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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>The Madonna of the Future</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">The Madonna of the Future, by Henry James</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Madonna of the Future, 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 Madonna of the Future
+
+
+Author: Henry James
+
+Release Date: May 8, 2005 [eBook #2460]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MADONNA OF THE FUTURE***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1887 Macmillan and Co. edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk, proofed by Jennifer Austin.</p>
+<h1>THE MADONNA OF THE FUTURE<br />
+by Henry James</h1>
+<p>We had been talking about the masters who had achieved but a single
+masterpiece&mdash;the artists and poets who but once in their lives
+had known the divine afflatus and touched the high level of perfection.&nbsp;
+Our host had been showing us a charming little cabinet picture by a
+painter whose name we had never heard, and who, after this single spasmodic
+bid for fame, had apparently relapsed into obscurity and mediocrity.&nbsp;
+There was some discussion as to the frequency of this phenomenon; during
+which, I observed, H--- sat silent, finishing his cigar with a meditative
+air, and looking at the picture which was being handed round the table.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know how common a case it is,&rdquo; he said at
+last, &ldquo;but I have seen it.&nbsp; I have known a poor fellow who
+painted his one masterpiece, and&rdquo;&mdash;he added with a smile&mdash;&ldquo;he
+didn&rsquo;t even paint that.&nbsp; He made his bid for fame and missed
+it.&rdquo;&nbsp; We all knew H--- for a clever man who had seen much
+of men and manners, and had a great stock of reminiscences.&nbsp; Some
+one immediately questioned him further, and while I was engrossed with
+the raptures of my neighbour over the little picture, he was induced
+to tell his tale.&nbsp; If I were to doubt whether it would bear repeating,
+I should only have to remember how that charming woman, our hostess,
+who had left the table, ventured back in rustling rose-colour to pronounce
+our lingering a want of gallantry, and, finding us a listening circle,
+sank into her chair in spite of our cigars, and heard the story out
+so graciously that, when the catastrophe was reached, she glanced across
+at me and showed me a tear in each of her beautiful eyes.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>It relates to my youth, and to Italy: two fine things!&nbsp; (H---
+began).&nbsp; I had arrived late in the evening at Florence, and while
+I finished my bottle of wine at supper, had fancied that, tired traveller
+though I was, I might pay the city a finer compliment than by going
+vulgarly to bed.&nbsp; A narrow passage wandered darkly away out of
+the little square before my hotel, and looked as if it bored into the
+heart of Florence.&nbsp; I followed it, and at the end of ten minutes
+emerged upon a great piazza, filled only with the mild autumn moonlight.&nbsp;
+Opposite rose the Palazzo Vecchio, like some huge civic fortress, with
+the great bell-tower springing from its embattled verge as a mountain-pine
+from the edge of a cliff.&nbsp; At its base, in its projected shadow,
+gleamed certain dim sculptures which I wonderingly approached.&nbsp;
+One of the images, on the left of the palace door, was a magnificent
+colossus, shining through the dusky air like a sentinel who has taken
+the alarm.&nbsp; In a moment I recognised him as Michael Angelo&rsquo;s
+<i>David</i>.&nbsp; I turned with a certain relief from his sinister
+strength to a slender figure in bronze, stationed beneath the high light
+loggia, which opposes the free and elegant span of its arches to the
+dead masonry of the palace; a figure supremely shapely and graceful;
+gentle, almost, in spite of his holding out with his light nervous arm
+the snaky head of the slaughtered Gorgon.&nbsp; His name is Perseus,
+and you may read his story, not in the Greek mythology, but in the memoirs
+of Benvenuto Cellini.&nbsp; Glancing from one of these fine fellows
+to the other, I probably uttered some irrepressible commonplace of praise,
+for, as if provoked by my voice, a man rose from the steps of the loggia,
+where he had been sitting in the shadow, and addressed me in good English&mdash;a
+small, slim personage, clad in a sort of black velvet tunic (as it seemed),
+and with a mass of auburn hair, which gleamed in the moonlight, escaping
+from a little medi&aelig;val birretta.&nbsp; In a tone of the most insinuating
+deference he asked me for my &ldquo;impressions.&rdquo;&nbsp; He seemed
+picturesque, fantastic, slightly unreal.&nbsp; Hovering there in this
+consecrated neighbourhood, he might have passed for the genius of &aelig;sthetic
+hospitality&mdash;if the genius of &aelig;sthetic hospitality were not
+commonly some shabby little custode, flourishing a calico pocket-handkerchief
+and openly resentful of the divided franc.&nbsp; This analogy was made
+none the less complete by the brilliant tirade with which he greeted
+my embarrassed silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have known Florence long, sir, but I have never known her
+so lovely as tonight.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s as if the ghosts of her past
+were abroad in the empty streets.&nbsp; The present is sleeping; the
+past hovers about us like a dream made visible.&nbsp; Fancy the old
+Florentines strolling up in couples to pass judgment on the last performance
+of Michael, of Benvenuto!&nbsp; We should come in for a precious lesson
+if we might overhear what they say.&nbsp; The plainest burgher of them,
+in his cap and gown, had a taste in the matter!&nbsp; That was the prime
+of art, sir.&nbsp; The sun stood high in heaven, and his broad and equal
+blaze made the darkest places bright and the dullest eyes clear.&nbsp;
+We live in the evening of time!&nbsp; We grope in the gray dusk, carrying
+each our poor little taper of selfish and painful wisdom, holding it
+up to the great models and to the dim idea, and seeing nothing but overwhelming
+greatness and dimness.&nbsp; The days of illumination are gone!&nbsp;
+But do you know I fancy&mdash;I fancy&rdquo;&mdash;and he grew suddenly
+almost familiar in this visionary fervour&mdash;&ldquo;I fancy the light
+of that time rests upon us here for an hour!&nbsp; I have never seen
+the David so grand, the Perseus so fair!&nbsp; Even the inferior productions
+of John of Bologna and of Baccio Bandinelli seem to realise the artist&rsquo;s
+dream.&nbsp; I feel as if the moonlit air were charged with the secrets
+of the masters, and as if, standing here in religious attention, we
+might&mdash;we might witness a revelation!&rdquo;&nbsp; Perceiving at
+this moment, I suppose, my halting comprehension reflected in my puzzled
+face, this interesting rhapsodist paused and blushed.&nbsp; Then with
+a melancholy smile, &ldquo;You think me a moonstruck charlatan, I suppose.&nbsp;
+It&rsquo;s not my habit to bang about the piazza and pounce upon innocent
+tourists.&nbsp; But tonight, I confess, I am under the charm.&nbsp;
+And then, somehow, I fancied you too were an artist!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not an artist, I am sorry to say, as you must understand
+the term.&nbsp; But pray make no apologies.&nbsp; I am also under the
+charm; your eloquent remarks have only deepened it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you are not an artist you are worthy to be one!&rdquo;
+he rejoined, with an expressive smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;A young man who
+arrives at Florence late in the evening, and, instead of going prosaically
+to bed, or hanging over the traveller&rsquo;s book at his hotel, walks
+forth without loss of time to pay his devoirs to the beautiful, is a
+young man after my own heart!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The mystery was suddenly solved; my friend was an American!&nbsp;
+He must have been, to take the picturesque so prodigiously to heart.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;None the less so, I trust,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;if the young
+man is a sordid New Yorker.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;New Yorkers have been munificent patrons of art!&rdquo; he
+answered, urbanely.</p>
+<p>For a moment I was alarmed.&nbsp; Was this midnight reverie mere
+Yankee enterprise, and was he simply a desperate brother of the brush
+who had posted himself here to extort an &ldquo;order&rdquo; from a
+sauntering tourist?&nbsp; But I was not called to defend myself.&nbsp;
+A great brazen note broke suddenly from the far-off summit of the bell-tower
+above us, and sounded the first stroke of midnight.&nbsp; My companion
+started, apologised for detaining me, and prepared to retire.&nbsp;
+But he seemed to offer so lively a promise of further entertainment
+that I was indisposed to part with him, and suggested that we should
+stroll homeward together.&nbsp; He cordially assented; so we turned
+out of the Piazza, passed down before the statued arcade of the Uffizi,
+and came out upon the Arno.&nbsp; What course we took I hardly remember,
+but we roamed slowly about for an hour, my companion delivering by snatches
+a sort of moon-touched &aelig;sthetic lecture.&nbsp; I listened in puzzled
+fascination, and wondered who the deuce he was.&nbsp; He confessed with
+a melancholy but all-respectful head-shake to his American origin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are the disinherited of Art!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;We
+are condemned to be superficial!&nbsp; We are excluded from the magic
+circle.&nbsp; The soil of American perception is a poor little barren
+artificial deposit.&nbsp; Yes! we are wedded to imperfection.&nbsp;
+An American, to excel, has just ten times as much to learn as a European.&nbsp;
+We lack the deeper sense.&nbsp; We have neither taste, nor tact, nor
+power.&nbsp; How should we have them?&nbsp; Our crude and garish climate,
+our silent past, our deafening present, the constant pressure about
+us of unlovely circumstance, are as void of all that nourishes and prompts
+and inspires the artist, as my sad heart is void of bitterness in saying
+so!&nbsp; We poor aspirants must live in perpetual exile.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You seem fairly at home in exile,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;and
+Florence seems to me a very pretty Siberia.&nbsp; But do you know my
+own thought?&nbsp; Nothing is so idle as to talk about our want of a
+nutritive soil, of opportunity, of inspiration, and all the rest of
+it.&nbsp; The worthy part is to do something fine!&nbsp; There is no
+law in our glorious Constitution against that.&nbsp; Invent, create,
+achieve!&nbsp; No matter if you have to study fifty times as much as
+one of these!&nbsp; What else are you an artist for?&nbsp; Be you our
+Moses,&rdquo; I added, laughing, and laying my hand on his shoulder,
+&ldquo;and lead us out of the house of bondage!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Golden words&mdash;golden words, young man!&rdquo; he cried,
+with a tender smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;&lsquo;Invent, create, achieve!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Yes, that&rsquo;s our business; I know it well.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t take
+me, in Heaven&rsquo;s name, for one of your barren complainers&mdash;impotent
+cynics who have neither talent nor faith!&nbsp; I am at work!&rdquo;&mdash;and
+he glanced about him and lowered his voice as if this were a quite peculiar
+secret&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;m at work night and day.&nbsp; I have undertaken
+a <i>creation</i>!&nbsp; I am no Moses; I am only a poor patient artist;
+but it would be a fine thing if I were to cause some slender stream
+of beauty to flow in our thirsty land!&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t think me a
+monster of conceit,&rdquo; he went on, as he saw me smile at the avidity
+with which he adopted my illustration; &ldquo;I confess that I am in
+one of those moods when great things seem possible!&nbsp; This is one
+of my nervous nights&mdash;I dream waking!&nbsp; When the south wind
+blows over Florence at midnight it seems to coax the soul from all the
+fair things locked away in her churches and galleries; it comes into
+my own little studio with the moonlight, and sets my heart beating too
+deeply for rest.&nbsp; You see I am always adding a thought to my conception!&nbsp;
+This evening I felt that I couldn&rsquo;t sleep unless I had communed
+with the genius of Buonarotti!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He seemed deeply versed in local history and tradition, and he expatiated
+<i>con amore</i> on the charms of Florence.&nbsp; I gathered that he
+was an old resident, and that he had taken the lovely city into his
+heart.&nbsp; &ldquo;I owe her everything,&rdquo; he declared.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s only since I came here that I have really lived, intellectually.&nbsp;
+One by one, all profane desires, all mere worldly aims, have dropped
+away from me, and left me nothing but my pencil, my little note-book&rdquo;
+(and he tapped his breast-pocket), &ldquo;and the worship of the pure
+masters&mdash;those who were pure because they were innocent, and those
+who were pure because they were strong!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And have you been very productive all this time?&rdquo; I
+asked sympathetically.</p>
+<p>He was silent a while before replying.&nbsp; &ldquo;Not in the vulgar
+sense!&rdquo; he said at last.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have chosen never to manifest
+myself by imperfection.&nbsp; The good in every performance I have re-absorbed
+into the generative force of new creations; the bad&mdash;there is always
+plenty of that&mdash;I have religiously destroyed.&nbsp; I may say,
+with some satisfaction, that I have not added a mite to the rubbish
+of the world.&nbsp; As a proof of my conscientiousness&rdquo;&mdash;and
+he stopped short, and eyed me with extraordinary candour, as if the
+proof were to be overwhelming&mdash;&ldquo;I have never sold a picture!&nbsp;
+&lsquo;At least no merchant traffics in my heart!&rsquo;&nbsp; Do you
+remember that divine line in Browning?&nbsp; My little studio has never
+been profaned by superficial, feverish, mercenary work.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s
+a temple of labour, but of leisure!&nbsp; Art is long.&nbsp; If we work
+for ourselves, of course we must hurry.&nbsp; If we work for her, we
+must often pause.&nbsp; She can wait!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This had brought us to my hotel door, somewhat to my relief, I confess,
+for I had begun to feel unequal to the society of a genius of this heroic
+strain.&nbsp; I left him, however, not without expressing a friendly
+hope that we should meet again.&nbsp; The next morning my curiosity
+had not abated; I was anxious to see him by common daylight.&nbsp; I
+counted upon meeting him in one of the many pictorial haunts of Florence,
+and I was gratified without delay.&nbsp; I found him in the course of
+the morning in the Tribune of the Uffizi&mdash;that little treasure-chamber
+of world-famous things.&nbsp; He had turned his back on the Venus de&rsquo;
+Medici, and with his arms resting on the rail-mug which protects the
+pictures, and his head buried in his hands, he was lost in the contemplation
+of that superb triptych of Andrea Mantegna&mdash;a work which has neither
+the material splendour nor the commanding force of some of its neighbours,
+but which, glowing there with the loveliness of patient labour, suits
+possibly a more constant need of the soul.&nbsp; I looked at the picture
+for some time over his shoulder; at last, with a heavy sigh, he turned
+away and our eyes met.&nbsp; As he recognised me a deep blush rose to
+his face; he fancied, perhaps, that he had made a fool of himself overnight.&nbsp;
+But I offered him my hand with a friendliness which assured him I was
+not a scoffer.&nbsp; I knew him by his ardent <i>chevelure</i>; otherwise
+he was much altered.&nbsp; His midnight mood was over, and he looked
+as haggard as an actor by daylight.&nbsp; He was far older than I had
+supposed, and he had less bravery of costume and gesture.&nbsp; He seemed
+the quiet, poor, patient artist he had proclaimed himself, and the fact
+that he had never sold a picture was more obvious than glorious.&nbsp;
+His velvet coat was threadbare, and his short slouched hat, of an antique
+pattern, revealed a rustiness which marked it an &ldquo;original,&rdquo;
+and not one of the picturesque reproductions which brethren of his craft
+affect.&nbsp; His eye was mild and heavy, and his expression singularly
+gentle and acquiescent; the more so for a certain pallid leanness of
+visage, which I hardly knew whether to refer to the consuming fire of
+genius or to a meagre diet.&nbsp; A very little talk, however, cleared
+his brow and brought back his eloquence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And this is your first visit to these enchanted halls?&rdquo;
+he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Happy, thrice happy youth!&rdquo;&nbsp; And taking
+me by the arm, he prepared to lead me to each of the pre-eminent works
+in turn and show me the cream of the gallery.&nbsp; But before we left
+the Mantegna he pressed my arm and gave it a loving look.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>He</i>
+was not in a hurry,&rdquo; he murmured.&nbsp; &ldquo;He knew nothing
+of &lsquo;raw Haste, half-sister to Delay!&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; How sound
+a critic my friend was I am unable to say, but he was an extremely amusing
+one; overflowing with opinions, theories, and sympathies, with disquisition
+and gossip and anecdote.&nbsp; He was a shade too sentimental for my
+own sympathies, and I fancied he was rather too fond of superfine discriminations
+and of discovering subtle intentions in shallow places.&nbsp; At moments,
+too, he plunged into the sea of metaphysics, and floundered a while
+in waters too deep for intellectual security.&nbsp; But his abounding
+knowledge and happy judgment told a touching story of long attentive
+hours in this worshipful company; there was a reproach to my wasteful
+saunterings in so devoted a culture of opportunity.&nbsp; &ldquo;There
+are two moods,&rdquo; I remember his saying, &ldquo;in which we may
+walk through galleries&mdash;the critical and the ideal.&nbsp; They
+seize us at their pleasure, and we can never tell which is to take its
+turn.&nbsp; The critical mood, oddly, is the genial one, the friendly,
+the condescending.&nbsp; It relishes the pretty trivialities of art,
+its vulgar cleverness, its conscious graces.&nbsp; It has a kindly greeting
+for anything which looks as if, according to his light, the painter
+had enjoyed doing it&mdash;for the little Dutch cabbages and kettles,
+for the taper fingers and breezy mantles of late-coming Madonnas, for
+the little blue-hilled, pastoral, sceptical Italian landscapes.&nbsp;
+Then there are the days of fierce, fastidious longing&mdash;solemn church
+feasts of the intellect&mdash;when all vulgar effort and all petty success
+is a weariness, and everything but the best&mdash;the best of the best&mdash;disgusts.&nbsp;
+In these hours we are relentless aristocrats of taste.&nbsp; We will
+not take Michael Angelo for granted, we will not swallow Raphael whole!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The gallery of the Uffizi is not only rich in its possessions, but
+peculiarly fortunate in that fine architectural accident, as one may
+call it, which unites it&mdash;with the breadth of river and city between
+them&mdash;to those princely chambers of the Pitti Palace.&nbsp; The
+Louvre and the Vatican hardly give you such a sense of sustained inclosure
+as those long passages projected over street and stream to establish
+a sort of inviolate transition between the two palaces of art.&nbsp;
+We passed along the gallery in which those precious drawings by eminent
+hands hang chaste and gray above the swirl and murmur of the yellow
+Arno, and reached the ducal saloons of the Pitti.&nbsp; Ducal as they
+are, it must be confessed that they are imperfect as show-rooms, and
+that, with their deep-set windows and their massive mouldings, it is
+rather a broken light that reaches the pictured walls.&nbsp; But here
+the masterpieces hang thick, and you seem to see them in a luminous
+atmosphere of their own.&nbsp; And the great saloons, with their superb
+dim ceilings, their outer wall in splendid shadow, and the sombre opposite
+glow of mellow canvas and dusky gilding, make, themselves, almost as
+fine a picture as the Titians and Raphaels they imperfectly reveal.&nbsp;
+We lingered briefly before many a Raphael and Titian; but I saw my friend
+was impatient, and I suffered him at last to lead me directly to the
+goal of our journey&mdash;the most tenderly fair of Raphael&rsquo;s
+virgins, the Madonna in the Chair.&nbsp; Of all the fine pictures of
+the world, it seemed to me this is the one with which criticism has
+least to do.&nbsp; None betrays less effort, less of the mechanism of
+success and of the irrepressible discord between conception and result,
+which shows dimly in so many consummate works.&nbsp; Graceful, human,
+near to our sympathies as it is, it has nothing of manner, of method,
+nothing, almost, of style; it blooms there in rounded softness, as instinct
+with harmony as if it were an immediate exhalation of genius.&nbsp;
+The figure melts away the spectator&rsquo;s mind into a sort of passionate
+tenderness which he knows not whether he has given to heavenly purity
+or to earthly charm.&nbsp; He is intoxicated with the fragrance of the
+tenderest blossom of maternity that ever bloomed on earth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I call a fine picture,&rdquo; said my companion,
+after we had gazed a while in silence.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have a right to
+say so, for I have copied it so often and so carefully that I could
+repeat it now with my eyes shut.&nbsp; Other works are of Raphael: this
+<i>is</i> Raphael himself.&nbsp; Others you can praise, you can qualify,
+you can measure, explain, account for: this you can only love and admire.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t know in what seeming he walked among men while this divine
+mood was upon him; but after it, surely, he could do nothing but die;
+this world had nothing more to teach him.&nbsp; Think of it a while,
+my friend, and you will admit that I am not raving.&nbsp; Think of his
+seeing that spotless image, not for a moment, for a day, in a happy
+dream, or a restless fever-fit; not as a poet in a five minutes&rsquo;
+frenzy&mdash;time to snatch his phrase and scribble his immortal stanza;
+but for days together, while the slow labour of the brush went on, while
+the foul vapours of life interposed, and the fancy ached with tension,
+fixed, radiant, distinct, as we see it now!&nbsp; What a master, certainly!&nbsp;
+But ah! what a seer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you imagine,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;that he
+had a model, and that some pretty young woman&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As pretty a young woman as you please!&nbsp; It doesn&rsquo;t
+diminish the miracle!&nbsp; He took his hint, of course, and the young
+woman, possibly, sat smiling before his canvas.&nbsp; But, meanwhile,
+the painter&rsquo;s idea had taken wings.&nbsp; No lovely human outline
+could charm it to vulgar fact.&nbsp; He saw the fair form made perfect;
+he rose to the vision without tremor, without effort of wing; he communed
+with it face to face, and resolved into finer and lovelier truth the
+purity which completes it as the fragrance completes the rose.&nbsp;
+That&rsquo;s what they call idealism; the word&rsquo;s vastly abused,
+but the thing is good.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s my own creed, at any rate.&nbsp;
+Lovely Madonna, model at once and muse, I call you to witness that I
+too am an idealist!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An idealist, then,&rdquo; I said, half jocosely, wishing to
+provoke him to further utterance, &ldquo;is a gentleman who says to
+Nature in the person of a beautiful girl, &lsquo;Go to, you are all
+wrong!&nbsp; Your fine is coarse, your bright is dim, your grace is
+<i>gaucherie</i>.&nbsp; This is the way you should have done it!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Is not the chance against him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He turned upon me almost angrily, but perceiving the genial savour
+of my sarcasm, he smiled gravely.&nbsp; &ldquo;Look at that picture,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;and cease your irreverent mockery!&nbsp; Idealism is
+<i>that</i>!&nbsp; There&rsquo;s no explaining it; one must feel the
+flame!&nbsp; It says nothing to Nature, or to any beautiful girl, that
+they will not both forgive!&nbsp; It says to the fair woman, &lsquo;Accept
+me as your artist friend, lend me your beautiful face, trust me, help
+me, and your eyes shall be half my masterpiece!&rsquo;&nbsp; No one
+so loves and respects the rich realities of nature as the artist whose
+imagination caresses and flatters them.&nbsp; He knows what a fact may
+hold (whether Raphael knew, you may judge by his portrait, behind us
+there, of Tommaso Inghirami); bad his fancy hovers above it, as Ariel
+hovered above the sleeping prince.&nbsp; There is only one Raphael,
+bad an artist may still be an artist.&nbsp; As I said last night, the
+days of illumination are gone; visions are rare; we have to look long
+to see them.&nbsp; But in meditation we may still cultivate the ideal;
+round it, smooth it, perfect it.&nbsp; The result&mdash;the result,&rdquo;
+(here his voice faltered suddenly, and he fixed his eyes for a moment
+on the picture; when they met my own again they were full of tears)&mdash;&ldquo;the
+result may be less than this; but still it may be good, it may be <i>great</i>!&rdquo;
+he cried with vehemence.&nbsp; &ldquo;It may hang somewhere, in after
+years, in goodly company, and keep the artist&rsquo;s memory warm.&nbsp;
+Think of being known to mankind after some such fashion as this! of
+hanging here through the slow centuries in the gaze of an altered world;
+living on and on in the cunning of an eye and hand that are part of
+the dust of ages, a delight and a law to remote generations; making
+beauty a force and purity an example!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Heaven forbid,&rdquo; I said, smiling, &ldquo;that I should
+take the wind out of your sails!&nbsp; But doesn&rsquo;t it occur to
+you that, besides being strong in his genius, Raphael was happy in a
+certain good faith of which we have lost the trick?&nbsp; There are
+people, I know, who deny that his spotless Madonnas are anything more
+than pretty blondes of that period enhanced by the Raphaelesque touch,
+which they declare is a profane touch.&nbsp; Be that as it may, people&rsquo;s
+religious and &aelig;sthetic needs went arm in arm, and there was, as
+I may say, a demand for the Blessed Virgin, visible and adorable, which
+must have given firmness to the artist&rsquo;s hand.&nbsp; I am afraid
+there is no demand now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>My companion seemed painfully puzzled; he shivered, as it were, in
+this chilling blast of scepticism.&nbsp; Then shaking his head with
+sublime confidence&mdash;&ldquo;There is always a demand!&rdquo; he
+cried; &ldquo;that ineffable type is one of the eternal needs of man&rsquo;s
+heart; but pious souls long for it in silence, almost in shame.&nbsp;
+Let it appear, and their faith grows brave.&nbsp; How <i>should</i>
+it appear in this corrupt generation?&nbsp; It cannot be made to order.&nbsp;
+It could, indeed, when the order came, trumpet-toned, from the lips
+of the Church herself, and was addressed to genius panting with inspiration.&nbsp;
+But it can spring now only from the soil of passionate labour and culture.&nbsp;
+Do you really fancy that while, from time to time, a man of complete
+artistic vision is born into the world, that image can perish?&nbsp;
+The man who paints it has painted everything.&nbsp; The subject admits
+of every perfection&mdash;form, colour, expression, composition.&nbsp;
+It can be as simple as you please, and yet as rich; as broad and pure,
+and yet as full of delicate detail.&nbsp; Think of the chance for flesh
+in the little naked, nestling child, irradiating divinity; of the chance
+for drapery in the chaste and ample garment of the mother! think of
+the great story you compress into that simple theme!&nbsp; Think, above
+all, of the mother&rsquo;s face and its ineffable suggestiveness, of
+the mingled burden of joy and trouble, the tenderness turned to worship,
+and the worship turned to far-seeing pity!&nbsp; Then look at it all
+in perfect line and lovely colour, breathing truth and beauty and mastery!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anch&rsquo; io son pittore!&rdquo; I cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Unless
+I am mistaken, you have a masterpiece on the stocks.&nbsp; If you put
+all that in, you will do more than Raphael himself did.&nbsp; Let me
+know when your picture is finished, and wherever in the wide world I
+may be, I will post back to Florence and pay my respects to&mdash;the
+<i>Madonna of the future</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He blushed vividly and gave a heavy sigh, half of protest, half of
+resignation.&nbsp; &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t often mention my picture by
+name.&nbsp; I detest this modern custom of premature publicity.&nbsp;
+A great work needs silence, privacy, mystery even.&nbsp; And then, do
+you know, people are so cruel, so frivolous, so unable to imagine a
+man&rsquo;s wishing to paint a Madonna at this time of day, that I have
+been laughed at&mdash;laughed at, sir!&rdquo; and his blush deepened
+to crimson.&nbsp; &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what has prompted me to
+be so frank and trustful with you.&nbsp; You look as if you wouldn&rsquo;t
+laugh at me.&nbsp; My dear young man&rdquo;&mdash;and he laid his hand
+on my arm&mdash;&ldquo;I am worthy of respect.&nbsp; Whatever my talents
+may be, I am honest.&nbsp; There is nothing grotesque in a pure ambition,
+or in a life devoted to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was something so sternly sincere in his look and tone that
+further questions seemed impertinent.&nbsp; I had repeated opportunity
+to ask them, however, for after this we spent much time together.&nbsp;
+Daily for a fortnight, we met by appointment, to see the sights.&nbsp;
+He knew the city so well, he had strolled and lounged so often through
+its streets and churches and galleries, he was so deeply versed in its
+greater and lesser memories, so imbued with the local genius, that he
+was an altogether ideal <i>valet de place</i>, and I was glad enough
+to leave my Murray at home, and gather facts and opinions alike from
+his gossiping commentary.&nbsp; He talked of Florence like a lover,
+and admitted that it was a very old affair; he had lost his heart to
+her at first sight.&nbsp; &ldquo;It&rsquo;s the fashion to talk of all
+cities as feminine,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but, as a rule, it&rsquo;s
+a monstrous mistake.&nbsp; Is Florence of the same sex as New York,
+as Chicago?&nbsp; She is the sole perfect lady of them all; one feels
+towards her as a lad in his teens feels to some beautiful older woman
+with a &lsquo;history.&rsquo;&nbsp; She fills you with a sort of aspiring
+gallantry.&rdquo;&nbsp; This disinterested passion seemed to stand my
+friend in stead of the common social ties; he led a lonely life, and
+cared for nothing but his work.&nbsp; I was duly flattered by his having
+taken my frivolous self into his favour, and by his generous sacrifice
+of precious hours to my society.&nbsp; We spent many of these hours
+among those early paintings in which Florence is so rich, returning
+ever and anon, with restless sympathies, to wonder whether these tender
+blossoms of art had not a vital fragrance and savour more precious than
+the full-fruited knowledge of the later works.&nbsp; We lingered often
+in the sepulchral chapel of San Lorenzo, and watched Michael Angelo&rsquo;s
+dim-visaged warrior sitting there like some awful Genius of Doubt and
+brooding behind his eternal mask upon the mysteries of life.&nbsp; We
+stood more than once in the little convent chambers where Fra Angelico
+wrought as if an angel indeed had held his hand, and gathered that sense
+of scattered dews and early bird-notes which makes an hour among his
+relics seem like a morning stroll in some monkish garden.&nbsp; We did
+all this and much more&mdash;wandered into dark chapels, damp courts,
+and dusty palace-rooms, in quest of lingering hints of fresco and lurking
+treasures of carving.</p>
+<p>I was more and more impressed with my companion&rsquo;s remarkable
+singleness of purpose.&nbsp; Everything was a pretext for some wildly
+idealistic rhapsody or reverie.&nbsp; Nothing could be seen or said
+that did not lead him sooner or later to a glowing discourse on the
+true, the beautiful, and the good.&nbsp; If my friend was not a genius,
+he was certainly a monomaniac; and I found as great a fascination in
+watching the odd lights and shades of his character as if he had been
+a creature from another planet.&nbsp; He seemed, indeed, to know very
+little of this one, and lived and moved altogether in his own little
+province of art.&nbsp; A creature more unsullied by the world it is
+impossible to conceive, and I often thought it a flaw in his artistic
+character that he had not a harmless vice or two.&nbsp; It amused me
+greatly at times to think that he was of our shrewd Yankee race; but,
+after all, there could be no better token of his American origin than
+this high &aelig;sthetic fever.&nbsp; The very heat of his devotion
+was a sign of conversion; those born to European opportunity manage
+better to reconcile enthusiasm with comfort.&nbsp; He had, moreover,
+all our native mistrust for intellectual discretion, and our native
+relish for sonorous superlatives.&nbsp; As a critic he was very much
+more generous than just, and his mildest terms of approbation were &ldquo;stupendous,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;transcendent,&rdquo; and &ldquo;incomparable.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+small change of admiration seemed to him no coin for a gentleman to
+handle; and yet, frank as he was intellectually, he was personally altogether
+a mystery.&nbsp; His professions, somehow, were all half-professions,
+and his allusions to his work and circumstances left something dimly
+ambiguous in the background.&nbsp; He was modest and proud, and never
+spoke of his domestic matters.&nbsp; He was evidently poor; yet he must
+have had some slender independence, since he could afford to make so
+merry over the fact that his culture of ideal beauty had never brought
+him a penny.&nbsp; His poverty, I supposed, was his motive for neither
+inviting me to his lodging nor mentioning its whereabouts.&nbsp; We
+met either in some public place or at my hotel, where I entertained
+him as freely as I might without appearing to be prompted by charity.&nbsp;
