Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- THE LIFE OF SAMUEL PALMER
- CHAPTER I 1805 TO 1826
- CHAPTER II 1826 TO 1833
- CHAPTER III 1833 TO 1848
- CHAPTER IV 1848 TO 1861
- CHAPTER V 1861 TO ABOUT 1876
- CHAPTER VI CONCLUSION
- THE LETTERS OF SAMUEL PALMER
- A CATALOGUE OF THE EXHIBITED WORKS AND THE ETCHINGS OF SAMUEL PALMER
- Plate section
THE LETTERS OF SAMUEL PALMER
from THE LIFE OF SAMUEL PALMER
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- THE LIFE OF SAMUEL PALMER
- CHAPTER I 1805 TO 1826
- CHAPTER II 1826 TO 1833
- CHAPTER III 1833 TO 1848
- CHAPTER IV 1848 TO 1861
- CHAPTER V 1861 TO ABOUT 1876
- CHAPTER VI CONCLUSION
- THE LETTERS OF SAMUEL PALMER
- A CATALOGUE OF THE EXHIBITED WORKS AND THE ETCHINGS OF SAMUEL PALMER
- Plate section
Summary
1828
To Mr. John Linnell
SHOREHAM, KENT, December 21st, 1828.
My dear Sir. … I have begun to take off a pretty view of part of the village, and have no doubt but the drawing of choice portions and aspects of external objects is one of the varieties of study requisite to build up an artist, who should be a magnet to all kinds of knowledge; though, at the same time, I can't help seeing that the general characteristics of Nature's beauty not only differ from, but are, in some respects, opposed to those of Imaginative Art; and that, even in those scenes and appearances where she is loveliest, and most universally pleasing.
Nature, with mild reposing breadths of lawn and hill, shadowy glades and meadows, is sprinkled and showered with a thousand pretty eyes, and buds, and spires, and blossoms gemm'd with dew, and Is clad in living green. Nor must be forgotten the motley clouding, the fine meshes, the aerial tissues, that dapple the skies of spring; nor the rolling volumes and piled mountains of light; nor the purple sunset blazon'd with gold and the translucent amber. Universal nature wears a lovely gentleness of mild attraction; but the leafy lightness, the thousand repetitions of little forms, which are part of its own genuine perfection (and who would wish them but what they are?), seem hard to be reconciled with the unwinning seventy, the awfulness, the ponderous globosity of Art.
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- Life and Letters of Samuel Palmer, Painter and Etcher , pp. 171 - 402Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1892