It may be proved, with much certainty,
that God intends no man to live in this world without
working: but it seems to me no less evident that
He intends every man to be happy in his work.
It is written, “in the sweat of thy brow,”
but it was never written, “in the breaking of
thine heart,” thou shalt eat bread; and I find
that, as on the one hand, infinite misery is caused
by idle people, who both fail in doing what was appointed
for them to do, and set in motion various springs of
mischief in matters in which they should have had no
concern, so on the other hand, no small misery is
caused by over-worked and unhappy people, in the dark
views which they necessarily take up themselves, and
force upon others, of work itself. Were it not
so, I believe the fact of their being unhappy is in
itself a violation of divine law, and a sign of some
kind of folly or sin in their way of life. Now
in order that people may be happy in their work, these
three things are needed: They must be fit for
it: They must not do too much of it: and
they must have a sense of success in it not
a doubtful sense, such as needs some testimony of
other people for its confirmation, but a sure sense,
or rather knowledge, that so much work has been done
well, and fruitfully done, whatever the world may
say or think about it. So that in order that a
man may be happy, it is necessary that he should not
only be capable of his work, but a good judge of his
work.
The first thing then that he has to
do, if unhappily his parents or masters have not done
it for him, is to find out what he is fit for.
In which inquiry a man may be very safely guided by
his likings, if he be not also guided by his pride.
People usually reason in some such fashion as this:
“I don’t seem quite fit for a head-manager
in the firm of & Co., therefore,
in all probability, I am fit to be Chancellor of the
Exchequer.” Whereas, they ought rather to
reason thus: “I don’t seem quite
fit to be head-manager in the firm of
& Co., but I daresay I might do something in a small
green-grocery business; I used to be a good judge
of peas;” that is to say, always trying lower
instead of trying higher, until they find bottom:
once well set on the ground, a man may build up by
degrees, safely, instead of disturbing every one in
his neighborhood by perpetual catastrophes. But
this kind of humility is rendered especially difficult
in these days, by the contumely thrown on men in humble
employments. The very removal of the massy bars
which once separated one class of society from another,
has rendered it tenfold more shameful in foolish people’s, i. e. in most people’s eyes, to remain in the
lower grades of it, than ever it was before. When
a man born of an artisan was looked upon as an entirely
different species of animal from a man born of a noble,
it made him no more uncomfortable or ashamed to remain
that different species of animal, than it makes a
horse ashamed to remain a horse, and not to become
a giraffe. But now that a man may make money,
and rise in the world, and associate himself, unreproached,
with people once far above him, not only is the natural
discontentedness of humanity developed to an unheard-of
extent, whatever a man’s position, but it becomes
a veritable shame to him to remain in the state he
was born in, and everybody thinks it his duty
to try to be a “gentleman.” Persons
who have any influence in the management of public
institutions for charitable education know how common
this feeling has become. Hardly a day passes
but they receive letters from mothers who want all
their six or eight sons to go to college, and make
the grand tour in the long vacation, and who think
there is something wrong in the foundations of society,
because this is not possible. Out of every ten
letters of this kind, nine will allege, as the reason
of the writers’ importunity, their desire to
keep their families in such and such a “station
of life.” There is no real desire for the
safety, the discipline, or the moral good of the children,
only a panic horror of the inexpressibly pitiable
calamity of their living a ledge or two lower on the
molehill of the world a calamity to be averted
at any cost whatever, of struggle, anxiety, and shortening
of life itself. I do not believe that any greater
good could be achieved for the country, than the change
in public feeling on this head, which might be brought
about by a few benevolent men, undeniably in the class
of “gentlemen,” who would, on principle,
enter into some of our commonest trades, and make
them honorable; showing that it was possible for a
man to retain his dignity, and remain, in the best
sense, a gentleman, though part of his time was every
day occupied in manual labor, or even in serving customers
over a counter. I do not in the least see why
courtesy, and gravity, and sympathy with the feelings
of others, and courage, and truth, and piety, and
what else goes to make up a gentleman’s character,
should not be found behind a counter as well as elsewhere,
if they were demanded, or even hoped for, there.
Let us suppose, then, that the man’s
way of life and manner of work have been discreetly
chosen; then the next thing to be required is, that
he do not over-work himself therein. I am not
going to say anything here about the various errors
in our systems of society and commerce, which appear
(I am not sure if they ever do more than appear) to
force us to over-work ourselves merely that we may
live; nor about the still more fruitful cause of unhealthy
toil the incapability, in many men, of
being content with the little that is indeed necessary
to their happiness. I have only a word or two
to say about one special cause of over-work the
ambitious desire of doing great or clever things, and
the hope of accomplishing them by immense efforts:
hope as vain as it is pernicious; not only making
men over-work themselves, but rendering all the work
they do unwholesome to them. I say it is a vain
hope, and let the reader be assured of this (it is
a truth all-important to the best interests of humanity).
No great intellectual thing was ever done by great
effort; a great thing can only be done by a great
man, and he does it without effort. Nothing
is, at present, less understood by us than this nothing
is more necessary to be understood. Let me try
to say it as clearly, and explain it as fully as I
may.
I have said no great intellectual
thing: for I do not mean the assertion to extend
to things moral. On the contrary, it seems to
me that just because we are intended, as long as we
live, to be in a state of intense moral effort, we
are not intended to be in intense physical
or intellectual effort. Our full energies are
to be given to the soul’s work to
the great fight with the Dragon the taking
the kingdom of heaven by force. But the body’s
work and head’s work are to be done quietly,
and comparatively without effort. Neither limbs
nor brain are ever to be strained to their utmost;
that is not the way in which the greatest quantity
of work is to be got out of them: they are never
to be worked furiously, but with tranquillity and
constancy. We are to follow the plough from sunrise
to sunset, but not to pull in race-boats at the twilight:
we shall get no fruit of that kind of work, only disease
of the heart.
How many pangs would be spared to
thousands, if this great truth and law were but once
sincerely, humbly understood, that if a
great thing can be done at all, it can be done easily;
that, when it is needed to be done, there is perhaps
only one man in the world who can do it; but he
can do it without any trouble without more
trouble, that is, than it costs small people to do
small things; nay, perhaps, with less. And yet
what truth lies more openly on the surface of all human
phenomena? Is not the evidence of Ease on the
very front of all the greatest works in existence?
Do they not say plainly to us, not, “there has
been a great effort here,” but, “there
has been a great power here”? It
is not the weariness of mortality, but the strength
of divinity, which we have to recognise in all mighty
things; and that is just what we now never
recognise, but think that we are to do great things,
by help of iron bars and perspiration: alas!
we shall do nothing that way but lose some pounds
of our own weight.
Yet, let me not be misunderstood,
nor this great truth be supposed anywise resolvable
into the favorite dogma of young men, that they need
not work if they have genius. The fact is, that
a man of genius is always far more ready to work than
other people, and gets so much more good from the
work that he does, and is often so little conscious
of the inherent divinity in himself, that he is very
apt to ascribe all his capacity to his work, and to
tell those who ask how he came to be what he is:
“If I am anything, which I much doubt,
I made myself so merely by labor.” This
was Newton’s way of talking, and I suppose it
would be the general tone of men whose genius had
been devoted to the physical sciences. Genius
in the Arts must commonly be more self-conscious, but
in whatever field, it will always be distinguished
by its perpetual, steady, well-directed, happy, and
faithful labor in accumulating and disciplining its
powers, as well as by its gigantic, incommunicable
facility in exercising them. Therefore, literally,
it is no man’s business whether he has genius
or not: work he must, whatever he is, but quietly
and steadily; and the natural and unforced results
of such work will be always the things that God meant
him to do, and will be his best. No agonies nor
heart-rendings will enable him to do any better.
If he be a great man, they will be great things; if
a small man, small things; but always, if thus peacefully
done, good and right; always, if restlessly and ambitiously
done, false, hollow, and despicable.
Then the third thing needed was, I
said, that a man should be a good judge of his work;
and this chiefly that he may not be dependent upon
popular opinion for the manner of doing it, but also
that he may have the just encouragement of the sense
of progress, and an honest consciousness of victory:
how else can he become
“That awful independent
on to-morrow,
Whose yesterdays look backwards
with a smile.”
I am persuaded that the real nourishment
and help of such a feeling as this is nearly unknown
to half the workmen of the present day. For whatever
appearance of self-complacency there may be in their
outward bearing, it is visible enough, by their feverish
jealousy of each other, how little confidence they
have in the sterling value of their several doings.
Conceit may puff a man up, but never prop him up; and
there is too visible distress and hopelessness in men’s
aspects to admit of the supposition that they have
any stable support of faith in themselves.
I have stated these principles generally,
because there is no branch of labor to which they
do not apply: But there is one in which our ignorance
or forgetfulness of them has caused an incalculable
amount of suffering: and I would endeavor now
to reconsider them with especial reference to it, the
branch of the Arts.
In general, the men who are employed
in the Arts have freely chosen their profession, and
suppose themselves to have special faculty for it;
yet, as a body, they are not happy men. For which
this seems to me the reason, that they are expected,
and themselves expect, to make their bread by being
clever not by steady or quiet work;
and are, therefore, for the most part, trying to be
clever, and so living in an utterly false state of
mind and action.
