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+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>The Beldonald Holbein</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">The Beldonald Holbein, by Henry James</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Beldonald Holbein, by Henry James
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Beldonald Holbein
+
+
+Author: Henry James
+
+Release Date: May 8, 2005 [eBook #2366]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BELDONALD HOLBEIN***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1922 Macmillan and Co. edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk.&nbsp; Proofing by Andy and his wife.</p>
+<h1>THE BELDONALD HOLBEIN <br />
+by Henry James</h1>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<p>Mrs. Munden had not yet been to my studio on so good a pretext as
+when she first intimated that it would be quite open to me&mdash;should
+I only care, as she called it, to throw the handkerchief&mdash;to paint
+her beautiful sister-in-law.&nbsp; I needn&rsquo;t go here more than
+is essential into the question of Mrs. Munden, who would really, by
+the way, be a story in herself.&nbsp; She has a manner of her own of
+putting things, and some of those she has put to me&mdash;!&nbsp; Her
+implication was that Lady Beldonald hadn&rsquo;t only seen and admired
+certain examples of my work, but had literally been prepossessed in
+favour of the painter&rsquo;s &ldquo;personality.&rdquo;&nbsp; Had I
+been struck with this sketch I might easily have imagined her ladyship
+was throwing me the handkerchief.&nbsp; &ldquo;She hasn&rsquo;t done,&rdquo;
+my visitor said, &ldquo;what she ought.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mean she has done what she oughtn&rsquo;t?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing horrid&mdash;ah dear no.&rdquo;&nbsp; And something
+in Mrs. Munden&rsquo;s tone, with the way she appeared to muse a moment,
+even suggested to me that what she &ldquo;oughtn&rsquo;t&rdquo; was
+perhaps what Lady Beldonald had too much neglected.&nbsp; &ldquo;She
+hasn&rsquo;t got on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter with her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, to begin with, she&rsquo;s American.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I thought that was the way of ways to get on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s one of them.&nbsp; But it&rsquo;s one of the ways
+of being awfully out of it too.&nbsp; There are so many!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So many Americans?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, plenty of <i>them</i>,&rdquo; Mrs. Munden sighed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;So many ways, I mean, of being one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if your sister-in-law&rsquo;s way is to be beautiful&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh there are different ways of that too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And she hasn&rsquo;t taken the right way?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; my friend returned as if it were rather difficult
+to express, &ldquo;she hasn&rsquo;t done with it&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; I laughed; &ldquo;what she oughtn&rsquo;t!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Munden in a manner corrected me, but it <i>was</i> difficult
+to express.&nbsp; &ldquo;My brother at all events was certainly selfish.&nbsp;
+Till he died she was almost never in London; they wintered, year after
+year, for what he supposed to be his health&mdash;which it didn&rsquo;t
+help, since he was so much too soon to meet his end&mdash;in the south
+of France and in the dullest holes he could pick out, and when they
+came back to England he always kept her in the country.&nbsp; I must
+say for her that she always behaved beautifully.&nbsp; Since his death
+she has been more in London, but on a stupidly unsuccessful footing.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t think she quite understands.&nbsp; She hasn&rsquo;t what
+I should call a life.&nbsp; It may be of course that she doesn&rsquo;t
+want one.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s just what I can&rsquo;t exactly find out.&nbsp;
+I can&rsquo;t make out how much she knows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can easily make out,&rdquo; I returned with hilarity, &ldquo;how
+much <i>you</i> do!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you&rsquo;re very horrid.&nbsp; Perhaps she&rsquo;s
+too old.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Too old for what?&rdquo; I persisted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For anything.&nbsp; Of course she&rsquo;s no longer even a
+little young; only preserved&mdash;oh but preserved, like bottled fruit,
+in syrup!&nbsp; I want to help her if only because she gets on my nerves,
+and I really think the way of it would be just the right thing of yours
+at the Academy and on the line.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But suppose,&rdquo; I threw out, &ldquo;she should give on
+my nerves?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh she will.&nbsp; But isn&rsquo;t that all in the day&rsquo;s
+work, and don&rsquo;t great beauties always&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>You</i> don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; I interrupted; but I at any
+rate saw Lady Beldonald later on&mdash;the day came when her kinswoman
+brought her, and then I saw how her life must have its centre in her
+own idea of her appearance.&nbsp; Nothing else about her mattered&mdash;one
+knew her all when one knew that.&nbsp; She&rsquo;s indeed in one particular,
+I think, sole of her kind&mdash;a person whom vanity has had the odd
+effect of keeping positively safe and sound.&nbsp; This passion is supposed
+surely, for the most part, to be a principle of perversion and of injury,
+leading astray those who listen to it and landing them sooner or later
+in this or that complication; but it has landed her ladyship nowhere
+whatever&mdash;it has kept her from the first moment of full consciousness,
+one feels, exactly in the same place.&nbsp; It has protected her from
+every danger, has made her absolutely proper and prim.&nbsp; If she&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;preserved,&rdquo; as Mrs. Munden originally described her to
+me, it&rsquo;s her vanity that has beautifully done it&mdash;putting
+her years ago in a plate-glass case and closing up the receptacle against
+every breath of air.&nbsp; How shouldn&rsquo;t she be preserved when
+you might smash your knuckles on this transparency before you could
+crack it?&nbsp; And she is&mdash;oh amazingly!&nbsp; Preservation is
+scarce the word for the rare condition of her surface.&nbsp; She looks
+<i>naturally</i> new, as if she took out every night her large lovely
+varnished eyes and put them in water.&nbsp; The thing was to paint her,
+I perceived, in the glass case&mdash;a most tempting attaching feat;
+render to the full the shining interposing plate and the general show-window
+effect.</p>
+<p>It was agreed, though it wasn&rsquo;t quite arranged, that she should
+sit to me.&nbsp; If it wasn&rsquo;t quite arranged this was because,
+as I was made to understand from an early stage, the conditions from
+our start must be such as should exclude all elements of disturbance,
+such, in a word, as she herself should judge absolutely favourable.&nbsp;
+And it seemed that these conditions were easily imperilled.&nbsp; Suddenly,
+for instance, at a moment when I was expecting her to meet an appointment&mdash;the
+first&mdash;that I had proposed, I received a hurried visit from Mrs.
+Munden, who came on her behalf to let me know that the season happened
+just not to be propitious and that our friend couldn&rsquo;t be quite
+sure, to the hour, when it would again become so. She felt nothing would
+make it so but a total absence of worry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh a &lsquo;total absence,&rsquo;&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;is
+a large order!&nbsp; We live in a worrying world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; and she feels exactly that&mdash;more than you&rsquo;d
+think.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s in fact just why she mustn&rsquo;t have, as
+she has now, a particular distress on at the very moment.&nbsp; She
+wants of course to look her best, and such things tell on her appearance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I shook my head.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nothing tells on her appearance.&nbsp;
+Nothing reaches it in any way; nothing gets <i>at</i> it.&nbsp; However,
+I can understand her anxiety.&nbsp; But what&rsquo;s her particular
+distress?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why the illness of Miss Dadd.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And who in the world&rsquo;s Miss Dadd?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Her most intimate friend and constant companion&mdash;the
+lady who was with us here that first day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh the little round black woman who gurgled with admiration?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None other.&nbsp; But she was taken ill last week, and it
+may very well be that she&rsquo;ll gurgle no more.&nbsp; She was very
+bad yesterday and is no better to-day, and Nina&rsquo;s much upset.&nbsp;
+If anything happens to Miss Dadd she&rsquo;ll have to get another, and,
+though she has had two or three before, that won&rsquo;t be so easy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two or three Miss Dadds? is it possible?&nbsp; And still wanting
+another!&rdquo;&nbsp; I recalled the poor lady completely now.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;No; I shouldn&rsquo;t indeed think it would be easy to get another.&nbsp;
+But why is a succession of them necessary to Lady Beldonald&rsquo;s
+existence?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you guess?&rdquo;&nbsp; Mrs. Munden looked deep,
+yet impatient.&nbsp; &ldquo;They help.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Help what?&nbsp; Help whom?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why every one.&nbsp; You and me for instance.&nbsp; To do
+what?&nbsp; Why to think Nina beautiful.&nbsp; She has them for that
+purpose; they serve as foils, as accents serve on syllables, as terms
+of comparison.&nbsp; They make her &lsquo;stand out.&rsquo;&nbsp; It&rsquo;s
+an effect of contrast that must be familiar to you artists; it&rsquo;s
+what a woman does when she puts a band of black velvet under a pearl
+ornament that may, require, as she thinks, a little showing off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I wondered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you mean she always has them black?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear no; I&rsquo;ve seen them blue, green, yellow.&nbsp; They
+may be what they like, so long as they&rsquo;re always one other thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hideous?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Munden made a mouth for it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Hideous is too much
+to say; she doesn&rsquo;t really require them as bad as that.&nbsp;
+But consistently, cheerfully, loyally plain.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s really
+a most happy relation.&nbsp; She loves them for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And for what do they love <i>her</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why just for the amiability that they produce in her.&nbsp;
+Then also for their &lsquo;home.&rsquo;&nbsp; It&rsquo;s a career for
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see.&nbsp; But if that&rsquo;s the case,&rdquo; I asked,
+&ldquo;why are they so difficult to find?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh they must be safe; it&rsquo;s all in that: her being able
+to depend on them to keep to the terms of the bargain and never have
+moments of rising&mdash;as even the ugliest woman will now and then
+(say when she&rsquo;s in love)&mdash;superior to themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I turned it over.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then if they can&rsquo;t inspire passions
+the poor things mayn&rsquo;t even at least feel them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She distinctly deprecates it.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s why such
+a man as you may be after all a complication.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I continued to brood.&nbsp; &ldquo;You&rsquo;re very sure Miss Dadd&rsquo;s
+ailment isn&rsquo;t an affection that, being smothered, has struck in?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+My joke, however, wasn&rsquo;t well timed, for I afterwards learned
+that the unfortunate lady&rsquo;s state had been, even while I spoke,
+such as to forbid all hope.&nbsp; The worst symptoms had appeared; she
+was destined not to recover; and a week later I heard from Mrs. Munden
+that she would in fact &ldquo;gurgle&rdquo; no more.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<p>All this had been for Lady Beldonald an agitation so great that access
+to her apartment was denied for a time even to her sister-in-law.&nbsp;
+It was much more out of the question of course that she should unveil
+her face to a person of my special business with it; so that the question
+of the portrait was by common consent left to depend on that of the
+installation of a successor to her late companion.&nbsp; Such a successor,
+I gathered from Mrs. Munden, widowed childless and lonely, as well as
+inapt for the minor offices, she had absolutely to have; a more or less
+humble <i>alter ago</i> to deal with the servants, keep the accounts,
+make the tea and watch the window-blinds.&nbsp; Nothing seemed more
+natural than that she should marry again, and obviously that might come;
+yet the predecessors of Miss Dadd had been contemporaneous with a first
+husband, so that others formed in her image might be contemporaneous
+with a second.&nbsp; I was much occupied in those months at any rate,
+and these questions and their ramifications losing themselves for a
+while to my view, I was only brought back to them by Mrs. Munden&rsquo;s
+arrival one day with the news that we were all right again&mdash;her
+sister-in-law was once more &ldquo;suited.&rdquo;&nbsp; A certain Mrs.
+Brash, an American relative whom she hadn&rsquo;t seen for years, but
+with whom she had continued to communicate, was to come out to her immediately;
+and this person, it appeared, could be quite trusted to meet the conditions.&nbsp;
+She was ugly&mdash;ugly enough, without abuse of it, and was unlimitedly
+good.&nbsp; The position offered her by Lady Beldonald was moreover
+exactly what she needed; widowed also, after many troubles and reverses,
+with her fortune of the smallest, and her various children either buried
+or placed about, she had never had time or means to visit England, and
+would really be grateful in her declining years for the new experience
+and the pleasant light work involved in her cousin&rsquo;s hospitality.&nbsp;
+They had been much together early in life and Lady Beldonald was immensely
+fond of her&mdash;would in fact have tried to get hold of her before
+hadn&rsquo;t Mrs. Brash been always in bondage to family duties, to
+the variety of her tribulations.&nbsp; I daresay I laughed at my friend&rsquo;s
+use of the term &ldquo;position&rdquo;&mdash;the position, one might
+call it, of a candlestick or a sign-post, and I daresay I must have
+asked if the special service the poor lady was to render had been made
+clear to her.&nbsp; Mrs. Munden left me in any case with the rather
+droll image of her faring forth across the sea quite consciously and
+resignedly to perform it.</p>
+<p>The point of the communication had however been that my sitter was
+again looking up and would doubtless, on the arrival and due initiation
+of Mrs. Brash, be in form really to wait on me.&nbsp; The situation
+must further, to my knowledge, have developed happily, for I arranged
+with Mrs. Munden that our friend, now all ready to begin, but wanting
+first just to see the things I had most recently done, should come once
+more, as a final preliminary, to my studio.&nbsp; A good foreign friend
+of mine, a French painter, Paul Outreau, was at the moment in London,
+and I had proposed, as he was much interested in types, to get together
+for his amusement a small afternoon party.&nbsp; Every one came, my
+big room was full, there was music and a modest spread; and I&rsquo;ve
+not forgotten the light of admiration in Outreau&rsquo;s expressive
+face as at the end of half an hour he came up to me in his enthusiasm.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;<i>Bont&eacute; divine, mon cher&mdash;que cette vieille est
+donc belle</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had tried to collect all the beauty I could, and also all the youth,
+so that for a moment I was at a loss.&nbsp; I had talked to many people
+and provided for the music, and there were figures in the crowd that
+were still lost to me.&nbsp; &ldquo;What old woman do you mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know her name&mdash;she was over by the door
+a moment ago.&nbsp; I asked somebody and was told, I think, that she&rsquo;s
+American.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I looked about and saw one of my guests attach a pair of fine eyes
+to Outreau very much as if she knew he must be talking of her.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh Lady Beldonald!&nbsp; Yes, she&rsquo;s handsome; but the great
+point about her is that she has been &lsquo;put up&rsquo; to keep, and
+that she wouldn&rsquo;t be flattered if she knew you spoke of her as
+old.&nbsp; A box of sardines is &lsquo;old&rsquo; only after it has
+been opened, Lady Beldonald never has yet been&mdash;but I&rsquo;m going
+to do it.&rdquo;&nbsp; I joked, but I was somewhat disappointed.&nbsp;
+It was a type that, with his unerring sense for the <i>banal</i>, I
+shouldn&rsquo;t have expected Outreau to pick out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re going to paint her?&nbsp; But, my dear man, she
+is painted&mdash;and as neither you nor I can do it.&nbsp; <i>O&ugrave;
+est-elle donc</i>?&nbsp; He had lost her, and I saw I had made a mistake.
+She&rsquo;s the greatest of all the great Holbeins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was relieved.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah then not Lady Beldonald!&nbsp; But
+do I possess a Holbein of <i>any</i> price unawares?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There she is&mdash;there she is!&nbsp; Dear, dear, dear, what
+a head!&rdquo;&nbsp; And I saw whom he meant&mdash;and what: a small
+old lady in a black dress and a black bonnet, both relieved with a little
+white, who had evidently just changed, her place to reach a corner from
+which more of the room and of the scene was presented to her.&nbsp;
+She appeared unnoticed and unknown, and I immediately recognised that
+some other guest must have brought her and, for want of opportunity,
+had as yet to call my attention to her.&nbsp; But two things, simultaneously
+with this and with each other, struck me with force; one of them the
+truth of Outreau&rsquo;s description of her, the other the fact that
+the person bringing her could only have been Lady Beldonald.&nbsp; She
+<i>was</i> a Holbein&mdash;of the first water; yet she was also Mrs.
