Part 19
Art, deathblow of pagan, 1; Christianity and, 1; and religion, 2, 4, 208; the golden age of Italian, 4; spirit of Greek and Roman, 19; ancient works of, difficulty of determining authorship of, 69; the toreutic, 100; the productions of, always show the true spirit of religion among any people, 208; and nature, 232, 233.
Artemisia and Mausolus, 132.
Arts, all, aid each other, 43.
Athena Areia, statue of, by Phidias, 53, 58; its height, 62; described, 65.
Athena Lemnia, statue of, by Phidias, 62; beauty of, 65.
Athena of the Parthenon, chryselephantine statue, by Phidias, 50–68, 82, 83, 97, 98, 111, 209, 210.
Athena Promachos, the, cast from spoils taken at Marathon, 59; its height, 62, 64.
Athenagoras, cited, 66, 70.
Aulus Gellius, definition of “facies” by, 121.
Aurelius, Marcus, the Meditations of, 190–193, 228; how the Meditations were written, 191; no book of ancient literature higher and purer, 192; his dust, 192; a conversation with, 193–230; Jesus of Nazareth reverenced by, 199; supposed ideas of God held by, 199–202; cannot understand modern pronunciation of Latin, 217; purely a Stoic, 220; did not persecute Christians, 220; letters of, on the proper treatment of one’s enemies, 228.
Aurora, figure of, by Michel Angelo, 14–21.
Ausonius, cited, 68.
Baldi Chapel, the, 7.
Bargello, the, 6.
Bartolommeo, Fra, 31.
Baruch, cited, 150.
Batrachus, 107.
Beethoven and Mozart, 30.
Bembo, 4.
Berlinghi, family of the, 10.
Bibbiena, 3.
Biblical history, in Michel Angelo’s frescoes, 28, 29.
Boccaccio, 3.
Boiardo, 3.
Borgia, Lucrezia, 264.
Bostick and Riley, translation of Pliny by, 135.
Bramante, instigates Pope Julius II. to summon Michel Angelo to Rome, 21; jealous of Michel Angelo’s fame, 22; tries to induce the Pope to discharge Michel Angelo, 24.
Brass-casting, decline of the art of, 170.
Brick, printed on by the ancient Romans, 167.
British Museum, so-called plaster casts in, 164, 165.
Bronze statues, the method of the ancients in casting, 142.
Browning, Robert, 233.
Browning and Tennyson, 30.
Brunelleschi, 5, 6, 8, 40; designs Church of San Lorenzo, 13.
Brunn, Dr., cited, 59, 60; on Pliny’s Natural History, 120, 137–139.
Bryaxis, 68.
Buggiardini, 21.
Buonomini, Michel Angelo’s father one of the twelve, 10.
Byzantine tradition, 4.
Callicrates, and the Parthenon, 51, 52.
Callimachus, nicknamed, 130; drill supposed to have been invented by, 171.
Cambronne, 74.
Campaspe, portrait of, by Apelles, 132.
Canossa, the Counts of, 10.
Canova, opinion of, as to the use of proportional compasses by ancient sculptors, 171.
Caprese, birthplace of Michel Angelo, 9.
Carmine, Church of the, 7.
Carpion and the Parthenon, 51.
Carrara, Michel Angelo at, 37.
Casting, from life or from the round, difficulties of, 159, 160; distinction between, and modeling, 155, 161.
Casting in plaster, alleged practice of, among the Greeks and Romans, 115–189; introduced by Verrocchio, 188.
Casts, plaster, not found in ancient houses or tombs, 157, 158, 176, 177.
Cato, book published by, 167.
Catulus, 67.
Cellini, the Renaissance Perseus of, 6; accomplished in many arts, 43.
Ceres, the Temple of, at Eleusis, 52, 53.
Chalcosthenes, executed works in baked earth, 148.
Changes, only gradual, do real good, 197.
