed. But in the just case the hired labourer may be able to hire, for his own necessities, another workman by the purchase of what he needs ; and the influence of this ability passes on through all the kinds and grades of labour. Ruskin's system would tend to send wealth flowing. It was, needless to say, accused of socialism, to which he answers, not very profoundly but profoundly enough for the purpose : " Whether socialism has made more progress among the army and navy (where payment is made on my principles) or among the manufacturing operatives (who are paid on my opponents' principles) I leave it to those opponents to ascertain." He rec- ognises as no other has done "the impossibility of equality." He had said in Modern Painters, " Govern- ment, and Co-operation are . . . the Laws of Life ; Anarchy and Competition the Laws of Death." A modern reader may wonder that Ruskin should, in replying to a charge of socialism, defend himself by the strange means of a denunciation of anarchy. I5O JOHN RUSKIN Anarchy and Socialism are the two poles of political principle, as we know now that the words are better defined; yet even to-day the two opposites are con- fused in daily speech. The truth is that Ruskin's system is highly socialistic because it is opposed to anarchy and to the licence of irresponsible forces such as competition. But his meaning is not at all con- fused, although in this one instance his diction is so. To this essay there are two important notes; one announcing Ruskin as a complete Free-trader, despite his perception of the false grounds on which the pub- lic of that day believed in Free trade; and another suggesting that human passion might enter into the calculations of science as justly as the " mere thought " to the importance whereof Mill confessed that he could set no limit, " even in a purely productive and material point of view." Mill even assigns a certain action to "feelings," but only to those "of a disa- greeable kind," as discouragements of labour. Ruskin would permit feelings " of an agreeable kind " to have their turn. The fourth and last essay, " Ad Valorem," deals with the search, above-indicated, of " the equivalent " the payment that would represent, in the hands of the labourer, his right to the labour of another. Rus- kin, in this research, defines Value, Wealth, Price, and Produce. I confess I do not think him to be fair either to Mill or to his own argument when he with- ers that writer for his saying that political economy has nothing to do with" the estimate of the moralist." "UNTO THIS LAST" 151 Mill might justly say this of a science, and yet be willing that the science should be overruled. The economist's business is to demonstrate the laws of wealth and their working, and if this were done scien- tifically Ruskin would have no ground of opposition. But, on the other hand, he has legitimate ground in his contention that Mill is unscientific, because it is unscientific to make no calculation of human feeling except feeling " of a disagreeable kind." Into that contention, however, I do not see that moral indigna- tion should enter, albeit intellectual irritation may. It is not Ruskin's anger that replies pat to Mill's error, but Ruskin's detection, declared in this sentence : " The only conclusions of his which I have to dispute are those which follow from his premises." For he found that Mill covertly introduced the " moral esti- mate " he professed to exclude. It is much to the purpose also to expose Mill's definition : " Wealth consists of all useful and agreeable objects which possess exchangeable value." Usefulness cannot agreeableness certainly cannot be separated from human passion. "Therefore," Ruskin says, " polit- ical economy, being a science of wealth, must be a science respecting human capacities and dispositions." A " definition " of Ricardo's he shows to be a strange misfit indeed ; and a plain reader wishes Cobbett were there to trip, entangle, and fell Ricardo in his abomi- nable pronouns : " Utility is not the measure of ex- changeable value, though it is absolutely essential to it." In making his own definition of value Ruskin does admirable work in words. He reminds us of the 152 JOHN RUSK.IN nominative of valorem and of its reference to health and, in the original sense, to virtue : 41 A truly valuable thing is that which leads to life. . . . In proportion as it does not lead to life, or as its strength is broken, it is less valuable ; in pro- portion as it leads away from life, it is invaluable." This value is independent of opinion, and of quan- tity. Here we get back, as in every one of Ruskin's books, to that absolute good that Carlyle warned us not to doubt at our peril. Within all Ruskin's science, all his art, all his sight, and all his thought stands this : " The real science of political economy, which has yet to be distinguished from the bastard science, as medicine from witchcraft, ... is that which teaches nations to desire and labour for the things that lead to life." It is to teach them to destroy things that lead to destruction, and to forsake indifferent things that do negative evil. Ruskin then defines " wealth " or "having," adding to Mill's definition: "To be wealthy is to have a large stock of useful articles," the not unnecessary words, " which we can use," and thus bringing in once again the human power and the human heart. "Wealth," he says, "instead of de- pending merely on a * have,' is thus seen to depend on a 'can.' Gladiator's death, on a 4 habct'; but sol- dier's victory, and state's salvation, on a * quo pluri- mum posset.' " " Wealth ... is the possession "UNTO THIS LAST" 153 of the valuable by the valiant." As to price, he teaches that in as much as it is exchange value, it has nothing to do with profit. It is only in labour there can be profit, or advance. The processes of exchange, in so far as they are laborious, may bear profit, as involved in the labours of production ; but the pure exchange is absolute exchange and nothing more. Acquisition there is in mercantile exchange, but the word profit should represent increase such as that of the workshop and the field. Profit is of " po- litical," acquisition of u mercantile," importance ; ac- quisition makes poor by the same act as it makes rich. The making rich is conspicuous, and the mak- ing poor is obscure, but none the less real because it is obscure, of the back-street, and finally of the grave ; nothing is more obscure in this world. Ruskin holds the science of acquisition to be the one science that is " founded on nescience, and an art founded on art- lessness." All other arts and sciences, except this, " have for their object the doing away with their op- posite nescience and artlessness." This alone needs the existence of the ignorance and helplessness whereby its knowledge and power may work. " The general law, then, respecting just or econom- ical exchange, is simply this : There must be advan- tage on both sides (or if only advantage on one, at least no disadvantage on the other), . . . and just payment for his time, intelligence, and labour to any intermediate person effecting the transaction. . And whatever advantage there is on either side, and whatever pay is given to the intermediate 154 JOHN RUSKIN person, should be thoroughly known. All attempt at concealment implies some practice of the opposite, or undivine, science, founded on nescience." What we wish for is to be reckoned with amongst our gettings, as well as what we need. We wish for romantic things, and ideal ; " and the regulation of the purse is, in its essence, regulation of the imagina- tion and the heart." Phenomena of price are there- fore extremely complex, but price is to be calculated finally in labour, and Ruskin goes on to define the na- ture of that standard. "The price of other things must always be counted by the quantity of labour; not the price of labour by the quantity of other things." And this is well illustrated by an instance too long to quote. To this section belongs the sin- gularly interesting sentence on consumption as the end, crown, and perfection of production. Ruskin and Mill agree mainly in regard to the impoverishing political effect of the consumption of the unproductive classes and of the vain or vicious consumption of the productive classes ; but pure consumption Mill in- clines to treat as though there were, at any rate, no good in it, whereas Ruskin declares it to be in itself good. I own that Mill seems to me on this point more logical ; that Ruskin's estimate is rather of the joy and happiness whereof consumption is the cost than of consumption itself; and that it is scientific to treat consumption as loss necessary loss or unneces- sary but still loss. Obviously if men could live for a generation without food all granaries might over- flow ; and eating gives pleasure, but the pleasure does "UNTO THIS LAST" 155 not consist in eating as an act of destruction. Ruskin, however, seems to speak more indisputably when he declares all wealth to be measured by this human ca- pacity of consumption, and shows good measures of consumption to be as worthy of an economist's study as good measures of production. He next opposes Mill's assertion that " A demand for commodities is not a demand for labour." It is one of the knotty points. Near this follows a fine passage on wars of capitalists and on the taxing of future generations. In a word, the book is part of the perpetual plea of righteousness against blind self-interest, and the plea is scientific. It closes with some pages beautiful beyond praise, and full of the dignity of confidence in unalterable facts. Whilst man lives by bread, by the very wheat and the flocks, the sacred necessities of his body of his mouth will be the moderate measure of his common and daily wealth. " All England may, if it