+He seemed always hungry, and this was his nearest approach to human
+grossness.&nbsp; I made a point of asking no impertinent questions,
+but, each time we met, I ventured to make some respectful allusion to
+the <i>magnum opus</i>, to inquire, as it were, as to its health and
+progress.&nbsp; &ldquo;We are getting on, with the Lord&rsquo;s help,&rdquo;
+he would say, with a grave smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;We are doing well.&nbsp;
+You see, I have the grand advantage that I lose no time.&nbsp; These
+hours I spend with you are pure profit.&nbsp; They are <i>suggestive</i>!&nbsp;
+Just as the truly religious soul is always at worship, the genuine artist
+is always in labour.&nbsp; He takes his property wherever he finds it,
+and learns some precious secret from every object that stands up in
+the light.&nbsp; If you but knew the rapture of observation!&nbsp; I
+gather with every glance some hint for light, for colour, or relief!&nbsp;
+When I get home, I pour out my treasures into the lap of toy Madonna.&nbsp;
+Oh, I am not idle!&nbsp; <i>Nulla dies sine linea</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was introduced in Florence to an American lady whose drawing-room
+had long formed an attractive place of reunion for the foreign residents.&nbsp;
+She lived on a fourth floor, and she was not rich; but she offered her
+visitors very good tea, little cakes at option, and conversation not
+quite to match.&nbsp; Her conversation had mainly an &aelig;sthetic
+flavour, for Mrs. Coventry was famously &ldquo;artistic.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Her apartment was a sort of Pitti Palace <i>au petit pied</i>.&nbsp;
+She possessed &ldquo;early masters&rdquo; by the dozen&mdash;a cluster
+of Peruginos in her dining-room, a Giotto in her boudoir, an Andrea
+del Sarto over her drawing-room chimney-piece.&nbsp; Surrounded by these
+treasures, and by innumerable bronzes, mosaics, majolica dishes, and
+little worm-eaten diptychs covered with angular saints on gilded backgrounds,
+our hostess enjoyed the dignity of a sort of high-priestess of the arts.&nbsp;
+She always wore on her bosom a huge miniature copy of the Madonna della
+Seggiola.&nbsp; Gaining her ear quietly one evening, I asked her whether
+she knew that remarkable man, Mr. Theobald.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Know him!&rdquo; she exclaimed; &ldquo;know poor Theobald!&nbsp;
+All Florence knows him, his flame-coloured locks, his black velvet coat,
+his interminable harangues on the beautiful, and his wondrous Madonna
+that mortal eye has never seen, and that mortal patience has quite given
+up expecting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Really,&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;you don&rsquo;t believe in
+his Madonna?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear ingenuous youth,&rdquo; rejoined my shrewd friend,
+&ldquo;has he made a convert of you?&nbsp; Well, we all believed in
+him once; he came down upon Florence and took the town by storm.&nbsp;
+Another Raphael, at the very least, had been born among men, and the
+poor dear United States were to have the credit of him.&nbsp; Hadn&rsquo;t
+he the very hair of Raphael flowing down on his shoulders?&nbsp; The
+hair, alas, but not the head!&nbsp; We swallowed him whole, however;
+we hung upon his lips and proclaimed his genius on the house-tops.&nbsp;
+The women were all dying to sit to him for their portraits and be made
+immortal, like Leonardo&rsquo;s Joconde.&nbsp; We decided that his manner
+was a good deal like Leonardo&rsquo;s&mdash;mysterious, and inscrutable,
+and fascinating.&nbsp; Mysterious it certainly was; mystery was the
+beginning and the end of it.&nbsp; The months passed by, and the miracle
+hung fire; our master never produced his masterpiece.&nbsp; He passed
+hours in the galleries and churches, posturing, musing, and gazing;
+he talked more than ever about the beautiful, but he never put brush
+to canvas.&nbsp; We had all subscribed, as it were, to the great performance;
+but as it never came off people began to ask for their money again.&nbsp;
+I was one of the last of the faithful; I carried devotion so far as
+to sit to him for my head.&nbsp; If you could have seen the horrible
+creature he made of me, you would admit that even a woman with no more
+vanity than will tie her bonnet straight must have cooled off then.&nbsp;
+The man didn&rsquo;t know the very alphabet of drawing!&nbsp; His strong
+point, he intimated, was his sentiment; but is it a consolation, when
+one has been painted a fright, to know it has been done with peculiar
+gusto?&nbsp; One by one, I confess, we fell away from the faith, and
+Mr. Theobald didn&rsquo;t lift his little finger to preserve us.&nbsp;
+At the first hint that we were tired of waiting, and that we should
+like the show to begin, he was off in a huff.&nbsp; &lsquo;Great work
+requires time, contemplation, privacy, mystery!&nbsp; O ye of little
+faith!&rsquo;&nbsp; We answered that we didn&rsquo;t insist on a great
+work; that the five-act tragedy might come at his convenience; that
+we merely asked for something to keep us from yawning, some inexpensive
+little <i>lever de rideau</i>.&nbsp; Hereupon the poor man took his
+stand as a genius misconceived and persecuted, an <i>&acirc;me m&eacute;connue</i>,
+and washed his hands of us from that hour!&nbsp; No, I believe he does
+me the honour to consider me the head and front of the conspiracy formed
+to nip his glory in the bud&mdash;a bud that has taken twenty years
+to blossom.&nbsp; Ask him if he knows me, and he will tell you I am
+a horribly ugly old woman, who has vowed his destruction because he
+won&rsquo;t paint her portrait as a pendant to Titian&rsquo;s Flora.&nbsp;
+I fancy that since then he has had none but chance followers, innocent
+strangers like yourself, who have taken him at his word.&nbsp; The mountain
+is still in labour; I have not heard that the mouse has been born.&nbsp;
+I pass him once in a while in the galleries, and he fixes his great
+dark eyes on me with a sublimity of indifference, as if I were a bad
+copy of a Sassoferrato!&nbsp; It is a long time ago now that I heard
+that he was making studies for a Madonna who was to be a <i>r&eacute;sum&eacute;</i>
+of all the other Madonnas of the Italian school&mdash;like that antique
+Venus who borrowed a nose from one great image and an ankle from another.&nbsp;
+It&rsquo;s certainly a masterly idea.&nbsp; The parts may be fine, but
+when I think of my unhappy portrait I tremble for the whole.&nbsp; He
+has communicated this striking idea under the pledge of solemn secrecy
+to fifty chosen spirits, to every one he has ever been able to button-hole
+for five minutes.&nbsp; I suppose he wants to get an order for it, and
+he is not to blame; for Heaven knows how he lives.&nbsp; I see by your
+blush,&rdquo; my hostess frankly continued, &ldquo;that you have been
+honoured with his confidence.&nbsp; You needn&rsquo;t be ashamed, my
+dear young man; a man of your age is none the worse for a certain generous
+credulity.&nbsp; Only allow me to give you a word of advice: keep your
+credulity out of your pockets!&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t pay for the picture
+till it&rsquo;s delivered.&nbsp; You have not been treated to a peep
+at it, I imagine!&nbsp; No more have your fifty predecessors in the
+faith.&nbsp; There are people who doubt whether there is any picture
+to be seen.&nbsp; I fancy, myself, that if one were to get into his
+studio, one would find something very like the picture in that tale
+of Balzac&rsquo;s&mdash;a mere mass of incoherent scratches and daubs,
+a jumble of dead paint!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I listened to this pungent recital in silent wonder.&nbsp; It had
+a painfully plausible sound, and was not inconsistent with certain shy
+suspicions of my own.&nbsp; My hostess was not only a clever woman,
+but presumably a generous one.&nbsp; I determined to let my judgment
+wait upon events.&nbsp; Possibly she was right; but if she was wrong,
+she was cruelly wrong!&nbsp; Her version of my friend&rsquo;s eccentricities
+made me impatient to see him again and examine him in the light of public
+opinion.&nbsp; On our next meeting I immediately asked him if he knew
+Mrs. Coventry.&nbsp; He laid his hand on my arm and gave me a sad smile.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Has she taxed <i>your</i> gallantry at last?&rdquo; he asked.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;s a foolish woman.&nbsp; She&rsquo;s frivolous and
+heartless, and she pretends to be serious and kind.&nbsp; She prattles
+about Giotto&rsquo;s second manner and Vittoria Colonna&rsquo;s liaison
+with &lsquo;Michael&rsquo;&mdash;one would think that Michael lived
+across the way and was expected in to take a hand at whist&mdash;but
+she knows as little about art, and about the conditions of production,
+as I know about Buddhism.&nbsp; She profanes sacred words,&rdquo; he
+added more vehemently, after a pause.&nbsp; &ldquo;She cares for you
+only as some one to band teacups in that horrible mendacious little
+parlour of hers, with its trumpery Peruginos!&nbsp; If you can&rsquo;t
+dash off a new picture every three days, and let her hand it round among
+her guests, she tells them in plain English that you are an impostor!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This attempt of mine to test Mrs. Coventry&rsquo;s accuracy was made
+in the course of a late afternoon walk to the quiet old church of San
+Miniato, on one of the hill-tops which directly overlook the city, from
+whose gates you are guided to it by a stony and cypress-bordered walk,
+which seems a very fitting avenue to a shrine.&nbsp; No spot is more
+propitious to lingering repose than the broad terrace in front of the
+church, where, lounging against the parapet, you may glance in slow
+alternation from the black and yellow marbles of the church fa&ccedil;ade,
+seamed and cracked with time and wind-sown with a tender flora of its
+own, down to the full domes and slender towers of Florence and over
+to the blue sweep of the wide-mouthed cup of mountains into whose hollow
+the little treasure city has been dropped.&nbsp; I had proposed, as
+a diversion from the painful memories evoked by Mrs. Coventry&rsquo;s
+name, that Theobald should go with me the next evening to the opera,
+where some rarely-played work was to be given.&nbsp; He declined, as
+I half expected, for I observed that he regularly kept his evenings
+in reserve, and never alluded to his manner of passing them.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+have reminded me before,&rdquo; I said, smiling, &ldquo;of that charming
+speech of the Florentine painter in Alfred de Musset&rsquo;s &lsquo;Lorenzaccio&rsquo;:
+&lsquo;I do no harm to anyone.&nbsp; I pass my days in my studio, On
+Sunday I go to the Annunziata or to Santa Mario; the monks think I have
+a voice; they dress me in a white gown and a red cap, and I take a share
+in the choruses; sometimes I do a little solo: these are the only times
+I go into public.&nbsp; In the evening, I visit my sweetheart; when
+the night is fine, we pass it on her balcony.&rsquo;&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t
+know whether you have a sweetheart, or whether she has a balcony.&nbsp;
+But if you are so happy, it&rsquo;s certainly better than trying to
+find a charm in a third-rate prima donna.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He made no immediate response, but at last he turned to me solemnly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Can you look upon a beautiful woman with reverent eyes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Really,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t pretend to be
+sheepish, but I should be sorry to think I was impudent.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And I asked him what in the world he meant.&nbsp; When at last I had
+assured him that I could undertake to temper admiration with respect,
+he informed me, with an air of religious mystery, that it was in his
+power to introduce me to the most beautiful woman in Italy&mdash;&ldquo;A
+beauty with a soul!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Upon my word,&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;you are extremely fortunate,
+and that is a most attractive description.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This woman&rsquo;s beauty,&rdquo; he went on, &ldquo;is a
+lesson, a morality, a poem!&nbsp; It&rsquo;s my daily study.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of course, after this, I lost no time in reminding him of what, before
+we parted, had taken the shape of a promise.&nbsp; &ldquo;I feel somehow,&rdquo;
+he had said, &ldquo;as if it were a sort of violation of that privacy
+in which I have always contemplated her beauty.&nbsp; This is friendship,
+my friend.&nbsp; No hint of her existence has ever fallen from my lips.&nbsp;
+But with too great a familiarity we are apt to lose a sense of the real
+value of things, and you perhaps will throw some new light upon it and
+offer a fresher interpretation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We went accordingly by appointment to a certain ancient house in
+the heart of Florence&mdash;the precinct of the Mercato Vecchio&mdash;and
+climbed a dark, steep staircase, to the very summit of the edifice.&nbsp;
+Theobald&rsquo;s beauty seemed as loftily exalted above the line of
+common vision as his artistic ideal was lifted above the usual practice
+of men.&nbsp; He passed without knocking into the dark vestibule of
+a small apartment, and, flinging open an inner door, ushered me into
+a small saloon.&nbsp; The room seemed mean and sombre, though I caught
+a glimpse of white curtains swaying gently at an open window.&nbsp;
+At a table, near a lamp, sat a woman dressed in black, working at a
+piece of embroidery.&nbsp; As Theobald entered she looked up calmly,
+with a smile; but seeing me she made a movement of surprise, and rose
+with a kind of stately grace.&nbsp; Theobald stepped forward, took her
+hand and kissed it, with an indescribable air of immemorial usage.&nbsp;
+As he bent his head she looked at me askance, and I thought she blushed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Behold the Serafina!&rdquo; said Theobald, frankly, waving
+me forward.&nbsp; &ldquo;This is a friend, and a lover of the arts,&rdquo;
+he added, introducing me.&nbsp; I received a smile, a curtsey, and a
+request to be seated.</p>
+<p>The most beautiful woman in Italy was a person of a generous Italian
+type and of a great simplicity of demeanour.&nbsp; Seated again at her
+lamp, with her embroidery, she seemed to have nothing whatever to say.&nbsp;
+Theobald, bending towards her in a sort of Platonic ecstasy, asked her
+a dozen paternally tender questions as to her health, her state of mind,
+her occupations, and the progress of her embroidery, which he examined
+minutely and summoned me to admire.&nbsp; It was some portion of an
+ecclesiastical vestment&mdash;yellow satin wrought with an elaborate
+design of silver and gold.&nbsp; She made answer in a full rich voice,
+but with a brevity which I hesitated whether to attribute to native
+reserve or to the profane constraint of my presence.&nbsp; She had been
+that morning to confession; she had also been to market, and had bought
+a chicken for dinner.&nbsp; She felt very happy; she had nothing to
+complain of except that the people for whom she was making her vestment,
+and who furnished her materials, should be willing to put such rotten
+silver thread into the garment, as one might say, of the Lord.&nbsp;
+From time to time, as she took her slow stitches, she raised her eyes
+and covered me with a glance which seemed at first to denote a placid
+curiosity, but in which, as I saw it repeated, I thought I perceived
+the dim glimmer of an attempt to establish an understanding with me
+at the expense of our companion.&nbsp; Meanwhile, as mindful as possible
+of Theobald&rsquo;s injunction of reverence, I considered the lady&rsquo;s
+personal claims to the fine compliment he had paid her.</p>
+<p>That she was indeed a beautiful woman I perceived, after recovering
+from the surprise of finding her without the freshness of youth.&nbsp;
+Her beauty was of a sort which, in losing youth, loses little of its
+essential charm, expressed for the most part as it was in form and structure,
+and, as Theobald would have said, in &ldquo;composition.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+She was broad and ample, low-browed and large-eyed, dark and pale.&nbsp;
+Her thick brown hair hung low beside her cheek and ear, and seemed to
+drape her head with a covering as chaste and formal as the veil of a
+nun.&nbsp; The poise and carriage of her head were admirably free and
+noble, and they were the more effective that their freedom was at moments
+discreetly corrected by a little sanctimonious droop, which harmonised
+admirably with the level gaze of her dark and quiet eye.&nbsp; A strong,
+serene, physical nature, and the placid temper which comes of no nerves
+and no troubles, seemed this lady&rsquo;s comfortable portion.&nbsp;
+She was dressed in plain dull black, save for a sort of dark blue kerchief
+which was folded across her bosom and exposed a glimpse of her massive
+throat.&nbsp; Over this kerchief was suspended a little silver cross.&nbsp;
+I admired her greatly, and yet with a large reserve.&nbsp; A certain
+mild intellectual apathy belonged properly to her type of beauty, and
+had always seemed to round and enrich it; but this <i>bourgeoise</i>
+Egeria, if I viewed her right, betrayed a rather vulgar stagnation of
+mind.&nbsp; There might have been once a dim spiritual light in her
+face; but it had long since begun to wane.&nbsp; And furthermore, in
+plain prose, she was growing stout.&nbsp; My disappointment amounted
+very nearly to complete disenchantment when Theobald, as if to facilitate
+my covert inspection, declaring that the lamp was very dim, and that
+she would ruin her eyes without more light, rose and fetched a couple
+of candles from the mantelpiece, which he placed lighted on the table.&nbsp;
+In this brighter illumination I perceived that our hostess was decidedly
+an elderly woman.&nbsp; She was neither haggard, nor worn, nor gray;
+she was simply coarse.&nbsp; The &ldquo;soul&rdquo; which Theobald had
+promised seemed scarcely worth making such a point of; it was no deeper
+mystery than a sort of matronly mildness of lip and brow.&nbsp; I should
+have been ready even to declare that that sanctified bend of the head
+was nothing more than the trick of a person constantly working at embroidery.&nbsp;
+It occurred to me even that it was a trick of a less innocent sort;
+for, in spite of the mellow quietude of her wits, this stately needlewoman
+dropped a hint that she took the situation rather less seriously than
+her friend.&nbsp; When he rose to light the candles she looked across
+at me with a quick, intelligent smile, and tapped her forehead with
+her forefinger; then, as from a sudden feeling of compassionate loyalty
+to poor Theobald, I preserved a blank face, she gave a little shrug
+and resumed her work.</p>
+<p>What was the relation of this singular couple?&nbsp; Was he the most
+ardent of friends or the most reverent of lovers?&nbsp; Did she regard
+him as an eccentric swain, whose benevolent admiration of her beauty
+she was not ill pleased to humour at this small cost of having him climb
+into her little parlour and gossip of summer nights?&nbsp; With her
+decent and sombre dress, her simple gravity, and that fine piece of
+priestly needlework, she looked like some pious lay-member of a sisterhood,
+living by special permission outside her convent walls.&nbsp; Or was
+she maintained here aloft by her friend in comfortable leisure, so that
+he might have before him the perfect, eternal type, uncorrupted and
+untarnished by the struggle for existence?&nbsp; Her shapely hands,
+I observed, wore very fair and white; they lacked the traces of what
+is called honest toil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the pictures, how do they come on?&rdquo; she asked of
+Theobald, after a long pause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Finely, finely!&nbsp; I have here a friend whose sympathy
+and encouragement give me new faith and ardour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Our hostess turned to me, gazed at me a moment rather inscrutably,
+and then tapping her forehead with the gesture she had used a minute
+before, &ldquo;He has a magnificent genius!&rdquo; she said, with perfect
+gravity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am inclined to think so,&rdquo; I answered, with a smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh, why do you smile?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;If you
+doubt it, you must see the <i>bambino</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; And she took
+the lamp and conducted me to the other side of the room, where on the
+wall, in a plain black frame, hung a large drawing in red chalk.&nbsp;
+Beneath it was fastened a little howl for holy water.&nbsp; The drawing
+represented a very young child, entirely naked, half nestling back against
+his mother&rsquo;s gown, but with his two little arms outstretched,
+as if in the act of benediction.&nbsp; It was executed with singular
+freedom and power, and yet seemed vivid with the sacred bloom of infancy.&nbsp;
+A sort of dimpled elegance and grace, mingled with its boldness, recalled
+the touch of Correggio.&nbsp; &ldquo;That&rsquo;s what he can do!&rdquo;
+said my hostess.&nbsp; &ldquo;It&rsquo;s the blessed little boy whom
+I lost.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s his very image, and the Signor Teobaldo gave
+it me as a gift.&nbsp; He has given me many things besides!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I looked at the picture for some time and admired it immensely.&nbsp;
+Turning back to Theobald I assured him that if it were hung among the
+drawings in the Uffizi and labelled with a glorious name it would hold
+its own.&nbsp; My praise seemed to give him extreme pleasure; he pressed
+my hands, and his eyes filled with tears.&nbsp; It moved him apparently
+with the desire to expatiate on the history of the drawing, for he rose
+and made his adieux to our companion, kissing her band with the same
+mild ardour as before.&nbsp; It occurred to me that the offer of a similar
+piece of gallantry on my own part might help me to know what manner
+of woman she was.&nbsp; When she perceived my intention she withdrew
+her hand, dropped her eyes solemnly, and made me a severe curtsey.&nbsp;
+Theobald took my arm and led me rapidly into the street.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what do you think of the divine Serafina?&rdquo; he cried
+with fervour.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is certainly an excellent style of good looks!&rdquo; I
+answered.</p>
+<p>He eyed me an instant askance, and then seemed hurried along by the
+current of remembrance.&nbsp; &ldquo;You should have seen the mother
+and the child together, seen them as I first saw them&mdash;the mother
+with her head draped in a shawl, a divine trouble in her face, and the
+bambino pressed to her bosom.&nbsp; You would have said, I think, that
+Raphael had found his match in common chance.&nbsp; I was coming in,
+one summer night, from a long walk in the country, when I met this apparition
+at the city gate.&nbsp; The woman held out her hand.&nbsp; I hardly
+knew whether to say, &lsquo;What do you want?&rsquo; or to fall down
+and worship.&nbsp; She asked for a little money.&nbsp; I saw that she
+was beautiful and pale; she might have stepped out of the stable of
+Bethlehem!&nbsp; I gave her money and helped her on her way into the
+town.&nbsp; I had guessed her story.&nbsp; She, too, was a maiden mother,
+and she had been turned out into the world in her shame.&nbsp; I felt
+in all my pulses that here was my subject marvellously realised.&nbsp;
+I felt like one of the old monkish artists who had had a vision.&nbsp;
+I rescued the poor creatures, cherished them, watched them as I would
+have done some precious work of art, some lovely fragment of fresco
+discovered in a mouldering cloister.&nbsp; In a month&mdash;as if to
+deepen and sanctify the sadness and sweetness of it all&mdash;the poor
+little child died.&nbsp; When she felt that he was going she held him
+up to me for ten minutes, and I made that sketch.&nbsp; You saw a feverish
+haste in it, I suppose; I wanted to spare the poor little mortal the
+pain of his position.&nbsp; After that I doubly valued the mother.&nbsp;
+She is the simplest, sweetest, most natural creature that ever bloomed
+in this brave old land of Italy.&nbsp; She lives in the memory of her
+child, in her gratitude for the scanty kindness I have been able to
+show her, and in her simple religion!&nbsp; She is not even conscious
+of her beauty; my admiration has never made her vain.&nbsp; Heaven knows
+that I have made no secret of it.&nbsp; You must have observed the singular
+transparency of her expression, the lovely modesty of her glance.&nbsp;
+And was there ever such a truly virginal brow, such a natural classic
+elegance in the wave of the hair and the arch of the forehead?&nbsp;
+I have studied her; I may say I know her.&nbsp; I have absorbed her
+little by little; my mind is stamped and imbued, and I have determined
+now to clinch the impression; I shall at last invite her to sit for
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;At last&mdash;at last&rsquo;?&rdquo; I repeated, in
+much amazement.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you mean that she has never done so
+yet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have not really had&mdash;a&mdash;a sitting,&rdquo; said
+Theobald, speaking very slowly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have taken notes, you
+know; I have got my grand fundamental impression.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s
+the great thing!&nbsp; But I have not actually had her as a model, posed
+and draped and lighted, before my easel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What had become for the moment of my perception and my tact I am
+at a loss to say; in their absence I was unable to repress a headlong
+exclamation.&nbsp; I was destined to regret it.&nbsp; We had stopped
+at a turning, beneath a lamp.&nbsp; &ldquo;My poor friend,&rdquo; I
+exclaimed, laying my hand on his shoulder, &ldquo;you have <i>dawdled</i>!&nbsp;
+She&rsquo;s an old, old woman&mdash;for a Madonna!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was as if I had brutally struck him; I shall never forget the
+long, slow, almost ghastly look of pain, with which he answered me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dawdled?&mdash;old, old?&rdquo; he stammered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are
+you joking?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, my dear fellow, I suppose you don&rsquo;t take her for
+a woman of twenty?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He drew a long breath and leaned against a house, looking at me with
+questioning, protesting, reproachful eyes.&nbsp; At last, starting forward,
+and grasping my arm&mdash;&ldquo;Answer me solemnly: does she seem to
+you truly old?&nbsp; Is she wrinkled, is she faded, am I blind?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then at last I understood the immensity of his illusion how, one
+by one, the noiseless years had ebbed away and left him brooding in
+charmed inaction, for ever preparing for a work for ever deferred.&nbsp;
+It seemed to me almost a kindness now to tell him the plain truth.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I should be sorry to say you are blind,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;but
+I think you are deceived.&nbsp; You have lost time in effortless contemplation.&nbsp;
+Your friend was once young and fresh and virginal; but, I protest, that
+was some years ago.&nbsp; Still, she has <i>de beaux restes</i>.&nbsp;
+By all means make her sit for you!&rdquo; I broke down; his face was
+too horribly reproachful.</p>
+<p>He took off his hat and stood passing his handkerchief mechanically
+over his forehead.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>De beaux restes</i>?&nbsp; I thank
+you for sparing me the plain English.&nbsp; I must make up my Madonna
+out of <i>de beaux restes</i>!&nbsp; What a masterpiece she will be!&nbsp;
+Old&mdash;old!&nbsp; Old&mdash;old!&rdquo; he murmured.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind her age,&rdquo; I cried, revolted at what I had
+done, &ldquo;never mind my impression of her!&nbsp; You have your memory,
+your notes, your genius.&nbsp; Finish your picture in a month.&nbsp;
+I pronounce it beforehand a masterpiece, and I hereby offer you for
+it any sum you may choose to ask.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stared, but he seemed scarcely to understand me.&nbsp; &ldquo;Old&mdash;old!&rdquo;
+he kept stupidly repeating.&nbsp; &ldquo;If she is old, what am I?&nbsp;
+If her beauty has faded, where&mdash;where is my strength?&nbsp; Has
+life been a dream?&nbsp; Have I worshipped too long&mdash;have I loved
+too well?&rdquo;&nbsp; The charm, in truth, was broken.&nbsp; That the
+chord of illusion should have snapped at my light accidental touch showed
+how it had been weakened by excessive tension.&nbsp; The poor fellow&rsquo;s
+sense of wasted time, of vanished opportunity, seemed to roll in upon
+his soul in waves of darkness.&nbsp; He suddenly dropped his head and
+burst into tears.</p>
+<p>I led him homeward with all possible tenderness, but I attempted
+neither to check his grief, to restore his equanimity, nor to unsay
+the hard truth.&nbsp; When we reached my hotel I tried to induce him
+to come so.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will drink a glass of wine,&rdquo; I said, smiling, &ldquo;to
+the completion of the Madonna.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With a violent effort he held up his head, mused for a moment with
+a formidably sombre frown, and then giving me his hand, &ldquo;I will
+finish it,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;in a month!&nbsp; No, in a fortnight!&nbsp;
+After all, I have it <i>here</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he tapped his forehead.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Of course she&rsquo;s old!&nbsp; She can afford to have it said
+of her&mdash;a woman who has made twenty years pass like a twelvemonth!&nbsp;
+Old&mdash;old!&nbsp; Why, sir, she shall be eternal!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I wished to see him safely to his own door, but he waved me back
+and walked away with an air of resolution, whistling and swinging his
+cane.&nbsp; I waited a moment, and then followed him at a distance,
+and saw him proceed to cross the Santa Trinit&agrave; Bridge.&nbsp;
+When he reached the middle he suddenly paused, as if his strength had
+deserted him, and leaned upon the parapet gazing over into the river.&nbsp;
+I was careful to keep him in sight; I confess that I passed ten very
+nervous minutes.&nbsp; He recovered himself at last, and went his way,
+slowly and with hanging head.</p>
+<p>That I had really startled poor Theobald into a bolder use of his
+long-garnered stores of knowledge and taste, into the vulgar effort
+and hazard of production, seemed at first reason enough for his continued
+silence and absence; but as day followed day without his either calling
+or sending me a line, and without my meeting him in his customary haunts,
+in the galleries, in the Chapel at San Lorenzo, or strolling between
+the Arno side and the great hedge-screen of verdure which, along the
+drive of the Cascine, throws the fair occupants of barouche and phaeton
+into such becoming relief&mdash;as for more than a week I got neither
+tidings nor sight of him, I began to fear that I had fatally offended
+him, and that, instead of giving a wholesome impetus to his talent,
+I had brutally paralysed it.&nbsp; I had a wretched suspicion that I
+had made him ill.&nbsp; My stay at Florence was drawing to a close,
+and it was important that, before resuming my journey, I should assure
+myself of the truth.&nbsp; Theobald, to the last, had kept his lodging
+a mystery, and I was altogether at a loss where to look for him.&nbsp;
+The simplest course was to make inquiry of the beauty of the Mercato
+Vecchio, and I confess that unsatisfied curiosity as to the lady herself
+counselled it as well.&nbsp; Perhaps I had done her injustice, and she
+was as immortally fresh and fair as be conceived her.&nbsp; I was, at
+any rate, anxious to behold once more the ripe enchantress who had made
+twenty years pass as a twelvemonth.&nbsp; I repaired accordingly, one
+morning, to her abode, climbed the interminable staircase, and reached
+her door.&nbsp; It stood ajar, and as I hesitated whether to enter,
+a little serving-maid came clattering out with an empty kettle, as if
+she had just performed some savoury errand.&nbsp; The inner door, too,
+was open; so I crossed the little vestibule and entered the room in
+which I had formerly been received.&nbsp; It had not its evening aspect.&nbsp;
+The table, or one end of it, was spread for a late breakfast, and before
+it sat a gentleman&mdash;an individual, at least, of the male sex&mdash;doing
+execution upon a beefsteak and onions, and a bottle of wine.&nbsp; At
+his elbow, in friendly proximity, was placed the lady of the house.&nbsp;
+Her attitude, as I entered, was not that of an enchantress.&nbsp; With
+one hand she held in her lap a plate of smoking maccaroni; with the
+other she had lifted high in air one of the pendulous filaments of this
+succulent compound, and was in the act of slipping it gently down her
+throat.&nbsp; On the uncovered end of the table, facing her companion,
+were ranged half a dozen small statuettes, of some snuff-coloured substance
+resembling terra-cotta.&nbsp; He, brandishing his knife with ardour,
+was apparently descanting on their merits.</p>
+<p>Evidently I darkened the door.&nbsp; My hostess dropped liner maccaroni&mdash;into
+her mouth, and rose hastily with a harsh exclamation and a flushed face.&nbsp;
+I immediately perceived that the Signora Serafina&rsquo;s secret was
+even better worth knowing than I had supposed, and that the way to learn
+it was to take it for granted.&nbsp; I summoned my best Italian, I smiled
+and bowed and apologised for my intrusion; and in a moment, whether
+or no I had dispelled the lady&rsquo;s irritation, I had at least stimulated
+her prudence.&nbsp; I was welcome, she said; I must take a seat.&nbsp;
+This was another friend of hers&mdash;also an artist, she declared with
+a smile which was almost amiable.&nbsp; Her companion wiped his moustache
+and bowed with great civility.&nbsp; I saw at a glance that he was equal
+to the situation.&nbsp; He was presumably the author of the statuettes
+on the table, and he knew a money-spending <i>foresti&eacute;re</i>
+when he saw one.&nbsp; He was a small wiry man, with a clever, impudent,
+tossed-up nose, a sharp little black eye, and waxed ends to his moustache.&nbsp;
+On the side of his head he wore jauntily a little crimson velvet smoking-cap,
+and I observed that his feet were encased in brilliant slippers.&nbsp;
+On Serafina&rsquo;s remarking with dignity that I was the friend of
+Mr. Theobald, he broke out into that fantastic French of which certain
+Italians are so insistently lavish, and declared with fervour that Mr.
