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attention the other day at a printseller's window. It was meant, I presume, as an imitation of Claude, Claude reduced to the then English vulgarity. If multiplicity of parts would make a picture, doubtless Richard Wilson, with his simple, sweeping, free lines, could have no chance in competition with such a painter. Every niche was crowded -and equally so-every niche might have made a picture, such as it was, but all the niches made none, or a bad one. Why, the variety was universal; it should have been confined to the smaller space. The picture is objectionable in other points of view; but this ignorance of the very nature of composition was fatal. Yet this work was evidently an imitation of Claude, whose variety, however, of distance, the modern imitator brought into his very foreground. He could not see the simplicity of Claude. Not that Claude himself was a learned composer; his lines are often incongruous, and there is not unfrequently a poverty of design, scarcely concealed by the magic of his colouring. Now, I find, in looking over my sketches, that I had selected those scenes where the passages of variety lay in the distance, and, it being a narrow valley, they occupied but a small space; but, though small, it was mostly the place of interest there was the more vivid light or the deeper shade, the change, the life of the picture, and the embellished way of escape out of a defile, that from its closeness would have been otherwise painful. In saying "painful," I seem to point to a defect in this Lynmouth valley. Indeed, it will not suit those who do not love close scenery. That certainly is its character. Yet is it not so close, but that there is room for this kind of variety. I think what I have said upon this point, of interest and variety lying in the smaller portion of the canvass for I here speak even of nature as a picture-may be applicable generally to light. I imagine those scenes will be found most pleasing, where the light is by far the smallest portion, the half-tone by far the larger, and the dark but to show the power of both. Take, for instance, a garden scene-a broad walk, trees on each

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side-all is in broad light, but all is in painful glare, monotony, and sameness of endless detail. Let a shadow pass over it, a broad shadow-or rather a half-tone of light, that shall only show the local colour subdued— now, let a gleam pass across it, and just touch here and there the leafage, and seem to escape behind it-how small is the light, but it has given life to the picture. I cannot but think it a fault of our day that halftone is neglected; light is made a glare, and therefore the very object of light is lost. I believe it was the aim at a mere novelty that first introduced this false principle. It was recommended to Guido, but he failed in it: pictures so painted by him are far from being his best. Rubens erred in it; but modern artists have carried the false principle to the utmost limit; and, in doing so, are liable to a palpable incongruity, an impossibility in nature, which they profess to imitate. For it is the property of light to take away colour; yet in this school, the whitest light, and the most vivid colours, are in the same piece. The old painters, aware of this property of light, in their outof-door scenes, avoid, not to say a white, but even a light sky-especially the Venetian-so that their great depth and power of colour was rendered natural, by the depth of their skies.

Their blues were dark-intensely so-but they were sustained by the general colour. If it be said the Italian skies are notoriously the bluest, Mr Ruskin has, in contradiction, pronounced them to be white; but I believe the fact is, that the great painters considered colour, as a beauty in art, sui generis, and that there was no need of a slavish adherence, in this respect, to nature herself. Indeed, they delighted, even when aiming at the richest colouring, to subdue all glare, and to preserve rather a deep half-tone.

I believe they studied nature through coloured glasses; and we learn from Mrs Merrifield that Gaspar Poussin used a black mirror, which had been bequeathed to him by Bamboccio. The works of some of the Flemish painters evidently show that they used such a mirror.

Have I not, then, reached Lyn

416

Lynmouth Revisited.

mouth yet? I found it in full leafage,
and the little river as clear as amber,
and like it in colour. It is always
beautiful, and variable too-after rain
it assumes more variety of colour, and
of great richness. For most part of
the time of my visit, it was more shal-
low than I had ever seen it. I was
pleased that it was so, though I heard
То
many complaints on that score.
those who sketch close to the water,
it is, in fact, an advantage; for where
the scenery is so confined, it is a great
thing to be able to reach the large
stones in mid-stream, and thus many
new views are obtained; and when
you are pretty close to water, whether
it be a fall, or still, there is really but
very little difference whether the river
be full or not-the falls still retain
sufficient body, and the still pools are
sufficiently wide.

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There are but two parties who know anything of the painter-scenery of Lynmouth the sketchers and the anglers. The common road generally taken by tourists shows not half the beauty of the place. Did Lynmouth appear less beautiful?-certainly not. I easily recognised the chosen spots, and was surprised to find what little change had taken place. I knew individual trees perfectly, and, strange to say, they did not seem to have acThere were quired growth. parently the same branches stretching over the stream.