chooses, become one man- ufacturing town ; and Englishmen, sacrificing them- selves to the good of general humanity, may live diminished lives in the midst of noise, of darkness, and of deadly exhalation. But the world cannot be- come a factory or a mine. . . . Neither the av- arice nor the rage of men will ever feed them. So long as men live by bread, the far away valleys must laugh as they are covered with the gold of God, and the shouts of His happy multitudes ring round the winepress and the well." Then he consoles the mere sentimentalist, who might fear that the tilled country, peopled one day 156 JOHN RUSKIN with its natural inheritors, would lose its beauty. Not so, Ruskin says ; let the desert have its own place, but the soil is " loveliest in habitation. . . . The de- sire of the heart is also the desire of the eyes." In this he proves his conversion from the young passion of Modern Painters for solitudes and its contempt of potato-patches. He ends : " Not greater wealth, but simpler pleasure. Waste nothing, and grudge nothing. Care in nowise to make more of money, but care to make much of it ; remembering always the great, palpable, inevitable fact that what one person has, another cannot have. . . . And if, on due and honest thought over these things, it seems that the kind of existence to which men are now summoned by every plea of pity and claim of right, may, for some time at least, not be a luxurious one ; consider whether, even supposing it guiltless, luxury could be desired by any of us, if we saw clearly at our sides the suffering which accom- panies it in the world. . . . The crudest man living could not sit at his feast, unless he sat blindfold. Raise the veil boldly ; face the light ; and if, as yet, the light of the eye can only be through tears, and the light of the body through sackcloth, go thou forth weeping, bearing precious seed." How did the world hear this appeal ? It replied with a laugh. Was, then, the argument of the book so hollow that the first comer could refute it ? Was the feeling of the book so small that the first comer might deride it ? John Ruskin was bidden to go back to his art-criticism. Thackeray stopped the papers in the Cornhill. The unsold copies of the reissue re- "UNTO THIS LAST" 157 mained on the publisher's hands. Munera Pulveris, a more technical work on economy, was equally un- acceptable in the pages of Eraser's Magazine. And now, after forty years, " the living wage " is but another name for Ruskin's fixity of payments. The old-age pensions of to-day or to-morrow are of his proposal ; so are technical and elementary educa- tion by the State ; government workshops ; fair rents j fixity of tenure ; compensation for improvements ; compulsory powers of allotment ; the preservation of commons ; municipal recognition of trades-union rates of wages ; all are, or are to be, rehearsals of measures suggested by him, in this book or elsewhere, to the legislature. Private undertakings have followed him no less in the building and regulation of houses for the poor. CHAPTER XIV "SESAME AND LILIES" (1864-1869) THIS also was a work solemnly presented. Ruskin took it for the initial volume of the revised series of his writings, furnished it with a new preface, and added to the two lectures a third, which every atten- tive reader must hold to be amongst the most mo- mentous of the expressions of his mind. It is not surprising, to one who has recognised in the book a supreme value, to find that in the later preface its author declares it to contain the best of many state- ments of his purpose. In the same pages he takes occasion to present himself to those whose confidence he asks : " Not an unjust person ; not an unkind one ; a lover of order, labour, and peace. That, it seems to me, is enough to give me right to say all I care to say on ethical subjects ; more, I could only tell definitely through details of autobiography such as none but pros- perous and (in the simple sense of the word) faultless lives could justify; and mine has been neither. Yet if any one, skilled in reading the torn manuscripts of the human soul, cares for more intimate knowledge of me, he may have it by knowing with what persons in past history I have most sympathy. " I will name three. " In all that is strongest and deepest in me, that fits me for my work, and gives light or shadow to my be- ing, I have sympathy with Guido Guinicelli. 158 "SESAME AND LILIES" 159 " In my constant natural temper, and thoughts of things and people, with Marmontel. " In my enforced and accidental temper, and thoughts of things and people, with Dean Swift." The first lecture " Sesame : of Kings' Treasuries" is chiefly a plea for accessible libraries. Its demands have been fullfilled in part, and as far as public authority had office and function in the matter. But in part also the urgent counsel of the lecture has been absolutely contemned ; for it represented to the hearers that inasmuch as life is very short, " and the quiet hours of it few," it is well to waste none of them in reading worthless books. Public libraries are increasing not entirely in the sense in which Ruskin intended to commend them ; for he wished English- men to be rather able to buy good books securely than to read them free of cost ; yet in a very real sense treasuries have been stored for the use of the " quiet hours " of citizens. But it is evident that more of the quiet hours of this short life are wasted now in reading worthless books than when the re- monstrance was spoken. The private following of Ruskin's teaching, however diligent it may have been with a few, separate and single, has been as nothing amongst the multitude of units. Corporately in munic- ipal action, and obscurely in the practice of two or three not joined together, but scattered out of sight " Sesame " had its share of influence ; but its appeal was to the private throng, thousands and millions, whose conduct of life is matter of their own mul- titudinous but solitary responsibility. And in this l6o JOHN RUSKIN matter of idle reading, general opinion grows daily more relaxed. Ruskin would teach men to read ; and from this long instruction, in which not a sen- tence is futile, I gather first the rebuke of that common appreciation, " How good this is that's ex- actly what I think ! " The right feeling is rather, " How strange that is ! I never thought of that before, and yet I see it is true ; or if I do not now, I hope I shall, some day." This is asking perhaps overmuch submission ; and assuredly litera- ture is a question, a recognition, a consultation, an evocation to the reader's spirit. // poeta mi disse : Che pense ? And what Virgil asked of his student, Dante, every poet asks of a young man. But Ruskin says, " Be sure that you go to the author to get at his meaning, not to find yours " ; and that doubtless is the first step. Next the reader is bidden to look intently at words and to know their history. " Let the accent of words be watched, and closely : let their meaning be watched more closely still, and fewer will do the work. . . . There are masked words droning and skulking about us in Europe just now." How excellent a phrase ! Ruskin is not of those who think English to be a fortunate language in that it has words of Greek and Latin derivation for august and awful things. He would have us transpose what we have so arbitrarily placed " damn " and " condemn " by popular use, for example, and u Bible " and " book " by derivation. Nevertheless there might be much to be said on the other side. Quote the French Scriptures, in words that do journey- "SESAME AND LILIES" 161 man's work nay, worse, commercial work in daily life, and see the loss. The world acquires and pos- sesses a greater number of things spiritual things as it grows older ; nobler its possessions may not be, but they are certainly more numerous ; and England, among the nations of the world, is happy in the fact that she is able, better than the rest, to multiply names for these things by her power of giving to one word two forms. Has not Ruskin himself been able to think more remotely and more intellectually by means of the removed and immaterial Latin word of what he calls our " mongrel tongue " ? No imag- inative reader, however, and no reader who knows anything of Ruskin, will need to be told that when he would have us to counterchange " Bible " and " book," or any such words, he would add to the gravity of this word, not take away from the gravity of that. But no reader who knows anything of the world will need to be told that in effect the counter- change would add nothing to the gravity of one word and would take much from the gravity of the other. As a lesson in the intent study of words, such as a great poet claims from his reader by his own weight of special purpose the single stroke struck with single intention Ruskin takes his hearers through the St. Peter passage of Lycidas. Every word has full audience, and makes an ample discharge of Milton's meaning at the assize of this solicitous judge. Nor may we complain that such separate audience re- sembles the judgment of one who would take a lens l6l JOHN RUSKIN to look at a picture piecemeal. The particular verbal examination is entirely right, it answers immediately to a special claim of the poet in a special passage ; anon he will relax his demands, and you the instance of your attention. And so does Holbein draw finely, intensely, and much, some passage of anatomical articulation, and then pass to a larger and slighter drawing of the laxer forms of flesh. But the mournful point of this lecture on reading is that after all it is a lecture against reading. The lecturer himself must not follow his proper vocation chiefly, he has said elsewhere, the outlining of primroses; because no savages are housed so ill as the poor of English