+Theobald was a magnificent genius.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; I answered with a shrug.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If you are in a position to affirm it, you have the advantage
+of me.&nbsp; I have seen nothing from his hand but the bambino yonder,
+which certainly is fine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He declared that the bambino was a masterpiece, a pure Corregio.&nbsp;
+It was only a pity, he added with a knowing laugh, that the sketch had
+not been made on some good bit of honeycombed old panel.&nbsp; The stately
+Serafina hereupon protested that Mr. Theobald was the soul of honour,
+and that he would never lend himself to a deceit.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am
+not a judge of genius,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and I know nothing of
+pictures.&nbsp; I am but a poor simple widow; but I know that the Signor
+Teobaldo has the heart of an angel and the virtue of a saint.&nbsp;
+He is my benefactor,&rdquo; she added sententiously.&nbsp; The after-glow
+of the somewhat sinister flush with which she had greeted me still lingered
+in her cheek, and perhaps did not favour her beauty; I could not but
+fancy it a wise custom of Theobald&rsquo;s to visit her only by candle-light.&nbsp;
+She was coarse, and her pour adorer was a poet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have the greatest esteem for him,&rdquo; I said; &ldquo;it
+is for this reason that I have been uneasy at not seeing him for ten
+days.&nbsp; Have you seen him?&nbsp; Is he perhaps ill?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ill!&nbsp; Heaven forbid!&rdquo; cried Serafina, with genuine
+vehemence.</p>
+<p>Her companion uttered a rapid expletive, and reproached her with
+not having been to see him.&nbsp; She hesitated a moment; then she simpered
+the least bit and bridled.&nbsp; &ldquo;He comes to see me&mdash;without
+reproach!&nbsp; But it would not be the same for me to go to him, though,
+indeed, you may almost call him a man of holy life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has the greatest admiration for you,&rdquo; I said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;He would have been honoured by your visit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She looked at me a moment sharply.&nbsp; &ldquo;More admiration than
+you.&nbsp; Admit that!&rdquo;&nbsp; Of course I protested with all the
+eloquence at my command, and my mysterious hostess then confessed that
+she had taken no fancy to me on my former visit, and that, Theobald
+not having returned, she believed I had poisoned his mind against her.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It would be no kindness to the poor gentleman, I can tell you
+that,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;He has come to see me every evening
+for years.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s a long friendship!&nbsp; No one knows him
+as well as I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t pretend to know him or to understand him,&rdquo;
+I said.&nbsp; &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a mystery!&nbsp; Nevertheless, he seems
+to me a little&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp; And I touched my forehead and waved
+my hand in the air.</p>
+<p>Serafina glanced at her companion a moment, as if for inspiration.&nbsp;
+He contented himself with shrugging his shoulders as he filled his glass
+again.&nbsp; The <i>padrona</i> hereupon gave me a more softly insinuating
+smile than would have seemed likely to bloom on so candid a brow.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s for that that I love him!&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+world has so little kindness for such persons.&nbsp; It laughs at them,
+and despises them, and cheats them.&nbsp; He is too good for this wicked
+life!&nbsp; It&rsquo;s his fancy that he finds a little Paradise up
+here in my poor apartment.&nbsp; If he thinks so, how can I help it?&nbsp;
+He has a strange belief&mdash;really, I ought to be ashamed to tell
+you&mdash;that I resemble the Blessed Virgin: Heaven forgive me!&nbsp;
+I let him think what he pleases, so long as it makes him happy.&nbsp;
+He was very kind to me once, and I am not one that forgets a favour.&nbsp;
+So I receive him every evening civilly, and ask after his health, and
+let him look at me on this side and that!&nbsp; For that matter, I may
+say it without vanity, I was worth looking at once!&nbsp; And he&rsquo;s
+not always amusing, poor man!&nbsp; He sits sometimes for an hour without
+speaking a word, or else he talks away, without stopping, on art and
+nature, and beauty and duty, and fifty fine things that are all so much
+Latin to me.&nbsp; I beg you to understand that he has never said a
+word to me that I mightn&rsquo;t decently listen to.&nbsp; He may be
+a little cracked, but he&rsquo;s one of the blessed saints.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh!&rdquo; cried the man, &ldquo;the blessed saints were all
+a little cracked!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Serafina, I fancied, left part of her story untold; but she told
+enough of it to make poor Theobald&rsquo;s own statement seem intensely
+pathetic in its exalted simplicity.&nbsp; &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a strange
+fortune, certainly,&rdquo; she went on, &ldquo;to have such a friend
+as this dear man&mdash;a friend who is less than a lover and more than
+a friend.&rdquo;&nbsp; I glanced at her companion, who preserved an
+impenetrable smile, twisted the end of his moustache, and disposed of
+a copious mouthful.&nbsp; Was <i>he</i> less than a lover? &ldquo;But
+what will you have?&rdquo; Serafina pursued.&nbsp; &ldquo;In this hard
+world one must not ask too many questions; one must take what comes
+and keep what one gets.&nbsp; I have kept my good friend for twenty
+years, and I do hope that, at this time of day, signore, you have not
+come to turn him against me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I assured her that I had no such design, and that I should vastly
+regret disturbing Mr. Theobald&rsquo;s habits or convictions.&nbsp;
+On the contrary, I was alarmed about him, and I should immediately go
+in search of him.&nbsp; She gave me his address, and a florid account
+of her sufferings at his non-appearance.&nbsp; She had not been to him
+for various reasons; chiefly because she was afraid of displeasing him,
+as he had always made such a mystery of his home.&nbsp; &ldquo;You might
+have sent this gentleman!&rdquo; I ventured to suggest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; cried the gentleman, &ldquo;he admires the Signora
+Serafina, but he wouldn&rsquo;t admire me.&rdquo;&nbsp; And then, confidentially,
+with his finger on his nose, &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a purist!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was about to withdraw, after having promised that I would inform
+the Signora Serafina of my friend&rsquo;s condition, when her companion,
+who had risen from table and girded his loins apparently for the onset,
+grasped me gently by the arm, and led me before the row of statuettes.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I perceive by your conversation, signore, that you are a patron
+of the arts.&nbsp; Allow me to request your honourable attention for
+these modest products of my own ingenuity.&nbsp; They are brand-new,
+fresh from my atelier, and have never been exhibited in public.&nbsp;
+I have brought them here to receive the verdict of this dear lady, who
+is a good critic, for all she may pretend to the contrary.&nbsp; I am
+the inventor of this peculiar style of statuette&mdash;of subject, manner,
+material, everything.&nbsp; Touch them, I pray you; handle them freely&mdash;you
+needn&rsquo;t fear.&nbsp; Delicate as they look, it is impossible they
+should break!&nbsp; My various creations have met with great success.&nbsp;
+They are especially admired by Americans.&nbsp; I have sent them all
+over Europe&mdash;to London, Paris, Vienna!&nbsp; You may have observed
+some little specimens in Paris, on the Boulevard, in a shop of which
+they constitute the specialty.&nbsp; There is always a crowd about the
+window.&nbsp; They form a very pleasing ornament for the mantel-shelf
+of a gay young bachelor, for the boudoir of a pretty woman.&nbsp; You
+couldn&rsquo;t make a prettier present to a person with whom you wished
+to exchange a harmless joke.&nbsp; It is not classic art, signore, of
+course; but, between ourselves, isn&rsquo;t classic art sometimes rather
+a bore?&nbsp; Caricature, burlesque, <i>la charge</i>, as the French
+say, has hitherto been confined to paper, to the pen and pencil.&nbsp;
+Now, it has been my inspiration to introduce it into statuary.&nbsp;
+For this purpose I have invented a peculiar plastic compound which you
+will permit me not to divulge.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s my secret, signore!&nbsp;
+It&rsquo;s as light, you perceive, as cork, and yet as firm as alabaster!&nbsp;
+I frankly confess that I really pride myself as much on this little
+stroke of chemical ingenuity as upon the other element of novelty in
+my creations&mdash;my types.&nbsp; What do you say to my types, signore?&nbsp;
+The idea is bold; does it strike you as happy?&nbsp; Cats and monkeys&mdash;monkeys
+and cats&mdash;all human life is there!&nbsp; Human life, of course,
+I mean, viewed with the eye of the satirist!&nbsp; To combine sculpture
+and satire, signore, has been my unprecedented ambition.&nbsp; I flatter
+myself that I have not egregiously failed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As this jaunty Juvenal of the chimney-piece delivered himself of
+his persuasive allocution, he took up his little groups successively
+from the table, held them aloft, turned them about, rapped them with
+his knuckles, and gazed at them lovingly, with his head on one side.&nbsp;
+They consisted each of a cat and a monkey, fantastically draped, in
+some preposterously sentimental conjunction.&nbsp; They exhibited a
+certain sameness of motive, and illustrated chiefly the different phases
+of what, in delicate terms, may be called gallantry and coquetry; but
+they were strikingly clever and expressive, and were at once very perfect
+cats and monkeys and very natural men and women.&nbsp; I confess, however,
+that they failed to amuse me.&nbsp; I was doubtless not in a mood to
+enjoy them, for they seemed to me peculiarly cynical and vulgar.&nbsp;
+Their imitative felicity was revolting.&nbsp; As I looked askance at
+the complacent little artist, brandishing them between finger and thumb
+and caressing them with an amorous eye, he seemed to me himself little
+more than an exceptionally intelligent ape.&nbsp; I mustered an admiring
+grin, however, and he blew another blast.&nbsp; &ldquo;My figures are
+studied from life!&nbsp; I have a little menagerie of monkeys whose
+frolics I contemplate by the hour.&nbsp; As for the cats, one has only
+to look out of one&rsquo;s back window!&nbsp; Since I have begun to
+examine these expressive little brutes, I have made many profound observations.&nbsp;
+Speaking, signore, to a man of imagination, I may say that my little
+designs are not without a philosophy of their own.&nbsp; Truly, I don&rsquo;t
+know whether the cats and monkeys imitate us, or whether it&rsquo;s
+we who imitate them.&rdquo;&nbsp; I congratulated him on his philosophy,
+and he resumed: &ldquo;You will do use the honour to admit that I have
+handled my subjects with delicacy.&nbsp; Eh, it was needed, signore!&nbsp;
+I have been free, but not too free&mdash;eh?&nbsp; Just a hint, you
+know!&nbsp; You may see as much or as little as you please.&nbsp; These
+little groups, however, are no measure of my invention.&nbsp; If you
+will favour me with a call at my studio, I think that you will admit
+that my combinations are really infinite.&nbsp; I likewise execute figures
+to command.&nbsp; You have perhaps some little motive&mdash;the fruit
+of your philosophy of life, signore&mdash;which you would like to have
+interpreted.&nbsp; I can promise to work it up to your satisfaction;
+it shall be as malicious as you please!&nbsp; Allow me to present you
+with my card, and to remind you that my prices are moderate.&nbsp; Only
+sixty francs for a little group like that.&nbsp; My statuettes are as
+durable as bronze&mdash;<i>&aelig;re perennius</i>, signore&mdash;and,
+between ourselves, I think they are more amusing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As I pocketed his card I glanced at Madonna Serafina, wondering whether
+she had an eye for contrasts.&nbsp; She had picked up one of the little
+couples and was tenderly dusting it with a feather broom.</p>
+<p>What I had just seen and heard had so deepened my compassionate interest
+in my deluded friend that I took a summary leave, making my way directly
+to the house designated by this remarkable woman.&nbsp; It was in an
+obscure corner of the opposite side of the town, and presented a sombre
+and squalid appearance.&nbsp; An old woman in the doorway, on my inquiring
+for Theobald, ushered me in with a mumbled blessing and an expression
+of relief at the poor gentleman having a friend.&nbsp; His lodging seemed
+to consist of a single room at the top of the house.&nbsp; On getting
+no answer to my knock, I opened the door, supposing that he was absent,
+so that it gave me a certain shock to find him sitting there helpless
+and dumb.&nbsp; He was seated near the single window, facing an easel
+which supported a large canvas.&nbsp; On my entering he looked up at
+me blankly, without changing his position, which was that of absolute
+lassitude and dejection, his arms loosely folded, his legs stretched
+before him, his head hanging on his breast.&nbsp; Advancing into the
+room I perceived that his face vividly corresponded with his attitude.&nbsp;
+He was pale, haggard, and unshaven, and his dull and sunken eye gazed
+at me without a spark of recognition.&nbsp; I had been afraid that he
+would greet me with fierce reproaches, as the cruelly officious patron
+who had turned his contentment to bitterness, and I was relieved to
+find that my appearance awakened no visible resentment.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+you know me?&rdquo; I asked, as I put out my hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have
+you already forgotten me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He made no response, kept his position stupidly, and left me staring
+about the room.&nbsp; It spoke most plaintively for itself.&nbsp; Shabby,
+sordid, naked, it contained, beyond the wretched bed, but the scantiest
+provision for personal comfort.&nbsp; It was bedroom at once and studio&mdash;a
+grim ghost of a studio.&nbsp; A few dusty casts and prints on the walls,
+three or four old canvases turned face inward, and a rusty-looking colour-box,
+formed, with the easel at the window, the sum of its appurtenances.&nbsp;
+The place savoured horribly of poverty.&nbsp; Its only wealth was the
+picture on the easel, presumably the famous Madonna.&nbsp; Averted as
+this was from the door, I was unable to see its face; but at last, sickened
+by the vacant misery of the spot, I passed behind Theobald, eagerly
+and tenderly.&nbsp; I can hardly say that I was surprised at what I
+found&mdash;a canvas that was a mere dead blank, cracked and discoloured
+by time.&nbsp; This was his immortal work!&nbsp; Though not surprised,
+I confess I was powerfully moved, and I think that for five minutes
+I could not have trusted myself to speak.&nbsp; At last my silent nearness
+affected him; he stirred and turned, and then rose and looked at me
+with a slowly kindling eye.&nbsp; I murmured some kind ineffective nothings
+about his being ill and needing advice and care, but he seemed absorbed
+in the effort to recall distinctly what had last passed between us.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You were right,&rdquo; he said, with a pitiful smile, &ldquo;I
+am a dawdler!&nbsp; I am a failure!&nbsp; I shall do nothing more in
+this world.&nbsp; You opened my eyes; and, though the truth is bitter,
+I bear you no grudge.&nbsp; Amen!&nbsp; I have been sitting here for
+a week, face to face with the truth, with the past, with my weakness
+and poverty and nullity.&nbsp; I shall never touch a brush!&nbsp; I
+believe I have neither eaten nor slept.&nbsp; Look at that canvas!&rdquo;
+he went on, as I relieved my emotion in an urgent request that he would
+come home with me and dine.&nbsp; &ldquo;That was to have contained
+my masterpiece!&nbsp; Isn&rsquo;t it a promising foundation?&nbsp; The
+elements of it are all <i>here</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he tapped his forehead
+with that mystic confidence which had marked the gesture before.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If I could only transpose them into some brain that has the hand,
+the will!&nbsp; Since I have been sitting here taking stock of my intellects,
+I have come to believe that I have the material for a hundred masterpieces.&nbsp;
+But my hand is paralysed now, and they will never be painted.&nbsp;
+I never began!&nbsp; I waited and waited to be worthier to begin, and
+wasted my life in preparation.&nbsp; While I fancied my creation was
+growing it was dying.&nbsp; I have taken it all too hard!&nbsp; Michael
+Angelo didn&rsquo;t, when he went at the Lorenzo!&nbsp; He did his best
+at a venture, and his venture is immortal.&nbsp; <i>That&rsquo;s</i>
+mine!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he pointed with a gesture I shall never forget
+at the empty canvas.&nbsp; &ldquo;I suppose we are a genus by ourselves
+in the providential scheme&mdash;we talents that can&rsquo;t act, that
+can&rsquo;t do nor dare!&nbsp; We take it out in talk, in plans and
+promises, in study, in visions!&nbsp; But our visions, let me tell you,&rdquo;
+he cried, with a toss of his head, &ldquo;have a way of being brilliant,
+and a man has not lived in vain who has seen the things I have seen!&nbsp;
+Of course you will not believe in them when that bit of worm-eaten cloth
+is all I have to show for them; but to convince you, to enchant and
+astound the world, I need only the hand of Raphael.&nbsp; His brain
+I already have.&nbsp; A pity, you will say, that I haven&rsquo;t his
+modesty!&nbsp; Ah, let me boast and babble now; it&rsquo;s all I have
+left!&nbsp; I am the half of a genius!&nbsp; Where in the wide world
+is my other half?&nbsp; Lodged perhaps in the vulgar soul, the cunning,
+ready fingers of some dull copyist or some trivial artisan, who turns
+out by the dozen his easy prodigies of touch!&nbsp; But it&rsquo;s not
+for me to sneer at him; he at least does something.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s
+not a dawdler!&nbsp; Well for me if I had been vulgar and clever and
+reckless, if I could have shut my eyes and taken my leap.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What to say to the poor fellow, what to do for him, seemed hard to
+determine; I chiefly felt that I must break the spell of his present
+inaction, and remove him from the haunted atmosphere of the little room
+it was such a cruel irony to call a studio.&nbsp; I cannot say I persuaded
+him to come out with me; he simply suffered himself to be led, and when
+we began to walk in the open air I was able to appreciate his pitifully
+weakened condition.&nbsp; Nevertheless, he seemed in a certain way to
+revive, and murmured at last that he should like to go to the Pitti
+Gallery.&nbsp; I shall never forget our melancholy stroll through those
+gorgeous halls, every picture on whose walls seemed, even to my own
+sympathetic vision, to glow with a sort of insolent renewal of strength
+and lustre.&nbsp; The eyes and lips of the great portraits appeared
+to smile in ineffable scorn of the dejected pretender who had dreamed
+of competing with their triumphant authors; the celestial candour, even,
+of the Madonna of the Chair, as we paused in perfect silence before
+her, was tinged with the sinister irony of the women of Leonardo.&nbsp;
+Perfect silence, indeed, marked our whole progress&mdash;the silence
+of a deep farewell; for I felt in all my pulses, as Theobald, leaning
+on my arm, dragged one heavy foot after the other, that he was looking
+his last.&nbsp; When we came out he was so exhausted that instead of
+taking him to my hotel to dine, I called a carriage and drove him straight
+to his own poor lodging.&nbsp; He had sunk into an extraordinary lethargy;
+he lay back in the carriage, with his eyes closed, as pale as death,
+his faint breathing interrupted at intervals by a sudden gasp, like
+a smothered sob or a vain attempt to speak.&nbsp; With the help of the
+old woman who had admitted me before, and who emerged from a dark back
+court, I contrived to lead him up the long steep staircase and lay him
+on his wretched bed.&nbsp; To her I gave him in charge, while I prepared
+in all haste to seek a physician.&nbsp; But she followed me out of the
+room with a pitiful clasping of her hands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor, dear, blessed gentleman,&rdquo; she murmured; &ldquo;is
+he dying?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Possibly.&nbsp; How long has he been thus?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Since a certain night he passed ten days ago.&nbsp; I came
+up in the morning to make his poor bed, and found him sitting up in
+his clothes before that great canvas he keeps there.&nbsp; Poor, dear,
+strange man, he says his prayers to it!&nbsp; He had not been to bed,
+nor since then, properly!&nbsp; What has happened to him?&nbsp; Has
+he found out about the Serafina?&rdquo; she whispered, with a glittering
+eye and a toothless grin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Prove at least that one old woman can be faithful,&rdquo;
+I said, &ldquo;and watch him well till I come back.&rdquo;&nbsp; My
+return was delayed, through the absence of the English physician, who
+was away on a round of visits, and whom I vainly pursued from house
+to house before I overtook him.&nbsp; I brought him to Theobald&rsquo;s
+bedside none too soon.&nbsp; A violent fever had seized our patient,
+and the case was evidently grave.&nbsp; A couple of hours later I knew
+that he had brain fever.&nbsp; From this moment I was with him constantly;
+but I am far from wishing to describe his illness.&nbsp; Excessively
+painful to witness, it was happily brief.&nbsp; Life burned out in delirium.&nbsp;
+One night in particular that I passed at his pillow, listening to his
+wild snatches of regret, of aspiration, of rapture and awe at the phantasmal
+pictures with which his brain seemed to swarm, comes back to my memory
+now like some stray page from a lost masterpiece of tragedy.&nbsp; Before
+a week was over we had buried him in the little Protestant cemetery
+on the way to Fiesole.&nbsp; The Signora Serafina, whom I had caused
+to be informed of his illness, had come in person, I was told, to inquire
+about its progress; but she was absent from his funeral, which was attended
+by but a scanty concourse of mourners.&nbsp; Half a dozen old Florentine
+sojourners, in spite of the prolonged estrangement which had preceded
+his death, had felt the kindly impulse to honour his grave.&nbsp; Among
+them was my friend Mrs. Coventry, whom I found, on my departure, waiting
+in her carriage at the gate of the cemetery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she said, relieving at last with a significant
+smile the solemnity of our immediate greeting, &ldquo;and the great
+Madonna?&nbsp; Have you seen her, after all?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have seen her,&rdquo; I said; &ldquo;she is mine&mdash;by
+bequest.&nbsp; But I shall never show her to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And why not, pray?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Mrs. Coventry, you would not understand her!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Upon my word, you are polite.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excuse me; I am sad and vexed and bitter.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+with reprehensible rudeness I marched away.&nbsp; I was excessively
+impatient to leave Florence; my friend&rsquo;s dark spirit seemed diffused
+through all things.&nbsp; I had packed my trunk to start for Rome that
+night, and meanwhile, to beguile my unrest, I aimlessly paced the streets.&nbsp;
+Chance led me at last to the church of San Lorenzo.&nbsp; Remembering
+poor Theobald&rsquo;s phrase about Michael Angelo&mdash;&ldquo;He did
+his best at a venture&rdquo;&mdash;I went in and turned my steps to
+the chapel of the tombs.&nbsp; Viewing in sadness the sadness of its
+immortal treasures, I fancied, while I stood there, that they needed
+no ampler commentary than these simple words.&nbsp; As I passed through
+the church again to leave it, a woman, turning away from one of the
+side altars, met me face to face.&nbsp; The black shawl depending from
+her head draped picturesquely the handsome visage of Madonna Serafina.&nbsp;
+She stopped as she recognised me, and I saw that she wished to speak.&nbsp;
+Her eye was bright, and her ample bosom heaved in a way that seemed
+to portend a certain sharpness of reproach.&nbsp; But the expression
+of my own face, apparently, drew the sting from her resentment, and
+she addressed me in a tone in which bitterness was tempered by a sort
+of dogged resignation.&nbsp; &ldquo;I know it was you, now, that separated
+us,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;It was a pity he ever brought you
+to see me!&nbsp; Of course, you couldn&rsquo;t think of me as he did.&nbsp;
+Well, the Lord gave him, the Lord has taken him.&nbsp; I have just paid
+for a nine days&rsquo; mass for his soul.&nbsp; And I can tell you this,
+signore&mdash;I never deceived him.&nbsp; Who put it into his head that
+I was made to live on holy thoughts and fine phrases?&nbsp; It was his
+own fancy, and it pleased him to think so.&mdash;Did he suffer much?&rdquo;
+she added more softly, after a pause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His sufferings were great, but they were short.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And did he speak of me?&rdquo;&nbsp; She had hesitated and
+dropped her eyes; she raised them with her question, and revealed in
+their sombre stillness a gleam of feminine confidence which, for the
+moment, revived and illumined her beauty.&nbsp; Poor Theobald!&nbsp;
+Whatever name he had given his passion, it was still her fine eyes that
+had charmed him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be contented, madam,&rdquo; I answered, gravely.</p>
+<p>She dropped her eyes again and was silent.&nbsp; Then exhaling a
+full rich sigh, as she gathered her shawl together&mdash;&ldquo;He was
+a magnificent genius!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I bowed, and we separated.</p>
+<p>Passing through a narrow side street on my way back to my hotel,
+I perceived above a doorway a sign which it seemed to me I had read
+before.&nbsp; I suddenly remembered that it was identical with the superscription
+of a card that I had carried for an hour in my waistcoat pocket.&nbsp;
+On the threshold stood the ingenious artist whose claims to public favour
+were thus distinctly signalised, smoking a pipe in the evening air,
+and giving the finishing polish with a bit of rag to one of his inimitable
+&ldquo;combinations.&rdquo;&nbsp; I caught the expressive curl of a
+couple of tails.&nbsp; He recognised me, removed his little red cap
+with a most obsequious bow, and motioned me to enter his studio.&nbsp;
+I returned his salute and passed on, vexed with the apparition.&nbsp;
+For a week afterwards, whenever I was seized among the ruins of triumphant
+Rome with some peculiarly poignant memory of Theobald&rsquo;s transcendent
+illusions and deplorable failure, I seemed to hear a fantastic, impertinent
+murmur, &ldquo;Cats and monkeys, monkeys and cats; all human life there!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MADONNA OF THE FUTURE***</p>
+<pre>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Madonna of the Future, 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 Madonna of the Future
+
+
+Author: Henry James
+
+Release Date: May 8, 2005 [eBook #2460]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MADONNA OF THE FUTURE***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1887 Macmillan and Co. edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@coventry.ac.uk, proofed by Jennifer Austin.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MADONNA OF THE FUTURE
+by Henry James
+
+
+We had been talking about the masters who had achieved but a single
+masterpiece--the artists and poets who but once in their lives had known
+the divine afflatus and touched the high level of perfection. Our host
+had been showing us a charming little cabinet picture by a painter whose
+name we had never heard, and who, after this single spasmodic bid for
+fame, had apparently relapsed into obscurity and mediocrity. There was
+some discussion as to the frequency of this phenomenon; during which, I
+observed, H--- sat silent, finishing his cigar with a meditative air, and
+looking at the picture which was being handed round the table. "I don't
+know how common a case it is," he said at last, "but I have seen it. I
+have known a poor fellow who painted his one masterpiece, and"--he added
+with a smile--"he didn't even paint that. He made his bid for fame and
+missed it." We all knew H--- for a clever man who had seen much of men
+and manners, and had a great stock of reminiscences. Some one
+immediately questioned him further, and while I was engrossed with the
+raptures of my neighbour over the little picture, he was induced to tell
+his tale. If I were to doubt whether it would bear repeating, I should
+only have to remember how that charming woman, our hostess, who had left
+the table, ventured back in rustling rose-colour to pronounce our
+lingering a want of gallantry, and, finding us a listening circle, sank
+into her chair in spite of our cigars, and heard the story out so
+graciously that, when the catastrophe was reached, she glanced across at
+me and showed me a tear in each of her beautiful eyes.