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In one spot where large ledges of rock shoot out in mid-stream, down whose grooves the river rushes precipitously, (I had, sixteen years ago, sketched the scene,) there was growing out of the edge of the rock a young ash-tree shoot-to my surprise, there it was still, or the old had decayed, and a similar had sprung up. There is something remarkable in this continued identity, year after year, as if the law of mutability had been suspended. Yet there were changes. I remember sketching by a little fall of the river, where further progress was staid by a large mass of projecting rock. I felt sure there must be fine subjects beyond, and in my attempt to reach it from the opposite side by climbing, and holding by the boughs of a tree, one broke off, and I I found now fell into the cauldron. that the whole mass of this ledge of

rock had given way, and opened a
passage, and one of no great difficulty.
Here, as I suspected, were some very
fine studies. The place where I de-
scended is about half a mile, or less,
from Lynmouth, where the road turns,
near to a little bridge across a water-
The
course intercepting the road.
view of this little fall from above is
singularly beautiful; and, being so
much elevated, you see the bed of the
river continuous for a long distance,
I know no place
greatly varied.
where there are such fine studies of
this kind, though they are rarely
taken, being only parts for composi-
tion-the whole not making a view.

Was Lynmouth, then, to me as it
was?-not quite. The interval of years
had not, I trust, been lost. If there
was little change in the place, there
was a change in the mind's eye and
head of the sketcher. Though I re-
cognised nearly all the spots where I
had sketched, I found many new-
some that might have escaped me,
because I had not taken the feeling
with me, at least not in the degree
in which I now possessed it. During
all the years that had intervened, I
had scarcely painted a single view.
I could not but observe that the new
scenes were those more especially
suggestive, leading to the ideal.

A friend who was part of the time with me observed that he had thought some of my pictures, which he had seen, compositions without the warranty of nature; but he now saw that nature supplied me with what I wanted, and acknowledged that the sketches were correct.

It was then I observed that the sketcher may find almost everywhere what he has learnt to look for. The fact is, that it is not whole and large scenery, nor the most beautiful, that best suits the painter, but those parts which he can combine. The real painter looks to nature for form and colour, the elements of his art upon these he must work; and they seldom reach any great magnitude, or are diffused over large space.

Why is it, that generally what we term beautiful scenery was seldom the ground of the old painters? They were not, generally speaking, painters of views; and why not? There the pictures were made for them. They

and all the world had the thing before them to love and to admire it was already done; there was no room for their genius, which is a creative, "not an imitative faculty. The scene for every eye was not theirs. They found that, by their art, they could take nature's best feeling, even from her fragments. It requires not an Alp to portray grandeur. Fifty feet of rock, precipitous or superimpending, will better represent the greatness of danger; for it is a more immediate and solid mass to crush the intruder, and the form may frown with a demon malice. The whole awe of darkness may be felt in a cavern of a few feet space. Indeed, it may be almost said that largeness is not to be obtained on the canvass, by the largeness of whole extensive scenes in nature, but by the continuous lines of near masses: whatever is actually largest in nature the forest and the mountain-in art may with advantage occupy the smallest space. For the best magnitude here is in perspective, and in that aerial tone which, as a veil, half conceals, and thereby makes mysterious, and converts into one azure whole the parts which would, otherwise seen, but break up the great character. The Arabian genii were greatest when dimly seen through smoke and vapour.

Art, indeed, differs from nature in this, as regards the pleasure derived through the eye, that nature allows you many unperspective views at many instant glances, and therefore surprises you, if I may so express it, with a perspective impossibility, of which the judgment at the time is not cognisant; whereas art is bounded by a rule, looks not all around, and comprehends by mind beyond the eye, but is constrained to frame in the conception. It must, therefore, make to itself another power-and this power it finds in form, in light and shade, and colour, all which are in greater intensity and force in the fragmentary parts than in the whole and large scenes. It is a step for the young artist to believe that art and nature are not and should not be the same that they are essentially different, and use their materials differently, have other rules of space and largeness. If art be more limited, its power is greater by

being more condensed,—and its impressions more certain, because more direct, and not under the vague and changeable process of making an idea from many perspectives.

