Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- MODERN PAINTERS VOLUME I
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION (1843)
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION (1844)
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO THIRD EDITION (1846)
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO NEW EDITION (1873)
- AUTHOR'S SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS
- PART I OF GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- SECTION I OF THE NATURE OF THE IDEAS CONVEYABLE BY ART
- SECTION II OF POWER
- PART II OF TRUTH
- SECTION I GENERAL PRINCIPLES RESPECTING IDEAS OF TRUTH
- SECTION II OF GENERAL TRUTHS
- SECTION III OF TRUTH OF SKIES
- SECTION IV OF TRUTH OF EARTH
- SECTION V OF TRUTH OF WATER
- SECTION VI OF TRUTH OF VEGETATION.—CONCLUSION
- Appendix
- Plate section
INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- MODERN PAINTERS VOLUME I
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION (1843)
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION (1844)
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO THIRD EDITION (1846)
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO NEW EDITION (1873)
- AUTHOR'S SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS
- PART I OF GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- SECTION I OF THE NATURE OF THE IDEAS CONVEYABLE BY ART
- SECTION II OF POWER
- PART II OF TRUTH
- SECTION I GENERAL PRINCIPLES RESPECTING IDEAS OF TRUTH
- SECTION II OF GENERAL TRUTHS
- SECTION III OF TRUTH OF SKIES
- SECTION IV OF TRUTH OF EARTH
- SECTION V OF TRUTH OF WATER
- SECTION VI OF TRUTH OF VEGETATION.—CONCLUSION
- Appendix
- Plate section
Summary
The following pages contain the first volume of Modern Painters, the book by which Ruskin, whose juvenilia have occupied the preceding volumes of this edition, first made his mark as a prose-writer. The successive volumes of Modern Painters were in some respects independent works. They form not one book, but four or five. The first volume was published in 1843; the fifth not till 1860. Between the first and second there was an interval of three years (1843–46), and in point of view and in style a marked distinction. Between the second volume and the third and fourth (which were issued together) there was an interval of ten years (1846–56); and there was another interval of four years (1856–60) before the fifth and final volume was published. During these intervals Ruskin did a great deal of other work. Thus, to mention his principal books only, during the second of the intervals he wrote and published The Seven Lamps of Architecture and The Stones of Venice; and in the last interval, The Political Economy of Art, foreshadowing his studies in social and political questions. There is in the five volumes of Modern Painters a unity of purpose, but it is an increasing purpose. “In the main aim and principle of the book,” said its author in his preface to the last volume, “there is no variation, from its first syllable to its last.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. xvii - lviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1903