Vulgar words in Great Pictures, As Seen and Described by Famous Writers (Page 1)

This book at a glance

blockhead x 1
buffoon x 1
            

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The band of buffoons comes running, bringing beneath the shady boughs the carnival of human passions and its rainbow-hued garb.

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Daubers and blockheads think themselves painters, and are received by the public as such, if they know how to foreshorten bones and decipher entrails; and men with capacity of art either shrink away (the best of them always do) into petty felicities and innocencies of genre painting--landscapes, cattle, family breakfasts, village schoolings, and the like; or else, if they have the full sensuous art-faculty that would have made true painters of them, being taught from their youth up, to look for and learn the body instead of the spirit, have learned it and taught it to such purpose, that at this hour, when I speak to you, the rooms of the Royal Academy of England, receiving also what of best can be sent there by the masters of France, contain _not one_ picture honourable to the arts of their age; and contain many which are shameful in their record of its manners.

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