towns, or die so lonely ; and no man nor woman ought to follow the vocation of art or study until the lost were rescued and the names of the unknown written in a register open under the eyes of a responsible compassion. And even if it were fit that the arts should engross the human energy that is due to the tasks of succour, how should a covetous people read aright ? With the love of money publicly confessed to be the motive of all action, the insanity of avarice is broadcast, and the insane are incapable of thought. " Happily our disease is, as yet, little worse than this incapacity of thought, ... we are still in- dustrious to the last hour of the day, though we add the gambler's fury to the labourer's patience ; we are still brave to the death, though incapable of discern- ing the true cause for battle ; and are still true in af- fection to our own flesh. . . . There is hope for "SESAME AND LILIES" 163 a nation while this can still be said of it. As long as it holds its life in its hand, ready to give it for its honour (though a foolish honour), for its love (though a selfish love), and for its business (though a base business), there is hope for it. But hope only ; for this instinc- tive, reckless virtue cannot last." On the last page, after the evil of privilege has been shown fully, broadly, and with the most im- petuous will, the problem of privilege is touched where it lies, known to all men, awaiting some solu- tion in the future, not always to make matter for the last of seventy pages : " The principal question remains inexorable, . which of us, in brief word, is to do the hard and dirty work for the rest and for what pay ? Who is to do the pleasant and clean work, and for what pay ? We live, we gentlemen, on delicatest prey, after the manner of weasels ; we keep a certain number of clowns digging and ditching, and generally stupefied, in order that we, being fed gratis, may have all the thinking and feel- ing to ourselves. . . . Yet . . . it is per- haps better to build a beautiful human creature than a beautiful dome or steeple, . . . only the beauti- ful human creature will hav^e some duties to do in re- turn." It is of these duties that the second lecture, "Of Queens' Gardens," treats with singular beauty. The foregoing pages of the book as it stands had assuredly cast not only sudden lights upon the evil but black shadows upon the good of modern English life. Not a word, for instance, of the vast alms, of the private 164 JOHN RUSKIN and voluntary but corporate service rendered to all kinds of distress, of the great socialistic confession of the theory of the Poor Law ; not a word of any business that is not " base " or of any love that is not " selfish." But in u Lilies " the teaching is addressed particularly to women of a kind and class that ac- knowledge conscience and are concerned with private duty, though they can hardly be charged with an in- tellectual responsibility for the national condition. In effect, the examples proposed to them by Ruskin are those of heroines who have never questioned the privilege moral, mental, bodily into which they were born. Nor have the women addressed inquired into the conditions of their own privilege, even though they may vaguely avow that some obligations are implied by their unexplained " rights." In ad- dressing women at all Ruskin tells us he had recourse to " faith " ; it was a faith that could boast of no great foundation : " I wrote c Lilies ' to please one girl ; and were it not for what I remember of her, and of few besides, should now recast some of the sentences. . . . The fashion of the time renders whatever is forward, coarse, or senseless, in feminine nature, too palpable to all men." The "one girl" was the "Rosie" of Pr*terita, whom, child and woman, he had loved, and who was dead (1875) when he revised the pages written for her. As to the audience then left to him, he says that the picturesqueness of his earlier writings " had "SESAME AND LILIES" 165 brought him acquainted with much of their emptiest enthusiasms " ; and as to the failure of women in re- lation to his own life, " What I might have been so helped " [that is, helped by a woman] " I rarely in- dulge myself in the idleness of thinking." He proposes examples of heroic nature, and the entirely heroic nature of the women of Shakespeare all worthy young readers will grant to Ruskin's lovely exposition. But they will assuredly boggle at a like ascription of honour to the women of Scott. These young creatures Scott made virtuous because conven- tion required a virtuous maid for the hero to love, and made faultless, at a blow, because he could not be at the pains to work upon their characters. It is chilling to hear their intellect and tenderness praised in the noble terms that honour the intellect and tenderness of Imogen, Hermione, or Perdita, of a goddess, or of the fairy women of romance : " I would take Spenser, and show you how all his fairy knights are sometimes deceived and sometimes vanquished ; but the soul of Una is never darkened, and the spear of Britomart is never broken." " That Athena of the olive-helm and cloudy shield, to faith in whom you owe, down to this date, whatever you hold most precious in art, in literature, or in types of national virtue." As for the education of the girl who is in England born into the inheritance of the privilege of what is while the disinherited consent her own place, Ruskin counsels what perhaps no one will question. She is to be trained in habits of accurate thought ; she is to 1 66 JOHN RUSKIN understand the meaning, the inevitableness, and the loveliness of natural laws ; and to u follow at least some one path of scientific attainment as far as to the threshold of that bitter Valley of Humiliation into which only the wisest and bravest of men can de- scend, owning themselves for ever children, gathering pebbles on a boundless shore." To the girl herself Ruskin makes a passionate appeal. To no one, to no class, has he spoken words more urgent, more hardly wrung from his profound distress and desire on behalf of mankind. The criminal is beyond reach, in the grip of circumstance and of passion j the political economist is, according to Ruskin, teaching his own different lesson ; the soldier is under another obedience; the man is indocile. But here, in the nation, is the girl, for a score of reasons accessible and profitable. Against her sins there is no legisla- tion, against her destructiveness no national protest, no public opinion against her cruelty. In Sesame and Lilies she learns that she must not be cruel, and that she must not be idle that her idleness cannot but be cruel ; at her disposal is the awful force of the negation of good. He, who does not wonder at the death of the miser, at the life of the sensualist, at the frenzy of nations, at the crimes of kings, does wonder at the lack of mercy in the heart of a fortunate woman. He would persuade her to make garments for the poor and to give alms, not to eat her bread in idleness, not to waste it ; to live and care for no flowers until she shall have rescued the withering flowers of miserable childhood : "SESAME AND LILIES" 167 " Did you ever hear, not of a Maud but a Made- leine, who went down to her garden in the dawn, and found One waiting at the gate, whom she supposed to be the gardener ? " The third and last lecture bound in this volume " The Mystery of Life and its Arts," delivered in Dublin in 1868 has near its opening this passage: " I have had what, in many respects, I boldly call the misfortune, to set my words somewhat prettily to- gether ; not without a foolish vanity in the poor knack I had of doing so ; until I was heavily punished for this pride, by finding that many people thought of the words only, and cared nothing for the meaning." A little further is this : " I spent the ten strongest years of my life (from twenty to thirty) in endeavouring to show the excel- lence of the work of the man whom I believed, and rightly believed, to be the greatest painter of the schools of England since Reynolds. I had then per- fect faith in the power of every great truth or beauty to prevail ultimately. . . . Fortunately or un- fortunately, an opportunity of perfect trial undeceived me at once and forever." Ruskin found that the Turner drawings arranged by him for exhibition were the object of absolute public neglect. He saw that his ten years had been lost. " For that I did not much care ; I had, at least, learned my own business thoroughly. . . . But what I did care for was the to me frightful dis- covery, that the most splendid genius in the arts l68 JOHN RUSK.IN might be permitted by Providence to labour and perish uselessly, . . . that the glory of it was perishable as well as invisible. That was the first mystery of life to me." The reader will remember that Turner's pictures were not only neglected by men, but also irreparably injured and altered by time ; to witness this was to endure the chastisement of a hope whereof few men are capable. Surely it is no obscure sign of greatness in a soul that it should have hoped so much. Ninety and nine are they who need no repentance, having not committed the sin of going thus in front of the judgments of Heaven heralds and have not been called back to rebuke as was this one. In what has so often been called the dogmatism of Ruskin's work appears this all-noble fault. Upon the discovery of this mystery crowd all the mysteries. Who that has suffered one but has also soon suffered all ? In this great lecture Ruskin con- fesses them one by one, in extremities of soul. And he is aghast at the indifference not of the vulgar only, but of poets. The seers themselves have paltered with the faculty of sight. Milton's history of the fall of the angels is unbelievable to himself, told with artifice and invention, not a