+Brash, the imported &ldquo;foil,&rdquo; the indispensable &ldquo;accent,&rdquo;
+the successor to the dreary Miss Dadd!&nbsp; By the time I had put these
+things together&mdash;Outreau&rsquo;s &ldquo;American&rdquo; having
+helped me&mdash;I was in just such full possession of her face as I
+had found myself, on the other first occasion, of that of her patroness.&nbsp;
+Only with so different a consequence.&nbsp; I couldn&rsquo;t look at
+her enough, and I stared and stared till I became aware she might have
+fancied me challenging her as a person unpresented.&nbsp; &ldquo;All
+the same,&rdquo; Outreau went on, equally held, &ldquo;<i>c&rsquo;est
+une t&ecirc;te &agrave; faire</i>.&nbsp; If I were only staying long
+enough for a crack at her!&nbsp; But I tell you what&rdquo;&mdash;and
+he seized my arm&mdash;&ldquo;bring her over!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Over?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To Paris.&nbsp; She&rsquo;d have a <i>succ&egrave;s fou</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah thanks, my dear fellow,&rdquo; I was now quite in a position
+to say; &ldquo;she&rsquo;s the handsomest thing in London, and&rdquo;&mdash;for
+what I might do with her was already before me with intensity&mdash;&ldquo;I
+propose to keep her to myself.&rdquo;&nbsp; It was before me with intensity,
+in the light of Mrs. Brash&rsquo;s distant perfection of a little white
+old face, in which every wrinkle was the touch of a master; but something
+else, I suddenly felt, was not less so, for Lady Beldonald, in the other
+quarter, and though she couldn&rsquo;t have made out the subject of
+our notice, continued to fix us, and her eyes had the challenge of those
+of the woman of consequence who has missed something.&nbsp; A moment
+later I was close to her, apologising first for not having been more
+on the spot at her arrival, but saying in the next breath uncontrollably:
+&ldquo;Why my dear lady, it&rsquo;s a Holbein!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A Holbein?&nbsp; What?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why the wonderful sharp old face so extraordinarily, consummately
+drawn&mdash;in the frame of black velvet.&nbsp; That of Mrs. Brash,
+I mean&mdash;isn&rsquo;t it her name?&mdash;your companion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was the beginning of a most odd matter&mdash;the essence of
+my anecdote; and I think the very first note of the oddity must have
+sounded for me in the tone in which her ladyship spoke after giving
+me a silent look.&nbsp; It seemed to come to me out of a distance immeasurably
+removed from Holbein.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mrs. Brash isn&rsquo;t my &lsquo;companion&rsquo;
+in the sense you appear to mean.&nbsp; She&rsquo;s my rather near relation
+and a very dear old friend.&nbsp; I love her&mdash;and you must know
+her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Know her?&nbsp; Rather!&nbsp; Why to see her is to want on
+the spot to &lsquo;go&rsquo; for her.&nbsp; She also must sit for me,&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>She</i>?&nbsp; Louisa Brash?&rdquo;&nbsp; If Lady Beldonald
+had the theory that her beauty directly showed it when things weren&rsquo;t
+well with her, this impression, which the fixed sweetness of her serenity
+had hitherto struck me by no means as justifying, gave me now my first
+glimpse of its grounds.&nbsp; It was as if I had never before seen her
+face invaded by anything I should have called an expression.&nbsp; This
+expression moreover was of the faintest&mdash;was like the effect produced
+on a surface by an agitation both deep within and as yet much confused.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Have you told her so?&rdquo; she then quickly asked, as if to
+soften the sound of her surprise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear no, I&rsquo;ve but just noticed her&mdash;Outreau, a
+moment ago put me on her.&nbsp; But we&rsquo;re both so taken, and he
+also wants&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To <i>paint</i> her?&rdquo; Lady Beldonald uncontrollably
+murmured.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be afraid we shall fight for her,&rdquo; I returned
+with a laugh for this tone.&nbsp; Mrs. Brash was still where I could
+see her without appearing to stare, and she mightn&rsquo;t have seen
+I was looking at her, though her protectress, I&rsquo;m afraid, could
+scarce have failed of that certainty.&nbsp; &ldquo;We must each take
+our turn, and at any rate she&rsquo;s a wonderful thing, so that if
+you&rsquo;ll let her go to Paris Outreau promises her there&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>There</i>?&rdquo; my companion gasped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A career bigger still than among us, as he considers we haven&rsquo;t
+half their eye.&nbsp; He guarantees her <i>a succ&egrave;s fou</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She couldn&rsquo;t get over it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Louisa Brash?&nbsp;
+In Paris?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They do see,&rdquo; I went on, &ldquo;more than we and they
+live extraordinarily, don&rsquo;t you know, in that.&nbsp; But she&rsquo;ll
+do something here too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what will she do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>If frankly now I couldn&rsquo;t help giving Mrs. Brash a longer look,
+so after it I could as little resist sounding my converser.&nbsp; &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll
+see.&nbsp; Only give her time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She said nothing during the moment in which she met my eyes; but
+then: &ldquo;Time, it seems to me, is exactly what you and your friend
+want.&nbsp; If you haven&rsquo;t talked with her&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We haven&rsquo;t seen her?&nbsp; Oh we see bang off&mdash;with
+a click like a steel spring.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s our trade, it&rsquo;s
+our life, and we should be donkeys if we made mistakes.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s
+the way I saw you yourself, my lady, if I may say so; that&rsquo;s the
+way, with a long pin straight through your body, I&rsquo;ve got you.&nbsp;
+And just so I&rsquo;ve got <i>her</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All this, for reasons, had brought my guest to her feet; but her
+eyes had while we talked never once followed the direction of mine.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You call her a Holbein?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Outreau did, and I of course immediately recognised it.&nbsp;
+Don&rsquo;t you?&nbsp; She brings the old boy to life!&nbsp; It&rsquo;s
+just as I should call you a Titian.&nbsp; You bring <i>him</i> to life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She couldn&rsquo;t be said to relax, because she couldn&rsquo;t be
+said to have hardened; but something at any rate on this took place
+in her&mdash;something indeed quite disconnected from what I would have
+called her.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you understand that she has always
+been supposed&mdash;?&rdquo;&nbsp; It had the ring of impatience; nevertheless
+it stopped short on a scruple.</p>
+<p>I knew what it was, however, well enough to say it for her if she
+preferred.&nbsp; &ldquo;To be nothing whatever to look at?&nbsp; To
+be unfortunately plain&mdash;or even if you like repulsively ugly?&nbsp;
+Oh yes, I understand it perfectly, just as I understand&mdash;I have
+to as a part of my trade&mdash;many other forms of stupidity.&nbsp;
+It&rsquo;s nothing new to one that ninety-nine people out of a hundred
+have no eyes, no sense, no taste.&nbsp; There are whole communities
+impenetrably sealed.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t say your friend&rsquo;s a person
+to make the men turn round in Regent Street.&nbsp; But it adds to the
+joy of the few who do see that they have it so much to themselves.&nbsp;
+Where in the world can she have lived?&nbsp; You must tell me all about
+that&mdash;or rather, if she&rsquo;ll be so good, <i>she</i> must.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean then to speak to her&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I wondered as she pulled up again.&nbsp; &ldquo;Of her beauty?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Her beauty!&rdquo; cried Lady Beldonald so loud that two or
+three persons looked round.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah with every precaution of respect!&rdquo; I declared in
+a much lower tone.&nbsp; But her back was by this time turned to me,
+and in the movement, as it were, one of the strangest little dramas
+I&rsquo;ve ever known was well launched.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<p>It was a drama of small smothered intensely private things, and I
+knew of but one other person in the secret; yet that person and I found
+it exquisitely susceptible of notation, followed it with an interest
+the mutual communication of which did much for our enjoyment, and were
+present with emotion at its touching catastrophe.&nbsp; The small case&mdash;for
+so small a case&mdash;had made a great stride even before my little
+party separated, and in fact within the next ten minutes.</p>
+<p>In that space of time two things had happened one of which was that
+I made the acquaintance of Mrs. Brash; and the other that Mrs. Munden
+reached me, cleaving the crowd, with one of her usual pieces of news.&nbsp;
+What she had to impart was that, on her having just before asked Nina
+if the conditions of our sitting had been arranged with me, Nina had
+replied, with something like perversity, that she didn&rsquo;t propose
+to arrange them, that the whole affair was &ldquo;off&rdquo; again and
+that she preferred not to be further beset for the present.&nbsp; The
+question for Mrs. Munden was naturally what had happened and whether
+I understood.&nbsp; Oh I understood perfectly, and what I at first most
+understood was that even when I had brought in the name of Mrs. Brash
+intelligence wasn&rsquo;t yet in Mrs. Munden.&nbsp; She was quite as
+surprised as Lady Beldonald had been on hearing of the esteem in which
+I held Mrs. Brash&rsquo;s appearance.&nbsp; She was stupefied at learning
+that I had just in my ardour proposed to its proprietress to sit to
+me.&nbsp; Only she came round promptly&mdash;which Lady Beldonald really
+never did.&nbsp; Mrs. Munden was in fact wonderful; for when I had given
+her quickly &ldquo;Why she&rsquo;s a Holbein, you know, absolutely,&rdquo;
+she took it up, after a first fine vacancy, with an immediate abysmal
+&ldquo;Oh <i>is</i> she?&rdquo; that, as a piece of social gymnastics,
+did her the greatest honour; and she was in fact the first in London
+to spread the tidings.&nbsp; For a face&mdash;about it was magnificent.&nbsp;
+But she was also the first, I must add, to see what would really happen&mdash;though
+this she put before me only a week or two later.&nbsp; &ldquo;It will
+kill her, my dear&mdash;that&rsquo;s what it will do!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She meant neither more nor less than that it would kill Lady Beldonald
+if I were to paint Mrs. Brash; for at this lurid light had we arrived
+in so short a space of time.&nbsp; It was for me to decide whether my
+&aelig;sthetic need of giving life to my idea was such as to justify
+me in destroying it in a woman after all in most eyes so beautiful.&nbsp;
+The situation was indeed sufficiently queer; for it remained to be seen
+what I should positively gain by giving up Mrs. Brash.&nbsp; I appeared
+to have in any case lost Lady Beldonald, now too &ldquo;upset&rdquo;&mdash;it
+was always Mrs. Munden&rsquo;s word about her and, as I inferred, her
+own about herself&mdash;to meet me again on our previous footing.&nbsp;
+The only thing, I of course soon saw, was to temporise to drop the whole
+question for the present and yet so far as possible keep each of the
+pair in view.&nbsp; I may as well say at once that this plan and this
+process gave their principal interest to the next several months.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Brash had turned up, if I remember, early in the new year, and
+her little wonderful career was in our particular circle one of the
+features of the following season.&nbsp; It was at all events for myself
+the most attaching; it&rsquo;s not my fault if I am so put together
+as often to find more life in situations obscure and subject to interpretation
+than in the gross rattle of the foreground.&nbsp; And there were all
+sorts of things, things touching, amusing, mystifying&mdash;and above
+all such an instance as I had never yet met&mdash;in this funny little
+fortune of the useful American cousin.&nbsp; Mrs. Munden was promptly
+at one with me as to the rarity and, to a near and human view, the beauty
+and interest of the position.&nbsp; We had neither of us ever before
+seen that degree and that special sort of personal success come to a
+woman for the first time so late in life.&nbsp; I found it an example
+of poetic, of absolutely retributive justice; so that my desire grew
+great to work it, as we say, on those lines.&nbsp; I had seen it all
+from the original moment at my studio; the poor lady had never known
+an hour&rsquo;s appreciation&mdash;which moreover, in perfect good faith,
+she had never missed.&nbsp; The very first thing I did after inducing
+so unintentionally the resentful retreat of her protectress had been
+to go straight over to her and say almost without preliminaries that
+I should hold myself immeasurably obliged for a few patient sittings.&nbsp;
+What I thus came face to face with was, on the instant, her whole unenlightened
+past and the full, if foreshortened, revelation of what among us all
+was now unfailingly in store for her.&nbsp; To turn the handle and start
+that tune came to me on the spot as a temptation.&nbsp; Here was a poor
+lady who had waited for the approach of old age to find out what she
+was worth.&nbsp; Here was a benighted being to whom it was to be disclosed
+in her fifty-seventh year&mdash;I was to make that out&mdash;that she
+had something that might pass for a face.&nbsp; She looked much more
+than her age, and was fairly frightened&mdash;as if I had been trying
+on her some possibly heartless London trick&mdash;when she had taken
+in my appeal.&nbsp; That showed me in what an air she had lived and&mdash;as
+I should have been tempted to put it had I spoken out&mdash;among what
+children of darkness.&nbsp; Later on I did them more justice; saw more
+that her wonderful points must have been points largely the fruit of
+time, and even that possibly she might never in all her life have looked
+so well as at this particular moment.&nbsp; It might have been that
+if her hour had struck I just happened to be present at the striking.&nbsp;
+What had occurred, all the same, was at the worst a notable comedy.</p>
+<p>The famous &ldquo;irony of fate&rdquo; takes many forms, but I had
+never yet seen it take quite this one.&nbsp; She had been &ldquo;had
+over&rdquo; on an understanding, and she wasn&rsquo;t playing fair.&nbsp;
+She had broken the law of her ugliness and had turned beautiful on the
+hands of her employer.&nbsp; More interesting even perhaps than a view
+of the conscious triumph that this might prepare for her, and of which,
+had I doubted of my own judgement, I could still take Outreau&rsquo;s
+fine start as the full guarantee&mdash;more interesting was the question
+of the process by which such a history could get itself enacted.&nbsp;
+The curious thing was that all the while the reasons of her having passed
+for plain&mdash;the reasons for Lady Beldonald&rsquo;s fond calculation,
+which they quite justified&mdash;were written large in her face, so
+large that it was easy to understand them as the only ones she herself
+had ever read.&nbsp; What was it then that actually made the old stale
+sentence mean something so different?&mdash;into what new combinations,
+what extraordinary language, unknown but understood at a glance, had
+time and life translated it?&nbsp; The only thing to be said was that
+time and life were artists who beat us all, working with recipes and
+secrets we could never find out.&nbsp; I really ought to have, like
+a lecturer or a showman, a chart or a blackboard to present properly
+the relation, in the wonderful old tender battered blanched face, between
+the original elements and the exquisite final &ldquo;style.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+I could do it with chalks, but I can scarcely do it with words.&nbsp;
+However, the thing was, for any artist who respected himself, to <i>feel</i>
+it&mdash;which I abundantly did; and then not to conceal from <i>her</i>
+I felt it&mdash;which I neglected as little.&nbsp; But she was really,
+to do her complete justice, the last to understand; and I&rsquo;m not
+sure that, to the end&mdash;for there was an end&mdash;she quite made
+it all out or knew where she was.&nbsp; When you&rsquo;ve been brought
+up for fifty years on black it must be hard to adjust your organism
+at a day&rsquo;s notice to gold-colour.&nbsp; Her whole nature had been
+pitched in the key of her supposed plainness.&nbsp; She had known how
+to be ugly&mdash;it was the only thing she had learnt save, if possible,
+how not to mind it.&nbsp; Being beautiful took in any case a new set
+of muscles.&nbsp; It was on the prior conviction, literally, that she
+had developed her admirable dress, instinctively felicitous, always
+either black or white and a matter of rather severe squareness and studied
+line.&nbsp; She was magnificently neat; everything she showed had a
+way of looking both old and fresh; and there was on every occasion the
+same picture in her draped head&mdash;draped in low-falling black&mdash;and
+the fine white plaits (of a painter&rsquo;s white, somehow) disposed
+on her chest.&nbsp; What had happened was that these arrangements, determined
+by certain considerations, lent themselves in effect much better to
+certain others.&nbsp; Adopted in mere shy silence they had really only
+deepened her accent.&nbsp; It was singular, moreover, that, so constituted,
+there was nothing in her aspect of the ascetic or the nun.&nbsp; She
+was a good hard sixteenth-century figure, not withered with innocence,
+bleached rather by life in the open.&nbsp; She was in short just what
+we had made of her, a Holbein for a great Museum; and our position,
+Mrs. Munden&rsquo;s and mine, rapidly became that of persons having
+such a treasure to dispose of.&nbsp; The world&mdash;I speak of course
+mainly of the art-world&mdash;flocked to see it.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;But has she any idea herself, poor thing?&rdquo; was the way
+I had put it to Mrs. Munden on our next meeting after the incident at
+my studio; with the effect, however, only of leaving my friend at first
+to take me as alluding to Mrs. Brash&rsquo;s possible prevision of the
+chatter she might create.&nbsp; I had my own sense of that&mdash;this
+provision had been nil; the question was of her consciousness of the
+office for which Lady Beldonald had counted on her and for which we
+were so promptly proceeding to spoil her altogether.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh I think she arrived with a goodish notion,&rdquo; Mrs.
