Mysterious Wisdom (67 page)

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Authors: Rachel Campbell-Johnston

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3
L709
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L809
5
L811
6
L752
7
L&L146
8
L770
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L777
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L776
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L775
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L797
13
L808
14
L817
15
L818
16
AHP153
17
L658
18
Art Journal
, 1 June 1866
19
L&L149
20
AHP
21
L&L149
22
L690 note 1
23
L690
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L698
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L699
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L696
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L970
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L737
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L704
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L&L91
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L&L152
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L764
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L904
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L913
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L965
36
Ibid.

Chapter 22: The Lonely Tower

1
L685
2
L&L155
3
Ibid.
4
Ibid.
5
Ibid.
6
L&L157
7
L&L158
8
L970
9
L964
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L963
11
L820
12
L974
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L60
14
L974
15
Letter to Martin Hardie (V&A)
16
L&L100
17
Letter to Sir Frank Short, 12 November 1920 (Ashmolean)
18
Linnell,
Blake, Palmer, Linnell and Co.
, p. 345
19
Ibid.
20
AHP
21
L935
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L939
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L1015
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This memoir was published in 1897
25
Philip Gilbert Hamerton,
An Autobiography and a Memoir by his wife
, London 1897, p. 441
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L928
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L954
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L1035
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L967
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L919
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L951
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L966
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L1058
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L664
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L990
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L1052
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L142
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L956
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L932
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L978
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L941
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Ibid.
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L969
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L1038
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Ibid.
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Stirling (ed.),
The Richmond Papers
, p. 88
47
L1055
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L1058
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L944
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L1042
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L1052
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L1077
53
John 11:25, the Bible
54
William Butler Yeats,
The Phases of the Moon

Chapter 23: The Legacy

1
AHP
2
Lister,
Calvert
, p. 58
3
Grigson,
The Visionary Years
, p. 96
4
Stephens in
Athenaeum
, 16 April 1881
5
The Times
, 13 April 1881
6
The Spectator
, 16 April 1881
7
L1073
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L700
9
L&L18
10
Letters to Martin Hardie (V&A)
11
Eric Maclagan in a letter dated 2 November 1926 to A. H. Palmer
12
‘Samuel Palmer: Being', a lecture delivered to the Print Collectors' Club on 16 November 1927, Print Collectors' Club, London, 1928, p. 47
13
Quoted in foreword to the catalogue
The English Vision
, an exhibition at William Weston Gallery, London, 1973
14
Malcolm Yorke,
The Spirit of Place
, p. 89
15
Kenneth Clark,
Landscape into Art
, p. 71
16
Tom Keating,
The Fake's Progress
, p. 182
17
Ibid., p. 183
18
L703
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L1073
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L923
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L537

A page from Samuel Palmer's 1824 sketchbook. Palmer studies the way that light streams through shadowing foliage. He frames a single figure within a painted Gothic frame. Accompanying notes record precise visual details from the ‘very brilliant horizon' to the textures and tones of the monk's bald head: ‘rather red', ‘globular', ‘polished & smooth'.

Early Morning
(1825). Palmer captures the quiet harmony of dawn in this delicate sepia. Doves call from the boughs of the crinkle-leaved oaks. A hare picks its solitary way up the shadow-streaked path.

William Blake and John Varley
(1821) by John Linnell. The ebullient Varley is sketched in the middle of animated conversation; Blake is leaning back with an expression of benign detachment. Varley was probably trying to convince Blake of his astrological theories.

Portrait of an Artist
(1829). When Richmond titled this miniature likeness of Samuel Palmer it was an act of affirmation, of faith in the future career of his friend who in Shoreham would sometimes don archaic robes like these.

Oak Trees in Lullingstone Park
(1828). For Palmer, trees were far more than mere leafy adornments of a picturesque composition. They seemed like people: each with an individual personality and look. He saw in these oaks the noble descendents of the great Celtic giants which had once sheltered the valley of Shoreham, and he tried to evoke their monumental splendour as surely as Milton, in his poetry, does.

Coming from Evening Church
(1830). This image distils the essence of Palmer's convictions. The natural and spiritual merge as villagers process home from their ivy-clad chapel beneath trees which soar upwards like the Gothic arches of a church. The light of the moon falls, a benediction from above.

In a Shoreham Garden
(
c.
1830). The extraordinary pictures which Palmer kept secret in his ‘Curiosity Portfolio' are now considered among his finest paintings. They are works of splendour. Here nature runs riot in a profusion of pale apple blossom.

The Magic Apple Tree
(
c.
1830). Another of the works which were shown only to close friends, this painting glows as bright as an autumn bonfire. Palmer exults in the harvest's rich gifts. Colour becomes a pure sensual pleasure.

Yellow Twilight
(
c.
1830). ‘In a half-lit room the drawing seems luminescent; both startling and tender,' wrote Palmer scholar Geoffrey Grigson, who counted it among the artist's very greatest works. ‘In few things painted by an English artist is vision held so securely and with such simplicity and such delicate, grave concentration.'

The Harvest Moon
(1833). Villagers harvest together through the star-spangled night, gathering in the natural bounty of the land. Palmer used oil for this painting and submitted it (along with
Th e Gleaning Field
) to the Royal Academy. It remained unsold.

Cypresses at the Villa d'Este
(1838). Ruskin may well have been thinking of this study when he wrote that Palmer's ‘studies of foreign foliage especially are beyond all praise for care and fullness'.

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