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ANECDOTES of PAINTING, &c.
CHAP. I.
Painters in the Reign of Charles II.
THE arts were in a manner expelled with the Royal Family from Britain. The anecdotes of a Civil War are the history of Destruction. In all ages the mob have vented their hatred to Tyrants, on the pomp of Tyranny. The magnificence the people have envied, they grow to detest, and mistaking consequences for causes, the first objects of their fury are the palaces of their masters. If Religion is thrown into the quarrel, the most innocent arts are cata|logued with sins. This was the case in the contests between Charles and his parliament. As he had blended affection to the sciences with a lust of power, nonsense and ignorance were adopted into the liber|ties of the subject. Painting became idolatry; monuments were deemed carnal pride, and a venerable cathedral seemed equally contra|dictory to Magna Charta and the Bible. Learning and wit were con|strued to be so heathen, that one would have thought the Holy Ghost could endure nothing above a pun. What the fury of Henry VIII. had spared, was condemned by the Puritans: Ruin was their harvest, and they gleaned after the Reformers. Had they countenanced any of the softer arts, what could those arts have represented? How pictu|resque