John Lothrop Motley. a memoir — Volume 1 by Oliver Wendell Holmes
page 53 of 72 (73%)
page 53 of 72 (73%)
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any one of the average amount of imagination and sentiment to stand
long before the Descent from the Cross without being moved more nearly to tears than he would care to acknowledge. As for color, his effects are as sure as those of the sun rising in a tropical landscape. There is something quite genial in the cheerful sense of his own omnipotence which always inspired him. There are a few fine pictures of his here, and I go in sometimes of a raw, foggy morning merely to warm myself in the blaze of their beauty." I have been more willing to give room to this description of Rubens's pictures and the effect they produced upon Motley, because there is a certain affinity between those sumptuous and glowing works of art and the prose pictures of the historian who so admired them. He was himself a colorist in language, and called up the image of a great personage or a splendid pageant of the past with the same affluence, the same rich vitality, that floods and warms the vast areas of canvas over which the full-fed genius of Rubens disported itself in the luxury of imaginative creation. XI. 1856-1857. AEt. 42-43. PUBLICATION OF HIS FIRST HISTORICAL WORK, "RISE OF THE DUTCH REPUBLIC."-- ITS RECEPTION.--CRITICAL NOTICES. The labor of ten years was at last finished. Carrying his formidable |
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