Christ, and Communism, 222, 223; example of, not always followed by Christians, 226.
Christianity and Art, 1.
Christians, not persecuted by Marcus Aurelius, but punished as Communists, 220–222; attitude of, toward the government, 221, 227; theory and practice of, 225, 226.
Cicero, Demosthenes and, 30; on the meaning of _vultus_, 121; quoted, 125, 134, 141, 149, 152.
Cimabue, 4.
Clay, not a material for casting, 134; why used by the ancients instead of gypsum, 158, 159.
Clemens Alexandrinus, cited, 68.
Colonna, Vittoria, and Michel Angelo, 34.
Columbus, 4.
Communists, the early followers of Christ were, 222.
Compasses, proportional, used by ancient sculptors, 171, 172.
Condivi, doubtful assertion of, 25.
Cooke, a safe guide for the tragic actor, 236.
Copies, exact, not made by ancient sculptors, 174–176.
Corœbus, begins the Temple of Initiation at Eleusis, 52.
Creed, every religious, should be living, 196.
Crepuscule, figure of, by Michel Angelo, 14–21.
Ctesilaus, 67, 97; compared with Phidias, 96.
Cydon, competition of, with Phidias, 97, 98.
Cymon, 67.
Cyrenaicn, the, fragments of figures from, 164, 165.
Dædalus, statue to Hercules by, 182, 186.
Dallaway, cited, 109.
Damophilus, 117, 146.
Daniel, Michel Angelo’s figure of, 27.
Dante, 3, 5, 6, 8; his influence on Michel Angelo, 17; and Ariosto, 30; the favorite poet of Michel Angelo, 35.
David, Michel Angelo’s statue of, 8, 11.
Day, Michel Angelo’s colossal figure of, 14–21.
Deity, figure of the, by Michel Angelo, 27.
Delacroix and Ary Scheffer, 30.
Delphi, group of statues at, 59, 60, 62, 64, 121.
Demetrius, on the work of Phidias, 81; introduces the realistic school of portraiture, 130.
Demosthenes and Cicero, 30.
Devils, the, that haunt and tempt us, come out of ourselves, 286.
D’Hancarville, cited, 109.
Dibutades of Sicyon, 137–139.
Diocletian, ruins of the Baths of, 41.
Diodotos, 70.
Dion Chrysostomos, on the style of Phidias, 81.
Dionysius of Colophon, 132.
Dionysius of Halicarnassus, on the art of Phidias, 81, 102; on the works of Polyclitus, 89.
Dives and Lazarus, 223.
Dolls, ancient, 166.
Drama, reaction in the, against conventionalism, 233.
Drill, the, supposed to have been invented by Callimachus, 171.
Dryads, 1.
Dust of the dead, 192.
Duty, the, of considering adverse doctrines, 224, 225.
Ectypa of baked clay, 156.
Eleusinian mysteries, meaning of the, 217, 218.
Eleusis, the Temple of Initiation at, 52; the Temple of Ceres at, 52.
Elgin marbles, the, 49–114.
Elis, work of Phidias at, 53, 54.
Elpinice, portrait of, by Polygnotua, 132.
Epicurus, the face of, carried about by the Romans, 150.
Equanimity, the last watchword given by Antoninus Pius, 230.
Erechtheum, the, 94.
Esaias, Michel Angelo’s figure of, 27.
Euphranor, 73.
Euripides, Æschylus and, 30; on the immensity of God, 206.
Ezekiel, Michel Angelo’s figure of, 27.
Fables of the ancients, the mythical garb of great truths, 211, 212; true to the imagination, not to the reason, 212.
Facts, but dead husks, 212.
Faith, death of, 196; easily degenerates into superstition, 204; of the ancients compared with ours, 218–220.
Fame, what is, 228.
Fechter, as Hamlet, 236.
Fedi, 6.
Ficino, Marsilio, 3.
Firmicus, story by, about Zagreus, 101.
