Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER I UNTO THIS LAST (1860)
- CHAPTER II EXILE (1861–1863)
- CHAPTER III BOULOGNE—LUCERNE—MILAN (1861–1862)
- CHAPTER IV MORNEX—MUNERA PULVERIS (1862–1863)
- CHAPTER V HOME LIFE AT DENMARK HILL (1864–1866)
- CHAPTER VI SESAME AND LILIES—THE GROWN OF WILD OLIVE—THE ETHICS OF THE DUST (1865, 1866)
- CHAPTER VII TIME AND TIDE (1866, 1867)
- CHAPTER VIII RUSKIN's POLITICAL ECONOMY
- CHAPTER IX ABBEVILLE AND VERONA (1868, 1869)
- CHAPTER X OXFORD PROFESSOR (1870–1878)
- CHAPTER XI FIRST OXFORD LECTURES (1870, 1871)
- CHAPTER XII A DARK YEAE (1871)
- CHAPTER XIII BOTTICELLI (1872, 1873)
- CHAPTER XIV WITH ST. FRANCIS AT ASSISI (1874)
- CHAPTER XV THE END OF A ROMANCE (1875)
- CHAPTER XVI HOME LIFE AT BRANTWOOD (1872–1876)
- CHAPTER XVII VENICE REVISITED (1876–1877)
- CHAPTER XVIII FORS CLAVIGERA (1871–1878)
- CHAPTER XIX THE ST. GEORGE'S GUILD
- CHAPTER XX THE RUSKIN MUSEUM
- CHAPTER XXI SCHOOLS OF ST. GEORGE
- CHAPTER XXII ARROWS OF THE CHACE
- CHAPTER XXIII “THE DREAM” (1877–1878)
- CHAPTER XXIV STUDIES OF FLOWERS AND ROCKS (1878)
- CHAPTER XXV RETURN TO WORK (1878–1880)
- CHAPTER XXVI THE BIBLE OF AMIENS. FURTHER ILLNESSES (1880–1882)
- CHAPTER XXVII SECOND PROFESSORSHIP AT OXFORD (1882–1885)
- CHAPTER XXVIII PRÆTERITA (1885–1889)
- CHAPTER XXIX OLD AGE AND LAST WORKS (1886–1889)
- CHAPTER XXX CLOSING YEARS (1889–1900)
- CHAPTER XXXI CHARACTERISTICS
- CHAPTER XXXII INFLUENCE
- INDEX
CHAPTER IX - ABBEVILLE AND VERONA (1868, 1869)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER I UNTO THIS LAST (1860)
- CHAPTER II EXILE (1861–1863)
- CHAPTER III BOULOGNE—LUCERNE—MILAN (1861–1862)
- CHAPTER IV MORNEX—MUNERA PULVERIS (1862–1863)
- CHAPTER V HOME LIFE AT DENMARK HILL (1864–1866)
- CHAPTER VI SESAME AND LILIES—THE GROWN OF WILD OLIVE—THE ETHICS OF THE DUST (1865, 1866)
- CHAPTER VII TIME AND TIDE (1866, 1867)
- CHAPTER VIII RUSKIN's POLITICAL ECONOMY
- CHAPTER IX ABBEVILLE AND VERONA (1868, 1869)
- CHAPTER X OXFORD PROFESSOR (1870–1878)
- CHAPTER XI FIRST OXFORD LECTURES (1870, 1871)
- CHAPTER XII A DARK YEAE (1871)
- CHAPTER XIII BOTTICELLI (1872, 1873)
- CHAPTER XIV WITH ST. FRANCIS AT ASSISI (1874)
- CHAPTER XV THE END OF A ROMANCE (1875)
- CHAPTER XVI HOME LIFE AT BRANTWOOD (1872–1876)
- CHAPTER XVII VENICE REVISITED (1876–1877)
- CHAPTER XVIII FORS CLAVIGERA (1871–1878)
- CHAPTER XIX THE ST. GEORGE'S GUILD
- CHAPTER XX THE RUSKIN MUSEUM
- CHAPTER XXI SCHOOLS OF ST. GEORGE
- CHAPTER XXII ARROWS OF THE CHACE
- CHAPTER XXIII “THE DREAM” (1877–1878)
- CHAPTER XXIV STUDIES OF FLOWERS AND ROCKS (1878)
- CHAPTER XXV RETURN TO WORK (1878–1880)
- CHAPTER XXVI THE BIBLE OF AMIENS. FURTHER ILLNESSES (1880–1882)
- CHAPTER XXVII SECOND PROFESSORSHIP AT OXFORD (1882–1885)
- CHAPTER XXVIII PRÆTERITA (1885–1889)
- CHAPTER XXIX OLD AGE AND LAST WORKS (1886–1889)
- CHAPTER XXX CLOSING YEARS (1889–1900)
- CHAPTER XXXI CHARACTERISTICS
- CHAPTER XXXII INFLUENCE
- INDEX
Summary
“ My writing is so entirely at present the picture of my mind that it seems to me as if the one must be as inscrutable as the other. For indeed I am quite unable from any present crises to judge of what is best for me to do. There is so much misery and error in the world which I see I could have immense power to set various human influences against, by giving up my science and art, and wholly trying to teach peace and justice; and yet my own gifts seem so specially directed towards quiet investigation of beautiful things that I cannot make up my mind, and my writing is as vacillating as my temper.”
—Ruskin (Letter to his mother, May 25, 1868).Ruskin spent the winter of 1867–68 quietly at home, and many friends came to see him at Denmark Hill; but this was not always unalloyed pleasure. “ Mama provoking in abuse of people, ” is a significant entry in the diary. His mother was affectionate, but also exacting and somewhat censorious; she was firmly persuaded that only the pernicious influence of ill-chosen friends had seduced her son from the evangelical principles which she had inculcated in his youth. She liked, too, to be mistress in her own house; and now that advancing years had confirmed her in habits of great regularity and precision, she did not always welcome the sight of new faces and unexpected guests. We have seen, in the recollections of a visitor at an earlier date, with what beautiful deference Ruskin treated his mother, and this was always his attitude, though sometimes he would venture indirectly to answer her reproaches.
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- Information
- The Life of John Ruskin , pp. 142 - 168Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1911