Papers Read at the Royal Institute of British ArchitectsThe Institute, 1865 |
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Side 4
... passing though a time of great depression , I have no doubt that the step was eminently salutary . I proceed further , and say that , even now , when architecture occupies in every way a very different position from what it did in the ...
... passing though a time of great depression , I have no doubt that the step was eminently salutary . I proceed further , and say that , even now , when architecture occupies in every way a very different position from what it did in the ...
Side 6
... passed over the First Commissioner , and instead created an anomalous semi - minister , under the ambiguous name of Vice - President of the Committee of Council , to divide his time between high art at South Kensington , and parochial ...
... passed over the First Commissioner , and instead created an anomalous semi - minister , under the ambiguous name of Vice - President of the Committee of Council , to divide his time between high art at South Kensington , and parochial ...
Side 9
... passed over those buildings , the curious traveller from the antipodes may visit London , not to sit upon the broken ... passing in London , as well as elsewhere , I should have still more to say , which , however , I think it is better ...
... passed over those buildings , the curious traveller from the antipodes may visit London , not to sit upon the broken ... passing in London , as well as elsewhere , I should have still more to say , which , however , I think it is better ...
Side 11
... passed three years in the schools of the Royal Academy . It was a very happy period of his life . He formed connections and associations then , and he believed gained knowledge in art from being connected with young men of that period ...
... passed three years in the schools of the Royal Academy . It was a very happy period of his life . He formed connections and associations then , and he believed gained knowledge in art from being connected with young men of that period ...
Side 16
... passed away , and the age of iron has set in . The remembrance of the past will be , and must be , crushed out of us ... passing , good reason for my assertion . Do I therefore ignore the use of iron , and say that it is incapable of ...
... passed away , and the age of iron has set in . The remembrance of the past will be , and must be , crushed out of us ... passing , good reason for my assertion . Do I therefore ignore the use of iron , and say that it is incapable of ...
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Abbey aisles altar ancient ancient lights angle appears apse apsis Aqua Aqua Marcia aqueduct arcade arches architects architecture artist Ashpitel beauty British Architects building Caen called carried Cathedral centre century chancel chapels character choir church clerestory cloister colour construction decoration drawing easement effect English erected evidence examination feet foliage French Frontinus G. E. STREET Gothic ground hypethral inches Institute of British interesting iron Kilkenny light and air Lincoln Cathedral London Lord Chancellor marble material Medieval monuments mouldings nature nave obstruction opinion original ornament painting paper Papworth present principle Professor Donaldson Professor Kerr Pudsey purpose question remains remarks restoration right of light Roman Romanesque Rome roof sculpture shew side spires stone style supply surface temple thought tiles tower transept triforium vaulted Vitruvius vote of thanks walls window
Populære avsnitt
Side 7 - If a straight line touch a circle, and from the point of contact a straight line be drawn at right angles to the touching line, the centre of the circle shall be in that line.
Side 36 - tis a thing impossible to frame Conceptions equal to the soul's desires, And the most difficult of tasks to keep Heights which the soul is competent to gain.
Side 10 - Architecture certainly possesses many principles in common with Poetry and Painting. Among those which may be reckoned as the first, is, that of affecting the imagination by means of association of ideas.
Side 2 - In obtuse-angled triangles, if a perpendicular be drawn from either of the acute angles to the opposite side produced, the square on the side subtending the obtuse angle, is greater than the squares on the sides containing the obtuse angle, by twice the rectangle contained by the side...
Side 2 - THE angles at the base of an isosceles triangle are equal to one another : and, if the equal sides be produced, the angles upon the other side of the base shall be equal.
Side 7 - IF a straight line be drawn parallel to one of the sides of a triangle, it shall cut the other sides, or those produced, proportionally; and if the sides, or the sides produced, be cut proportionally, the straight line which joins the points of section shall be parallel to the remaining side of the triangle...
Side 165 - That, when the access and use of light to and for any dwelling-house, workshop, or other building, shall have been actually enjoyed therewith for the full period of twenty years without interruption, the right thereto shall be deemed absolute and indefeasible...
Side 7 - To describe an isosceles triangle, having each of the angles at the base double of the third angle.
Side 170 - ... what principle can it be said that a person, by endeavouring to extend a right, must be held to have abandoned it ; when, so far from manifesting any such intention, he evinces his determination to retain it, and to acquire something beyond it? If under such circumstances abandonment of the right cannot be assumed, as little can it be said that it is a cause of forfeiture.
Side 10 - ... is, that of affecting the imagination by means of association of ideas. Thus, for instance, as we have naturally a veneration for antiquity, whatever building brings to our remembrance ancient customs and manners, such as the castles of the Barons of ancient chivalry, is sure to give this delight. Hence it is that towers and battlements...