+Munden had replied when I had explained; &ldquo;for she&rsquo;s clever
+too, you know, as well as good-looking, and I don&rsquo;t see how, if
+she ever really <i>knew</i> Nina, she could have supposed for a moment
+that she wasn&rsquo;t wanted for whatever she might have left to give
+up.&nbsp; Hasn&rsquo;t she moreover always been made to feel that she&rsquo;s
+ugly enough for anything?&rdquo;&nbsp; It was even at this point already
+wonderful how my friend had mastered the case and what lights, alike
+for its past and its future, she was prepared to throw on it.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If she has seen herself as ugly enough for anything she has seen
+herself&mdash;and that was the only way&mdash;as ugly enough for Nina;
+and she has had her own manner of showing that she understands without
+making Nina commit herself to anything vulgar.&nbsp; Women are never
+without ways for doing such things&mdash;both for communicating and
+receiving knowledge&mdash;that I can&rsquo;t explain to you, and that
+you wouldn&rsquo;t understand if I could, since you must be a woman
+even to do that.&nbsp; I daresay they&rsquo;ve expressed it all to each
+other simply in the language of kisses.&nbsp; But doesn&rsquo;t it at
+any rate make something rather beautiful of the relation between them
+as affected by our discovery&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had a laugh for her plural possessive.&nbsp; &ldquo;The point is
+of course that if there was a conscious bargain, and our action on Mrs.
+Brash is to deprive her of the sense of keeping her side of it, various
+things may happen that won&rsquo;t be good either for her or for ourselves.&nbsp;
+She may conscientiously throw up the position.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; my companion mused&mdash;&ldquo;for she is conscientious.&nbsp;
+Or Nina, without waiting for that, may cast her forth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I faced it all.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then we should have to keep her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As a regular model?&rdquo; Mrs. Munden was ready for anything.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh that would be lovely!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But I further worked it out.&nbsp; &ldquo;The difficulty is that
+she&rsquo;s not a model, hang it&mdash;that she&rsquo;s too good for
+one, that she&rsquo;s the very thing herself.&nbsp; When Outreau and
+I have each had our go, that will be all; there&rsquo;ll be nothing
+left for any one else.&nbsp; Therefore it behoves us quite to understand
+that our attitude&rsquo;s a responsibility.&nbsp; If we can&rsquo;t
+do for her positively more than Nina does&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We must let her alone?&rdquo;&nbsp; My companion continued
+to muse.&nbsp; &ldquo;I see!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yet don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; I returned, &ldquo;see too much.&nbsp;
+We <i>can</i> do more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Than Nina?&rdquo; She was again on the spot.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+wouldn&rsquo;t after all be difficult.&nbsp; We only want the directly
+opposite thing&mdash;and which is the only one the poor dear can give.&nbsp;
+Unless indeed,&rdquo; she suggested, &ldquo;we simply retract&mdash;we
+back out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I turned it over.&nbsp; &ldquo;It&rsquo;s too late for that.&nbsp;
+Whether Mrs. Brash&rsquo;s peace is gone I can&rsquo;t say.&nbsp; But
+Nina&rsquo;s is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, and there&rsquo;s no way to bring it back that won&rsquo;t
+sacrifice her friend.&nbsp; We can&rsquo;t turn round and say Mrs. Brash
+is ugly, can we?&nbsp; But fancy Nina&rsquo;s not having <i>seen</i>!&rdquo;
+Mrs. Munden exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t see now,&rdquo; I answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;She
+can&rsquo;t, I&rsquo;m certain, make out what we mean.&nbsp; The woman,
+for <i>her</i> still, is just what she always was.&nbsp; But she has
+nevertheless had her stroke, and her blindness, while she wavers and
+gropes in the dark, only adds to her discomfort.&nbsp; Her blow was
+to see the attention of the world deviate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All the same I don&rsquo;t think, you know,&rdquo; my interlocutress
+said, &ldquo;that Nina will have made her a scene or that, whatever
+we do, she&rsquo;ll ever make her one.&nbsp; That isn&rsquo;t the way
+it will happen, for she&rsquo;s exactly as conscientious as Mrs. Brash.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then what is the way?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will just happen in silence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what will &lsquo;it,&rsquo; as you call it, be?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that what we want really to see?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I replied after a turn or two about, &ldquo;whether
+we want it or not it&rsquo;s exactly what we <i>shall</i> see; which
+is a reason the more for fancying, between the pair there&mdash;in the
+quiet exquisite house, and full of superiorities and suppressions as
+they both are&mdash;the extraordinary situation.&nbsp; If I said just
+now that it&rsquo;s too late to do anything but assent it&rsquo;s because
+I&rsquo;ve taken the full measure of what happened at my studio.&nbsp;
+It took but a few moments&mdash;but she tasted of the tree.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>My companion wondered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nina?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Brash.&rdquo;&nbsp; And to have to put it so ministered,
+while I took yet another turn, to a sort of agitation.&nbsp; Our attitude
+was a responsibility.</p>
+<p>But I had suggested something else to my friend, who appeared for
+a moment detached.&nbsp; &ldquo;Should you say she&rsquo;ll hate her
+worse if she <i>doesn&rsquo;t</i> see?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lady Beldonald?&nbsp; Doesn&rsquo;t see what we see, you mean,
+than if she does?&nbsp; Ah I give <i>that</i> up!&rdquo; I laughed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But what I can tell you is why I hold that, as I said just now,
+we can do most.&nbsp; We can do this: we can give to a harmless and
+sensitive creature hitherto practically disinherited&mdash;and give
+with an unexpectedness that will immensely add to its price&mdash;the
+pure joy of a deep draught of the very pride of life, of an acclaimed
+personal triumph in our superior sophisticated world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Munden had a glow of response for my sudden eloquence.&nbsp;
+Oh it will be beautiful!</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<p>Well, that&rsquo;s what, on the whole and in spite of everything,
+it really was.&nbsp; It has dropped into my memory a rich little gallery
+of pictures, a regular panorama of those occasions that were to minister
+to the view from which I had so for a moment extracted a lyric inspiration.&nbsp;
+I see Mrs. Brash on each of these occasions practically enthroned and
+surrounded and more or less mobbed; see the hurrying and the nudging
+and the pressing and the staring; see the people &ldquo;making up&rdquo;
+and introduced, and catch the word when they have had their turn; hear
+it above all, the great one&mdash;&ldquo;Ah yes, the famous Holbein!&rdquo;&mdash;passed
+about with that perfection of promptitude that makes the motions of
+the London mind so happy a mixture of those of the parrot and the sheep.&nbsp;
+Nothing would be easier of course than to tell the whole little tale
+with an eye only for that silly side of it. Great was the silliness,
+but great also as to this case of poor Mrs. Brash, I will say for it,
+the good nature.&nbsp; Of course, furthermore, it took in particular
+&ldquo;our set,&rdquo; with its positive child-terror of the <i>banal</i>,
+to be either so foolish or so wise; though indeed I&rsquo;ve never quite
+known where our set begins and ends, and have had to content myself
+on this score with the indication once given me by a lady next whom
+I was placed at dinner: &ldquo;Oh it&rsquo;s bounded on the north by
+Ibsen and on the south by Sargent!&rdquo;&nbsp; Mrs. Brash never sat
+to me; she absolutely declined; and when she declared that it was quite
+enough for her that I had with that fine precipitation invited her,
+I quite took this as she meant it; before we had gone very far our understanding,
+hers and mine, was complete.&nbsp; Her attitude was as happy as her
+success was prodigious.&nbsp; The sacrifice of the portrait was a sacrifice
+to the true inwardness of Lady Beldonald, and did much, for the time,
+I divined, toward muffling their domestic tension.&nbsp; All it was
+thus in her power to say&mdash;and I heard of a few cases of her having
+said it&mdash;was that she was sure I would have painted her beautifully
+if she hadn&rsquo;t prevented me.&nbsp; She couldn&rsquo;t even tell
+the truth, which was that I certainly would have done so if Lady Beldonald
+hadn&rsquo;t; and she never could mention the subject at all before
+that personage.&nbsp; I can only describe the affair, naturally, from
+the outside, and heaven forbid indeed that I should try too closely
+to, reconstruct the possible strange intercourse of these good friends
+at home.</p>
+<p>My anecdote, however, would lose half the point it may have to show
+were I to omit all mention of the consummate turn her ladyship appeared
+gradually to have found herself able to give her deportment.&nbsp; She
+had made it impossible I should myself bring up our old, our original
+question, but there was real distinction in her manner of now accepting
+certain other possibilities.&nbsp; Let me do her that justice; her effort
+at magnanimity must have been immense.&nbsp; There couldn&rsquo;t fail
+of course to be ways in which poor Mrs. Brash paid for it.&nbsp; How
+much she had to pay we were in fact soon enough to see; and it&rsquo;s
+my intimate conviction that, as a climax, her life at last was the price.&nbsp;
+But while she lived at least&mdash;and it was with an intensity, for
+those wondrous weeks, of which she had never dreamed&mdash;Lady Beldonald
+herself faced the music.&nbsp; This is what I mean by the possibilities,
+by the sharp actualities indeed, that she accepted.&nbsp; She took our
+friend out, she showed her at home, never attempted to hide or to betray
+her, played her no trick whatever so long as the ordeal lasted.&nbsp;
+She drank deep, on her side too, of the cup&mdash;the cup that for her
+own lips could only be bitterness.&nbsp; There was, I think, scarce
+a special success of her companion&rsquo;s at which she wasn&rsquo;t
+personally present.&nbsp; Mrs. Munden&rsquo;s theory of the silence
+in which all this would be muffled for them was none the less, and in
+abundance, confirmed by our observations.&nbsp; The whole thing was
+to be the death of one or the other of them, but they never spoke of
+it at tea.&nbsp; I remember even that Nina went so far as to say to
+me once, looking me full in the eyes, quite sublimely, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+made out what you mean&mdash;she <i>is</i> a picture.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+beauty of this moreover was that, as I&rsquo;m persuaded, she hadn&rsquo;t
+really made it out at all&mdash;the words were the mere hypocrisy of
+her reflective endeavour for virtue.&nbsp; She couldn&rsquo;t possibly
+have made it out; her friend was as much as ever &ldquo;dreadfully plain&rdquo;
+to her; she must have wondered to the last what on earth possessed us.&nbsp;
+Wouldn&rsquo;t it in fact have been after all just this failure of vision,
+this supreme stupidity in short, that kept the catastrophe so long at
+bay?&nbsp; There was a certain sense of greatness for her in seeing
+so many of us so absurdly mistaken; and I recall that on various occasions,
+and in particular when she uttered the words just quoted, this high
+serenity, as a sign of the relief of her soreness, if not of the effort
+of her conscience, did something quite visible to my eyes, and also
+quite unprecedented, for the beauty of her face.&nbsp; She got a real
+lift from it&mdash;such a momentary discernible sublimity that I recollect
+coming out on the spot with a queer crude amused &ldquo;Do you know
+I believe I could paint you <i>now</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was a fool not to have closed with me then and there; for what
+has happened since has altered everything&mdash;what was to happen a
+little later was so much more than I could swallow.&nbsp; This was the
+disappearance of the famous Holbein from one day to the other&mdash;producing
+a consternation among us all as great as if the Venus of Milo had suddenly
+vanished from the Louvre.&nbsp; &ldquo;She has simply shipped her straight
+back&rdquo;&mdash;the explanation was given in that form by Mrs. Munden,
+who added that any cord pulled tight enough would end at last by snapping.&nbsp;
+At the snap, in any case, we mightily jumped, for the masterpiece we
+had for three or four months been living with had made us feel its presence
+as a luminous lesson and a daily need.&nbsp; We recognised more than
+ever that it had been, for high finish, the gem of our collection&mdash;we
+found what a blank it left on the wall.&nbsp; Lady Beldonald might fill
+up the blank, but we couldn&rsquo;t.&nbsp; That she did soon fill it
+up&mdash;and, heaven help us, <i>how</i> was put before me after an
+interval of no great length, but during which I hadn&rsquo;t seen her.&nbsp;
+I dined on the Christmas of last year at Mrs. Munden&rsquo;s, and Nina,
+with a &ldquo;scratch lot,&rdquo; as our hostess said, was there, so
+that, the preliminary wait being longish, she could approach me very
+sweetly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll come to you tomorrow if you like,&rdquo;
+she said; and the effect of it, after a first stare at her, was to make
+me look all round.&nbsp; I took in, by these two motions, two things;
+one of which was that, though now again so satisfied herself of her
+high state, she could give me nothing comparable to what I should have
+got had she taken me up at the moment of my meeting her on her distinguished
+concession; the other that she was &ldquo;suited&rdquo; afresh and that
+Mrs. Brash&rsquo;s successor was fully installed.&nbsp; Mrs. Brash&rsquo;s
+successor, was at the other side of the room, and I became conscious
+that Mrs. Munden was waiting to see my eyes seek her.&nbsp; I guessed
+the meaning of the wait; what was one, this time, to say?&nbsp; Oh first
+and foremost assuredly that it was immensely droll, for this time at
+least there was no mistake.&nbsp; The lady I looked upon, and as to
+whom my friend, again quite at sea, appealed to me for a formula, was
+as little a Holbein, or a specimen of any other school, as she was,
+like Lady Beldonald herself, a Titian.&nbsp; The formula was easy to
+give, for the amusement was that her prettiness&mdash;yes, literally,
+prodigiously, her prettiness&mdash;was distinct.&nbsp; Lady Beldonald
+had been magnificent&mdash;had been almost intelligent.&nbsp; Miss What&rsquo;s-her-name
+continues pretty, continues even young, and doesn&rsquo;t matter a straw!&nbsp;
+She matters so ideally little that Lady Beldonald is practically safer,
+I judge, than she has ever been.&nbsp; There hasn&rsquo;t been a symptom
+of chatter about this person, and I believe her protectress is much
+surprised that we&rsquo;re not more struck.</p>
+<p>It was at any rate strictly impossible to me to make an appointment
+for the day as to which I have just recorded Nina&rsquo;s proposal;
+and the turn of events since then has not quickened my eagerness.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Munden remained in correspondence with Mrs. Brash&mdash;to the
+extent, that is, of three letters, each of which she showed me.&nbsp;
+They so told to our imagination her terrible little story that we were
+quite prepared&mdash;or thought we were&mdash;for her going out like
+a snuffed candle.&nbsp; She resisted, on her return to her original
+conditions, less than a year; the taste of the tree, as I had called
+it, had been fatal to her; what she had contentedly enough lived without
+before for half a century she couldn&rsquo;t now live without for a
+day.&nbsp; I know nothing of her original conditions&mdash;some minor
+American city&mdash;save that for her to have gone back to them was
+clearly to have stepped out of her frame.&nbsp; We performed, Mrs. Munden
+and I, a small funeral service for her by talking it all over and making
+it all out.&nbsp; It wasn&rsquo;t&mdash;the minor American city&mdash;a
+market for Holbeins, and what had occurred was that the poor old picture,
+banished from its museum and refreshed by the rise of no new movement
+to hang it, was capable of the miracle of a silent revolution; of itself
+turning, in its dire dishonour, its face to the wall.&nbsp; So it stood,
+without the intervention of the ghost of a critic, till they happened
+to pull it round again and find it mere dead paint.&nbsp; Well, it had
+had, if that&rsquo;s anything, its season of fame, its name on a thousand
+tongues and printed in capitals in the catalogue.&nbsp; We hadn&rsquo;t
+been at fault.&nbsp; I haven&rsquo;t, all the same, the least note of
+her&mdash;not a scratch.&nbsp; And I did her so in intention!&nbsp;
+Mrs. Munden continues to remind me, however, that this is not the sort
+of rendering with which, on the other side, after all, Lady Beldonald
+proposes to content herself.&nbsp; She has come back to the question
+of her own portrait.&nbsp; Let me settle it then at last.&nbsp; Since
+she <i>will</i> have the real thing&mdash;well, hang it, she shall!</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BELDONALD HOLBEIN***</p>
+<pre>
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+</pre></body>
+</html>
diff --git a/2366.txt b/2366.txt
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+++ b/2366.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Beldonald Holbein, by Henry James
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Beldonald Holbein
+
+
+Author: Henry James
+
+Release Date: May 8, 2005 [eBook #2366]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BELDONALD HOLBEIN***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1922 Macmillan and Co. edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@coventry.ac.uk. Proofing by Andy and his wife.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BELDONALD HOLBEIN
+by Henry James
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Mrs. Munden had not yet been to my studio on so good a pretext as when
+she first intimated that it would be quite open to me--should I only
+care, as she called it, to throw the handkerchief--to paint her beautiful
+sister-in-law. I needn't go here more than is essential into the
+question of Mrs. Munden, who would really, by the way, be a story in
+herself. She has a manner of her own of putting things, and some of
+those she has put to me--! Her implication was that Lady Beldonald
+hadn't only seen and admired certain examples of my work, but had
+literally been prepossessed in favour of the painter's "personality." Had
+I been struck with this sketch I might easily have imagined her ladyship
+was throwing me the handkerchief. "She hasn't done," my visitor said,
+"what she ought."
