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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69227 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69227)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Sir John Everett Millais, by A. L.
-Baldry
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Sir John Everett Millais
-
-Author: A. L. Baldry
-
-Release Date: October 24, 2022 [eBook #69227]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIR JOHN EVERETT
-MILLAIS ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: A YEOMAN OF THE GUARD.]
-
-
-
- Bell's Miniature Series of Painters
-
-
- SIR JOHN EVERETT
- MILLAIS
-
-
- BY A. L. BALDRY
-
-
-
- LONDON
- GEORGE BELL & SONS
- 1908
-
-
-
-
- First Published, December, 1902.
- Reprinted, December, 1907.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- Life of the Artist
- The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
- Later Developments
- Last Years
-
- The Art of Millais
-
- Our Illustrations
-
- The Chief Works of Millais in Public Galleries, etc.
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-A Yeoman of the Guard ... _Frontispiece_
-
-Christ in the House of His Parents
-
-A Souvenir of Velazquez
-
-The Vale of Rest
-
-Ophelia
-
-Autumn Leaves
-
-The North-West Passage
-
-Thomas Carlyle
-
-
-
-
-SIR JOHN MILLAIS
-
-
-
-HIS LIFE
-
-Although John Everett Millais was born, on June 8, 1829, at Portland
-Place, Southampton, his father was an inhabitant of Jersey, and a
-member of a family which had been settled in that island from a date
-anterior to the Norman conquest. The first five years of the child's
-life were spent in Jersey, but in 1835 he was taken by his parents to
-Dinan, in Brittany, where he began, by his sketches of the scenery of
-the place and the types of the people, to give the first convincing
-proofs of the remarkable artistic capacity that was in him. These
-early efforts were so surprising, and attracted so much attention
-outside his family circle, that when he was not more than nine years
-old he was brought to London for an expert opinion on his chances in
-the profession for which he seemed predestined. The President of the
-Royal Academy, Sir Martin Archer Shee, was consulted, and his
-encouraging declaration, that "Nature had provided for the boy's
-success," decided the future of the young artist, who was at once
-allowed to begin serious study.
-
-In 1838 he entered the drawing-school in Bloomsbury which was carried
-on by Henry Sass, and regarded as the best available place for the
-training of budding genius. In the same year he took the silver
-medal of the Society of Arts, for a drawing from the antique, and
-caused quite a sensation when he appeared, at the distribution of the
-prizes, to receive his award from the Duke of Sussex, who was
-presiding. The surprise of the spectators is said to have been
-unbounded when "Mr. Millais" came forward, a small child in a
-pinafore, to answer to his name, and even the officials at first
-found it hard to believe that he could be really the winner of the
-medal.
-
-For two years he remained under the tuition of Mr. Sass, and, helped
-by his teaching and by a good deal of work from the casts in the
-British Museum, the boy developed so rapidly that when he was only
-eleven years old he gained admission to the Royal Academy Schools,
-the youngest student, it is said, that has ever been received into
-them. His career there was a series of successes. For six years he
-laboured indefatigably, and plainly proved his ability by taking
-prize after prize, beginning with a silver medal in 1843, and ending,
-in 1847, with the gold medal for a historical picture, _The Tribe of
-Benjamin seizing the Daughters of Shiloh_.
-
-Subjects of this type seem at that time to have attracted him
-strongly, and to have occupied a great deal of his attention, for in
-1846 he had painted, and exhibited at the Academy, _Pizarro seizing
-the Inca of Peru_, which is now in the South Kensington Museum, and
-in the following year another study of violent action, _Elgiva seized
-by Order of Archbishop Odo_. To 1847 also belongs the great design,
-_The Widow bestowing her Mite_, for the Westminster Hall competition,
-a canvas fourteen feet long by ten feet high, covered with life-size
-figures. Such an effort speaks well for the energy and ambition of a
-lad of eighteen, who could within the space of a few months carry out
-so vast an undertaking in addition to the _Elgiva_, and his gold
-medal picture.
-
-So far his progress had been, from the point of view of his elder
-contemporaries, very promising and satisfactory. He had proved
-himself to be possessed of unusual gifts; and apparently historical
-art was to have in him an exponent of rather a rare type, a painter
-who would carry on its traditions with some degree of vitality. But
-really he had only been feeling his way, and, not having had time as
-yet to analyse his inclinations, he had temporarily accepted, with
-youthful imitativeness, the precepts of his teachers and
-fellow-students. It did not take him long to discover that he was on
-the wrong track, and to decide that there was in another direction a
-far better opportunity for the assertion of his own independent
-convictions.
-
-About the middle of the year 1848, he, and his friends Rossetti and
-Holman Hunt, inspired partly by the example of Ford Madox Brown, and
-partly by their own study of the works of the Italian Primitives who,
-before the time of Raphael, had laboured with devout and simple
-naturalism, decided that the principles which guided the early
-masters were being deliberately ignored by the modern men. So these
-three youths agreed among themselves to break away from most of the
-regulations by which they had been bound in their student days and to
-formulate a new art creed of their own. From this agreement sprang
-into existence an association, that, despite the small number of its
-members, and the shortness of its life, has left upon the history of
-the British School a mark clear and ineffaceable.
-
-
-
-THE PRE-RAPHAELITE BROTHERHOOD
-
-The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, as this association was called by way
-of declaring the intentions and ambitions of the men who belonged to
-it, was formally constituted during the autumn of 1848. It included,
-in addition to the three originators, two other painters, James
-Collinson and F. G. Stephens; a sculptor, Thomas Woolner; and a
-writer, William Michael Rossetti, who acted as secretary of the
-Brotherhood. Ford Madox Brown never became a member, although he
-entirely sympathised with the artistic aims of the group, for he had,
-it is said, doubts concerning the utility of such a banding together,
-and was more inclined to favour independent action; but several other
-young painters, who were never formally of the company, gave it
-practical support, and openly adopted its methods. Indeed, the list
-of these outside sympathisers soon became a long one; it included
-such able workers as William Bell Scott, Arthur Hughes, Thomas
-Seddon, W. L. Windus, and W. H. Deverell, who were directly inspired
-by the beliefs of the Brotherhood, and if, as would be quite
-legitimate, it were extended to take in all the others whose first
-essays in art were controlled by Pre-Raphaelite principles, an
-astonishing number of artists who have reached high rank in their
-profession could be added to it.
-
-[Illustration: CHRIST IN THE HOUSE OF HIS PARENTS.]
-
-At first the inner significance of the Pre-Raphaelite movement was
-lost upon the general public. When, in 1849, Millais exhibited at
-the Academy his _Lorenzo and Isabella_, by which his adoption of the
-new creed was plainly enough asserted, the picture was not unkindly
-received. It was ridiculed, perhaps, by the people who realised that
-it showed an artistic intention somewhat unlike that which was then
-generally prevalent; but its novelty of manner was put down to the
-youth and inexperience of the artist, and was regarded as a minor
-defect that a few more years of practice would remedy.
-
-But in January, 1850, the Brotherhood took a step that very
-effectually removed any doubts that were felt by the public about the
-meaning of such canvases. They began to issue a monthly magazine,
-called "The Germ," in which they and their friends stated with
-sufficient frankness what Pre-Raphaelitism really meant, and what
-were the opinions that they professed. As a commercial speculation
-the magazine must be reckoned a failure, for after the fourth number
-it ceased to be issued, and at no time had it any general
-circulation. It served its purpose, however, of making quite
-intelligible the creed of its promoters; and it gave to the world
-certain etchings of Holman Hunt, Collinson, Madox Brown, and
-Deverell, and much literary matter by Coventry Patmore, Woolner, W.
-B. Scott, F. G. stephens, the two Rossettis and their sister
-Christina, and some other writers. An etching was prepared by
-Millais for the fifth number, an illustration of a story that Dante
-Rossetti was to write; but this fifth number did not appear.
-
-Though "The Germ" died so quickly for want of support, it had fully
-accomplished what was required of it in the way of propagandism.
-When the next batch of Pre-Raphaelite efforts was exhibited in the
-spring of 1850 there was no trace of hesitation or toleration in the
-comments of the older artists and the press. A perfect storm of
-abuse broke out. Against _Ferdinand lured by Ariel_ and _Christ in
-the House of His Parents_, which were the chief pictures sent by
-Millais to the Academy, the bitterest attack was directed.
-Everything that could be said or done to minimise their influence,
-and to discredit the motives by which they were inspired, was
-lavished upon them without restraint, in a kind of frenzy of
-anguished excitement.
-
-All this, however, was mild in comparison with the agitation in the
-following year, when it was seen that the Pre-Raphaelites, instead of
-bowing to the storm and recanting their opinions, were prepared to go
-to even greater lengths in the avowal of their convictions. The
-opposition had done its best to howl them down, and to frighten them
-by ferocious threats; but all this expenditure of misapplied energy
-had had no result. Millais exhibited _The Woodman's Daughter_, _The
-Return of the Dove to the Ark_, and _Mariana in the Moated Grange_,
-and Holman Hunt _Valentine and Sylvia_; while the other members of
-the group gave equally definite proofs of their intention to
-persevere in the course they had adopted.
-
-Alarm at this defiance, and perhaps an uneasy consciousness of the
-real strength of a movement that gave so little sign of yielding to
-pressure, drove the supporters of the existing condition of affairs
-to almost incredible lengths. They demanded that these canvases
-should be removed from the exhibition of the Academy, summarily
-expelled as outrages on good taste; they urged the students in the
-art schools to shun the Brotherhood and everyone connected with it;
-they descended to the lowest depths of misrepresentation, and drew
-the line at nothing in the way of exaggeration. Calm and critical
-judgment ceased, for the moment, to exist, and a hysterical absence
-of balance threw into confusion even the best ordered and judicious
-minds.
-
-This outburst had one immediate effect, an unpleasant one for the
-young artists, it checked for a while the sale of their pictures.
-_Christ in the House of His Parents_ had been painted on commission
-for a well-known dealer, and it remained for many years on his hands;
-but _Ferdinand lured by Ariel_, which had also been commissioned, was
-refused by the intending purchaser. It was afterwards sold to Mr.
-Richard Ellison, a collector of rare discrimination, who was
-introduced to Millais by a mutual friend. Other canvases belonging
-to the same period either returned from the exhibitions to the
-artist's studio, or were parted with at low prices and on terms of
-payment none too favourable.
-
-But after a little while things began to mend. The attack exhausted
-itself by its very excess of virulence; and here and there strong men
-came forward to champion the cause of the Pre-Raphaelites. Mr.
-Ruskin, especially, appeared in the arena as an enthusiastic advocate
-of an undertaking that was in every way calculated to appeal to his
-vivid sympathies. He declared with acute and prophetic insight that
-the pilloried artists were laying "the foundations of a school of art
-nobler than the world has seen for three hundred years." His
-explanations of their methods were just what were wanted to set
-people thinking. Some years, it is true, elapsed before his
-enthusiasm, and the dogged perseverance of the young men, finally
-converted the great majority of art lovers; but the conversion did
-come, and it was complete.
-
-Meanwhile Millais was manfully playing his part in the struggle,
-giving no sign that he minded being, as he put it in after years, "so
-dreadfully bullied." Nothing could shake his resolve to work out his
-artistic destiny in the way he thought best. Happily he was not
-entirely without encouragement from the chiefs of his own profession,
-for just at the time when the outside world was decrying him most
-strenuously, the Academy elected him an Associate. This election,
-was, however, quashed, because he was discovered to be under the age
-at which admission was possible, and it was not till 1853 that he was
-again chosen. By this time he had added to the list of his paintings
-his exquisite _Ophelia_, _The Huguenot_, _The Proscribed Royalist_
-and _The Order of Release_, all works of the highest value, and
-regarded to-day as evidences of a quite extraordinary ability.
-
-For about ten years he remained faithful to the Pre-Raphaelite creed,
-and made no serious attempt to modify his methods. During this
-period appeared his _Portrait of Mr. Ruskin_, _The Rescue_, _Autumn
-Leaves_, _The Blind Girl_, _Sir Isumbras at the Ford_, _The Vale of
-Rest_, and _Apple Blossoms_, of which the last two are to be reckoned
-as to some extent transitional, leading the way to the later changes
-in both his theory and practice. What was to be the nature of these
-changes was foreshadowed by _The Eve of St. Agnes_, shown at the
-Academy in 1863, the year before his advancement to the rank of Royal
-Academician. This was the beginning of a period during which he
-wavered between recollections of his earlier style and an obvious
-desire to find new ways of expressing himself. These variations in
-his production implied that he was just then uncertain as to the
-course which it would be best for him to follow. He recognised that
-there were many details of his youthful creed which had served their
-purpose and ought to be set aside. He was conscious of the
-possibilities that his wonderful command over his materials opened up
-to him, and he knew that his years of devoted study had given him an
-equipment of knowledge that would serve him in any emergency; what he
-was seeking was the exact form in which to cast his efforts so as to
-allow full scope to his abilities and to make indisputable that wide
-popularity which was coming to him at last.
-
-
-
-LATER DEVELOPMENTS
-
-There was no hesitation about the avowal of his new views when
-finally he did make up his mind. With a suddenness that was
-absolutely startling, he abandoned the close and careful realism that
-marked in such canvases as _Asleep_, _Awake_, and _The Minuet_, the
-still-continuing influence of his Pre-Raphaelite conviction, and
-chose instead the riotous freedom of touch, and the happy readiness
-of suggestion that make his _Souvenir of Velasquez_, _Rosalind and
-Celia_, and _Stella_ so impressive. The dramatic point of this
-change is that a year sufficed to bring it into active operation. In
-1867 he was still anxious to work out bit by bit and part by part
-every fact that his subject might present, and, in his zeal for
-naturalism, to leave no chance of mistake about the exact meaning of
-his treatment; in 1868 he had thrown himself heart and soul into the
-task of persuading his admirers to accept hints in the place of plain
-statements, and to understand subtle compromises with nature, instead
-of direct transcriptions of her assertions.
