[The Life of John Ruskin by W. G. Collingwood]@TWC D-Link bookThe Life of John Ruskin CHAPTER II 1/6
"MUNERA PULVERIS" (1862) After an autumn among the Alps, hearing that the Turner drawings in the National Gallery had been mildewed, he ran home to see about them in January 1862; and was kept until the end of May.
He found that his political economy work was not such a total failure as it had seemed. Froude, then editor of _Fraser's Magazine_, thought there was something in it, and would give him another chance.
So, by way of a fresh start, he had his four _Cornhill_ articles published in book form; and almost simultaneously, in June 1862 the first of the new series appeared. The author had then returned to Lucerne with Mr.and Mrs.Burne-Jones, with whom he crossed the St.Gothard to Milan, where he tried to forget the harrowing of hell in a close study of Luini, and in copying the "St. Catherine" now at Oxford.
Ruskin has never said so much about Luini as, perhaps, he intended.
A short notice in the "Cestus of Aglaia," and occasional references scattered up and down his later works, hardly give the prominence in his writings that the painter held in his thoughts.
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