“Discord,” in Homer, Spenser, and Turner, v. [309]-311.

Distance, effect of, on our perception of objects, i. 186, 191, 192; must sometimes be sacrificed to foreground, i. 187; effect of, on pictorial color, iv. 64; expression of infinity in, ii. 41; extreme, characterized by sharp outlines, i. 283; effect of, on mountains, i. 277, 280; early masters put details into, i. 187.

Dog, as painted by various masters, v. [224], [255].

Dragon, of Scripture, v. [305]; of the Greeks, v. [300], [305]; of Dante, v. [306]; of Turner, v. [300], [307]-312, 314, 316, 323.

Drawing, noble, mystery and characteristic of, iv. 56, 59, 63, 214; real power of, never confined to one subject, i. 416; of mountain forms, i. 286, 305, iv. 188-191, 242; of clouds, v. [111] (note), 118; necessary to education, v. [330] (note); figure, of Turner, i. 189; questions concerning, v. [36]; landscape of old and modern painters, iii. 249; of artists and architects, difference between, i. 118; distinctness of, iii. 36; of Swiss pines, iv. 290; modern, of snowy mountains, unintelligible, i. 286; as taught in Encyclopædia Britannica, iv. 295; inviolable canon of, “draw only what you see,” iv. 16; should be taught every child, iii. 299.

Earth, general structure of, i. 271; laws of organization of, important in art, i. 270; past and present condition of, iv. 140, 141; colors of, iv. 38; the whole not habitable, iv. 95, 96; noblest scenes of, seen by few, i. 204; man’s appointed work on, v. [1]; preparation of, for man, v. [3]; sculpturing of the dry land, iv. 89.

Economy of labor, v. [328].

Education, value of, iii. 42; its good and bad effect on enjoyment of beauty, iii. 64; of Turner, iii. 319, v. [287]-297; of Scott, iii. 308; of Giorgione, v. [286], [287], [291]; of Durer, v. [230], [231]; of Salvator, v. [235], [236]; generally unfavorable to love of nature, iii. 298; modern, corrupts taste, iii. 65; logical, a great want of the time, iv. 384; love of picturesque, a means of, iv. 12; what to be taught in, v. [328] (note); what it can do, iii. 42; can improve race, v. [262]; of persons of simple life, v. [328] (note).

Emotions, noble and ignoble, iii. 10; true, generally imaginative, ii. 190.

Enamel, various uses of the word, iii. 221-223.