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reconcile enthusiasm with comfort。  He had; moreover; all our native

mistrust for intellectual discretion; and our native relish for

sonorous superlatives。  As a critic he was very much more generous

than just; and his mildest terms of approbation were 〃stupendous;〃

〃transcendent;〃 and 〃incomparable。〃  The small change of admiration

seemed to him no coin for a gentleman to handle; and yet; frank as he

was intellectually; he was personally altogether a mystery。  His

professions; somehow; were all half…professions; and his allusions to

his work and circumstances left something dimly ambiguous in the

background。  He was modest and proud; and never spoke of his domestic

matters。  He was evidently poor; yet he must have had some slender

independence; since he could afford to make so merry over the fact

that his culture of ideal beauty had never brought him a penny。  His

poverty; I supposed; was his motive for neither inviting me to his

lodging nor mentioning its whereabouts。  We met either in some public

place or at my hotel; where I entertained him as freely as I might

without appearing to be prompted by charity。  He seemed always

hungry; and this was his nearest approach to human grossness。  I made

a point of asking no impertinent questions; but; each time we met; I

ventured to make some respectful allusion to the magnum opus; to

inquire; as it were; as to its health and progress。  〃We are getting

on; with the Lord's help;〃 he would say; with a grave smile。  〃We are

doing well。  You see; I have the grand advantage that I lose no time。

These hours I spend with you are pure profit。  They are SUGGESTIVE!

Just as the truly religious soul is always at worship; the genuine

artist is always in labour。  He takes his property wherever he finds

it; and learns some precious secret from every object that stands up

in the light。  If you but knew the rapture of observation!  I gather

with every glance some hint for light; for colour; or relief!  When I

get home; I pour out my treasures into the lap of toy Madonna。  Oh; I

am not idle!  Nulla dies sine linea。〃



I was introduced in Florence to an American lady whose drawing…room

had long formed an attractive place of reunion for the foreign

residents。  She lived on a fourth floor; and she was not rich; but

she offered her visitors very good tea; little cakes at option; and

conversation not quite to match。  Her conversation had mainly an

aesthetic flavour; for Mrs。 Coventry was famously ''artistic。〃  Her

apartment was a sort of Pitti Palace au petit pied。  She possessed

〃early masters〃 by the dozena cluster of Peruginos in her dining…

room; a Giotto in her boudoir; an Andrea del Sarto over her drawing…

room chimney…piece。  Surrounded by these treasures; and by

innumerable bronzes; mosaics; majolica dishes; and little worm…eaten

diptychs covered with angular saints on gilded backgrounds; our

hostess enjoyed the dignity of a sort of high…priestess of the arts。

She always wore on her bosom a huge miniature copy of the Madonna

della Seggiola。  Gaining her ear quietly one evening; I asked her

whether she knew that remarkable man; Mr。 Theobald。



〃Know him!〃 she exclaimed; 〃know poor Theobald!  All Florence knows

him; his flame…coloured locks; his black velvet coat; his

interminable harangues on the beautiful; and his wondrous Madonna

that mortal eye has never seen; and that mortal patience has quite

given up expecting。〃



〃Really;〃 I cried; 〃you don't believe in his Madonna?〃



〃My dear ingenuous youth;〃 rejoined my shrewd friend; 〃has he made a

convert of you?  Well; we all believed in him once; he came down upon

Florence and took the town by storm。  Another Raphael; at the very

least; had been born among men; and the poor dear United States were

to have the credit of him。  Hadn't he the very hair of Raphael

flowing down on his shoulders?  The hair; alas; but not the head!  We

swallowed him whole; however; we hung upon his lips and proclaimed

his genius on the house…tops。  The women were all dying to sit to him

for their portraits and be made immortal; like Leonardo's Joconde。

We decided that his manner was a good deal like Leonardo's

mysterious; and inscrutable; and fascinating。  Mysterious it

certainly was; mystery was the beginning and the end of it。  The

months passed by; and the miracle hung fire; our master never

produced his masterpiece。  He passed hours in the galleries and

churches; posturing; musing; and gazing; he talked more than ever

about the beautiful; but he never put brush to canvas。  We had all

subscribed; as it were; to the great performance; but as it never

came off people began to ask for their money again。  I was one of the

last of the faithful; I carried devotion so far as to sit to him for

my head。  If you could have seen the horrible creature he made of me;