+
+* * * * *
+
+It relates to my youth, and to Italy: two fine things! (H--- began). I
+had arrived late in the evening at Florence, and while I finished my
+bottle of wine at supper, had fancied that, tired traveller though I was,
+I might pay the city a finer compliment than by going vulgarly to bed. A
+narrow passage wandered darkly away out of the little square before my
+hotel, and looked as if it bored into the heart of Florence. I followed
+it, and at the end of ten minutes emerged upon a great piazza, filled
+only with the mild autumn moonlight. Opposite rose the Palazzo Vecchio,
+like some huge civic fortress, with the great bell-tower springing from
+its embattled verge as a mountain-pine from the edge of a cliff. At its
+base, in its projected shadow, gleamed certain dim sculptures which I
+wonderingly approached. One of the images, on the left of the palace
+door, was a magnificent colossus, shining through the dusky air like a
+sentinel who has taken the alarm. In a moment I recognised him as
+Michael Angelo's _David_. I turned with a certain relief from his
+sinister strength to a slender figure in bronze, stationed beneath the
+high light loggia, which opposes the free and elegant span of its arches
+to the dead masonry of the palace; a figure supremely shapely and
+graceful; gentle, almost, in spite of his holding out with his light
+nervous arm the snaky head of the slaughtered Gorgon. His name is
+Perseus, and you may read his story, not in the Greek mythology, but in
+the memoirs of Benvenuto Cellini. Glancing from one of these fine
+fellows to the other, I probably uttered some irrepressible commonplace
+of praise, for, as if provoked by my voice, a man rose from the steps of
+the loggia, where he had been sitting in the shadow, and addressed me in
+good English--a small, slim personage, clad in a sort of black velvet
+tunic (as it seemed), and with a mass of auburn hair, which gleamed in
+the moonlight, escaping from a little mediaeval birretta. In a tone of
+the most insinuating deference he asked me for my "impressions." He
+seemed picturesque, fantastic, slightly unreal. Hovering there in this
+consecrated neighbourhood, he might have passed for the genius of
+aesthetic hospitality--if the genius of aesthetic hospitality were not
+commonly some shabby little custode, flourishing a calico
+pocket-handkerchief and openly resentful of the divided franc. This
+analogy was made none the less complete by the brilliant tirade with
+which he greeted my embarrassed silence.
+
+"I have known Florence long, sir, but I have never known her so lovely as
+tonight. It's as if the ghosts of her past were abroad in the empty
+streets. The present is sleeping; the past hovers about us like a dream
+made visible. Fancy the old Florentines strolling up in couples to pass
+judgment on the last performance of Michael, of Benvenuto! We should
+come in for a precious lesson if we might overhear what they say. The
+plainest burgher of them, in his cap and gown, had a taste in the matter!
+That was the prime of art, sir. The sun stood high in heaven, and his
+broad and equal blaze made the darkest places bright and the dullest eyes
+clear. We live in the evening of time! We grope in the gray dusk,
+carrying each our poor little taper of selfish and painful wisdom,
+holding it up to the great models and to the dim idea, and seeing nothing
+but overwhelming greatness and dimness. The days of illumination are
+gone! But do you know I fancy--I fancy"--and he grew suddenly almost
+familiar in this visionary fervour--"I fancy the light of that time rests
+upon us here for an hour! I have never seen the David so grand, the
+Perseus so fair! Even the inferior productions of John of Bologna and of
+Baccio Bandinelli seem to realise the artist's dream. I feel as if the
+moonlit air were charged with the secrets of the masters, and as if,
+standing here in religious attention, we might--we might witness a
+revelation!" Perceiving at this moment, I suppose, my halting
+comprehension reflected in my puzzled face, this interesting rhapsodist
+paused and blushed. Then with a melancholy smile, "You think me a
+moonstruck charlatan, I suppose. It's not my habit to bang about the
+piazza and pounce upon innocent tourists. But tonight, I confess, I am
+under the charm. And then, somehow, I fancied you too were an artist!"
+
+"I am not an artist, I am sorry to say, as you must understand the term.
+But pray make no apologies. I am also under the charm; your eloquent
+remarks have only deepened it."
+
+"If you are not an artist you are worthy to be one!" he rejoined, with an
+expressive smile. "A young man who arrives at Florence late in the
+evening, and, instead of going prosaically to bed, or hanging over the
+traveller's book at his hotel, walks forth without loss of time to pay
+his devoirs to the beautiful, is a young man after my own heart!"
+
+The mystery was suddenly solved; my friend was an American! He must have
+been, to take the picturesque so prodigiously to heart. "None the less
+so, I trust," I answered, "if the young man is a sordid New Yorker."
+
+"New Yorkers have been munificent patrons of art!" he answered, urbanely.
+
+For a moment I was alarmed. Was this midnight reverie mere Yankee
+enterprise, and was he simply a desperate brother of the brush who had
+posted himself here to extort an "order" from a sauntering tourist? But
+I was not called to defend myself. A great brazen note broke suddenly
+from the far-off summit of the bell-tower above us, and sounded the first
+stroke of midnight. My companion started, apologised for detaining me,
+and prepared to retire. But he seemed to offer so lively a promise of
+further entertainment that I was indisposed to part with him, and
+suggested that we should stroll homeward together. He cordially
+assented; so we turned out of the Piazza, passed down before the statued
+arcade of the Uffizi, and came out upon the Arno. What course we took I
+hardly remember, but we roamed slowly about for an hour, my companion
+delivering by snatches a sort of moon-touched aesthetic lecture. I
+listened in puzzled fascination, and wondered who the deuce he was. He
+confessed with a melancholy but all-respectful head-shake to his American
+origin.
+
+"We are the disinherited of Art!" he cried. "We are condemned to be
+superficial! We are excluded from the magic circle. The soil of
+American perception is a poor little barren artificial deposit. Yes! we
+are wedded to imperfection. An American, to excel, has just ten times as
+much to learn as a European. We lack the deeper sense. We have neither
+taste, nor tact, nor power. How should we have them? Our crude and
+garish climate, our silent past, our deafening present, the constant
+pressure about us of unlovely circumstance, are as void of all that
+nourishes and prompts and inspires the artist, as my sad heart is void of
+bitterness in saying so! We poor aspirants must live in perpetual
+exile."
+
+"You seem fairly at home in exile," I answered, "and Florence seems to me
+a very pretty Siberia. But do you know my own thought? Nothing is so
+idle as to talk about our want of a nutritive soil, of opportunity, of
+inspiration, and all the rest of it. The worthy part is to do something
+fine! There is no law in our glorious Constitution against that. Invent,
+create, achieve! No matter if you have to study fifty times as much as
+one of these! What else are you an artist for? Be you our Moses," I
+added, laughing, and laying my hand on his shoulder, "and lead us out of
+the house of bondage!"
+
+"Golden words--golden words, young man!" he cried, with a tender smile.
+"'Invent, create, achieve!' Yes, that's our business; I know it well.
+Don't take me, in Heaven's name, for one of your barren
+complainers--impotent cynics who have neither talent nor faith! I am at
+work!"--and he glanced about him and lowered his voice as if this were a
+quite peculiar secret--"I'm at work night and day. I have undertaken a
+_creation_! I am no Moses; I am only a poor patient artist; but it would
+be a fine thing if I were to cause some slender stream of beauty to flow
+in our thirsty land! Don't think me a monster of conceit," he went on,
+as he saw me smile at the avidity with which he adopted my illustration;
+"I confess that I am in one of those moods when great things seem
+possible! This is one of my nervous nights--I dream waking! When the
+south wind blows over Florence at midnight it seems to coax the soul from
+all the fair things locked away in her churches and galleries; it comes
+into my own little studio with the moonlight, and sets my heart beating
+too deeply for rest. You see I am always adding a thought to my
+conception! This evening I felt that I couldn't sleep unless I had
+communed with the genius of Buonarotti!"
+
+He seemed deeply versed in local history and tradition, and he expatiated
+_con amore_ on the charms of Florence. I gathered that he was an old
+resident, and that he had taken the lovely city into his heart. "I owe
+her everything," he declared. "It's only since I came here that I have
+really lived, intellectually. One by one, all profane desires, all mere
+worldly aims, have dropped away from me, and left me nothing but my
+pencil, my little note-book" (and he tapped his breast-pocket), "and the
+worship of the pure masters--those who were pure because they were
+innocent, and those who were pure because they were strong!"
+
+"And have you been very productive all this time?" I asked
+sympathetically.
+
+He was silent a while before replying. "Not in the vulgar sense!" he
+said at last. "I have chosen never to manifest myself by imperfection.
+The good in every performance I have re-absorbed into the generative
+force of new creations; the bad--there is always plenty of that--I have
+religiously destroyed. I may say, with some satisfaction, that I have
+not added a mite to the rubbish of the world. As a proof of my
+conscientiousness"--and he stopped short, and eyed me with extraordinary
+candour, as if the proof were to be overwhelming--"I have never sold a
+picture! 'At least no merchant traffics in my heart!' Do you remember
+that divine line in Browning? My little studio has never been profaned
+by superficial, feverish, mercenary work. It's a temple of labour, but
+of leisure! Art is long. If we work for ourselves, of course we must
+hurry. If we work for her, we must often pause. She can wait!"
+
+This had brought us to my hotel door, somewhat to my relief, I confess,
+for I had begun to feel unequal to the society of a genius of this heroic
+strain. I left him, however, not without expressing a friendly hope that
+we should meet again. The next morning my curiosity had not abated; I
+was anxious to see him by common daylight. I counted upon meeting him in
+one of the many pictorial haunts of Florence, and I was gratified without
+delay. I found him in the course of the morning in the Tribune of the
+Uffizi--that little treasure-chamber of world-famous things. He had
+turned his back on the Venus de' Medici, and with his arms resting on the
+rail-mug which protects the pictures, and his head buried in his hands,
+he was lost in the contemplation of that superb triptych of Andrea
+Mantegna--a work which has neither the material splendour nor the
+commanding force of some of its neighbours, but which, glowing there with
+the loveliness of patient labour, suits possibly a more constant need of
+the soul. I looked at the picture for some time over his shoulder; at
+last, with a heavy sigh, he turned away and our eyes met. As he
+recognised me a deep blush rose to his face; he fancied, perhaps, that he
+had made a fool of himself overnight. But I offered him my hand with a
+friendliness which assured him I was not a scoffer. I knew him by his
+ardent _chevelure_; otherwise he was much altered. His midnight mood was
+over, and he looked as haggard as an actor by daylight. He was far older
+than I had supposed, and he had less bravery of costume and gesture. He
+seemed the quiet, poor, patient artist he had proclaimed himself, and the
+fact that he had never sold a picture was more obvious than glorious. His
+velvet coat was threadbare, and his short slouched hat, of an antique
+pattern, revealed a rustiness which marked it an "original," and not one
+of the picturesque reproductions which brethren of his craft affect. His
+eye was mild and heavy, and his expression singularly gentle and
+acquiescent; the more so for a certain pallid leanness of visage, which I
+hardly knew whether to refer to the consuming fire of genius or to a
+meagre diet. A very little talk, however, cleared his brow and brought
+back his eloquence.
+
+"And this is your first visit to these enchanted halls?" he cried.
+"Happy, thrice happy youth!" And taking me by the arm, he prepared to
+lead me to each of the pre-eminent works in turn and show me the cream of
+the gallery. But before we left the Mantegna he pressed my arm and gave
+it a loving look. "_He_ was not in a hurry," he murmured. "He knew
+nothing of 'raw Haste, half-sister to Delay!'" How sound a critic my
+friend was I am unable to say, but he was an extremely amusing one;
+overflowing with opinions, theories, and sympathies, with disquisition
+and gossip and anecdote. He was a shade too sentimental for my own
+sympathies, and I fancied he was rather too fond of superfine
+discriminations and of discovering subtle intentions in shallow places.
+At moments, too, he plunged into the sea of metaphysics, and floundered a
+while in waters too deep for intellectual security. But his abounding
+knowledge and happy judgment told a touching story of long attentive
+hours in this worshipful company; there was a reproach to my wasteful
+saunterings in so devoted a culture of opportunity. "There are two
+moods," I remember his saying, "in which we may walk through
+galleries--the critical and the ideal. They seize us at their pleasure,
+and we can never tell which is to take its turn. The critical mood,
+oddly, is the genial one, the friendly, the condescending. It relishes
+the pretty trivialities of art, its vulgar cleverness, its conscious
+graces. It has a kindly greeting for anything which looks as if,
+according to his light, the painter had enjoyed doing it--for the little
+Dutch cabbages and kettles, for the taper fingers and breezy mantles of
+late-coming Madonnas, for the little blue-hilled, pastoral, sceptical
+Italian landscapes. Then there are the days of fierce, fastidious
+longing--solemn church feasts of the intellect--when all vulgar effort
+and all petty success is a weariness, and everything but the best--the
+best of the best--disgusts. In these hours we are relentless aristocrats
+of taste. We will not take Michael Angelo for granted, we will not
+swallow Raphael whole!"
+
+The gallery of the Uffizi is not only rich in its possessions, but
+peculiarly fortunate in that fine architectural accident, as one may call
+it, which unites it--with the breadth of river and city between them--to
+those princely chambers of the Pitti Palace. The Louvre and the Vatican
+hardly give you such a sense of sustained inclosure as those long
+passages projected over street and stream to establish a sort of
+inviolate transition between the two palaces of art. We passed along the
+gallery in which those precious drawings by eminent hands hang chaste and
+gray above the swirl and murmur of the yellow Arno, and reached the ducal
+saloons of the Pitti. Ducal as they are, it must be confessed that they
+are imperfect as show-rooms, and that, with their deep-set windows and
+their massive mouldings, it is rather a broken light that reaches the
+pictured walls. But here the masterpieces hang thick, and you seem to
+see them in a luminous atmosphere of their own. And the great saloons,
+with their superb dim ceilings, their outer wall in splendid shadow, and
+the sombre opposite glow of mellow canvas and dusky gilding, make,
+themselves, almost as fine a picture as the Titians and Raphaels they
+imperfectly reveal. We lingered briefly before many a Raphael and
+Titian; but I saw my friend was impatient, and I suffered him at last to
+lead me directly to the goal of our journey--the most tenderly fair of
+Raphael's virgins, the Madonna in the Chair. Of all the fine pictures of
+the world, it seemed to me this is the one with which criticism has least
+to do. None betrays less effort, less of the mechanism of success and of
+the irrepressible discord between conception and result, which shows
+dimly in so many consummate works. Graceful, human, near to our
+sympathies as it is, it has nothing of manner, of method, nothing,
+almost, of style; it blooms there in rounded softness, as instinct with
+harmony as if it were an immediate exhalation of genius. The figure
+melts away the spectator's mind into a sort of passionate tenderness
+which he knows not whether he has given to heavenly purity or to earthly
+charm. He is intoxicated with the fragrance of the tenderest blossom of
+maternity that ever bloomed on earth.
+
+"That's what I call a fine picture," said my companion, after we had
+gazed a while in silence. "I have a right to say so, for I have copied
+it so often and so carefully that I could repeat it now with my eyes
+shut. Other works are of Raphael: this _is_ Raphael himself. Others you
+can praise, you can qualify, you can measure, explain, account for: this
+you can only love and admire. I don't know in what seeming he walked
+among men while this divine mood was upon him; but after it, surely, he
+could do nothing but die; this world had nothing more to teach him. Think
+of it a while, my friend, and you will admit that I am not raving. Think
+of his seeing that spotless image, not for a moment, for a day, in a
+happy dream, or a restless fever-fit; not as a poet in a five minutes'
+frenzy--time to snatch his phrase and scribble his immortal stanza; but
+for days together, while the slow labour of the brush went on, while the
+foul vapours of life interposed, and the fancy ached with tension, fixed,
+radiant, distinct, as we see it now! What a master, certainly! But ah!
+what a seer!"
+
+"Don't you imagine," I answered, "that he had a model, and that some
+pretty young woman--"
+
+"As pretty a young woman as you please! It doesn't diminish the miracle!
+He took his hint, of course, and the young woman, possibly, sat smiling
+before his canvas. But, meanwhile, the painter's idea had taken wings.
+No lovely human outline could charm it to vulgar fact. He saw the fair
+form made perfect; he rose to the vision without tremor, without effort
+of wing; he communed with it face to face, and resolved into finer and
+lovelier truth the purity which completes it as the fragrance completes
+the rose. That's what they call idealism; the word's vastly abused, but
+the thing is good. It's my own creed, at any rate. Lovely Madonna,
+model at once and muse, I call you to witness that I too am an idealist!"
+
+"An idealist, then," I said, half jocosely, wishing to provoke him to
+further utterance, "is a gentleman who says to Nature in the person of a
+beautiful girl, 'Go to, you are all wrong! Your fine is coarse, your
+bright is dim, your grace is _gaucherie_. This is the way you should
+have done it!' Is not the chance against him?"
+
+He turned upon me almost angrily, but perceiving the genial savour of my
+sarcasm, he smiled gravely. "Look at that picture," he said, "and cease
+your irreverent mockery! Idealism is _that_! There's no explaining it;
+one must feel the flame! It says nothing to Nature, or to any beautiful
+girl, that they will not both forgive! It says to the fair woman,
+'Accept me as your artist friend, lend me your beautiful face, trust me,
+help me, and your eyes shall be half my masterpiece!' No one so loves
+and respects the rich realities of nature as the artist whose imagination
+caresses and flatters them. He knows what a fact may hold (whether
+Raphael knew, you may judge by his portrait, behind us there, of Tommaso
+Inghirami); bad his fancy hovers above it, as Ariel hovered above the
+sleeping prince. There is only one Raphael, bad an artist may still be
+an artist. As I said last night, the days of illumination are gone;
+visions are rare; we have to look long to see them. But in meditation we
+may still cultivate the ideal; round it, smooth it, perfect it. The
+result--the result," (here his voice faltered suddenly, and he fixed his
+eyes for a moment on the picture; when they met my own again they were
+full of tears)--"the result may be less than this; but still it may be
+good, it may be _great_!" he cried with vehemence. "It may hang
+somewhere, in after years, in goodly company, and keep the artist's
+memory warm. Think of being known to mankind after some such fashion as
+this! of hanging here through the slow centuries in the gaze of an
+altered world; living on and on in the cunning of an eye and hand that
+are part of the dust of ages, a delight and a law to remote generations;
+making beauty a force and purity an example!"
+
+"Heaven forbid," I said, smiling, "that I should take the wind out of
+your sails! But doesn't it occur to you that, besides being strong in
+his genius, Raphael was happy in a certain good faith of which we have
+lost the trick? There are people, I know, who deny that his spotless
+Madonnas are anything more than pretty blondes of that period enhanced by
+the Raphaelesque touch, which they declare is a profane touch. Be that
+as it may, people's religious and aesthetic needs went arm in arm, and
+there was, as I may say, a demand for the Blessed Virgin, visible and
+adorable, which must have given firmness to the artist's hand. I am
+afraid there is no demand now."
+
+My companion seemed painfully puzzled; he shivered, as it were, in this
+chilling blast of scepticism. Then shaking his head with sublime
+confidence--"There is always a demand!" he cried; "that ineffable type is
+one of the eternal needs of man's heart; but pious souls long for it in
+silence, almost in shame. Let it appear, and their faith grows brave.
+How _should_ it appear in this corrupt generation? It cannot be made to
+order. It could, indeed, when the order came, trumpet-toned, from the
+lips of the Church herself, and was addressed to genius panting with
+inspiration. But it can spring now only from the soil of passionate
+labour and culture. Do you really fancy that while, from time to time, a
+man of complete artistic vision is born into the world, that image can
+perish? The man who paints it has painted everything. The subject
+admits of every perfection--form, colour, expression, composition. It
+can be as simple as you please, and yet as rich; as broad and pure, and
+yet as full of delicate detail. Think of the chance for flesh in the
+little naked, nestling child, irradiating divinity; of the chance for
+drapery in the chaste and ample garment of the mother! think of the great
+story you compress into that simple theme! Think, above all, of the
+mother's face and its ineffable suggestiveness, of the mingled burden of
+joy and trouble, the tenderness turned to worship, and the worship turned
+to far-seeing pity! Then look at it all in perfect line and lovely
+colour, breathing truth and beauty and mastery!"
+
+"Anch' io son pittore!" I cried. "Unless I am mistaken, you have a
+masterpiece on the stocks. If you put all that in, you will do more than
+Raphael himself did. Let me know when your picture is finished, and
+wherever in the wide world I may be, I will post back to Florence and pay
+my respects to--the _Madonna of the future_!"
+
+He blushed vividly and gave a heavy sigh, half of protest, half of
+resignation. "I don't often mention my picture by name. I detest this
+modern custom of premature publicity. A great work needs silence,
+privacy, mystery even. And then, do you know, people are so cruel, so
+frivolous, so unable to imagine a man's wishing to paint a Madonna at
+this time of day, that I have been laughed at--laughed at, sir!" and his
+blush deepened to crimson. "I don't know what has prompted me to be so
+frank and trustful with you. You look as if you wouldn't laugh at me. My
+dear young man"--and he laid his hand on my arm--"I am worthy of respect.
+Whatever my talents may be, I am honest. There is nothing grotesque in a
+pure ambition, or in a life devoted to it."
+
+There was something so sternly sincere in his look and tone that further
+questions seemed impertinent. I had repeated opportunity to ask them,
+however, for after this we spent much time together. Daily for a
+fortnight, we met by appointment, to see the sights. He knew the city so
+well, he had strolled and lounged so often through its streets and
+churches and galleries, he was so deeply versed in its greater and lesser
+memories, so imbued with the local genius, that he was an altogether
+ideal _valet de place_, and I was glad enough to leave my Murray at home,
+and gather facts and opinions alike from his gossiping commentary. He
+talked of Florence like a lover, and admitted that it was a very old
+affair; he had lost his heart to her at first sight. "It's the fashion
+to talk of all cities as feminine," he said, "but, as a rule, it's a
+monstrous mistake. Is Florence of the same sex as New York, as Chicago?
+She is the sole perfect lady of them all; one feels towards her as a lad
+in his teens feels to some beautiful older woman with a 'history.' She
+fills you with a sort of aspiring gallantry." This disinterested passion
+seemed to stand my friend in stead of the common social ties; he led a
+lonely life, and cared for nothing but his work. I was duly flattered by
+his having taken my frivolous self into his favour, and by his generous
+sacrifice of precious hours to my society. We spent many of these hours
+among those early paintings in which Florence is so rich, returning ever
+and anon, with restless sympathies, to wonder whether these tender
+blossoms of art had not a vital fragrance and savour more precious than
+the full-fruited knowledge of the later works. We lingered often in the
+sepulchral chapel of San Lorenzo, and watched Michael Angelo's
+dim-visaged warrior sitting there like some awful Genius of Doubt and
+brooding behind his eternal mask upon the mysteries of life. We stood
+more than once in the little convent chambers where Fra Angelico wrought
+as if an angel indeed had held his hand, and gathered that sense of
+scattered dews and early bird-notes which makes an hour among his relics
+seem like a morning stroll in some monkish garden. We did all this and
+much more--wandered into dark chapels, damp courts, and dusty
+palace-rooms, in quest of lingering hints of fresco and lurking treasures
+of carving.
+
+I was more and more impressed with my companion's remarkable singleness
+of purpose. Everything was a pretext for some wildly idealistic rhapsody
+or reverie. Nothing could be seen or said that did not lead him sooner
+or later to a glowing discourse on the true, the beautiful, and the good.
+If my friend was not a genius, he was certainly a monomaniac; and I found
+as great a fascination in watching the odd lights and shades of his
+character as if he had been a creature from another planet. He seemed,
+indeed, to know very little of this one, and lived and moved altogether
+in his own little province of art. A creature more unsullied by the
+world it is impossible to conceive, and I often thought it a flaw in his
+artistic character that he had not a harmless vice or two. It amused me
+greatly at times to think that he was of our shrewd Yankee race; but,
+after all, there could be no better token of his American origin than
+this high aesthetic fever. The very heat of his devotion was a sign of
+conversion; those born to European opportunity manage better to reconcile
+enthusiasm with comfort. He had, moreover, all our native mistrust for
+intellectual discretion, and our native relish for sonorous superlatives.
+As a critic he was very much more generous than just, and his mildest
+terms of approbation were "stupendous," "transcendent," and
+"incomparable." The small change of admiration seemed to him no coin for
+a gentleman to handle; and yet, frank as he was intellectually, he was
+personally altogether a mystery. His professions, somehow, were all half-
+professions, and his allusions to his work and circumstances left
+something dimly ambiguous in the background. He was modest and proud,
+and never spoke of his domestic matters. He was evidently poor; yet he
+must have had some slender independence, since he could afford to make so
+merry over the fact that his culture of ideal beauty had never brought
+him a penny. His poverty, I supposed, was his motive for neither
+inviting me to his lodging nor mentioning its whereabouts. We met either
+in some public place or at my hotel, where I entertained him as freely as
+I might without appearing to be prompted by charity. He seemed always
+hungry, and this was his nearest approach to human grossness. I made a
+point of asking no impertinent questions, but, each time we met, I
+ventured to make some respectful allusion to the _magnum opus_, to
+inquire, as it were, as to its health and progress. "We are getting on,
+with the Lord's help," he would say, with a grave smile. "We are doing
+well. You see, I have the grand advantage that I lose no time. These
+hours I spend with you are pure profit. They are _suggestive_! Just as
+the truly religious soul is always at worship, the genuine artist is
+always in labour. He takes his property wherever he finds it, and learns
+some precious secret from every object that stands up in the light. If
+you but knew the rapture of observation! I gather with every glance some
+hint for light, for colour, or relief! When I get home, I pour out my
+treasures into the lap of toy Madonna. Oh, I am not idle! _Nulla dies
+sine linea_."
+
+I was introduced in Florence to an American lady whose drawing-room had
+long formed an attractive place of reunion for the foreign residents. She
+lived on a fourth floor, and she was not rich; but she offered her
+visitors very good tea, little cakes at option, and conversation not
+quite to match. Her conversation had mainly an aesthetic flavour, for
+Mrs. Coventry was famously "artistic." Her apartment was a sort of Pitti
+Palace _au petit pied_. She possessed "early masters" by the dozen--a
+cluster of Peruginos in her dining-room, a Giotto in her boudoir, an
+Andrea del Sarto over her drawing-room chimney-piece. Surrounded by
+these treasures, and by innumerable bronzes, mosaics, majolica dishes,
+and little worm-eaten diptychs covered with angular saints on gilded
+backgrounds, our hostess enjoyed the dignity of a sort of high-priestess
+of the arts. She always wore on her bosom a huge miniature copy of the
+Madonna della Seggiola. Gaining her ear quietly one evening, I asked her
+whether she knew that remarkable man, Mr. Theobald.
+
+"Know him!" she exclaimed; "know poor Theobald! All Florence knows him,
+his flame-coloured locks, his black velvet coat, his interminable
+harangues on the beautiful, and his wondrous Madonna that mortal eye has
+never seen, and that mortal patience has quite given up expecting."
+
+"Really," I cried, "you don't believe in his Madonna?"
+
+"My dear ingenuous youth," rejoined my shrewd friend, "has he made a
+convert of you? Well, we all believed in him once; he came down upon
+Florence and took the town by storm. Another Raphael, at the very least,
+had been born among men, and the poor dear United States were to have the
+credit of him. Hadn't he the very hair of Raphael flowing down on his
+shoulders? The hair, alas, but not the head! We swallowed him whole,
+however; we hung upon his lips and proclaimed his genius on the house-
+tops. The women were all dying to sit to him for their portraits and be
+made immortal, like Leonardo's Joconde. We decided that his manner was a
+good deal like Leonardo's--mysterious, and inscrutable, and fascinating.
+Mysterious it certainly was; mystery was the beginning and the end of it.
