| Tate Gallery - 1900 - 254 стор.
...writing to a friend on attending Bonington's funeral, remarks, " I have never known in my own time an early death, of talent SO promising, and so rapidly and obviously improving."* Bonington exhibited only four pictures at the Royal Academy : " A Scene on the French Coast," in 1827... | |
| Tate Gallery - 1908 - 388 стор.
...writing to a friend on attending Remington's funeral, remarks, " I have never known in my own time an early death, of talent so promising, and so rapidly and obviously improving."* Bonington exhibited only four pictures at the Royal Academy : " A Scene on the French Coast," in 1827... | |
| 1913 - 568 стор.
...fatally verified ; the last duties have been paid to him this day. Except hi the case of Mr. Harlowe I have never known In my own time the early death...morning's conversation, his mind seemed expanding every way and ripening into full maturity of taste and elevated judgment, with that generous ambition... | |
| Hugh Stokes - 1922 - 202 стор.
...months earlier. " Your sad presage has been too fatally verified," wrote Lawrence to Mrs. Forster. " The last duties have just been paid to the lamented...which makes confinement to lesser departments in the arts painfully irksome and annoying." More touching as an epitaph was Delacroix's pathetic sentence,... | |
| Freeman - 1924 - 416 стор.
...twenty-seventh year. Sir Thomas Lawrence said he had never known, except in the case of George Harlow, "the early death of talent so promising, and so rapidly and obviously improving." The young artist whom the French called "our Bonington," was characteristically English in self and... | |
| Thomas Banks - 1938 - 350 стор.
...duties having been paid to the lamented Mr Bonington this day — Except in the case of Mr Harlowe, I have never known in my own time, the early death...direction of his studies, and from remembrance of a mornings conversation, his mind seem'd expanding every way, and ripening into full maturity of Taste... | |
| 1920 - 628 стор.
...twenty-seventh year. Sir Thomas Lawrence said he had never known, except in the case of George Harlow, "the early death of talent so promising, and so rapidly and obviously improving." The young artist whom the French called "our Bonington," was characteristically English in self and... | |
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