SO strongly displayed. It would be hopeless
to attempt to describe all his pictures in the
Madrid Gallery. The Saviour and St. John, as
boys, drinking out of a shell, is perhaps the most
delicate and exquisite in colouring and expres-
sion ; but the ^ Conception ' surpasses all. No one
should compare it with the Louvre pictures of the
same subject. There is a refinement, a tenderness,
and a beauty in the Madrid ' Conception ' entirely
wanting in the one stolen by the French. Then
there is Velasquez, with his inimitable portraits ;
full of droll originality, as the 'iEsop ; ' or of deep
historical interest, as his 'Philip IV.; ' or of sub-
lime piety, as in his 'Crucifixion,' with the hair
falling over one side of the Saviour's face, which
the pierced and fastened hands cannot push aside :
each and all are priceless treasures, and there
must be sixty or seventy in that one long room.
Ford says that 'Velasquez is the Homer of the
Spanish school, of which Murillo is the Virgil.'
Then there are Riberas, and Zurbarans, Divino
Morales, Juan Joanes, Alonso Cano, and half-a-
dozen other artists, whose very names are scarcely
known out of Spain, and all of whose works are
impregnated with that mystic, devotional, self-
sacrificing spirit which is the essence of Catholi-
cism. The Italian school is equally magnificently
Page:Impressions of Spain in 1866.djvu/40
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24
MADRID.