Florence, the city of the Renaissance, 5; ungrateful, 7; Dante and, 8.
Fol, Mr., the collection of, in Rome, 156, 168.
Forcellinus, cited, 120, 122, 123.
Forms, of little consequence, compared to essences, 195.
Formulas check growth in the spirit, 195; but are useful, as trunks in which we pack our goods, 195.
Fornarina, the, 31, 34.
Francis I. and Leonardo da Vinci, 74.
Fresco-painting, source of the term, 25.
Fronto, _De differentiis Vocabulorum_ of, 122, _note_.
Galatea, the, of Raffaelle, 32.
Galileo, 4, 8.
Garrick, 236–238.
Germans, as students of Shakespeare, 237.
Ghiberti, 6, 8, 43.
Ghirlandajo, Michel Angelo’s early master, 10, 22.
Giorgione, 4.
Giotto, 4; the campanile of, 6; frescoes of, 7; accomplished in many arts, 43.
Glycon, 109.
God, tendency to humanize and degrade, 198; the justice of, 200; supposed ideas of, held by Marcus Aurelius, 199–202; man cannot comprehend, 203; yet man makes, 203; Christian and pagan conceptions of, compared, 199–208; representations of, in art, inferior to pagan works, 208.
Gods, images of, in early Greece, with clothes and false hair, 152; the ancient, but anthropomorphic symbols, 210.
Gonsalvi, Cardinal, and Michel Angelo, 13.
Good, real, done only by gradual changes, 197.
Gorgasus, 117, 146.
Gorgias, 88.
Greek and Roman art, the spirit of, 19.
Greek sculptors not accustomed to put their names on statues, 107.
Guarini, 3.
Guelphs end Ghibellines, 3.
Guicciardini, 8.
Gypsum, not used by the ancients in casting, 157–159, 169; Pliny on, 169.
Hamlet, the warnings of, needed by English actors, 234, 235; not Hamlet on the English stage, 238; mental aberration of, compared with that of Macbeth, 249, 250.
Hegias, 88.
Hermitage, Museum of the, 163.
Hercules, statue of, by Dædalus, 182, 186.
Hesychius, cited, 70, 103.
History, who knows, 214; must be interpreted by imagination, 214.
Homer, and Virgil, 30; relief in the British Museum, representing the deification of, 109.
Honesty of intention, not enough, 221.
Horace, quotation from, 126.
Horse-Tamer, the, statue of, ascribed to Phidias, 67, 70–79.
Hugo, Victor, and Lamartine, 30.
Hunt, Leigh, 233.
Iasos, 94.
Iconic statues, first made by Antenor, 129.
Ictinus, works of, 113.
Idealisti, motto of the, 232.
Images, draped with real stuffs by the Greeks and Romans, 152; false hair on, 152.
Imagination in art, 232; may work independently of real feelings, 251.
Inevitable, the, should be accepted without murmuring, 229.
Isis, 221.
Isocrates, quoted, 66.
Italy, the land of the Renaissance, 5.
Jehovah, the, of the Jews, development of, 205.
Jeremiah, figure of, by Michel Angelo, 27.
Jesus, reverenced by Marcus Aurelius, 199, 220.
John of Bologna, the Rape of the Sabines by, 6.
Julian, statement by, about Phidias, 84.
Julius II., Pope, and Michel Angelo, 21–25; strikes Michel Angelo with a cane, 25.
Juno, the Temple of, at Argos, 53.
Jupiter, the true philosophic idea of, 204–207.
Jupiter Pluvius, 216.
Kalamis, 88; works of, 93; compared with Phidias, 96.
Kallimachus, 88.
Kallon, 88.
Kean, Charles, 236, 237.
Kean, the elder, 236.
Kemble, John, as Hamlet, 238, 239.
Kertch, excavations at, 163; so-called casts from, in the British Museum, 164, 165.
Kleoitas, 88.
Knight, Richard Payne, opinion of, on the Elgin marbles, 99.