living truth presented to living faith, nor told as he must answer it in the last judgment of the intellectual conscience. u Dante's conception is far more intense, and by himself for the time, not to be escaped from ; it is in- deed a vision, but a vision only. . . . And the destinies of the Christian Church, under their most "SESAME AND LILIES" 169 sacred symbols, become literally subordinate to the praise, and are only to be understood by the aid, of one dear Florentine maiden. ... It seems daily more amazing to me that men such as these should dare to ... fill the openings of eternity, before which prophets have veiled their faces, with idle puppets of their scholastic imagination, and melancholy lights of frantic faith in their lost mortal love." The indifference of the world as to the infinite question of religion, the indifference of all mankind as to the purpose of its little life, of every man as to the effect of his little life in an evil hour these puzzles throng the way to the recesses of thought. As it chanced, with the irony of things, Ruskin had been bidden to avoid religious questions in Dublin for fear of offending some of his hearers. What he had been moved to say, however, he thought would offend all if it offended any, and not in Dublin only but in the breadth and in the corners of the world. But as his audience expected to hear about " art," and not about the mysteries of life, he closes the lecture in his old manner, with all the splendid confidence of teaching, demonstrating the cause of the good fortune of this art and of the disaster of that, putting away once more what he confessed to be the unanswerable, for the exposition of what he held to be the answer- able, question. In a delightful passage (what wonder that his hearers wanted to hear it ?) he recurs to the contrast of the Lombardic Eve the barbarous carving that had a future, with the Angel (it was an Irish angel, by the way), the barbarous design that had no 170 JOHN RUSKIN possible artistic future and was the end of its own futile attempt ; these had been described in The Two Paths. Here is Ruskin leaving the Mystery for the lesson. But, strange to say, if ever he has explained in vain, registered an inconsequence, committed him- self to failure, it has been in the generous cause of possible rescue it has been in the Lesson. CHAPTER XV "THE CROWN OF WILD OLIVE" (1866) WHETHER the four lectures published under this title chanced to be written at a time of interior weak- ness I know not ; but at least two of them bear such signs of flagging life as are not to be found elsewhere. Alike in gentleness, in play, in gravity, and in violence in exaggeration itself, which wastes the life of all other writers Ruskin has an incomparable vitality ; and it is not too much to say that, amongst these many books, only in the lecture on "War "is the place of this vitality taken by vivacity and excite- ment; but the following lecture, "The Future of England," seems also to show signs of the spur. Both lectures were given at Woolwich the one at the Royal Military Academy, and the other at the Royal Artillery Institution, with four years between. Ruskin had been asked, not once or twice, to speak to the young soldier, and had " not ventured persist- ently to refuse " ; and perhaps the knowledge that he had a paradox before him caused him to make the paradox a sort of impossibility, in very despair. Ac- cordingly we have it : " All the pure and noble arts of peace are founded on war " ; " No great art ever yet arose on earth, but among a nation of soldiers " ; " There is no art among a shepherd people, if it re- mains at peace " ; " There is no great art possible to 171 172 JOHN RUSKIN a nation but that which is based on battle." The reader is almost able to imagine for himself how Rus- kin opposes these assertions by condemnations of the contentious temper of man who, set to dress and to keep his garden, delighted to trample it in quarrel. The opposition is violent enough, but there is, for once, a lack of passion. Not so when war ceases to be directly the theme, and Ruskin approaches once more the intricate but more accessible question of public economy : " You object, Lords of England, to increase, to the poor, the wages you give them, because they spend them, you say, unadvisedly. Render them, therefore, an account of the wages which they give you; and show them, by your example, how to spend theirs to the last farthing, advisedly." He had just then heard of working men who spent their wages in the brief time of prosperity " by sitting two days a-week in the tavern parlour, ladling port wine, not out of bowls, but out of buckets " ; and he remembered the example set to them at his own first college supper. The two other lectures are on " Work " and " Traffic," and the first was for a Working Men's Institute. The main matter treated is the appoint- ment made by capital of the kind and the object of labour. No other operation of capital not even the paying of wages is so momentous as this for the in- terests of the labouring class ; Ruskin accuses the writers on political economy of neglecting its impor- "THE CROWN OF WILD OLIVE" 173 tance, but I think that Mill has sufficiently marked it, in his own way. The difference between Ruskin and the others is probably that he sees waste, inutility, and mischief where others, beguiled of their clear per- ceptions by commercial (or non-political) economy, were not aware of it : in iron railings, for example, set up before a new public-house : " The front of it was built in so wise manner, that a recess of two feet was left below its front windows, between them and the street-pavement ; a recess too narrow for any possible use (for even if it had been occupied by a seat, as in old time it might have been, everybody walking along the street would have fallen over the legs of the reposing wayfarer). But, by way of making this two feet depth of freehold land more expressive of the dignity of an establishment for the sale of spirituous liquors, it was fenced from the pave- ment by an imposing iron railing, having four or five spear-heads to the yard of it, and six feet high ; con- taining as much iron and iron-work, indeed, as could well be put into the space; and by this stately ar- rangement, the little piece of dead ground within . became a protective receptacle of refuse." It was only Ruskin who saw this work to be im- poverishing ; and hard by this Croydon railing was the once sweet stream at Carshalton, full of festering refuse that a little natural labour would have cleared. Food, fresh air, and pure water brought about by labour are so much gain to the nation a political possession even if the labour spent on them be ill paid. The lecture on " Traffic " was given in the Brad- 174 JOHN RUSK.IN ford Town Hall on the eve of the building of a new Exchange. " I do not care about this Exchange," said the lecturer, " because you don't." " You know there are a great many odd styles of architecture about; you don't want to do anything ridiculous; you hear of me, among others, as a re- spectable architectural man-milliner, and you send for me." His hope was to teach his hearers to like some- thing, and to build what they could like. " The first and last, and closest trial question to any living crea- ture is * What do you like ? ' . . . Taste is not only a pan and an index of morality ; it is the only morality." CHAPTER XVI "TIME AND TIDE BY WEARE AND TYNE" (1867) THE years 1866 and 1867 are famous in the history of self-government in England. The agitator and the legislator, this party and that, vied amongst themselves for a place not in the vanward and the rearward, but both in the vanward. Democracy gained ground that would not have been yielded to it without the slight quibble of altered names. At any rate it was in 1866 that the two parties began to intersect one another at various points, and the intersections took names. The great two parties of political history were virtually confusible ; somewhat like the little animals, one im- placental and the other placental, and therefore derived by descent through ways that lay apart for incalculable years, yet so like each other in shape, habit, and feature that to see them run in the fields you cannot tell them apart. Everything then became technically political ; politics became a matter not of principle but of termi- nology ; and amid the arbitrary passion about words, Ruskin wrote his twenty-five letters to a workingman of Sunderland on the Laws of Work, to which he gave the aforesaid title, and which were intended to teach realities. Ruskin himself at times used the names of parties, calling himself a Tory or what not. But the writer of Time and Tide is one who warns Tory and Radical alike against the illusion of outward 175 176 JOHN RUSK.IN liberty, and enforces the necessity of inward law first, and of outward law secondly, to execute the first. Freedom from covetousness, freedom from luxury, protection from cruelty Ruskin would ensure these with so much force that standing somewhere between the extremity of socialism on the one hand and the extremity of anarchism on the other, it would certainly be to socialists that he would seem to be gathered. Nevertheless, though the socialist might quote Time and Tide in favour of licences to marry, yet the anarchist might cite the same book against the army estimates. It is in this little volume, written when men at a time of political revision were not ashamed to make fresh plans (called Utopias in the language of the newspaper) for society, that Ruskin has given himself the greatest freedom of proposal. That is, he takes, for all his sad heart, something of the pleasure of a child planning the laws and economies of its own island in the Pacific Ocean. There is an ingenious interest in the work, and