+
+"Do you mean she has done what she oughtn't?"
+
+"Nothing horrid--ah dear no." And something in Mrs. Munden's tone, with
+the way she appeared to muse a moment, even suggested to me that what she
+"oughtn't" was perhaps what Lady Beldonald had too much neglected. "She
+hasn't got on."
+
+"What's the matter with her?"
+
+"Well, to begin with, she's American."
+
+"But I thought that was the way of ways to get on."
+
+"It's one of them. But it's one of the ways of being awfully out of it
+too. There are so many!"
+
+"So many Americans?" I asked.
+
+"Yes, plenty of _them_," Mrs. Munden sighed. "So many ways, I mean, of
+being one."
+
+"But if your sister-in-law's way is to be beautiful--?"
+
+"Oh there are different ways of that too."
+
+"And she hasn't taken the right way?"
+
+"Well," my friend returned as if it were rather difficult to express,
+"she hasn't done with it--"
+
+"I see," I laughed; "what she oughtn't!"
+
+Mrs. Munden in a manner corrected me, but it _was_ difficult to express.
+"My brother at all events was certainly selfish. Till he died she was
+almost never in London; they wintered, year after year, for what he
+supposed to be his health--which it didn't help, since he was so much too
+soon to meet his end--in the south of France and in the dullest holes he
+could pick out, and when they came back to England he always kept her in
+the country. I must say for her that she always behaved beautifully.
+Since his death she has been more in London, but on a stupidly
+unsuccessful footing. I don't think she quite understands. She hasn't
+what I should call a life. It may be of course that she doesn't want
+one. That's just what I can't exactly find out. I can't make out how
+much she knows."
+
+"I can easily make out," I returned with hilarity, "how much _you_ do!"
+
+"Well, you're very horrid. Perhaps she's too old."
+
+"Too old for what?" I persisted.
+
+"For anything. Of course she's no longer even a little young; only
+preserved--oh but preserved, like bottled fruit, in syrup! I want to
+help her if only because she gets on my nerves, and I really think the
+way of it would be just the right thing of yours at the Academy and on
+the line."
+
+"But suppose," I threw out, "she should give on my nerves?"
+
+"Oh she will. But isn't that all in the day's work, and don't great
+beauties always--?"
+
+"_You_ don't," I interrupted; but I at any rate saw Lady Beldonald later
+on--the day came when her kinswoman brought her, and then I saw how her
+life must have its centre in her own idea of her appearance. Nothing
+else about her mattered--one knew her all when one knew that. She's
+indeed in one particular, I think, sole of her kind--a person whom vanity
+has had the odd effect of keeping positively safe and sound. This
+passion is supposed surely, for the most part, to be a principle of
+perversion and of injury, leading astray those who listen to it and
+landing them sooner or later in this or that complication; but it has
+landed her ladyship nowhere whatever--it has kept her from the first
+moment of full consciousness, one feels, exactly in the same place. It
+has protected her from every danger, has made her absolutely proper and
+prim. If she's "preserved," as Mrs. Munden originally described her to
+me, it's her vanity that has beautifully done it--putting her years ago
+in a plate-glass case and closing up the receptacle against every breath
+of air. How shouldn't she be preserved when you might smash your
+knuckles on this transparency before you could crack it? And she is--oh
+amazingly! Preservation is scarce the word for the rare condition of her
+surface. She looks _naturally_ new, as if she took out every night her
+large lovely varnished eyes and put them in water. The thing was to
+paint her, I perceived, in the glass case--a most tempting attaching
+feat; render to the full the shining interposing plate and the general
+show-window effect.
+
+It was agreed, though it wasn't quite arranged, that she should sit to
+me. If it wasn't quite arranged this was because, as I was made to
+understand from an early stage, the conditions from our start must be
+such as should exclude all elements of disturbance, such, in a word, as
+she herself should judge absolutely favourable. And it seemed that these
+conditions were easily imperilled. Suddenly, for instance, at a moment
+when I was expecting her to meet an appointment--the first--that I had
+proposed, I received a hurried visit from Mrs. Munden, who came on her
+behalf to let me know that the season happened just not to be propitious
+and that our friend couldn't be quite sure, to the hour, when it would
+again become so. She felt nothing would make it so but a total absence of
+worry.
+
+"Oh a 'total absence,'" I said, "is a large order! We live in a worrying
+world."
+
+"Yes; and she feels exactly that--more than you'd think. It's in fact
+just why she mustn't have, as she has now, a particular distress on at
+the very moment. She wants of course to look her best, and such things
+tell on her appearance."
+
+I shook my head. "Nothing tells on her appearance. Nothing reaches it
+in any way; nothing gets _at_ it. However, I can understand her anxiety.
+But what's her particular distress?"
+
+"Why the illness of Miss Dadd."
+
+"And who in the world's Miss Dadd?"
+
+"Her most intimate friend and constant companion--the lady who was with
+us here that first day."
+
+"Oh the little round black woman who gurgled with admiration?"
+
+"None other. But she was taken ill last week, and it may very well be
+that she'll gurgle no more. She was very bad yesterday and is no better
+to-day, and Nina's much upset. If anything happens to Miss Dadd she'll
+have to get another, and, though she has had two or three before, that
+won't be so easy."
+
+"Two or three Miss Dadds? is it possible? And still wanting another!" I
+recalled the poor lady completely now. "No; I shouldn't indeed think it
+would be easy to get another. But why is a succession of them necessary
+to Lady Beldonald's existence?"
+
+"Can't you guess?" Mrs. Munden looked deep, yet impatient. "They help."
+
+"Help what? Help whom?"
+
+"Why every one. You and me for instance. To do what? Why to think Nina
+beautiful. She has them for that purpose; they serve as foils, as
+accents serve on syllables, as terms of comparison. They make her 'stand
+out.' It's an effect of contrast that must be familiar to you artists;
+it's what a woman does when she puts a band of black velvet under a pearl
+ornament that may, require, as she thinks, a little showing off."
+
+I wondered. "Do you mean she always has them black?"
+
+"Dear no; I've seen them blue, green, yellow. They may be what they
+like, so long as they're always one other thing."
+
+"Hideous?"
+
+Mrs. Munden made a mouth for it. "Hideous is too much to say; she
+doesn't really require them as bad as that. But consistently,
+cheerfully, loyally plain. It's really a most happy relation. She loves
+them for it."
+
+"And for what do they love _her_?"
+
+"Why just for the amiability that they produce in her. Then also for
+their 'home.' It's a career for them."
+
+"I see. But if that's the case," I asked, "why are they so difficult to
+find?"
+
+"Oh they must be safe; it's all in that: her being able to depend on them
+to keep to the terms of the bargain and never have moments of rising--as
+even the ugliest woman will now and then (say when she's in
+love)--superior to themselves."
+
+I turned it over. "Then if they can't inspire passions the poor things
+mayn't even at least feel them?"
+
+"She distinctly deprecates it. That's why such a man as you may be after
+all a complication."
+
+I continued to brood. "You're very sure Miss Dadd's ailment isn't an
+affection that, being smothered, has struck in?" My joke, however,
+wasn't well timed, for I afterwards learned that the unfortunate lady's
+state had been, even while I spoke, such as to forbid all hope. The
+worst symptoms had appeared; she was destined not to recover; and a week
+later I heard from Mrs. Munden that she would in fact "gurgle" no more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+All this had been for Lady Beldonald an agitation so great that access to
+her apartment was denied for a time even to her sister-in-law. It was
+much more out of the question of course that she should unveil her face
+to a person of my special business with it; so that the question of the
+portrait was by common consent left to depend on that of the installation
+of a successor to her late companion. Such a successor, I gathered from
+Mrs. Munden, widowed childless and lonely, as well as inapt for the minor
+offices, she had absolutely to have; a more or less humble _alter ago_ to
+deal with the servants, keep the accounts, make the tea and watch the
+window-blinds. Nothing seemed more natural than that she should marry
+again, and obviously that might come; yet the predecessors of Miss Dadd
+had been contemporaneous with a first husband, so that others formed in
+her image might be contemporaneous with a second. I was much occupied in
+those months at any rate, and these questions and their ramifications
+losing themselves for a while to my view, I was only brought back to them
+by Mrs. Munden's arrival one day with the news that we were all right
+again--her sister-in-law was once more "suited." A certain Mrs. Brash,
+an American relative whom she hadn't seen for years, but with whom she
+had continued to communicate, was to come out to her immediately; and
+this person, it appeared, could be quite trusted to meet the conditions.
+She was ugly--ugly enough, without abuse of it, and was unlimitedly good.
+The position offered her by Lady Beldonald was moreover exactly what she
+needed; widowed also, after many troubles and reverses, with her fortune
+of the smallest, and her various children either buried or placed about,
+she had never had time or means to visit England, and would really be
+grateful in her declining years for the new experience and the pleasant
+light work involved in her cousin's hospitality. They had been much
+together early in life and Lady Beldonald was immensely fond of her--would
+in fact have tried to get hold of her before hadn't Mrs. Brash been
+always in bondage to family duties, to the variety of her tribulations. I
+daresay I laughed at my friend's use of the term "position"--the
+position, one might call it, of a candlestick or a sign-post, and I
+daresay I must have asked if the special service the poor lady was to
+render had been made clear to her. Mrs. Munden left me in any case with
+the rather droll image of her faring forth across the sea quite
+consciously and resignedly to perform it.
+
+The point of the communication had however been that my sitter was again
+looking up and would doubtless, on the arrival and due initiation of Mrs.
+Brash, be in form really to wait on me. The situation must further, to
+my knowledge, have developed happily, for I arranged with Mrs. Munden
+that our friend, now all ready to begin, but wanting first just to see
+the things I had most recently done, should come once more, as a final
+preliminary, to my studio. A good foreign friend of mine, a French
+painter, Paul Outreau, was at the moment in London, and I had proposed,
+as he was much interested in types, to get together for his amusement a
+small afternoon party. Every one came, my big room was full, there was
+music and a modest spread; and I've not forgotten the light of admiration
+in Outreau's expressive face as at the end of half an hour he came up to
+me in his enthusiasm. "_Bonte divine, mon cher--que cette vieille est
+donc belle_!"
+
+I had tried to collect all the beauty I could, and also all the youth, so
+that for a moment I was at a loss. I had talked to many people and
+provided for the music, and there were figures in the crowd that were
+still lost to me. "What old woman do you mean?"
+
+"I don't know her name--she was over by the door a moment ago. I asked
+somebody and was told, I think, that she's American."
+
+I looked about and saw one of my guests attach a pair of fine eyes to
+Outreau very much as if she knew he must be talking of her. "Oh Lady
+Beldonald! Yes, she's handsome; but the great point about her is that
+she has been 'put up' to keep, and that she wouldn't be flattered if she
+knew you spoke of her as old. A box of sardines is 'old' only after it
+has been opened, Lady Beldonald never has yet been--but I'm going to do
+it." I joked, but I was somewhat disappointed. It was a type that, with
+his unerring sense for the _banal_, I shouldn't have expected Outreau to
+pick out.
+
+"You're going to paint her? But, my dear man, she is painted--and as
+neither you nor I can do it. _Ou est-elle donc_? He had lost her, and I
+saw I had made a mistake. She's the greatest of all the great Holbeins."
+
+I was relieved. "Ah then not Lady Beldonald! But do I possess a Holbein
+of _any_ price unawares?"
+
+"There she is--there she is! Dear, dear, dear, what a head!" And I saw
+whom he meant--and what: a small old lady in a black dress and a black
+bonnet, both relieved with a little white, who had evidently just
+changed, her place to reach a corner from which more of the room and of
+the scene was presented to her. She appeared unnoticed and unknown, and
+I immediately recognised that some other guest must have brought her and,
+for want of opportunity, had as yet to call my attention to her. But two
+things, simultaneously with this and with each other, struck me with
+force; one of them the truth of Outreau's description of her, the other
+the fact that the person bringing her could only have been Lady
+Beldonald. She _was_ a Holbein--of the first water; yet she was also
+Mrs. Brash, the imported "foil," the indispensable "accent," the
+successor to the dreary Miss Dadd! By the time I had put these things
+together--Outreau's "American" having helped me--I was in just such full
+possession of her face as I had found myself, on the other first
+occasion, of that of her patroness. Only with so different a
+consequence. I couldn't look at her enough, and I stared and stared till
+I became aware she might have fancied me challenging her as a person
+unpresented. "All the same," Outreau went on, equally held, "_c'est une
+tete a faire_. If I were only staying long enough for a crack at her!
+But I tell you what"--and he seized my arm--"bring her over!"
+
+"Over?"
+
+"To Paris. She'd have a _succes fou_."
+
+"Ah thanks, my dear fellow," I was now quite in a position to say; "she's
+the handsomest thing in London, and"--for what I might do with her was
+already before me with intensity--"I propose to keep her to myself." It
+was before me with intensity, in the light of Mrs. Brash's distant
+perfection of a little white old face, in which every wrinkle was the
+touch of a master; but something else, I suddenly felt, was not less so,
+for Lady Beldonald, in the other quarter, and though she couldn't have
+made out the subject of our notice, continued to fix us, and her eyes had
+the challenge of those of the woman of consequence who has missed
+something. A moment later I was close to her, apologising first for not
+having been more on the spot at her arrival, but saying in the next
+breath uncontrollably: "Why my dear lady, it's a Holbein!"
+
+"A Holbein? What?"
+
+"Why the wonderful sharp old face so extraordinarily, consummately
+drawn--in the frame of black velvet. That of Mrs. Brash, I mean--isn't
+it her name?--your companion."
+
+This was the beginning of a most odd matter--the essence of my anecdote;
+and I think the very first note of the oddity must have sounded for me in
+the tone in which her ladyship spoke after giving me a silent look. It
+seemed to come to me out of a distance immeasurably removed from Holbein.
+"Mrs. Brash isn't my 'companion' in the sense you appear to mean. She's
+my rather near relation and a very dear old friend. I love her--and you
+must know her."
