

396 INDEX. 



Egyptian and Greek ornaments, 301. 



Egyptians did not use colour with a religious view, 95. 



cramped by rules, 207. 

 Elongated form marks the decay of art, 181, 182, 183. 

 Enamel glass, 34. 



Enameling known to the Persians, 33. 

 England, Bright colours in, formerly, 23, 55. 

 Colours of glass in, bright, 25. 

 "Quiet colour" of, 1,25. 

 English architectural designs, Improvement in, 354. 



artisans only want good instruction, 192, 356. 

 not impeded by mannerism in art, 357. 

 their nicety of hand, 357. 

 climate not the reason of our choice of dull colours, 23. 

 fond of ornament, as of flowers, 356. 

 formerly had bright colours in dresses and bulidings, 23. 

 not deficient in love for ornament, 356. 



working classes have not the opportunity of visiting objects of taste 

 enjoyed on the Continent, 193. 

 Entablatures. Broken, 340. 



Eskimos, if they coloured by a theory, might be nearly limited to white, 12. 

 Etruscan ash-chests, Colouring on the, 96, 282. 

 Etruscans appreciated art, 233. 



copied the Greeks, 183, 233, 275, 282, 306. 

 used heads of horses in stone as ornaments, 228. 

 Evergreens for sheltering walks, 347. 

 Exclusive admiration for one style, 59. 

 Eye, the judge of colour, 4, 10. 

 Accuracy of, 246. 



may be assisted in judging of harmony of colour, 4. 

 if fatigued by looking at one colour, 103, 104. 



Facts, not reasons, 7. 



required, not theories, 6, 8, 60. 

 Field's chromatic equivalents, 64, 147. 

 Figures to be good in architecture and for ornament, 236. 



of different sizes in designs, 229. 

 Fillet of yellow (or white) required between red and blue, 9, 94. 

 Flaxman, 218, 242. (And in Addenda.) 



not properly appreciated by us, 218. 

 Flemish glass windows, 25. 

 Flowers adapted for the " dressed garden," list of, 379, 389. 



Love of, amongst the poor, 356. 



Colours of, not to be necessarily the same in ornamentation, 19. 



in a garden have a different effect from flat colours, 19, 100, 106. 



injured by being in flower-pots of bright colours, 100. 



Proper to study, for ornamentation, 227. 



if copied, must have their natural colours in architecture, 225. 



Rare, not always the most beautiful, 375, 378. 



The spirit of. Effect of, for ornamentation, 224, 225, 227. 



with scroll work, or with architectural designs. Faulty union of, 264. 

 Flowing lines, 1 74. 



Fontainebleau. Papers with the Chasse de, 264. 

 Foreigners, Works of, admired, 218. 



not always faultless, 355. 

 Form, a great element of beauty in a garden, 371, 372. 

 France, Byzantine churches in, 133. ^ 



Doge Orseolo I. settled in, 33. 



The earliest specimens of painted glass windows found in, 28. 