withal a profound conviction of the wisdom of what seems so visionary. It is needless to say that a proposal to give young men and rosieres a licence to marry when they deserved it re- ceived from the world the derision that costs nothing not even the pains of reading the book. The book, indeed, is full rather of desires than of hopes, and its dejection is almost as great as that manifest in the most decoratively beautiful of Ruskin's writings Sesame and Lilies. He was not able to acquiesce in the sufferings of cities. He was obliged to try to "TIME AND TIDE BY WEARE AND TYNE " 177 think for the foolish and work for the helpless, and to give to the disinherited. He was not able, besides, to acquiesce in the profanations. " The action of the deceiving or devilish power is in nothing shown quite so distinctly among us at this day not even in our commercial dishonesties, nor in our social cruelties as in its having been able to take away music, as an instrument of education, altogether ; and to enlist it wholly in the service of superstition on the one hand, and of sensuality on the other." It is right that I should quote this unjust passage. In 1867 the intellectual and spiritual education of thou- sands of Englishmen by the greatest music in the world may not have made great progress ; but even at that time Ruskin, if he had looked, might have seen multitudes of people studying music neither for superstition nor for sensuality; the citizens at the familiar popular concerts were then beginning, with the most willing hearts ever brought to the hearing of good music, their education at no ignoble hands. The page that describes a stage-burlesque of that day (it would only need to be made more contemptuous for this) is written with such strange felicity as Ruskin uses when, with much feeling, he writes lightly : " The pantomime was Ali Bada and the Forty Thieves. The forty thieves were girls. The forty thieves had forty companions, who were girls. The forty thieves and their forty companions were in some way mixed up with about four hundred and forty fairies, who were girls. There was an Oxford and Cambridge, in which the Oxford and Cambridge men iy8 JOHN RUSK.IN were girls. . . . Mingled incongruously with these seraphic, and as far as my boyish experience extends, novel elements of pantomime, there were yet some of its old and fast-expiring elements. There were, in speciality, two thoroughly good pantomime actors, Mr. W. H. Payne and Mr. Frederick Payne. . . . There were two subordinate actors, who played, sub- ordinately well, the fore and hind legs of a donkey. And there was a little actress, of whom I have chiefly to speak, who played exquisitely the little part she had to play. The scene in which she appeared was . . . the house scene, in which Ali Baba's wife, on washing day, is called upon by the butcher, baker, and milkman, with unpaid bills; and in the extremity of her distress hears her husband's knock at the door and opens it for him to drive in his donkey, laden with gold. The children . . . presently share in the rapture of their father and mother ; and the little lady I spoke of eight or nine years old dances a pas de deux with the donkey. She did it beautifully and simply, as a child ought to dance. She was not an infant prodigy ; there was no evidence, in the finish or strength of her motion, that she had been put to continual torture through half her eight or nine years. She did nothing more than any child, well taught, but painlessly, might easily do. She caricatured no older person attempted no curious or fantastic skill. She was dressed decently she moved decently she looked and behaved innocently and she danced her joyful dance with perfect grace, spirit, sweetness, and self- forget fulness. And through all the vast theatre, full of English fathers and mothers and children, there was not one hand lifted to give her sign of praise but mine. Presently after this came on the forty thieves, who, as I told you, were girls ; and, there being no thieving to be presently done, and time hanging heavy on their hands, arms, and legs, the forty thief-girls proceeded "TIME AND TIDE BY WEARE AND TYNE" 179 to light forty cigars, whereupon the British public give them a round of applause. Whereupon I fell a-think- ing ; and saw little more of the piece, except as an ugly and disturbing dream." I recur elsewhere to the saddest page Ruskin ever wrote (and perhaps in writing it he did not think how some few of his readers would share with him its last bitterness) wherein he avers that he has at last learnt to be cheerful and to rest in spite of the starving and dying of the forlorn, and notwithstanding the disre- gard with which the world had let go by his courageous plan of succour. But in 1867 there was no such despair, but much distress and desire, in that generous heart. He still thought that there were many who would defer the arts, the muses, the luxuries, the graces of civilization, the tasks of intellect, and the accomplishment of nations, until a rescue had been made of the poor. At the time of writing Time and Tide the author had the large desire of saving the labouring classes from what Antiquity and the modern world alike have held to be the misfortune and servi- tude of labour. But he found himself, needless to say, with the unvanquished difficulty of the necessity of some such servitude. With a laugh he asks the professors of Evangelical Christianity especially the ministers whether they will not purchase their own proclaimed eternal reward by taking upon themselves the disgrace of the unattractive offices. There seems no other way to fill them in the nation as he would reconstruct it. He sets about the work of reconstruc- tion ingeniously, with wisdom, and like a child : l8o JOHN RUSKIN "You say that many a boy runs away . . . from good positions to go to sea. Of course he does. I never said I should have any difficulty in finding sailors, but that I shall in finding fishmongers. I am not at a loss for gardeners either, but what am I to do for greengrocers ? " It is chiefly to serve the study of profits, fair and unfair, that Time and Tide was written ; but amongst its many other purposes was that reunion of art and handicraft for which Ruskin worked in those days alone, and to further which, as also to rebuke luxury, he wrote : " Labour without joy is base. Labour without sor- row is base. Sorrow without labour is base. Joy without labour is base." CHAPTER XVII "THE QUEEN OF THE AIR" (1869) RUSKIN called this book a study of the Greek myths of cloud and storm, but no more than a prefatory study a collection of " desultory memoranda on a most noble subject." The myth of Athena, his Queen of the Air, he names one of "the great myths," or those as to which it is of small importance " what wild hunter dreamed, or what childish race first dreaded it," because one thing is certain that a " strong people " lived by it. The myth of St. George is of the same influential and significant kind. But this Queen of the Air is queen also of the breathing creatures of earth, queen of human breath, and of the moral health and " habitual wisdom " of the unaf- frighted Grecian heart. Queen of the blue air, first of all ; and in the Introduction Ruskin appeals once more to a world busied upon the defilement of so much of the celestial blue, but at that moment greatly interested in Professor Tyndall's discovery of the cause of the colour of the sky researches for which Ruskin thanks the professor, with a gentle apology for any words of his that had seemed to fail in respect for the powers of thought of the masters of modern physical science. "This first day of May, 1869, I am writing where 181 l82 JOHN RUSKIN my work was begun thirty-five years ago, within sight of the snows of the higher Alps. In that half of the permitted life of man, I have seen strange evil brought upon every scene that I best loved. . . . The light that once flushed those pale summits with its rose at dawn, and purple at sunset, is now umbered and faint ; the air which once inlaid the clefts of all their golden crags with azure is now defiled with languid coils of smoke ; . . . the waters that once sank at their feet into crystalline rest are now dimmed and foul." Is there any reader inclined to take this for a light grief? I protest that it is a heavy one. The Athena of the clear heavens was the theme of the greatest myth in that central time about 500 B. c. which held more explicitly and with fuller consciousness the early religion of the Homeric day. " The Homeric poems . . . are not conceived didactically, but are didactic in their essence, as all good art is. There is an increasing insensibility to this character, and even an open denial of it, among us, now, which is one of the most curious errors of modernism, the peculiar and judicial blindness of an age which, having long practiced art and poetry for the sake of pleasure only, has become incapable of reading their language when they were both didactic : and also, having been itself accustomed to a profess- edly didactic teaching which yet, for private interests, studiously avoids collision with every prevalent vice of its day (and especially with avarice), has become equally dead to the intensely ethical conceptions of a race which habitually divided all men into two broad classes of worthy or worthless ; good, and good for nothing." "THE QUEEN OF THE AIR" 183 Ruskin would teach this Greek spirit again to a world that had boasted of denying it ; but before the formative and decisive spirit of Athena is shown centred in the heart and work of men, Ruskin studies it " in the heavens," and " in the earth." Athena represents " all cloud, and rain, and dew, and dark- ness, and peace, and wrath of heaven." She repre- sents the vegetative power of the earth, the motion of sea and