[The Life of John Ruskin by W. G. Collingwood]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of John Ruskin

CHAPTER VII
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They parade a good deal of classical learning and travelled experience; readers of the magazine took their author for some dilettante Don at Oxford.

The editor did not wish the illusion to be dispelled, so John Ruskin had to choose a _nom de plume_.

He called himself "Kata Phusin" ("according to nature"), for he had begun to read some Aristotle.

No phrase would have better expressed his point of view, that of commonsense extended by experience, and confirmed by the appeal to matters of fact, rather than to any authority, or tradition, or committee of taste, or abstract principles.
While these papers were in process of publication "Kata Phusin" plunged into his first controversy, as an opponent of "Parsey's Convergence of Perpendiculars," according to which vertical lines should have a vanishing point, even though they are assumed to be parallel to the plane of the picture.
During this controversy, and just before the summer tour of 1838 to Scotland, John Ruskin was introduced to Miss Charlotte Withers, a young lady who was as fond of music as he was of drawing.

They discussed their favourite studies with eagerness, and, to settle the matter, he wrote a long essay on "The Comparative Advantages of the Studies of Music and Painting," in which he set painting as a means of recreation and of education far above music.
Already at nineteen, then, we see him a writer on art, not full-fledged, but attracting some notice.


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