This is the case, to the same extent,
in no other profession or employment. A lawyer
may indeed suspect that, unless he has more wit than
those around him, he is not likely to advance in his
profession; but he will not be always thinking how
he is to display his wit. He will generally understand,
early in his career, that wit must be left to take
care of itself, and that it is hard knowledge of law
and vigorous examination and collation of the facts
of every case entrusted to him, which his clients
will mainly demand; this it is which he has to be paid
for; and this is healthy and measurable labor, payable
by the hour. If he happen to have keen natural
perception and quick wit, these will come into play
in their due time and place, but he will not think
of them as his chief power; and if he have them not,
he may still hope that industry and conscientiousness
may enable him to rise in his profession without them.
Again in the case of clergymen: that they are
sorely tempted to display their eloquence or wit,
none who know their own hearts will deny, but then
they know this to be a temptation:
they never would suppose that cleverness was all that
was to be expected from them, or would sit down deliberately
to write a clever sermon: even the dullest or
vainest of them would throw some veil over their vanity,
and pretend to some profitableness of purpose in what
they did. They would not openly ask of their
hearers Did you think my sermon ingenious,
or my language poetical? They would early understand
that they were not paid for being ingenious, nor called
to be so, but to preach truth; that if they happened
to possess wit, eloquence, or originality, these would
appear and be of service in due time, but were not
to be continually sought after or exhibited:
and if it should happen that they had them not, they
might still be serviceable pastors without them.
Not so with the unhappy artist.
No one expects any honest or useful work of him; but
every one expects him to be ingenious. Originality,
dexterity, invention, imagination, every thing is asked
of him except what alone is to be had for asking honesty
and sound work, and the due discharge of his function
as a painter. What function? asks the reader
in some surprise. He may well ask; for I suppose
few painters have any idea what their function is,
or even that they have any at all.
And yet surely it is not so difficult
to discover. The faculties, which when a man
finds in himself, he resolves to be a painter, are,
I suppose, intenseness of observation and facility
of imitation. The man is created an observer
and an imitator; and his function is to convey knowledge
to his fellow-men, of such things as cannot be taught
otherwise than ocularly. For a long time this
function remained a religious one: it was to
impress upon the popular mind the reality of the objects
of faith, and the truth of the histories of Scripture,
by giving visible form to both. That function
has now passed away, and none has as yet taken its
place. The painter has no profession, no purpose.
He is an idler on the earth, chasing the shadows of
his own fancies.
But he was never meant to be this.
The sudden and universal Naturalism, or inclination
to copy ordinary natural objects, which manifested
itself among the painters of Europe, at the moment
when the invention of printing superseded their legendary
labors, was no false instinct. It was misunderstood
and misapplied, but it came at the right time, and
has maintained itself through all kinds of abuse;
presenting in the recent schools of landscape, perhaps
only the first fruits of its power. That instinct
was urging every painter in Europe at the same moment
to his true duty the faithful representation
of all objects of historical interest, or of natural
beauty existent at the period; representations
such as might at once aid the advance of the sciences,
and keep faithful record of every monument of past
ages which was likely to be swept away in the approaching
eras of revolutionary change.
The instinct came, as I said, exactly
at the right moment; and let the reader consider what
amount and kind of general knowledge might by this
time have been possessed by the nations of Europe,
had their painters understood and obeyed it.
Suppose that, after disciplining themselves so as
to be able to draw, with unerring precision, each the
particular kind of subject in which he most delighted,
they had separated into two great armies of historians
and naturalists; that the first had painted
with absolute faithfulness every edifice, every city,
every battle-field, every scene of the slightest historical
interest, precisely and completely rendering their
aspect at the time; and that their companions, according
to their several powers, had painted with like fidelity
the plants and animals, the natural scenery, and the
atmospheric phenomena of every country on the earth suppose
that a faithful and complete record were now in our
museums of every building destroyed by war, or time,
or innovation, during these last 200 years suppose
that each recess of every mountain chain of Europe
had been penetrated, and its rocks drawn with such
accuracy that the geologist’s diagram was no
longer necessary suppose that every tree
of the forest had been drawn in its noblest aspect,
every beast of the field in its savage life that
all these gatherings were already in our national
galleries, and that the painters of the present day
were laboring, happily and earnestly, to multiply
them, and put such means of knowledge more and more
within reach of the common people would
not that be a more honorable life for them, than gaining
precarious bread by “bright effects?”
They think not, perhaps. They think it easy, and
therefore contemptible, to be truthful; they have been
taught so all their lives. But it is not so,
whoever taught it them. It is most difficult,
and worthy of the greatest men’s greatest effort,
to render, as it should be rendered, the simplest
of the natural features of the earth; but also be
it remembered, no man is confined to the simplest;
each may look out work for himself where he chooses,
and it will be strange if he cannot find something
hard enough for him. The excuse is, however,
one of the lips only; for every painter knows that
when he draws back from the attempt to render nature
as she is, it is oftener in cowardice than in disdain.
I must leave the reader to pursue
this subject for himself; I have not space to suggest
to him the tenth part of the advantages which would
follow, both to the painter from such an understanding
of his mission, and to the whole people, in the results
of his labor. Consider how the man himself would
be elevated: how content he would become, how
earnest, how full of all accurate and noble knowledge,
how free from envy knowing creation to
be infinite, feeling at once the value of what he
did, and yet the nothingness. Consider the advantage
to the people; the immeasurably larger interest given
to art itself; the easy, pleasurable, and perfect
knowledge conveyed by it, in every subject; the far
greater number of men who might be healthily and profitably
occupied with it as a means of livelihood; the useful
direction of myriads of inferior talents, now left
fading away in misery. Conceive all this, and
then look around at our exhibitions, and behold the
“cattle pieces,” and “sea pieces,”
and “fruit pieces,” and “family pieces;”
the eternal brown cows in ditches, and white sails
in squalls, and sliced lemons in saucers, and foolish
faces in simpers; and try to feel what we
are, and what we might have been.
Take a single instance in one branch
of archaeology. Let those who are interested
in the history of religion consider what a treasure
we should now have possessed, if, instead of painting
pots, and vegetables, and drunken peasantry, the most
accurate painters of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries had been set to copy, line for line, the
religious and domestic sculpture on the German, Flemish,
and French cathedrals and castles; and if every building
destroyed in the French or in any other subsequent
revolution, had thus been drawn in all its parts with
the same precision with which Gerard Douw or Mieris
paint bas-reliefs of Cupids. Consider, even now,
what incalculable treasure is still left in ancient
bas-reliefs, full of every kind of legendary interest,
of subtle expression, of priceless evidence as to
the character, feelings habits, histories, of past
generations, in neglected and shattered churches and
domestic buildings, rapidly disappearing over the whole
of Europe treasure which, once lost, the
labor of all men living cannot bring back again; and
then look at the myriads of men, with skill enough,
if they had but the commonest schooling, to record
all this faithfully, who are making their bread by
drawing dances of naked women from academy models,
or idealities of chivalry fitted out with Wardour
Street armor, or eternal scenes from Gil Blas, Don
Quixote, and the Vicar of Wakefield, or mountain sceneries
with young idiots of Londoners wearing Highland bonnets
and brandishing rifles in the foregrounds. Do
but think of these things in the breadth of their inexpressible
imbecility, and then go and stand before that broken
bas-relief in the southern gate of Lincoln Cathedral,
and see if there is no fibre of the heart in you that
will break too.
But is there to be no place left,
it will be indignantly asked, for imagination and
invention, for poetical power, or love of ideal beauty?
Yes; the highest, the noblest place that
which these only can attain when they are all used
in the cause, and with the aid of truth. Wherever
imagination and sentiment are, they will either show
themselves without forcing, or, if capable of artificial
development, the kind of training which such a school
of art would give them would be the best they could
receive. The infinite absurdity and failure of
our present training consists mainly in this, that
we do not rank imagination and invention high enough,
and suppose that they can be taught. Throughout
every sentence that I ever have written, the reader
will find the same rank attributed to these powers, the
rank of a purely divine gift, not to be attained,
increased, or in any wise modified by teaching, only
in various ways capable of being concealed or quenched.
Understand this thoroughly; know once for all, that
a poet on canvas is exactly the same species of creature
as a poet in song, and nearly every error in our methods
of teaching will be done away with. For who among
us now thinks of bringing men up to be poets? of
producing poets by any kind of general recipe or method
of cultivation? Suppose even that we see in youth
that which we hope may, in its development, become
a power of this kind, should we instantly, supposing
that we wanted to make a poet of him, and nothing
else, forbid him all quiet, steady, rational labor?
Should we force him to perpetual spinning of new crudities
out of his boyish brain, and set before him, as the
only objects of his study, the laws of versification
which criticism has supposed itself to discover in
the works of previous writers? Whatever gifts
the boy had, would much be likely to come of them
so treated? unless, indeed, they were so great as
to break through all such snares of falsehood and vanity,
and build their own foundation in spite of us; whereas
if, as in cases numbering millions against units,
the natural gifts were too weak to do this, could
any thing come of such training but utter inanity and
spuriousness of the whole man? But if we had
sense, should we not rather restrain and bridle the
first flame of invention in early youth, heaping material
on it as one would on the first sparks and tongues
of a fire which we desired to feed into greatness?
Should we not educate the whole intellect into general
strength, and all the affections into warmth and honesty,
and look to heaven for the rest? This, I say,
we should have sense enough to do, in order to produce
a poet in words: but, it being required to produce
a poet on canvas, what is our way of setting to work?