-
-[Illustration: A SOUVENIR OF VELASQUEZ.]
-
-Thenceforward his progress was an almost unbroken series of
-successes, gained by superb mastery of craftsmanship, and by the
-splendid confidence in himself that put his intentions always beyond
-the possibility of doubt. With few exceptions his pictures, to the
-end of his life, were worthy to rank with the best that the British
-school can show, great in accomplishment, admirable in style, and
-attractive always by their frankness of manner and purity of motive.
-In some ways he enlarged his borders, for in 1871 he made, with
-_Chill October_, his first digression into landscape without figures,
-and began that array of important studies of the open air which
-reveal most instructively his limitless patience and searching power
-of observation.
-
-As a portrait painter also he developed superlative gifts, adding
-year by year to a collection of masterpieces unequalled by any of his
-contemporaries. He was fortunate in his sitters, and the list of his
-productions in this branch of art includes a large proportion of the
-most beautiful women and distinguished men who have graced the latter
-half of the century. He immortalised impartially leaders of fashion,
-pretty children, noted politicians, and people eminent in many
-professions; and in his rendering of these various types he missed
-nothing of the individuality and distinctive character with which
-each one was endowed. Here especially his Pre-Raphaelite training
-stood him in good stead; for the habit of close analysis and careful
-investigation had been so impressed upon him by the experiences of
-his youth, that his instinctive judgment was now perfectly reliable,
-and his ability to decide promptly and with certainty about the
-aspects of his subject which were fittest for pictorial record had
-become absolutely complete.
-
-In this succession of portraits some stand out commandingly as
-notable performances even for an artist who was always
-distinguished--for example, _Mrs. Bischoffsheim_ (1873), _Miss
-Eveleen Tennant_ (1874), _Mrs. Jopling_ (1879), _Mrs. Perugini_
-(1880), _Sir Henry Irving_ (1884), _The Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone_
-(1885), _J. C. Hook, R.A._ (1882), and _The Marquis of Salisbury_
-(1883)--marking great moments in his career; just as from time to
-time figure compositions of rare importance, like _The North-West
-Passage_ (1874), _Effie Deans_ (1877), _The Princes in the Tower_
-(1878), and _Speak! Speak!_ (1895), punctuated the progress of his
-intellectual and imaginative evolution. He was always, to the last
-day of his life, ambitious and eager to grapple with problems of
-technical expression. Courage to face the supreme difficulties of
-his profession never failed him. He had no idea of avoiding
-responsibilities, or of finding in an easy convention a way to evade
-his duty to art; and he tried consistently to bring his production up
-to the high level that would satisfy his ideals. When he missed his
-aim--and there is no such thing as unvarying success for any
-artist--it was not for want of thought or sincere effort, but rather
-from over-anxiety. He once said of himself, "I may honestly say that
-I never consciously put an idle touch upon canvas, and that I have
-always been earnest and hard-working; yet the worst pictures I ever
-painted in my life are those into which I threw most trouble and
-labour"; and in these few words he summed up his whole history.
-
-
-
-LAST YEARS
-
-It was characteristic of him that the honours which were heaped upon
-him in his later years should have diminished neither the strength of
-his work nor the charm of his personality. Affectation or
-self-consciousness were the last things that were possible to such a
-nature with its almost boyish energy and magnificent vitality. Yet
-he had every reason to be proud of success that had come to him, not
-by fortunate chance, but as a result of his own tenacity. He was
-made an Officer of the Legion of Honour, and received the Medaille
-d'Honneur at the Paris International Exhibition, in 1878; the degree
-of D.C.L. was conferred upon him at Oxford in 1880, and at Durham in
-1893; he was elected a Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery in
-1881, a Foreign Associate of the Académie des Beaux Arts in 1882, and
-President of the Royal Academy in 1896; he was created a Baronet in
-1885, and an Officer of the Order of Leopold in 1895; and was,
-besides, an Officer of the Order of St. Maurice, and the Prussian
-Order "Pour la Mérite," and a member of the Academies of Vienna,
-Belgium, Antwerp, and of St. Luke, Rome, and San Fernando, Madrid.
-He was one of the few Englishmen invited to contribute his portrait
-to the great collection of pictures of artists painted by themselves
-in the Uffizi Gallery at Florence. Such a record proves most
-cogently the manner in which the public estimate of his capacity
-changed as years went on; it is instructive to compare its unanimity
-of recognition with the story of the time when art teachers were
-urging their pupils to greet the name of Millais with hisses, and
-were holding up his work, and that of his associates, to the
-bitterest execration.
-
-The post of President of the Royal Academy he held for only six
-months, for he succeeded Lord Leighton on February 20th, 1896, and
-died on 13th of August in the same year. His election, however,
-rounded off appropriately that long association with the Academy to
-which he referred in his speech at the 1895 banquet, at which he
-presided in the absence of Lord Leighton. "I must tell you briefly
-my connection with this Academy. I entered the Antique School as a
-probationer, when I was eleven years of age; then became a student in
-the Life School; and I have risen from stage to stage until I reached
-the position I now hold of Royal Academician: so that, man and boy, I
-have been intimately connected with this Academy for more than half a
-century. I have received here a free education as an artist--an
-advantage any lad may enjoy who can pass a qualifying
-examination--and I owe the Academy a debt of gratitude I never can
-repay. I can, however, make this return--I can give it my love. I
-love everything belonging to it; the casts I have drawn from as a
-boy, the books I have consulted in our Library, the very benches I
-have sat on." No other teaching institution had, indeed, had any
-part in his education; no other art society had given him assistance
-at a moment when the world was against him; and in no other direction
-had such practical belief in the greatness of his future been
-manifested. Truly, he owed a debt of gratitude to the Academy, and
-he repaid it by being ever one of its most active supporters, and by
-doing infinite credit to its best traditions.
-
-There was something peculiarly pathetic in the fact that his life
-should have ended just when he had reached the position that must
-have seemed to him, after his long and intimate connection with the
-Academy, the most honourable to which he could aspire. To be the
-head of the institution that he loved so well, and to be hailed as
-chief in the place that had seen every stage of his development, from
-childhood to ripe maturity, could not fail to be anything but
-exquisitely gratifying to a man of his nature. But almost at the
-moment of his election it appeared that there was little time left
-him in which to enjoy the honour that had crowned his many years of
-devotion to the great principles of art. The fatal disease that had
-gripped him a little while before was not to be shaken off, and was
-sapping rapidly and effectually even his superb vitality. He worked
-on, however, almost to the end, hopeful even in the midst of
-suffering, active in carrying out the duties of his office, and busy
-as ever with the canvases that crowded his studio. He was fully
-represented in the Academy Exhibition of 1896, by a group of
-portraits, and by a picture, _A Forerunner_, which showed no sign of
-failing strength or of any relaxation in his grasp of the essentials
-of his craft.
-
-Then, with painful suddenness, came the verdict of his doctors, that
-his case was hopeless. The throat trouble, that had been growing
-month by month more acute and distressing, was pronounced to be
-cancer and incurable. In June the disease had made such strides that
-the end seemed to be imminent, but an operation gave him some relief,
-and his life was prolonged till the middle of August, when at last
-death released him from his agony. He passed away at the house in
-Palace Gate, Kensington, which had been the scene of the many
-triumphs of his later years, dying as he had lived, full of courage
-and patience, fearing nothing, and meeting his fate with cheerful
-resignation. On August 20th, he was buried in St. Paul's Cathedral,
-beside his old friend Lord Leighton, whom only a few months before he
-had helped to lay to rest.
-
-His death not only left a gap in the ranks of art, but it also took
-away, while he was yet in the full enjoyment of his powers, a man
-whose sterling qualities had attracted a host of friends. His
-frankness and honesty, his geniality and kindliness, and, above all,
-his manly wholesomeness, without taint of modern decadence or
-morbidity, endeared him to everyone with whom he came in contact. He
-was typically English, in the best sense, with all the physical and
-mental attributes that have enabled our race to dominate the world, a
-lover of the country, a good shot, a keen fisherman, and a fearless
-horseman. The very look of him, with his stalwart, well set-up
-figure, and handsome, self-reliant face, conveyed the impression of
-perfect health of mind and body, and declared the inexhaustible
-vigour of his nature.
-
-
-
-
-HIS ART
-
-With all his definiteness of opinion and sincere belief in the
-accuracy of his own judgment, Millais was too keenly alive to the
-varieties of nature, too earnest in his observation of the life about
-him, to fall into the mechanical habit of repeating himself. He was
-robust, modern and practical, a man whose instinct was active rather
-than contemplative; and he might even be said to be wanting in
-imagination, if by imagination is understood the capacity to evolve
-things curious and unusual out of the inner consciousness.
-
-But if he lacked imagination in this sense, he more than made up for
-the deficiency by the exquisite acuteness of his insight into natural
-facts, and by the depth of his judgment about the essentials of art.
-He made no mistakes through ignorance or want of proper preparation;
-and he never failed because he grudged the preliminary thought needed
-to carry to success a great undertaking. Indeed, the one thing that
-he always preached was application, constant industry devoted to the
-task of finding out how work should be done. Carelessness he
-condemned; but he had no love for that type of performance which
-shows the trouble that the producer has taken over it. He contended,
-justly, that it was the duty of the artist to so master the executive
-details of his profession that his work should impress the spectator
-by its ready certainty rather than its conscientious toil.
-
-The need to strive for the quality of freshness in technical
-expression was, however, very far from being the only thing he
-insisted upon. He had, as well, a strong belief in the importance of
-a definitely independent attitude with regard to choice of pictorial
-motive, and selection of suitable material. But beyond this he
-advocated special precautions against any narrowing of the artist's
-practice by too close adherence to one kind of picture. He once put
-this conviction into words of considerable significance.
-"Individuality is not all that should be looked to; a varied manner
-must be cultivated as well. I believe that however admirably he may
-paint in a certain method, or however perfectly he may render a
-certain class of subject, the artist should not be content to adhere
-to a speciality of manner or method. A fine style is good, but it is
-not everything--it is not absolutely necessary."
-
-Certainly Sir John carried out these principles in his own
-production. He had many sides to his character as an artist, and
-used his powers of observation with splendid freedom. His popularity
-was gained not by the reiteration of any one set of ideas, but by
-showing himself equally capable in many forms of painting. In his
-figure pictures he was by turns dramatic, romantic, sternly
-realistic, and at times sentimental in a robust way; in his portraits
-he was incisive, direct, and accurate; in his landscapes precise,
-exact, and searchingly correct in his rendering of what was before
-him; and in his water-colours and drawings in black and white
-delightfully facile and ingenious. He had no speciality, and no set
-conviction that there was one particular thing he could do better
-than anything else; so that he never restrained his love of variety
-or bound himself by limitations based simply upon expediency.
-
-In any classification of his works, the first place must necessarily
-be given to his figure paintings and portraits. Indeed, they make up
-the bulk of his achievement, and represent the fullest growth of his
-capacity. The history of his life is principally written in them.
-The charm of his personality distinguishes them all--a charm as
-evident in the simpler and more limited subjects as in those which
-made great demands upon his powers of invention and contrivance.
-There was never any suggestion that he did not honestly feel the
-motive with which he was dealing, or that he was not perfectly
-convinced that what he had chosen was worthy of record. If he
-failed, it was because he had misapprehended the suitability of his
-material, not because he had been trying to do something outside the
-range of his belief.
-
-Curiously, perhaps, his honesty and directness were at the same time
-the source of what was best in his pictures, and the cause of their
-chief weaknesses. Had he not been so frank and wholesome-minded he
-could never have arrived at that exquisite appreciation of the
-daintiness of childhood to which he gave expression in a great many
-of his most successful canvases, and could never have gained, as he
-did, the hearts of all classes of art lovers. Only a worshipper of
-children, with the most absolute sympathy with their ways and habits,
-could have painted pictures as persuasive as _Cherry Ripe_, _A Waif_,
-_Caller Herrin'_, _The Princess Elizabeth_, and that long series of
-pretty studies of which _Perfect Bliss_, _Dropped from the Nest_,
-_Forbidden Fruit_, and _Little Mrs. Gamp_ may be quoted as types.
-Only a man with the happiest sense of delicate shades of character
-could have commanded the extraordinary popularity that came to him as
-a result of his production of pictures such as these.
-
-Yet it was to these very qualities that was due his occasional want
-of success in dealing with stronger themes. His dramatic pictures
-descended at times into an artlessness that was only redeemed from
-feebleness by its obvious sincerity. They failed because he
-concerned himself so much with matters of fact that he missed the
-greater possibilities of the subjects he had selected, and because in
-his desire to be real and convincing he forgot that there was a need
-to appeal to the imagination of people who would not be satisfied
-with plain statements.
-
-[Illustration: THE VALE OF REST.]
-
-On the other hand it is possible to select from among his subject
-pictures several that prove him to have had brilliant moments when he
-could reach the greater heights of pictorial invention. There are
-quite half a dozen of his canvases which by their wonderful vitality,
-their deep significance, and force of expression make good a claim to
-the possession of the finest kind of mastery. _The Vale of Rest_,
-_The North-West Passage_, _The Order of Release_, _The Ruling
-Passion_, _The Boyhood of Raleigh_, and perhaps _Effie Deans_ show
-that he could grasp with all possible firmness and state with
-unflinching decision, motives that called for great mental exertion.
-Their qualities are those that come from a minute insight not only
-into details of character, but also into the principles which govern
-the dramatic side of pictorial art. No false note spoils the harmony
-of these compositions, no touch of uncertainty or divided opinion;
-they are confident and assured, and their meaning is not to be
-questioned. They express the thoughts of a man who, with all his
-straightforwardness and simplicity, could now and then look beneath
-the surface and work out problems far more profound than it was his
-every-day habit to investigate.
-
-His romance, especially, had this merit of being well thought out.