+The months passed by, and the miracle hung fire; our master never
+produced his masterpiece. He passed hours in the galleries and churches,
+posturing, musing, and gazing; he talked more than ever about the
+beautiful, but he never put brush to canvas. We had all subscribed, as
+it were, to the great performance; but as it never came off people began
+to ask for their money again. I was one of the last of the faithful; I
+carried devotion so far as to sit to him for my head. If you could have
+seen the horrible creature he made of me, you would admit that even a
+woman with no more vanity than will tie her bonnet straight must have
+cooled off then. The man didn't know the very alphabet of drawing! His
+strong point, he intimated, was his sentiment; but is it a consolation,
+when one has been painted a fright, to know it has been done with
+peculiar gusto? One by one, I confess, we fell away from the faith, and
+Mr. Theobald didn't lift his little finger to preserve us. At the first
+hint that we were tired of waiting, and that we should like the show to
+begin, he was off in a huff. 'Great work requires time, contemplation,
+privacy, mystery! O ye of little faith!' We answered that we didn't
+insist on a great work; that the five-act tragedy might come at his
+convenience; that we merely asked for something to keep us from yawning,
+some inexpensive little _lever de rideau_. Hereupon the poor man took
+his stand as a genius misconceived and persecuted, an _ame meconnue_, and
+washed his hands of us from that hour! No, I believe he does me the
+honour to consider me the head and front of the conspiracy formed to nip
+his glory in the bud--a bud that has taken twenty years to blossom. Ask
+him if he knows me, and he will tell you I am a horribly ugly old woman,
+who has vowed his destruction because he won't paint her portrait as a
+pendant to Titian's Flora. I fancy that since then he has had none but
+chance followers, innocent strangers like yourself, who have taken him at
+his word. The mountain is still in labour; I have not heard that the
+mouse has been born. I pass him once in a while in the galleries, and he
+fixes his great dark eyes on me with a sublimity of indifference, as if I
+were a bad copy of a Sassoferrato! It is a long time ago now that I
+heard that he was making studies for a Madonna who was to be a _resume_
+of all the other Madonnas of the Italian school--like that antique Venus
+who borrowed a nose from one great image and an ankle from another. It's
+certainly a masterly idea. The parts may be fine, but when I think of my
+unhappy portrait I tremble for the whole. He has communicated this
+striking idea under the pledge of solemn secrecy to fifty chosen spirits,
+to every one he has ever been able to button-hole for five minutes. I
+suppose he wants to get an order for it, and he is not to blame; for
+Heaven knows how he lives. I see by your blush," my hostess frankly
+continued, "that you have been honoured with his confidence. You needn't
+be ashamed, my dear young man; a man of your age is none the worse for a
+certain generous credulity. Only allow me to give you a word of advice:
+keep your credulity out of your pockets! Don't pay for the picture till
+it's delivered. You have not been treated to a peep at it, I imagine! No
+more have your fifty predecessors in the faith. There are people who
+doubt whether there is any picture to be seen. I fancy, myself, that if
+one were to get into his studio, one would find something very like the
+picture in that tale of Balzac's--a mere mass of incoherent scratches and
+daubs, a jumble of dead paint!"
+
+I listened to this pungent recital in silent wonder. It had a painfully
+plausible sound, and was not inconsistent with certain shy suspicions of
+my own. My hostess was not only a clever woman, but presumably a
+generous one. I determined to let my judgment wait upon events. Possibly
+she was right; but if she was wrong, she was cruelly wrong! Her version
+of my friend's eccentricities made me impatient to see him again and
+examine him in the light of public opinion. On our next meeting I
+immediately asked him if he knew Mrs. Coventry. He laid his hand on my
+arm and gave me a sad smile. "Has she taxed _your_ gallantry at last?"
+he asked. "She's a foolish woman. She's frivolous and heartless, and
+she pretends to be serious and kind. She prattles about Giotto's second
+manner and Vittoria Colonna's liaison with 'Michael'--one would think
+that Michael lived across the way and was expected in to take a hand at
+whist--but she knows as little about art, and about the conditions of
+production, as I know about Buddhism. She profanes sacred words," he
+added more vehemently, after a pause. "She cares for you only as some
+one to band teacups in that horrible mendacious little parlour of hers,
+with its trumpery Peruginos! If you can't dash off a new picture every
+three days, and let her hand it round among her guests, she tells them in
+plain English that you are an impostor!"
+
+This attempt of mine to test Mrs. Coventry's accuracy was made in the
+course of a late afternoon walk to the quiet old church of San Miniato,
+on one of the hill-tops which directly overlook the city, from whose
+gates you are guided to it by a stony and cypress-bordered walk, which
+seems a very fitting avenue to a shrine. No spot is more propitious to
+lingering repose than the broad terrace in front of the church, where,
+lounging against the parapet, you may glance in slow alternation from the
+black and yellow marbles of the church facade, seamed and cracked with
+time and wind-sown with a tender flora of its own, down to the full domes
+and slender towers of Florence and over to the blue sweep of the wide-
+mouthed cup of mountains into whose hollow the little treasure city has
+been dropped. I had proposed, as a diversion from the painful memories
+evoked by Mrs. Coventry's name, that Theobald should go with me the next
+evening to the opera, where some rarely-played work was to be given. He
+declined, as I half expected, for I observed that he regularly kept his
+evenings in reserve, and never alluded to his manner of passing them.
+"You have reminded me before," I said, smiling, "of that charming speech
+of the Florentine painter in Alfred de Musset's 'Lorenzaccio': 'I do no
+harm to anyone. I pass my days in my studio, On Sunday I go to the
+Annunziata or to Santa Mario; the monks think I have a voice; they dress
+me in a white gown and a red cap, and I take a share in the choruses;
+sometimes I do a little solo: these are the only times I go into public.
+In the evening, I visit my sweetheart; when the night is fine, we pass it
+on her balcony.' I don't know whether you have a sweetheart, or whether
+she has a balcony. But if you are so happy, it's certainly better than
+trying to find a charm in a third-rate prima donna."
+
+He made no immediate response, but at last he turned to me solemnly. "Can
+you look upon a beautiful woman with reverent eyes?"
+
+"Really," I said, "I don't pretend to be sheepish, but I should be sorry
+to think I was impudent." And I asked him what in the world he meant.
+When at last I had assured him that I could undertake to temper
+admiration with respect, he informed me, with an air of religious
+mystery, that it was in his power to introduce me to the most beautiful
+woman in Italy--"A beauty with a soul!"
+
+"Upon my word," I cried, "you are extremely fortunate, and that is a most
+attractive description."
+
+"This woman's beauty," he went on, "is a lesson, a morality, a poem! It's
+my daily study."
+
+Of course, after this, I lost no time in reminding him of what, before we
+parted, had taken the shape of a promise. "I feel somehow," he had said,
+"as if it were a sort of violation of that privacy in which I have always
+contemplated her beauty. This is friendship, my friend. No hint of her
+existence has ever fallen from my lips. But with too great a familiarity
+we are apt to lose a sense of the real value of things, and you perhaps
+will throw some new light upon it and offer a fresher interpretation."
+
+We went accordingly by appointment to a certain ancient house in the
+heart of Florence--the precinct of the Mercato Vecchio--and climbed a
+dark, steep staircase, to the very summit of the edifice. Theobald's
+beauty seemed as loftily exalted above the line of common vision as his
+artistic ideal was lifted above the usual practice of men. He passed
+without knocking into the dark vestibule of a small apartment, and,
+flinging open an inner door, ushered me into a small saloon. The room
+seemed mean and sombre, though I caught a glimpse of white curtains
+swaying gently at an open window. At a table, near a lamp, sat a woman
+dressed in black, working at a piece of embroidery. As Theobald entered
+she looked up calmly, with a smile; but seeing me she made a movement of
+surprise, and rose with a kind of stately grace. Theobald stepped
+forward, took her hand and kissed it, with an indescribable air of
+immemorial usage. As he bent his head she looked at me askance, and I
+thought she blushed.
+
+"Behold the Serafina!" said Theobald, frankly, waving me forward. "This
+is a friend, and a lover of the arts," he added, introducing me. I
+received a smile, a curtsey, and a request to be seated.
+
+The most beautiful woman in Italy was a person of a generous Italian type
+and of a great simplicity of demeanour. Seated again at her lamp, with
+her embroidery, she seemed to have nothing whatever to say. Theobald,
+bending towards her in a sort of Platonic ecstasy, asked her a dozen
+paternally tender questions as to her health, her state of mind, her
+occupations, and the progress of her embroidery, which he examined
+minutely and summoned me to admire. It was some portion of an
+ecclesiastical vestment--yellow satin wrought with an elaborate design of
+silver and gold. She made answer in a full rich voice, but with a
+brevity which I hesitated whether to attribute to native reserve or to
+the profane constraint of my presence. She had been that morning to
+confession; she had also been to market, and had bought a chicken for
+dinner. She felt very happy; she had nothing to complain of except that
+the people for whom she was making her vestment, and who furnished her
+materials, should be willing to put such rotten silver thread into the
+garment, as one might say, of the Lord. From time to time, as she took
+her slow stitches, she raised her eyes and covered me with a glance which
+seemed at first to denote a placid curiosity, but in which, as I saw it
+repeated, I thought I perceived the dim glimmer of an attempt to
+establish an understanding with me at the expense of our companion.
+Meanwhile, as mindful as possible of Theobald's injunction of reverence,
+I considered the lady's personal claims to the fine compliment he had
+paid her.
+
+That she was indeed a beautiful woman I perceived, after recovering from
+the surprise of finding her without the freshness of youth. Her beauty
+was of a sort which, in losing youth, loses little of its essential
+charm, expressed for the most part as it was in form and structure, and,
+as Theobald would have said, in "composition." She was broad and ample,
+low-browed and large-eyed, dark and pale. Her thick brown hair hung low
+beside her cheek and ear, and seemed to drape her head with a covering as
+chaste and formal as the veil of a nun. The poise and carriage of her
+head were admirably free and noble, and they were the more effective that
+their freedom was at moments discreetly corrected by a little
+sanctimonious droop, which harmonised admirably with the level gaze of
+her dark and quiet eye. A strong, serene, physical nature, and the
+placid temper which comes of no nerves and no troubles, seemed this
+lady's comfortable portion. She was dressed in plain dull black, save
+for a sort of dark blue kerchief which was folded across her bosom and
+exposed a glimpse of her massive throat. Over this kerchief was
+suspended a little silver cross. I admired her greatly, and yet with a
+large reserve. A certain mild intellectual apathy belonged properly to
+her type of beauty, and had always seemed to round and enrich it; but
+this _bourgeoise_ Egeria, if I viewed her right, betrayed a rather vulgar
+stagnation of mind. There might have been once a dim spiritual light in
+her face; but it had long since begun to wane. And furthermore, in plain
+prose, she was growing stout. My disappointment amounted very nearly to
+complete disenchantment when Theobald, as if to facilitate my covert
+inspection, declaring that the lamp was very dim, and that she would ruin
+her eyes without more light, rose and fetched a couple of candles from
+the mantelpiece, which he placed lighted on the table. In this brighter
+illumination I perceived that our hostess was decidedly an elderly woman.
+She was neither haggard, nor worn, nor gray; she was simply coarse. The
+"soul" which Theobald had promised seemed scarcely worth making such a
+point of; it was no deeper mystery than a sort of matronly mildness of
+lip and brow. I should have been ready even to declare that that
+sanctified bend of the head was nothing more than the trick of a person
+constantly working at embroidery. It occurred to me even that it was a
+trick of a less innocent sort; for, in spite of the mellow quietude of
+her wits, this stately needlewoman dropped a hint that she took the
+situation rather less seriously than her friend. When he rose to light
+the candles she looked across at me with a quick, intelligent smile, and
+tapped her forehead with her forefinger; then, as from a sudden feeling
+of compassionate loyalty to poor Theobald, I preserved a blank face, she
+gave a little shrug and resumed her work.
+
+What was the relation of this singular couple? Was he the most ardent of
+friends or the most reverent of lovers? Did she regard him as an
+eccentric swain, whose benevolent admiration of her beauty she was not
+ill pleased to humour at this small cost of having him climb into her
+little parlour and gossip of summer nights? With her decent and sombre
+dress, her simple gravity, and that fine piece of priestly needlework,
+she looked like some pious lay-member of a sisterhood, living by special
+permission outside her convent walls. Or was she maintained here aloft
+by her friend in comfortable leisure, so that he might have before him
+the perfect, eternal type, uncorrupted and untarnished by the struggle
+for existence? Her shapely hands, I observed, wore very fair and white;
+they lacked the traces of what is called honest toil.
+
+"And the pictures, how do they come on?" she asked of Theobald, after a
+long pause.
+
+"Finely, finely! I have here a friend whose sympathy and encouragement
+give me new faith and ardour."
+
+Our hostess turned to me, gazed at me a moment rather inscrutably, and
+then tapping her forehead with the gesture she had used a minute before,
+"He has a magnificent genius!" she said, with perfect gravity.
+
+"I am inclined to think so," I answered, with a smile.
+
+"Eh, why do you smile?" she cried. "If you doubt it, you must see the
+_bambino_!" And she took the lamp and conducted me to the other side of
+the room, where on the wall, in a plain black frame, hung a large drawing
+in red chalk. Beneath it was fastened a little howl for holy water. The
+drawing represented a very young child, entirely naked, half nestling
+back against his mother's gown, but with his two little arms
+outstretched, as if in the act of benediction. It was executed with
+singular freedom and power, and yet seemed vivid with the sacred bloom of
+infancy. A sort of dimpled elegance and grace, mingled with its
+boldness, recalled the touch of Correggio. "That's what he can do!" said
+my hostess. "It's the blessed little boy whom I lost. It's his very
+image, and the Signor Teobaldo gave it me as a gift. He has given me
+many things besides!"
+
+I looked at the picture for some time and admired it immensely. Turning
+back to Theobald I assured him that if it were hung among the drawings in
+the Uffizi and labelled with a glorious name it would hold its own. My
+praise seemed to give him extreme pleasure; he pressed my hands, and his
+eyes filled with tears. It moved him apparently with the desire to
+expatiate on the history of the drawing, for he rose and made his adieux
+to our companion, kissing her band with the same mild ardour as before.
+It occurred to me that the offer of a similar piece of gallantry on my
+own part might help me to know what manner of woman she was. When she
+perceived my intention she withdrew her hand, dropped her eyes solemnly,
+and made me a severe curtsey. Theobald took my arm and led me rapidly
+into the street.
+
+"And what do you think of the divine Serafina?" he cried with fervour.
+
+"It is certainly an excellent style of good looks!" I answered.
+
+He eyed me an instant askance, and then seemed hurried along by the
+current of remembrance. "You should have seen the mother and the child
+together, seen them as I first saw them--the mother with her head draped
+in a shawl, a divine trouble in her face, and the bambino pressed to her
+bosom. You would have said, I think, that Raphael had found his match in
+common chance. I was coming in, one summer night, from a long walk in
+the country, when I met this apparition at the city gate. The woman held
+out her hand. I hardly knew whether to say, 'What do you want?' or to
+fall down and worship. She asked for a little money. I saw that she was
+beautiful and pale; she might have stepped out of the stable of
+Bethlehem! I gave her money and helped her on her way into the town. I
+had guessed her story. She, too, was a maiden mother, and she had been
+turned out into the world in her shame. I felt in all my pulses that
+here was my subject marvellously realised. I felt like one of the old
+monkish artists who had had a vision. I rescued the poor creatures,
+cherished them, watched them as I would have done some precious work of
+art, some lovely fragment of fresco discovered in a mouldering cloister.
+In a month--as if to deepen and sanctify the sadness and sweetness of it
+all--the poor little child died. When she felt that he was going she
+held him up to me for ten minutes, and I made that sketch. You saw a
+feverish haste in it, I suppose; I wanted to spare the poor little mortal
+the pain of his position. After that I doubly valued the mother. She is
+the simplest, sweetest, most natural creature that ever bloomed in this
+brave old land of Italy. She lives in the memory of her child, in her
+gratitude for the scanty kindness I have been able to show her, and in
+her simple religion! She is not even conscious of her beauty; my
+admiration has never made her vain. Heaven knows that I have made no
+secret of it. You must have observed the singular transparency of her
+expression, the lovely modesty of her glance. And was there ever such a
+truly virginal brow, such a natural classic elegance in the wave of the
+hair and the arch of the forehead? I have studied her; I may say I know
+her. I have absorbed her little by little; my mind is stamped and
+imbued, and I have determined now to clinch the impression; I shall at
+last invite her to sit for me!"
+
+"'At last--at last'?" I repeated, in much amazement. "Do you mean that
+she has never done so yet?"
+
+"I have not really had--a--a sitting," said Theobald, speaking very
+slowly. "I have taken notes, you know; I have got my grand fundamental
+impression. That's the great thing! But I have not actually had her as
+a model, posed and draped and lighted, before my easel."
+
+What had become for the moment of my perception and my tact I am at a
+loss to say; in their absence I was unable to repress a headlong
+exclamation. I was destined to regret it. We had stopped at a turning,
+beneath a lamp. "My poor friend," I exclaimed, laying my hand on his
+shoulder, "you have _dawdled_! She's an old, old woman--for a Madonna!"
+
+It was as if I had brutally struck him; I shall never forget the long,
+slow, almost ghastly look of pain, with which he answered me.
+
+"Dawdled?--old, old?" he stammered. "Are you joking?"
+
+"Why, my dear fellow, I suppose you don't take her for a woman of
+twenty?"
+
+He drew a long breath and leaned against a house, looking at me with
+questioning, protesting, reproachful eyes. At last, starting forward,
+and grasping my arm--"Answer me solemnly: does she seem to you truly old?
+Is she wrinkled, is she faded, am I blind?"
+
+Then at last I understood the immensity of his illusion how, one by one,
+the noiseless years had ebbed away and left him brooding in charmed
+inaction, for ever preparing for a work for ever deferred. It seemed to
+me almost a kindness now to tell him the plain truth. "I should be sorry
+to say you are blind," I answered, "but I think you are deceived. You
+have lost time in effortless contemplation. Your friend was once young
+and fresh and virginal; but, I protest, that was some years ago. Still,
+she has _de beaux restes_. By all means make her sit for you!" I broke
+down; his face was too horribly reproachful.
+
+He took off his hat and stood passing his handkerchief mechanically over
+his forehead. "_De beaux restes_? I thank you for sparing me the plain
+English. I must make up my Madonna out of _de beaux restes_! What a
+masterpiece she will be! Old--old! Old--old!" he murmured.
+
+"Never mind her age," I cried, revolted at what I had done, "never mind
+my impression of her! You have your memory, your notes, your genius.
+Finish your picture in a month. I pronounce it beforehand a masterpiece,
+and I hereby offer you for it any sum you may choose to ask."
+
+He stared, but he seemed scarcely to understand me. "Old--old!" he kept
+stupidly repeating. "If she is old, what am I? If her beauty has faded,
+where--where is my strength? Has life been a dream? Have I worshipped
+too long--have I loved too well?" The charm, in truth, was broken. That
+the chord of illusion should have snapped at my light accidental touch
+showed how it had been weakened by excessive tension. The poor fellow's
+sense of wasted time, of vanished opportunity, seemed to roll in upon his
+soul in waves of darkness. He suddenly dropped his head and burst into
+tears.
+
+I led him homeward with all possible tenderness, but I attempted neither
+to check his grief, to restore his equanimity, nor to unsay the hard
+truth. When we reached my hotel I tried to induce him to come so.
+
+"We will drink a glass of wine," I said, smiling, "to the completion of
+the Madonna."
+
+With a violent effort he held up his head, mused for a moment with a
+formidably sombre frown, and then giving me his hand, "I will finish it,"
+he cried, "in a month! No, in a fortnight! After all, I have it
+_here_!" And he tapped his forehead. "Of course she's old! She can
+afford to have it said of her--a woman who has made twenty years pass
+like a twelvemonth! Old--old! Why, sir, she shall be eternal!"
+
+I wished to see him safely to his own door, but he waved me back and
+walked away with an air of resolution, whistling and swinging his cane. I
+waited a moment, and then followed him at a distance, and saw him proceed
+to cross the Santa Trinita Bridge. When he reached the middle he
+suddenly paused, as if his strength had deserted him, and leaned upon the
+parapet gazing over into the river. I was careful to keep him in sight;
+I confess that I passed ten very nervous minutes. He recovered himself
+at last, and went his way, slowly and with hanging head.
+
+That I had really startled poor Theobald into a bolder use of his long-
+garnered stores of knowledge and taste, into the vulgar effort and hazard
+of production, seemed at first reason enough for his continued silence
+and absence; but as day followed day without his either calling or
+sending me a line, and without my meeting him in his customary haunts, in
+the galleries, in the Chapel at San Lorenzo, or strolling between the
+Arno side and the great hedge-screen of verdure which, along the drive of
+the Cascine, throws the fair occupants of barouche and phaeton into such
+becoming relief--as for more than a week I got neither tidings nor sight
+of him, I began to fear that I had fatally offended him, and that,
+instead of giving a wholesome impetus to his talent, I had brutally
+paralysed it. I had a wretched suspicion that I had made him ill. My
+stay at Florence was drawing to a close, and it was important that,
+before resuming my journey, I should assure myself of the truth.
+Theobald, to the last, had kept his lodging a mystery, and I was
+altogether at a loss where to look for him. The simplest course was to
+make inquiry of the beauty of the Mercato Vecchio, and I confess that
+unsatisfied curiosity as to the lady herself counselled it as well.
+Perhaps I had done her injustice, and she was as immortally fresh and
+fair as be conceived her. I was, at any rate, anxious to behold once
+more the ripe enchantress who had made twenty years pass as a
+twelvemonth. I repaired accordingly, one morning, to her abode, climbed
+the interminable staircase, and reached her door. It stood ajar, and as
+I hesitated whether to enter, a little serving-maid came clattering out
+with an empty kettle, as if she had just performed some savoury errand.
+The inner door, too, was open; so I crossed the little vestibule and
+entered the room in which I had formerly been received. It had not its
+evening aspect. The table, or one end of it, was spread for a late
+breakfast, and before it sat a gentleman--an individual, at least, of the
+male sex--doing execution upon a beefsteak and onions, and a bottle of
+wine. At his elbow, in friendly proximity, was placed the lady of the
+house. Her attitude, as I entered, was not that of an enchantress. With
+one hand she held in her lap a plate of smoking maccaroni; with the other
+she had lifted high in air one of the pendulous filaments of this
+succulent compound, and was in the act of slipping it gently down her
+throat. On the uncovered end of the table, facing her companion, were
+ranged half a dozen small statuettes, of some snuff-coloured substance
+resembling terra-cotta. He, brandishing his knife with ardour, was
+apparently descanting on their merits.
+
+Evidently I darkened the door. My hostess dropped liner maccaroni--into
+her mouth, and rose hastily with a harsh exclamation and a flushed face.
+I immediately perceived that the Signora Serafina's secret was even
+better worth knowing than I had supposed, and that the way to learn it
+was to take it for granted. I summoned my best Italian, I smiled and
+bowed and apologised for my intrusion; and in a moment, whether or no I
+had dispelled the lady's irritation, I had at least stimulated her
+prudence. I was welcome, she said; I must take a seat. This was another
+friend of hers--also an artist, she declared with a smile which was
+almost amiable. Her companion wiped his moustache and bowed with great
+civility. I saw at a glance that he was equal to the situation. He was
+presumably the author of the statuettes on the table, and he knew a money-
+spending _forestiere_ when he saw one. He was a small wiry man, with a
+clever, impudent, tossed-up nose, a sharp little black eye, and waxed
+ends to his moustache. On the side of his head he wore jauntily a little
+crimson velvet smoking-cap, and I observed that his feet were encased in
+brilliant slippers. On Serafina's remarking with dignity that I was the
+friend of Mr. Theobald, he broke out into that fantastic French of which
+certain Italians are so insistently lavish, and declared with fervour
+that Mr. Theobald was a magnificent genius.
+
+"I am sure I don't know," I answered with a shrug. "If you are in a
+position to affirm it, you have the advantage of me. I have seen nothing
+from his hand but the bambino yonder, which certainly is fine."
+
+He declared that the bambino was a masterpiece, a pure Corregio. It was
+only a pity, he added with a knowing laugh, that the sketch had not been
+made on some good bit of honeycombed old panel. The stately Serafina
+hereupon protested that Mr. Theobald was the soul of honour, and that he
+would never lend himself to a deceit. "I am not a judge of genius," she
+said, "and I know nothing of pictures. I am but a poor simple widow; but
+I know that the Signor Teobaldo has the heart of an angel and the virtue
+of a saint. He is my benefactor," she added sententiously. The after-
+glow of the somewhat sinister flush with which she had greeted me still
+lingered in her cheek, and perhaps did not favour her beauty; I could not
+but fancy it a wise custom of Theobald's to visit her only by
+candle-light. She was coarse, and her pour adorer was a poet.
+
+"I have the greatest esteem for him," I said; "it is for this reason that
+I have been uneasy at not seeing him for ten days. Have you seen him? Is
+he perhaps ill?"
+
+"Ill! Heaven forbid!" cried Serafina, with genuine vehemence.
+
+Her companion uttered a rapid expletive, and reproached her with not
+having been to see him. She hesitated a moment; then she simpered the
+least bit and bridled. "He comes to see me--without reproach! But it
+would not be the same for me to go to him, though, indeed, you may almost
+call him a man of holy life."
+
+"He has the greatest admiration for you," I said. "He would have been
+honoured by your visit."
+
+She looked at me a moment sharply. "More admiration than you. Admit
+that!" Of course I protested with all the eloquence at my command, and
+my mysterious hostess then confessed that she had taken no fancy to me on
+my former visit, and that, Theobald not having returned, she believed I
+had poisoned his mind against her. "It would be no kindness to the poor
+gentleman, I can tell you that," she said. "He has come to see me every
+evening for years. It's a long friendship! No one knows him as well as
+I."
+
+"I don't pretend to know him or to understand him," I said. "He's a
+mystery! Nevertheless, he seems to me a little--" And I touched my
+forehead and waved my hand in the air.
+
+Serafina glanced at her companion a moment, as if for inspiration. He
+contented himself with shrugging his shoulders as he filled his glass
+again. The _padrona_ hereupon gave me a more softly insinuating smile
+than would have seemed likely to bloom on so candid a brow. "It's for
+that that I love him!" she said. "The world has so little kindness for
+such persons. It laughs at them, and despises them, and cheats them. He
+is too good for this wicked life! It's his fancy that he finds a little
+Paradise up here in my poor apartment. If he thinks so, how can I help
+it? He has a strange belief--really, I ought to be ashamed to tell
+you--that I resemble the Blessed Virgin: Heaven forgive me! I let him
+think what he pleases, so long as it makes him happy. He was very kind
+to me once, and I am not one that forgets a favour. So I receive him
+every evening civilly, and ask after his health, and let him look at me
+on this side and that! For that matter, I may say it without vanity, I
+was worth looking at once! And he's not always amusing, poor man! He
+sits sometimes for an hour without speaking a word, or else he talks
+away, without stopping, on art and nature, and beauty and duty, and fifty
+fine things that are all so much Latin to me. I beg you to understand
+that he has never said a word to me that I mightn't decently listen to.
+He may be a little cracked, but he's one of the blessed saints."
+
+"Eh!" cried the man, "the blessed saints were all a little cracked!"
+
+Serafina, I fancied, left part of her story untold; but she told enough
+of it to make poor Theobald's own statement seem intensely pathetic in
+its exalted simplicity. "It's a strange fortune, certainly," she went
+on, "to have such a friend as this dear man--a friend who is less than a
+lover and more than a friend." I glanced at her companion, who preserved
+an impenetrable smile, twisted the end of his moustache, and disposed of
+a copious mouthful. Was _he_ less than a lover? "But what will you
+have?" Serafina pursued. "In this hard world one must not ask too many
+questions; one must take what comes and keep what one gets. I have kept
+my good friend for twenty years, and I do hope that, at this time of day,
+signore, you have not come to turn him against me!"
+
+I assured her that I had no such design, and that I should vastly regret
+disturbing Mr. Theobald's habits or convictions. On the contrary, I was
+alarmed about him, and I should immediately go in search of him. She
+gave me his address, and a florid account of her sufferings at his non-
+appearance. She had not been to him for various reasons; chiefly because
+she was afraid of displeasing him, as he had always made such a mystery
+of his home. "You might have sent this gentleman!" I ventured to
+suggest.
+
+"Ah," cried the gentleman, "he admires the Signora Serafina, but he
+wouldn't admire me." And then, confidentially, with his finger on his
+nose, "He's a purist!"
+
+I was about to withdraw, after having promised that I would inform the
+Signora Serafina of my friend's condition, when her companion, who had
+risen from table and girded his loins apparently for the onset, grasped
+me gently by the arm, and led me before the row of statuettes. "I
+perceive by your conversation, signore, that you are a patron of the
+arts. Allow me to request your honourable attention for these modest
+products of my own ingenuity. They are brand-new, fresh from my atelier,
+and have never been exhibited in public. I have brought them here to
+receive the verdict of this dear lady, who is a good critic, for all she
+may pretend to the contrary. I am the inventor of this peculiar style of
+statuette--of subject, manner, material, everything. Touch them, I pray
+you; handle them freely--you needn't fear. Delicate as they look, it is
+impossible they should break! My various creations have met with great
+success. They are especially admired by Americans. I have sent them all
+over Europe--to London, Paris, Vienna! You may have observed some little
+specimens in Paris, on the Boulevard, in a shop of which they constitute
+the specialty. There is always a crowd about the window. They form a
+very pleasing ornament for the mantel-shelf of a gay young bachelor, for
+the boudoir of a pretty woman. You couldn't make a prettier present to a
+person with whom you wished to exchange a harmless joke. It is not
+classic art, signore, of course; but, between ourselves, isn't classic
+art sometimes rather a bore? Caricature, burlesque, _la charge_, as the
+French say, has hitherto been confined to paper, to the pen and pencil.
+Now, it has been my inspiration to introduce it into statuary. For this
+purpose I have invented a peculiar plastic compound which you will permit
+me not to divulge. That's my secret, signore! It's as light, you
+perceive, as cork, and yet as firm as alabaster! I frankly confess that
+I really pride myself as much on this little stroke of chemical ingenuity
+as upon the other element of novelty in my creations--my types. What do
+you say to my types, signore? The idea is bold; does it strike you as
+happy? Cats and monkeys--monkeys and cats--all human life is there!
