Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- Modern Painters, VOL. III. (CONTAINING THE TEXT OF ALL THE EDITIONS)
- PREFACE
- PART IV “OF MANY THINGS”
- CHAP. I OF THE RECEIVED OPINIONS TOUCHING THE “GRAND STYLE”
- CHAP. II OF REALIZATION
- CHAP. III OF THE REAL NATURE OF GREATNESS OF STYLE
- CHAP. IV OF THE FALSE IDEAL:—FIRST, RELIGIOUS
- CHAP. V OF THE FALSE IDEAL:—SECONDLY, PROFANE
- CHAP. VI OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—FIRST, PURIST
- CHAP. VII OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—SECONDLY, NATURALIST
- CHAP. VIII OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—THIRDLY, GROTESQUE
- CHAP. IX OF FINISH
- CHAP. X OF THE USE OF PICTURES
- CHAP. XI OF THE NOVELTY OF LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XII OF THE PATHETIC FALLACY
- CHAP. XIII OF CLASSICAL LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XIV OF MEDIÆVAL LANDSCAPE:—FIRST, THE FIELDS
- CHAP. XV OF MEDIÆVAL LANDSCAPE:—SECONDLY, THE ROCKS
- CHAP. XVI OF MODERN LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XVII THE MORAL OF LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XVIII OF THE TEACHERS OF TURNER
- APPENDIX
- Plate section
CHAP. XVII - THE MORAL OF LANDSCAPE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- Modern Painters, VOL. III. (CONTAINING THE TEXT OF ALL THE EDITIONS)
- PREFACE
- PART IV “OF MANY THINGS”
- CHAP. I OF THE RECEIVED OPINIONS TOUCHING THE “GRAND STYLE”
- CHAP. II OF REALIZATION
- CHAP. III OF THE REAL NATURE OF GREATNESS OF STYLE
- CHAP. IV OF THE FALSE IDEAL:—FIRST, RELIGIOUS
- CHAP. V OF THE FALSE IDEAL:—SECONDLY, PROFANE
- CHAP. VI OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—FIRST, PURIST
- CHAP. VII OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—SECONDLY, NATURALIST
- CHAP. VIII OF THE TRUE IDEAL:—THIRDLY, GROTESQUE
- CHAP. IX OF FINISH
- CHAP. X OF THE USE OF PICTURES
- CHAP. XI OF THE NOVELTY OF LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XII OF THE PATHETIC FALLACY
- CHAP. XIII OF CLASSICAL LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XIV OF MEDIÆVAL LANDSCAPE:—FIRST, THE FIELDS
- CHAP. XV OF MEDIÆVAL LANDSCAPE:—SECONDLY, THE ROCKS
- CHAP. XVI OF MODERN LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XVII THE MORAL OF LANDSCAPE
- CHAP. XVIII OF THE TEACHERS OF TURNER
- APPENDIX
- Plate section
Summary
§ 1. Supposing then the preceding conclusions correct, respecting the grounds and component elements of the pleasure which the moderns take in landscape, we have here to consider what are the probable or usual effects of this pleasure. Is it a safe or a seductive one? May we wisely boast of it, and unhesitatingly indulge it? or is it rather a sentiment to be despised when it is slight, and condemned when it is intense; a feeling which disinclines us to labour, and confuses us in thought; a joy only to the inactive and the visionary, incompatible with the duties of life, and the accuracies of reflection?
§ 2. It seems to me that, as matters stand at present, there is considerable ground for the latter opinion. We saw, in the preceding chapter, that our love of nature had been partly forced upon us by mistakes in our social economy, and led to no distinct issues of action or thought. And when we look to Scott—the man who feels it most deeply—for some explanation of its effect upon him, we find a curious tone of apology (as if for an involuntary folly) running through his confessions of such sentiment, and a still more curious inability to define, beyond a certain point, the character of this emotion. He has lost the company of his friends among the hills, and turns to these last for comfort.
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- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 354 - 387Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1904