We begin, in all probability, by telling the youth
of fifteen or sixteen, that Nature is full of faults,
and that he is to improve her; but that Raphael is
perfection, and that the more he copies Raphael the
better; that after much copying of Raphael, he is to
try what he can do himself in a Raphaelesque, but
yet original, manner: that is to say, he is to
try to do something very clever, all out of his own
head, but yet this clever something is to be properly
subjected to Raphaelesque rules, is to have a principal
light occupying one-seventh of its space, and a principle
shadow occupying one-third of the same; that no two
people’s heads in the picture are to be turned
the same way, and that all the personages represented
are to possess ideal beauty of the highest order,
which ideal beauty consists partly in a Greek outline
of nose, partly in proportions expressible in decimal
fractions between the lips and chin; but partly also
in that degree of improvement which the youth of sixteen
is to bestow upon God’s work in general.
This I say is the kind of teaching which through various
channels, Royal Academy lecturings, press criticisms,
public enthusiasm, and not least by solid weight of
gold, we give to our young men. And we wonder
we have no painters!
But we do worse than this. Within
the last few years some sense of the real tendency
of such teaching has appeared in some of our younger
painters. It only could appear in the younger
ones, our older men having become familiarised with
the false system, or else having passed through it
and forgotten it, not well knowing the degree of harm
they had sustained. This sense appeared, among
our youths, increased, matured
into resolute action. Necessarily, to exist at
all, it needed the support both of strong instincts
and of considerable self-confidence, otherwise it
must at once have been borne down by the weight of
general authority and received canon law. Strong
instincts are apt to make men strange, and rude; self-confidence,
however well founded, to give much of what they do
or say the appearance of impertinence. Look at
the self-confidence of Wordsworth, stiffening every
other sentence of his prefaces into defiance; there
is no more of it than was needed to enable him to
do his work, yet it is not a little ungraceful here
and there. Suppose this stubbornness and self-trust
in a youth, laboring in an art of which the executive
part is confessedly to be best learnt from masters,
and we shall hardly wonder that much of his work has
a certain awkwardness and stiffness in it, or that
he should be regarded with disfavor by many, even
the most temperate, of the judges trained in the system
he was breaking through, and with utter contempt and
reprobation by the envious and the dull. Consider,
farther, that the particular system to be overthrown
was, in the present case, one of which the main characteristic
was the pursuit of beauty at the expense of manliness
and truth; and it will seem likely, a priori,
that the men intended successfully to resist the influence
of such a system should be endowed with little natural
sense of beauty, and thus rendered dead to the temptation
it presented. Summing up these conditions, there
is surely little cause for surprise that pictures
painted, in a temper of resistance, by exceedingly
young men, of stubborn instincts and positive self-trust,
and with little natural perception of beauty, should
not be calculated, at the first glance, to win us
from works enriched by plagiarism, polished by convention,
invested with all the attractiveness of artificial
grace, and recommended to our respect by established
authority.
We should, however, on the other hand,
have anticipated, that in proportion to the strength
of character required for the effort, and to the absence
of distracting sentiments, whether respect for precedent,
or affection for ideal beauty, would be the energy
exhibited in the pursuit of the special objects which
the youths proposed to themselves, and their success
in attaining them.
All this has actually been the case,
but in a degree which it would have been impossible
to anticipate. That two youths, of the respective
ages of eighteen and twenty, should have conceived
for themselves a totally independent and sincere method
of study, and enthusiastically persevered in it against
every kind of dissuasion and opposition, is strange
enough; that in the third or fourth year of their efforts
they should have produced works in many parts not
inferior to the best of Albert Durer, this is perhaps
not less strange. But the loudness and universality
of the howl which the common critics of the press have
raised against them, the utter absence of all generous
help or encouragement from those who can both measure
their toil and appreciate their success, and the shrill,
shallow laughter of those who can do neither the one
nor the other, these are strangest of all unimaginable
unless they had been experienced.
And as if these were not enough, private
malice is at work against them, in its own small,
slimy way. The very day after I had written my
second letter to the Times in the defence of the Pre-Raphaelites,
I received an anonymous letter respecting one of them,
from some person apparently hardly capable of spelling,
and about as vile a specimen of petty malignity as
ever blotted paper. I think it well that the public
should know this, and so get some insight into the
sources of the spirit which is at work against these
men how first roused it is difficult to
say, for one would hardly have thought that mere eccentricity
in young artists could have excited an hostility so
determined and so cruel; hostility which
hesitated at no assertion, however impudent.
That of the “absence of perspective” was
one of the most curious pieces of the hue and cry
which began with the Times, and died away in feeble
maundering in the Art Union; I contradicted it in the
Times I here contradict it directly for
the second time. There was not a single error
in perspective in three out of the four pictures in
question. But if otherwise, would it have been
anything remarkable in them? I doubt, if with
the exception of the pictures of David Roberts, there
were one architectural drawing in perspective on the
walls of the Academy; I never met but with two men
in my life who knew enough of perspective to draw
a Gothic arch in a retiring plane, so that its lateral
dimensions and curvatures might be calculated to scale
from the drawing. Our architects certainly do
not, and it was but the other day that, talking to
one of the most distinguished among them, the author
of several most valuable works, I found he actually
did not know how to draw a circle in perspective.
And in this state of general science our writers for
the press take it upon them to tell us, that the forest
trees in Mr. Hunt’s Sylvia, and the bunches
of lilies in Mr. Collins’s Convent Thoughts,
are out of perspective.
It might not, I think, in such circumstances,
have been ungraceful or unwise in the Academicians
themselves to have defended their young pupils, at
least by the contradiction of statements directly false
respecting them, and the direction of the mind
and sight of the public to such real merit as they
possess. If Sir Charles Eastlake, Mulready, Edwin
and Charles Landseer, Cope, and Dyce would each of
them simply state their own private opinion respecting
their paintings, sign it and publish it, I believe
the act would be of more service to English art than
any thing the Academy has done since it was founded.
But as I cannot hope for this, I can only ask the
public to give their pictures careful examination,
and look at them at once with the indulgence and the
respect which I have endeavored to show they deserve.
Yet let me not be misunderstood.
I have adduced them only as examples of the kind of
study which I would desire to see substituted for that
of our modern schools, and of singular success in
certain characters, finish of detail, and brilliancy
of color. What faculties, higher than imitative,
may be in these men, I do not yet venture to say; but
I do say that if they exist, such faculties will manifest
themselves in due time all the more forcibly because
they have received training so severe.
For it is always to be remembered
that no one mind is like another, either in its powers
or perceptions; and while the main principles of training
must be the same for all, the result in each will be
as various as the kinds of truth which each will apprehend;
therefore, also, the modes of effort, even in men
whose inner principles and final aims are exactly
the same. Suppose, for instance, two men, equally
honest, equally industrious, equally impressed with
a humble desire to render some part of what they saw
in nature faithfully; and, otherwise trained in convictions
such as I have above endeavored to induce. But
one of them is quiet in temperament, has a feeble
memory, no invention, and excessively keen sight.
The other is impatient in temperament, has a memory
which nothing escapes, an invention which never rests,
and is comparatively near-sighted.
Set them both free in the same field
in a mountain valley. One sees everything, small
and large, with almost the same clearness; mountains
and grasshoppers alike; the leaves on the branches,
the veins in the pebbles, the bubbles in the stream:
but he can remember nothing, and invent nothing.
Patiently he sets himself to his mighty task; abandoning
at once all thoughts of seizing transient effects,
or giving general impressions of that which his eyes
present to him in microscopical dissection, he chooses
some small portion out of the infinite scene, and
calculates with courage the number of weeks which must
elapse before he can do justice to the intensity of
his perceptions, or the fulness of matter in his subject.
Meantime, the other has been watching
the change of the clouds, and the march of the light
along the mountain sides; he beholds the entire scene
in broad, soft masses of true gradation, and the very
feebleness of his sight is in some sort an advantage
to him, in making him more sensible of the aerial
mystery of distance, and hiding from him the multitudes
of circumstances which it would have been impossible
for him to represent. But there is not one change
in the casting of the jagged shadows along the hollows
of the hills, but it is fixed on his mind for ever;
not a flake of spray has broken from the sea of cloud
about their bases, but he has watched it as it melts
away, and could recall it to its lost place in heaven
by the slightest effort of his thoughts. Not only
so, but thousands and thousands of such images, of
older scenes, remain congregated in his mind, each
mingling in new associations with those now visibly
passing before him, and these again confused with other
images of his own ceaseless, sleepless imagination,
flashing by in sudden troops. Fancy how his paper
will be covered with stray symbols and blots, and
undecipherable shorthand: as for his sitting
down to “draw from Nature,” there was
not one of the things which he wished to represent
that stayed for so much as five seconds together:
but none of them escaped, for all that: they
are sealed up in that strange storehouse of his; he
may take one of them out, perhaps, this day twenty
years, and paint it in his dark room, far away.
Now, observe, you may tell both of these men, when
they are young, that they are to be honest, that they
have an important function, and that they are not to
care what Raphael did. This you may wholesomely
impress on them both. But fancy the exquisite
absurdity of expecting either of them to possess any
of the qualities of the other.