+
+"Know her? Rather! Why to see her is to want on the spot to 'go' for
+her. She also must sit for me,"
+
+"_She_? Louisa Brash?" If Lady Beldonald had the theory that her beauty
+directly showed it when things weren't well with her, this impression,
+which the fixed sweetness of her serenity had hitherto struck me by no
+means as justifying, gave me now my first glimpse of its grounds. It was
+as if I had never before seen her face invaded by anything I should have
+called an expression. This expression moreover was of the faintest--was
+like the effect produced on a surface by an agitation both deep within
+and as yet much confused. "Have you told her so?" she then quickly
+asked, as if to soften the sound of her surprise.
+
+"Dear no, I've but just noticed her--Outreau, a moment ago put me on her.
+But we're both so taken, and he also wants--"
+
+"To _paint_ her?" Lady Beldonald uncontrollably murmured.
+
+"Don't be afraid we shall fight for her," I returned with a laugh for
+this tone. Mrs. Brash was still where I could see her without appearing
+to stare, and she mightn't have seen I was looking at her, though her
+protectress, I'm afraid, could scarce have failed of that certainty. "We
+must each take our turn, and at any rate she's a wonderful thing, so that
+if you'll let her go to Paris Outreau promises her there--"
+
+"_There_?" my companion gasped.
+
+"A career bigger still than among us, as he considers we haven't half
+their eye. He guarantees her _a succes fou_."
+
+She couldn't get over it. "Louisa Brash? In Paris?"
+
+"They do see," I went on, "more than we and they live extraordinarily,
+don't you know, in that. But she'll do something here too."
+
+"And what will she do?"
+
+If frankly now I couldn't help giving Mrs. Brash a longer look, so after
+it I could as little resist sounding my converser. "You'll see. Only
+give her time."
+
+She said nothing during the moment in which she met my eyes; but then:
+"Time, it seems to me, is exactly what you and your friend want. If you
+haven't talked with her--"
+
+"We haven't seen her? Oh we see bang off--with a click like a steel
+spring. It's our trade, it's our life, and we should be donkeys if we
+made mistakes. That's the way I saw you yourself, my lady, if I may say
+so; that's the way, with a long pin straight through your body, I've got
+you. And just so I've got _her_!"
+
+All this, for reasons, had brought my guest to her feet; but her eyes had
+while we talked never once followed the direction of mine. "You call her
+a Holbein?"
+
+"Outreau did, and I of course immediately recognised it. Don't you? She
+brings the old boy to life! It's just as I should call you a Titian. You
+bring _him_ to life."
+
+She couldn't be said to relax, because she couldn't be said to have
+hardened; but something at any rate on this took place in her--something
+indeed quite disconnected from what I would have called her. "Don't you
+understand that she has always been supposed--?" It had the ring of
+impatience; nevertheless it stopped short on a scruple.
+
+I knew what it was, however, well enough to say it for her if she
+preferred. "To be nothing whatever to look at? To be unfortunately
+plain--or even if you like repulsively ugly? Oh yes, I understand it
+perfectly, just as I understand--I have to as a part of my trade--many
+other forms of stupidity. It's nothing new to one that ninety-nine
+people out of a hundred have no eyes, no sense, no taste. There are
+whole communities impenetrably sealed. I don't say your friend's a
+person to make the men turn round in Regent Street. But it adds to the
+joy of the few who do see that they have it so much to themselves. Where
+in the world can she have lived? You must tell me all about that--or
+rather, if she'll be so good, _she_ must."
+
+"You mean then to speak to her--?"
+
+I wondered as she pulled up again. "Of her beauty?"
+
+"Her beauty!" cried Lady Beldonald so loud that two or three persons
+looked round.
+
+"Ah with every precaution of respect!" I declared in a much lower tone.
+But her back was by this time turned to me, and in the movement, as it
+were, one of the strangest little dramas I've ever known was well
+launched.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+It was a drama of small smothered intensely private things, and I knew of
+but one other person in the secret; yet that person and I found it
+exquisitely susceptible of notation, followed it with an interest the
+mutual communication of which did much for our enjoyment, and were
+present with emotion at its touching catastrophe. The small case--for so
+small a case--had made a great stride even before my little party
+separated, and in fact within the next ten minutes.
+
+In that space of time two things had happened one of which was that I
+made the acquaintance of Mrs. Brash; and the other that Mrs. Munden
+reached me, cleaving the crowd, with one of her usual pieces of news.
+What she had to impart was that, on her having just before asked Nina if
+the conditions of our sitting had been arranged with me, Nina had
+replied, with something like perversity, that she didn't propose to
+arrange them, that the whole affair was "off" again and that she
+preferred not to be further beset for the present. The question for Mrs.
+Munden was naturally what had happened and whether I understood. Oh I
+understood perfectly, and what I at first most understood was that even
+when I had brought in the name of Mrs. Brash intelligence wasn't yet in
+Mrs. Munden. She was quite as surprised as Lady Beldonald had been on
+hearing of the esteem in which I held Mrs. Brash's appearance. She was
+stupefied at learning that I had just in my ardour proposed to its
+proprietress to sit to me. Only she came round promptly--which Lady
+Beldonald really never did. Mrs. Munden was in fact wonderful; for when
+I had given her quickly "Why she's a Holbein, you know, absolutely," she
+took it up, after a first fine vacancy, with an immediate abysmal "Oh
+_is_ she?" that, as a piece of social gymnastics, did her the greatest
+honour; and she was in fact the first in London to spread the tidings.
+For a face--about it was magnificent. But she was also the first, I must
+add, to see what would really happen--though this she put before me only
+a week or two later. "It will kill her, my dear--that's what it will
+do!"
+
+She meant neither more nor less than that it would kill Lady Beldonald if
+I were to paint Mrs. Brash; for at this lurid light had we arrived in so
+short a space of time. It was for me to decide whether my aesthetic need
+of giving life to my idea was such as to justify me in destroying it in a
+woman after all in most eyes so beautiful. The situation was indeed
+sufficiently queer; for it remained to be seen what I should positively
+gain by giving up Mrs. Brash. I appeared to have in any case lost Lady
+Beldonald, now too "upset"--it was always Mrs. Munden's word about her
+and, as I inferred, her own about herself--to meet me again on our
+previous footing. The only thing, I of course soon saw, was to temporise
+to drop the whole question for the present and yet so far as possible
+keep each of the pair in view. I may as well say at once that this plan
+and this process gave their principal interest to the next several
+months. Mrs. Brash had turned up, if I remember, early in the new year,
+and her little wonderful career was in our particular circle one of the
+features of the following season. It was at all events for myself the
+most attaching; it's not my fault if I am so put together as often to
+find more life in situations obscure and subject to interpretation than
+in the gross rattle of the foreground. And there were all sorts of
+things, things touching, amusing, mystifying--and above all such an
+instance as I had never yet met--in this funny little fortune of the
+useful American cousin. Mrs. Munden was promptly at one with me as to
+the rarity and, to a near and human view, the beauty and interest of the
+position. We had neither of us ever before seen that degree and that
+special sort of personal success come to a woman for the first time so
+late in life. I found it an example of poetic, of absolutely retributive
+justice; so that my desire grew great to work it, as we say, on those
+lines. I had seen it all from the original moment at my studio; the poor
+lady had never known an hour's appreciation--which moreover, in perfect
+good faith, she had never missed. The very first thing I did after
+inducing so unintentionally the resentful retreat of her protectress had
+been to go straight over to her and say almost without preliminaries that
+I should hold myself immeasurably obliged for a few patient sittings.
+What I thus came face to face with was, on the instant, her whole
+unenlightened past and the full, if foreshortened, revelation of what
+among us all was now unfailingly in store for her. To turn the handle
+and start that tune came to me on the spot as a temptation. Here was a
+poor lady who had waited for the approach of old age to find out what she
+was worth. Here was a benighted being to whom it was to be disclosed in
+her fifty-seventh year--I was to make that out--that she had something
+that might pass for a face. She looked much more than her age, and was
+fairly frightened--as if I had been trying on her some possibly heartless
+London trick--when she had taken in my appeal. That showed me in what an
+air she had lived and--as I should have been tempted to put it had I
+spoken out--among what children of darkness. Later on I did them more
+justice; saw more that her wonderful points must have been points largely
+the fruit of time, and even that possibly she might never in all her life
+have looked so well as at this particular moment. It might have been
+that if her hour had struck I just happened to be present at the
+striking. What had occurred, all the same, was at the worst a notable
+comedy.
+
+The famous "irony of fate" takes many forms, but I had never yet seen it
+take quite this one. She had been "had over" on an understanding, and
+she wasn't playing fair. She had broken the law of her ugliness and had
+turned beautiful on the hands of her employer. More interesting even
+perhaps than a view of the conscious triumph that this might prepare for
+her, and of which, had I doubted of my own judgement, I could still take
+Outreau's fine start as the full guarantee--more interesting was the
+question of the process by which such a history could get itself enacted.
+The curious thing was that all the while the reasons of her having passed
+for plain--the reasons for Lady Beldonald's fond calculation, which they
+quite justified--were written large in her face, so large that it was
+easy to understand them as the only ones she herself had ever read. What
+was it then that actually made the old stale sentence mean something so
+different?--into what new combinations, what extraordinary language,
+unknown but understood at a glance, had time and life translated it? The
+only thing to be said was that time and life were artists who beat us
+all, working with recipes and secrets we could never find out. I really
+ought to have, like a lecturer or a showman, a chart or a blackboard to
+present properly the relation, in the wonderful old tender battered
+blanched face, between the original elements and the exquisite final
+"style." I could do it with chalks, but I can scarcely do it with words.
+However, the thing was, for any artist who respected himself, to _feel_
+it--which I abundantly did; and then not to conceal from _her_ I felt
+it--which I neglected as little. But she was really, to do her complete
+justice, the last to understand; and I'm not sure that, to the end--for
+there was an end--she quite made it all out or knew where she was. When
+you've been brought up for fifty years on black it must be hard to adjust
+your organism at a day's notice to gold-colour. Her whole nature had
+been pitched in the key of her supposed plainness. She had known how to
+be ugly--it was the only thing she had learnt save, if possible, how not
+to mind it. Being beautiful took in any case a new set of muscles. It
+was on the prior conviction, literally, that she had developed her
+admirable dress, instinctively felicitous, always either black or white
+and a matter of rather severe squareness and studied line. She was
+magnificently neat; everything she showed had a way of looking both old
+and fresh; and there was on every occasion the same picture in her draped
+head--draped in low-falling black--and the fine white plaits (of a
+painter's white, somehow) disposed on her chest. What had happened was
+that these arrangements, determined by certain considerations, lent
+themselves in effect much better to certain others. Adopted in mere shy
+silence they had really only deepened her accent. It was singular,
+moreover, that, so constituted, there was nothing in her aspect of the
+ascetic or the nun. She was a good hard sixteenth-century figure, not
+withered with innocence, bleached rather by life in the open. She was in
+short just what we had made of her, a Holbein for a great Museum; and our
+position, Mrs. Munden's and mine, rapidly became that of persons having
+such a treasure to dispose of. The world--I speak of course mainly of
+the art-world--flocked to see it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+"But has she any idea herself, poor thing?" was the way I had put it to
+Mrs. Munden on our next meeting after the incident at my studio; with the
+effect, however, only of leaving my friend at first to take me as
+alluding to Mrs. Brash's possible prevision of the chatter she might
+create. I had my own sense of that--this provision had been nil; the
+question was of her consciousness of the office for which Lady Beldonald
+had counted on her and for which we were so promptly proceeding to spoil
+her altogether.
+
+"Oh I think she arrived with a goodish notion," Mrs. Munden had replied
+when I had explained; "for she's clever too, you know, as well as good-
+looking, and I don't see how, if she ever really _knew_ Nina, she could
+have supposed for a moment that she wasn't wanted for whatever she might
+have left to give up. Hasn't she moreover always been made to feel that
+she's ugly enough for anything?" It was even at this point already
+wonderful how my friend had mastered the case and what lights, alike for
+its past and its future, she was prepared to throw on it. "If she has
+seen herself as ugly enough for anything she has seen herself--and that
+was the only way--as ugly enough for Nina; and she has had her own manner
+of showing that she understands without making Nina commit herself to
+anything vulgar. Women are never without ways for doing such things--both
+for communicating and receiving knowledge--that I can't explain to you,
+and that you wouldn't understand if I could, since you must be a woman
+even to do that. I daresay they've expressed it all to each other simply
+in the language of kisses. But doesn't it at any rate make something
+rather beautiful of the relation between them as affected by our
+discovery--?"
+
+I had a laugh for her plural possessive. "The point is of course that if
+there was a conscious bargain, and our action on Mrs. Brash is to deprive
+her of the sense of keeping her side of it, various things may happen
+that won't be good either for her or for ourselves. She may
+conscientiously throw up the position."
+
+"Yes," my companion mused--"for she is conscientious. Or Nina, without
+waiting for that, may cast her forth."
+
+I faced it all. "Then we should have to keep her."
+
+"As a regular model?" Mrs. Munden was ready for anything. "Oh that would
+be lovely!"
+
+But I further worked it out. "The difficulty is that she's not a model,
+hang it--that she's too good for one, that she's the very thing herself.
+When Outreau and I have each had our go, that will be all; there'll be
+nothing left for any one else. Therefore it behoves us quite to
+understand that our attitude's a responsibility. If we can't do for her
+positively more than Nina does--"
+
+"We must let her alone?" My companion continued to muse. "I see!"
+
+"Yet don't," I returned, "see too much. We _can_ do more."
+
+"Than Nina?" She was again on the spot. "It wouldn't after all be
+difficult. We only want the directly opposite thing--and which is the
+only one the poor dear can give. Unless indeed," she suggested, "we
+simply retract--we back out."
+
+I turned it over. "It's too late for that. Whether Mrs. Brash's peace
+is gone I can't say. But Nina's is."
+
+"Yes, and there's no way to bring it back that won't sacrifice her
+friend. We can't turn round and say Mrs. Brash is ugly, can we? But
+fancy Nina's not having _seen_!" Mrs. Munden exclaimed.
+
+"She doesn't see now," I answered. "She can't, I'm certain, make out
+what we mean. The woman, for _her_ still, is just what she always was.
+But she has nevertheless had her stroke, and her blindness, while she
+wavers and gropes in the dark, only adds to her discomfort. Her blow was
+to see the attention of the world deviate."
+
+"All the same I don't think, you know," my interlocutress said, "that
+Nina will have made her a scene or that, whatever we do, she'll ever make
+her one. That isn't the way it will happen, for she's exactly as
+conscientious as Mrs. Brash."
+
+"Then what is the way?" I asked.
+
+"It will just happen in silence."
+
+"And what will 'it,' as you call it, be?"
+
+"Isn't that what we want really to see?"
+
+"Well," I replied after a turn or two about, "whether we want it or not
+it's exactly what we _shall_ see; which is a reason the more for
+fancying, between the pair there--in the quiet exquisite house, and full
+of superiorities and suppressions as they both are--the extraordinary
+situation. If I said just now that it's too late to do anything but
+assent it's because I've taken the full measure of what happened at my
+studio. It took but a few moments--but she tasted of the tree."
+
+My companion wondered. "Nina?"
+
+"Mrs. Brash." And to have to put it so ministered, while I took yet
+another turn, to a sort of agitation. Our attitude was a responsibility.
+
+But I had suggested something else to my friend, who appeared for a
+moment detached. "Should you say she'll hate her worse if she _doesn't_
+see?"
+
+"Lady Beldonald? Doesn't see what we see, you mean, than if she does? Ah
+I give _that_ up!" I laughed. "But what I can tell you is why I hold
+that, as I said just now, we can do most. We can do this: we can give to
+a harmless and sensitive creature hitherto practically disinherited--and
+give with an unexpectedness that will immensely add to its price--the
+pure joy of a deep draught of the very pride of life, of an acclaimed
+personal triumph in our superior sophisticated world."
