THE WORLD'S DEBT TO THE IRISH
tury an [rish Art which astonished the world. From
Ireland it spread its influence not only to Great
Britain, but over a considerable part of West, North
and Central Europe. However it came, the art of
illumination was cultivated in the Irish monasteries
with a success which has not been reached elsewhere.
It is not too much to say that in the art of illumina-
tion the early Christian artist of Ireland has never
been excelled. His inexhaustible exuberance and in-
vention seem almost uncanny, and equally remark-
able, or almost so, are his inimitable delicacy of
execution and the uniform certainty of his marvel-
lous hand.”
Very probably the easiest and surest criterion for
the estimation of the level of culture which a people
has reached at a particular period of their develop-
ment is that which is to be revealed by the kind of
books they make. For the appreciation of books is
the best index of that interest in the things of the
mind rather than the body which represents the
elimination of barbaric instincts and the cultivation
of intellectual interests. Whenever beautiful books
are made it is a demonstration of artistic taste in
the makers but also in the users of them. The
patience required for the execution of genuine art of
high excellence will soon be exhausted unless there
is a reasonable prospect of admiration for the
products of it. Manifestly the Irish must have been
a cultivated people in the best sense of that term or
such beautiful books as we have from them would
not have been made by them and for them.
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