If there be truth in these remarks, we may see why the old masters left untouched those scenes which are the delight of tourists. To copy the scene before them was to put their creative faculty in abeyance. It was only to work after a given pattern-and that pattern imperfect-of a whole which defied the laws of optics. I here speak almost entirely of the Italian masters, both the historical, and more strictly the landscape painters. The Flemish and Dutch schools had mostly another aim, and were more imitative; hence they are more easily understood, but felt with a far less passion. But even these, far from undervaluing the conventional aids of art, applied as much of them as the nature of their subjects would admit.

But the sketcher must not consider himself in his studies when he is out with his portfolio. However he may select, he must be faithful. And this fidelity I have seen painters of great skill often unwisely contemn, become too conventional, both in their drawing and colouring. It requires much practice of the eye, as well as that knowledge which constitutes taste, to frame in as it were pictures, from the large space that fills the eye. Nothing is more useful than to carry in the portfolio a light frame of stiff paper or wood, and to hold it up, so as actually to frame in pictures, and thus to experimentalise upon the design, and see what shiftings of the frame make the best choice. It is an assistance even to the most practised in composition.

Lynmouth is greatly improved of late years in accommodation; many new lodging-houses are built, and there are some residents who have shown great taste in laying out their grounds, and in their buildings. The little pier has been rendered picturesque, by the erection of a small look-out house after a model from Rhodes. There is not much here at any time that would deserve the name of shipping; but a few fishing boats, and such small craft compose well with the little pier. The even

418

Lynmouth Revisited.

ings are very fine, the sun setting
over the Channel; and the Welsh
coast in the distance assumes, occa-
sionally, a very beautiful ultramarine
blue, like a glaze over warm colour-
ing. When the tide comes in, and
the little vessels are afloat, these are
good subjects, the water being of a
gray green, softening the reflections.
I began a sketch when the boats were
aground; but the tide, coming in
rapidly, soon so altered the position
of the vessels that I did not proceed.
When the tide receded, leaving the
vessels aground, they were not in the
same direction in which I had sketched
them; and an artist who was present
remarked, that the beauty of the
scene as a composition was gone, and
This led to
referred to the sketch.
some discussion, as to the cause-Why
should it be less good now, said he,
than when you drew it? I believe I
saw the reason, and pointed it out.
There was a sloop, larger by much
than all the rest, which were indeed,
though having masts, but boats. The
larger vessel was the principal ob-
ject, even more so than the buildings
on the pier, towards which it leaned;
and this leaning was important, for
a union and certain connexion of
parts was everything here, for it made
one of many things. Accordingly,
the smaller boats on each side the
larger vessel inclined their masts
towards it; so that this manifest
uniting, and the belonging of one to
the other, was the pleasing idea,
and invested the whole with a kind
of life and sensitiveness; but in the
alteration, after the receding of the
tide, this communication of the one
with the other was gone, and, on the
contrary, there was left an uncomfort-
able feeling of disunion.

This reasoning was admitted, and
we further discussed the principle in-
volved in the remarks, as applicable
to all scenes and subjects. It is this
correspondence of part with part
which animates the works of nature,
invests them with an ideal sensitive-
ness; and through this fond belief of
their life, our own sensitiveness is
awakened to a sympathy with them.
Whatever inanimate objects we in
our fancy invest with life, through
our own sympathy, we clothe with a
kind of humanity; and thus we look

on trees and rocks, and water, as to a
degree our fellow creatures, in this
great wild world. We love accord-
ingly. Nihil humanum a me alienum
The very winds speak to us
puto.
as human voices, as do the trees in
their whisperings or complainings;
and the waters are ever repeating
their histories and their romances to
As we walked we
our willing ears.
tested the principle, and were believ-
ers in its truth. "Mark," said our
friend, "that bank of fern-how
graceful, how charming, is their bend-
ing, their interchange, their masses
and their hollow shades, their little
home-depths, wherein they grow,
and retire as their home-chambers:
there is throughout the pleasing idea
of a family enjoying their quiet ex-
He enjoys
istence, and all in one small green
world of their own."
nature most worthily, and most in-
tensely, who carries with him this
sense of nature's life, and of a mu-
tuality, a co-partnership with the
blessings of existence with himself.
There are some fine rocks at the base
of the precipitous cliffs-of fine form
and colour; I never went sufficiently
near to sketch them, having no fancy
to be caught by the tide. I have
seen sketches made amongst them
that prove them to afford very good
subjects. Many years ago, while sit-
ting under these cliffs, I heard a
groan; I thought at the time it must
have been a delusion, but on that
evening a man had fallen over the
cliffs. His body was, I think, found
the next day. It fell from Countes-
bury Hill, the road on which is
certainly not sufficiently protected.
And this reminds me to speak of
an alarming occurrence on the road,
about half a mile from Lynmouth.
We were a small party, and had
taken shelter from rain against the
I and
receding part of the rocks cut for
the widening the road.
another were reading a newspaper.
Looking up, we suddenly saw a wo-
man on horseback very near us. The
Our endeavour to
animal started, and was frightened at
the newspaper.
conceal it made the matter worse; the
horse retreated from us, and I think
his hind legs could not have been
many inches from the precipice. It
was a trying moment; one step more