I have supposed the feebleness of
sight in the last, and of invention in the first painter,
that the contrast between them might be more striking;
but, with very slight modification, both the characters
are real. Grant to the first considerable inventive
power, with exquisite sense of color; and give to
the second, in addition to all his other faculties,
the eye of an eagle; and the first is John Everett
Millais, the second Joseph Mallard William Turner.
They are among the few men who have
defied all false teaching, and have, therefore, in
great measure, done justice to the gifts with which
they were entrusted. They stand at opposite poles,
marking culminating points of art in both directions;
between them, or in various relations to them, we
may class five or six more living artists who, in like
manner, have done justice to their powers. I
trust that I may be pardoned for naming them, in order
that the reader may know how the strong innate genius
in each has been invariably accompanied with the same
humility, earnestness, and industry in study.
It is hardly necessary to point out
the earnestness or humility in the works of William
Hunt; but it may be so to suggest the high value they
possess as records of English rural life, and still
life. Who is there who for a moment could contend
with him in the unaffected, yet humorous truth with
which he has painted our peasant children? Who
is there who does not sympathize with him in the simple
love with which he dwells on the brightness and bloom
of our summer fruit and flowers? And yet there
is something to be regretted concerning him: why
should he be allowed continually to paint the same
bunches of hot-house grapes, and supply to the Water
Color Society a succession of pineapples with the
regularity of a Covent Garden fruiterer? He has
of late discovered that primrose banks are lovely;
but there are other things grow wild besides primroses:
what undreamt-of loveliness might he not bring back
to us, if he would lose himself for a summer in Highland
foregrounds; if he would paint the heather as it grows,
and the foxglove and the harebell as they nestle in
the clefts of the rocks, and the mosses and bright
lichens of the rocks themselves. And then, cross
to the Jura, and bring back a piece of Jura pasture
in spring; with the gentians in their earliest blue,
and the soldanelle beside the fading snow!
And return again, and paint a gray wall of Alpine
crag, with budding roses crowning it like a wreath
of rubies. That is what he was meant to do in
this world; not to paint bouquets in china vases.
I have in various other places expressed
my sincere respect for the works of Samuel Prout:
his shortness of sight has necessarily prevented their
possessing delicacy of finish or fulness of minor detail;
but I think that those of no other living artist furnish
an example so striking of innate and special instinct,
sent to do a particular work at the exact and only
period when it was possible. At the instant when
peace had been established all over Europe, but when
neither national character nor national architecture
had as yet been seriously changed by promiscuous intercourse
or modern “improvement;” when, however,
nearly every ancient and beautiful building had been
long left in a state of comparative neglect, so that
its aspect of partial ruinousness, and of separation
from recent active life, gave to every edifice a peculiar
interest half sorrowful, half sublime; at
that moment Prout was trained among the rough rocks
and simple cottages of Cornwall, until his eye was
accustomed to follow with delight the rents and breaks,
and irregularities which, to another man, would have
been offensive; and then, gifted with infinite readiness
in composition, but also with infinite affection for
the kind of subjects he had to portray, he was sent
to preserve, in an almost innumerable series of drawings,
every one made on the spot, the aspect borne,
at the beginning of the nineteenth century, by cities
which, in a few years more, rekindled wars, or unexpected
prosperities, were to ravage, or renovate, into nothingness.
It seems strange to pass from Prout
to John Lewis; but there is this fellowship between
them, that both seem to have been intended to appreciate
the characters of foreign countries more than of their
own nay, to have been born in England chiefly
that the excitement of strangeness might enhance to
them the interest of the scenes they had to represent.
I believe John Lewis to have done more entire justice
to all his powers (and they are magnificent ones)
than any other man amongst us. His mission was
evidently to portray the comparatively animal life
of the southern and eastern families of mankind.
For this he was prepared in a somewhat singular way by
being led to study, and endowed with altogether peculiar
apprehension of, the most sublime characters of animals
themselves. Rubens, Rembrandt, Snyders, Tintoret,
and Titian, have all, in various ways, drawn wild
beasts magnificently; but they have in some sort humanized
or demonized them, making them either ravenous fiends
or educated beasts, that would draw cars, and had
respect for hermits. The sullen isolation of the
brutal nature; the dignity and quietness of the mighty
limbs; the shaggy mountainous power, mingled with
grace, as of a flowing stream; the stealthy restraint
of strength and wrath in every soundless motion of
the gigantic frame; all this seems never to have been
seen, much less drawn, until Lewis drew and himself
engraved a series of animal subjects, now many years
ago. Since then, he has devoted himself to the
portraiture of those European and Asiatic races, among
whom the refinements of civilization exist without
its laws or its energies, and in whom the fierceness,
indolence, and subtlety of animal nature are associated
with brilliant imagination and strong affections.
To this task he has brought not only intense perception
of the kind of character, but powers of artistical
composition like those of the great Venetians, displaying,
at the same time, a refinement of drawing almost miraculous,
and appreciable only, as the minutiae of nature itself
are appreciable, by the help of the microscope.
The value, therefore, of his works, as records of the
aspect of the scenery and inhabitants of the south
of Spain and of the East, in the earlier part of the
nineteenth century, is quite above all estimate.
I hardly know how to speak of Mulready:
in delicacy and completion of drawing, and splendor
of color, he takes place beside John Lewis and the
pre-Raphaelites; but he has, throughout his career,
displayed no definiteness in choice of subject.
He must be named among the painters who have studied
with industry, and have made themselves great by doing
so; but having obtained a consummate method of execution,
he has thrown it away on subjects either altogether
uninteresting, or above his powers, or unfit for pictorial
representation. “The Cherry Woman,”
exhibited in 1850, may be named as an example of the
first kind; the “Burchell and Sophia”
of the second (the character of Sir William Thornhill
being utterly missed); the “Seven Ages”
of the third; for this subject cannot be painted.
In the written passage, the thoughts are progressive
and connected; in the picture they must be co-existent,
and yet separate; nor can all the characters of the
ages be rendered in painting at all. One may
represent the soldier at the cannon’s mouth,
but one cannot paint the “bubble reputation”
which he seeks. Mulready, therefore, while he
has always produced exquisite pieces of painting,
has failed in doing anything which can be of true or
extensive use. He has, indeed, understood how
to discipline his genius, but never how to direct
it.
Edwin Landseer is the last painter
but one whom I shall name: I need not point out
to any one acquainted with his earlier works, the labor,
or watchfulness of nature which they involve, nor
need I do more than allude to the peculiar faculties
of his mind. It will at once be granted that
the highest merits of his pictures are throughout found
in those parts of them which are least like what had
before been accomplished; and that it was not by the
study of Raphael that he attained his eminent success,
but by a healthy love of Scotch terriers.
None of these painters, however, it
will be answered, afford examples of the rise of the
highest imaginative power out of close study of matters
of fact. Be it remembered, however, that the imaginative
power, in its magnificence, is not to be found every
day. Lewis has it in no mean degree; but we cannot
hope to find it at its highest more than once in an
age. We have had it once, and must be content.
Towards the close of the last century,
among the various drawings executed, according to
the quiet manner of the time, in greyish blue, with
brown foregrounds, some began to be noticed as exhibiting
rather more than ordinary diligence and delicacy,
signed W. Turner. There was nothing, however,
in them at all indicative of genius, or even of more
than ordinary talent, unless in some of the subjects
a large perception of space, and excessive clearness
and decision in the arrangement of masses. Gradually
and cautiously the blues became mingled with delicate
green, and then with gold; the browns in the foreground
became first more positive, and then were slightly
mingled with other local colors; while the touch,
which had at first been heavy and broken, like that
of the ordinary drawing masters of the time, grew more
and more refined and expressive, until it lost itself
in a method of execution often too delicate for the
eye to follow, rendering, with a precision before
unexampled, both the texture and the form of every
object. The style may be considered as perfectly
formed about the year 1800, and it remained unchanged
for twenty years.
During that period the painter had
attempted, and with more or less success had rendered,
every order of landscape subject, but always on the
same principle, subduing the colors of nature into
a harmony of which the key-notes are greyish green
and brown; pure blues and delicate golden yellows
being admitted in small quantity, as the lowest and
highest limits of shade and light: and bright
local colors in extremely small quantity in figures
or other minor accessories.
Pictures executed on such a system
are not, properly speaking, works in color
at all; they are studies of light and shade, in which
both the shade and the distance are rendered in the
general hue which best expresses their attributes
of coolness and transparency; and the lights and the
foreground are executed in that which best expresses
their warmth and solidity. This advantage may
just as well be taken as not, in studies of light
and shadow to be executed with the hand: but the
use of two, three, or four colors, always in the same
relations and places, does not in the least constitute
the work a study of color, any more than the brown
engravings of the Liber Studiorum; nor would the idea
of color be in general more present to the artist’s
mind, when he was at work on one of these drawings,
than when he was using pure brown in the mezzotint
engraving. But the idea of space, warmth, and
freshness being not successfully expressible in a
single tint, and perfectly expressible by the admission
of three or four, he allows himself this advantage
when it is possible, without in the least embarrassing
himself with the actual color of the objects to be
represented. A stone in the fore ground might
in nature have been cold grey, but it will be drawn
nevertheless of a rich brown, because it is in the
foreground; a hill in the distance might in nature
be purple with heath, or golden with furze; but it
will be drawn nevertheless of a cool grey, because
it is in the distance.