-It was never complicated by excess of details, and was strict in its
-adherence to the main facts of the story, without irrelevant matter
-introduced to complete picturesquely an imperfect conception. _The
-Knight Errant_ is a very good example of his method of dealing with
-an incident evolved from his own fancy; and _Victory, O Lord!_ is
-equally characteristic as an instance of the power with which he
-could seize upon the salient points of a subject suggested to him by
-written history. Many of his finer paintings were illustrative
-records of the impressions made upon him by things he had read, and
-expressions of the instinct that brought him throughout his life such
-success as a draughtsman in black and white; but they were only
-occasionally direct illustrations of particular passages from books.
-More often what he gave was his view of what might have happened,
-rather than a plain reproduction in paint of what was already fixed
-in words.
-
-He preferred to base himself more upon the spirit than the letter of
-a story, to find a new reading for himself, and to treat it with a
-considerable degree of independence. In _The Princes in the Tower_
-he followed none of the accepted versions, and in _Effie Deans_ he
-made a subject out of the slightest possible suggestion in the text
-of the romance; yet both pictures show that peculiar air of
-conviction which results from a perfect understanding of what is
-essential for the proper application of dramatic material. In these,
-as in almost all his renderings of incident, appears his habit of
-attacking not the climax of the story, but rather one of its earlier
-stages, an intermediate moment when the action is still in progress
-and the final result is suggested rather than clearly foreshadowed.
-This habit was always strong upon him. It gave their particular
-interest to such early works as _The Huguenot_, _The Black
-Brunswicker_, _The Proscribed Royalist_, and _The Escape of a
-Heretic_, just as much as it did to later pictures like _The Girlhood
-of St. Theresa_, or _Speak! Speak!_; and by introducing a touch of
-speculation into the record of his thoughts he enhanced the
-fascination which was never wanting in his sturdy inventions.
-
-Indeed, there was in every branch of his figure-painting some
-sufficient reason for his popularity, some distinct attractiveness of
-mental quality to add convincingly to the impression created by his
-superlative command over technicalities. He could be tender, dainty,
-and refined in his studies of children; serious and solemn in his
-symbolical compositions; pathetic, vigorous, and passionate by turns
-in his subject-pictures; and through all ran a vein of sentiment that
-was always wholesome, clean, and intelligible. He never affected to
-be influenced by feelings that were not honestly natural to him, nor
-did he pretend to represent anything that he did not believe in
-sincerely and without question. What he painted was invariably what
-he felt at the moment; and, whether it was a masterpiece or a
-comparative failure it expressed simply the appeal that the subject
-had made to him; and his response to this appeal was always
-unconventional and definite.
-
-He trusted in the same way to a personal impression of his sitter
-when he set himself to paint a portrait. What he wanted was to show
-that he understood the individuality of the man or woman before him,
-and that his understanding had helped him to make clear to others the
-special idiosyncrasies that separated that man or woman from the
-ordinary crowd. Portraiture to him was a matter of observation, of
-receptiveness to suggestion, and acceptance of what was visible,
-rather than an artistic process which enabled him to give free scope
-to his inventive instincts.
-
-Perhaps he was less analytical and discriminating in his pictures of
-women. They seemed to appeal to him less than men did as subjects
-for psychological study. What he preferred to dwell upon were the
-physical charms of femininity, beauty of face and form, elegance of
-carriage, and that rounded fulness of development that argues perfect
-healthiness of body and mind. The stateliness of the card-players in
-_Hearts are Trumps_, the air of high breeding and conscious power
-which distinguishes the portrait of the Duchess of Westminster, and
-the more matronly splendour of _Mrs. Bischoffsheim_, mark the chief
-variations in his manner of painting womankind; occasionally only did
-he diverge into more detailed character, as in _Miss Eveleen
-Tennant_, _Mrs. Jopling_, and _Mrs. Perugini_; but as a rule he was
-content to treat the freshness and brilliant vitality of his feminine
-sitters, and to leave untouched their possibilities of passion or
-strong emotion. His men were full of vigorous aspirations,
-restrained for the moment, yet near the surface and ready at any time
-to break into activity; but his women were serene and unmoved,
-prepared, perhaps, for conquest, but wrapped in a reserve that would
-not allow them to make the first advances.
-
-That his preference for repose in representation did not lead the
-artist into a dry convention, or into any disregard of the essential
-points of difference between people, is very evident if a comparison
-is made of his chief portraits. Beneath their reserve appears a
-wonderful variety of manner, and a superb power of interpretation.
-They are studied, exact, and intensely real. No perfunctory labour
-is seen in them, and their value is diminished by no slurring over of
-the little things which help to define the more intimate
-characteristics of the modern man.
-
-The unquestionable popularity that Millais gained by his excursions
-into landscape was equally due to the fact that he was a student of
-nature, not an imaginative interpreter of what she presented. He
-dealt with facts and left fancies almost entirely alone. In the
-series of canvases that began with _Chill October_, and ended with
-_Halcyon Weather_, there was infinite industry, marvellous accuracy,
-perfect veracity of record, but little effort to be anything but
-absolutely exact in his statement of what he saw. His amazing
-patience and his surprising quickness of vision, enabled him to grasp
-with easy confidence the plain truths of nature, and his command of
-brushwork ensured a rare perfection in his pictorial expression of
-the matter that he had selected for representation. Nothing was
-implied or left in sketchy incompleteness, because his patience had
-failed him before he had realised the complicated fulness of his
-subject. He spared himself no toil to arrive at what seemed to him
-to be the perfection of nature, and he was as minutely attentive, as
-surely certain of himself, as he ever was in his figure work.
-
-As a necessary consequence, however, of this manner of working, he
-never could be ranked among the inspired painters of the open air,
-nor could he ever be said to have dealt exhaustively with the
-problems presented by natural phenomena. He remained untouched by
-the subtleties of atmospheric effect, by the varieties of momentary
-illumination, or by the fleeting glories of aerial colour, which
-provide the student of nature's devices with the chief incentive to
-artistic effort. He was always too much concerned with the things at
-his feet, with matter that he could dissect and investigate, to give
-much thought to the broad and comprehensive scheme of which these
-things formed part. Whatever he arrived at in the way of a record of
-a natural effect was reached not so much by thorough understanding of
-the effect as a whole, as by an amazingly acute interpretation of the
-influence exercised by it upon the details upon which his eyes were
-fixed.
-
-An excellent instance of this is afforded in _The Blind Girl_, where
-he has given little enough attention to the grandeur of the passing
-storm-clouds, and has concentrated the whole of his energies upon the
-rendering, with supreme fidelity, of dripping weeds and a drenched
-hillside lighted by the rays of the setting sun. As a record of
-microscopic insight, the picture is superlatively successful; it
-could hardly be more closely reasoned out; but, as a representation
-of Nature in one of her most impressive moods, it is ineffectual and
-unconvincing. So, too, his most popular landscape, _Chill October_,
-falls short of greatness, because it is too plainly studied bit by
-bit, and part by part, and built up precisely by the careful putting
-in place of material collected for the pictorial purpose. It holds
-together, not because it has one great dominating intention, but
-because its construction is so ingenious, and its mechanism so
-workmanlike, that no single detail can be criticised as out of
-relation to the rest. It can hardly be called learned in design, nor
-can it be said to have any conspicuous dignity of style; yet the
-knowledge of form, the intimate observation of the growth of
-riverside vegetation, and the appreciation of autumnal colouring,
-which were turned to account by the artist in his treatment of the
-subject, make the canvas prominent among the greatest nature studies
-of modern times.
-
-No consideration of his influence and no review of his performance
-would be complete without an appreciative reference to his services
-to black and white. As a painter he has a secure place among the
-chief modern masters of the world; but what he did for pictorial art
-was paralleled, if not surpassed, by his assertion of the dignity and
-importance of illustration as a form of occupation for even the
-greatest of art workers.
-
-It has been well said that if Millais had never devoted himself to
-the painting of oil pictures, but had given his life entirely to the
-work of book illustration, his position would still have been
-indisputable, and his magnificent ability would have been amply
-demonstrated. There is, indeed, a great deal of truth in this
-contention. Although the world would have been the poorer for the
-loss of his masterly essays in brushwork, and of his wonderful
-exercises in the arrangement of strong colour, it would have
-possessed extremely significant evidence of the reality of his
-artistic judgment, and of the adaptability of his inventive powers.
-In his black and white work he showed frequently a side of his
-capacity that appeared in his painting only on great occasions, a
-sense of dramatic exigencies, a feeling for illustrative meanings,
-far beyond what was suggested by the general run of his pictures. As
-an interpreter of the fancies of other men he was exceptionally
-intelligent, with a memorable grasp of the salient points of the
-story and a remarkable facility in summarising essentials. He was
-afraid of nothing in the way of a subject, and spared no labour to
-make his drawings completely expressive.
-
-His love of black and white was indeed a genuine one. Illustration
-was not to him, as it so often is with other men, a mere expedient,
-resorted to because an unappreciative public refused to recognise the
-merit and importance of his paintings, and abandoned gladly as soon
-as he found he could make a sufficient income without it. On the
-contrary, he welcomed the opportunities with which this branch of art
-practice provided him, and regarded them as of the highest value.
-For more than twenty years he was a prolific illustrator, constantly
-busy with drawings that were reproduced in all kinds of books and
-magazines; and even in his later life occasional examples appeared to
-prove that his hand had not lost its cunning and that his interest in
-this type of work was undiminished.
-
-How deeply he felt about this particular subject is, perhaps, best
-proved by his constant advocacy, within and without the Academy, of
-the claims of illustrative draughtsmen to official recognition.
-Before the Royal Commission on the Academy he strenuously urged that
-workers in black and white should be declared eligible for election
-to membership of that institution as draughtsmen purely, instead of
-being required to disguise themselves as picture painters before they
-could hope for admission; and his pleading then expressed a
-conviction which remained strong in him till his death. He spoke
-with real authority on a matter that, both by inclination and
-association, he was fully qualified to discuss. His experience of
-illustrative drawing, and his acquaintance with the history of its
-development, were both peculiarly intimate; and he knew exactly what
-were the possibilities of influence possessed by the craft.
-
-About his technical methods there is comparatively little to be said.
-He was not a worker who concerned himself very deeply over devices of
-execution, or cared to codify his system of painting in accordance
-with scientific principles. He drew well, and handled his materials
-with the sureness and confidence that came from complete knowledge of
-what he wanted to do. His chief desire, as has been already stated,
-was to retain in pictures that had really cost him deep thought and
-prolonged labour an aspect of spontaneity and freshness; to be direct
-in statement and simple in expression. He had a well-founded belief
-that the finest art was that in which the meaning of the artist was
-to be realised with the least amount of seeking and with as little
-inquiry as possible about his intentions. Consequently, he strove
-all his life to master the intricacies of his craft, so that no
-hesitation on his part might make his meaning vague or indefinite.
-
-Speed he always had. Even in the apparently laborious period of his
-Pre-Raphaelite performance he could, and did, paint with amazing
-facility--the head of Ferdinand in _Ferdinand lured by Ariel_, was,
-for instance, completed in five hours--and as years went on his
-certainty became even more indisputable. _Cherry Ripe_ was painted
-in a week, _The Last Rose of Summer_ in not more than four days, and
-for many of his portraits half a dozen sittings sufficed to give him
-all that was necessary for the achievement of a masterpiece. His
-quickness of apprehension and accuracy of vision helped him to a
-prompt decision as to choice of material; and when his direction was
-once fixed, his inexhaustible energy carried him easily through the
-work of production. Nature had well equipped him for his profession,
-and wisely he followed the lines she had laid down.
-
-
-
-
-OUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-The works which have been reproduced as illustrations to this summary
-of the career of one of the greatest artists whom the British school
-has known have been selected with the intention of representing the
-more important stages in his progress. It is comparatively easy to
-divide his life into different periods, each one of which was marked
-by some achievements of more than ordinary significance. Thus the
-_Christ in the House of His Parents_ (1849), and _Ophelia_ (1852)
-belong to the time when he was a devout believer in the creed of the
-Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood; _Autumn Leaves_ (1856) and _The Vale of
-Rest_ (1858) show the first beginnings of the change of conviction
-which led him a few years later to an almost complete abandonment of
-his earlier principles; _A Souvenir of Velasquez_ (1868) marks the
-end of the transition from his youthful methods to the vigorous
-freedom of his middle life; _The North-West Passage_ (1874) and _A
-Yeoman of the Guard_ (1876), the triumphant attainment of absolute
-mastery over all the details of his craft, and the _Thomas Carlyle_
-(1877), the commencement of that period of sober confidence in his
-perfected skill which continued till his death in 1896.
-
-There is hardly one of these pictures which does not by its
-superlative quality deserve a place among the great things that may
-be said to have made our art history. They show Sir John Millais not
-only as a splendid executant but also as a frank and sincere thinker
-on art questions, who did not hesitate to modify his opinions as his
-widening experience proved to him that a better way than the one
-which he was following at the moment might be found to lead him to
-the highest results. It is a fortunate circumstance that with one
-exception the whole of this group of noble works can be counted as
-public property. They have passed into galleries where they are
-always accessible, and they are within the reach of every student who
-wishes to profit by the great lessons they are able to teach.
-
-
-
-CHRIST IN THE HOUSE OF HIS PARENTS
-
-This is the earliest and in some respects the most ambitious of the
-Pre-Raphaelite pictures. In it all the resources of Pre-Raphaelitism
-are turned to good account, and the logic of the creed is asserted
-with unquestioning faith. A verse in Zechariah, "And one shall say
-unto him, 'What are these wounds in thine hands?' Then he shall
-answer, 'Those with which I was wounded in the house of my friends,'"
-provided the motive, and the love of exact and searching observation
-which was from the first the governing principle of the artist's
-practice, controlled every detail of the execution.