of ships, the vibration of sound. To her great myth, therefore, Ruskin devotes a beautiful page regarding flowers, a doubtful page regarding music, and one of great vigour regarding the strength that is rather in breath than muscle the young strength in war, wherewith Athena filled the breast of Achilles when " She leaped down out of heaven like a harpy falcon, shrill-voiced." And this follows, on the crea- ture that lives and moves by air the bird : " It is little more than a drift of the air brought into form by plumes ; the air is in all its quills, it breathes through its whole frame and flesh, and glows with air in its flying, like a blown flame : it rests upon the air, subdues it, surpasses it, outraces it ; it is the air, conscious of itself, conquering itself, ruling itself." The voice of Athena's air is in the bird's throat : "As we may imagine the wild form of the cloud closed into the perfect form of the bird's wings, so the wild voice of the cloud into its ordered and com- manded voice. . . . Also upon the plumes of the bird are put the colours of the air : on these the gold of the cloud, that cannot be gathered by covet- 184 JOHN RUSK.IN ousness ; the rubies of the clouds, that are not the price of Athena, but are Athena ; the vermilion of the cloud-bar and the flame of the cloud-crest, and the snow of the cloud, and its shadow, and the melted blue of the deep wells of the sky." As the bird has most of the life of air, the serpent has least ; and the serpent is one of the dark sayings of nature the invariable living hieroglyph, worth the reading. " Athena in the Heart " is rather a reading by in- sight of the Greek mind than a tracing of Greek rec- ords. Ruskin has sought that mind "through the imperfection, and alas ! more dimly yet, through the triumphs, of formative art." He finds Athena in that early creative power we may name it the mother of art that dies in childbirth. " It is as vain an attempt to reason out the vision- ary power or guiding influence of Athena in the Greek heart, from anything we now read, or possess, of the work of Phidias, as it would be for the disciples of some new religion to infer the spirit of Christianity from Titian's l Assumption.' ' But in the days of art, Athena teaches " Tightness." Every reader of Ruskin knows well what he means by this. Rightness is in the nature of the workman his spirit and his style. " If stone-work is well put together, it means that a thoughtful man planned it, and a careful man cut it. . . . A man may hide himself from you, or mis- represent himself to you, every other way ; but he "THE QUEEN OF THE AIR" 185 cannot in his work : there, be sure, you have him to the inmost." The command of Athena which is the command of Tightness antecedent to beauty is spoken thus : "'Be well exercised, and rightly clothed. Clothed, and in your right minds ; not insane and in rags, nor in soiled fine clothes clutched from each other's shoulders. Fight and weave. Then I myself will answer for the course of the lance, and the colours of the loom.' " Ruskin renews, upon this text, his warning to a society that sets machines to fight and weave whilst men are obliged to stand idle. All vital power, he holds, should be employed first, natural mechanical force secondly, and artificially produced mechanical force only in the third place. "We waste our coal, and spoil our humanity, at one and the same time." Athena, finally, represents restraint : " No one ever gets wiser by doing wrong, nor stronger. You will get wiser and stronger only by doing right. . . . l What ! ' a wayward youth might perhaps answer . . . 4 Shall I not know the world best by trying the wrong of it, and repent- ing ? ' . . . Your liberty of choice has simply destroyed for you so much life and strength, never regainable. It is true you now know the habits of swine, and the taste of husks : do you think your father could not have taught you to know better habits and pleasanter tastes ? " CHAPTER XVIII "LECTURES ON ART" (1870) THE first course of Slade Lectures begins with some formality and a sense of the novelty and solem- nity of the lecturer's office. The first of the six goes to the beginning of things, and has this sharp phrase on education : it is " not the equaliser, but the dis- coverer, of men," and, " So far from being instruments for the collection of riches, the first lesson of wisdom is to disdain them, and of gentleness, to diffuse." The technical education proposed by Ruskin is not to enable a man here and there to extricate himself from a crowd " confessed to be in evil case," but to make the case of the crowd more honourable. Art may be mingled with their toil, but on this point a modest expectation is proposed. Let us not hope, says Ruskin in 1870, to excel not even in the merest decoration. u No nation ever had, or will have, the power of suddenly developing, under the pressure of necessity, faculties it had neglected when it was at ease." He closes against his countrymen " the highest fields of ideal art," but strangely confounds himself and voids his own argument when he closes those fields 1 86 "LECTURES ON ART" 187 of art for reasons that would avail equally to shut the gates of " the highest fields " of ideal literature. He finds in the English genius (and so proper thereto that the lack, in an Englishman, implies some failure or weakness) a pleasure in the grotesque, and a tolerance of certain gross forms of evil. Let us grant to Ruskin that it is there ; we would go further and grant to him that because of it Englishmen cannot be the greatest painters, if that concession did not bind us to the absurdity that because of it Englishmen cannot be the greatest writers. As it is, the theory cannot stand. Judged by comparison with Dante, we may be, if Ruskin will, a coarse nation ; but in that case a coarse nation owns one name certainly greater than Dante's. Surely because of his terrible custom of referring the human spirit to Dante, and of testing human char- acter by the rule of Dante's, does Ruskin commit this outrage. He offers his countrymen some comfort ; if they cannot paint the greatest pictures, they can, in the persons of Reynolds and Gainsborough, paint portraits insuperably good (but in the second lecture he says, " The highest that art can do is to set before you the true image of the presence of a noble human being ") ; they can love and study landscape by the very fact that they are unhappily a city folk, whereas the peasant cares little for natural beauty ; and they have a national sympathy with animals ; let them improve it and learn to draw birds rather than shoot them. And there follows a beautiful passage on the inheritance of a love of beauty : l88 JOHN RUSKIN " In the children of noble races, trained by sur- rounding art, and at the same time in the practice of great deeds, there is an intense delight in the land- scape of their country, as memorial ; a sense not taught to them, nor teachable to any others ; but, in them, innate ; and the seal and reward of persistence in great national life ; the obedience and the peace of ages having extended gradually the glory of the revered ancestors also to the ancestral land ; until the Mother- hood of the dust, the mystery of the Demeter from whose bosom we came, and to whose bosom we return, surrounds and inspires, everywhere, the local awe of field and fountain." The students, discouraged, one must suppose, by the inaugural lecture, were instructed, in the second, on " The Relation of Art to Religion." " The phenomena of imagination . . . are the result of the influence of the common and vital, but not, therefore, less Divine, spirit, of which some por- tion is given to all living creatures in such manner as may be adapted to their rank in creation ; . . . and everything which men rightly accomplish is indeed done by Divine help, but under a consistent law which is never departed from." " The Relation of Art to Morals " is the subject of a lecture contrasting once more the thought of Antiquity and of the modern world. It seems to the careful reader that if Ruskin tests art by morality, he also tests morality by art. One page of this lecture puts life to the touch with a trial like that of Mr. Meredith's test in The Empty Purse : " Is it accepted of song ? " "LECTURES ON ART" 189 " No art-teaching," says Ruskin in the same lecture, " could be of use to you, but would rather be harmful, unless it was grafted on something deeper than all art." But we have heard him say elsewhere that taste is the only morality that is to say, what a man loves is his spiritual life. Whichever of these two answers for the other whether morality for such art as it is able to teach, or art for such morality as it is able to teach by neither, nor by both, in those elementary measures, are men led many paces on the way they must walk. The fact of morality may be established by art, but the code of morality whereby we have to control our actions and to constrain ourselves has that fact as its starting point, and does its effectual work further on. Ruskin, however, seems to hold that a working morality is to be found in the decisions of art. Leaving these polemics, the reader stops with full assent upon this incidental judgment of language and literature : " The chief vices of education have arisen from the one great fallacy of supposing that noble language is a communicable trick of grammar and accent, instead of simply the careful expression of right thought." It is certainly not a communicable trick, but neither is it a communicable virtue. The following is one of the finest of many passages condemning modern con- ditions : " Great obscurity . . . has been brought upon the truth ... by the want of integrity and sim- plicity in our modern life. Everything is broken up, . . . besides being in great part imitative j so