This at least was the general theory, carried
out with great severity in many, both of the drawings
and pictures executed by him during the period:
in others more or less modified by the cautious introduction
of color, as the painter felt his liberty increasing;
for the system was evidently never considered as final,
or as anything more than a means of progress:
the conventional, easily manageable color, was visibly
adopted, only that his mind might be at perfect liberty
to address itself to the acquirement of the first
and most necessary knowledge in all art that
of form. But as form, in landscape, implies vast
bulk and space, the use of the tints which enabled
him best to express them, was actually auxiliary to
the mere drawing; and, therefore, not only permissible,
but even necessary, while more brilliant or varied
tints were never indulged in, except when they might
be introduced without the slightest danger of diverting
his mind for an instant from his principal object.
And, therefore, it will be generally found in the
works of this period, that exactly in proportion to
the importance and general toil of the composition,
is the severity of the tint; and that the play of
color begins to show itself first in slight and small
drawings, where he felt that he could easily secure
all that he wanted in form.
Thus the “Crossing the Brook,”
and such other elaborate and large compositions, are
actually painted in nothing but grey, brown, and blue,
with a point or two of severe local color in the figures;
but in the minor drawings, tender passages of complicated
color occur not unfrequently in easy places; and even
before the year 1800 he begins to introduce it with
evident joyfulness and longing in his rude and simple
studies, just as a child, if it could be supposed to
govern itself by a fully developed intellect, would
cautiously, but with infinite pleasure, add now and
then a tiny dish of fruit or other dangerous luxury
to the simple order of its daily fare. Thus,
in the foregrounds of his most severe drawings, we
not unfrequently find him indulging in the luxury of
a peacock; and it is impossible to express the joyfulness
with which he seems to design its graceful form, and
deepen with soft pencilling the bloom of its blue,
after he has worked through the stern detail of his
almost colorless drawing. A rainbow is another
of his most frequently permitted indulgences; and
we find him very early allowing the edges of his evening
clouds to be touched with soft rose-color or gold;
while, whenever the hues of nature in anywise fall
into his system, and can be caught without a dangerous
departure from it, he instantly throws his whole soul
into the faithful rendering of them. Thus the
usual brown tones of his foreground become warmed
into sudden vigor, and are varied and enhanced with
indescribable delight, when he finds himself by the
shore of a moorland stream, where they truly express
the stain of its golden rocks, and the darkness of
its clear, Cairngorm-like pools, and the usual serenity
of his aerial blue is enriched into the softness and
depth of the sapphire, when it can deepen the distant
slumber of some Highland lake, or temper the gloomy
shadows of the evening upon its hills.
The system of his color being thus
simplified, he could address all the strength of his
mind to the accumulation of facts of form; his choice
of subject, and his methods of treatment, are therefore
as various as his color is simple; and it is not a
little difficult to give the reader who is unacquainted
with his works, an idea either of their infinitude
of aims, on the one hand, or of the kind of feeling
which prevades them all, on the other. No subject
was too low or too high for him; we find him one day
hard at work on a cock and hen, with their family of
chickens in a farm-yard; and bringing all the refinement
of his execution into play to express the texture
of the plumage; next day, he is drawing the Dragon
of Colchis. One hour he is much interested in
a gust of wind blowing away an old woman’s cap;
the next he is painting the fifth plague of Egypt.
Every landscape painter before him had acquired distinction
by confining his efforts to one class of subject.
Hobbima painted oaks; Ruysdael, waterfalls and copses;
Cuyp, river or meadow scenes in quiet afternoons;
Salvator and Poussin, such kind of mountain scenery
as people could conceive, who lived in towns in the
seventeenth century. But I am well persuaded that
if all the works of Turner, up to the year 1820, were
divided into classes (as he has himself divided them
in the Liber Studiorum), no preponderance could be
assigned to one class over another. There is architecture,
including a large number of formal “gentlemen’s
seats,” I suppose drawings commissioned by the
owners; then lowland pastoral scenery of every kind,
including nearly all farming operations, ploughing,
harrowing, hedging and ditching, felling trees, sheep-washing,
and I know not what else; then all kinds of town life court-yards
of inns, starting of mail coaches, interiors of shops,
house-buildings, fairs, elections, &c.; then all kinds
of inner domestic life interiors of rooms,
studies of costumes, of still life, and heraldry,
including multitudes of symbolical vignettes; then
marine scenery of every kind, full of local incident;
every kind of boat and method of fishing for particular
fish, being specifically drawn, round the whole coast
of England; pilchard fishing at St. Ives,
whiting fishing at Margate, herring at Loch Fyne;
and all kinds of shipping, including studies of every
separate part of the vessels, and many marine battle-pieces,
two in particular of Trafalgar, both of high importance, one
of the Victory after the battle, now in Greenwich
Hospital; another of the Death of Nelson, in his own
gallery; then all kinds of mountain scenery, some idealised
into compositions, others of definite localities;
together with classical compositions, Romes and Carthages
and such others, by the myriad, with mythological,
historical, or allegorical figures, nymphs,
monsters, and spectres; heroes and divinities.
What general feeling, it may be asked
incredulously, can possibly pervade all this?
This, the greatest of all feelings an utter
forgetfulness of self. Throughout the whole period
with which we are at present concerned, Turner appears
as a man of sympathy absolutely infinite a
sympathy so all-embracing, that I know nothing but
that of Shakespeare comparable with it. A soldier’s
wife resting by the roadside is not beneath it; Rizpah,
the daughter of Aiah, watching the dead bodies of
her sons, not above it. Nothing can possibly be
so mean as that it will not interest his whole mind,
and carry away his whole heart; nothing so great or
solemn but that he can raise himself into harmony
with it; and it is impossible to prophesy of him at
any moment, whether, the next, he will be in laughter
or in tears.
This is the root of the man’s
greatness; and it follows as a matter of course that
this sympathy must give him a subtle power of expression,
even of the characters of mere material things, such
as no other painter ever possessed. The man who
can best feel the difference between rudeness and
tenderness in humanity, perceives also more difference
between the branches of an oak and a willow than any
one else would; and therefore, necessarily the most
striking character of the drawings themselves is the
speciality of whatever they represent the
thorough stiffness of what is stiff, and grace of
what is graceful, and vastness of what is vast; but
through and beyond all this, the condition of the
mind of the painter himself is easily enough discoverable
by comparison of a large number of the drawings.
It is singularly serene and peaceful: in itself
quite passionless, though entering with ease into the
external passion which it contemplates. By the
effort of its will it sympathises with tumult or distress,
even in their extremes, but there is no tumult, no
sorrow in itself, only a chastened and exquisitely
peaceful cheerfulness, deeply meditative; touched
without loss of its own perfect balance, by sadness
on the one side, and stooping to playfulness upon
the other. I shall never cease to regret the destruction,
by fire, now several years ago, of a drawing which
always seemed to me to be the perfect image of the
painter’s mind at this period, the
drawing of Brignal Church near Rokeby, of which a
feeble idea may still be gathered from the engraving
(in the Yorkshire series). The spectator stands
on the “Brignal banks,” looking down into
the glen at twilight; the sky is still full of soft
rays, though the sun is gone; and the Greta glances
brightly in the valley, singing its evening-song; two
white clouds, following each other, move without wind
through the hollows of the ravine, and others lie
couched on the far away moorlands; every leaf of the
woods is still in the delicate air; a boy’s kite,
incapable of rising, has become entangled in their
branches, he is climbing to recover it; and just behind
it in the picture, almost indicated by it, the lowly
church is seen in its secluded field between the rocks
and the stream; and around it the low churchyard wall,
and the few white stones which mark the resting places
of those who can climb the rocks no more, nor hear
the river sing as it passes.
There are many other existing drawings
which indicate the same character of mind, though
I think none so touching or so beautiful; yet they
are not, as I said above, more numerous than those
which express his sympathy with sublimer or more active
scenes; but they are almost always marked by a tenderness
of execution, and have a look of being beloved in
every part of them, which shows them to be the truest
expression of his own feelings.
One other characteristic of his mind
at this period remains to be noticed its
reverence for talent in others. Not the reverence
which acts upon the practices of men as if they were
the laws of nature, but that which is ready to appreciate
the power, and receive the assistance, of every mind
which has been previously employed in the same direction,
so far as its teaching seems to be consistent with
the great text-book of nature itself. Turner
thus studied almost every preceding landscape painter,
chiefly Claude, Poussin, Vandevelde, Loutherbourg,
and Wilson. It was probably by the Sir George
Beaumonts and other feeble conventionalists of the
period, that he was persuaded to devote his attention
to the works of these men; and his having done so will
be thought, a few scores of years hence, evidence
of perhaps the greatest modesty ever shown by a man
of original power. Modesty at once admirable
and unfortunate, for the study of the works of Vandevelde
and Claude was productive of unmixed mischief to him;
he spoiled many of his marine pictures, as for instance
Lord Ellesmere’s, by imitation of the former;
and from the latter learned a false ideal, which confirmed
by the notions of Greek art prevalent in London in
the beginning of this century, has manifested itself
in many vulgarities in his composition pictures, vulgarities
which may perhaps be best expressed by the general
term “Twickenham Classicism,” as consisting
principally in conceptions of ancient or of rural
life such as have influenced the erection of most
of our suburban villas. From Nicolo Poussin and
Loutherbourg he seems to have derived advantage; perhaps
also from Wilson; and much in his subsequent travels
from far higher men, especially Tintoret and Paul
Veronese. I have myself heard him speaking with
singular delight of the putting in of the beech leaves
in the upper right-hand corner of Titian’s Peter
Martyr. I cannot in any of his works trace the
slightest influence of Salvator; and I am not
surprised at it, for though Salvator was a man
of far higher powers than either Vandevelde or Claude,
he was a wilful and gross caricaturist. Turner
would condescend to be helped by feeble men, but could
not be corrupted by false men. Besides, he had
never himself seen classical life, and Claude was represented
to him as competent authority for it. But he
had seen mountains and torrents, and knew therefore
that Salvator could not paint them.