-
-As a religious painting, a representation of a Holy Family, this work
-was by no means approved by the mid-century critics. One of the
-writers of the period, who joined in the general outcry against the
-picture, declared, with what seems now to have been quite unnecessary
-emphasis, that it touched "the lowest depths of what is mean, odious,
-repulsive, and repelling." It certainly shows no respect for any of
-the traditions which were then popularly supposed to call for the
-unquestioning support of every artist, for the spirit by which was
-inspired such a composition, for instance, as Sir Charles Eastlake's
-_Christ lamenting over Jerusalem_, a picture now in the Tate Gallery,
-which explains very well the sort of feebleness that was in fashion
-in the middle of the nineteenth century.
-
-Millais did not hesitate to put on one side all the namby-pamby
-prettiness and elegant affectation which governed the production of
-his contemporaries, and struck out for himself in a very different
-direction. He laid the scene of his story in the house of Joseph,
-and, to quote another critic, associated the characters of the sacred
-story "with the meanest details of a carpenter's shop, with no
-conceivable omission of misery, of dirt, and even of disease, all
-finished with the same loathsome minuteness." The child Christ
-stands before the carpenter's bench with the Virgin kneeling beside
-him preparing to bind up with a piece of linen a wound in his hand,
-at which Joseph leaning forward from the end of the bench is looking.
-St. Anne in the background is picking up a pair of pincers, and
-beside Joseph is John the Baptist coming towards the central group
-with a bowl of water in his hands. An assistant on the other side of
-the picture watches the incident gravely.
-
-The keynote of the whole composition is its earnest symbolism. Every
-one of the lovingly laboured details explains something of the story,
-the tools on the wall, the dove perched on the ladder, and the sheep,
-typifying the faithful, and the wattled fence, an emblem of the
-Church, which are seen through the doorway; while in the meadow
-beyond is placed a well as a symbol of Truth. In its imaginative
-qualities, the picture is not less masterly than in its technical
-accuracy, and excites as much wonder by the depth of thought it
-reveals as by its astonishing accomplishment. It is the most
-original of all the artist's earlier works, marking definitely his
-emancipation from the influences of his student days, and his
-development in craftsmanship.
-
-
-
-OPHELIA
-
-The _Ophelia_ is neither in scale nor in imaginative invention as
-impressive as the _Christ in the House of His Parents_, but it is,
-without doubt, one of the pictures by which he will most surely be
-remembered. It is an admirable example of his searching study of
-natural details, close and elaborate in its realisation of every part
-of the subject, and curiously true in its rendering of the subtle
-tones of brilliant daylight. Only an observer endowed with
-extraordinary keenness of vision, and with absolutely inexhaustible
-patience could have interpreted so exactly all the complexities of
-such a scene. In no part of the canvas is it possible to detect any
-relaxation of his strenuous effort after completeness; nothing is
-slurred over, and nothing which could add to the persuasiveness of
-the work is omitted.
-
-[Illustration: OPHELIA.]
-
-The points which are particularly to be noticed are the amazing
-accuracy of the drawing of every leaf and twig in the background, the
-truth with which the floating draperies and the river weeds lying
-beneath the surface of the water have been rendered, and the
-brilliant vivacity of the colour, which, strong and insistent as it
-is, entirely avoids garishness and rankness of quality. There is,
-too, a delightful tenderness of sentiment which suits to perfection a
-subject full of sympathetic suggestion. Not a trace of affectation
-is to be perceived; the sincerity and good faith of the artist cannot
-for an instant be doubted, and his understanding of the dramatic
-meaning of the incident chosen is perfectly judicious. It would not
-be easy to find a picture which marks more truly the difference
-between the finish that comes from learned study, and the mere
-surface elaboration by which an uninspired artist seeks to hide his
-insufficiency of technical knowledge. The imitative painter is
-satisfied if he can deceive the eye by tricks of handling, cunningly
-managed, and cares little for the broad effect of his canvas as a
-whole; but Millais, who was a man of genius, could never have
-contented himself with the cheap popularity attainable by such
-devices. He took a far larger view of his artistic responsibility,
-and even in his most prolonged and assiduous labour he never forgot
-that the part which every touch had to play in the general pictorial
-scheme had to be considered. That he should never have lost the
-unity of effect of _his Ophelia_, though he spent many weeks painting
-the landscape setting of the figure, in a quiet corner on the Ewell
-River, near Kingston, may be regarded as a convincing proof of his
-rare fitness for dealing with some of the greater problems of open
-air painting.
-
-
-
-AUTUMN LEAVES
-
-As an example of his use of poetic and tender sentiment this picture
-is now rightly admired as the most fascinating of all the works which
-he produced during his life. It is neither a great composition nor
-an amazing illustration of minute patience in technical performance;
-but it has a spontaneous charm of manner that puts it among the few
-modern masterpieces. When it was first exhibited it was not properly
-understood by the general public, but expert observers even then
-appreciated its delicate symbolism, and saw in it qualities of the
-noblest kind. Mr. Ruskin praised it with generous enthusiasm, and
-not only ranked it as one of the monumental canvases of the world,
-but declared that not even to Titian could be assigned a place higher
-than that which Millais had reached by this triumphant achievement.
-
-[Illustration: AUTUMN LEAVES.]
-
-Judged as a piece of painting it is surprisingly free from all those
-little artifices which a less thoughtful artist would have used to
-increase the strength of his appeal to the attention of the public.
-It is studiously quiet in manner and formal in composition, an
-arrangement of severe lines and simple masses, which might easily
-have been made blankly inexpressive if they had been managed with
-less subtle perception of the deeper possibilities of the subject.
-But this very reserve gives the picture much of its strangely
-sympathetic beauty, and increases its hold upon the feelings of all
-people who are not satisfied with the superficialities of pictorial
-art. The attitudes of the figures, the expressions of the faces, the
-bareness of the landscape against which the group of children is set,
-and the solemn stillness of the autumn twilight which pervades the
-whole composition are all of value in the carrying out of the
-artist's intention. The lingering sadness of autumn is throughout
-the idea which was in his mind, and the way in which this is
-symbolised in every touch and every detail is well-nigh perfect.
-
-The picture is also remarkable because it is practically the first in
-which Millais showed that masterly understanding of the character and
-ways of children, which was so often and so delightfully displayed in
-his later production. The young girls who are grouped round the fire
-of faded leaves are painted with inimitable grace and tenderness.
-Their unconscious naturalness is wholly charming, their unstudied
-ease of gesture is extraordinarily well rendered; and there is in the
-purity of the delicate little faces a suggestion of the innocence of
-childhood which is exquisitely fresh and attractive. Yet no
-impossible idealisation spoils the truth of the painting. They are
-frankly children who play their parts in it, not little angels with
-none of the instincts of human beings.
-
-
-
-THE VALE OF REST
-
-Although the public, after having become accustomed to the artist's
-uncompromising Pre-Raphaelitism, must have been warned by the
-symbolism of _Autumn Leaves_ of the coming change in his methods, the
-appearance of his _Vale of Rest_ at the Academy in 1859 caused a very
-definite sensation. People then found themselves called upon to
-accept him as a didactic and imaginative moralist. He had, indeed,
-entered upon his transition, and had moved far from the literalism of
-_Christ in the House of His Parents_, and the obvious actuality of
-_Ophelia_, towards the closely impending declaration of those
-individual preferences which were to guide him in the work of the
-latter half of his life. _The Vale of Rest_ is said to have been of
-all his paintings the one that Millais estimated most highly; and it
-is with justice reckoned among the most brilliant achievements which
-mark great moments in his career.
-
-It is certainly the picture which combines most surely his power of
-thought, and his capacity for stating forcibly and dramatically the
-things which he imagined. There is in it a manly sincerity which
-cannot be questioned, and there is besides a kind of solemn beauty
-that comes from his instinctive avoidance of sensationalism and from
-his naturally correct preference for simplicity of treatment. This
-simplicity and sincerity of manner can always be found in his best
-paintings, and when applied, as in _The Vale of Rest_, to the avowal
-of a strong conviction must be regarded as accountable for the
-extraordinary persuasiveness of his art. An artist of less
-straightforward habit of mind would have sought to complicate his
-statement by adding little things with the idea of stimulating the
-curiosity of the observer; but Millais was content, when he had found
-a subject inherently dignified and impressive, to leave it to tell
-its own story and not to embroider it with trivial accessories. To
-this reticence is due the monumental character of _The Vale of Rest_;
-there is nothing in it to distract attention, and nothing which could
-jar on the imagination, and so diminish the value of the lesson which
-it is intended to teach.
-
-Perhaps the greatest triumph of all is the way in which the picture,
-despite the sadness, the grimness almost, of the subject, escapes
-morbidity. It would have been so easy to introduce into it a touch
-of fantastic mysticism, or to spoil its mystery by asserting too
-plainly the moral of the story, but the artist has been proof against
-every temptation, and has gone through with the work in the way that
-his wholesome instincts told him would be most correct. The dominant
-note is one of peace, and the restfulness of the secluded convent
-graveyard in which the last act of the drama of life is played
-typifies truly the long sleep which comes at last to end the troubles
-and strivings of humanity. None of the turmoil of the world intrudes
-into this vale of rest, and even nature herself is in sympathy with
-its gentle calm.
-
-
-
-SOUVENIR OF VELASQUEZ
-
-If the _Vale of Rest_ marks significantly the transition through
-which Millais passed before he finally found the way that he followed
-for the last thirty years of his life, the _Souvenir of Velasquez_
-shows decisively what was the nature of the change that came over his
-art. Between 1859 and 1867 he seemed to have settled down into a
-habit of careful and rather laborious manipulation and to have become
-a confirmed lover of high finish and a scrupulous exponent of what
-were almost unnecessary realities. But suddenly, in 1868, he threw
-all this minute precision aside and avowed himself to be a robust
-impressionist, glorying in his power to give by a few large and
-summary touches a vivid suggestion of many facts, and eager to render
-great effects rather than microscopically analysed and elaborately
-assorted details. There was no mistaking this change and no
-explaining it away. It meant that he had abandoned once and for ever
-all that had remained to him of the restrictions of the
-Pre-Raphaelite method and had begun to apply its principles in such a
-way that he could aim henceforth at the highest flights of executive
-expression.
-
-Among the many pictures which he produced at this period to prove how
-completely the wish to rival the great executants of other schools
-had possessed him, the _Souvenir of Velasquez_ stands out as the
-cleverest in craftsmanship, and the most delightful in feeling. It
-is not merely an amazingly direct piece of brushwork in which every
-touch shows the hand of a master of technical contrivance, but as a
-reflection of the spirit of childhood it deserves, as well, to be
-spoken of as a veritable inspiration. The beauty of the face is very
-remarkable, and there is a pretty stateliness in the pose of the
-young sitter which accords perfectly with the old-world costume in
-which she is represented. As the title implies, the general
-arrangement and treatment of the picture were suggested by the
-practice of the great Spanish master, but this _Souvenir_ is a great
-deal more than a copy of the methods of another artist; it has in
-full measure the personal qualities by which almost everything that
-Millais touched was distinguished.
-
-[Illustration: THE NORTH-WEST PASSAGE.]
-
-That this performance was not a happy accident, one of those chance
-successes which sometimes come to an artist as a result of a
-fortunate combination of circumstances, was put beyond doubt by the
-character of his contributions to the Academy exhibitions during the
-next half dozen years. He fully maintained the high level of
-executive performance at which he had arrived, and continued steadily
-to widen the scope of his activity. There seemed to be no problem of
-handling which he was unprepared to attack and no difficulty that he
-feared as insurmountable.
-
-
-
-THE NORTH-WEST PASSAGE
-
-In this work, painted in 1874, he displayed his strength in a large
-and ambitious composition. As a subject picture it may fairly be
-reckoned as the most complete assertion of his mature conviction that
-he ever put before the public. Its motive was one calculated to
-appeal vividly to his militant instincts, and was suited in every way
-to his robust and energetic personality. The idea of indomitable
-perseverance in the face of apparently overwhelming dangers, of
-tenacious effort to triumphantly accomplish a great intention, was
-quite in accordance with his natural sympathies; and the picture has
-therefore an inner significance to which almost as much interest
-attaches as to its outward aspect of unhesitating certainty. It is,
-perhaps, a little unequal in execution, but parts of it are
-magnificent, and especially the head of the old seaman, who sits at
-the table and listens to the story of Arctic exploration that is
-being read to him by the girl seated at his feet. The sitter for
-this splendid study of rugged age was Mr. Trelawny, the friend of
-Shelley and Byron.
-
-According to his usual custom Millais did little more than suggest in
-the picture the story implied by the title. _The North-West Passage_
-is not an illustrative painting of adventures in the Arctic region,
-but a piece of domestic genre on a large scale intended rather to
-stimulate the imagination than to record something actually
-accomplished. But to every thinking man it is wanting in nothing
-that gives interest to a work of art. It teaches an admirable lesson
-and points a moral well worth attention; and in its combination of
-strenuousness and simple directness, it reflects exactly the nature
-of one of the frankest and least self-conscious of men. The canvas
-is a tribute to the many great personalities whose lives have been
-devoted to the making of our national history, and, rightly
-understood, it is an eloquent appeal to us all to follow worthily in
-their footsteps.
-
-
-
-A YEOMAN OF THE GUARD
-
-Another masterpiece exhibited three years later has now found a
-permanent resting-place in the National Gallery. This riotous and
-gorgeous exercise in strong colour could only have been accomplished
-by an artist whose splendid audacity was equalled by his knowledge of
-his craft. The scarlet uniform, with its lavish embroidery of black
-and gold and picturesque fashion, was something that exactly suited
-his fancy; and he revelled in his struggle with the many problems of
-technique which such a subject presented for solution. Yet there is
-little sign in the picture that he found it more than usually
-exacting; and there is no evidence that he devoted to it an
-exceptional amount of labour. It is particularly memorable for its
-consistent and thorough treatment, for the sound judgment with which
-every variation of the colour and every component part of the design
-have been managed; and it seems to have been carried through without
-hesitation or change of intention. It is an unfaltering record of a
-clearly defined impression, and is not less interesting on account of
-the sensitive and characteristic rendering of the worn, old face of
-the model than as a piece of still life painting of quite
-extraordinary force. The qualities that make it great are those
-which distinguish the productions of none but the unquestionable
-masters of pictorial art.