+
+Mrs. Munden had a glow of response for my sudden eloquence. Oh it will
+be beautiful!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+Well, that's what, on the whole and in spite of everything, it really
+was. It has dropped into my memory a rich little gallery of pictures, a
+regular panorama of those occasions that were to minister to the view
+from which I had so for a moment extracted a lyric inspiration. I see
+Mrs. Brash on each of these occasions practically enthroned and
+surrounded and more or less mobbed; see the hurrying and the nudging and
+the pressing and the staring; see the people "making up" and introduced,
+and catch the word when they have had their turn; hear it above all, the
+great one--"Ah yes, the famous Holbein!"--passed about with that
+perfection of promptitude that makes the motions of the London mind so
+happy a mixture of those of the parrot and the sheep. Nothing would be
+easier of course than to tell the whole little tale with an eye only for
+that silly side of it. Great was the silliness, but great also as to this
+case of poor Mrs. Brash, I will say for it, the good nature. Of course,
+furthermore, it took in particular "our set," with its positive child-
+terror of the _banal_, to be either so foolish or so wise; though indeed
+I've never quite known where our set begins and ends, and have had to
+content myself on this score with the indication once given me by a lady
+next whom I was placed at dinner: "Oh it's bounded on the north by Ibsen
+and on the south by Sargent!" Mrs. Brash never sat to me; she absolutely
+declined; and when she declared that it was quite enough for her that I
+had with that fine precipitation invited her, I quite took this as she
+meant it; before we had gone very far our understanding, hers and mine,
+was complete. Her attitude was as happy as her success was prodigious.
+The sacrifice of the portrait was a sacrifice to the true inwardness of
+Lady Beldonald, and did much, for the time, I divined, toward muffling
+their domestic tension. All it was thus in her power to say--and I heard
+of a few cases of her having said it--was that she was sure I would have
+painted her beautifully if she hadn't prevented me. She couldn't even
+tell the truth, which was that I certainly would have done so if Lady
+Beldonald hadn't; and she never could mention the subject at all before
+that personage. I can only describe the affair, naturally, from the
+outside, and heaven forbid indeed that I should try too closely to,
+reconstruct the possible strange intercourse of these good friends at
+home.
+
+My anecdote, however, would lose half the point it may have to show were
+I to omit all mention of the consummate turn her ladyship appeared
+gradually to have found herself able to give her deportment. She had
+made it impossible I should myself bring up our old, our original
+question, but there was real distinction in her manner of now accepting
+certain other possibilities. Let me do her that justice; her effort at
+magnanimity must have been immense. There couldn't fail of course to be
+ways in which poor Mrs. Brash paid for it. How much she had to pay we
+were in fact soon enough to see; and it's my intimate conviction that, as
+a climax, her life at last was the price. But while she lived at
+least--and it was with an intensity, for those wondrous weeks, of which
+she had never dreamed--Lady Beldonald herself faced the music. This is
+what I mean by the possibilities, by the sharp actualities indeed, that
+she accepted. She took our friend out, she showed her at home, never
+attempted to hide or to betray her, played her no trick whatever so long
+as the ordeal lasted. She drank deep, on her side too, of the cup--the
+cup that for her own lips could only be bitterness. There was, I think,
+scarce a special success of her companion's at which she wasn't
+personally present. Mrs. Munden's theory of the silence in which all
+this would be muffled for them was none the less, and in abundance,
+confirmed by our observations. The whole thing was to be the death of
+one or the other of them, but they never spoke of it at tea. I remember
+even that Nina went so far as to say to me once, looking me full in the
+eyes, quite sublimely, "I've made out what you mean--she _is_ a picture."
+The beauty of this moreover was that, as I'm persuaded, she hadn't really
+made it out at all--the words were the mere hypocrisy of her reflective
+endeavour for virtue. She couldn't possibly have made it out; her friend
+was as much as ever "dreadfully plain" to her; she must have wondered to
+the last what on earth possessed us. Wouldn't it in fact have been after
+all just this failure of vision, this supreme stupidity in short, that
+kept the catastrophe so long at bay? There was a certain sense of
+greatness for her in seeing so many of us so absurdly mistaken; and I
+recall that on various occasions, and in particular when she uttered the
+words just quoted, this high serenity, as a sign of the relief of her
+soreness, if not of the effort of her conscience, did something quite
+visible to my eyes, and also quite unprecedented, for the beauty of her
+face. She got a real lift from it--such a momentary discernible
+sublimity that I recollect coming out on the spot with a queer crude
+amused "Do you know I believe I could paint you _now_?"
+
+She was a fool not to have closed with me then and there; for what has
+happened since has altered everything--what was to happen a little later
+was so much more than I could swallow. This was the disappearance of the
+famous Holbein from one day to the other--producing a consternation among
+us all as great as if the Venus of Milo had suddenly vanished from the
+Louvre. "She has simply shipped her straight back"--the explanation was
+given in that form by Mrs. Munden, who added that any cord pulled tight
+enough would end at last by snapping. At the snap, in any case, we
+mightily jumped, for the masterpiece we had for three or four months been
+living with had made us feel its presence as a luminous lesson and a
+daily need. We recognised more than ever that it had been, for high
+finish, the gem of our collection--we found what a blank it left on the
+wall. Lady Beldonald might fill up the blank, but we couldn't. That she
+did soon fill it up--and, heaven help us, _how_ was put before me after
+an interval of no great length, but during which I hadn't seen her. I
+dined on the Christmas of last year at Mrs. Munden's, and Nina, with a
+"scratch lot," as our hostess said, was there, so that, the preliminary
+wait being longish, she could approach me very sweetly. "I'll come to
+you tomorrow if you like," she said; and the effect of it, after a first
+stare at her, was to make me look all round. I took in, by these two
+motions, two things; one of which was that, though now again so satisfied
+herself of her high state, she could give me nothing comparable to what I
+should have got had she taken me up at the moment of my meeting her on
+her distinguished concession; the other that she was "suited" afresh and
+that Mrs. Brash's successor was fully installed. Mrs. Brash's successor,
+was at the other side of the room, and I became conscious that Mrs.
+Munden was waiting to see my eyes seek her. I guessed the meaning of the
+wait; what was one, this time, to say? Oh first and foremost assuredly
+that it was immensely droll, for this time at least there was no mistake.
+The lady I looked upon, and as to whom my friend, again quite at sea,
+appealed to me for a formula, was as little a Holbein, or a specimen of
+any other school, as she was, like Lady Beldonald herself, a Titian. The
+formula was easy to give, for the amusement was that her prettiness--yes,
+literally, prodigiously, her prettiness--was distinct. Lady Beldonald
+had been magnificent--had been almost intelligent. Miss What's-her-name
+continues pretty, continues even young, and doesn't matter a straw! She
+matters so ideally little that Lady Beldonald is practically safer, I
+judge, than she has ever been. There hasn't been a symptom of chatter
+about this person, and I believe her protectress is much surprised that
+we're not more struck.
+
+It was at any rate strictly impossible to me to make an appointment for
+the day as to which I have just recorded Nina's proposal; and the turn of
+events since then has not quickened my eagerness. Mrs. Munden remained
+in correspondence with Mrs. Brash--to the extent, that is, of three
+letters, each of which she showed me. They so told to our imagination
+her terrible little story that we were quite prepared--or thought we
+were--for her going out like a snuffed candle. She resisted, on her
+return to her original conditions, less than a year; the taste of the
+tree, as I had called it, had been fatal to her; what she had contentedly
+enough lived without before for half a century she couldn't now live
+without for a day. I know nothing of her original conditions--some minor
+American city--save that for her to have gone back to them was clearly to
+have stepped out of her frame. We performed, Mrs. Munden and I, a small
+funeral service for her by talking it all over and making it all out. It
+wasn't--the minor American city--a market for Holbeins, and what had
+occurred was that the poor old picture, banished from its museum and
+refreshed by the rise of no new movement to hang it, was capable of the
+miracle of a silent revolution; of itself turning, in its dire dishonour,
+its face to the wall. So it stood, without the intervention of the ghost
+of a critic, till they happened to pull it round again and find it mere
+dead paint. Well, it had had, if that's anything, its season of fame,
+its name on a thousand tongues and printed in capitals in the catalogue.
+We hadn't been at fault. I haven't, all the same, the least note of
+her--not a scratch. And I did her so in intention! Mrs. Munden
+continues to remind me, however, that this is not the sort of rendering
+with which, on the other side, after all, Lady Beldonald proposes to
+content herself. She has come back to the question of her own portrait.
+Let me settle it then at last. Since she _will_ have the real
+thing--well, hang it, she shall!
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BELDONALD HOLBEIN***
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+Project Gutenberg Etext of The Beldonald Holbein, by Henry James
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+The Beldonald Holbein
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+by Henry James
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+October, 2000 [Etext #2366]
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+The edition used was the 1922 Macmillan and Co. one.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BELDONALD HOLBEIN
+
+by Henry James
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+
+Mrs. Munden had not yet been to my studio on so good a pretext as when she
+first intimated that it would be quite open to me--should I only care, as
+she called it, to throw the handkerchief--to paint her beautiful sister-in-
+law. I needn't go here more than is essential into the question of Mrs.
+Munden, who would really, by the way, be a story in herself. She has a
+manner of her own of putting things, and some of those she has put to me--!
+Her implication was that Lady Beldonald hadn't only seen and admired
+certain examples of my work, but had literally been prepossessed in favour
+of the painter's "personality." Had I been struck with this sketch I might
+easily have imagined her ladyship was throwing me the handkerchief. "She
+hasn't done," my visitor said, "what she ought."
+
+"Do you mean she has done what she oughtn't?"
+
+"Nothing horrid--ah dear no." And something in Mrs. Munden's tone, with
+the way she appeared to muse a moment, even suggested to me that what she
+"oughtn't" was perhaps what Lady Beldonald had too much neglected. "She
+hasn't got on."
+
+"What's the matter with her?"
+
+"Well, to begin with, she's American."
+
+"But I thought that was the way of ways to get on."
+
+"It's one of them. But it's one of the ways of being awfully out of it
+too. There are so many!"
+
+"So many Americans?" I asked.
+
+"Yes, plenty of THEM," Mrs. Munden sighed. "So many ways, I mean, of being
+one."
+
+"But if your sister-in-law's way is to be beautiful--?"
+
+"Oh there are different ways of that too."
+
+"And she hasn't taken the right way?"
+
+"Well," my friend returned as if it were rather difficult to express, "she
+hasn't done with it--"
+
+"I see," I laughed; "what she oughtn't!"
+
+Mrs. Munden in a manner corrected me, but it WAS difficult to express. "My
+brother at all events was certainly selfish. Till he died she was almost
+never in London; they wintered, year after year, for what he supposed to be
+his health--which it didn't help, since he was so much too soon to meet his
+end--in the south of France and in the dullest holes he could pick out, and
+when they came back to England he always kept her in the country. I must
+say for her that she always behaved beautifully. Since his death she has
+been more in London, but on a stupidly unsuccessful footing. I don't think
+she quite understands. She hasn't what I should call a life. It may be of
+course that she doesn't want one. That's just what I can't exactly find
+out. I can't make out how much she knows."
+
+"I can easily make out," I returned with hilarity, "how much YOU do!"
+
+"Well, you're very horrid. Perhaps she's too old."
+
+"Too old for what?" I persisted.
+
+"For anything. Of course she's no longer even a little young; only
+preserved--oh but preserved, like bottled fruit, in syrup! I want to help
+her if only because she gets on my nerves, and I really think the way of it
+would be just the right thing of yours at the Academy and on the line."
+
+"But suppose," I threw out, "she should give on my nerves?"
+
+"Oh she will. But isn't that all in the day's work, and don't great
+beauties always--?"
+
+"YOU don't," I interrupted; but I at any rate saw Lady Beldonald later on--
+the day came when her kinswoman brought her, and then I saw how her life
+must have its centre in her own idea of her appearance. Nothing else about
+her mattered--one knew her all when one knew that. She's indeed in one
+particular, I think, sole of her kind--a person whom vanity has had the odd
+effect of keeping positively safe and sound. This passion is supposed
+surely, for the most part, to be a principle of perversion and of injury,
+leading astray those who listen to it and landing them sooner or later in
+this or that complication; but it has landed her ladyship nowhere whatever-
+-it has kept her from the first moment of full consciousness, one feels,
+exactly in the same place. It has protected her from every danger, has
+made her absolutely proper and prim. If she's "preserved," as Mrs. Munden
+originally described her to me, it's her vanity that has beautifully done
+it--putting her years ago in a plate-glass case and closing up the
+receptacle against every breath of air. How shouldn't she be preserved
+when you might smash your knuckles on this transparency before you could
+crack it? And she is--oh amazingly! Preservation is scarce the word for
+the rare condition of her surface. She looks NATURALLY new, as if she took
+out every night her large lovely varnished eyes and put them in water. The
+thing was to paint her, I perceived, in the glass case--a most tempting
+attaching feat; render to the full the shining interposing plate and the
+general show-window effect.
+
+It was agreed, though it wasn't quite arranged, that she should sit to me.
+If it wasn't quite arranged this was because, as I was made to understand
+from an early stage, the conditions from our start must be such as should
+exclude all elements of disturbance, such, in a word, as she herself should
+judge absolutely favourable. And it seemed that these conditions were
+easily imperilled. Suddenly, for instance, at a moment when I was
+expecting her to meet an appointment--the first--that I had proposed, I
+received a hurried visit from Mrs. Munden, who came on her behalf to let me
+know that the season happened just not to be propitious and that our friend
+couldn't be quite sure, to the hour, when it would again become so. She
+felt nothing would make it so but a total absence of worry.
+
+"Oh a 'total absence,'" I said, "is a large order! We live in a worrying
+world."
+
+"Yes; and she feels exactly that--more than you'd think. It's in fact just
+why she mustn't have, as she has now, a particular distress on at the very
+moment. She wants of course to look her best, and such things tell on her
+appearance."
+
+I shook my head. "Nothing tells on her appearance. Nothing reaches it in
+any way; nothing gets AT it. However, I can understand her anxiety. But
+what's her particular distress?"
+
+"Why the illness of Miss Dadd."
+
+"And who in the world's Miss Dadd?"
+
+"Her most intimate friend and constant companion--the lady who was with us
+here that first day."
+
+"Oh the little round black woman who gurgled with admiration?"
+
+"None other. But she was taken ill last week, and it may very well be that
+she'll gurgle no more. She was very bad yesterday and is no better to-day,
+and Nina's much upset. If anything happens to Miss Dadd she'll have to get
+another, and, though she has had two or three before, that won't be so
+easy."
+
+"Two or three Miss Dadds? is it possible? And still wanting another!" I
+recalled the poor lady completely now. "No; I shouldn't indeed think it
+would be easy to get another. But why is a succession of them necessary to
+Lady Beldonald's existence?"
+
+"Can't you guess?" Mrs. Munden looked deep, yet impatient. "They help."
+
+"Help what? Help whom?"
+
+"Why every one. You and me for instance. To do what? Why to think Nina
+beautiful. She has them for that purpose; they serve as foils, as accents
+serve on syllables, as terms of comparison. They make her 'stand out.'
+It's an effect of contrast that must be familiar to you artists; it's what
+a woman does when she puts a band of black velvet under a pearl ornament
+that may, require, as she thinks, a little showing off."
+
+I wondered. "Do you mean she always has them black?"
+
+"Dear no; I've seen them blue, green, yellow. They may be what they like,
+so long as they're always one other thing."
+
+"Hideous?"
+
+Mrs. Munden made a mouth for it. "Hideous is too much to say; she doesn't
+really require them as bad as that. But consistently, cheerfully, loyally
+plain. It's really a most happy relation. She loves them for it."
+
+"And for what do they love HER?"
+
+"Why just for the amiability that they produce in her. Then also for their
+'home.' It's a career for them."
+
+"I see. But if that's the case," I asked, "why are they so difficult to
+find?"