One of the most characteristic drawings
of this period fortunately bears a date, 1818, and
brings us within two years of another dated drawing,
no less characteristic of what I shall henceforward
call Turner’s Second period. It is in the
possession of Mr. Hawkesworth Fawkes of Farnley, one
of Turner’s earliest and truest friends; and
bears the inscription, unusually conspicuous, heaving
itself up and down over the eminences of the
foreground “PASSAGE OF MONT CENIS.
J. M. W. TURNER, January 15th, 1820.”
The scene is on the summit of the
pass close to the hospice, or what seems to have been
a hospice at that time, I do not remember
such at present, a small square-built house,
built as if partly for a fortress, with a detached
flight of stone steps in front of it, and a kind of
drawbridge to the door. This building, about 400
or 500 yards off, is seen in a dim, ashy grey against
the light, which by help of a violent blast of mountain
wind has broken through the depth of clouds which
hangs upon the crags. There is no sky, properly
so called, nothing but this roof of drifting cloud;
but neither is there any weight of darkness the
high air is too thin for it, all savage,
howling, and luminous with cold, the massy bases of
the granite hills jutting out here and there grimly
through the snow wreaths. There is a desolate-looking
refuge on the left, with its number 16, marked on it
in long ghastly figures, and the wind is drifting
the snow off the roof and through its window in a
frantic whirl; the near ground is all wan with half-thawed,
half-trampled snow; a diligence in front, whose horses,
unable to face the wind, have turned right round with
fright, its passengers struggling to escape, jammed
in the window; a little farther on is another carriage
off the road, some figures pushing at its wheels,
and its driver at the horses’ heads, pulling
and lashing with all his strength, his lifted arm
stretched out against the light of the distance, though
too far off for the whip to be seen.
Now I am perfectly certain that any
one thoroughly accustomed to the earlier works of
the painter, and shown this picture for the first time,
would be struck by two altogether new characters in
it.
The first, a seeming enjoyment of
the excitement of the scene, totally different from
the contemplative philosophy with which it would formerly
have been regarded. Every incident of motion and
of energy is seized upon with indescribable delight,
and every line of the composition animated with a
force and fury which are now no longer the mere expression
of a contemplated external truth, but have origin in
some inherent feeling in the painter’s mind.
The second, that although the subject
is one in itself almost incapable of color, and although,
in order to increase the wildness of the impression,
all brilliant local color has been refused even where
it might easily have been introduced, as in the figures;
yet in the low minor key which has been chosen, the
melodies of color have been elaborated to the utmost
possible pitch, so as to become a leading, instead
of a subordinate, element in the composition; the subdued
warm hues of the granite promontories, the dull stone
color of the walls of the buildings, clearly opposed,
even in shade, to the grey of the snow wreaths heaped
against them, and the faint greens and ghastly blues
of the glacier ice, being all expressed with delicacies
of transition utterly unexampled in any previous drawings.
These, accordingly, are the chief
characteristics of the works of Turner’s second
period, as distinguished from the first, a
new energy inherent in the mind of the painter, diminishing
the repose and exalting the force and fire of his
conceptions, and the presence of Color, as at least
an essential, and often a principal, element of design.
Not that it is impossible, or even
unusual, to find drawings of serene subject, and perfectly
quiet feeling, among the compositions of this period;
but the repose is in them, just as the energy and tumult
were in the earlier period, an external quality, which
the painter images by an effort of the will:
it is no longer a character inherent in himself.
The “Ulleswater,” in the England series,
is one of those which are in most perfect peace:
in the “Cowes,” the silence is only broken
by the dash of the boat’s oars, and in the “Alnwick”
by a stag drinking; but in at least nine drawings
out of ten, either sky, water, or figures are in rapid
motion, and the grandest drawings are almost always
those which have even violent action in one or other,
or in all: e. g. high force of Tees, Coventry,
Llanthony, Salisbury, Llanberis, and such others.
The color is, however, a more absolute
distinction; and we must return to Mr. Fawkes’s
collection in order to see how the change in it was
effected. That such a change would take place
at one time or other was of course to be securely
anticipated, the conventional system of the first
period being, as above stated, merely a means of Study.
But the immediate cause was the journey of the year
1820. As might be guessed from the legend on
the drawing above described, “Passage of Mont
Cenis, January 15th, 1820,” that drawing represents
what happened on the day in question to the painter
himself. He passed the Alps then in the winter
of 1820; and either in the previous or subsequent summer,
but on the same journey, he made a series of sketches
on the Rhine, in body color, now in Mr. Fawkes’s
collection. Every one of those sketches is the
almost instantaneous record of an effect of
color or atmosphere, taken strictly from nature, the
drawing and the details of every subject being comparatively
subordinate, and the color nearly as principal as the
light and shade had been before, certainly
the leading feature, though the light and shade are
always exquisitely harmonized with it. And naturally,
as the color becomes the leading object, those times
of day are chosen in which it is most lovely; and
whereas before, at least five out of six of Turner’s
drawings represented ordinary daylight, we now find
his attention directed constantly to the evening:
and, for the first time, we have those rosy lights
upon the hills, those gorgeous falls of sun through
flaming heavens, those solemn twilights, with the
blue moon rising as the western sky grows dim, which
have ever since been the themes of his mightiest thoughts.
I have no doubt, that the immediate
reason of this change was the impression made upon
him by the colors of the continental skies. When
he first travelled on the Continent (1800), he was
comparatively a young student; not yet able to draw
form as he wanted, he was forced to give all his thoughts
and strength to this primary object. But now he
was free to receive other impressions; the time was
come for perfecting his art, and the first sunset
which he saw on the Rhine taught him that all previous
landscape art was vain and valueless, that in comparison
with natural color, the things that had been called
paintings were mere ink and charcoal, and that all
precedent and all authority must be cast away at once,
and trodden under foot. He cast them away:
the memories of Vandevelde and Claude were at once
weeded out of the great mind they had encumbered;
they and all the rubbish of the schools together with
them; the waves of the Rhine swept them away for ever;
and a new dawn rose over the rocks of the Siebengebirge.
There was another motive at work,
which rendered the change still more complete.
His fellow artists were already conscious enough of
his superior power in drawing, and their best hope
was, that he might not be able to color. They
had begun to express this hope loudly enough for it
to reach his ears. The engraver of one of his
most important marine pictures told me, not long ago,
that one day about the period in question, Turner
came into his room to examine the progress of the
plate, not having seen his own picture for several
months. It was one of his dark early pictures,
but in the foreground was a little piece of luxury,
a pearly fish wrought into hues like those of an opal.
He stood before the picture for some moments; then
laughed, and pointed joyously to the fish; “They
say that Turner can’t color!” and turned
away.
Under the force of these various impulses
the change was total. Every subject thenceforth
was primarily conceived in color; and no engraving
ever gave the slightest idea of any drawing of this
period.
The artists who had any perception
of the truth were in despair; the Beaumontites, classicalists,
and “owl species” in general, in as much
indignation as their dulness was capable of. They
had deliberately closed their eyes to all nature,
and had gone on inquiring, “Where do you put
your brown tree?” A vast revelation was made
to them at once, enough to have dazzled any one; but
to them, light unendurable as incomprehensible.
They “did to the moon complain,” in one
vociferous, unanimous, continuous “Tu whoo.”
Shrieking rose from all dark places at the same instant,
just the same kind of shrieking that is now raised
against the Pre-Raphaelites. Those glorious old
Arabian Nights, how true they are! Mocking and
whispering, and abuse loud and low by turns, from
all the black stones beside the road, when one living
soul is toiling up the hill to get the golden water.
Mocking and whispering, that he may look back, and
become a black stone like themselves.
Turner looked not back, but he went
on in such a temper as a strong man must be in, when
he is forced to walk with his fingers in his ears.
He retired into himself; he could look no longer for
help, or counsel, or sympathy from any one; and the
spirit of defiance in which he was forced to labor
led him sometimes into violences, from which the
slightest expression of sympathy would have saved
him. The new energy that was upon him, and the
utter isolation into which he was driven, were both
alike dangerous, and many drawings of the time show
the evil effects of both; some of them being hasty,
wild, or experimental, and others little more than
magnificent expressions of defiance of public opinion.
But all have this noble virtue they
are in everything his own: there are no more
reminiscences of dead masters, no more trials of skill
in the manner of Claude or Poussin; every faculty
of his soul is fixed upon nature only, as he saw her,
or as he remembered her.
I have spoken above of his gigantic
memory: it is especially necessary to notice
this, in order that we may understand the kind of grasp
which a man of real imagination takes of all things
that are once brought within his reach grasp
thenceforth not to be relaxed for ever.