Kolotes, an assistant of Phidias, 55; statue of Athena attributed to, by Pliny, 66, 70, 91.
Lacon, 88.
Lactantius, 206.
Lamartine, Victor Hugo and, 30.
Lanzi, 8.
Laocoön, the, 19.
Latin, modern pronunciation of, unintelligible to Marcus Aurelius, 217.
Laurentian Library, the, 42.
Lazarus, and Dives, 223.
Lear, the aberration of mind of, different from that of Macbeth, 249, 250.
Leo X., Pope, 13, 14.
Leochares, statues by, 130.
Leonardo, 43; competition of, with Michel Angelo, 22; story about his death, 74.
Libeccio, the howling, 190.
Libon, 113.
Lippi, 7.
Loclos, 94.
Lomazzo, statement by, about Leonardo’s death, 74.
Lorenzo, Duke of Urbino, 14.
Lorenzo the Magnificent, 3; favors Michel Angelo, 10.
Lucan, lofty idea of God expressed by, 207.
Lucian, cited, 65, 67; his ideal image of the most beautiful woman, 96; comment by, on Demetrius, 130; the “Tragic Jupiter” of, citations from, 181–185; the “Somnium, seu Gallus,” of, quoted, 187.
Lysias, cited, 101, _note_.
Lysippus, statue of Opportunity by, 68; varies the canon of proportion, 73; gives a new impulse to the school of portraiture, 131; praised by Nicephorus Chumnus, 132.
Lysistratus, and the art of casting in plaster, 116, 117, 139, 141, 143, 145; and the practice of portraiture, 131; probable use of color by, 154.
Macbeth, the true character of, 239–285; not understood by Lady Macbeth till after the murder of Duncan, 241, 242, 244, 277; Shakespeare’s worst villain, save Iago, 284.
Macbeth, Lady, the real, 230–241, 251–282.
Macchiavelli, 3, 8.
Maderno, Carlo, St. Peter’s injured by, 42.
Madonna di San Sisto, the, 32.
Mai, Cardinal, 122, _note_.
Mammon, worshiped, 227.
Man, inferior to woman in adjusting details, 259.
Marathon, the use made of spoils taken from the Medes at, 59.
Marbles, the Elgin and Phigaleian, work on, in the Library of Entertaining Knowledge, 99, 110.
Masaccio, 7.
Mausolus, statue of, 131.
Medicean Chapel, the, 9, 11; great works of Michel Angelo in, 13–21, 39.
Medici, real mausoleum of the, 9; burial chapel of the, 44–48; coffins of the, neglected and robbed, 45–47; sad lesson of their fate, 48.
Medici, Giuliano dei, mausoleum to, 14.
Melzi, cited, 74.
Metagenes, and the Temple of Initiation at Eleusis, 52.
Metoscopi, a story about, 132.
Middle Ages, the, 2.
Middleton, the witches of, different from Shakespeare’s weird sisters, 285, 286.
Miltiades, portrait statue of, at Delphi, 129.
Minerva, Church of the, 20.
Mini, Antonio, 21.
Mini, Giovanni Battista, letter by, 21.
Mirandola, Pico della, 3.
Mithras, 221, 225.
Mnesicles, 52.
Molière and Racine, 30.
Moses, statue of, by Michel Angelo, 39.
Mount Mithridates, excavations at, 163.
Mozart, Beethoven and, 30.
Müller, cited, 59, 101, _note_, 185.
Music, development of, 4.
Myron, 88; great skill of, 89, 90; inscription on his Discobolos, 108.
Mys, carving by, 64.
Myths, enchanting, 212.
Naiads, 1.
Narrow-mindedness, development of truth impeded by, 225.
Naturalisti, motto of the, 232.
Nature and art, 232.
Nemesis, statue of, at Rhamnus, 67, 70, 71; inscription on, 109.
Nero, 77, 79; like Macbeth, 243.
