Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- Modern Painters, Vol. V.
- PREFACE
- PART VI “OF LEAF BEAUTY”
- PART VII “OF CLOUD BEAUTY”
- PART VIII “OF IDEAS OF RELATION:—FIRST, OF INVENTION FORMAL”
- PART IX “OF IDEAS OF RELATION:—SECOND, OF INVENTION SPIRITUAL”
- CHAP. I THE DARK MIRROR
- CHAP. II THE LANCE OF PALLAS
- CHAP. III THE WINGS OF THE LION
- CHAP. IV DÜRER AND SALVATOR
- CHAP. V CLAUDE AND POUSSIN
- CHAP. VI RUBENS AND CUYP
- CHAP. VII OF VULGARITY
- CHAP. VIII WOUVERMANS AND ANGELICO
- CHAP. IX THE TWO BOYHOODS
- CHAP. X THE NEREID'S GUARD
- CHAP. XI THE HESPERID ÆGLÉ
- CHAP. XII PEACE
- EPILOGUE (1888)
- APPENDIX
- Plate section
CHAP. VI - RUBENS AND CUYP
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- Modern Painters, Vol. V.
- PREFACE
- PART VI “OF LEAF BEAUTY”
- PART VII “OF CLOUD BEAUTY”
- PART VIII “OF IDEAS OF RELATION:—FIRST, OF INVENTION FORMAL”
- PART IX “OF IDEAS OF RELATION:—SECOND, OF INVENTION SPIRITUAL”
- CHAP. I THE DARK MIRROR
- CHAP. II THE LANCE OF PALLAS
- CHAP. III THE WINGS OF THE LION
- CHAP. IV DÜRER AND SALVATOR
- CHAP. V CLAUDE AND POUSSIN
- CHAP. VI RUBENS AND CUYP
- CHAP. VII OF VULGARITY
- CHAP. VIII WOUVERMANS AND ANGELICO
- CHAP. IX THE TWO BOYHOODS
- CHAP. X THE NEREID'S GUARD
- CHAP. XI THE HESPERID ÆGLÉ
- CHAP. XII PEACE
- EPILOGUE (1888)
- APPENDIX
- Plate section
Summary
§ 1. The examination of the causes which led to the final departure of the religious spirit from the hearts of painters, would involve discussion of the whole scope of the Reformation on the minds of persons unconcerned directly in its progress. This is of course impossible.
One or two broad facts only can be stated, which the reader may verify, if he pleases, by his own labour. I do not give them rashly.
§ 2. The strength of the Reformation lay entirely in its being a movement towards purity of practice.
The Catholic priesthood was hostile to it in proportion to the degree in which they had been false to their own principles of moral action, and had become corrupt or worldly in heart.
The Reformers indeed cast out many absurdities, and demonstrated many fallacies, in the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church. But they themselves introduced errors, which rent the ranks, and finally arrested the march of the Reformation, and which paralyze the Protestant Church to this day. Errors of which the fatality was increased by the controversial bent which lost accuracy of meaning in force of declamation, and turned expressions, which ought to be used only in retired depth of thought, into phrases of custom, or watchwords of attack. Owing to which habits of hot, ingenious, and unguarded controversy, the Reformed Churches themselves soon forgot the meaning of the word which, of all words, was oftenest in their mouths.
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- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 326 - 342Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1903