| Lee Foster Hartman, Frederick Lewis Allen - 1913 - 1090 pagine
...art can but transmute; r ; Invention is not absolute; 5 ï i I I i "Things fail to spring from naught rhAo 4 Z tdD v TVq U X .Ze ,y $l%v > ' gwU D 9 ...{ $ #(X , Ȇ < l($b G61:m ^ i] ... \ \2Q = J j e it has faded out of mind." . . . The abbot: "It shall not be hid! I'll trace it." But he never did.... | |
| Henry Mills Alden, Lee Foster Hartman, Frederick Lewis Allen, Thomas Bucklin Wells - 1913 - 1212 pagine
...Replied: "Nay; art can but transmute; Invention is not absolute; "Things fail to spring from naught at call, And art-beginnings most of all. " He did...him. "His name? 'Twas of some common kind, And now it has faded out of mind." . . . The abbot: "It shall not be hid! I'll trace it." But he never did.... | |
| Verlyn Klinkenborg, Herbert Cahoon, Pierpont Morgan Library - 1981 - 332 pagine
...cause the chalk to run, thus adding their own delicate tracery. Hardy concludes that the abbey mason "did but what all artists do,/ Wait upon nature for his cue." This poem was first published in Harper's Monthly Magazine in December 1912. Like the manuscript of... | |
| Verlyn Klinkenborg, Herbert Cahoon, Pierpont Morgan Library - 1981 - 332 pagine
...cause the chalk to run, thus adding their own delicate tracery. Hardy concludes that the abbey mason “did but what all artists do,! Wait upon nature for his cue. “ This poem was first published in Harper's Monthly Magazine in December 1912. Like the manuscript... | |
| Thomas Hardy - 2006 - 294 pagine
...Had more perceptions than he taught, Replied: "Nay; art can but transmute; Invention is not absolute; "Things fail to spring from nought at call, And art-beginnings most of all. "He did but what all artists do, 267 Wait upon Nature for his cue." - "Had you been here to tell them so Lord Abbot, sixty years ago,... | |
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