Nestocles, 88.
Nicephorus Chumnus, Apelles and Lysippus praised by, 132.
Nicias, statues colored by, 153.
Night, Michel Angelo’s colossal figure of, 14–21.
Odeum, the, 52, 53.
Olympia, the Temple of Zeus at, 53, 54.
Opinion, arrogance of, development of truth impeded by, 225.
Opinions but running streams, 229.
Orcagna, the Loggia of, 6.
Oreads, 1.
Orpheus, as the Good Shepherd, 1.
Othello, the trance of, unlike Macbeth’s aberration of mind, 249, 250.
Ovid, quoted, 122, 151.
Pæonios, 55, 88; works of, 92, 93.
Pagan religion and pagan art, 1.
Painting, and sculpture, 1; substances used by the ancients in, 145.
Palazzo Farnese, the, 41.
Pan, 1.
Pantarces, a victor in the Olympian games, 129.
Parrhasius, 64; paints portrait of himself, 132.
Parthenon, the, sculptures in, 49, 50, 52–55; builders of, 51, 52; built between 444 and 438 B. C., 54; the extant fragments of, not in the style of Phidias, 84–86; probably executed by various hands, 94.
Pasiteles, 135.
Pauline Chapel, the, 11.
Pausanias, statements by, 59, 64–71, 75, 91; the marble statues ascribed to Phidias by, 105–107; on the invention of casting in bronze, 137.
Pelichus, statue of, by Demetrius, 130.
Pensiero, Il, 18.
Pericles, appoints Phidias director of public works in Athens, 49, 51; directs the building of the Odeum, 52; said by Strabo to have been director of public works, 52; sole administrator of public affairs, 53; likeness of, by Phidias, 60, 129.
Perkins, Charles C., his “Du Moulage en Plâtre chez les Anciens,” 115 ff.; confounds modeling and casting, 162.
Perugino, 31.
Peruzzi Chapel, the, 7.
Petrarca, 3, 42; admired by Michel Angelo, 35.
Petronius, cited, 90.
Phædrus, quoted, 108.
Phidias, 19; painter and architect, as well as sculptor, 43; and the Elgin marbles, 49–114; appointed director of public works by Pericles, 49; his chryselephantine statue of Athena, 50–68, 82, 83, 97, 98, 111; doubtful if he ever made statues in marble, 51, 98–113; testimony of Plutarch, 51, 52; of Strabo, 52; impossible for him to have done all the work that is attributed to him, 53–58, 63, 68; a slow and elaborate worker, 55; disadvantages of, 56, 57; date of his birth, 58–62; likeness of, by himself, 60, 129; works ascribed to, 62–68; incredible stories about, 71–73; peculiarly celebrated for his statues of Athena, 75; the Horse-Tamer, not the work of, 76–79; compared with Michel Angelo, 80; his style, 80, 81; elaboration of his great works, 81–84, 86; the Cellini of Athens, 84; introduces the art of making statues in ivory and gold, 87; estimation of, among his contemporaries, 96; Propertius and Quinctilian on, 98; appellation applied to, by Aristotle, 99–102; skill of, in the toreutic art, 101; marble statues ascribed to, by Pausanias, 105–107; prosecuted for impiety, 129.
Phigaleia, the Temple of Apollo at, 53.
Photias, 72.
Phradmon, 67; competes with Phidias, 97.
Phryne, portrait of, by Apelles, 132.
Phyromachos, 94.
Piece-moulds apparently not used by the ancient Greeks and Romans, 156, 157, 176, 178.
Pindar, quotation from, 206.
Pius VIII., monument of, by Tenerani, 61.
Plaster, the art of casting in, among the Greeks and Romans, 115–189.
Platæa, 53, 59.
Plautus, quoted, 121, 135.