+
+"Oh they must be safe; it's all in that: her being able to depend on them
+to keep to the terms of the bargain and never have moments of rising--as
+even the ugliest woman will now and then (say when she's in love)--superior
+to themselves."
+
+I turned it over. "Then if they can't inspire passions the poor things
+mayn't even at least feel them?"
+
+"She distinctly deprecates it. That's why such a man as you may be after
+all a complication."
+
+I continued to brood. "You're very sure Miss Dadd's ailment isn't an
+affection that, being smothered, has struck in?" My joke, however, wasn't
+well timed, for I afterwards learned that the unfortunate lady's state had
+been, even while I spoke, such as to forbid all hope. The worst symptoms
+had appeared; she was destined not to recover; and a week later I heard
+from Mrs. Munden that she would in fact "gurgle" no more.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+
+All this had been for Lady Beldonald an agitation so great that access to
+her apartment was denied for a time even to her sister-in-law. It was much
+more out of the question of course that she should unveil her face to a
+person of my special business with it; so that the question of the portrait
+was by common consent left to depend on that of the installation of a
+successor to her late companion. Such a successor, I gathered from Mrs.
+Munden, widowed childless and lonely, as well as inapt for the minor
+offices, she had absolutely to have; a more or less humble alter ago to
+deal with the servants, keep the accounts, make the tea and watch the
+window-blinds. Nothing seemed more natural than that she should marry
+again, and obviously that might come; yet the predecessors of Miss Dadd had
+been contemporaneous with a first husband, so that others formed in her
+image might be contemporaneous with a second. I was much occupied in those
+months at any rate, and these questions and their ramifications losing
+themselves for a while to my view, I was only brought back to them by Mrs.
+Munden's arrival one day with the news that we were all right again--her
+sister-in-law was once more "suited." A certain Mrs. Brash, an American
+relative whom she hadn't seen for years, but with whom she had continued to
+communicate, was to come out to her immediately; and this person, it
+appeared, could be quite trusted to meet the conditions. She was ugly--
+ugly enough, without abuse of it, and was unlimitedly good. The position
+offered her by Lady Beldonald was moreover exactly what she needed; widowed
+also, after many troubles and reverses, with her fortune of the smallest,
+and her various children either buried or placed about, she had never had
+time or means to visit England, and would really be grateful in her
+declining years for the new experience and the pleasant light work involved
+in her cousin's hospitality. They had been much together early in life and
+Lady Beldonald was immensely fond of her--would in fact have tried to get
+hold of her before hadn't Mrs. Brash been always in bondage to family
+duties, to the variety of her tribulations. I daresay I laughed at my
+friend's use of the term "position"--the position, one might call it, of a
+candlestick or a sign-post, and I daresay I must have asked if the special
+service the poor lady was to render had been made clear to her. Mrs.
+Munden left me in any case with the rather droll image of her faring forth
+across the sea quite consciously and resignedly to perform it.
+
+The point of the communication had however been that my sitter was again
+looking up and would doubtless, on the arrival and due initiation of Mrs.
+Brash, be in form really to wait on me. The situation must further, to my
+knowledge, have developed happily, for I arranged with Mrs. Munden that our
+friend, now all ready to begin, but wanting first just to see the things I
+had most recently done, should come once more, as a final preliminary, to
+my studio. A good foreign friend of mine, a French painter, Paul Outreau,
+was at the moment in London, and I had proposed, as he was much interested
+in types, to get together for his amusement a small afternoon party. Every
+one came, my big room was full, there was music and a modest spread; and
+I've not forgotten the light of admiration in Outreau's expressive face as
+at the end of half an hour he came up to me in his enthusiasm. "Bonte
+divine, mon cher--que cette vieille est donc belle!"
+
+I had tried to collect all the beauty I could, and also all the youth, so
+that for a moment I was at a loss. I had talked to many people and
+provided for the music, and there were figures in the crowd that were still
+lost to me. "What old woman do you mean?"
+
+"I don't know her name--she was over by the door a moment ago. I asked
+somebody and was told, I think, that she's American."
+
+I looked about and saw one of my guests attach a pair of fine eyes to
+Outreau very much as if she knew he must be talking of her. "Oh Lady
+Beldonald! Yes, she's handsome; but the great point about her is that she
+has been 'put up' to keep, and that she wouldn't be flattered if she knew
+you spoke of her as old. A box of sardines is 'old' only after it has been
+opened, Lady Beldonald never has yet been--but I'm going to do it." I
+joked, but I was somewhat disappointed. It was a type that, with his
+unerring sense for the banal, I shouldn't have expected Outreau to pick
+out.
+
+"You're going to paint her? But, my dear man, she is painted--and as
+neither you nor I can do it. Ou est-elle donc? He had lost her, and I saw
+I had made a mistake. She's the greatest of all the great Holbeins."
+
+I was relieved. "Ah then not Lady Beldonald! But do I possess a Holbein
+of ANY price unawares?"
+
+"There she is--there she is! Dear, dear, dear, what a head!" And I saw
+whom he meant--and what: a small old lady in a black dress and a black
+bonnet, both relieved with a little white, who had evidently just changed,
+her place to reach a corner from which more of the room and of the scene
+was presented to her. She appeared unnoticed and unknown, and I
+immediately recognised that some other guest must have brought her and, for
+want of opportunity, had as yet to call my attention to her. But two
+things, simultaneously with this and with each other, struck me with force;
+one of them the truth of Outreau's description of her, the other the fact
+that the person bringing her could only have been Lady Beldonald. She WAS
+a Holbein--of the first water; yet she was also Mrs. Brash, the imported
+"foil," the indispensable accent," the successor to the dreary Miss Dadd!
+By the time I had put these things together--Outreau's "American" having
+helped me--I was in just such full possession of her face as I had found
+myself, on the other first occasion, of that of her patroness. Only with
+so different a consequence. I couldn't look at her enough, and I stared
+and stared till I became aware she might have fancied me challenging her as
+a person unpresented. "All the same," Outreau went on, equally held,
+"c'est une tete a faire. If I were only staying long enough for a crack at
+her! But I tell you what and he seized my arm--"bring her over!"
+
+"Over?"
+
+"To Paris. She'd have a succes fou."
+
+"Ah thanks, my dear fellow," I was now quite in a position to say; "she's
+the handsomest thing in London, and"--for what I might do with her was
+already before me with intensity--"I propose to keep her to myself." It
+was before me with intensity, in the light of Mrs. Brash's distant
+perfection of a little white old face, in which every wrinkle was the touch
+of a master; but something else, I suddenly felt, was not less so, for Lady
+Beldonald, in the other quarter, and though she couldn't have made out the
+subject of our notice, continued to fix us, and her eyes had the challenge
+of those of the woman of consequence who has missed something. A moment
+later I was close to her, apologising first for not having been more on the
+spot at her arrival, but saying in the next breath uncontrollably: "Why my
+dear lady, it's a Holbein!"
+
+"A Holbein? What?"
+
+"Why the wonderful sharp old face so extraordinarily, consummately drawn--
+in the frame of black velvet. That of Mrs. Brash, I mean--isn't it her
+name?--your companion."
+
+This was the beginning of a most odd matter--the essence of my anecdote;
+and I think the very first note of the oddity must have sounded for me in
+the tone in which her ladyship spoke after giving me a silent look. It
+seemed to come to me out of a distance immeasurably removed from Holbein.
+"Mrs. Brash isn't my 'companion' in the sense you appear to mean. She's my
+rather near relation and a very dear old friend. I love her--and you must
+know her."
+
+"Know her? Rather! Why to see her is to want on the spot to 'go' for her.
+She also must sit for me,"
+
+"SHE? Louisa Brash?" If Lady Beldonald had the theory that her beauty
+directly showed it when things weren't well with her, this impression,
+which the fixed sweetness of her serenity had hitherto struck me by no
+means as justifying, gave me now my first glimpse of its grounds. It was
+as if I had never before seen her face invaded by anything I should have
+called an expression. This expression moreover was of the faintest--was
+like the effect produced on a surface by an agitation both deep within and
+as yet much confused. "Have you told her so?" she then quickly asked, as
+if to soften the sound of her surprise.
+
+"Dear no, I've but just noticed her--Outreau, a moment ago put me on her.
+But we're both so taken, and he also wants--"
+
+"To PAINT her?" Lady Beldonald uncontrollably murmured.
+
+"Don't be afraid we shall fight for her," I returned with a laugh for this
+tone. Mrs. Brash was still where I could see her without appearing to
+stare, and she mightn't have seen I was looking at her, though her
+protectress, I'm afraid, could scarce have failed of that certainty. "We
+must each take our turn, and at any rate she's a wonderful thing, so that
+if you'll let her go to Paris Outreau promises her there--"
+
+"THERE?" my companion gasped.
+
+"A career bigger still than among us, as he considers we haven't half their
+eye. He guarantees her a succes fou."
+
+She couldn't get over it. "Louisa Brash? In Paris?"
+
+"They do see," I went on, "more than we and they live extraordinarily,
+don't you know, in that. But she'll do something here too."
+
+"And what will she do?"
+
+If frankly now I couldn't help giving Mrs. Brash a longer look, so after it
+I could as little resist sounding my converser. "You'll see. Only give
+her time."
+
+She said nothing during the moment in which she met my eyes; but then:
+"Time, it seems to me, is exactly what you and your friend want. If you
+haven't talked with her--"
+
+"We haven't seen her? Oh we see bang off--with a click like a steel
+spring. It's our trade, it's our life, and we should be donkeys if we made
+mistakes. That's the way I saw you yourself, my lady, if I may say so;
+that's the way, with a long pin straight through your body, I've got you.
+And just so I've got HER!"
+
+All this, for reasons, had brought my guest to her feet; but her eyes had
+while we talked never once followed the direction of mine. "You call her a
+Holbein?"
+
+"Outreau did, and I of course immediately recognised it. Don't you? She
+brings the old boy to life! It's just as I should call you a Titian. You
+bring HIM to life."
+
+She couldn't be said to relax, because she couldn't be said to have
+hardened; but something at any rate on this took place in her--something
+indeed quite disconnected from what I would have called her. "Don't you
+understand that she has always been supposed--?" It had the ring of
+impatience; nevertheless it stopped short on a scruple.
+
+I knew what it was, however, well enough to say it for her if she
+preferred. "To be nothing whatever to look at? To be unfortunately plain-
+-or even if you like repulsively ugly? Oh yes, I understand it perfectly,
+just as I understand--I have to as a part of my trade--many other forms of
+stupidity. It's nothing new to one that ninety-nine people out of a
+hundred have no eyes, no sense, no taste. There are whole communities
+impenetrably sealed. I don't say your friend's a person to make the men
+turn round in Regent Street. But it adds to the joy of the few who do see
+that they have it so much to themselves. Where in the world can she have
+lived? You must tell me all about that--or rather, if she'll be so good,
+SHE must."
+
+"You mean then to speak to her--?"
+
+I wondered as she pulled up again. "Of her beauty?"
+
+"Her beauty!" cried Lady Beldonald so loud that two or three persons looked
+round.
+
+"Ah with every precaution of respect I declared in a much lower tone. But
+her back was by this time turned to me, and in the movement, as it were,
+one of the strangest little dramas I've ever known was well launched.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+
+It was a drama of small smothered intensely private things, and I knew of
+but one other person in the secret; yet that person and I found it
+exquisitely susceptible of notation, followed it with an interest the
+mutual communication of which did much for our enjoyment, and were present
+with emotion at its touching catastrophe. The small case--for so small a
+case--had made a great stride even before my little party separated, and in
+fact within the next ten minutes.
+
+In that space of time two things had happened one of which was that I made
+the acquaintance of Mrs. Brash; and the other that Mrs. Munden reached me,
+cleaving the crowd, with one of her usual pieces of news. What she had to
+impart was that, on her having just before asked Nina if the conditions of
+our sitting had been arranged with me, Nina had replied, with something
+like perversity, that she didn't propose to arrange them, that the whole
+affair was "off" again and that she preferred not to be further beset for
+the present. The question for Mrs. Munden was naturally what had happened
+and whether I understood. Oh I understood perfectly, and what I at first
+most understood was that even when I had brought in the name of Mrs. Brash
+intelligence wasn't yet in Mrs. Munden. She was quite as surprised as Lady
+Beldonald had been on hearing of the esteem in which I held Mrs. Brash's
+appearance. She was stupefied at learning that I had just in my ardour
+proposed to its proprietress to sit to me. Only she came round promptly--
+which Lady Beldonald really never did. Mrs. Munden was in fact wonderful;
+for when I had given her quickly "Why she's a Holbein, you know,
+absolutely," she took it up, after a first fine vacancy, with an immediate
+abysmal "Oh IS she?" that, as a piece of social gymnastics, did her the
+greatest honour; and she was in fact the first in London to spread the
+tidings. For a face--about it was magnificent. But she was also the
+first, I must add, to see what would really happen--though this she put
+before me only a week or two later. It will kill her, my dear--that's what
+it will do
+
+She meant neither more nor less than that it would kill Lady Beldonald if I
+were to paint Mrs. Brash; for at this lurid light had we arrived in so
+short a space of time. It was for me to decide whether my aesthetic need
+of giving life to my idea was such as to justify me in destroying it in a
+woman after all in most eyes so beautiful. The situation was indeed
+sufficiently queer; for it remained to be seen what I should positively
+gain by giving up Mrs. Brash. I appeared to have 'in any case lost Lady
+Beldonald, now too "upset"--it was always Mrs. Munden's word about her and,
+as I inferred, her own about herself--to meet me again on our previous
+footing. The only thing, I of course soon saw, was to temporise to drop
+the whole question for the present and yet so far as possible keep each of
+the pair in view. I may as well say at once that this plan and this
+process gave their principal interest to the next several months. Mrs.
+Brash had turned up, if I remember, early in the new year, and her little
+wonderful career was in our particular circle one of the features of the
+following season. It was at all events for myself the most attaching; it's
+not my fault if I am so put together as often to find more life in
+situations obscure and subject to interpretation than in the gross rattle
+of the foreground. And there were all sorts of things, things touching,
+amusing, mystifying--and above all such an instance as I had never yet met-
+-in this funny little fortune of the useful American cousin. Mrs. Munden
+was promptly at one with me as to the rarity and, to a near and human view,
+the beauty and interest of the position. We had neither of us ever before
+seen that degree and that special sort of personal success come to a woman
+for the first time so late in life. I found it an example of poetic, of
+absolutely retributive justice; so that my desire grew great to work it, as
+we say, on those lines. I had seen it all from the original moment at my
+studio; the poor lady had never known an hour's appreciation--which
+moreover, in perfect good faith, she had never missed. The very first
+thing I did after inducing so unintentionally the resentful retreat of her
+protectress had been to go straight over to her and say almost without
+preliminaries that I should hold myself immeasurably obliged for a few
+patient sittings. What I thus came face to face with was, on the instant,
+her whole unenlightened past and the full, if foreshortened, revelation of
+what among us all was now unfailingly in store for her. To turn the handle
+and start that tune came to me on the spot as a temptation. Here was a
+poor lady who had waited for the approach of old age to find out what she
+was worth. Here was a benighted being to whom it was to be disclosed in
+her fifty-seventh year--I was to make that out--that she had something that
+might pass for a face. She looked much more than her age, and was fairly
+frightened--as if I had been trying on her some possibly heartless London
+trick--when she had taken in my appeal. That showed me in what an air she
+had lived and--as I should have been tempted to put it had I spoken out--
+among what children of darkness. Later on I did them more justice; saw
+more that her wonderful points must have been points largely the fruit of
+time, and even that possibly she might never in all her life have looked so
+well as at this particular moment. It might have been that if her hour had
+struck I just happened to be present at the striking. What had occurred,
+all the same, was at the worst a notable comedy.