that JOHN RUSKIN you not only cannot tell what a man is, but sometimes you cannot tell whether he /V, at all." Amongst other things we fail in is anger when it is due; Ruskin will not away with our non-vindictive justice, which, having convicted a man of a crime worthy of death, entirely pardons the criminal, restores him to honour and esteem, and then hangs him ; " not as a malefactor, but as a scarecrow." " That is the theory. And the practice is, that we send a child to prison for a month for stealing a hand- ful of walnuts, for fear that other children should come to steal more of our walnuts. And we do not punish a swindler for ruining a thousand families, be- cause we think swindling a wholesome excitement to trade." Ruskin will have justice to be vindictive and pun- ishment retributive. In " The Relation of Art to Use," we read, " The entire vitality of art depends upon its being either full of truth or full of use." It is " either to state a true thing or to adorn a serviceable one. It must never exist alone never for itself." The very commonplace of later, but not latest, opinion is to the contrary. I confess that " to state a true thing " is a definition of purpose against which there may be some rebellion even in a mind never subject to the fashion of a now depart- ing day. Here, as before, such a mind may appeal, against Ruskin's phrase, to the separate art of music. "To make a beautiful thing " is not, however, a suf- ficient amendment of that phrase, in as much as u the "LECTURES ON ART" 191 formation of an actually beautiful thing " is involved by Ruskin in the act of art. One thing is certain that it is not by way of dishonour to art that he would have art subservient, but for the advantage of its es- sential vitality and of its particular skill. Of vitality he is the best judge in the world. Of human skill he charges the whole world of these three hundred years past with taking not too much but too little heed. " We have lost our delight in Skill ; in that majesty of it . . . which long ago I tried to express, under the head of c ideas of power.' . . . All the joy and reverence we ought to feel in looking at a strong man's work have ceased in us. We keep them yet a little in looking at a honeycomb or a bird's nest; we understand that these differ, by divinity of skill, from a lump of wax or a cluster of sticks." It is in the lecture on the relation of art to use, moreover, that the reader finds this splendid passage on Reynolds : "He rejoices in showing you his skill; and those of you who succeed in learning what painter's work really is, will one day rejoice also, even to laughter that highest laughter which springs of pure delight, in watching the fortitude and fire of a hand which strikes forth its will upon the canvas as easily as the wind strikes it on the sea. He rejoices in all abstract beauty and rhythm and melody of design." But the beauty is to serve by likeness to nature. This " likeness " seems to be rather a strain of the idea of " use." And in fact to prove this curious JOHN RUSKIN contention Ruskin is obliged to place portrait at a height, as has already been said, that he had seemed to deny it. But in the course of this argument is a brilliant page on the cause of the dishonour of por- traiture in Greek art : " The progressive course of Greek art was in sub- duing monstrous conceptions to natural ones ; it did this by general laws ; it reached absolute truth of generic human form, and if this ethical force had remained, would have advanced into healthy portrait- ure. But at the moment of change the national life ended in Greece ; and portraiture, there, meant insult to her religion, and flattery to her tyrants. And her skill perished, not because she became true in sight, but because she became vile in heart." But these moralities and portraitures are but obscure glories of art in use (as to which the reader may be half-convinced, or may hold that they are concerned rather with the sense of words than with principles of art) compared with the kinds of plain and obvious utility to which, in the beginning of this course, as in the pamphlet on Prt-RaJ>baeIitism y Ruskin com- mends the services of painters : " What we especially need at present for educational purposes is to know, not the anatomy of plants, but their biography how and where they live and die, their tempers, benevolences, malignities, distresses, and virtues. We want them drawn from their youth to their age, from bud to fruit. . . . And all this we ought to have drawn so accurately that we might at once compare any given part of a plant with the same part of any other, drawn on the like conditions. "LECTURES ON ART" 193 Now, is not this a work which we may set about here in Oxford, with good hope and much pleas- ure ? " Not many thought so, it is said. The professor's classes were not well attended. He went on to sug- gest that geology should be served, as well as botany, and urged his art students to the study of the cleav- age-lines of the smallest fragments of rock. To the rescue of topography, and zoology, and history they might go too : " The feudal and monastic buildings of Europe, and still more the streets of her ancient cities, are vanishing like dreams ; and it is difficult to imagine the mingled envy and contempt with which future generations will look back to us, who still possessed such things, yet made no effort to preserve, and scarcely any to delineate them ; for, when used as material of landscape by the modern artist, they are nearly always superficially or flatteringly represented, without zeal enough to penetrate their character, or patience enough to render it in modest harmony." Ruskin appeals to those professing to love art that they would labour to " get the country clean and the people lovely," to rescue young creatures from miser- able toil and deadly shade, to dress them better, to lodge them more fitly, to restore the handicrafts to dignity and simplicity. But the reform of outward conditions must come first, and Ruskin thought that art could hardly flourish "In any country where the cities are thus built, or thus, let me rather say, clotted and coagulated j spots 194 JOHN RUSK.IN of dreadful mildew spreading by patches and blotches over the country they consume." It is a repetition of the old contention, made doubtful by history as Ruskin himself tells it ; for whenever art has begun to decay it has been surrounded, in that hour, by fulness of beauty. The fourth lecture is a practical lesson on " Line " that outline which is " infinitely subtle ; not even a line, but the place of a line, and that, also, made soft by texture." The linear arts are the earliest, and they divide principally into the Greek (line with light) and the Gothic (line with colour). Ruskin shows how these arts began to cease to depend upon line, and learnt to represent masses, and how from them were derived " Two vast mediaeval schools ; one of flat and infi- nitely varied colour, with exquisite character and senti- ment added, . . . but little perception of shadow ; the other, of light and shade, with exquisite drawing of solid form, and little perception of colour ; some- times as little of sentiment." According to Ruskin, the schools of colour en- riched themselves by adopting from the schools of light and shadow " whatever was compatible with their own power." The schools of light and shadow, on the other hand, were too haughty and too weak to learn much from the schools of colour. To them is chiefly due the decadence of art. " In their fall they dragged the schools of colour down with them." Returning to the study of line, Ruskin recommends "LECTURES ON ART" 195 severity in drawing as a first aim, rather than the finished studies of light and shade practised in some of our classes. In the following lecture, on " Light," and in the last, on " Colour," he insists further upon the happiness and peace of the art of colour, and upon the oppression and mortality of the art of chiaroscuro the art that sought light and found darkness also, and loved form and found formlessness. " The school of light is founded in the Doric wor- ship of Apollo and the Ionic worship of Athena, as the spirits of life in the light, and of light in the air, opposed each to their own contrary deity of death Apollo to the Python, Athena to the Gorgon Apollo as life in light, to the earth spirit of corruption in darkness, Athena as life by motion, to the Gorgon spirit of death by pause, freezing, or turning to stone ; both of the great divinities taking their glory from the evil they have conquered ; both of them, when angry, taking to men the form of the evil which is their op- posite. . . . But underlying both these, and far more mysterious, dreadful, and yet beautiful, there is the Greek conception of spiritual darkness ; of the anger of fate, whether foredoomed or avenging." Ruskin then takes us through the allegory (not the representation) of light in the Greek vase-paintings, and closes his history of light with the illumination of the work of Turner. To the student it must seem somewhat fantastic to call the schools of light and shadow Greek, for the sake of those allegories of light in Greek art to call, for example, the northern spirit of the " Melancholia " and " The Knight and Death " Greek. But the student of Ruskin will retain, at any 196 JOHN RUSKIN rate, the fact that he holds the colour-schools the Gothic to be the more vital, and the chiaroscuro schools, albeit noble in noble masters, to be subject to derogation in " licentious and vulgar forms of art " having no parallel amongst the colourists. Inciden- tally I must avow that amongst the griefs that a reader of Ruskin has to swallow is the contempt of reflected lights that is but the outcome of his suspicion and distrust of the schools of light and shadow. He