BLACKSMITHING.
We regard the blacksmith as the prince of mechanics
He is at once an artist and a mechanist. He who can
mold a statue, having in his mind the image, while the
clay is yet but a rude mass, and knows how to remove the
excrescent parts, and mold the mass into the requisite
forms, has the same talent which the blacksmith requires,
who withdraws from the forge the flaming bar of metal
and is required to mold it with his hammer into the desired
shape. This shape must exist in his mind as the statue
does in the mind of the sculptor, and though the fact of
repeated heavy blows seems a rude way of working out
his artistical thought, it is only so because his metal is less
malleable than the plastic clay. We contend that whoever
can be a first-rate blacksmith could be also an artist
in clay and marble. But the blacksmith, in order to reduce
the firm metal to the form required, must have muscle,
strength, executiveness, resolution, thoroughness,
power, and, if we may say it, the elements of fineness
joined with the elements of coarseness; the elements of
taste with the elements of strength.
A first-rate blacksmith requires to be a first-rate man;
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