40& ] INDEX. 



Sculpture not to go out of its province and invade that of painting, 210. 



Secondaries, should be less striking in a pattern than the primaries, 94. 



Sevres porcelain, often bad in form, proportion, and design, 255, 258. 



Ships not to be introduced into sculpture, 210. 



Siena cathedral, Library of, 108, 269. 



Silence, Harpocrates, god of, 8 (note). 



Silver plate, Designs for, 228, 229. 



Sky being blue, Theory connected with the, 1 1. 



Slate colour in combination, 124. 



Snake coiled round a vase, 222. 



Sophocles and Euripides, Personages described by, 323. 



Sounds heard readily without our having to understand the nature of quick 



and slow vibrations, 6. 

 South Kensington Museum, 192, 195. 

 Sea islanders, Carving of, 220. 

 Spanish painters, 248. 

 Spires, their sides and points, 338, 339, 340. 



in Germany, 340. 

 Statues on columns, 238. 



called " Acroliths," with marble face, hands, and feet, coloured, 281. 

 in architecture, 225, 286, 288. 

 Colouring of, by the Greeks, 277, 284. 

 at first one uniform colour, 276, 284. 

 Gilding of, 214, 283. 

 naked, of Venus, The earliest, 285. 

 placed too high to be seen, 238. 

 of painted gypsum, 220. 

 Wooden, coloured, of Seville, 282. 

 Stone and wood. Union of, 219. 

 Stoneware of the Germans, 181. 

 String courses. Suitableness of, 342. 

 Stuart period. Forms of the, 348. 

 Stucco imitating stone, 342, 351. 

 " Style" in architecture. Gradual formation of, 353. 

 Styles arising out of a predecessor, 302, 353. 

 Subjects from common life, 176. 

 Suger, of St. Denis, in 1152, 28. 

 Switzerland, Views in, as a picture, 18. 

 Sydenham palace, Berlin vase in, 181. 



Courts of, 1 09. 

 Symmetry and proportion, 203. 



Tapestry, Use of, 267. 



Taste not to be spread merely by patronage of the great, 167, 356. 



vitiated by studying bad models, 178. 



should pervade all classes, i69, 172. 

 be general, 167, 169, 265. 



promotes the sale of goods, 171. 



Objects of good, not within the reach of the wealthy alone, 169, 170, 358. 



should be cultivated in England, 168. 



not to be a mere luxury, 172. 



The public want, 175. 



Hopeless to expect to find, in manufacturers, if purchasers do not possess 

 it, 179. 



not to be established by rules, 208. 



may be universal, and of all ages, 207. 



Want of, in our houses, 168. 



general, 167, 169, 172, 175, 355, 360. 