-
-
-
-THOMAS CARLYLE
-
-[Illustration: THOMAS CARLYLE.]
-
-The _Portrait of Thomas Carlyle_ has qualities scarcely less
-commanding, though it did not offer such opportunities for the
-display of masterly contrivance as were afforded by the _Yeoman of
-the Guard_. To deal with masses of strong colour, or to attempt
-audacities of brushwork, would not have been correct in a simple
-presentation of a modern man. But even without any spectacular
-additions this picture is a remarkable one, because it reveals so
-plainly the discernment of character which had much to do with the
-success that Millais gained in portraiture. He cannot be said to
-have spared Carlyle in his analysis, nor to have tried to soften off
-the angularities of disposition which made the grim old sage more
-feared than loved by the people with whom he came in contact. The
-face is frankly that of a man who has been soured by the warfare of
-life; it is hard, dogmatic, fierce perhaps, and certainly intolerant,
-but it is keenly intellectual and shrewdly reflective. There is
-courage and firmness of conviction in every line, and the instinct of
-the tenacious fighter is declared in all the rugged and rough-hewn
-features. The unflinching gaze of the angry eyes, deep-set under the
-lowering brows, is wonderfully suggested, and the cynical,
-contemptuous mouth is magnificently drawn without any trace of
-caricature. That such a man should have summed up humanity as
-"mostly fools" would seem natural enough to every one who studies
-this portrait; the Carlyle that Millais has put on record for us does
-not look like a lover of his species, nor like a man who would find
-much pleasure in the society of his fellows. Perhaps the painter has
-been too severe--to such a breezy enthusiast Carlyle must have been
-more than a little repellent--but he has indisputably been perfectly
-consistent in his statement of what he considered to be the right
-reading of the complex character of his famous sitter.
-
-
-
-
-THE CHIEF WORKS OF MILLAIS IN PUBLIC GALLERIES, ETC.
-
-
-NATIONAL GALLERY.
-
-The Yeoman of the Guard. 1876. 4 ft. 7 in. by 3 ft. 8 in. (1494.)
-
-Portrait of the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone. 1879. 4 ft. 1 in. by 3
-ft. (1666.)
-
-
-TATE GALLERY.
-
-Ophelia. 1852. 2 ft. 6 in. by 3 ft. 8 in. (1506.) Tate Gift.
-
-The Vale of Rest. 1858. 3 ft. 4 in. by 5 ft. 7 in. (1507.) Tate
-Gift.
-
-The Knight Errant. 1870. 6 ft. by 4 ft. 5 in. (1508.) Tate Gift.
-
-The North-West Passage. 1874. 5 ft. 9 in. by 7 ft. 4 in. (1509.)
-Tate Gift.
-
-Mercy--St. Bartholomew's Day--1572. 1886. 6 ft. 1 in. by 4 ft. 4
-in. (1510.) Tate Gift.
-
-Saint Stephen. 1895. 5 ft. by 3 ft. 9 in. (1563.) Tate Gift.
-
-A Disciple. 1895. 4 ft. 1 in. by 2 ft. 11 in. (1564.) Tate Gift.
-
-Speak! Speak! 1895. 5 ft. 6 in. by 6 ft. 11 in. (1584.) Chantrey
-Bequest.
-
-The Order of Release--1746. 1853. 3 ft. 4 in. by 2 ft. 5 in.
-(1657.) Tate Gift.
-
-The Boyhood of Raleigh. (1691.) 4 ft. by 4 ft. 8 in. Gift of Lady
-Tate. (1870.)
-
-A Maid offering a Basket of Fruit to a Cavalier. 6 in. by 4½ in.
-(1807.) Bequeathed by Mr. Henry Vaughan.
-
-Charles I. and his Son in the Studio of Van Dyck. 6¼ in. by 4½ in.
-(1808.) Bequeathed by Mr. Henry Vaughan.
-
-Equestrian Portrait. 1882. 10 ft. 5 in. by 7 ft. 7 in. (1503.)
-Anonymous donor.
-
-N.B. Sir Edwin Landseer painted the gray palfrey with the gorgeous
-accoutrements, intending it for an equestrian portrait of Queen
-Victoria, but this was never carried out, and ultimately the picture
-was sent to Millais, who painted his daughter, now Mrs. James, in
-this old riding costume, together with the page, the dog, and the
-background, and called the picture "Nell Gwynne." It is also
-sometimes known as Diana Vernon.
-
-It is initialled both by Landseer and Millais, and the date is that
-of its completion by Millais.
-
-
-NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY.
-
-The Earl of Beaconsfield. A copy by Boyle from Millais' portrait.
-
-Thomas Carlyle. 1877. An unfinished portrait. 3 ft. 9 in. by 2 ft.
-10 in.
-
-William Wilkie Collins, the novelist. 11 in. by 7 in.
-
-John Leech, caricaturist. In water-colours. 11 in. by 9 in.
-
-
-BIRMINGHAM ART GALLERY.
-
-The Widow's Mite. 1869. 3 ft. 10 in. by 2 ft. 7 in. (171.)
-
-The Blind Girl. 1856. Pre-Raphaelite work. 2 ft. 8 in. by 1 ft. 9
-in. (172.) Presented by the Rt. Hon. William Kenrick.
-
-
-BRITISH AND FOREIGN BIBLE SOCIETY, QUEEN VICTORIA ST., LONDON.
-
-Portrait of the Earl of Shaftesbury. 1877.
-
-
-CHRIST CHURCH, OXFORD.
-
-Portrait of the Rt. Hon. W. E. Gladstone. 1885.
-
-
-FITZWILLIAM MUSEUM, CAMBRIDGE.
-
-The Bridesmaid. ("All Hallows' E'en.") 1851.
-
-
-THE GARRICK CLUB, LONDON.
-
-Portrait of Sir Henry Irving. 1884.
-
-
-INSTITUTE OF CIVIL ENGINEERS, LONDON.
-
-Portrait of Sir John Fowler, Bart., C.E. 1868.
-
-
-LEEDS ART GALLERY
-
- Childhood. }
- Youth. } A series of panels for lunettes
- Manhood. } formerly in the Judges' Lodgings in
- Age. } Leeds. Painted in 1847.
- Music. }
- Art. }
-
-
-LIVERPOOL ART GALLERY.
-
-Lorenzo and Isabella. 1849. Pre-Raphaelite work. 4 ft. 9 in. by 3
-ft. 4 in. Purchased in 1884. (337.)
-
-The Martyr of the Solway, in 1680. 1870. 1 ft. 10 in. by 2 ft. 4
-in. Presented by Mr. George Holt in 1895. (525.)
-
-
-MANCHESTER ART GALLERY.
-
-Autumn Leaves. 1856. Pre-Raphaelite work. 3 ft. 5 in. by 2 ft. 5
-in. (144.) Bought from the Leathart Collection.
-
-A Flood. 1870. 3 ft. 2 in. by 4 ft. 8 in. (145.) From the
-Matthews Collection.
-
-"Victory, O Lord!" 1871. 6 ft. 4 in. by 4 ft. 6 in. (171.) Bought
-from the Executors of Mrs. Reiss, 1894.
-
-
-THE CORPORATION OF MANCHESTER.
-
-Portrait of Bishop Fraser. 1880.
-
-Portrait of Queen Alexandra when Princess of Wales. 1886.
-
-
-NATIONAL GALLERY OF CANADA.
-
-Portrait of the Marquis of Lorne, now Duke of Argyll. 1884.
-
-
-NEW SOUTH WALES GALLERY, AUSTRALIA.
-
-The Captive. 1882.
-
-
-THE CORPORATION OF OLDHAM.
-
-Portrait of T. O. Barlow, R.A. 1886.
-
-
-OXFORD UNIVERSITY GALLERY.
-
-Portrait of Thomas Combe. 1850.
-
-Return of the Dove to the Ark. 1851.
-
-
-THE ROYAL ACADEMY, BURLINGTON HOUSE DIPLOMA GALLERY.
-
-A Souvenir of Velazquez. 1868.
-
-
-ROYAL HOLLOWAY COLLEGE, EGHAM.
-
-The Princes in the Tower. 1878.
-
-The Princess Elizabeth. 1879.
-
-
-SHAKESPEARE MUSEUM, STRATFORD ON-AVON.
-
-Portrait of Lord Ronald Gower. 1876.
-
-
-ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S HOSPITAL, LONDON.
-
-Portrait of Sir James Paget. 1872.
-
-Portrait of Luther Holden, P.R.C.S. 1880.
-
-
-UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW.
-
-Portrait of the Rev. John Caird, D.D. 1881.
-
-
-THE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON.
-
-Portrait of George Grote. 1871.
-
-
-
-
- CHISWICK PRESS: PRINTED BY CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.
- TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIR JOHN EVERETT MILLAIS ***
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Sir John Everett Millais, by A. L. Baldry</p>
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Sir John Everett Millais</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: A. L. Baldry</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 24, 2022 [eBook #69227]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Al Haines</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIR JOHN EVERETT MILLAIS ***</div>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-front"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-front.jpg" alt="A YEOMAN OF THE GUARD.">
-<br>
-A YEOMAN OF THE GUARD.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- Bell's Miniature Series of Painters<br>
-</p>
-
-<h1>
-<br><br>
- SIR JOHN EVERETT<br>
- MILLAIS<br>
-</h1>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- BY A. L. BALDRY<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON<br>
- GEORGE BELL & SONS<br>
- 1908<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- First Published, December, 1902.<br>
- Reprinted, December, 1907.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <a href="#chap01">Life of the Artist</a><br>
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#chap01a">The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood</a><br>
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#chap01b">Later Developments</a><br>
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#chap01c">Last Years</a><br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <a href="#chap02">The Art of Millais</a><br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <a href="#chap03">Our Illustrations</a><br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <a href="#chap04">The Chief Works of Millais in Public Galleries, etc.</a><br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-front">A Yeoman of the Guard</a> ... <i>Frontispiece</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-006">Christ in the House of His Parents</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-012">A Souvenir of Velazquez</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-026">The Vale of Rest</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-044">Ophelia</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-046">Autumn Leaves</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-052">The North-West Passage</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-056">Thomas Carlyle</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-SIR JOHN MILLAIS
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<h3>
-HIS LIFE
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Although John Everett Millais was born,
-on June 8, 1829, at Portland Place, Southampton,
-his father was an inhabitant of Jersey,
-and a member of a family which had been settled
-in that island from a date anterior to the Norman
-conquest. The first five years of the child's life
-were spent in Jersey, but in 1835 he was taken by
-his parents to Dinan, in Brittany, where he began,
-by his sketches of the scenery of the place and
-the types of the people, to give the first
-convincing proofs of the remarkable artistic capacity
-that was in him. These early efforts were so
-surprising, and attracted so much attention
-outside his family circle, that when he was not more
-than nine years old he was brought to London
-for an expert opinion on his chances in the
-profession for which he seemed predestined. The
-President of the Royal Academy, Sir Martin
-Archer Shee, was consulted, and his encouraging
-declaration, that "Nature had provided for the
-boy's success," decided the future of the young
-artist, who was at once allowed to begin serious
-study.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In 1838 he entered the drawing-school in
-Bloomsbury which was carried on by Henry
-Sass, and regarded as the best available place
-for the training of budding genius. In the
-same year he took the silver medal of the Society
-of Arts, for a drawing from the antique, and
-caused quite a sensation when he appeared, at
-the distribution of the prizes, to receive his award
-from the Duke of Sussex, who was presiding.
