On the Old Road, Vol. 2 (of 2), by 
John Ruskin 
 
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Title: On the Old Road, Vol. 2 (of 2) A Collection of Miscellaneous 
Essays and Articles on Art and Literature 
Author: John Ruskin 
Release Date: April 30, 2007 [EBook #21263] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ON THE 
OLD ROAD, VOL. 2 (OF 2) *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Janet Blenkinship and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
Library Edition 
THE COMPLETE WORKS
OF 
JOHN RUSKIN 
ON THE OLD ROAD VOLUMES I-II 
NATIONAL LIBRARY ASSOCIATION NEW YORK CHICAGO 
 
ON THE OLD ROAD. 
A COLLECTION OF MISCELLANEOUS ESSAYS AND ARTICLES ON 
ART AND LITERATURE. 
PUBLISHED 1834-1885. 
VOL. II. 
 
CONTENTS OF VOL. II. 
PAGE 
PICTURE GALLERIES. 
PARLIAMENTARY EVIDENCE:-- NATIONAL GALLERY SITE 
COMMISSION. 1857 3 SELECT COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC 
INSTITUTIONS. 1860 25 THE ROYAL ACADEMY COMMISSION 
50 A MUSEUM OR PICTURE GALLERY 71 
MINOR WRITINGS UPON ART. 
THE CAVALLI MONUMENTS, VERONA. 1872 89 VERONA AND 
ITS RIVERS (WITH CATALOGUE). 1870 99 CHRISTIAN ART 
AND SYMBOLISM. 1872 118 ART SCHOOLS OF MEDIÆVAL 
CHRISTENDOM. 1876 121 THE EXTENSION OF RAILWAYS. 
1876 125 THE STUDY OF BEAUTY. 1883 132
NOTES ON NATURAL SCIENCE. 
THE COLOR OF THE RHINE. 1834 141 THE STRATA OF MONT 
BLANC. 1834 143 THE INDURATION OF SANDSTONE. 1836 145 
THE TEMPERATURE OF SPRING AND RIVER WATER. 1836. 148 
METEOROLOGY. 1839 153 TREE TWIGS. 1861 158 STRATIFIED 
ALPS OF SAVOY. 1863 162 INTELLECTUAL CONCEPTION AND 
ANIMATED LIFE. 1871 168 
LITERATURE. 
FICTION--FAIR AND FOUL. 1880-81 175 FAIRY STORIES. 1868 
290 
ECONOMY. 
HOME, AND ITS ECONOMIES. 1873 299 USURY. A REPLY AND 
A REJOINDER. 1880 314 USURY. A PREFACE. 1885 340 
THEOLOGY. 
NOTES ON THE CONSTRUCTION OF SHEEPFOLDS. 1851 347 
THE LORD'S PRAYER AND THE CHURCH. 1879-81. (Letters and 
Epilogue.) 382 THE NATURE AND AUTHORITY OF MIRACLE. 
1873 418 
AN OXFORD LECTURE. 1878 429 
* * * * * 
PICTURE GALLERIES: 
THEIR FUNCTIONS AND FORMATION. 
A. PARLIAMENTARY EVIDENCE. 
NATIONAL GALLERY SITE COMMISSION 1857. SELECT 
COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS 1860. THE ROYAL 
ACADEMY COMMISSION 1863.
B. LETTERS ON A MUSEUM OR PICTURE GALLERY. 
(Art Journal, June and August, 1880.) 
* * * * * 
PICTURE GALLERIES--THEIR FUNCTIONS AND FORMATION. 
THE NATIONAL GALLERY SITE COMMISSION.[1] 
Evidence of John Ruskin, Monday, April 6, 1857. 
114. Chairman. Has your attention been turned to the desirableness of 
uniting sculpture with painting under the same roof?--Yes. 
What is your opinion on the subject?--I think it almost essential that 
they should be united, if a National Gallery is to be of service in 
teaching the course of art. 
Sculpture of all kinds, or only ancient sculpture?--Of all kinds. 
Do you think that the sculpture in the British Museum should be in the 
same building with the pictures in the National Gallery, that is to say, 
making an application of your principle to that particular case?--Yes, 
certainly; I think so for several reasons--chiefly because I think the 
taste of the nation can only be rightly directed by having always 
sculpture and painting visible together. Many of the highest and best 
points of painting, I think, can only be discerned after some discipline 
of the eye by sculpture. That is one very essential reason. I think that 
after looking at sculpture one feels the grace of composition infinitely 
more, and one also feels how that grace of composition was reached by 
the painter. 
Do you consider that if works of sculpture and works of painting were 
placed in the same gallery, the same light would be useful for both of 
them?--I understood your question only to refer to their collection 
under the same roof. I should be sorry to see them in the same room. 
You would not mix them up in the way in which they are mixed up in
the Florentine Gallery, for instance?--Not at all. I think, on the contrary, 
that the one diverts the mind from the other, and that, although the one 
is an admirable discipline, you should take some time for the 
examination of sculpture, and pass afterwards into the painting room, 
and so on. You should not be disturbed while looking at paintings by 
the whiteness of the sculpture. 
You do not then approve, for example, of the way in which the famous 
room, the Tribune, at Florence, is arranged?--No; I think it is merely 
arranged for show--for showing how many rich things can be got 
together. 
115. Mr. Cockerell. Then you do not regard sculpture as    
    
		
	
	
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