Pliny, cited, 65–68, 70, 71, 76, 89, 90; story by, about Phidias, Polyclitus, Ctesilaus, Cydon, and Phradmon, 97, 98; statements by, about Phidias, 103, 104; quotation from his Natural History, 116; meaning of the quotation considered, 117 ff.; the Natural History characterized, 118, 119; stories by, about Apelles and Parrhasius, 132, 133; Bostick and Riley’s translation of, 135; his use of the term “cera,” 144; chapter on “Plastices,” in the Natural History, 146–150; chapter on the honor attached to portraits, 150, 151.
Plutarch, statements by, about Pericles and Phidias, 51, 52, 56, 57; quoted, 66.
Plyntheria, the colossal Athena’s gold drapery washed at, 152.
Poliziano, Angelo, teacher of Michel Angelo, 3, 10.
Polybius, referred to, 146, _note_.
Polyclitus, 67; his canon of proportion, 73; his works, 88, 89; compared with Phidias, 96, 97, 101; price received by, for his Doryphoros, 176.
Polygnotus, the “Rape of Cassandra” by, 132.
Polyxines, 6.
Pompeii, works of art found in, 177.
Pomponius Mela, cited, 70.
Popes, the, and Michel Angelo, 12.
Portrait statues, erection of, in public, seldom allowed by the Greeks, 129.
Portraiture, in its true sense, the beginning of, 130; development of, by Lysippus and Lysistratus, 131; earliest specimen of, by a great painter, 132; use of, by the Romans, 150.
Possis, excellent work of, 148.
Praxias, 88, 92, 94, 95.
Praxiteles, statue of Alexander taming Bucephalus, ascribed to, 77, 78; praised by Lucian, 96; and Nicias, 153; price offered by Athens for the Venus of, 175.
Pre-Raphaelites, error of the, 233.
Printing, among the ancient Romans, 167.
Propertius, quoted, 98.
Propylæa, 53.
Pulci, the three, 3.
Pythagoras, 88.
Quinctilian, quoted, 98, 125; criticises Demetrius, 130.
Quincy, M. Quatremere de, on chryselephantine statues, 100.
Quirinal Hill, statue of the Horse-Tamer on the, 67, 76.
Racine, Molière and, 30.
Raffaelle, 4, 8; and the Sistine Chapel, 24; and Michel Angelo, 30–33, 35; character and style of, 31; his finest work, 32; his early death, 32; characterized by contemporaries, 33; and the Fornarina, 31, 34; accomplished in many arts, 43.
Ravenna, Dante’s grave at, 8.
Reform, slow movement of, in England, 235.
Rehoboam, group by Michel Angelo, 29.
Religion, and art, hand in hand, 208; no system of, ever embraced all truth, 224.
Religious controversy, nothing so bitter as, 225.
Religious ideas, each age has its, 196.
Renaissance, the, 3–5.
Revolutionizing the world, 227.
Rhamnus, statue of Nemesis at, 67, 70, 71.
Rhœcus, cast in bronze, 136.
Riches, denounced by Christ, 222.
Riley and Bostick, translation of Pliny by, 135.
Roman and Greek art, the spirit of, 19.
Rousseau and Voltaire, 30.
S. Justinus, 206.
S. Theophilus Antiochenus, 206.
Sallust, quoted, 152.
San Gallo, Antonio, architect of St. Peter’s, 39.
San Lorenzo, Church of, 9, 13.
Santa Croce, Church of, 7, 8.
Saurus, 107.
Savonarola, 5; his influence on Michel Angelo, 17, 35.
Scheffer, Ary, Delacroix and, 30.
Scopas, 67; celebrated for heroic figures and demigods, 75; a worker in marble, 76.
Sculpture, and idolatry, 1; considered more dignified than painting, by the Athenians, 133.
Second-sight, Macbeth’s, 246.
Secretive nature, the, always a puzzle to the frank nature, 244.
Semele and Zagreus, 161.
Seneca, quoted, 110; sentiments of, regarding God, 207, 208.
