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Life & Wisdom Quote by Eduard Hanslick

"Grant that the true organ with which the beautiful is apprehended is the imagination, and it follows that all arts are likely to affect the feelings indirectly"

About this Quote

Hanslick is doing something sly here: he sounds like he is handing sentimentality its due, only to quietly cordon it off. If beauty is apprehended through imagination, then art does not operate like a syringe for emotion. It doesn’t inject feeling; it provokes the mind to generate feeling as a secondary effect. That “grant that” is a rhetorical feint, a lawyerly move that frames his premise as common sense while smuggling in his larger agenda: to defend art (especially music) against the 19th-century demand that it narrate, confess, or morally instruct.

The key word is “indirectly.” Hanslick isn’t denying that art moves people; he’s denying that the movement is the art’s primary job or its measurable content. Subtext: the audience’s tears are not evidence of artistic truth, just evidence of an imaginative reaction. This is aesthetic anti-populism in a velvet glove. He’s shifting authority away from the spectator’s feelings and back toward form, structure, and the internal logic of the artwork.

Context matters: Hanslick wrote in a period when Romanticism had elevated personal emotion into a kind of artistic currency, and when music in particular was being treated as a language of the soul. His line pushes back, insisting that the artwork’s power is mediated, not raw. The implication is bracingly modern: if feelings are indirect, they’re also variable, culturally conditioned, even manipulable. That makes art less like a diary entry and more like a machine for producing meaning in the viewer’s head, with all the unsettling responsibility that entails.

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TopicArt
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APA Style (7th ed.)
Hanslick, Eduard. (2026, January 15). Grant that the true organ with which the beautiful is apprehended is the imagination, and it follows that all arts are likely to affect the feelings indirectly. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/grant-that-the-true-organ-with-which-the-167370/

Chicago Style
Hanslick, Eduard. "Grant that the true organ with which the beautiful is apprehended is the imagination, and it follows that all arts are likely to affect the feelings indirectly." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/grant-that-the-true-organ-with-which-the-167370/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Grant that the true organ with which the beautiful is apprehended is the imagination, and it follows that all arts are likely to affect the feelings indirectly." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/grant-that-the-true-organ-with-which-the-167370/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

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Eduard Hanslick (September 11, 1825 - August 6, 1904) was a Writer from Germany.

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