back would have been certain death to both the woman and the horse. We were truly happy when, by a little management, we contrived to get them past us. The road, too, is in these dangerous places very narrow; yet the people venture to drive at a good pace, and without reins, their uncouth and apparently unmanageable teams-neither quite dray nor cart-fearlessly. It is surprising that accidents do not often occur, especially as there is some danger from the falling of masses of stone from above; and even such as the sheep remove with their feet may frighten horses, and precipitate all to sure destruction. There are great rents in huge masses of rock, close to the road, and some apparently are kept firm with but little earth, and seem to threaten a move. I have had some blows on the back occasionally from small stones, cast down by passing sheep, while I have been sketching down by the water; and once so large a one took the corner of my portfolio, that with my best speed I quitted the place. That was some years ago; but I have recently seen not very small fragments fall very near me. I would, therefore, caution the sketcher to choose as safe a position as he can, which he may generally find under some projection of rock. Some of the masses in the bed of the river are of enormous size; and let me here remark upon the fine, bold character these masses in the river possess they are very fine in form, and the beauty and variety in their colouring are quite wondrous. Some are very dark, entirely covered with brown, and some with bright golden moss. But most of them when dry are gray-but one name will not describe that gray, varying as it does from the blue to the green and pink hues. They are commonly in bold relief against the dark water yet themselves show dark, edged by the white foam, where the water, sloping insinuatingly, falls and rushes by them. Here and there, in some deep-shaded, wild, lonely places, they are of gigantic size, and look like huge Titans turned to stone, amid the fragments that had hurled them down. The sketcher may easily imagine himself in the territory of magic. Shall I confess that, in such

places, I do not like to sketch alone? And why not? Why should there be a something like a superstitious awe of the spot, the "severi religio loci?"

Doubtless it is because we do feel contradicting knowledge, in this consciousness of all nature in its own life. and power. Nor can we divest ourselves of a kind of natural poetry-a feeling that the rocks, the wild trees, and the somewhere though unseen "genius loci" all look at us, and we fancy ourselves but under sufferance, and know not how long our presence may be endured. It is surprising how a sense of such presences possesses us when alone. I could often have fancied voices, and mocking ones too, in the waters, and threats that thundered in the ear, and went off as if to fetch and bring whole cataracts down upon me. In such places I do not like to be caught by the dusk of the evening, being quite alone.

The fact is, nature, to a real lover and sketcher, is at all times powerful. Scenes affect him as they affect no other. I have often surprised people by the assertion that I could not live in the midst of fine scenery; it is too powerful, it unnerves one with an unrelaxing watchfulness. The presence of the mountain will not be shaken off. It becomes a nightmare upon the spirits, holds communion with the wild winds and storms, and has fearful dealings I would not dream of in the dark, howling, dismal nights. Nor, when the sombre light of a melancholy day just obscures the clouds that have been gathering round it, would I in imagination draw the curtain to behold the unearthly drama.

There is something terrific in the sound of unseen rushing water. When all else is still in the dark night, and you are uncertain of the path, and feel the danger that a false footing may plunge you into an abyss of waters, that seem to cry out and roar for a victim, have you not felt both fear and shame? Recently I experienced this in Lynmouth, having in the darkness lost my way. To the poet and the painter, here is a source of the sublime. Plunge your pencil boldly into this eclipse, and work into it a few dim lights, formless and undefined-the obscure will be of a grand mystery. The night-darkness

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