+
+The famous "irony of fate" takes many forms, but I had never yet seen it
+take quite this one. She had been "had over" on an understanding, and she
+wasn't playing fair. She had broken the law of her ugliness and had turned
+beautiful on the hands of her employer. More interesting even perhaps than
+a view of the conscious triumph that this might prepare for her, and of
+which, had I doubted of my own judgement, I could still take Outreau's fine
+start as the full guarantee--more interesting was the question of the
+process by which such a history could get itself enacted. The curious
+thing was that all the while the reasons of her having passed for plain--
+the reasons for Lady Beldonald's fond calculation, which they quite
+justified--were written large in her face, so large that it was easy to
+understand them as the only ones she herself had ever read. What was it
+then that actually made the old stale sentence mean something so
+different?--into what new combinations, what extraordinary language,
+unknown but understood at a glance, had time and life translated it? The
+only thing to be said was that time and life were artists who beat us all,
+working with recipes and secrets we could never find out. I really ought
+to have, like a lecturer or a showman, a chart or a blackboard to present
+properly the relation, in the wonderful old tender battered blanched face,
+between the original elements and the exquisite final it style." I could
+do it with chalks, but I can scarcely do it with words. However, the thing
+was, for any artist who respected himself, to FEEL it--which I abundantly
+did; and then not to conceal from HER I felt it--which I neglected as
+little. But she was really, to do her complete justice, the last to
+understand; and I'm not sure that, to the end--for there was an end--she
+quite made it all out or knew where she was. When you've been brought up
+for fifty years on black it must be hard to adjust your organism at a day's
+notice to gold-colour. Her whole nature had been pitched in the key of her
+supposed plainness. She had known how to be ugly--it was the only thing
+she had learnt save, if possible, how not to mind it. Being beautiful took
+in any case a new set of muscles. It was on the prior conviction,
+literally, that she had developed her admirable dress, instinctively
+felicitous, always either black or white and a matter of rather severe
+squareness and studied line. She was magnificently neat; everything she
+showed had a way of looking both old and fresh; and there was on every
+occasion the same picture in her draped head--draped in low-falling black--
+and the fine white plaits (of a painter's white, somehow) disposed on her
+chest. What had happened was that these arrangements, determined by
+certain considerations, lent themselves in effect much better to certain
+others. Adopted in mere shy silence they had really only deepened her
+accent. It was singular, moreover, that, so constituted, there was nothing
+in her aspect of the ascetic or the nun. She was a good hard sixteenth-
+century figure, not withered with innocence, bleached rather by life in the
+open. She was in short just what we had made of her, a Holbein for a great
+Museum; and our position, Mrs. Munden's and mine, rapidly became that of
+persons having such a treasure to dispose of. The world--I speak of course
+mainly of the art-world--flocked to see it.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+
+"But has she any idea herself, poor thing?" was the way I had put it to
+Mrs. Munden on our next meeting after the incident at my studio; with the
+effect, however, only of leaving my friend at first to take me as alluding
+to Mrs. Brash's possible prevision of the chatter she might create. I had
+my own sense of that--this provision had been nil; the question was of her
+consciousness of the office for which Lady Beldonald had counted on her and
+for which we were so promptly proceeding to spoil her altogether.
+
+"Oh I think she arrived with a goodish notion," Mrs. Munden had replied
+when I had explained; "for she's clever too, you know, as well as good-
+looking, and I don't see how, if she ever really KNEW Nina, she could have
+supposed for a moment that she wasn't wanted for whatever she might have
+left to give up. Hasn't she moreover always been made to feel that she's
+ugly enough for anything?" It was even at this point already wonderful how
+my friend had mastered the case and what lights, alike for its past and its
+future, she was prepared to throw on it. "If she has seen herself as ugly
+enough for anything she has seen herself--and that was the only way--as
+ugly enough for Nina; and she has had her own manner of showing that she
+understands without making Nina commit herself to anything vulgar. Women
+are never without ways for doing such things--both for communicating and
+receiving knowledge--that I can't explain to you, and that you wouldn't
+understand if I could, since you must be a woman even to do that. I
+daresay they've expressed it all to each other simply in the language of
+kisses. But doesn't it at any rate make something rather beautiful of the
+relation between them as affected by our discovery--?"
+
+I had a laugh for her plural possessive. "The point is of course that if
+there was a conscious bargain, and our action on Mrs. Brash is to deprive
+her of the sense of keeping her side of it, various things may happen that
+won't be good either for her or for ourselves. She may conscientiously
+throw up the position."
+
+"Yes," my companion mused--"for she is conscientious. Or Nina, without
+waiting for that, may cast her forth."
+
+I faced it all. "Then we should have to keep her."
+
+"As a regular model?" Mrs. Munden was ready for anything. "Oh that would
+be lovely!"
+
+But I further worked it out. "The difficulty is that she's not a model,
+hang it--that she's too good for one, that she's the very thing herself.
+When Outreau and I have each had our go, that will be all; there'll be
+nothing left for any one else. Therefore it behoves us quite to understand
+that our attitude's a responsibility. If we can't do for her positively
+more than Nina does--"
+
+"We must let her alone?" My companion continued to muse. "I see!"
+
+"Yet don't," I returned, "see too much. We CAN do more."
+
+"Than Nina?" She was again on the spot. "It wouldn't after all be
+difficult. We only want the directly opposite thing--and which is the only
+one the poor dear can give. Unless indeed," she suggested, "we simply
+retract--we back out."
+
+I turned it over. "It's too late for that. Whether Mrs. Brash's peace is
+gone I can't say. But Nina's is."
+
+"Yes, and there's no way to bring it back that won't sacrifice her friend.
+We can't turn round and say Mrs. Brash is ugly, can we? But fancy Nina's
+not having SEEN!" Mrs. Munden exclaimed.
+
+"She doesn't see now," I answered. "She can't, I'm certain, make out what
+we mean. The woman, for HER still, is just what she always was. But she
+has nevertheless had her stroke, and her blindness, while she wavers and
+gropes in the dark, only adds to her discomfort. Her blow was to see the
+attention of the world deviate."
+
+"All the same I don't think, you know," my interlocutress said, "that Nina
+will have made her a scene or that, whatever we do, she'll ever make her
+one. That isn't the way it will happen, for she's exactly as conscientious
+as Mrs. Brash."
+
+"Then what is the way?" I asked.
+
+"It will just happen in silence."
+
+"And what will 'it,' as you call it, be?"
+
+"Isn't that what we want really to see?"
+
+"Well," I replied after a turn or two about, "whether we want it or not
+it's exactly what we SHALL see; which is a reason the more for fancying,
+between the pair there--in the quiet exquisite house, and full of
+superiorities and suppressions as they both are--the extraordinary
+situation. If I said just now that it's too late to do anything but assent
+it's because I've taken the full measure of what happened at my studio. It
+took but a few moments--but she tasted of the tree."
+
+My companion wondered. "Nina?"
+
+"Mrs. Brash." And to have to put it so ministered, while I took yet
+another turn, to a sort of agitation. Our attitude was a responsibility.
+
+But I had suggested something else to my friend, who appeared for a moment
+detached. "Should you say she'll hate her worse if she DOESN'T see?"
+
+"Lady Beldonald? Doesn't see what we see, you mean, than if she does? Ah
+I give THAT up!" I laughed. "But what I can tell you is why I hold that,
+as I said just now, we can do most. We can do this: we can give to a
+harmless and sensitive creature hitherto practically disinherited--and give
+with an unexpectedness that will immensely add to its price--the pure joy
+of a deep draught of the very pride of life, of an acclaimed personal
+triumph in our superior sophisticated world."
+
+Mrs. Munden had a glow of response for my sudden eloquence. Oh it will be
+beautiful!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+
+Well, that's what, on the whole and in spite of everything, it really was.
+It has dropped into my memory a rich little gallery of pictures, a regular
+panorama of those occasions that were to minister to the view from which I
+had so for a moment extracted a lyric inspiration. I see Mrs. Brash on
+each of these occasions practically enthroned and surrounded and more or
+less mobbed; see the hurrying and the nudging and the pressing and the
+staring; see the people "making up" and introduced, and catch the word when
+they have had their turn; hear it above all, the great one--"Ah yes, the
+famous Holbein!"--passed about with that perfection of promptitude that
+makes the motions of the London mind so happy a mixture of those of the
+parrot and the sheep. Nothing would be easier of course than to tell the
+whole little tale with an eye only for that silly side of it. Great was
+the silliness, but great also as to this case of poor Mrs. Brash, I will
+say for it, the good nature. Of course, furthermore, it took in particular
+"our set," with its positive child-terror of the banal, to be either so
+foolish or so wise; though indeed I've never quite known where our set
+begins and ends, and have had to content myself on this score with the
+indication once given me by a lady next whom I was placed at dinner: "Oh
+it's bounded on the north by Ibsen and on the south by Sargent! Mrs. Brash
+never sat to me; she absolutely declined; and when she declared that it was
+quite enough for her that I had with that fine precipitation invited her, I
+quite took this as she meant it; before we had gone very far our
+understanding, hers and mine, was complete. Her attitude was as happy as
+her success was prodigious. The sacrifice of the portrait was a sacrifice
+to the true inwardness of Lady Beldonald, and did much, for the time, I
+divined, toward muffling their domestic tension. All it was thus in her
+power to say--and I heard of a few cases of her having said it--was that
+she was sure I would have painted her beautifully if she hadn't prevented
+me. She couldn't even tell the truth, which was that I certainly would
+have done so if Lady Beldonald hadn't; and she never could mention the
+subject at all before that personage. I can only describe the affair,
+naturally, from the outside, and heaven forbid indeed that I should try too
+closely to, reconstruct the possible strange intercourse of these good
+friends at home.
+
+My anecdote, however, would lose half the point it may have to show were I
+to omit all mention of the consummate turn her ladyship appeared gradually
+to have found herself able to give her deportment. She had made it
+impossible I should myself bring up our old, our original question, but
+there was real distinction in her manner of now accepting certain other
+possibilities. Let me do her that justice; her effort at magnanimity must
+have been immense. There couldn't fail of course to be ways in which poor
+Mrs. Brash paid for it. How much she had to pay we were in fact soon
+enough to see; and it's my intimate conviction that, as a climax, her life
+at last was the price. But while she lived at least--and it was with an
+intensity, for those wondrous weeks, of which she had never dreamed--Lady
+Beldonald herself faced the music. This is what I mean by the
+possibilities, by the sharp actualities indeed, that she accepted. She
+took our friend out, she showed her at home, never attempted to hide or to
+betray her, played her no trick whatever so long as the ordeal lasted. She
+drank deep, on her side too, of the cup--the cup that for her own lips
+could only be bitterness. There was, I think, scarce a special success of
+her companion's at which she wasn't personally present. Mrs. Munden's
+theory of the silence in which all this would be muffled for them was none
+the less, and in abundance, confirmed by our observations. The whole thing
+was to be the death of one or the other of them, but they never spoke of it
+at tea. I remember even that Nina went so far as to say to me once,
+looking me full in the eyes, quite sublimely, "I've made out what you mean-
+-she IS a picture." The beauty of this moreover was that, as I'm
+persuaded, she hadn't really made it out at all--the words were the mere
+hypocrisy of her reflective endeavour for virtue. She couldn't possibly
+have made it out; her friend was as much as ever "dreadfully plain" to her;
+she must have wondered to the last what on earth possessed us. Wouldn't it
+in fact have been after all just this failure of vision, this supreme
+stupidity in short, that kept the catastrophe so long at bay? There was a
+certain sense of greatness for her in seeing so many of us so absurdly
+mistaken; and I recall that on various occasions, and in particular when
+she uttered the words just quoted, this high serenity, as a sign of the
+relief of her soreness, if not of the effort of her conscience, did
+something quite visible to my eyes, and also quite unprecedented, for the
+beauty of her face. She got a real lift from it--such a momentary
+discernible sublimity that I recollect coming out on the spot with a queer
+crude amused "Do you know I believe I could paint you NOW?"
+
+She was a fool not to have closed with me then and there; for what has
+happened since has altered everything--what was to happen a little later
+was so much more than I could swallow. This was the disappearance of the
+famous Holbein from one day to the other--producing a consternation among
+us all as great as if the Venus of Milo had suddenly vanished from the
+Louvre. "She has simply shipped her straight back"--the explanation was
+given in that form by Mrs. Munden, who added that any cord pulled tight
+enough would end at last by snapping. At the snap, in any case, we
+mightily jumped, for the masterpiece we had for three or four months been
+living with had made us feel its presence as a luminous lesson and a daily
+need. We recognised more than ever that it had been, for high finish, the
+gem of our collection--we found what a blank it left on the wall. Lady
+Beldonald might fill up the blank, but we couldn't. That she did soon fill
+it up--and, heaven help us, HOW was put before me after an interval of no
+great length, but during which I hadn't seen her. 'I dined on the
+Christmas of last year at Mrs. Munden's, and Nina, with a "scratch lot," as
+our hostess said, was there, so that, the preliminary wait being longish,
+she could approach me very sweetly. "I'll come to you tomorrow if you
+like," she said; and the effect of it, after a first stare at her, was to
+make me look all round. I took in, by these two motions, two things; one
+of which was that, though now again so satisfied herself of her high state,
+she could give me nothing comparable to what I should have got had she
+taken me up at the moment of my meeting her on her distinguished
+concession; the other that she was "suited" afresh and that Mrs. Brash's
+successor was fully installed. Mrs. Brash's successor, was at the other
+side of the room, and I became conscious that Mrs. Munden was waiting to
+see my eyes seek her. I guessed the meaning of the wait; what was one,
+this time, to say? Oh first and foremost assuredly that it was immensely
+droll, for this time at least there was no mistake. The lady I looked
+upon, and as to whom my friend, again quite at sea, appealed to me for a
+formula, was as little a Holbein, or a specimen of any other school, as she
+was, like Lady Beldonald herself, a Titian. The formula was easy to give,
+for the amusement was that her prettiness--yes, literally, prodigiously,
+her prettiness--was distinct. Lady Beldonald had been magnificent--had
+been almost intelligent. Miss What's-her-name continues pretty, continues
+even young, and doesn't matter a straw! She matters so ideally little that
+Lady Beldonald is practically safer, I judge, than she has ever been.
+There hasn't been a symptom of chatter about this person, and I believe her
+protectress is much surprised that we're not more struck.
+
+It was at any rate strictly impossible to me to make an appointment for the
+day as to which I have just recorded Nina's proposal; and the turn of
+events since then has not quickened my eagerness. Mrs. Munden remained in
+correspondence with Mrs. Brash--to the extent, that is, of three letters,
+each of which she showed me. They so told to our imagination her terrible
+little story that we were quite prepared--or thought we were--for her going
+out like a snuffed candle. She resisted, on her return to her original
+conditions, less than a year; the taste of the tree, as I had called it,
+had been fatal to her; what she had contentedly enough lived without before
+for half a century she couldn't now live without for a day. I know nothing
+of her original conditions--some minor American city--save that for her to
+have gone back to them was clearly to have stepped out of her frame. We
+performed, Mrs. Munden and I, a small funeral service for her by talking it
+all over and making it all out. It wasn't--the minor American city--a
+market for Holbeins, and what had occurred was that the poor old picture,
+banished from its museum and refreshed by the rise of no new movement to
+hang it, was capable of the miracle of a silent revolution; of itself
+turning, in its dire dishonour, its face to the wall. So it stood, without
+the intervention of the ghost of a critic, till they happened to pull it
+round again and find it mere dead paint. Well, it had had, if that's
+anything, its season of fame, its name on a thousand tongues and printed in
+capitals in the catalogue. We hadn't been at fault. I haven't, all the
+same, the least note of her--not a scratch. And I did her so in intention!
+Mrs. Munden continues to remind me, however, that this is not the sort of
+rendering with which, on the other side, after all, Lady Beldonald proposes
+to content herself. She has come back to the question of her own portrait.
+Let me settle it then at last. Since she WILL have the real thing--well,
+hang it, she shall!
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext of The Beldonald Holbein, by Henry James
+
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