-The surprise of the spectators is said to have been
-unbounded when "Mr. Millais" came forward,
-a small child in a pinafore, to answer to his
-name, and even the officials at first found it hard
-to believe that he could be really the winner of
-the medal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For two years he remained under the tuition
-of Mr. Sass, and, helped by his teaching and by
-a good deal of work from the casts in the British
-Museum, the boy developed so rapidly that
-when he was only eleven years old he gained
-admission to the Royal Academy Schools, the
-youngest student, it is said, that has ever been
-received into them. His career there was a
-series of successes. For six years he laboured
-indefatigably, and plainly proved his ability by
-taking prize after prize, beginning with a silver
-medal in 1843, and ending, in 1847, with the
-gold medal for a historical picture, <i>The Tribe of
-Benjamin seizing the Daughters of Shiloh</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Subjects of this type seem at that time to have
-attracted him strongly, and to have occupied a
-great deal of his attention, for in 1846 he had
-painted, and exhibited at the Academy, <i>Pizarro
-seizing the Inca of Peru</i>, which is now in the
-South Kensington Museum, and in the following
-year another study of violent action, <i>Elgiva
-seized by Order of Archbishop Odo</i>. To 1847
-also belongs the great design, <i>The Widow
-bestowing her Mite</i>, for the Westminster Hall
-competition, a canvas fourteen feet long by ten
-feet high, covered with life-size figures. Such
-an effort speaks well for the energy and ambition
-of a lad of eighteen, who could within the space
-of a few months carry out so vast an undertaking
-in addition to the <i>Elgiva</i>, and his gold
-medal picture.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So far his progress had been, from the point of
-view of his elder contemporaries, very promising
-and satisfactory. He had proved himself to be
-possessed of unusual gifts; and apparently
-historical art was to have in him an exponent of
-rather a rare type, a painter who would carry on
-its traditions with some degree of vitality. But
-really he had only been feeling his way, and, not
-having had time as yet to analyse his inclinations,
-he had temporarily accepted, with youthful
-imitativeness, the precepts of his teachers and
-fellow-students. It did not take him long to
-discover that he was on the wrong track, and to
-decide that there was in another direction a far
-better opportunity for the assertion of his own
-independent convictions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About the middle of the year 1848, he, and
-his friends Rossetti and Holman Hunt, inspired
-partly by the example of Ford Madox Brown,
-and partly by their own study of the works of
-the Italian Primitives who, before the time of
-Raphael, had laboured with devout and simple
-naturalism, decided that the principles which
-guided the early masters were being deliberately
-ignored by the modern men. So these three
-youths agreed among themselves to break away
-from most of the regulations by which they had
-been bound in their student days and to
-formulate a new art creed of their own. From
-this agreement sprang into existence an association,
-that, despite the small number of its members,
-and the shortness of its life, has left upon
-the history of the British School a mark clear
-and ineffaceable.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a id="chap01a"></a>
-THE PRE-RAPHAELITE BROTHERHOOD
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, as this
-association was called by way of declaring the
-intentions and ambitions of the men who
-belonged to it, was formally constituted during
-the autumn of 1848. It included, in addition
-to the three originators, two other painters,
-James Collinson and F. G. Stephens; a sculptor,
-Thomas Woolner; and a writer, William Michael
-Rossetti, who acted as secretary of the
-Brotherhood. Ford Madox Brown never became a
-member, although he entirely sympathised with
-the artistic aims of the group, for he had, it is
-said, doubts concerning the utility of such a
-banding together, and was more inclined to
-favour independent action; but several other
-young painters, who were never formally of the
-company, gave it practical support, and openly
-adopted its methods. Indeed, the list of these
-outside sympathisers soon became a long one;
-it included such able workers as William Bell
-Scott, Arthur Hughes, Thomas Seddon, W. L. Windus,
-and W. H. Deverell, who were directly
-inspired by the beliefs of the Brotherhood, and
-if, as would be quite legitimate, it were extended
-to take in all the others whose first essays in art
-were controlled by Pre-Raphaelite principles, an
-astonishing number of artists who have reached
-high rank in their profession could be added
-to it.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-006"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-006.jpg" alt="CHRIST IN THE HOUSE OF HIS PARENTS.">
-<br>
-CHRIST IN THE HOUSE OF HIS PARENTS.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At first the inner significance of the
-Pre-Raphaelite movement was lost upon the general
-public. When, in 1849, Millais exhibited at the
-Academy his <i>Lorenzo and Isabella</i>, by which his
-adoption of the new creed was plainly enough
-asserted, the picture was not unkindly received.
-It was ridiculed, perhaps, by the people who
-realised that it showed an artistic intention
-somewhat unlike that which was then generally
-prevalent; but its novelty of manner was put
-down to the youth and inexperience of the
-artist, and was regarded as a minor defect that a
-few more years of practice would remedy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But in January, 1850, the Brotherhood took
-a step that very effectually removed any doubts
-that were felt by the public about the meaning
-of such canvases. They began to issue a monthly
-magazine, called "The Germ," in which they
-and their friends stated with sufficient frankness
-what Pre-Raphaelitism really meant, and what
-were the opinions that they professed. As a
-commercial speculation the magazine must be
-reckoned a failure, for after the fourth number
-it ceased to be issued, and at no time had it any
-general circulation. It served its purpose, however,
-of making quite intelligible the creed of its
-promoters; and it gave to the world certain
-etchings of Holman Hunt, Collinson, Madox
-Brown, and Deverell, and much literary matter
-by Coventry Patmore, Woolner, W. B. Scott,
-F. G. stephens, the two Rossettis and their sister
-Christina, and some other writers. An etching
-was prepared by Millais for the fifth number, an
-illustration of a story that Dante Rossetti was to
-write; but this fifth number did not appear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though "The Germ" died so quickly for
-want of support, it had fully accomplished what
-was required of it in the way of propagandism.
-When the next batch of Pre-Raphaelite efforts
-was exhibited in the spring of 1850 there was no
-trace of hesitation or toleration in the comments
-of the older artists and the press. A perfect
-storm of abuse broke out. Against <i>Ferdinand
-lured by Ariel</i> and <i>Christ in the House of His
-Parents</i>, which were the chief pictures sent by
-Millais to the Academy, the bitterest attack was
-directed. Everything that could be said or done
-to minimise their influence, and to discredit the
-motives by which they were inspired, was lavished
-upon them without restraint, in a kind of frenzy
-of anguished excitement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All this, however, was mild in comparison
-with the agitation in the following year, when it
-was seen that the Pre-Raphaelites, instead of
-bowing to the storm and recanting their opinions,
-were prepared to go to even greater lengths in
-the avowal of their convictions. The opposition
-had done its best to howl them down, and
-to frighten them by ferocious threats; but all
-this expenditure of misapplied energy had had
-no result. Millais exhibited <i>The Woodman's
-Daughter</i>, <i>The Return of the Dove to the Ark</i>, and
-<i>Mariana in the Moated Grange</i>, and Holman
-Hunt <i>Valentine and Sylvia</i>; while the other
-members of the group gave equally definite
-proofs of their intention to persevere in the
-course they had adopted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Alarm at this defiance, and perhaps an
-uneasy consciousness of the real strength of a
-movement that gave so little sign of yielding to
-pressure, drove the supporters of the existing
-condition of affairs to almost incredible lengths.
-They demanded that these canvases should be
-removed from the exhibition of the Academy,
-summarily expelled as outrages on good taste;
-they urged the students in the art schools to
-shun the Brotherhood and everyone connected
-with it; they descended to the lowest depths of
-misrepresentation, and drew the line at nothing
-in the way of exaggeration. Calm and critical
-judgment ceased, for the moment, to exist, and a
-hysterical absence of balance threw into
-confusion even the best ordered and judicious
-minds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This outburst had one immediate effect, an
-unpleasant one for the young artists, it checked
-for a while the sale of their pictures. <i>Christ in
-the House of His Parents</i> had been painted on
-commission for a well-known dealer, and it
-remained for many years on his hands; but
-<i>Ferdinand lured by Ariel</i>, which had also been
-commissioned, was refused by the intending
-purchaser. It was afterwards sold to Mr. Richard
-Ellison, a collector of rare discrimination, who
-was introduced to Millais by a mutual friend.
-Other canvases belonging to the same period
-either returned from the exhibitions to the artist's
-studio, or were parted with at low prices and on
-terms of payment none too favourable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But after a little while things began to mend.
-The attack exhausted itself by its very excess of
-virulence; and here and there strong men came
-forward to champion the cause of the
-Pre-Raphaelites. Mr. Ruskin, especially, appeared
-in the arena as an enthusiastic advocate of an
-undertaking that was in every way calculated to
-appeal to his vivid sympathies. He declared
-with acute and prophetic insight that the
-pilloried artists were laying "the foundations of a
-school of art nobler than the world has seen for
-three hundred years." His explanations of their
-methods were just what were wanted to set people
-thinking. Some years, it is true, elapsed before
-his enthusiasm, and the dogged perseverance of
-the young men, finally converted the great
-majority of art lovers; but the conversion did come,
-and it was complete.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile Millais was manfully playing his
-part in the struggle, giving no sign that he
-minded being, as he put it in after years, "so
-dreadfully bullied." Nothing could shake his
-resolve to work out his artistic destiny in the
-way he thought best. Happily he was not entirely
-without encouragement from the chiefs of his own
-profession, for just at the time when the outside
-world was decrying him most strenuously, the
-Academy elected him an Associate. This
-election, was, however, quashed, because he was
-discovered to be under the age at which admission
-was possible, and it was not till 1853 that
-he was again chosen. By this time he had
-added to the list of his paintings his exquisite
-<i>Ophelia</i>, <i>The Huguenot</i>, <i>The Proscribed Royalist</i>
-and <i>The Order of Release</i>, all works of the highest
-value, and regarded to-day as evidences of a
-quite extraordinary ability.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For about ten years he remained faithful to
-the Pre-Raphaelite creed, and made no serious
-attempt to modify his methods. During this
-period appeared his <i>Portrait of Mr. Ruskin</i>,
-<i>The Rescue</i>, <i>Autumn Leaves</i>, <i>The Blind Girl</i>,
-<i>Sir Isumbras at the Ford</i>, <i>The Vale of Rest</i>, and
-<i>Apple Blossoms</i>, of which the last two are to be
-reckoned as to some extent transitional, leading
-the way to the later changes in both his theory
-and practice. What was to be the nature of
-these changes was foreshadowed by <i>The Eve of
-St. Agnes</i>, shown at the Academy in 1863, the
-year before his advancement to the rank of
-Royal Academician. This was the beginning of
-a period during which he wavered between
-recollections of his earlier style and an obvious
-desire to find new ways of expressing himself.
-These variations in his production implied that
-he was just then uncertain as to the course
-which it would be best for him to follow. He
-recognised that there were many details of his
-youthful creed which had served their purpose
-and ought to be set aside. He was conscious
-of the possibilities that his wonderful command
-over his materials opened up to him, and he
-knew that his years of devoted study had given
-him an equipment of knowledge that would
-serve him in any emergency; what he was
-seeking was the exact form in which to cast his
-efforts so as to allow full scope to his abilities
-and to make indisputable that wide popularity
-which was coming to him at last.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a id="chap01b"></a>
-LATER DEVELOPMENTS
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no hesitation about the avowal of
-his new views when finally he did make up his
-mind. With a suddenness that was absolutely
-startling, he abandoned the close and careful
-realism that marked in such canvases as <i>Asleep</i>,
-<i>Awake</i>, and <i>The Minuet</i>, the still-continuing
-influence of his Pre-Raphaelite conviction, and
-chose instead the riotous freedom of touch, and
-the happy readiness of suggestion that make his
-<i>Souvenir of Velasquez</i>, <i>Rosalind and Celia</i>, and
-<i>Stella</i> so impressive. The dramatic point of
-this change is that a year sufficed to bring it
-into active operation. In 1867 he was still
-anxious to work out bit by bit and part by part
-every fact that his subject might present, and, in
-his zeal for naturalism, to leave no chance of
-mistake about the exact meaning of his treatment;
-in 1868 he had thrown himself heart and
-soul into the task of persuading his admirers to
-accept hints in the place of plain statements,
-and to understand subtle compromises with
-nature, instead of direct transcriptions of her
-assertions.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-012"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-012.jpg" alt="A SOUVENIR OF VELASQUEZ.">
-<br>
-A SOUVENIR OF VELASQUEZ.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thenceforward his progress was an almost
-unbroken series of successes, gained by superb
-mastery of craftsmanship, and by the splendid
-confidence in himself that put his intentions
-always beyond the possibility of doubt. With
-few exceptions his pictures, to the end of his
-life, were worthy to rank with the best that the
-British school can show, great in accomplishment,
-admirable in style, and attractive always
-by their frankness of manner and purity of
-motive. In some ways he enlarged his borders,
-for in 1871 he made, with <i>Chill October</i>, his
-first digression into landscape without figures,
-and began that array of important studies of the
-open air which reveal most instructively his
-limitless patience and searching power of observation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a portrait painter also he developed superlative
-gifts, adding year by year to a collection
-of masterpieces unequalled by any of his
-contemporaries. He was fortunate in his sitters,
-and the list of his productions in this branch of
-art includes a large proportion of the most
-beautiful women and distinguished men who
-have graced the latter half of the century. He
-immortalised impartially leaders of fashion,
-pretty children, noted politicians, and people
-eminent in many professions; and in his
-rendering of these various types he missed nothing
-of the individuality and distinctive character
-with which each one was endowed. Here especially
-his Pre-Raphaelite training stood him in
-good stead; for the habit of close analysis and
-careful investigation had been so impressed upon
-him by the experiences of his youth, that his
-instinctive judgment was now perfectly reliable,
-and his ability to decide promptly and with
-certainty about the aspects of his subject which
-were fittest for pictorial record had become
-absolutely complete.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this succession of portraits some stand out
-commandingly as notable performances even
-for an artist who was always distinguished&mdash;for
-example, <i>Mrs. Bischoffsheim</i> (1873), <i>Miss Eveleen
-Tennant</i> (1874), <i>Mrs. Jopling</i> (1879),
-<i>Mrs. Perugini</i> (1880), <i>Sir Henry Irving</i> (1884), <i>The
-Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone</i> (1885), <i>J. C. Hook,
-R.A.</i> (1882), and <i>The Marquis of Salisbury</i>
-(1883)&mdash;marking great moments in his career;
-just as from time to time figure compositions of
-rare importance, like <i>The North-West Passage</i>
-(1874), <i>Effie Deans</i> (1877), <i>The Princes in the
-Tower</i> (1878), and <i>Speak! Speak!</i> (1895),
-punctuated the progress of his intellectual and
-imaginative evolution. He was always, to the last day
-of his life, ambitious and eager to grapple with
-problems of technical expression. Courage to
-face the supreme difficulties of his profession
-never failed him. He had no idea of avoiding
-responsibilities, or of finding in an easy convention
-a way to evade his duty to art; and he tried
-consistently to bring his production up to the
-high level that would satisfy his ideals. When
-he missed his aim&mdash;and there is no such thing
-as unvarying success for any artist&mdash;it was not
-for want of thought or sincere effort, but rather
-from over-anxiety. He once said of himself, "I
-may honestly say that I never consciously put
-an idle touch upon canvas, and that I have
-always been earnest and hard-working; yet the
-worst pictures I ever painted in my life are those
-into which I threw most trouble and labour";
-and in these few words he summed up his whole
-history.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a id="chap01c"></a>
-LAST YEARS
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was characteristic of him that the honours
-which were heaped upon him in his later years
-should have diminished neither the strength of
-his work nor the charm of his personality.
-Affectation or self-consciousness were the last
-things that were possible to such a nature with
-its almost boyish energy and magnificent vitality.