bids his classes to make little inquiry into reflected lights : " Nearly all young students (and too many advanced masters') exaggerate them. ... In vulgar chiaro- scuro the shades are so full of reflection that they look as if some one had been walking round the ob- ject with a candle, and the students, by that help, peering into its crannies." Ruskin never really loved the landscape of the south. In a letter (I think to Miss Siddal) he agrees with her that the Mediterranean coast lacks beauty because it is too pale. Now, that paleness is due to the reflected light in shadow which is the loveliest secret of the southern summer, and the surprise of the East ; a secret and a surprise (although it makes all inner places tenderly bright), because the traveller ex- pects, on the contrary, that shadows shall be dark in a bright sun, and often expects black shadows so posi- tively that he goes further, and describes them. Ruskin here, as elsewhere, recommends the student not to disregard local colour even in studies of form not to ignore the leopard's spots for the sake of the "LECTURES ON ART" 197 lights or darks that are to aid in showing its anatomy. He would have the artist " to consider all nature merely as a mosaic of different colours, to be imitated one by one, in simplicity." In teaching the practice of the colourist painters he insists that " shadows are as much colours as lights are " j and that " whoever represents them by merely the subdued or darkened tint of the light, represents them falsely." In Modern Painters Cuyp and others seemed to be rebuked for the sep- arate colour of their shadows; we must understand false separate colour, no doubt ; in any case we may settle our difficulties of theory by referring to the Venetian practice, which Ruskin pronounces to be right, and right in all periods. In 1870 Ruskin had perhaps already begun to repent of that Renaissance wherewith I venture to charge him in the chapter on St. Mark's Rest ; and amongst those periods of Ve- netian " Tightness," he was inclining to the tranquil and undazzled cheerfulness of the earlier colourists. " None of their lights are flashing, . . . they are soft, winning, precious ; only, you know, on this condition they cannot have sunshine." In our eyes to-day the attaining to sunshine is worth the sacrifice of every lesser " cheerfulness," and of colour itself. And Titian and Tintoretto themselves thought so, and Ruskin himself must have thought so when he was at the height of his love for them, and for Turner. Even in 1870 he writes, nobly : " We do not live in the inside of a pearl ; but in an atmosphere through which a burning sun shines thwartedly, and over which a sorrowful night must far 198 JOHN RUSKIN prevail. . . . There is mystery in the day as in the night." Writing thus, he had not yet given his heart to the unmysterious allegory of early art. But how strange an injustice he could do at this time, and perhaps at all times, to that divine creation, " artificial " light, may be seen from this. The noble men, he says, of the sixteenth century learn their lesson from the schools of chiaroscuro nobly ; the base men learn it basely. " The great men rise from colour to sunlight. The base ones fall from colour to candlelight. To-day 4 non ragioniam di lor.' " What, then, about Sir Joshua ? As for the much more modern art which studies fire in daylight, and that which is dazzled by the flashes of day, they do not exist for Ruskin. Broadly, he names the Gothic school of colour " the school of crystal " (and strangely, too, for the colours of crystal and of glass are colours through which light comes, and are surely unlike the colours of the primitive colour-schools) ; and the Greek school of light he names " the school of clay : potter's clay, and human, are too sorrowfully the same, as far as art is concerned." And he tells his classes that they must choose between the two, and cannot belong to both. None the less had he shown, in many an elab- orate lesson, that the great Venetians had joined form and light to their colour, and that they did belong to "LECTURES ON ART" 199 both. And it is another surprise to find him declaring himself " wholly " a chiaroscurist. He had taught, in these same lectures, the colourists to be more " vital," and had recommended to the student the " mosaic " of the colour of nature ; he had disclaimed the chiaroscurists in Modern Painters, and in the later studies of Florentine art was to proclaim himself a colourist, as it would seem, " wholly." If there is an inconsistency, it is perhaps due to the theoretic separation of things long joined together; but the matter is full of difficulty to the reader. At any rate, Ruskin must needs give his Turner the names of both schools. And having a living imagination for the art of action (indeed what imagination ever lived so fully as his ?) he insists that action was, according to the divisions of this book, " Greek," not " Gothic." Yet here again what contradictions, when we call to mind the action and flight of Gothic architecture, the grow- ing plant in stone, the " prickly independence " of the leaf of Gothic sculpture, and the repose of Grecian building ! The lecture closes with a sombre encouragement : " You live in an age of base conceit and baser sur- vility an age whose intellect is chiefly formed by pillage, and occupied in desecration ; one day mimick- ing, the next destroying, the works of all the noble persons who made its intellectual or art life possible to it. ... In the midst of all this you have to become lowly and strong." CHAPTER XIX "ARATRA PENTELICI" (1872) THIS course of Slade Lectures treats of the Ele- ments of Sculpture. At setting forth Ruskin con- demns the lifeless work of cutting and chiselling jewels, in as much as true goods are common goods, and these crystals are prized chiefly because of their rarity. True sculpture he teaches to be the conquest of the plough-share and the chisel over clay ; it is the victory of life ; and the true sculptor " sees Pallas," that is, the spirit of life, and of wisdom in the choice of life to be honoured by art. This is another form of the lesson on " natural form." Life purifies de- sign. Here is briefly the indication of the essential matter of these lectures : True schools of sculpture are peculiar to nations in their youth and in their strong humanity. The Greeks found Phoenician and Etruscan art monstrous and made them human. The Florentines found Byzantine and Norman art monstrous and made them human both the reforming schools being wholly sincere. " We, on the contrary, are now . . . abso- lutely without sincerity ; absolutely, therefore, without imagination, and without virtue. Our hands are dex- terous with the vile and deadly dexterity of machines; 300 "ARATRA PENTELICI" 201 our minds filled with incoherent fragments of faith, which we cling to in cowardice, without believing, and make pictures of, in vanity, without loving." Then follows a sketch of the Thames Embankment ; its gas jets coming out of fishes' tails borrowed from a refuse Neapolitan marble, and these ill-cast and lacquered to imitate bronze, adorned with a caduceus stolen from Mercury, a street-knocker from two or three million street doors, the initials of the casting firm, and a lion's head copied from the Greek ; while the arch of Waterloo Bridge, under which this em- bankment passes, is but a " gloomy and hollow heap of wedged blocks of blind granite." Sculpture touches life essentially, and is forbidden to recognise those accidental beauties, such as the growth of lichen on a tree, that a painter pauses on. Its drapery has caught the life of the body. The controversy between Florentine and Greek drapery the Florentine having its own beauty rather than the body's beauty is in truth the difference between painting and sculpture. In the study of the Greek Ruskin takes us through the nine centuries three archaic, three central, and three decadent whereof the fifth century B. c. is symmetrically the middle age and the greatest. He insists upon the naturalism of the Greeks, and plunges once more into that per- petual question whether art can ever approach too near to nature, answering with that emphatic " No ! " to which some of his pages hardly seem to assent literally. Once more he reproaches the artists called 2O2 JOHN RUSKIN " ideal," whether sculptors or painters, for attempting to mend nature; and to this rebuke many and many an artist's heart must have replied that this is but a trap of words, for, at the worst, it is not nature the painter tries to mend, but his picture. In Modern Painters it had been written : u The picture which is taken as a substitute for nature had better be burned " ; but are we forbidden to do honor to a " substitute " by the name, say, of emissary, ambassador, or repre- sentative ? " The true sign," says Ruskin, " of the greatest art is to part voluntarily with its greatness," by making the eyes of those who look upon it to desire the natural fact. And this the Greeks knew. Phalaris says of the bull of Perilaus : " It only wanted motion and bellowing to seem alive ; and as soon as I saw it I cried out, It ought to be sent to the god " to Apollo, that is, who would delight in a work worthy to deceive not the simple but the wise. The Greek " rules over the arts to this day, and will forever, be- cause he sought not first for beauty, not first for pas- sion or for invention, but for Rightness." With him was the origin not only of all broad, mighty, and calm conception, " but of all that is divided, delicate, and tremulous." To him is owing the gigantic pillar of Agrigentum and the " last fineness of the Pisan Chapel of the Thorn." The beginning of Christian chivalry was in his bridling of the white and the black horses the spiritual and animal natures. " He be- came at last Gr