Shakespeare, and Sir Philip Sidney, 30; testimony of, as to English actors, 235; interpreted by the Germans, 237; his meaning perverted on the English stage, 238, 240; no serious character of, rants like Macbeth, 251; a master-stroke of, 259; Iago and Macbeth his worst villains, 284; his weird sisters a new creation, 285.
Sibylline verses, fragment of the, 206.
Sibyls, representations of, by Michel Angelo, 27, 28.
Siddons, Mrs., as Lady Macbeth, 239, 240, 264.
Sidney, Sir Philip, Shakespeare and, 30.
Sistine Chapel, the, 11; Michel Angelo’s frescoes in, 21–29, 44; opened to exhibit the frescoes in 1508 on All-Saints’ Day, 23.
Sixtus V., 77.
Smith, Philip, cited, 59, 61, 76.
Socrates, 88.
Solon, cited, 70.
Sophocles, unity and universality of God proclaimed by, 200.
Spartianus, statues modeled in plaster spoken of by, 160.
St. Paul, quoted, 231.
St. Peter’s, the Dome of, 5, 8, 11; Michel Angelo’s work upon, 39–42; the type of the universal church, 41; Michel Angelo not responsible for it as it now stands, 42; changes made in, by Carlo Maderno, 42.
Sta. Maria degli Angeli, Church of, 41.
Stage, tradition and convention on the English, 234–240.
Statius, quoted, 144.
Statues, ancient, singular defects in, 173.
Strabo, statements by, about Pericles and Phidias, 52; opinion of, on the statue of Nemesis, at Rhamnus, 70; on the work of Polyclitus, 89, 96.
Strozzi, Giovan’ Battista, quatrain by, 17.
Suidas, 72.
Sunium, 64.
Tartuffe, Macbeth not like, 254.
Tasso, 3, 42.
Tenerani, 61.
Tennyson, Browning and, 30.
Terra cotta, an ancient manufactory of, 178.
Tertullian, on the persecution of the Christians, 222.
Themistius, a saying of, 56; cited, 80.
Theocosmos, 67, 92; said to have been assisted by Phidias, 75.
Theocritus, 206.
Theodorus of Samos, cast in bronze, 136.
Theophrastus, treatise on mineralogy by, 159.
Thiersch, cited, 59, 61, 68.
Thoughts, our whole nature colored by our, 229.
Thrasymedes of Paros, 66, 70.
Thundering Legion, the, true story of, 215, 216.
Tintoretto, 4.
Tiridates, King of Armenia, 77, 79.
Titian, 4.
Toreutic art, the, 100.
Tradition, in English church and theatre, 235; Shakespeare’s meaning perverted by, 238, 240.
Traditions about artists, unreliable, 74.
Troughton, Mr., 233.
Truth, infinite in form and spirit, 195; a continual progression towards the divine, 195; not all embraced in one system of religion, 224; the growth of, impeded by narrow-mindedness, 225.
Tussaud, Madame, 154.
Tzetzes the Grammarian, story told by, 72; an untrustworthy gossip, 73; on Phidias, 103.
Urban VIII., 78.
Urbino, Michel Angelo’s servant, 37.
Valerius Maximus, quoted, 110, 111.
Valerius Soranus, God represented by, as the Father and Mother of us all, 207.
Valori, Bartolommeo, letter to, 21.
Varro, quoted, as to the meaning of “cera,” 144.
Vasari, Giorgio, doubtful assertion of, 25; on Raffaelle, 33; account by, of Verrocchio’s making casts, 188.
Veronese, 4.
Verrocchio, 43; casting in plaster introduced by, 188.
Via Latina, tombs in the, 157.
Vigenero, description of Michel Angelo by, 38.
Villari, 3.
Virgil, Homer and, 30; quoted, 122, 136.
Visconti, quoted, 99, 100; his views examined, 100–104.
Vitruvius, 145; description of process used in finishing walls by, 153.
Voltaire, Rousseau and, 30.