you would admit that even a woman with no more vanity than will tie

her bonnet straight must have cooled off then。  The man didn't know

the very alphabet of drawing!  His strong point; he intimated; was

his sentiment; but is it a consolation; when one has been painted a

fright; to know it has been done with peculiar gusto?  One by one; I

confess; we fell away from the faith; and Mr。 Theobald didn't lift

his little finger to preserve us。  At the first hint that we were

tired of waiting; and that we should like the show to begin; he was

off in a huff。  'Great work requires time; contemplation; privacy;

mystery!  O ye of little faith!'  We answered that we didn't insist

on a great work; that the five…act tragedy might come at his

convenience; that we merely asked for something to keep us from

yawning; some inexpensive little lever de rideau。  Hereupon the poor

man took his stand as a genius misconceived and persecuted; an ame

meconnue; and washed his hands of us from that hour!  No; I believe

he does me the honour to consider me the head and front of the

conspiracy formed to nip his glory in the buda bud that has taken

twenty years to blossom。  Ask him if he knows me; and he will tell

you I am a horribly ugly old woman; who has vowed his destruction

because he won't paint her portrait as a pendant to Titian's Flora。

I fancy that since then he has had none but chance followers;

innocent strangers like yourself; who have taken him at his word。

The mountain is still in labour; I have not heard that the mouse has

been born。  I pass him once in a while in the galleries; and he fixes

his great dark eyes on me with a sublimity of indifference; as if I

were a bad copy of a Sassoferrato!  It is a long time ago now that I

heard that he was making studies for a Madonna who was to be a resume

of all the other Madonnas of the Italian schoollike that antique

Venus who borrowed a nose from one great image and an ankle from

another。  It's certainly a masterly idea。  The parts may be fine; but

when I think of my unhappy portrait I tremble for the whole。  He has

communicated this striking idea under the pledge of solemn secrecy to

fifty chosen spirits; to every one he has ever been able to button…

hole for five minutes。  I suppose he wants to get an order for it;

and he is not to blame; for Heaven knows how he lives。  I see by your

blush;〃 my hostess frankly continued; 〃that you have been honoured

with his confidence。  You needn't be ashamed; my dear young man; a

man of your age is none the worse for a certain generous credulity。

Only allow me to give you a word of advice:  keep your credulity out

of your pockets!  Don't pay for the picture till it's delivered。  You

have not been treated to a peep at it; I imagine!  No more have your

fifty predecessors in the faith。  There are people who doubt whether

there is any picture to be seen。  I fancy; myself; that if one were

to get into his studio; one would find something very like the

picture in that tale of Balzac'sa mere mass of incoherent scratches

and daubs; a jumble of dead paint!〃



I listened to this pungent recital in silent wonder。  It had a

painfully plausible sound; and was not inconsistent with certain shy

suspicions of my own。  My hostess was not only a clever woman; but

presumably a generous one。  I determined to let my judgment wait upon

events。  Possibly she was right; but if she was wrong; she was

cruelly wrong!  Her version of my friend's eccentricities made me

impatient to see him again and examine him in the light of public

opinion。  On our next meeting I immediately asked him if he knew Mrs。

Coventry。  He laid his hand on my arm and gave me a sad smile。  〃Has

she taxed YOUR gallantry at last?〃 he asked。  〃She's a foolish woman。

She's frivolous and heartless; and she pretends to be serious and

kind。  She prattles about Giotto's second manner and Vittoria

Colonna's liaison with 'Michael'one would think that Michael lived

across the way and was expected in to take a hand at whistbut she

knows as little about art; and about the conditions of production; as

I know about Buddhism。  She profanes sacred words;〃 he added more

vehemently; after a pause。  〃She cares for you only as some one to

band teacups in that horrible mendacious little parlour of hers; with

its trumpery Peruginos!  If you can't dash off a new picture every

three days; and let her hand it round among her guests; she tells

them in plain English that you are an impostor!〃



This attempt of mine to test Mrs。 Coventry's accuracy was made in the

course of a late afternoon walk to the quiet old church of San

Miniato; on one of the hill…tops which directly overlook the city;

from whose gates you are guided to it by a stony and cypress…bordered

walk; which seems a very fitting avenue to a shrine。  No spot is more

propitious to lingering repose than the broad terrace in front of the

church; where; lounging against the parapet; you may glance in slow

alternation from the black and yellow marbles of the church facade;

seamed and cracked with time and wind…sown with a tender flora of its

own; 

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