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A guide to the literature of æsthetics,

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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1890 edition. Excerpt: ... 22-23. Uebersetzung von Cellini. Canova, A. The Works of Antonio Canova in Sculpture and Modeling, engraved in Outline by H. Moses. With a Memoir by Count Cicognara, and Descriptive Notes. Lond.: 1876. Dietrichson, L. Antinoos; eine kunstarchaolOgische Untersuchung. Christiania: 1884. Flaxman, John. Lectures on Sculpture. 2ded. Lond.: 1838. Fortnum, C. D. E. Bronzes. South Kensington Museum Art Handbooks. Lond.: 1877. Grimm, H. Essays. Hanover: 1859. P. 41-45 Die Venus von Milo; 177-260 Rafael und Michelangelo. Kekule, Reinhard, ed.. Griechische Thonfiguren aus Tanagra. Stuttg.: 1878. Lee, Mrs. Hannah F. Familiar Sketches of Sculpture and Sculptors. 2 v. Bost.: 1854. Liibke, W. History of Sculpture. Trans. by F. E. Bunnett. 2 v. Lond.: 1872. Michaelis, A. Ancient Marbles in Great Britain. Trans. from the German by C. A. M. Fernell. Camb.: 1882. Mitchell, Lucy M. A History of Ancient Sculpture. N. Y.: 1883. Mothes, O. Geschichte der Baukunst und Bildhauerei Venedigs. Leipz.: 1859. Murray, A. S. History of Greek Sculpture. 2 v. Lond.: 1880-83. Overbeck, J. Geschichte der griechischen Plastik. Leipzig: i857, --Same. 3e umgearb. u. verm. Aufl. 2 v. Leipzig: 1881--2. Perkins, Charles C. Historical Handbook of Italian Sculpture. N. Y.: 1883.--Tuscan Sculptors: Their Lives, Works and Times; with Illustrations from Original Drawings and Photographs. 2 v. Lond.: 1864. Perry, W. C. Greek and Roman Sculpture. Lond.: 1882. Plon, E. Thorwaldsen: His Life and Works. Trans. by I. M. Luyster. Illust. 2d Am. ed. Boston: 1874. Ruskin, John. Aratra Pentelici: Six Lectures on the Elements of Sculpture delivered at Oxford, 1870. Oxford: 1872. Rydberg, Victor. Roman Days. Trans. by A. C. Clark. 2d ed. N. Y.: 1887. P. 1-208 Sculpture. Semper, H. Uebersicht..

116 pages, Hardcover

First published September 12, 2013

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About the author

Charles Mills Gayley

169 books3 followers
Charles Mills Gayley (February 22, 1858 – July 25, 1932) was a professor of English, the Classics, and Academic Dean of the University of California at Berkeley between the fall of 1889 and July 1932.

Gayley was born in Shanghai to Irish-born American Presbyterian missionaries. In 1862, Charles' father (Rev. Samuel Rankin Gayley) contracted cholera and died. Young Gayley's father was only 34 when he was buried on a hill overlooking the Straits of Pe-chi-li, China. Gayley soon moved to Ireland with his mother, Sarah, where he was educated at Blackheath school and the Royal Belfast Academical Institution. Charles' stepfather, Rev. Andrew Brown, was pastor of the Presbyterian church at Hollymount, Ireland. Gayley earned his Doctorate at the University of Michigan and briefly served there as an Assistant Professor of English and Latin. While at Michigan, Gayley: (a) composed the Michigan college songs, The Yellow and Blue and Laudes atque Carmina; (b) developed a love of Shakespeare and poetry; (c) studied one year abroad at the University of Giessen, Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany (focusing on German, medieval European history, and Modern French History); and (c) accepted his call (within ten minutes of receiving it) to teach in California.

At the age of nine, Gayley was sent to Blackheath Proprietary School in London to be schooled, and at sixteen he studied at the Royal Belfast Academical Institution, Belfast.[1] He excelled in both English and the classics, and graduated with honours, winning a place at Cambridge University. Gayley planned to study to be a Presbyterian clergyman, like his father and stepfather. The arrival of his great-uncle changed his aspirations, declaring that Charles, as an American citizen, should be educated in the United States. With his mother eventually giving her approval, Gayley left Ireland for the University of Michigan, there to study law. Gayley again excelled in both Latin and Greek, but now he developed a passion for Shakespeare. After attending a performance of Romeo and Juliet, Gayley found the work moved him in a way it had not managed previously, and he took to reading and re-reading the complete works and attending performance after performance. His energies and his abilities were such that in 1878 he was offered the position as Principal at the high school in Muskegon. Within two years Gayley returned to the University of Michigan as a Latin teacher.

In 1904, Gayley, along with Clement Calhoun Young, published The Principles and Progress of English Poetry. The book was published and distributed by the Macmillan Company. In his honor, streets on the UC Berkeley and UC Los Angeles campuses are named after him.

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