On looking over any catalogues of
his works, or of particular series of them, we shall
notice the recurrence of the same subject two, three,
or even many times. In any other artist this
would be nothing remarkable. Probably most modern
landscape painters multiply a favorite subject twenty,
thirty, or sixty fold, putting the shadows and the
clouds in different places, and “inventing,”
as they are pleased to call it, a new “effect”
every time. But if we examine the successions
of Turner’s subjects, we shall find them either
the records of a succession of impressions actually
perceived by him at some favorite locality, or else
repetitions of one impression received in early youth,
and again and again realised as his increasing powers
enabled him to do better justice to it. In either
case we shall find them records of seen facts;
never compositions in his room to fill up a
favorite outline.
For instance, every traveller, at
least every traveller of thirty years’ standing,
must love Calais, the place where he first felt himself
in a strange world. Turner evidently loved it
excessively. I have never catalogued his studies
of Calais, but I remember, at this moment, five:
there is first the “Pas de Calais,” a very
large oil painting, which is what he saw in broad
daylight as he crossed over, when he got near the
French side. It is a careful study of French fishing
boats running for the shore before the wind, with
the picturesque old city in the distance. Then
there is the “Calais Harbor” in the Liber
Studiorum: that is what he saw just as he was
going into the harbor, a heavy brig warping
out, and very likely to get in his way, or run against
the pier, and bad weather coming on. Then there
is the “Calais Pier,” a large painting,
engraved some years ago by Mr. Lupton: that is
what he saw when he had landed, and ran back directly
to the pier to see what had become of the brig.
The weather had got still worse, the fishwomen were
being blown about in a distressful manner on the pier
head, and some more fishing boats were running in
with all speed. Then there is the “Fortrouge,”
Calais: that is what he saw after he had been
home to Dessein’s, and dined, and went out again
in the evening to walk on the sands, the tide being
down. He had never seen such a waste of sands
before, and it made an impression on him. The
shrimp girls were all scattered over them too, and
moved about in white spots on the wild shore; and
the storm had lulled a little, and there was a sunset such
a sunset, and the bars of Fortrouge seen
against it, skeleton-wise.
He did not paint that directly; thought
over it, painted it a long while afterwards.
Then there is the vignette in the
illustrations to Scott. That is what he saw as
he was going home, meditatively; and the revolving
lighthouse came blazing out upon him suddenly, and
disturbed him. He did not like that so much;
made a vignette of it, however, when he was asked to
do a bit of Calais, twenty or thirty years afterwards,
having already done all the rest.
Turner never told me all this, but
any one may see it if he will compare the pictures.
They might, possibly, not be impressions of a single
day, but of two days or three; though in all human
probability they were seen just as I have stated them;
but they are records of successive impressions,
as plainly written as ever traveller’s diary.
All of them pure veracities. Therefore immortal.
I could multiply these series almost
indefinitely from the rest of his works. What
is curious, some of them have a kind of private mark
running through all the subjects. Thus I know
three drawings of Scarborough, and all of them have
a starfish in the foreground: I do not remember
any others of his marine subjects which have a starfish.
The other kind of repetition the
recurrence to one early impression is however
still more remarkable. In the collection of F.
H. Bale, Esq., there is a small drawing of Llanthony
Abbey. It is in his boyish manner, its date probably
about 1795; evidently a sketch from nature, finished
at home. It had been a showery day; the hills
were partially concealed by the rain, and gleams of
sunshine breaking out at intervals. A man was
fishing in the mountain stream. The young Turner
sought a place of some shelter under the bushes; made
his sketch, took great pains when he got home to imitate
the rain, as he best could; added his child’s
luxury of a rainbow; put in the very bush under which
he had taken shelter, and the fisherman, a somewhat
ill-jointed and long-legged fisherman, in the courtly
short breeches which were the fashion of the time.
Some thirty years afterwards, with
all his powers in their strongest training, and after
the total change in his feelings and principles which
I have endeavored to describe, he undertook the series
of “England and Wales,” and in that series
introduced the subject of Llanthony Abbey. And
behold, he went back to his boy’s sketch, and
boy’s thought. He kept the very bushes
in their places, but brought the fisherman to the
other side of the river, and put him, in somewhat less
courtly dress, under their shelter, instead of himself.
And then he set all his gained strength and new knowledge
at work on the well-remembered shower of rain, that
had fallen thirty years before, to do it better.
The resultant drawing is one of the very noblest
of his second period.
Another of the drawings of the England
series, Ulleswater, is the repetition of one in Mr.
Fawkes’s collection, which, by the method of
its execution, I should conjecture to have been executed
about the year 1808, or 1810: at all events,
it is a very quiet drawing of the first period.
The lake is quite calm; the western hills in grey shadow,
the eastern massed in light. Helvellyn rising
like a mist between them, all being mirrored in the
calm water. Some thin and slightly evanescent
cows are standing in the shallow water in front; a
boat floats motionless about a hundred yards from
the shore: the foreground is of broken rocks,
with lovely pieces of copse on the right and left.
This was evidently Turner’s
record of a quiet evening by the shore of Ulleswater,
but it was a feeble one. He could not at that
time render the sunset colors: he went back to
it therefore in the England series, and painted it
again with his new power. The same hills are there,
the same shadows, the same cows, they had
stood in his mind, on the same spot, for twenty years, the
same boat, the same rocks, only the copse is cut away it
interfered with the masses of his color: some
figures are introduced bathing, and what was grey,
and feeble gold in the first drawing, becomes purple,
and burning rose-color in the last.
But perhaps one of the most curious
examples is in the series of subjects from Winchelsea.
That in the Liber Studiorum, “Winchelsea, Sussex,”
bears date 1812, and its figures consist of a soldier
speaking to a woman, who is resting on the bank beside
the road. There is another small subject, with
Winchelsea in the distance, of which the engraving
bears date 1817. It has two women with
bundles, and two soldiers toiling along the
embankment in the plain, and a baggage waggon in the
distance. Neither of these seems to have satisfied
him, and at last he did another for the England series,
of which the engraving bears date 1830. There
is now a regiment on the march; the baggage waggon
is there, having got no further on in the thirteen
years, but one of the women is tired, and has fainted
on the bank; another is supporting her against her
bundle, and giving her drink; a third sympathetic woman
is added, and the two soldiers have stopped, and one
is drinking from his canteen.
Nor is it merely of entire scenes,
or of particular incidents, that Turner’s memory
is thus tenacious. The slightest passages of color
or arrangement that have pleased him the
fork of a bough, the casting of a shadow, the fracture
of a stone will be taken up again and again,
and strangely worked into new relations with other
thoughts. There is a single sketch from nature
in one of the portfolios at Farnley, of a common wood-walk
on the estate, which has furnished passages to no fewer
than three of the most elaborate compositions in the
Liber Studiorum.
I am thus tedious in dwelling on Turner’s
powers of memory, because I wish it to be thoroughly
seen how all his greatness, all his infinite luxuriance
of invention, depends on his taking possession of everything
that he sees, on his grasping all, and losing
hold of nothing, on his forgetting himself,
and forgetting nothing else. I wish it to be
understood how every great man paints what he sees
or did see, his greatness being indeed little else
than his intense sense of fact. And thus Pre-Raphaelitism
and Raphaelitism, and Turnerism, are all one and the
same, so far as education can influence them.
They are different in their choice, different in their
faculties, but all the same in this, that Raphael
himself, so far as he was great, and all who preceded
or followed him who ever were great, became so by
painting the truths around them as they appeared to
each man’s own mind, not as he had been taught
to see them, except by the God who made both him and
them.
There is, however, one more characteristic
of Turner’s second period, on which I have still
to dwell, especially with reference to what has been
above advanced respecting the fallacy of overtoil;
namely, the magnificent ease with which all is done
when it is successfully done. For there
are one or two drawings of this time which are not
done easily. Turner had in these set himself
to do a fine thing to exhibit his powers; in the common
phrase, to excel himself; so sure as he does this,
the work is a failure. The worst drawings that
have ever come from his hands are some of this second
period, on which he has spent much time and laborious
thought; drawings filled with incident from one side
to the other, with skies stippled into morbid blue,
and warm lights set against them in violent contrast;
one of Bamborough Castle, a large water-color, may
be named as an example. But the truly noble works
are those in which, without effort, he has expressed
his thoughts as they came, and forgotten himself;
and in these the outpouring of invention is not less
miraculous than the swiftness and obedience of the
mighty hand that expresses it. Any one who examines
the drawings may see the evidence of this facility,
in the strange freshness and sharpness of every touch
of color; but when the multitude of delicate touches,
with which all the aerial tones are worked, is taken
into consideration, it would still appear impossible
that the drawing could have been completed with ease,
unless we had direct evidence in the matter: fortunately,
it is not wanting. There is a drawing in Mr. Fawkes’s
collection of a man-of-war taking in stores:
it is of the usual size of those of the England series,
about sixteen inches by eleven: it does not appear
one of the most highly finished, but is still farther
removed from slightness. The hull of a first-rate
occupies nearly one-half of the picture on the right,
her bows towards the spectator, seen in sharp perspective
from stem to stern, with all her portholes, guns, anchors,
and lower rigging elaborately detailed; there are two
other ships of the line in the middle distance, drawn
with equal precision; a noble breezy sea dancing against
their broad bows, full of delicate drawing in its
waves; a store-ship beneath the hull of the larger
vessel, and several other boats, and a complicated
cloudy sky. It might appear no small exertion
of mind to draw the detail of all this shipping down
to the smallest ropes, from memory, in the drawing-room
of a mansion in the middle of Yorkshire, even if considerable
time had been given for the effort. But Mr. Fawkes
sat beside the painter from the first stroke to the
last. Turner took a piece of blank paper one morning
after breakfast, outlined his ships, finished the
drawing in three hours, and went out to shoot.