-Yet he had every reason to be proud of success
-that had come to him, not by fortunate chance,
-but as a result of his own tenacity. He was
-made an Officer of the Legion of Honour, and
-received the Medaille d'Honneur at the Paris
-International Exhibition, in 1878; the degree
-of D.C.L. was conferred upon him at Oxford in
-1880, and at Durham in 1893; he was elected
-a Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery in
-1881, a Foreign Associate of the Académie des
-Beaux Arts in 1882, and President of the Royal
-Academy in 1896; he was created a Baronet in
-1885, and an Officer of the Order of Leopold in
-1895; and was, besides, an Officer of the Order
-of St. Maurice, and the Prussian Order "Pour
-la Mérite," and a member of the Academies of
-Vienna, Belgium, Antwerp, and of St. Luke,
-Rome, and San Fernando, Madrid. He was one
-of the few Englishmen invited to contribute his
-portrait to the great collection of pictures of
-artists painted by themselves in the Uffizi Gallery
-at Florence. Such a record proves most cogently
-the manner in which the public estimate of his
-capacity changed as years went on; it is
-instructive to compare its unanimity of recognition
-with the story of the time when art teachers were
-urging their pupils to greet the name of Millais
-with hisses, and were holding up his work, and
-that of his associates, to the bitterest execration.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The post of President of the Royal Academy
-he held for only six months, for he succeeded
-Lord Leighton on February 20th, 1896, and
-died on 13th of August in the same year. His
-election, however, rounded off appropriately that
-long association with the Academy to which he
-referred in his speech at the 1895 banquet, at
-which he presided in the absence of Lord
-Leighton. "I must tell you briefly my
-connection with this Academy. I entered the Antique
-School as a probationer, when I was eleven years
-of age; then became a student in the Life School;
-and I have risen from stage to stage until I
-reached the position I now hold of Royal
-Academician: so that, man and boy, I have been
-intimately connected with this Academy for
-more than half a century. I have received here
-a free education as an artist&mdash;an advantage any
-lad may enjoy who can pass a qualifying
-examination&mdash;and I owe the Academy a debt of gratitude
-I never can repay. I can, however, make this
-return&mdash;I can give it my love. I love everything
-belonging to it; the casts I have drawn from as
-a boy, the books I have consulted in our Library,
-the very benches I have sat on." No other
-teaching institution had, indeed, had any part
-in his education; no other art society had given
-him assistance at a moment when the world was
-against him; and in no other direction had such
-practical belief in the greatness of his future been
-manifested. Truly, he owed a debt of gratitude
-to the Academy, and he repaid it by being ever
-one of its most active supporters, and by doing
-infinite credit to its best traditions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was something peculiarly pathetic in
-the fact that his life should have ended just when
-he had reached the position that must have
-seemed to him, after his long and intimate
-connection with the Academy, the most honourable
-to which he could aspire. To be the head of
-the institution that he loved so well, and to be
-hailed as chief in the place that had seen every
-stage of his development, from childhood to ripe
-maturity, could not fail to be anything but
-exquisitely gratifying to a man of his nature. But
-almost at the moment of his election it appeared
-that there was little time left him in which to
-enjoy the honour that had crowned his many
-years of devotion to the great principles of art.
-The fatal disease that had gripped him a little
-while before was not to be shaken off, and was
-sapping rapidly and effectually even his superb
-vitality. He worked on, however, almost to the
-end, hopeful even in the midst of suffering, active
-in carrying out the duties of his office, and busy
-as ever with the canvases that crowded his
-studio. He was fully represented in the Academy
-Exhibition of 1896, by a group of portraits, and
-by a picture, <i>A Forerunner</i>, which showed no
-sign of failing strength or of any relaxation in
-his grasp of the essentials of his craft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, with painful suddenness, came the
-verdict of his doctors, that his case was hopeless.
-The throat trouble, that had been growing month
-by month more acute and distressing, was
-pronounced to be cancer and incurable. In June
-the disease had made such strides that the end
-seemed to be imminent, but an operation gave
-him some relief, and his life was prolonged till
-the middle of August, when at last death released
-him from his agony. He passed away at the
-house in Palace Gate, Kensington, which had
-been the scene of the many triumphs of his later
-years, dying as he had lived, full of courage and
-patience, fearing nothing, and meeting his fate
-with cheerful resignation. On August 20th, he
-was buried in St. Paul's Cathedral, beside his old
-friend Lord Leighton, whom only a few months
-before he had helped to lay to rest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His death not only left a gap in the ranks of
-art, but it also took away, while he was yet in
-the full enjoyment of his powers, a man whose
-sterling qualities had attracted a host of friends.
-His frankness and honesty, his geniality and
-kindliness, and, above all, his manly
-wholesomeness, without taint of modern decadence or
-morbidity, endeared him to everyone with whom
-he came in contact. He was typically English,
-in the best sense, with all the physical and
-mental attributes that have enabled our race to
-dominate the world, a lover of the country, a
-good shot, a keen fisherman, and a fearless
-horseman. The very look of him, with his
-stalwart, well set-up figure, and handsome,
-self-reliant face, conveyed the impression of perfect
-health of mind and body, and declared the
-inexhaustible vigour of his nature.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-HIS ART
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-With all his definiteness of opinion and
-sincere belief in the accuracy of his own
-judgment, Millais was too keenly alive to the
-varieties of nature, too earnest in his observation
-of the life about him, to fall into the mechanical
-habit of repeating himself. He was robust,
-modern and practical, a man whose instinct was
-active rather than contemplative; and he might
-even be said to be wanting in imagination, if by
-imagination is understood the capacity to evolve
-things curious and unusual out of the inner
-consciousness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But if he lacked imagination in this sense, he
-more than made up for the deficiency by the
-exquisite acuteness of his insight into natural
-facts, and by the depth of his judgment about
-the essentials of art. He made no mistakes
-through ignorance or want of proper preparation;
-and he never failed because he grudged the
-preliminary thought needed to carry to success a
-great undertaking. Indeed, the one thing that
-he always preached was application, constant
-industry devoted to the task of finding out how
-work should be done. Carelessness he
-condemned; but he had no love for that type of
-performance which shows the trouble that the
-producer has taken over it. He contended,
-justly, that it was the duty of the artist to so
-master the executive details of his profession
-that his work should impress the spectator by
-its ready certainty rather than its conscientious
-toil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The need to strive for the quality of freshness
-in technical expression was, however, very far
-from being the only thing he insisted upon. He
-had, as well, a strong belief in the importance of
-a definitely independent attitude with regard to
-choice of pictorial motive, and selection of
-suitable material. But beyond this he advocated
-special precautions against any narrowing of the
-artist's practice by too close adherence to one
-kind of picture. He once put this conviction
-into words of considerable significance.
-"Individuality is not all that should be looked to;
-a varied manner must be cultivated as well. I
-believe that however admirably he may paint in
-a certain method, or however perfectly he may
-render a certain class of subject, the artist should
-not be content to adhere to a speciality of manner
-or method. A fine style is good, but it is not
-everything&mdash;it is not absolutely necessary."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Certainly Sir John carried out these principles
-in his own production. He had many sides to
-his character as an artist, and used his powers
-of observation with splendid freedom. His
-popularity was gained not by the reiteration
-of any one set of ideas, but by showing himself
-equally capable in many forms of painting. In
-his figure pictures he was by turns dramatic,
-romantic, sternly realistic, and at times
-sentimental in a robust way; in his portraits he was
-incisive, direct, and accurate; in his landscapes
-precise, exact, and searchingly correct in his
-rendering of what was before him; and in his
-water-colours and drawings in black and white
-delightfully facile and ingenious. He had no
-speciality, and no set conviction that there was
-one particular thing he could do better than
-anything else; so that he never restrained his love
-of variety or bound himself by limitations based
-simply upon expediency.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In any classification of his works, the first
-place must necessarily be given to his figure
-paintings and portraits. Indeed, they make up
-the bulk of his achievement, and represent the
-fullest growth of his capacity. The history of
-his life is principally written in them. The
-charm of his personality distinguishes them
-all&mdash;a charm as evident in the simpler and more
-limited subjects as in those which made great
-demands upon his powers of invention and
-contrivance. There was never any suggestion that
-he did not honestly feel the motive with which
-he was dealing, or that he was not perfectly
-convinced that what he had chosen was worthy
-of record. If he failed, it was because he had
-misapprehended the suitability of his material,
-not because he had been trying to do something
-outside the range of his belief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Curiously, perhaps, his honesty and directness
-were at the same time the source of what
-was best in his pictures, and the cause of their
-chief weaknesses. Had he not been so frank
-and wholesome-minded he could never have
-arrived at that exquisite appreciation of the
-daintiness of childhood to which he gave
-expression in a great many of his most successful
-canvases, and could never have gained, as he
-did, the hearts of all classes of art lovers. Only
-a worshipper of children, with the most absolute
-sympathy with their ways and habits, could have
-painted pictures as persuasive as <i>Cherry Ripe</i>,
-<i>A Waif</i>, <i>Caller Herrin'</i>, <i>The Princess Elizabeth</i>,
-and that long series of pretty studies of which
-<i>Perfect Bliss</i>, <i>Dropped from the Nest</i>, <i>Forbidden
-Fruit</i>, and <i>Little Mrs. Gamp</i> may be quoted as
-types. Only a man with the happiest sense of
-delicate shades of character could have
-commanded the extraordinary popularity that came
-to him as a result of his production of pictures
-such as these.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet it was to these very qualities that was due
-his occasional want of success in dealing with
-stronger themes. His dramatic pictures
-descended at times into an artlessness that was
-only redeemed from feebleness by its obvious
-sincerity. They failed because he concerned
-himself so much with matters of fact that he
-missed the greater possibilities of the subjects
-he had selected, and because in his desire to be
-real and convincing he forgot that there was a
-need to appeal to the imagination of people who
-would not be satisfied with plain statements.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-026"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-026.jpg" alt="THE VALE OF REST.">
-<br>
-THE VALE OF REST.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the other hand it is possible to select from
-among his subject pictures several that prove
-him to have had brilliant moments when he
-could reach the greater heights of pictorial
-invention. There are quite half a dozen of his
-canvases which by their wonderful vitality, their
-deep significance, and force of expression make
-good a claim to the possession of the finest kind
-of mastery. <i>The Vale of Rest</i>, <i>The North-West
-Passage</i>, <i>The Order of Release</i>, <i>The Ruling
-Passion</i>, <i>The Boyhood of Raleigh</i>, and perhaps <i>Effie
-Deans</i> show that he could grasp with all possible
-firmness and state with unflinching decision,
-motives that called for great mental exertion.
-Their qualities are those that come from a minute
-insight not only into details of character, but
-also into the principles which govern the
-dramatic side of pictorial art. No false note spoils
-the harmony of these compositions, no touch of
-uncertainty or divided opinion; they are
-confident and assured, and their meaning is not to
-be questioned. They express the thoughts of a
-man who, with all his straightforwardness and
-simplicity, could now and then look beneath
-the surface and work out problems far more
-profound than it was his every-day habit to
-investigate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His romance, especially, had this merit of
-being well thought out. It was never complicated
-by excess of details, and was strict in its
-adherence to the main facts of the story, without
-irrelevant matter introduced to complete
-picturesquely an imperfect conception. <i>The Knight
-Errant</i> is a very good example of his method of
-dealing with an incident evolved from his own
-fancy; and <i>Victory, O Lord!</i> is equally
-characteristic as an instance of the power with which
-he could seize upon the salient points of a
-subject suggested to him by written history.
-Many of his finer paintings were illustrative
-records of the impressions made upon him by
-things he had read, and expressions of the
-instinct that brought him throughout his life
-such success as a draughtsman in black and
-white; but they were only occasionally direct
-illustrations of particular passages from books.
-More often what he gave was his view of what
-might have happened, rather than a plain
-reproduction in paint of what was already fixed in
-words.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He preferred to base himself more upon the
-spirit than the letter of a story, to find a new
-reading for himself, and to treat it with a
-considerable degree of independence. In <i>The
-Princes in the Tower</i> he followed none of the
-accepted versions, and in <i>Effie Deans</i> he made
-a subject out of the slightest possible suggestion
-in the text of the romance; yet both pictures
-show that peculiar air of conviction which results
-from a perfect understanding of what is essential
-for the proper application of dramatic material.
-In these, as in almost all his renderings of
-incident, appears his habit of attacking not the
-climax of the story, but rather one of its earlier
-stages, an intermediate moment when the action
-is still in progress and the final result is suggested
-rather than clearly foreshadowed. This habit
-was always strong upon him. It gave their
-particular interest to such early works as <i>The
-Huguenot</i>, <i>The Black Brunswicker</i>, <i>The
-Proscribed Royalist</i>, and <i>The Escape of a Heretic</i>,
-just as much as it did to later pictures like <i>The
-Girlhood of St. Theresa</i>, or <i>Speak! Speak!</i>;
-and by introducing a touch of speculation into
-the record of his thoughts he enhanced the
-fascination which was never wanting in his
-sturdy inventions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, there was in every branch of his figure-painting
-some sufficient reason for his popularity,
-some distinct attractiveness of mental quality to
-add convincingly to the impression created by
-his superlative command over technicalities. He
-could be tender, dainty, and refined in his studies
-of children; serious and solemn in his symbolical
-compositions; pathetic, vigorous, and passionate
-by turns in his subject-pictures; and through all
-ran a vein of sentiment that was always
-wholesome, clean, and intelligible. He never affected
-to be influenced by feelings that were not
-honestly natural to him, nor did he pretend to
-represent anything that he did not believe in
-sincerely and without question. What he painted
-was invariably what he felt at the moment; and,
-whether it was a masterpiece or a comparative
-failure it expressed simply the appeal that the
-subject had made to him; and his response to
-this appeal was always unconventional and
-definite.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He trusted in the same way to a personal
-impression of his sitter when he set himself to
-paint a portrait. What he wanted was to show
-that he understood the individuality of the man
-or woman before him, and that his understanding
-had helped him to make clear to others the
-special idiosyncrasies that separated that man or
-woman from the ordinary crowd. Portraiture to
-him was a matter of observation, of receptiveness
-to suggestion, and acceptance of what was visible,
-rather than an artistic process which enabled him
-to give free scope to his inventive instincts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps he was less analytical and discriminating
-in his pictures of women. They seemed to
-appeal to him less than men did as subjects for
-psychological study. What he preferred to dwell
-upon were the physical charms of femininity,
-beauty of face and form, elegance of carriage,
-and that rounded fulness of development that
-argues perfect healthiness of body and mind.
