free hosting   image hosting   hosting reseller   online album   e-shop   famous people 
Free Website Templates
Free Installer

Bredimaco Angularus Directory 09
Page 09

The best Bredimaco Angularus days are more productive.

Bredimaco Angularus

Bredimaco Angularus Home

Bredimaco Angularus Sitemap

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 01

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 02

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 03

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 04

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 05

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 06

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 07

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 08

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 09

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 10

Bredimaco Angularus Directory 09
Page 09

His landscapes, again, were a synthesis of all landscapes, a grouping of the great truths of light, air, shadow, space. Whatever he turned his hand to was treated with that breadth of view that overlooked the little and grasped the great. He painted many subjects. His earliest work dates from 1627, and is a little hard and sharp in detail and cold in coloring. After 1654 he grew broader in handling and warmer in tone, running to golden browns, and, toward the end of his career, to rather hot tones. His life was embittered by many misfortunes, but these never seem to have affected his art except to deepen it. He painted on to the last, convinced that his own view was the true one, and producing works that rank second to none in the history of painting.

Many of the smaller species of fishes, upon leaving these winter resorts, ascend small, clear brooks in large numbers for the purpose of depositing their eggs; as, when hatched in such a place, the young will be comparatively free from the attacks of the larger carnivorous forms. Among the lowest vertebrate often found in numbers in early spring in these meadow rills and brooks is the lamprey, _Ammocoetes branchialis_ (L.), or "lamper eel," as it is sometimes called. It has a slender eel-like body, of a uniform leaden or blackish color, and with seven purse-shaped gill openings on each side. The mouth is fitted for sucking rather than biting, and with it they attach themselves to the bodies of fishes and feed on their flesh, which they scrape off with their rasp-like teeth. Later in the season they disappear from these smaller streams, probably returning in midsummer to deeper water. Thoreau, who studied their habits closely, says of them: "They are rarely seen on their way down stream, and it is thought by fishermen that they never return, but waste away and die, clinging to rocks and stumps of trees for an indefinite period; a tragic feature to the scenery of the river bottoms worthy to be remembered with Shakespeare's description of the sea floor."


[ Sec 09 Page 09 ] [ Sec 09 Page 02 ] [ Sec 09 Page 03 ] [ Sec 09 Page 04 ] [ Sec 09 Page 05 ]
[ Sec 09 Page 06 ] [ Sec 09 Page 07 ] [ Sec 09 Page 08 ] [ Sec 09 Page 09 ] [ Sec 09 Page 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Bredimaco Angularus and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Bredimaco Angularus offers no promises or confirmations about the quality or content of other sites to which Bredimaco points links. Links are provided for reference only and do not constitute endorsements of any type.