+Human life, of course, I mean, viewed with the eye of the satirist! To
+combine sculpture and satire, signore, has been my unprecedented
+ambition. I flatter myself that I have not egregiously failed."
+
+As this jaunty Juvenal of the chimney-piece delivered himself of his
+persuasive allocution, he took up his little groups successively from the
+table, held them aloft, turned them about, rapped them with his knuckles,
+and gazed at them lovingly, with his head on one side. They consisted
+each of a cat and a monkey, fantastically draped, in some preposterously
+sentimental conjunction. They exhibited a certain sameness of motive,
+and illustrated chiefly the different phases of what, in delicate terms,
+may be called gallantry and coquetry; but they were strikingly clever and
+expressive, and were at once very perfect cats and monkeys and very
+natural men and women. I confess, however, that they failed to amuse me.
+I was doubtless not in a mood to enjoy them, for they seemed to me
+peculiarly cynical and vulgar. Their imitative felicity was revolting.
+As I looked askance at the complacent little artist, brandishing them
+between finger and thumb and caressing them with an amorous eye, he
+seemed to me himself little more than an exceptionally intelligent ape. I
+mustered an admiring grin, however, and he blew another blast. "My
+figures are studied from life! I have a little menagerie of monkeys
+whose frolics I contemplate by the hour. As for the cats, one has only
+to look out of one's back window! Since I have begun to examine these
+expressive little brutes, I have made many profound observations.
+Speaking, signore, to a man of imagination, I may say that my little
+designs are not without a philosophy of their own. Truly, I don't know
+whether the cats and monkeys imitate us, or whether it's we who imitate
+them." I congratulated him on his philosophy, and he resumed: "You will
+do use the honour to admit that I have handled my subjects with delicacy.
+Eh, it was needed, signore! I have been free, but not too free--eh? Just
+a hint, you know! You may see as much or as little as you please. These
+little groups, however, are no measure of my invention. If you will
+favour me with a call at my studio, I think that you will admit that my
+combinations are really infinite. I likewise execute figures to command.
+You have perhaps some little motive--the fruit of your philosophy of
+life, signore--which you would like to have interpreted. I can promise
+to work it up to your satisfaction; it shall be as malicious as you
+please! Allow me to present you with my card, and to remind you that my
+prices are moderate. Only sixty francs for a little group like that. My
+statuettes are as durable as bronze--_aere perennius_, signore--and,
+between ourselves, I think they are more amusing!"
+
+As I pocketed his card I glanced at Madonna Serafina, wondering whether
+she had an eye for contrasts. She had picked up one of the little
+couples and was tenderly dusting it with a feather broom.
+
+What I had just seen and heard had so deepened my compassionate interest
+in my deluded friend that I took a summary leave, making my way directly
+to the house designated by this remarkable woman. It was in an obscure
+corner of the opposite side of the town, and presented a sombre and
+squalid appearance. An old woman in the doorway, on my inquiring for
+Theobald, ushered me in with a mumbled blessing and an expression of
+relief at the poor gentleman having a friend. His lodging seemed to
+consist of a single room at the top of the house. On getting no answer
+to my knock, I opened the door, supposing that he was absent, so that it
+gave me a certain shock to find him sitting there helpless and dumb. He
+was seated near the single window, facing an easel which supported a
+large canvas. On my entering he looked up at me blankly, without
+changing his position, which was that of absolute lassitude and
+dejection, his arms loosely folded, his legs stretched before him, his
+head hanging on his breast. Advancing into the room I perceived that his
+face vividly corresponded with his attitude. He was pale, haggard, and
+unshaven, and his dull and sunken eye gazed at me without a spark of
+recognition. I had been afraid that he would greet me with fierce
+reproaches, as the cruelly officious patron who had turned his
+contentment to bitterness, and I was relieved to find that my appearance
+awakened no visible resentment. "Don't you know me?" I asked, as I put
+out my hand. "Have you already forgotten me?"
+
+He made no response, kept his position stupidly, and left me staring
+about the room. It spoke most plaintively for itself. Shabby, sordid,
+naked, it contained, beyond the wretched bed, but the scantiest provision
+for personal comfort. It was bedroom at once and studio--a grim ghost of
+a studio. A few dusty casts and prints on the walls, three or four old
+canvases turned face inward, and a rusty-looking colour-box, formed, with
+the easel at the window, the sum of its appurtenances. The place
+savoured horribly of poverty. Its only wealth was the picture on the
+easel, presumably the famous Madonna. Averted as this was from the door,
+I was unable to see its face; but at last, sickened by the vacant misery
+of the spot, I passed behind Theobald, eagerly and tenderly. I can
+hardly say that I was surprised at what I found--a canvas that was a mere
+dead blank, cracked and discoloured by time. This was his immortal work!
+Though not surprised, I confess I was powerfully moved, and I think that
+for five minutes I could not have trusted myself to speak. At last my
+silent nearness affected him; he stirred and turned, and then rose and
+looked at me with a slowly kindling eye. I murmured some kind
+ineffective nothings about his being ill and needing advice and care, but
+he seemed absorbed in the effort to recall distinctly what had last
+passed between us. "You were right," he said, with a pitiful smile, "I
+am a dawdler! I am a failure! I shall do nothing more in this world.
+You opened my eyes; and, though the truth is bitter, I bear you no
+grudge. Amen! I have been sitting here for a week, face to face with
+the truth, with the past, with my weakness and poverty and nullity. I
+shall never touch a brush! I believe I have neither eaten nor slept.
+Look at that canvas!" he went on, as I relieved my emotion in an urgent
+request that he would come home with me and dine. "That was to have
+contained my masterpiece! Isn't it a promising foundation? The elements
+of it are all _here_." And he tapped his forehead with that mystic
+confidence which had marked the gesture before. "If I could only
+transpose them into some brain that has the hand, the will! Since I have
+been sitting here taking stock of my intellects, I have come to believe
+that I have the material for a hundred masterpieces. But my hand is
+paralysed now, and they will never be painted. I never began! I waited
+and waited to be worthier to begin, and wasted my life in preparation.
+While I fancied my creation was growing it was dying. I have taken it
+all too hard! Michael Angelo didn't, when he went at the Lorenzo! He
+did his best at a venture, and his venture is immortal. _That's_ mine!"
+And he pointed with a gesture I shall never forget at the empty canvas.
+"I suppose we are a genus by ourselves in the providential scheme--we
+talents that can't act, that can't do nor dare! We take it out in talk,
+in plans and promises, in study, in visions! But our visions, let me
+tell you," he cried, with a toss of his head, "have a way of being
+brilliant, and a man has not lived in vain who has seen the things I have
+seen! Of course you will not believe in them when that bit of worm-eaten
+cloth is all I have to show for them; but to convince you, to enchant and
+astound the world, I need only the hand of Raphael. His brain I already
+have. A pity, you will say, that I haven't his modesty! Ah, let me
+boast and babble now; it's all I have left! I am the half of a genius!
+Where in the wide world is my other half? Lodged perhaps in the vulgar
+soul, the cunning, ready fingers of some dull copyist or some trivial
+artisan, who turns out by the dozen his easy prodigies of touch! But
+it's not for me to sneer at him; he at least does something. He's not a
+dawdler! Well for me if I had been vulgar and clever and reckless, if I
+could have shut my eyes and taken my leap."
+
+What to say to the poor fellow, what to do for him, seemed hard to
+determine; I chiefly felt that I must break the spell of his present
+inaction, and remove him from the haunted atmosphere of the little room
+it was such a cruel irony to call a studio. I cannot say I persuaded him
+to come out with me; he simply suffered himself to be led, and when we
+began to walk in the open air I was able to appreciate his pitifully
+weakened condition. Nevertheless, he seemed in a certain way to revive,
+and murmured at last that he should like to go to the Pitti Gallery. I
+shall never forget our melancholy stroll through those gorgeous halls,
+every picture on whose walls seemed, even to my own sympathetic vision,
+to glow with a sort of insolent renewal of strength and lustre. The eyes
+and lips of the great portraits appeared to smile in ineffable scorn of
+the dejected pretender who had dreamed of competing with their triumphant
+authors; the celestial candour, even, of the Madonna of the Chair, as we
+paused in perfect silence before her, was tinged with the sinister irony
+of the women of Leonardo. Perfect silence, indeed, marked our whole
+progress--the silence of a deep farewell; for I felt in all my pulses, as
+Theobald, leaning on my arm, dragged one heavy foot after the other, that
+he was looking his last. When we came out he was so exhausted that
+instead of taking him to my hotel to dine, I called a carriage and drove
+him straight to his own poor lodging. He had sunk into an extraordinary
+lethargy; he lay back in the carriage, with his eyes closed, as pale as
+death, his faint breathing interrupted at intervals by a sudden gasp,
+like a smothered sob or a vain attempt to speak. With the help of the
+old woman who had admitted me before, and who emerged from a dark back
+court, I contrived to lead him up the long steep staircase and lay him on
+his wretched bed. To her I gave him in charge, while I prepared in all
+haste to seek a physician. But she followed me out of the room with a
+pitiful clasping of her hands.
+
+"Poor, dear, blessed gentleman," she murmured; "is he dying?"
+
+"Possibly. How long has he been thus?"
+
+"Since a certain night he passed ten days ago. I came up in the morning
+to make his poor bed, and found him sitting up in his clothes before that
+great canvas he keeps there. Poor, dear, strange man, he says his
+prayers to it! He had not been to bed, nor since then, properly! What
+has happened to him? Has he found out about the Serafina?" she
+whispered, with a glittering eye and a toothless grin.
+
+"Prove at least that one old woman can be faithful," I said, "and watch
+him well till I come back." My return was delayed, through the absence
+of the English physician, who was away on a round of visits, and whom I
+vainly pursued from house to house before I overtook him. I brought him
+to Theobald's bedside none too soon. A violent fever had seized our
+patient, and the case was evidently grave. A couple of hours later I
+knew that he had brain fever. From this moment I was with him
+constantly; but I am far from wishing to describe his illness.
+Excessively painful to witness, it was happily brief. Life burned out in
+delirium. One night in particular that I passed at his pillow, listening
+to his wild snatches of regret, of aspiration, of rapture and awe at the
+phantasmal pictures with which his brain seemed to swarm, comes back to
+my memory now like some stray page from a lost masterpiece of tragedy.
+Before a week was over we had buried him in the little Protestant
+cemetery on the way to Fiesole. The Signora Serafina, whom I had caused
+to be informed of his illness, had come in person, I was told, to inquire
+about its progress; but she was absent from his funeral, which was
+attended by but a scanty concourse of mourners. Half a dozen old
+Florentine sojourners, in spite of the prolonged estrangement which had
+preceded his death, had felt the kindly impulse to honour his grave.
+Among them was my friend Mrs. Coventry, whom I found, on my departure,
+waiting in her carriage at the gate of the cemetery.
+
+"Well," she said, relieving at last with a significant smile the
+solemnity of our immediate greeting, "and the great Madonna? Have you
+seen her, after all?"
+
+"I have seen her," I said; "she is mine--by bequest. But I shall never
+show her to you."
+
+"And why not, pray?"
+
+"My dear Mrs. Coventry, you would not understand her!"
+
+"Upon my word, you are polite."
+
+"Excuse me; I am sad and vexed and bitter." And with reprehensible
+rudeness I marched away. I was excessively impatient to leave Florence;
+my friend's dark spirit seemed diffused through all things. I had packed
+my trunk to start for Rome that night, and meanwhile, to beguile my
+unrest, I aimlessly paced the streets. Chance led me at last to the
+church of San Lorenzo. Remembering poor Theobald's phrase about Michael
+Angelo--"He did his best at a venture"--I went in and turned my steps to
+the chapel of the tombs. Viewing in sadness the sadness of its immortal
+treasures, I fancied, while I stood there, that they needed no ampler
+commentary than these simple words. As I passed through the church again
+to leave it, a woman, turning away from one of the side altars, met me
+face to face. The black shawl depending from her head draped
+picturesquely the handsome visage of Madonna Serafina. She stopped as
+she recognised me, and I saw that she wished to speak. Her eye was
+bright, and her ample bosom heaved in a way that seemed to portend a
+certain sharpness of reproach. But the expression of my own face,
+apparently, drew the sting from her resentment, and she addressed me in a
+tone in which bitterness was tempered by a sort of dogged resignation. "I
+know it was you, now, that separated us," she said. "It was a pity he
+ever brought you to see me! Of course, you couldn't think of me as he
+did. Well, the Lord gave him, the Lord has taken him. I have just paid
+for a nine days' mass for his soul. And I can tell you this, signore--I
+never deceived him. Who put it into his head that I was made to live on
+holy thoughts and fine phrases? It was his own fancy, and it pleased him
+to think so.--Did he suffer much?" she added more softly, after a pause.
+
+"His sufferings were great, but they were short."
+
+"And did he speak of me?" She had hesitated and dropped her eyes; she
+raised them with her question, and revealed in their sombre stillness a
+gleam of feminine confidence which, for the moment, revived and illumined
+her beauty. Poor Theobald! Whatever name he had given his passion, it
+was still her fine eyes that had charmed him.
+
+"Be contented, madam," I answered, gravely.
+
+She dropped her eyes again and was silent. Then exhaling a full rich
+sigh, as she gathered her shawl together--"He was a magnificent genius!"
+
+I bowed, and we separated.
+
+Passing through a narrow side street on my way back to my hotel, I
+perceived above a doorway a sign which it seemed to me I had read before.
+I suddenly remembered that it was identical with the superscription of a
+card that I had carried for an hour in my waistcoat pocket. On the
+threshold stood the ingenious artist whose claims to public favour were
+thus distinctly signalised, smoking a pipe in the evening air, and giving
+the finishing polish with a bit of rag to one of his inimitable
+"combinations." I caught the expressive curl of a couple of tails. He
+recognised me, removed his little red cap with a most obsequious bow, and
+motioned me to enter his studio. I returned his salute and passed on,
+vexed with the apparition. For a week afterwards, whenever I was seized
+among the ruins of triumphant Rome with some peculiarly poignant memory
+of Theobald's transcendent illusions and deplorable failure, I seemed to
+hear a fantastic, impertinent murmur, "Cats and monkeys, monkeys and
+cats; all human life there!"
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MADONNA OF THE FUTURE***
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+Project Gutenberg Etext The Madonna of the Future, by Henry James
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+This etext was prepared by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+from the 1887 Macmillan and Co. edition. Proofing was by Jennifer
+Austin.
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+
+
+THE MADONNA OF THE FUTURE
+
+by Henry James
+
+
+
+
+We had been talking about the masters who had achieved but a single
+masterpiece--the artists and poets who but once in their lives had
+known the divine afflatus and touched the high level of perfection.
+Our host had been showing us a charming little cabinet picture by a
+painter whose name we had never heard, and who, after this single
+spasmodic bid for fame, had apparently relapsed into obscurity and
+mediocrity. There was some discussion as to the frequency of this
+phenomenon; during which, I observed, H- sat silent, finishing his
+cigar with a meditative air, and looking at the picture which was
+being handed round the table. "I don't know how common a case it
+is," he said at last, "but I have seen it. I have known a poor
+fellow who painted his one masterpiece, and"--he added with a smile--
+"he didn't even paint that. He made his bid for fame and missed it."
+We all knew H- for a clever man who had seen much of men and manners,
+and had a great stock of reminiscences. Some one immediately
+questioned him further, and while I was engrossed with the raptures
+of my neighbour over the little picture, he was induced to tell his
+tale. If I were to doubt whether it would bear repeating, I should
+only have to remember how that charming woman, our hostess, who had
+left the table, ventured back in rustling rose-colour to pronounce
+our lingering a want of gallantry, and, finding us a listening
+circle, sank into her chair in spite of our cigars, and heard the
+story out so graciously that, when the catastrophe was reached, she
+glanced across at me and showed me a tear in each of her beautiful
+eyes.
+
+
+It relates to my youth, and to Italy: two fine things! (H- began).
+I had arrived late in the evening at Florence, and while I finished
+my bottle of wine at supper, had fancied that, tired traveller though
+I was, I might pay the city a finer compliment than by going vulgarly
+to bed. A narrow passage wandered darkly away out of the little
+square before my hotel, and looked as if it bored into the heart of
+Florence. I followed it, and at the end of ten minutes emerged upon
+a great piazza, filled only with the mild autumn moonlight. Opposite
+rose the Palazzo Vecchio, like some huge civic fortress, with the
+great bell-tower springing from its embattled verge as a mountain-
+pine from the edge of a cliff. At its base, in its projected shadow,
+gleamed certain dim sculptures which I wonderingly approached. One
+of the images, on the left of the palace door, was a magnificent
+colossus, shining through the dusky air like a sentinel who has taken
+the alarm. In a moment I recognised him as Michael Angelo's David.
+I turned with a certain relief from his sinister strength to a
+slender figure in bronze, stationed beneath the high light loggia,
+which opposes the free and elegant span of its arches to the dead
+masonry of the palace; a figure supremely shapely and graceful;
+gentle, almost, in spite of his holding out with his light nervous
+arm the snaky head of the slaughtered Gorgon. His name is Perseus,
+and you may read his story, not in the Greek mythology, but in the
+memoirs of Benvenuto Cellini. Glancing from one of these fine
+fellows to the other, I probably uttered some irrepressible
+commonplace of praise, for, as if provoked by my voice, a man rose
+from the steps of the loggia, where he had been sitting in the
+shadow, and addressed me in good English--a small, slim personage,
+clad in a sort of black velvet tunic (as it seemed), and with a mass
+of auburn hair, which gleamed in the moonlight, escaping from a
+little mediaeval birretta. In a tone of the most insinuating
+deference he asked me for my "impressions." He seemed picturesque,
+fantastic, slightly unreal. Hovering there in this consecrated
+neighbourhood, he might have passed for the genius of aesthetic
+hospitality--if the genius of aesthetic hospitality were not commonly
+some shabby little custode, flourishing a calico pocket-handkerchief
+and openly resentful of the divided franc. This analogy was made
+none the less complete by the brilliant tirade with which he greeted
+my embarrassed silence.
+
+"I have known Florence long, sir, but I have never known her so
+lovely as tonight. It's as if the ghosts of her past were abroad in
+the empty streets. The present is sleeping; the past hovers about us
+like a dream made visible. Fancy the old Florentines strolling up in
+couples to pass judgment on the last performance of Michael, of
+Benvenuto! We should come in for a precious lesson if we might
+overhear what they say. The plainest burgher of them, in his cap and
+gown, had a taste in the matter! That was the prime of art, sir.
+The sun stood high in heaven, and his broad and equal blaze made the
+darkest places bright and the dullest eyes clear. We live in the
+evening of time! We grope in the gray dusk, carrying each our poor
+little taper of selfish and painful wisdom, holding it up to the
+great models and to the dim idea, and seeing nothing but overwhelming
+greatness and dimness. The days of illumination are gone! But do
+you know I fancy--I fancy"--and he grew suddenly almost familiar in
+this visionary fervour--"I fancy the light of that time rests upon us
+here for an hour! I have never seen the David so grand, the Perseus
+so fair! Even the inferior productions of John of Bologna and of
+Baccio Bandinelli seem to realise the artist's dream. I feel as if
+the moonlit air were charged with the secrets of the masters, and as
+if, standing here in religious attention, we might--we might witness
+a revelation!" Perceiving at this moment, I suppose, my halting
+comprehension reflected in my puzzled face, this interesting
+rhapsodist paused and blushed. Then with a melancholy smile, "You
+think me a moonstruck charlatan, I suppose. It's not my habit to
+bang about the piazza and pounce upon innocent tourists. But
+tonight, I confess, I am under the charm. And then, somehow, I
+fancied you too were an artist!"
+
+"I am not an artist, I am sorry to say, as you must understand the
+term. But pray make no apologies. I am also under the charm; your
+eloquent remarks have only deepened it."
+
+"If you are not an artist you are worthy to be one!" he rejoined,
+with an expressive smile. "A young man who arrives at Florence late
+in the evening, and, instead of going prosaically to bed, or hanging
+over the traveller's book at his hotel, walks forth without loss of
+time to pay his devoirs to the beautiful, is a young man after my own
+heart!"
+
+The mystery was suddenly solved; my friend was an American! He must
+have been, to take the picturesque so prodigiously to heart. "None
+the less so, I trust," I answered, "if the young man is a sordid New
+Yorker."
+
+"New Yorkers have been munificent patrons of art!" he answered,
+urbanely.
+
+For a moment I was alarmed. Was this midnight reverie mere Yankee
+enterprise, and was he simply a desperate brother of the brush who
+had posted himself here to extort an "order" from a sauntering
+tourist? But I was not called to defend myself. A great brazen note
+broke suddenly from the far-off summit of the bell-tower above us,
+and sounded the first stroke of midnight. My companion started,
+apologised for detaining me, and prepared to retire. But he seemed
+to offer so lively a promise of further entertainment that I was
+indisposed to part with him, and suggested that we should stroll
+homeward together. He cordially assented; so we turned out of the
+Piazza, passed down before the statued arcade of the Uffizi, and came
+out upon the Arno. What course we took I hardly remember, but we
+roamed slowly about for an hour, my companion delivering by snatches
+a sort of moon-touched aesthetic lecture. I listened in puzzled
+fascination, and wondered who the deuce he was. He confessed with a
+melancholy but all-respectful head-shake to his American origin.
+
+"We are the disinherited of Art!" he cried. "We are condemned to be
+superficial! We are excluded from the magic circle. The soil of
+American perception is a poor little barren artificial deposit. Yes!
+we are wedded to imperfection. An American, to excel, has just ten
+times as much to learn as a European. We lack the deeper sense. We
+have neither taste, nor tact, nor power. How should we have them?
+Our crude and garish climate, our silent past, our deafening present,
+the constant pressure about us of unlovely circumstance, are as void
+of all that nourishes and prompts and inspires the artist, as my sad
+heart is void of bitterness in saying so! We poor aspirants must
+live in perpetual exile."
+
+"You seem fairly at home in exile," I answered, "and Florence seems
+to me a very pretty Siberia. But do you know my own thought?
+Nothing is so idle as to talk about our want of a nutritive soil, of
+opportunity, of inspiration, and all the rest of it. The worthy part
+is to do something fine! There is no law in our glorious
+Constitution against that. Invent, create, achieve! No matter if
+you have to study fifty times as much as one of these! What else are
+you an artist for? Be you our Moses," I added, laughing, and laying
+my hand on his shoulder, "and lead us out of the house of bondage!"
+
+"Golden words--golden words, young man!" he cried, with a tender
+smile. "'Invent, create, achieve!' Yes, that's our business; I know
+it well. Don't take me, in Heaven's name, for one of your barren
+complainers--impotent cynics who have neither talent nor faith! I am
+at work!"--and he glanced about him and lowered his voice as if this
+were a quite peculiar secret--"I'm at work night and day. I have
+undertaken a CREATION! I am no Moses; I am only a poor patient
+artist; but it would be a fine thing if I were to cause some slender
+stream of beauty to flow in our thirsty land! Don't think me a
+monster of conceit," he went on, as he saw me smile at the avidity
+with which he adopted my illustration; "I confess that I am in one of
+those moods when great things seem possible! This is one of my
+nervous nights--I dream waking! When the south wind blows over
+Florence at midnight it seems to coax the soul from all the fair
+things locked away in her churches and galleries; it comes into my
+own little studio with the moonlight, and sets my heart beating too
+deeply for rest. You see I am always adding a thought to my
+conception! This evening I felt that I couldn't sleep unless I had
+communed with the genius of Buonarotti!"
+
+He seemed deeply versed in local history and tradition, and he
+expatiated con amore on the charms of Florence. I gathered that he
+was an old resident, and that he had taken the lovely city into his
+heart. "I owe her everything," he declared. "It's only since I came
+here that I have really lived, intellectually. One by one, all
+profane desires, all mere worldly aims, have dropped away from me,
+and left me nothing but my pencil, my little note-book" (and he
+tapped his breast-pocket), "and the worship of the pure masters--
+those who were pure because they were innocent, and those who were
+pure because they were strong!"
+
+"And have you been very productive all this time?" I asked
+sympathetically.
+
+He was silent a while before replying. "Not in the vulgar sense!" he
+said at last. "I have chosen never to manifest myself by
+imperfection. The good in every performance I have re-absorbed into
+the generative force of new creations; the bad--there is always
+plenty of that--I have religiously destroyed. I may say, with some
+satisfaction, that I have not added a mite to the rubbish of the
+world. As a proof of my conscientiousness and he stopped short, and
+eyed me with extraordinary candour, as if the proof were to be
+overwhelming--"I have never sold a picture! 'At least no merchant
+traffics in my heart!' Do you remember that divine line in Browning?
+My little studio has never been profaned by superficial, feverish,
+mercenary work. It's a temple of labour, but of leisure! Art is
+long. If we work for ourselves, of course we must hurry. If we work
+for her, we must often pause. She can wait!"
+
+This had brought us to my hotel door, somewhat to my relief, I
+confess, for I had begun to feel unequal to the society of a genius
+of this heroic strain. I left him, however, not without expressing a
+friendly hope that we should meet again. The next morning my
+curiosity had not abated; I was anxious to see him by common
+daylight. I counted upon meeting him in one of the many pictorial
+haunts of Florence, and I was gratified without delay. I found him
+in the course of the morning in the Tribune of the Uffizi--that
+little treasure-chamber of world-famous things. He had turned his
+back on the Venus de' Medici, and with his arms resting on the rail-
+mug which protects the pictures, and his head buried in his hands, he
+was lost in the contemplation of that superb triptych of Andrea
+Mantegna--a work which has neither the material splendour nor the
+commanding force of some of its neighbours, but which, glowing there
+with the loveliness of patient labour, suits possibly a more constant
+need of the soul. I looked at the picture for some time over his
+shoulder; at last, with a heavy sigh, he turned away and our eyes
+met. As he recognised me a deep blush rose to his face; he fancied,
+perhaps, that he had made a fool of himself overnight. But I offered
+him my hand with a friendliness which assured him I was not a
+scoffer. I knew him by his ardent chevelure; otherwise he was much
+altered. His midnight mood was over, and he looked as haggard as an
+actor by daylight. He was far older than I had supposed, and he had
+less bravery of costume and gesture. He seemed the quiet, poor,
+patient artist he had proclaimed himself, and the fact that he had
+never sold a picture was more obvious than glorious. His velvet coat
+was threadbare, and his short slouched hat, of an antique pattern,
+revealed a rustiness which marked it an "original," and not one of
+the picturesque reproductions which brethren of his craft affect.
+His eye was mild and heavy, and his expression singularly gentle and
+acquiescent; the more so for a certain pallid leanness of visage,
+which I hardly knew whether to refer to the consuming fire of genius
+or to a meagre diet. A very little talk, however, cleared his brow
+and brought back his eloquence.
+
+"And this is your first visit to these enchanted halls?" he cried.
+"Happy, thrice happy youth!" And taking me by the arm, he prepared to
+lead me to each of the pre-eminent works in turn and show me the
+cream of the gallery. But before we left the Mantegna he pressed my
+arm and gave it a loving look. "HE was not in a hurry," he murmured.
+"He knew nothing of "raw Haste, half-sister to Delay!" How sound a
+critic my friend was I am unable to say, but he was an extremely
+amusing one; overflowing with opinions, theories, and sympathies,
+with disquisition and gossip and anecdote. He was a shade too
+sentimental for my own sympathies, and I fancied he was rather too
+fond of superfine discriminations and of discovering subtle
+intentions in shallow places. At moments, too, he plunged into the
+sea of metaphysics, and floundered a while in waters too deep for
+intellectual security. But his abounding knowledge and happy
+judgment told a touching story of long attentive hours in this
+worshipful company; there was a reproach to my wasteful saunterings
+in so devoted a culture of opportunity. "There are two moods," I
+remember his saying, "in which we may walk through galleries--the
+critical and the ideal. They seize us at their pleasure, and we can
+never tell which is to take its turn. The critical mood, oddly, is
+the genial one, the friendly, the condescending. It relishes the
+pretty trivialities of art, its vulgar cleverness, its conscious
+graces. It has a kindly greeting for anything which looks as if,
+according to his light, the painter had enjoyed doing it--for the
+little Dutch cabbages and kettles, for the taper fingers and breezy
+mantles of late-coming Madonnas, for the little blue-hilled,
+pastoral, sceptical Italian landscapes. Then there are the days of
+fierce, fastidious longing--solemn church feasts of the intellect--
+when all vulgar effort and all petty success is a weariness, and
+everything but the best--the best of the best--disgusts. In these
+hours we are relentless aristocrats of taste. We will not take
+Michael Angelo for granted, we will not swallow Raphael whole!"
