[Penguin Island by Anatole France]@TWC D-Link bookPenguin Island BOOK III 25/63
The reflections are rare and, as a rule, judicious. V.THE ARTS: THE PRIMITIVES OF PENGUIN PAINTING The Penguin critics vie with one another in affirming that Penguin art has from its origin been distinguished by a powerful and pleasing originality, and that we may look elsewhere in vain for the qualities of grace and reason that characterise its earliest works.
But the Porpoises claim that their artists were undoubtedly the instructors and masters of the Penguins.
It is difficult to form an opinion on the matter, because the Penguins, before they began to admire their primitive painters, destroyed all their works. We cannot be too sorry for this loss.
For my own part I feel it cruelly, for I venerate the Penguin antiquities and I adore the primitives. They are delightful.
I do not say the are all alike, for that would be untrue, but they have common characters that are found in all schools--I mean formulas from which they never depart--and there is besides something finished in their work, for what they know they know well. Luckily we can form a notion of the Penguin primitives from the Italian, Flemish, and Dutch primitives, and from the French primitives, who are superior to all the rest; as M.Gruyer tells us they are more logical, logic being a peculiarly French quality.
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