The Eagle's Nest. Ten Lectures On the Relation of Natural Science to Art, Given Before the University of Oxford in Lent Term, 1872
The Eagle's Nest. Ten Lectures On the Relation of Natural Science to Art, Given Before the University of Oxford in Lent Term, 1872
Ruskin, John, 1819-1900
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However passive the material, however softly accommo- dated to the limbs, the wrinklings will always look foreign to the form, like the drip of a heavy shower of rain fall- ing off it, and will load themselves in the hollows uncom fortably. You will have to pull them about ; to stretch them one way, loosen them in another, and. supply the quantity of government which a living person would have given to the dress, before it becomes at all pleasing to you. 143. Doing your best, you will still not... succeed to your mind, provided you have, indeed, a mind worth pleasing. No adjustment that you can make, on the quiet figure, will give any approximation to the look of drapery which has previously accommodated itself to the action which brought the figure into the position in which it stays. Ob 122 the eagle's nest. a really living person, gracefully dressed,, and who has paused from graceful motion, you will get, again and again, arrangements of fold which yon can admire : but they will not remain to be copied, the first following movement alters all.
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