+
+The gallery of the Uffizi is not only rich in its possessions, but
+peculiarly fortunate in that fine architectural accident, as one may
+call it, which unites it--with the breadth of river and city between
+them--to those princely chambers of the Pitti Palace. The Louvre and
+the Vatican hardly give you such a sense of sustained inclosure as
+those long passages projected over street and stream to establish a
+sort of inviolate transition between the two palaces of art. We
+passed along the gallery in which those precious drawings by eminent
+hands hang chaste and gray above the swirl and murmur of the yellow
+Arno, and reached the ducal saloons of the Pitti. Ducal as they are,
+it must be confessed that they are imperfect as show-rooms, and that,
+with their deep-set windows and their massive mouldings, it is rather
+a broken light that reaches the pictured walls. But here the
+masterpieces hang thick, and you seem to see them in a luminous
+atmosphere of their own. And the great saloons, with their superb
+dim ceilings, their outer wall in splendid shadow, and the sombre
+opposite glow of mellow canvas and dusky gilding, make, themselves,
+almost as fine a picture as the Titians and Raphaels they imperfectly
+reveal. We lingered briefly before many a Raphael and Titian; but I
+saw my friend was impatient, and I suffered him at last to lead me
+directly to the goal of our journey--the most tenderly fair of
+Raphael's virgins, the Madonna in the Chair. Of all the fine
+pictures of the world, it seemed to me this is the one with which
+criticism has least to do. None betrays less effort, less of the
+mechanism of success and of the irrepressible discord between
+conception and result, which shows dimly in so many consummate works.
+Graceful, human, near to our sympathies as it is, it has nothing of
+manner, of method, nothing, almost, of style; it blooms there in
+rounded softness, as instinct with harmony as if it were an immediate
+exhalation of genius. The figure melts away the spectator's mind
+into a sort of passionate tenderness which he knows not whether he
+has given to heavenly purity or to earthly charm. He is intoxicated
+with the fragrance of the tenderest blossom of maternity that ever
+bloomed on earth.
+
+"That's what I call a fine picture," said my companion, after we had
+gazed a while in silence. "I have a right to say so, for I have
+copied it so often and so carefully that I could repeat it now with
+my eyes shut. Other works are of Raphael: this IS Raphael himself.
+Others you can praise, you can qualify, you can measure, explain,
+account for: this you can only love and admire. I don't know in
+what seeming he walked among men while this divine mood was upon him;
+but after it, surely, he could do nothing but die; this world had
+nothing more to teach him. Think of it a while, my friend, and you
+will admit that I am not raving. Think of his seeing that spotless
+image, not for a moment, for a day, in a happy dream, or a restless
+fever-fit; not as a poet in a five minutes' frenzy--time to snatch
+his phrase and scribble his immortal stanza; but for days together,
+while the slow labour of the brush went on, while the foul vapours of
+life interposed, and the fancy ached with tension, fixed, radiant,
+distinct, as we see it now! What a master, certainly! But ah! what
+a seer!"
+
+"Don't you imagine," I answered, "that he had a model, and that some
+pretty young woman--"
+
+"As pretty a young woman as you please! It doesn't diminish the
+miracle! He took his hint, of course, and the young woman, possibly,
+sat smiling before his canvas. But, meanwhile, the painter's idea
+had taken wings. No lovely human outline could charm it to vulgar
+fact. He saw the fair form made perfect; he rose to the vision
+without tremor, without effort of wing; he communed with it face to
+face, and resolved into finer and lovelier truth the purity which
+completes it as the fragrance completes the rose. That's what they
+call idealism; the word's vastly abused, but the thing is good. It's
+my own creed, at any rate. Lovely Madonna, model at once and muse, I
+call you to witness that I too am an idealist!"
+
+"An idealist, then," I said, half jocosely, wishing to provoke him to
+further utterance, "is a gentleman who says to Nature in the person
+of a beautiful girl, 'Go to, you are all wrong! Your fine is coarse,
+your bright is dim, your grace is gaucherie. This is the way you
+should have done it!' Is not the chance against him?"
+
+He turned upon me almost angrily, but perceiving the genial savour of
+my sarcasm, he smiled gravely. "Look at that picture," he said, "and
+cease your irreverent mockery! Idealism is THAT! There's no
+explaining it; one must feel the flame! It says nothing to Nature,
+or to any beautiful girl, that they will not both forgive! It says
+to the fair woman, 'Accept me as your artist friend, lend me your
+beautiful face, trust me, help me, and your eyes shall be half my
+masterpiece!' No one so loves and respects the rich realities of
+nature as the artist whose imagination caresses and flatters them.
+He knows what a fact may hold (whether Raphael knew, you may judge by
+his portrait, behind us there, of Tommaso Inghirami); bad his fancy
+hovers above it, as Anal hovered above the sleeping prince. There is
+only one Raphael, bad an artist may still be an artist. As I said
+last night, the days of illumination are gone; visions are rare; we
+have to look long to see them. But in meditation we may still
+cultivate the ideal; round it, smooth it, perfect it. The result--
+the result," (here his voice faltered suddenly, and he fixed his eyes
+for a moment on the picture; when they met my own again they were
+full of tears)--"the result may be less than this; but still it may
+be good, it may be GREAT!" he cried with vehemence. "It may hang
+somewhere, in after years, in goodly company, and keep the artist's
+memory warm. Think of being known to mankind after some such fashion
+as this! of hanging here through the slow centuries in the gaze of an
+altered world; living on and on in the cunning of an eye and hand
+that are part of the dust of ages, a delight and a law to remote
+generations; making beauty a force and purity an example!"
+
+"Heaven forbid," I said, smiling, "that I should take the wind out of
+your sails! But doesn't it occur to you that, besides being strong
+in his genius, Raphael was happy in a certain good faith of which we
+have lost the trick? There are people, I know, who deny that his
+spotless Madonnas are anything more than pretty blondes of that
+period enhanced by the Raphaelesque touch, which they declare is a
+profane touch. Be that as it may, people's religious and aesthetic
+needs went arm in arm, and there was, as I may say, a demand for the
+Blessed Virgin, visible and adorable, which must have given firmness
+to the artist's hand. I am afraid there is no demand now."
+
+My companion seemed painfully puzzled; he shivered, as it were, in
+this chilling blast of scepticism. Then shaking his head with
+sublime confidence--"There is always a demand!" he cried; "that
+ineffable type is one of the eternal needs of man's heart; but pious
+souls long for it in silence, almost in shame. Let it appear, and
+their faith grows brave. How SHOULD it appear in this corrupt
+generation? It cannot be made to order. It could, indeed, when the
+order came, trumpet-toned, from the lips of the Church herself, and
+was addressed to genius panting with inspiration. But it can spring
+now only from the soil of passionate labour and culture. Do you
+really fancy that while, from time to time, a man of complete
+artistic vision is born into the world, that image can perish? The
+man who paints it has painted everything. The subject admits of
+every perfection--form, colour, expression, composition. It can be
+as simple as you please, and yet as rich; as broad and pure, and yet
+as full of delicate detail. Think of the chance for flesh in the
+little naked, nestling child, irradiating divinity; of the chance for
+drapery in the chaste and ample garment of the mother! think of the
+great story you compress into that simple theme! Think, above all,
+of the mother's face and its ineffable suggestiveness, of the mingled
+burden of joy and trouble, the tenderness turned to worship, and the
+worship turned to far-seeing pity! Then look at it all in perfect
+line and lovely colour, breathing truth and beauty and mastery!"
+
+"Anch' io son pittore!" I cried. "Unless I am mistaken, you have a
+masterpiece on the stocks. If you put all that in, you will do more
+than Raphael himself did. Let me know when your picture is finished,
+and wherever in the wide world I may be, I will post back to Florence
+and pay my respects to--the MADONNA OF THE FUTURE!"
+
+He blushed vividly and gave a heavy sigh, half of protest, half of
+resignation. "I don't often mention my picture by name. I detest
+this modem custom of premature publicity. A great work needs
+silence, privacy, mystery even. And then, do you know, people are so
+cruel, so frivolous, so unable to imagine a man's wishing to paint a
+Madonna at this time of day, that I have been laughed at--laughed at,
+sir!" and his blush deepened to crimson. "I don't know what has
+prompted me to be so frank and trustful with you. You look as if you
+wouldn't laugh at me. My dear young man"--and he laid his hand on my
+arm--"I am worthy of respect. Whatever my talents may be, I am
+honest. There is nothing grotesque in a pure ambition, or in a life
+devoted to it."
+
+There was something so sternly sincere in his look and tone that
+further questions seemed impertinent. I had repeated opportunity to
+ask them, however, for after this we spent much time together. Daily
+for a fortnight, we met by appointment, to see the sights. He knew
+the city so well, he had strolled and lounged so often through its
+streets and churches and galleries, he was so deeply versed in its
+greater and lesser memories, so imbued with the local genius, that he
+was an altogether ideal valet de place, and I was glad enough to
+leave my Murray at home, and gather facts and opinions alike from his
+gossiping commentary. He talked of Florence like a lover, and
+admitted that it was a very old affair; he had lost his heart to her
+at first sight. "It's the fashion to talk of all cities as
+feminine," he said, "but, as a rule, it's a monstrous mistake. Is
+Florence of the same sex as New York, as Chicago? She is the sole
+perfect lady of them all; one feels towards her as a lad in his teens
+feels to some beautiful older woman with a 'history.' She fills you
+with a sort of aspiring gallantry." This disinterested passion
+seemed to stand my friend in stead of the common social ties; he led
+a lonely life, and cared for nothing but his work. I was duly
+flattered by his having taken my frivolous self into his favour, and
+by his generous sacrifice of precious hours to my society. We spent
+many of these hours among those early paintings in which Florence is
+so rich, returning ever and anon, with restless sympathies, to wonder
+whether these tender blossoms of art had not a vital fragrance and
+savour more precious than the full-fruited knowledge of the later
+works. We lingered often in the sepulchral chapel of San Lorenzo,
+and watched Michael Angelo's dim-visaged warrior sitting there like
+some awful Genius of Doubt and brooding behind his eternal mask upon
+the mysteries of life. We stood more than once in the little convent
+chambers where Fra Angelico wrought as if an angel indeed had held
+his hand, and gathered that sense of scattered dews and early bird-
+notes which makes an hour among his relics seem like a morning stroll
+in some monkish garden. We did all this and much more--wandered into
+dark chapels, damp courts, and dusty palace-rooms, in quest of
+lingering hints of fresco and lurking treasures of carving.
+
+I was more and more impressed with my companion's remarkable
+singleness of purpose. Everything was a pretext for some wildly
+idealistic rhapsody or reverie. Nothing could be seen or said that
+did not lead him sooner or later to a glowing discourse on the true,
+the beautiful, and the good. If my friend was not a genius, he was
+certainly a monomaniac; and I found as great a fascination in
+watching the odd lights and shades of his character as if he had been
+a creature from another planet. He seemed, indeed, to know very
+little of this one, and lived and moved altogether in his own little
+province of art. A creature more unsullied by the world it is
+impossible to conceive, and I often thought it a flaw in his artistic
+character that he had not a harmless vice or two. It amused me
+greatly at times to think that he was of our shrewd Yankee race; but,
+after all, there could be no better token of his American origin than
+this high aesthetic fever. The very heat of his devotion was a sign
+of conversion; those born to European opportunity manage better to
+reconcile enthusiasm with comfort. He had, moreover, all our native
+mistrust for intellectual discretion, and our native relish for
+sonorous superlatives. As a critic he was very much more generous
+than just, and his mildest terms of approbation were "stupendous,"
+"transcendent," and "incomparable." The small change of admiration
+seemed to him no coin for a gentleman to handle; and yet, frank as he
+was intellectually, he was personally altogether a mystery. His
+professions, somehow, were all half-professions, and his allusions to
+his work and circumstances left something dimly ambiguous in the
+background. He was modest and proud, and never spoke of his domestic
+matters. He was evidently poor; yet he must have had some slender
+independence, since he could afford to make so merry over the fact
+that his culture of ideal beauty had never brought him a penny. His
+poverty, I supposed, was his motive for neither inviting me to his
+lodging nor mentioning its whereabouts. We met either in some public
+place or at my hotel, where I entertained him as freely as I might
+without appearing to be prompted by charity. He seemed always
+hungry, and this was his nearest approach to human grossness. I made
+a point of asking no impertinent questions, but, each time we met, I
+ventured to make some respectful allusion to the magnum opus, to
+inquire, as it were, as to its health and progress. "We are getting
+on, with the Lord's help," he would say, with a grave smile. "We are
+doing well. You see, I have the grand advantage that I lose no time.
+These hours I spend with you are pure profit. They are SUGGESTIVE!
+Just as the truly religious soul is always at worship, the genuine
+artist is always in labour. He takes his property wherever he finds
+it, and learns some precious secret from every object that stands up
+in the light. If you but knew the rapture of observation! I gather
+with every glance some hint for light, for colour, or relief! When I
+get home, I pour out my treasures into the lap of toy Madonna. Oh, I
+am not idle! Nulla dies sine linea."
+
+I was introduced in Florence to an American lady whose drawing-room
+had long formed an attractive place of reunion for the foreign
+residents. She lived on a fourth floor, and she was not rich; but
+she offered her visitors very good tea, little cakes at option, and
+conversation not quite to match. Her conversation had mainly an
+aesthetic flavour, for Mrs. Coventry was famously ''artistic." Her
+apartment was a sort of Pitti Palace au petit pied. She possessed
+"early masters" by the dozen--a cluster of Peruginos in her dining-
+room, a Giotto in her boudoir, an Andrea del Sarto over her drawing-
+room chimney-piece. Surrounded by these treasures, and by
+innumerable bronzes, mosaics, majolica dishes, and little worm-eaten
+diptychs covered with angular saints on gilded backgrounds, our
+hostess enjoyed the dignity of a sort of high-priestess of the arts.
+She always wore on her bosom a huge miniature copy of the Madonna
+della Seggiola. Gaining her ear quietly one evening, I asked her
+whether she knew that remarkable man, Mr. Theobald.
+
+"Know him!" she exclaimed; "know poor Theobald! All Florence knows
+him, his flame-coloured locks, his black velvet coat, his
+interminable harangues on the beautiful, and his wondrous Madonna
+that mortal eye has never seen, and that mortal patience has quite
+given up expecting."
+
+"Really," I cried, "you don't believe in his Madonna?"
+
+"My dear ingenuous youth," rejoined my shrewd friend, "has he made a
+convert of you? Well, we all believed in him once; he came down upon
+Florence and took the town by storm. Another Raphael, at the very
+least, had been born among men, and the poor dear United States were
+to have the credit of him. Hadn't he the very hair of Raphael
+flowing down on his shoulders? The hair, alas, but not the head! We
+swallowed him whole, however; we hung upon his lips and proclaimed
+his genius on the house-tops. The women were all dying to sit to him
+for their portraits and be made immortal, like Leonardo's Joconde.
+We decided that his manner was a good deal like Leonardo's--
+mysterious, and inscrutable, and fascinating. Mysterious it
+certainly was; mystery was the beginning and the end of it. The
+months passed by, and the miracle hung fire; our master never
+produced his masterpiece. He passed hours in the galleries and
+churches, posturing, musing, and gazing; he talked more than ever
+about the beautiful, but he never put brush to canvas. We had all
+subscribed, as it were, to the great performance; but as it never
+came off people began to ask for their money again. I was one of the
+last of the faithful; I carried devotion so far as to sit to him for
+my head. If you could have seen the horrible creature he made of me,
+you would admit that even a woman with no more vanity than will tie
+her bonnet straight must have cooled off then. The man didn't know
+the very alphabet of drawing! His strong point, he intimated, was
+his sentiment; but is it a consolation, when one has been painted a
+fright, to know it has been done with peculiar gusto? One by one, I
+confess, we fell away from the faith, and Mr. Theobald didn't lift
+his little finger to preserve us. At the first hint that we were
+tired of waiting, and that we should like the show to begin, he was
+off in a huff. 'Great work requires time, contemplation, privacy,
+mystery! O ye of little faith!' We answered that we didn't insist
+on a great work; that the five-act tragedy might come at his
+convenience; that we merely asked for something to keep us from
+yawning, some inexpensive little lever de rideau. Hereupon the poor
+man took his stand as a genius misconceived and persecuted, an ame
+meconnue, and washed his hands of us from that hour! No, I believe
+he does me the honour to consider me the head and front of the
+conspiracy formed to nip his glory in the bud--a bud that has taken
+twenty years to blossom. Ask him if he knows me, and he will tell
+you I am a horribly ugly old woman, who has vowed his destruction
+because he won't paint her portrait as a pendant to Titian's Flora.
+I fancy that since then he has had none but chance followers,
+innocent strangers like yourself, who have taken him at his word.
+The mountain is still in labour; I have not heard that the mouse has
+been born. I pass him once in a while in the galleries, and he fixes
+his great dark eyes on me with a sublimity of indifference, as if I
+were a bad copy of a Sassoferrato! It is a long time ago now that I
+heard that he was making studies for a Madonna who was to be a resume
+of all the other Madonnas of the Italian school--like that antique
+Venus who borrowed a nose from one great image and an ankle from
+another. It's certainly a masterly idea. The parts may be fine, but
+when I think of my unhappy portrait I tremble for the whole. He has
+communicated this striking idea under the pledge of solemn secrecy to
+fifty chosen spirits, to every one he has ever been able to button-
+hole for five minutes. I suppose he wants to get an order for it,
+and he is not to blame; for Heaven knows how he lives. I see by your
+blush," my hostess frankly continued, "that you have been honoured
+with his confidence. You needn't be ashamed, my dear young man; a
+man of your age is none the worse for a certain generous credulity.
+Only allow me to give you a word of advice: keep your credulity out
+of your pockets! Don't pay for the picture till it's delivered. You
+have not been treated to a peep at it, I imagine! No more have your
+fifty predecessors in the faith. There are people who doubt whether
+there is any picture to be seen. I fancy, myself, that if one were
+to get into his studio, one would find something very like the
+picture in that tale of Balzac's--a mere mass of incoherent scratches
+and daubs, a jumble of dead paint!"
+
+I listened to this pungent recital in silent wonder. It had a
+painfully plausible sound, and was not inconsistent with certain shy
+suspicions of my own. My hostess was not only a clever woman, but
+presumably a generous one. I determined to let my judgment wait upon
+events. Possibly she was right; but if she was wrong, she was
+cruelly wrong! Her version of my friend's eccentricities made me
+impatient to see him again and examine him in the light of public
+opinion. On our next meeting I immediately asked him if he knew Mrs.
+Coventry. He laid his hand on my arm and gave me a sad smile. "Has
+she taxed YOUR gallantry at last?" he asked. "She's a foolish woman.
+She's frivolous and heartless, and she pretends to be serious and
+kind. She prattles about Giotto's second manner and Vittoria
+Colonna's liaison with 'Michael'--one would think that Michael lived
+across the way and was expected in to take a hand at whist--but she
+knows as little about art, and about the conditions of production, as
+I know about Buddhism. She profanes sacred words," he added more
+vehemently, after a pause. "She cares for you only as some one to
+band teacups in that horrible mendacious little parlour of hers, with
+its trumpery Peruginos! If you can't dash off a new picture every
+three days, and let her hand it round among her guests, she tells
+them in plain English that you are an impostor!"
+
+This attempt of mine to test Mrs. Coventry's accuracy was made in the
+course of a late afternoon walk to the quiet old church of San
+Miniato, on one of the hill-tops which directly overlook the city,
+from whose gates you are guided to it by a stony and cypress-bordered
+walk, which seems a very fitting avenue to a shrine. No spot is more
+propitious to lingering repose than the broad terrace in front of the
+church, where, lounging against the parapet, you may glance in slow
+alternation from the black and yellow marbles of the church facade,
+seamed and cracked with time and wind-sown with a tender flora of its
+own, down to the full domes and slender towers of Florence and over
+to the blue sweep of the wide-mouthed cup of mountains into whose
+hollow the little treasure city has been dropped. I had proposed, as
+a diversion from the painful memories evoked by Mrs. Coventry's name,
+that Theobald should go with me the next evening to the opera, where
+some rarely-played work was to be given. He declined, as I half
+expected, for I observed that he regularly kept his evenings in
+reserve, and never alluded to his manner of passing them. "You have
+reminded me before," I said, smiling, "of that charming speech of the
+Florentine painter in Alfred de Musset's 'Lorenzaccio': 'I do no
+harm to anyone. I pass my days in my studio, On Sunday I go to the
+Annunziata or to Santa Mario; the monks think I have a voice; they
+dress me in a white gown and a red cap, and I take a share in the
+choruses; sometimes I do a little solo: these are the only times I
+go into public. In the evening, I visit my sweetheart; when the
+night is fine, we pass it on her balcony.' I don't know whether you
+have a sweetheart, or whether she has a balcony. But if you are so
+happy, it's certainly better than trying to find a charm in a third-
+rate prima donna."
+
+He made no immediate response, but at last he turned to me solemnly.
+"Can you look upon a beautiful woman with reverent eyes?"
+
+"Really," I said, "I don't pretend to be sheepish, but I should be
+sorry to think I was impudent." And I asked him what in the world he
+meant. When at last I had assured him that I could undertake to
+temper admiration with respect, he informed me, with an air of
+religious mystery, that it was in his power to introduce me to the
+most beautiful woman in Italy--"A beauty with a soul!"
+
+"Upon my word," I cried, "you are extremely fortunate, and that is a
+most attractive description."
+
+"This woman's beauty," he went on, "is a lesson, a morality, a poem!
+It's my daily study."
+
+Of course, after this, I lost no time in reminding him of what,
+before we parted, had taken the shape of a promise. "I feel
+somehow," he had said, "as if it were a sort of violation of that
+privacy in which I have always contemplated her beauty. This is
+friendship, my friend. No hint of her existence has ever fallen from
+my lips. But with too great a familiarity we are apt to lose a sense
+of the real value of things, and you perhaps will throw some new
+light upon it and offer a fresher interpretation."
+
+We went accordingly by appointment to a certain ancient house in the
+heart of Florence--the precinct of the Mercato Vecchio--and climbed a
+dark, steep staircase, to the very summit of the edifice. Theobald's
+beauty seemed as loftily exalted above the line of common vision as
+his artistic ideal was lifted above the usual practice of men. He
+passed without knocking into the dark vestibule of a small apartment,
+and, flinging open an inner door, ushered me into a small saloon.
+The room seemed mean and sombre, though I caught a glimpse of white
+curtains swaying gently at an open window. At a table, near a lamp,
+sat a woman dressed in black, working at a piece of embroidery. As
+Theobald entered she looked up calmly, with a smile; but seeing me
+she made a movement of surprise, and rose with a kind of stately
+grace. Theobald stepped forward, took her hand and kissed it, with
+an indescribable air of immemorial usage. As he bent his head she
+looked at me askance, and I thought she blushed.
+
+"Behold the Serafina!" said Theobald, frankly, waving me forward.
+"This is a friend, and a lover of the arts," he added, introducing
+me. I received a smile, a curtsey, and a request to be seated.
+
+The most beautiful woman in Italy was a person of a generous Italian
+type and of a great simplicity of demeanour. Seated again at her
+lamp, with her embroidery, she seemed to have nothing whatever to
+say. Theobald, bending towards her in a sort of Platonic ecstasy,
+asked her a dozen paternally tender questions as to her health, her
+state of mind, her occupations, and the progress of her embroidery,
+which he examined minutely and summoned me to admire. It was some
+portion of an ecclesiastical vestment--yellow satin wrought with an
+elaborate design of silver and gold. She made answer in a full rich
+voice, but with a brevity which I hesitated whether to attribute to
+native reserve or to the profane constraint of my presence. She had
+been that morning to confession; she had also been to market, and had
+bought a chicken for dinner. She felt very happy; she had nothing to
+complain of except that the people for whom she was making her
+vestment, and who furnished her materials, should be willing to put
+such rotten silver thread into the garment, as one might say, of the
+Lord. From time to time, as she took her slow stitches, she raised
+her eyes and covered me with a glance which seemed at first to denote
+a placid curiosity, but in which, as I saw it repeated, I thought I
+perceived the dim glimmer of an attempt to establish an understanding
+with me at the expense of our companion. Meanwhile, as mindful as
+possible of Theobald's injunction of reverence, I considered the
+lady's personal claims to the fine compliment he had paid her.
+
+That she was indeed a beautiful woman I perceived, after recovering
+from the surprise of finding her without the freshness of youth. Her
+beauty was of a sort which, in losing youth, loses little of its
+essential charm, expressed for the most part as it was in form and
+structure, and, as Theobald would have said, in "composition." She
+was broad and ample, low-browed and large-eyed, dark and pale. Her
+thick brown hair hung low beside her cheek and ear, and seemed to
+drape her head with a covering as chaste and formal as the veil of a
+nun. The poise and carriage of her head were admirably free and
+noble, and they were the more effective that their freedom was at
+moments discreetly corrected by a little sanctimonious droop, which
+harmonised admirably with the level gaze of her dark and quiet eye.
+A strong, serene, physical nature, and the placid temper which comes
+of no nerves and no troubles, seemed this lady's comfortable portion.
+She was dressed in plain dull black, save for a sort of dark blue
+kerchief which was folded across her bosom and exposed a glimpse of
+her massive throat. Over this kerchief was suspended a little silver
+cross. I admired her greatly, and yet with a large reserve. A
+certain mild intellectual apathy belonged properly to her type of
+beauty, and had always seemed to round and enrich it; but this
+bourgeoise Egeria, if I viewed her right, betrayed a rather vulgar
+stagnation of mind. There might have been once a dim spiritual light
+in her face; but it had long since begun to wane. And furthermore,
+in plain prose, she was growing stout. My disappointment amounted
+very nearly to complete disenchantment when Theobald, as if to
+facilitate my covert inspection, declaring that the lamp was very
+dim, and that she would ruin her eyes without more light, rose and
+fetched a couple of candles from the mantelpiece, which he placed
+lighted on the table. In this brighter illumination I perceived that
+our hostess was decidedly an elderly woman. She was neither haggard,
+nor worn, nor gray; she was simply coarse. The "soul" which Theobald
+had promised seemed scarcely worth making such a point of; it was no
+deeper mystery than a sort of matronly mildness of lip and brow. I
+should have been ready even to declare that that sanctified bend of
+the head was nothing more than the trick of a person constantly
+working at embroidery. It occurred to me even that it was a trick of
+a less innocent sort; for, in spite of the mellow quietude of her
+wits, this stately needlewoman dropped a hint that she took the
+situation rather less seriously than her friend. When he rose to
+light the candles she looked across at me with a quick, intelligent
+smile, and tapped her forehead with her forefinger; then, as from a
+sudden feeling of compassionate loyalty to poor Theobald, I preserved
+a blank face, she gave a little shrug and resumed her work.
+
+What was the relation of this singular couple? Was he the most
+ardent of friends or the most reverent of lovers? Did she regard him
+as an eccentric swain, whose benevolent admiration of her beauty she
+was not ill pleased to humour at this small cost of having him climb
+into her little parlour and gossip of summer nights? With her decent
+and sombre dress, her simple gravity, and that fine piece of priestly
+needlework, she looked like some pious lay-member of a sisterhood,
+living by special permission outside her convent walls. Or was she
+maintained here aloft by her friend in comfortable leisure, so that
+he might have before him the perfect, eternal type, uncorrupted and
+untarnished by the struggle for existence? Her shapely hands, I
+observed, wore very fair and white; they lacked the traces of what is
+called honest toil.
+
+"And the pictures, how do they come on?" she asked of Theobald, after
+a long pause.
+
+"Finely, finely! I have here a friend whose sympathy and
+encouragement give me new faith and ardour."
+
+Our hostess turned to me, gazed at me a moment rather inscrutably,
+and then tapping her forehead with the gesture she had used a minute
+before, "He has a magnificent genius!" she said, with perfect
+gravity.
+
+"I am inclined to think so," I answered, with a smile.
+
+"Eh, why do you smile?" she cried. "If you doubt it, you must see
+the bambino!" And she took the lamp and conducted me to the other
+side of the room, where on the wall, in a plain black frame, hung a
+large drawing in red chalk. Beneath it was fastened a little howl
+for holy water. The drawing represented a very young child, entirely
+naked, half nestling back against his mother's gown, but with his two
+little arms outstretched, as if in the act of benediction. It was
+executed with singular freedom and power, and yet seemed vivid with
+the sacred bloom of infancy. A sort of dimpled elegance and grace,
+mingled with its boldness, recalled the touch of Correggio. "That's
+what he can do!" said my hostess. "It's the blessed little boy whom
+I lost. It's his very image, and the Signor Teobaldo gave it me as a
+gift. He has given me many things besides!"
+
+I looked at the picture for some time and admired it immensely.
+Turning back to Theobald I assured him that if it were hung among the
+drawings in the Uffizi and labelled with a glorious name it would
+hold its own. My praise seemed to give him extreme pleasure; he
+pressed my hands, and his eyes filled with tears. It moved him
+apparently with the desire to expatiate on the history of the
+drawing, for he rose and made his adieux to our companion, kissing
+her band with the same mild ardour as before. It occurred to me that
+the offer of a similar piece of gallantry on my own part might help
+me to know what manner of woman she was. When she perceived my
+intention she withdrew her hand, dropped her eyes solemnly, and made
+me a severe curtsey. Theobald took my arm and led me rapidly into
+the street.
+
+"And what do you think of the divine Serafina?" he cried with
+fervour.
+
+"It is certainly an excellent style of good looks!" I answered.
