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Gentleman's Magazine 1843 part 2 p.466
ought to be capable of rendering. It is disgraceful to omit
them; but it is no very great credit to observe them. I have
indeed proved that they have been neglected, and
disgracefully so, by those men who are commonly considered
the fathers of art; but, in showing that they have been
observed by Turner, I have only proved him to be
above other men in knowledge of truth, I have not
given any conception of his own positive rank as a painter
of nature. but it stands to reason, that the men who, in
broad, simple, and demonstrable matters are perpetually
violating the truth, will not be particularly accurate or
careful in carrying out delicate and refined undemonstrable
matters; and it stands equally to reason, that the man who,
as far as argument or demonstration can go, is found
invariably truthful, will, in all probability, be truthful
to the last line, and shadow of a line. And such is, indeed,
the case with every touch of this consummate artist; the
essential excellence - all that constitutes the real and
exceeding value of his works, is beyond and above
expression: it is a truth inherent in every line, and
breathing in every hue, to delicate and exquisite to admit
of any kind of proof, nor to be ascertained except by the
highest of tests - the keen feeling attained by extended
knowledge and long study. Two lines are laid on canvass; one
is right and another wrong. There is no difference between
them appreciable by the ordinary eye - one which can be
pointed out, if it is not seen. One person feels it; another
does not; but the feeling or sight of the one can by no
words be communicated to the other: it would be unjust if it
could, for that feeling and sight have been the reward of
years of labour. And there is, indeed, nothing in Turner -
not one dot nor line - whose meaning can be understood
without knowledge; becasue he never aims at sensual
impressions, but at the deep final truth, which only
meditation can discover, and only experience recognize.
There is nothing done or omitted by him, which does not
imply such a comparison of ends, such rejection of the least
worthy, (as far as they are incompatible with the rest,)
such careful selection and arrangement of all that can be
united, as can only be enjoyed by minds capable of going
through the same process, and discovering the reasons for
the choice. And, as there is nothing in his works which can
be enjoyed without knowledge, so there is nothing in them
which knowledge will not enable us to enjoy. There is no
test of our acquaintance with Nature so absolute and
unfailing as the degree of admiration we feel for Turner's
painting. Precisely as we are shallow in our knowledge,
vulgar in our feelings, and contracted in our views or
principles, will the works of this artist be stumbling
blocks or foolishness to us; precisely in the degree in
which we are familiar with Nature, constant in our
understanding of her, will they expand before our eyes into
glory and beauty. In every new insight which we obtain into
the works of God, in every new idea which we receive from
his creation, we shall find ourselves possessed of an
interpretation and a guide to something in Turner's works
which we had not before understood. We may range over Europe
from shore to shore; and from every rock that we tread upon,
every sky that passes over our heads, every form of local
vegetation or of soil, we shall receive fresh illustration
of his principles - fresh confirmation of his facts. We
shall feel, wherever we go, that he has been there before us
- whatever we see, that he has seen and seized before us;
and we shall at last cease the investigation, with a
well-grounded trust, that whatever we have been unable to
account for, and what we still dislike in his works, has
reason for it, and foundation like the rest; and that, even
where he has failed or erred, there is a beauty in the
failure which none are able to equal, and a dignity in error
which none are worthy to reprove. There has been a marked
and constant progress in his mind; he has not, like some few
artists, been without childhood; his course of study has
been as evident as it has been swiftly progressive, and in
different stages of the struggle, sometimes one order of
truth, sometimes another, has been aimed at or omitted. But
from the beginning to the present height of his career he
has never sacrificed a greater truth to a less. As he
advanced, the previous knowledge or attainment was absorbed
in what succeeded, or abandoned without a gain; and his
present works present the sum and perfection of his
accumulated knowledge, delivered with the impatience and
passion of one who feels too much, and has too little time
to say it in, to pause for expression or ponder over his
syllables. There is in them the obscurity, but the truth of
prophecy; the instinctive and burning language, which would
express less if it uttered more, which is indistinct only by
its fulness, and dark with its abundant meaning. He feels
now, with long-trained vividness and keenness of
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