John Ruskin, Victorian England\'s greatest writer on art and literature, believed himself an adopted son of Venice, and his feelings for this city are exquisitely expressed in The Stones of Venice.
I shall give him stones, and bricks and straw, chisels and trowels and the ground, and then ask.
This was Ruskin\'s war cry as he entered the now almost forgotten Battle of the Styles on the side against the school which has conducted men\'s inventive and constructional faculties from the Grand Canal to Gower Street.
But first the reader must know the difference between right and wrong; he must find out for himself the best way of doing everything.
Destroy its claims to admiration there, and it can assert them nowhere else.
It is in Venice, and in Venice only, that effectual blows can be struck at this pestilent art of the Renaissance.
It is a book for the lover of architecture, the lover of Venice, the lover of lost causes, and, perhaps above all, for the lover of fine writing.
Much that was superfluous has been omitted; what remains is the essence of a now very readable and portable book.
For fifty years, The Stones of Venice was read by all who went there and thousands who could not; the sightseers whom the city captivates today seldom have its greatest guidebook with them.
It is the aim of this new edition to put a fascinating book within reach of travelers--active or armchair--with limited resources of time.
I shall give him stones, and bricks and straw, chisels and trowels and the ground, and then ask him to build, only helping him if I find him puzzled.
Unhappily, both these exciting objectives were attained only after the expenditure of nearly half-a-million words; glorious words, but too many.
This was Ruskin\'s war cry as he entered the now almost forgotten Battle of the Styles on the side against the school which has conducted men\'s inventive and constructional faculties from the Grand Canal to Gower Street.
But first the reader must know the difference between right and wrong; he must find out for himself the best way of doing everything.
Destroy its claims to admiration there, and it can assert them nowhere else.
It is in Venice, and in Venice only, that effectual blows can be struck at this pestilent art of the Renaissance.
As Ruskin wrote in 1851, Thank God I am here, it is a Paradise of Cities.
This edition contains Ruskin\'s famous essay The Nature of Gothic, a marvelously descriptive tour of Venice before its postwar restoration.
John Ruskin, Victorian England\'s greatest writer on art and literature, believed himself an adopted son of Venice, and his feelings for this city are exquisitely expressed in The Stones of Venice