Notes and Queries, Number 09, December 29, 1849 by Various
page 22 of 61 (36%)
page 22 of 61 (36%)
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Architecture with the Modern_. Dufresnoy, also, who divided his time
between poetry and painting, and whose work on the latter art was rendered popular in this country by Dryden's translation, uses the term "_Gothique_" in a bad sense. But it was a strange misapplication of the term to use it for the pointed style, in contradistinction to the circular, formerly called Saxon, now Norman, Romanesque, &c. These latter styles, like Lombardic, Italian, and the Byzantine, of course belong more to the Gothic period than the light and elegant structures of the pointed order which succeeded them. Felibien, the French author of the _Lives of Architects_, divides Gothic architecture into two distinct kinds--the _massive_ and the _light_; and as the latter superseded the former, the term Gothic, which had been originally applied to both kinds, seems to have been restricted improperly to the latter only. As there is now, happily, no fear of the word being understood in a bad sense, there seems to be no longer any objection to the use of it in a good one, whatever terms may be used to discriminate all the varieties of the style observable either at home or abroad. J.I. Trinity College, Oxford. * * * * * {135} DR. BURNEY'S MUSICAL WORKS. Mr. Editor,--On pp. 63. and 78. of your columns inquiry is made for Burney's _Treatise on Music_ (not his _History_). Before correspondents trouble you with their wants, I think they should be certain that the books they inquire for have existence. Dr. Burney never published, or |
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