Likewise the nights and days have a new radiance for the student of Dante, the Alps and the ocean new wonders for the intimate of Byron and Swinburne, London and the Thames new fascinations for the familiar of Dickens. Writing of a calm at sea, Bullen in his Cruise of the Cachalot describes it as "such a calm as one realizes when one reads sympathetically that magical piece of work 'The Ancient Mariner.'" So largely is the world what the artists make of it for us. CONTENTS Education. Fine Art. Education in Fine Art. Popular Education III. THE AIMS OF MUSEUMS. THE IDEAL OF CULTURE I. DR. GOODE'S THESIS AND ITS ANTITHESIS II. THE TRIPLE AIM OF MUSEUMS OF FINE ART |