Let this single fact be quietly meditated
upon by our ordinary painters, and they will see the
truth of what was above asserted, that if
a great thing can be done at all, it can be done easily;
and let them not torment themselves with twisting
of compositions this way and that, and repeating,
and experimenting, and scene-shifting. If a man
can compose at all, he can compose at once, or rather
he must compose in spite of himself. And this
is the reason of that silence which I have kept in
most of my works, on the subject of Composition.
Many critics, especially the architects, have found
fault with me for not “teaching people how to
arrange masses;” for not “attributing sufficient
importance to composition.” Alas! I
attribute far more importance to it than they do; so
much importance, that I should just as soon think of
sitting down to teach a man how to write a Divina Commedia,
or King Lear, as how to “compose,” in
the true sense, a single building or picture.
The marvellous stupidity of this age of lecturers is,
that they do not see that what they call “principles
of composition,” are mere principles of common
sense in everything, as well as in pictures and buildings; A
picture is to have a principal light? Yes; and
so a dinner is to have a principal dish, and an oration
a principal point, and an air of music a principal
note, and every man a principal object. A picture
is to have harmony of relation among its parts?
Yes; and so is a speech well uttered, and an action
well ordered, and a company well chosen, and a ragout
well mixed. Composition! As if a man were
not composing every moment of his life, well or ill,
and would not do it instinctively in his picture as
well as elsewhere, if he could. Composition of
this lower or common kind is of exactly the same importance
in a picture that it is in any thing else, no
more. It is well that a man should say what he
has to say in good order and sequence, but the main
thing is to say it truly. And yet we go on preaching
to our pupils as if to have a principal light was every
thing, and so cover our academy walls with Shacabac
feasts, wherein the courses are indeed well ordered,
but the dishes empty.
It is not, however, only in invention
that men over-work themselves, but in execution also;
and here I have a word to say to the Pre-Raphaelites
specially. They are working too hard. There
is evidence in failing portions of their pictures,
showing that they have wrought so long upon them that
their very sight has failed for weariness, and that
the hand refused any more to obey the heart.
And, besides this, there are certain qualities of
drawing which they miss from over-carefulness.
For, let them be assured, there is a great truth lurking
in that common desire of men to see things done in
what they call a “masterly,” or “bold,”
or “broad,” manner: a truth oppressed
and abused, like almost every other in this world,
but an eternal one nevertheless; and whatever mischief
may have followed from men’s looking for nothing
else but this facility of execution, and supposing
that a picture was assuredly all right if only it
were done with broad dashes of the brush, still the
truth remains the same: that because it
is not intended that men shall torment or weary themselves
with any earthly labor, it is appointed that the noblest
results should only be attainable by a certain ease
and decision of manipulation. I only wish people
understood this much of sculpture, as well as of painting,
and could see that the finely finished statue is,
in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, a far more
vulgar work than that which shows rough signs of the
right hand laid to the workman’s hammer:
but at all events, in painting it is felt by all men,
and justly felt. The freedom of the lines of nature
can only be represented by a similar freedom in the
hand that follows them; there are curves in the flow
of the hair, and in the form of the features, and
in the muscular outline of the body, which can in no
wise be caught but by a sympathetic freedom in the
stroke of the pencil. I do not care what example
is taken, be it the most subtle and careful work of
Leonardo himself, there will be found a play and power
and ease in the outlines, which no slow effort
could ever imitate. And if the Pre-Raphaelites
do not understand how this kind of power, in its highest
perfection, may be united with the most severe rendering
of all other orders of truth, and especially of those
with which they themselves have most sympathy, let
them look at the drawings of John Lewis.
These then are the principal lessons
which we have to learn from Turner, in his second
or central period of labor. There is one more,
however, to be received; and that is a warning; for
towards the close of it, what with doing small conventional
vignettes for publishers, making showy drawings from
sketches taken by other people of places he had never
seen, and touching up the bad engravings from his works
submitted to him almost every day, engravings
utterly destitute of animation, and which had to be
raised into a specious brilliancy by scratching them
over with white, spotty lights, he gradually got inured
to many conventionalities, and even falsities; and,
having trusted for ten or twelve years almost entirely
to his memory and invention, living I believe mostly
in London, and receiving a new sensation only from
the burning of the Houses of Parliament, he painted
many pictures between 1830 and 1840 altogether unworthy
of him. But he was not thus to close his career.
In the summer either of 1840 or 1841,
he undertook another journey into Switzerland.
It was then at least forty years since he had first
seen the Alps; (the source of the Arveron, in Mr.
Fawkes’s collection, which could not have been
painted till he had seen the thing itself, bears date
1800,) and the direction of his journey in 1840 marks
his fond memory of that earliest one; for, if we look
over the Swiss studies and drawings executed in his
first period, we shall be struck with his fondness
for the pass of the St. Gothard; the most elaborate
drawing in the Farnley collection is one of the Lake
of Lucerne from Fluelen; and, counting the Liber Studiorum
subjects, there are, to my knowledge, six compositions
taken at the same period from the pass of St. Gothard,
and, probably, several others are in existence.
The valleys of Sallenche, and Chamouni, and Lake of
Geneva, are the only other Swiss scenes which seem
to have made very profound impressions on him.
He returned in 1841 to Lucerne; walked
up Mont Pilate on foot, crossed the St. Gothard, and
returned by Lausanne and Geneva. He made a large
number of colored sketches on this journey, and realised
several of them on his return. The drawings thus
produced are different from all that had preceded
them, and are the first which belong definitely to
what I shall henceforth call his Third period.
The perfect repose of his youth had
returned to his mind, while the faculties of imagination
and execution appeared in renewed strength; all conventionality
being done away with by the force of the impression
which he had received from the Alps, after his long
separation from them. The drawings are marked
by a peculiar largeness and simplicity of thought:
most of them by deep serenity, passing into melancholy;
all by a richness of color, such as he had never before
conceived. They, and the works done in following
years, bear the same relation to those of the rest
of his life that the colors of sunset do to those of
the day; and will be recognised, in a few years more,
as the noblest landscapes ever yet conceived by human
intellect.
Such has been the career of the greatest
painter of this century. Many a century may pass
away before there rises such another; but what greatness
any among us may be capable of, will, at least, be
best attained by following in his path; by beginning
in all quietness and hopefulness to use whatever powers
we may possess to represent the things around us as
we see and feel them; trusting to the close of life
to give the perfect crown to the course of its labors,
and knowing assuredly that the determination of the
degree in which watchfulness is to be exalted into
invention, rests with a higher will than our own.
And, if not greatness, at least a certain good, is
thus to be achieved; for though I have above spoken
of the mission of the more humble artist, as if it
were merely to be subservient to that of the antiquarian
or the man of science, there is an ulterior aspect
in which it is not subservient, but superior.
Every archaeologist, every natural philosopher, knows
that there is a peculiar rigidity of mind brought on
by long devotion to logical and analytical inquiries.
Weak men, giving themselves to such studies, are utterly
hardened by them, and become incapable of understanding
anything nobler, or even of feeling the value of the
results to which they lead. But even the best
men are in a sort injured by them, and pay a definite
price, as in most other matters, for definite advantages.
They gain a peculiar strength, but lose in tenderness,
elasticity, and impressibility. The man who has
gone, hammer in hand, over the surface of a romantic
country, feels no longer, in the mountain ranges he
has so laboriously explored, the sublimity or mystery
with which they were veiled when he first beheld them,
and with which they are adorned in the mind of the
passing traveller. In his more informed conception,
they arrange themselves like a dissected model:
where another man would be awe-struck by the magnificence
of the precipice, he sees nothing but the emergence
of a fossiliferous rock, familiarised already to his
imagination as extending in a shallow stratum, over
a perhaps uninteresting district; where the unlearned
spectator would be touched with strong emotion by the
aspect of the snowy summits which rise in the distance,
he sees only the culminating points of a metamorphic
formation, with an uncomfortable web of fan-like fissures
radiating, in his imagination, through their centres.
That in the grasp he has obtained of the inner relations
of all these things to the universe, and to man, that
in the views which have been opened to him of natural
energies such as no human mind would have ventured
to conceive, and of past states of being, each in some
new way bearing witness to the unity of purpose and
everlastingly consistent providence of the Maker of
all things, he has received reward well worthy the
sacrifice, I would not for an instant deny; but the
sense of the loss is not less painful to him if his
mind be rightly constituted; and it would be with
infinite gratitude that he would regard the man, who,
retaining in his delineation of natural scenery a fidelity
to the facts of science so rigid as to make his work
at once acceptable and credible to the most sternly
critical intellect, should yet invest its features
again with the sweet veil of their daily aspect; should
make them dazzling with the splendor of wandering
light, and involve them in the unsearchableness of
stormy obscurity; should restore to the divided anatomy
its visible vitality of operation, clothe naked crags
with soft forests, enrich the mountain ruins with
bright pastures, and lead the thoughts from the monotonous
recurrence of the phenomena of the physical world,
to the sweet interests and sorrows of human life and
death.