+
+He eyed me an instant askance, and then seemed hurried along by the
+current of remembrance. "You should have seen the mother and the
+child together, seen them as I first saw them--the mother with her
+head draped in a shawl, a divine trouble in her face, and the bambino
+pressed to her bosom. You would have said, I think, that Raphael had
+found his match in common chance. I was coming in, one summer night,
+from a long walk in the country, when I met this apparition at the
+city gate. The woman held out her hand. I hardly knew whether to
+say, 'What do you want?' or to fall down and worship. She asked for
+a little money. I saw that she was beautiful and pale; she might
+have stepped out of the stable of Bethlehem! I gave her money and
+helped her on her way into the town. I had guessed her story. She,
+too, was a maiden mother, and she had been turned out into the world
+in her shame. I felt in all my pulses that here was my subject
+marvellously realised. I felt like one of the old monkish artists
+who had had a vision. I rescued the poor creatures, cherished them,
+watched them as I would have done some precious work of art, some
+lovely fragment of fresco discovered in a mouldering cloister. In a
+month--as if to deepen and sanctify the sadness and sweetness of it
+all--the poor little child died. When she felt that he was going she
+held him up to me for ten minutes, and I made that sketch. You saw a
+feverish haste in it, I suppose; I wanted to spare the poor little
+mortal the pain of his position. After that I doubly valued the
+mother. She is the simplest, sweetest, most natural creature that
+ever bloomed in this brave old land of Italy. She lives in the
+memory of her child, in her gratitude for the scanty kindness I have
+been able to show her, and in her simple religion! She is not even
+conscious of her beauty; my admiration has never made her vain.
+Heaven knows that I have made no secret of it. You must have
+observed the singular transparency of her expression, the lovely
+modesty of her glance. And was there ever such a truly virginal
+brow, such a natural classic elegance in the wave of the hair and the
+arch of the forehead? I have studied her; I may say I know her. I
+have absorbed her little by little; my mind is stamped and imbued,
+and I have determined now to clinch the impression; I shall at last
+invite her to sit for me!"
+
+"'At last--at last'?" I repeated, in much amazement. "Do you mean
+that she has never done so yet?"
+
+"I have not really had--a--a sitting," said Theobald, speaking very
+slowly. "I have taken notes, you know; I have got my grand
+fundamental impression. That's the great thing! But I have not
+actually had her as a model, posed and draped and lighted, before my
+easel."
+
+What had become for the moment of my perception and my tact I am at a
+loss to say; in their absence I was unable to repress a headlong
+exclamation. I was destined to regret it. We had stopped at a
+turning, beneath a lamp. "My poor friend," I exclaimed, laying my
+hand on his shoulder, "you have DAWDLED! She's an old, old woman--
+for a Madonna!"
+
+It was as if I had brutally struck him; I shall never forget the
+long, slow, almost ghastly look of pain, with which he answered me.
+
+"Dawdled?--old, old?" he stammered. "Are you joking?"
+
+"Why, my dear fellow, I suppose you don't take her for a woman of
+twenty?"
+
+He drew a long breath and leaned against a house, looking at me with
+questioning, protesting, reproachful eyes. At last, starting
+forward, and grasping my arm--"Answer me solemnly: does she seem to
+you truly old? Is she wrinkled, is she faded, am I blind?"
+
+Then at last I understood the immensity of his illusion how, one by
+one, the noiseless years had ebbed away and left him brooding in
+charmed inaction, for ever preparing for a work for ever deferred.
+It seemed to me almost a kindness now to tell him the plain truth.
+"I should be sorry to say you are blind," I answered, "but I think
+you are deceived. You have lost time in effortless contemplation.
+Your friend was once young and fresh and virginal; but, I protest,
+that was some years ago. Still, she has de beaux restes. By all
+means make her sit for you!" I broke down; his face was too horribly
+reproachful.
+
+He took off his hat and stood passing his handkerchief mechanically
+over his forehead. "De beaux restes? I thank you for sparing me the
+plain English. I must make up my Madonna out of de beaux restes!
+What a masterpiece she will be! Old--old! Old--old!" he murmured.
+
+"Never mind her age," I cried, revolted at what I had done, "never
+mind my impression of her! You have your memory, your notes, your
+genius. Finish your picture in a month. I pronounce it beforehand a
+masterpiece, and I hereby offer you for it any sum you may choose to
+ask."
+
+He stared, but he seemed scarcely to understand me. "Old--old!" he
+kept stupidly repeating. "If she is old, what am I? If her beauty
+has faded, where--where is my strength? Has life been a dream? Have
+I worshipped too long--have I loved too well?" The charm, in truth,
+was broken. That the chord of illusion should have snapped at my
+light accidental touch showed how it had been weakened by excessive
+tension. The poor fellow's sense of wasted time, of vanished
+opportunity, seemed to roll in upon his soul in waves of darkness.
+He suddenly dropped his head and burst into tears.
+
+I led him homeward with all possible tenderness, but I attempted
+neither to check his grief, to restore his equanimity, nor to unsay
+the hard truth. When we reached my hotel I tried to induce him to
+come so.
+
+"We will drink a glass of wine," I said, smiling, "to the completion
+of the Madonna."
+
+With a violent effort he held up his head, mused for a moment with a
+formidably sombre frown, and then giving me his hand, "I will finish
+it," he cried, "in a month! No, in a fortnight! After all, I have
+it HERE!" And he tapped his forehead. "Of course she's old! She
+can afford to have it said of her--a woman who has made twenty years
+pass like a twelvemonth! Old--old! Why, sir, she shall be eternal!"
+
+I wished to see him safely to his own door, but he waved me back and
+walked away with an air of resolution, whistling and swinging his
+cane. I waited a moment, and then followed him at a distance, and
+saw him proceed to cross the Santa Trinita Bridge. When he reached
+the middle he suddenly paused, as if his strength had deserted him,
+and leaned upon the parapet gazing over into the river. I was
+careful to keep him in sight; I confess that I passed ten very
+nervous minutes. He recovered himself at last, and went his way,
+slowly and with hanging head.
+
+That I had really startled poor Theobald into a bolder use of his
+long-garnered stores of knowledge and taste, into the vulgar effort
+and hazard of production, seemed at first reason enough for his
+continued silence and absence; but as day followed day without his
+either calling or sending me a line, and without my meeting him in
+his customary haunts, in the galleries, in the Chapel at San Lorenzo,
+or strolling between the Arno side and the great hedge-screen of
+verdure which, along the drive of the Cascine, throws the fair
+occupants of barouche and phaeton into such becoming relief--as for
+more than a week I got neither tidings nor sight of him, I began to
+fear that I had fatally offended him, and that, instead of giving a
+wholesome impetus to his talent, I had brutally paralysed it. I had
+a wretched suspicion that I had made him ill. My stay at Florence
+was drawing to a close, and it was important that, before resuming my
+journey, I should assure myself of the truth. Theobald, to the last,
+had kept his lodging a mystery, and I was altogether at a loss where
+to look for him. The simplest course was to make inquiry of the
+beauty of the Mercato Vecchio, and I confess that unsatisfied
+curiosity as to the lady herself counselled it as well. Perhaps I
+had done her injustice, and she was as immortally fresh and fair as
+be conceived her. I was, at any rate, anxious to behold once more
+the ripe enchantress who had made twenty years pass as a twelvemonth.
+I repaired accordingly, one morning, to her abode, climbed the
+interminable staircase, and reached her door. It stood ajar, and as
+I hesitated whether to enter, a little serving-maid came clattering
+out with an empty kettle, as if she had just performed some savoury
+errand. The inner door, too, was open; so I crossed the little
+vestibule and entered the room in which I had formerly been received.
+It had not its evening aspect. The table, or one end of it, was
+spread for a late breakfast, and before it sat a gentleman--an
+individual, at least, of the male sex--doing execution upon a
+beefsteak and onions, and a bottle of wine. At his elbow, in
+friendly proximity, was placed the lady of the house. Her attitude,
+as I entered, was not that of an enchantress. With one hand she held
+in her lap a plate of smoking maccaroni; with the other she had
+lifted high in air one of the pendulous filaments of this succulent
+compound, and was in the act of slipping it gently down her throat.
+On the uncovered end of the table, facing her companion, were ranged
+half a dozen small statuettes, of some snuff- coloured substance
+resembling terra-cotta. He, brandishing his knife with ardour, was
+apparently descanting on their merits.
+
+Evidently I darkened the door. My hostess dropped liner maccaroni--
+into her mouth, and rose hastily with a harsh exclamation and a
+flushed face. I immediately perceived that the Signora Serafina's
+secret was even better worth knowing than I had supposed, and that
+the way to learn it was to take it for granted. I summoned my best
+Italian, I smiled and bowed and apologised for my intrusion; and in a
+moment, whether or no I had dispelled the lady's irritation, I had at
+least stimulated her prudence. I was welcome, she said; I must take
+a seat. This was another friend of hers--also an artist, she
+declared with a smile which was almost amiable. Her companion wiped
+his moustache and bowed with great civility. I saw at a glance that
+he was equal to the situation. He was presumably the author of the
+statuettes on the table, and he knew a money-spending forestiere when
+he saw one. He was a small wiry man, with a clever, impudent,
+tossed-up nose, a sharp little black eye, and waxed ends to his
+moustache. On the side of his head he wore jauntily a little crimson
+velvet smoking-cap, and I observed that his feet were encased in
+brilliant slippers. On Serafina's remarking with dignity that I was
+the friend of Mr. Theobald, he broke out into that fantastic French
+of which certain Italians are so insistently lavish, and declared
+with fervour that Mr. Theobald was a magnificent genius.
+
+"I am sure I don't know," I answered with a shrug. "If you are in a
+position to affirm it, you have the advantage of me. I have seen
+nothing from his hand but the bambino yonder, which certainly is
+fine."
+
+He declared that the bambino was a masterpiece, a pure Corregio. It
+was only a pity, he added with a knowing laugh, that the sketch had
+not been made on some good bit of honeycombed old panel. The stately
+Serafina hereupon protested that Mr. Theobald was the soul of honour,
+and that he would never lend himself to a deceit. "I am not a judge
+of genius," she said, "and I know nothing of pictures. I am but a
+poor simple widow; but I know that the Signor Teobaldo has the heart
+of an angel and the virtue of a saint. He is my benefactor," she
+added sententiously. The after-glow of the somewhat sinister flush
+with which she had greeted me still lingered in her cheek, and
+perhaps did not favour her beauty; I could not but fancy it a wise
+custom of Theobald's to visit her only by candle-light. She was
+coarse, and her pour adorer was a poet.
+
+"I have the greatest esteem for him," I said; "it is for this reason
+that I have been uneasy at not seeing him for ten days. Have you
+seen him? Is he perhaps ill?"
+
+"Ill! Heaven forbid!" cried Serafina, with genuine vehemence.
+
+Her companion uttered a rapid expletive, and reproached her with not
+having been to see him. She hesitated a moment; then she simpered
+the least bit and bridled. "He comes to see me--without reproach!
+But it would not be the same for me to go to him, though, indeed, you
+may almost call him a man of holy life."
+
+"He has the greatest admiration for you," I said. "He would have
+been honoured by your visit."
+
+She looked at me a moment sharply. "More admiration than you. Admit
+that!" Of course I protested with all the eloquence at my command,
+and my mysterious hostess then confessed that she had taken no fancy
+to me on my former visit, and that, Theobald not having returned, she
+believed I had poisoned his mind against her. "It would be no
+kindness to the poor gentleman, I can tell you that," she said. "He
+has come to see me every evening for years. It's a long friendship!
+No one knows him as well as I."
+
+"I don't pretend to know him or to understand him," I said. "He's a
+mystery! Nevertheless, he seems to me a little--" And I touched my
+forehead and waved my hand in the air.
+
+Serafina glanced at her companion a moment, as if for inspiration.
+He contented himself with shrugging his shoulders as he filled his
+glass again. The padrona hereupon gave me a more softly insinuating
+smile than would have seemed likely to bloom on so candid a brow.
+"It's for that that I love him!" she said. "The world has so little
+kindness for such persons. It laughs at them, and despises them, and
+cheats them. He is too good for this wicked life! It's his fancy
+that he finds a little Paradise up here in my poor apartment. If he
+thinks so, how can I help it? He has a strange belief--really, I
+ought to he ashamed to tell you--that I resemble the Blessed Virgin:
+Heaven forgive me! I let him think what he pleases, so long as it
+makes him happy. He was very kind to me once, and I am not one that
+forgets a favour. So I receive him every evening civilly, and ask
+after his health, and let him look at me on this side and that! For
+that matter, I may say it without vanity, I was worth looking at
+once! And he's not always amusing, poor man! He sits sometimes for
+an hour without speaking a word, or else he talks away, without
+stopping, on art and nature, and beauty and duty, and fifty fine
+things that are all so much Latin to me. I beg you to understand
+that he has never said a word to me that I mightn't decently listen
+to. He may be a little cracked, but he's one of the blessed saints."
+
+"Eh!" cried the man, "the blessed saints were all a little cracked!"
+
+Serafina, I fancied, left part of her story untold; but she told
+enough of it to make poor Theobald's own statement seem intensely
+pathetic in its exalted simplicity. "It's a strange fortune,
+certainly," she went on, "to have such a friend as this dear man--a
+friend who is less than a lover and more than a friend." I glanced
+at her companion, who preserved an impenetrable smile, twisted the
+end of his moustache, and disposed of a copious mouthful. Was HE
+less than a lover? "But what will you have?" Serafina pursued. "In
+this hard world one must not ask too many questions; one must take
+what comes and keep what one gets. I have kept my good friend for
+twenty years, and I do hope that, at this time of day, signore, you
+have not come to turn him against me!"
+
+I assured her that I had no such design, and that I should vastly
+regret disturbing Mr. Theobald's habits or convictions. On the
+contrary, I was alarmed about him, and I should immediately go in
+search of him. She gave me his address, and a florid account of her
+sufferings at his non-appearance. She had not been to him for
+various reasons; chiefly because she was afraid of displeasing him,
+as he had always made such a mystery of his home. "You might have
+sent this gentleman!" I ventured to suggest.
+
+"Ah," cried the gentleman, "he admires the Signora Serafina, but he
+wouldn't admire me." And then, confidentially, with his finger on
+his nose, "He's a purist!"
+
+I was about to withdraw, after having promised that I would inform
+the Signora Serafina of my friend's condition, when her companion,
+who had risen from table and girded his loins apparently for the
+onset, grasped me gently by the arm, and led me before the row of
+statuettes. "I perceive by your conversation, signore, that you are
+a patron of the arts. Allow me to request your honourable attention
+for these modest products of my own ingenuity. They are brand-new,
+fresh from my atelier, and have never been exhibited in public. I
+have brought them here to receive the verdict of this dear lady, who
+is a good critic, for all she may pretend to the contrary. I am the
+inventor of this peculiar style of statuette--of subject, manner,
+material, everything. Touch them, I pray you; handle them freely--
+you needn't fear. Delicate as they look, it is impossible they
+should break! My various creations have met with great success.
+They are especially admired by Americans. I have sent them all over
+Europe--to London, Paris, Vienna! You may have observed some little
+specimens in Paris, on the Boulevard, in a shop of which they
+constitute the specialty. There is always a crowd about the window.
+They form a very pleasing ornament for the mantel-shelf of a gay
+young bachelor, for the boudoir of a pretty woman. You couldn't make
+a prettier present to a person with whom you wished to exchange a
+harmless joke. It is not classic art, signore, of course; but,
+between ourselves, isn't classic art sometimes rather a bore?
+Caricature, burlesque, la charge, as the French say, has hitherto
+been confined to paper, to the pen and pencil. Now, it has been my
+inspiration to introduce it into statuary. For this purpose I have
+invented a peculiar plastic compound which you will permit me not to
+divulge. That's my secret, signore! It's as light, you perceive, as
+cork, and yet as firm as alabaster! I frankly confess that I really
+pride myself as much on this little stroke of chemical ingenuity as
+upon the other element of novelty in my creations--my types. What do
+you say to my types, signore? The idea is bold; does it strike you
+as happy? Cats and monkeys--monkeys and cats--all human life is
+there! Human life, of course, I mean, viewed with the eye of the
+satirist! To combine sculpture and satire, signore, has been my
+unprecedented ambition. I flatter myself that I have not egregiously
+failed."
+
+As this jaunty Juvenal of the chimney-piece delivered himself of his
+persuasive allocution, he took up his little groups successively from
+the table, held them aloft, turned them about, rapped them with his
+knuckles, and gazed at them lovingly, with his head on one side.
+They consisted each of a cat and a monkey, fantastically draped, in
+some preposterously sentimental conjunction. They exhibited a
+certain sameness of motive, and illustrated chiefly the different
+phases of what, in delicate terms, may be called gallantry and
+coquetry; but they were strikingly clever and expressive, and were at
+once very perfect cats and monkeys and very natural men and women. I
+confess, however, that they failed to amuse me. I was doubtless not
+in a mood to enjoy them, for they seemed to me peculiarly cynical and
+vulgar. Their imitative felicity was revolting. As I looked askance
+at the complacent little artist, brandishing them between finger and
+thumb and caressing them with an amorous eye, he seemed to me himself
+little more than an exceptionally intelligent ape. I mustered an
+admiring grin, however, and he blew another blast. "My figures are
+studied from life! I have a little menagerie of monkeys whose
+frolics I contemplate by the hour. As for the cats, one has only to
+look out of one's back window! Since I have begun to examine these
+expressive little brutes, I have made many profound observations.
+Speaking, signore, to a man of imagination, I may say that my little
+designs are not without a philosophy of their own. Truly, I don't
+know whether the cats and monkeys imitate us, or whether it's we who
+imitate them." I congratulated him on his philosophy, and he
+resumed: "You will do use the honour to admit that I have handled my
+subjects with delicacy. Eh, it was needed, signore! I have been
+free, but not too free--eh? Just a hint, you know! You may see as
+much or as little as you please. These little groups, however, are
+no measure of my invention. If you will favour me with a call at my
+studio, I think that you will admit that my combinations are really
+infinite. I likewise execute figures to command. You have perhaps
+some little motive--the fruit of your philosophy of life, signore--
+which you would like to have interpreted. I can promise to work it
+up to your satisfaction; it shall be as malicious as you please!
+Allow me to present you with my card, and to remind you that my
+prices are moderate. Only sixty francs for a little group like that.
+My statuettes are as durable as bronze--aere perennius, signore--and,
+between ourselves, I think they are more amusing!"
+
+As I pocketed his card I glanced at Madonna Serafina, wondering
+whether she had an eye for contrasts. She had picked up one of the
+little couples and was tenderly dusting it with a feather broom.
+
+What I had just seen and heard had so deepened my compassionate
+interest in my deluded friend that I took a summary leave, making my
+way directly to the house designated by this remarkable woman. It
+was in an obscure corner of the opposite side of the town, and
+presented a sombre and squalid appearance. An old woman in the
+doorway, on my inquiring for Theobald, ushered me in with a mumbled
+blessing and an expression of relief at the poor gentleman having a
+friend. His lodging seemed to consist of a single room at the top of
+the house. On getting no answer to my knock, I opened the door,
+supposing that he was absent, so that it gave me a certain shock to
+find him sitting there helpless and dumb. He was seated near the
+single window, facing an easel which supported a large canvas. On my
+entering he looked up at me blankly, without changing his position,
+which was that of absolute lassitude and dejection, his arms loosely
+folded, his legs stretched before him, his head hanging on his
+breast. Advancing into the room I perceived that his face vividly
+corresponded with his attitude. He was pale, haggard, and unshaven,
+and his dull and sunken eye gazed at me without a spark of
+recognition. I had been afraid that he would greet me with fierce
+reproaches, as the cruelly officious patron who had turned his
+contentment to bitterness, and I was relieved to find that my
+appearance awakened no visible resentment. "Don't you know me?" I
+asked, as I put out my hand. "Have you already forgotten me?"
+
+He made no response, kept his position stupidly, and left me staring
+about the room. It spoke most plaintively for itself. Shabby,
+sordid, naked, it contained, beyond the wretched bed, but the
+scantiest provision for personal comfort. It was bedroom at once and
+studio--a grim ghost of a studio. A few dusty casts and prints on
+the walls, three or four old canvases turned face inward, and a
+rusty-looking colour-box, formed, with the easel at the window, the
+sum of its appurtenances. The place savoured horribly of poverty.
+Its only wealth was the picture on the easel, presumably the famous
+Madonna. Averted as this was from the door, I was unable to see its
+face; but at last, sickened by the vacant misery of the spot, I
+passed behind Theobald, eagerly and tenderly. I can hardly say that
+I was surprised at what I found--a canvas that was a mere dead blank,
+cracked and discoloured by time. This was his immortal work! Though
+not surprised, I confess I was powerfully moved, and I think that for
+five minutes I could not have trusted myself to speak. At last my
+silent nearness affected him; he stirred and turned, and then rose
+and looked at me with a slowly kindling eye. I murmured some kind
+ineffective nothings about his being ill and needing advice and care,
+but he seemed absorbed in the effort to recall distinctly what had
+last passed between us. "You were right," he said, with a pitiful
+smile, "I am a dawdler! I am a failure! I shall do nothing more in
+this world. You opened my eyes; and, though the truth is bitter, I
+bear you no grudge. Amen! I have been sitting here for a week, face
+to face with the truth, with the past, with my weakness and poverty
+and nullity. I shall never touch a brush! I believe I have neither
+eaten nor slept. Look at that canvas!" he went on, as I relieved my
+emotion in an urgent request that he would come home with me and
+dine. "That was to have contained my masterpiece! Isn't it a
+promising foundation? The elements of it are all HERE. And he
+tapped his forehead with that mystic confidence which had marked the
+gesture before. "If I could only transpose them into some brain that
+has the hand, the will! Since I have been sitting here taking stock
+of my intellects, I have come to believe that I have the material for
+a hundred masterpieces. But my hand is paralysed now, and they will
+never be painted. I never began! I waited and waited to be worthier
+to begin, and wasted my life in preparation. While I fancied my
+creation was growing it was dying. I have taken it all too hard!
+Michael Angelo didn't, when he went at the Lorenzo! He did his best
+at a venture, and his venture is immortal. THAT'S mine!" And he
+pointed with a gesture I shall never forget at the empty canvas. "I
+suppose we are a genus by ourselves in the providential scheme--we
+talents that can't act, that can't do nor dare! We take it out in
+talk, in plans and promises, in study, in visions! But our visions,
+let me tell you," he cried, with a toss of his head, "have a way of
+being brilliant, and a man has not lived in vain who has seen the
+things I have seen! Of course you will not believe in them when that
+bit of worm-eaten cloth is all I have to show for them; but to
+convince you, to enchant and astound the world, I need only the hand
+of Raphael. His brain I already have. A pity, you will say, that I
+haven't his modesty! Ah, let me boast and babble now; it's all I
+have left! I am the half of a genius! Where in the wide world is my
+other half? Lodged perhaps in the vulgar soul, the cunning, ready
+fingers of some dull copyist or some trivial artisan, who turns out
+by the dozen his easy prodigies of touch! But it's not for me to
+sneer at him; he at least does something. He's not a dawdler! Well
+for me if I had been vulgar and clever and reckless, if I could have
+shut my eyes and taken my leap."
+
+What to say to the poor fellow, what to do for him, seemed hard to
+determine; I chiefly felt that I must break the spell of his present
+inaction, and remove him from the haunted atmosphere of the little
+room it was such a cruel irony to call a studio. I cannot say I
+persuaded him to come out with me; he simply suffered himself to be
+led, and when we began to walk in the open air I was able to
+appreciate his pitifully weakened condition. Nevertheless, he seemed
+in a certain way to revive, and murmured at last that he should like
+to go to the Pitti Gallery. I shall never forget our melancholy
+stroll through those gorgeous halls, every picture on whose walls
+seemed, even to my own sympathetic vision, to glow with a sort of
+insolent renewal of strength and lustre. The eyes and lips of the
+great portraits appeared to smile in ineffable scorn of the dejected
+pretender who had dreamed of competing with their triumphant authors;
+the celestial candour, even, of the Madonna of the Chair, as we
+paused in perfect silence before her, was tinged with the sinister
+irony of the women of Leonardo. Perfect silence, indeed, marked our
+whole progress--the silence of a deep farewell; for I felt in all my
+pulses, as Theobald, leaning on my arm, dragged one heavy foot after
+the other, that he was looking his last. When we came out he was so
+exhausted that instead of taking him to my hotel to dine, I called a
+carriage and drove him straight to his own poor lodging. He had sunk
+into an extraordinary lethargy; he lay back in the carriage, with his
+eyes closed, as pale as death, his faint breathing interrupted at
+intervals by a sudden gasp, like a smothered sob or a vain attempt to
+speak. With the help of the old woman who had admitted me before,
+and who emerged from a dark back court, I contrived to lead him up
+the long steep staircase and lay him on his wretched bed. To her I
+gave him in charge, while I prepared in all haste to seek a
+physician. But she followed me out of the room with a pitiful
+clasping of her hands.
+
+"Poor, dear, blessed gentleman," she murmured; "is he dying?"
+
+"Possibly. How long has he been thus?"
+
+"Since a certain night he passed ten days ago. I came up in the
+morning to make his poor bed, and found him sitting up in his clothes
+before that great canvas he keeps there. Poor, dear, strange man, he
+says his prayers to it! He had not been to bed, nor since then,
+properly! What has happened to him? Has he found out about the
+Serafina?" she whispered, with a glittering eye and a toothless grin.
+
+"Prove at least that one old woman can be faithful," I said, "and
+watch him well till I come back." My return was delayed, through the
+absence of the English physician, who was away on a round of visits,
+and whom I vainly pursued from house to house before I overtook him.
+I brought him to Theobald's bedside none too soon. A violent fever
+had seized our patient, and the case was evidently grave. A couple
+of hours later I knew that he had brain fever. From this moment I
+was with him constantly; but I am far from wishing to describe his
+illness. Excessively painful to witness, it was happily brief. Life
+burned out in delirium. One night in particular that I passed at his
+pillow, listening to his wild snatches of regret, of aspiration, of
+rapture and awe at the phantasmal pictures with which his brain
+seemed to swarm, comes back to my memory now like some stray page
+from a lost masterpiece of tragedy. Before a week was over we had
+buried him in the little Protestant cemetery on the way to Fiesole.
+The Signora Serafina, whom I had caused to be informed of his
+illness, had come in person, I was told, to inquire about its
+progress; but she was absent from his funeral, which was attended by
+but a scanty concourse of mourners. Half a dozen old Florentine
+sojourners, in spite of the prolonged estrangement which had preceded
+his death, had felt the kindly impulse to honour his grave. Among
+them was my friend Mrs. Coventry, whom I found, on my departure,
+waiting in her carriage at the gate of the cemetery.
+
+"Well," she said, relieving at last with a significant smile the
+solemnity of our immediate greeting, "and the great Madonna? Have
+you seen her, after all?"
+
+"I have seen her," I said; "she is mine--by bequest. But I shall
+never show her to you."
+
+"And why not, pray?"
+
+"My dear Mrs. Coventry, you would not understand her!"
+
+"Upon my word, you are polite."
+
+"Excuse me; I am sad and vexed and bitter." And with reprehensible
+rudeness I marched away. I was excessively impatient to leave
+Florence; my friend's dark spirit seemed diffused through all things.
+I had packed my trunk to start for Rome that night, and meanwhile, to
+beguile my unrest, I aimlessly paced the streets. Chance led me at
+last to the church of San Lorenzo. Remembering poor Theobald's
+phrase about Michael Angelo--"He did his best at a venture"--I went
+in and turned my steps to the chapel of the tombs. Viewing in
+sadness the sadness of its immortal treasures, I fancied, while I
+stood there, that they needed no ampler commentary than these simple
+words. As I passed through the church again to leave it, a woman,
+turning away from one of the side altars, met me face to face. The
+black shawl depending from her head draped picturesquely the handsome
+visage of Madonna Serafina. She stopped as she recognised me, and I
+saw that she wished to speak. Her eye was bright, and her ample
+bosom heaved in a way that seemed to portend a certain sharpness of
+reproach. But the expression of my own face, apparently, drew the
+sting from her resentment, and she addressed me in a tone in which
+bitterness was tempered by a sort of dogged resignation. "I know it
+was you, now, that separated us," she said. "It was a pity he ever
+brought you to see me! Of course, you couldn't think of me as he
+did. Well, the Lord gave him, the Lord has taken him. I have just
+paid for a nine days' mass for his soul. And I can tell you this,
+signore--I never deceived him. Who put it into his head that I was
+made to live on holy thoughts and fine phrases? It was his own
+fancy, and it pleased him to think so.--Did he suffer much?" she
+added more softly, after a pause.
+
+"His sufferings were great, but they were short."
+
+"And did he speak of me?" She had hesitated and dropped her eyes;
+she raised them with her question, and revealed in their sombre
+stillness a gleam of feminine confidence which, for the moment,
+revived and illumined her beauty. Poor Theobald! Whatever name he
+had given his passion, it was still her fine eyes that had charmed
+him.
+
+"Be contented, madam," I answered, gravely.
+
+She dropped her eyes again and was silent. Then exhaling a full rich
+sigh, as she gathered her shawl together--"He was a magnificent
+genius!"
+
+I bowed, and we separated.
+
+Passing through a narrow side street on my way back to my hotel, I
+perceived above a doorway a sign which it seemed to me I had read
+before. I suddenly remembered that it was identical with the
+superscription of a card that I had carried for an hour in my
+waistcoat pocket. On the threshold stood the ingenious artist whose
+claims to public favour were thus distinctly signalised, smoking a
+pipe in the evening air, and giving the finishing polish with a bit
+of rag to one of his inimitable "combinations." I caught the
+expressive curl of a couple of tails. He recognised me, removed his
+little red cap with a most obsequious bow, and motioned me to enter
+his studio. I returned his salute and passed on, vexed with the
+apparition. For a week afterwards, whenever I was seized among the
+ruins of triumphant Rome with some peculiarly poignant memory of
+Theobald's transcendent illusions and deplorable failure, I seemed to
+hear a fantastic, impertinent murmur, "Cats and monkeys, monkeys and
+cats; all human life there!"
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext The Madonna of the Future, by Henry James
+
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