-The stateliness of the card-players in <i>Hearts are
-Trumps</i>, the air of high breeding and conscious
-power which distinguishes the portrait of the
-Duchess of Westminster, and the more matronly
-splendour of <i>Mrs. Bischoffsheim</i>, mark the chief
-variations in his manner of painting womankind;
-occasionally only did he diverge into more detailed
-character, as in <i>Miss Eveleen Tennant</i>,
-<i>Mrs. Jopling</i>, and <i>Mrs. Perugini</i>; but as a rule he was
-content to treat the freshness and brilliant vitality
-of his feminine sitters, and to leave untouched
-their possibilities of passion or strong emotion.
-His men were full of vigorous aspirations,
-restrained for the moment, yet near the surface and
-ready at any time to break into activity; but his
-women were serene and unmoved, prepared,
-perhaps, for conquest, but wrapped in a reserve
-that would not allow them to make the first
-advances.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That his preference for repose in representation
-did not lead the artist into a dry convention,
-or into any disregard of the essential points of
-difference between people, is very evident if a
-comparison is made of his chief portraits.
-Beneath their reserve appears a wonderful variety
-of manner, and a superb power of interpretation.
-They are studied, exact, and intensely real. No
-perfunctory labour is seen in them, and their
-value is diminished by no slurring over of the
-little things which help to define the more
-intimate characteristics of the modern man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The unquestionable popularity that Millais
-gained by his excursions into landscape was
-equally due to the fact that he was a student of
-nature, not an imaginative interpreter of what
-she presented. He dealt with facts and left
-fancies almost entirely alone. In the series of
-canvases that began with <i>Chill October</i>, and
-ended with <i>Halcyon Weather</i>, there was infinite
-industry, marvellous accuracy, perfect veracity
-of record, but little effort to be anything but
-absolutely exact in his statement of what he
-saw. His amazing patience and his surprising
-quickness of vision, enabled him to grasp with
-easy confidence the plain truths of nature, and
-his command of brushwork ensured a rare
-perfection in his pictorial expression of the
-matter that he had selected for representation.
-Nothing was implied or left in sketchy
-incompleteness, because his patience had failed him
-before he had realised the complicated fulness
-of his subject. He spared himself no toil to
-arrive at what seemed to him to be the perfection
-of nature, and he was as minutely attentive,
-as surely certain of himself, as he ever was in
-his figure work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a necessary consequence, however, of this
-manner of working, he never could be ranked
-among the inspired painters of the open air,
-nor could he ever be said to have dealt
-exhaustively with the problems presented by
-natural phenomena. He remained untouched by
-the subtleties of atmospheric effect, by the
-varieties of momentary illumination, or by the
-fleeting glories of aerial colour, which provide the
-student of nature's devices with the chief
-incentive to artistic effort. He was always too much
-concerned with the things at his feet, with
-matter that he could dissect and investigate, to
-give much thought to the broad and comprehensive
-scheme of which these things formed part.
-Whatever he arrived at in the way of a record of
-a natural effect was reached not so much by
-thorough understanding of the effect as a whole,
-as by an amazingly acute interpretation of the
-influence exercised by it upon the details upon
-which his eyes were fixed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An excellent instance of this is afforded in
-<i>The Blind Girl</i>, where he has given little enough
-attention to the grandeur of the passing
-storm-clouds, and has concentrated the whole of his
-energies upon the rendering, with supreme
-fidelity, of dripping weeds and a drenched
-hillside lighted by the rays of the setting sun. As
-a record of microscopic insight, the picture is
-superlatively successful; it could hardly be
-more closely reasoned out; but, as a representation
-of Nature in one of her most impressive
-moods, it is ineffectual and unconvincing. So,
-too, his most popular landscape, <i>Chill October</i>,
-falls short of greatness, because it is too plainly
-studied bit by bit, and part by part, and built
-up precisely by the careful putting in place of
-material collected for the pictorial purpose. It
-holds together, not because it has one great
-dominating intention, but because its construction
-is so ingenious, and its mechanism so
-workmanlike, that no single detail can be
-criticised as out of relation to the rest. It can
-hardly be called learned in design, nor can it be
-said to have any conspicuous dignity of style;
-yet the knowledge of form, the intimate observation
-of the growth of riverside vegetation, and
-the appreciation of autumnal colouring, which
-were turned to account by the artist in his
-treatment of the subject, make the canvas
-prominent among the greatest nature studies of
-modern times.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No consideration of his influence and no
-review of his performance would be complete
-without an appreciative reference to his services
-to black and white. As a painter he has a
-secure place among the chief modern masters
-of the world; but what he did for pictorial art
-was paralleled, if not surpassed, by his assertion
-of the dignity and importance of illustration as
-a form of occupation for even the greatest of art
-workers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been well said that if Millais had never
-devoted himself to the painting of oil pictures, but
-had given his life entirely to the work of book
-illustration, his position would still have been
-indisputable, and his magnificent ability would have
-been amply demonstrated. There is, indeed, a
-great deal of truth in this contention. Although
-the world would have been the poorer for the
-loss of his masterly essays in brushwork, and of
-his wonderful exercises in the arrangement of
-strong colour, it would have possessed extremely
-significant evidence of the reality of his artistic
-judgment, and of the adaptability of his
-inventive powers. In his black and white work he
-showed frequently a side of his capacity that
-appeared in his painting only on great occasions,
-a sense of dramatic exigencies, a feeling for
-illustrative meanings, far beyond what was
-suggested by the general run of his pictures. As
-an interpreter of the fancies of other men he
-was exceptionally intelligent, with a memorable
-grasp of the salient points of the story and a
-remarkable facility in summarising essentials.
-He was afraid of nothing in the way of a
-subject, and spared no labour to make his
-drawings completely expressive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His love of black and white was indeed a
-genuine one. Illustration was not to him, as it
-so often is with other men, a mere expedient,
-resorted to because an unappreciative public
-refused to recognise the merit and importance
-of his paintings, and abandoned gladly as soon
-as he found he could make a sufficient income
-without it. On the contrary, he welcomed the
-opportunities with which this branch of art
-practice provided him, and regarded them as of
-the highest value. For more than twenty years
-he was a prolific illustrator, constantly busy with
-drawings that were reproduced in all kinds of
-books and magazines; and even in his later life
-occasional examples appeared to prove that his
-hand had not lost its cunning and that his
-interest in this type of work was undiminished.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How deeply he felt about this particular
-subject is, perhaps, best proved by his constant
-advocacy, within and without the Academy, of
-the claims of illustrative draughtsmen to official
-recognition. Before the Royal Commission on
-the Academy he strenuously urged that workers
-in black and white should be declared eligible
-for election to membership of that institution as
-draughtsmen purely, instead of being required
-to disguise themselves as picture painters before
-they could hope for admission; and his pleading
-then expressed a conviction which remained
-strong in him till his death. He spoke with
-real authority on a matter that, both by inclination
-and association, he was fully qualified to
-discuss. His experience of illustrative drawing,
-and his acquaintance with the history of its
-development, were both peculiarly intimate; and
-he knew exactly what were the possibilities of
-influence possessed by the craft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About his technical methods there is comparatively
-little to be said. He was not a worker
-who concerned himself very deeply over devices
-of execution, or cared to codify his system of
-painting in accordance with scientific principles.
-He drew well, and handled his materials with
-the sureness and confidence that came from
-complete knowledge of what he wanted to do.
-His chief desire, as has been already stated, was
-to retain in pictures that had really cost him
-deep thought and prolonged labour an aspect of
-spontaneity and freshness; to be direct in
-statement and simple in expression. He had a
-well-founded belief that the finest art was that in
-which the meaning of the artist was to be
-realised with the least amount of seeking and with
-as little inquiry as possible about his intentions.
-Consequently, he strove all his life to master the
-intricacies of his craft, so that no hesitation on
-his part might make his meaning vague or indefinite.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Speed he always had. Even in the apparently
-laborious period of his Pre-Raphaelite
-performance he could, and did, paint with amazing
-facility&mdash;the head of Ferdinand in <i>Ferdinand
-lured by Ariel</i>, was, for instance, completed in
-five hours&mdash;and as years went on his certainty
-became even more indisputable. <i>Cherry Ripe</i>
-was painted in a week, <i>The Last Rose of Summer</i>
-in not more than four days, and for many of his
-portraits half a dozen sittings sufficed to give
-him all that was necessary for the achievement
-of a masterpiece. His quickness of apprehension
-and accuracy of vision helped him to a
-prompt decision as to choice of material; and
-when his direction was once fixed, his
-inexhaustible energy carried him easily through the
-work of production. Nature had well equipped
-him for his profession, and wisely he followed
-the lines she had laid down.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-OUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The works which have been reproduced as
-illustrations to this summary of the career
-of one of the greatest artists whom the British
-school has known have been selected with the
-intention of representing the more important
-stages in his progress. It is comparatively easy
-to divide his life into different periods, each one
-of which was marked by some achievements of
-more than ordinary significance. Thus the <i>Christ
-in the House of His Parents</i> (1849), and <i>Ophelia</i>
-(1852) belong to the time when he was a devout
-believer in the creed of the Pre-Raphaelite
-Brotherhood; <i>Autumn Leaves</i> (1856) and <i>The
-Vale of Rest</i> (1858) show the first beginnings
-of the change of conviction which led him
-a few years later to an almost complete abandonment
-of his earlier principles; <i>A Souvenir of
-Velasquez</i> (1868) marks the end of the transition
-from his youthful methods to the vigorous
-freedom of his middle life; <i>The North-West
-Passage</i> (1874) and <i>A Yeoman of the Guard</i>
-(1876), the triumphant attainment of absolute
-mastery over all the details of his craft, and the
-<i>Thomas Carlyle</i> (1877), the commencement of
-that period of sober confidence in his perfected
-skill which continued till his death in 1896.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is hardly one of these pictures which
-does not by its superlative quality deserve a
-place among the great things that may be said
-to have made our art history. They show Sir
-John Millais not only as a splendid executant
-but also as a frank and sincere thinker on art
-questions, who did not hesitate to modify his
-opinions as his widening experience proved to
-him that a better way than the one which he
-was following at the moment might be found to
-lead him to the highest results. It is a fortunate
-circumstance that with one exception the whole
-of this group of noble works can be counted as
-public property. They have passed into galleries
-where they are always accessible, and they are
-within the reach of every student who wishes to
-profit by the great lessons they are able to teach.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-CHRIST IN THE HOUSE OF HIS PARENTS
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This is the earliest and in some respects the
-most ambitious of the Pre-Raphaelite pictures.
-In it all the resources of Pre-Raphaelitism are
-turned to good account, and the logic of the
-creed is asserted with unquestioning faith. A
-verse in Zechariah, "And one shall say unto
-him, 'What are these wounds in thine hands?' Then
-he shall answer, 'Those with which I was
-wounded in the house of my friends,'" provided
-the motive, and the love of exact and searching
-observation which was from the first the governing
-principle of the artist's practice, controlled
-every detail of the execution.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a religious painting, a representation of a
-Holy Family, this work was by no means approved
-by the mid-century critics. One of the writers
-of the period, who joined in the general outcry
-against the picture, declared, with what seems
-now to have been quite unnecessary emphasis,
-that it touched "the lowest depths of what is
-mean, odious, repulsive, and repelling." It
-certainly shows no respect for any of the
-traditions which were then popularly supposed to
-call for the unquestioning support of every
-artist, for the spirit by which was inspired such
-a composition, for instance, as Sir Charles
-Eastlake's <i>Christ lamenting over Jerusalem</i>, a picture
-now in the Tate Gallery, which explains very
-well the sort of feebleness that was in fashion in
-the middle of the nineteenth century.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Millais did not hesitate to put on one side all
-the namby-pamby prettiness and elegant affectation
-which governed the production of his
-contemporaries, and struck out for himself in a very
-different direction. He laid the scene of his
-story in the house of Joseph, and, to quote
-another critic, associated the characters of the
-sacred story "with the meanest details of a
-carpenter's shop, with no conceivable omission of
-misery, of dirt, and even of disease, all finished
-with the same loathsome minuteness." The
-child Christ stands before the carpenter's bench
-with the Virgin kneeling beside him preparing
-to bind up with a piece of linen a wound in his
-hand, at which Joseph leaning forward from the
-end of the bench is looking. St. Anne in the
-background is picking up a pair of pincers, and
-beside Joseph is John the Baptist coming towards
-the central group with a bowl of water in his
-hands. An assistant on the other side of the
-picture watches the incident gravely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The keynote of the whole composition is its
-earnest symbolism. Every one of the lovingly
-laboured details explains something of the story,
-the tools on the wall, the dove perched on the
-ladder, and the sheep, typifying the faithful, and
-the wattled fence, an emblem of the Church,
-which are seen through the doorway; while in
-the meadow beyond is placed a well as a symbol
-of Truth. In its imaginative qualities, the picture
-is not less masterly than in its technical accuracy,
-and excites as much wonder by the depth of
-thought it reveals as by its astonishing
-accomplishment. It is the most original of all the
-artist's earlier works, marking definitely his
-emancipation from the influences of his student
-days, and his development in craftsmanship.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-OPHELIA
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The <i>Ophelia</i> is neither in scale nor in
-imaginative invention as impressive as the <i>Christ in
-the House of His Parents</i>, but it is, without
-doubt, one of the pictures by which he will most
-surely be remembered. It is an admirable
-example of his searching study of natural details,
-close and elaborate in its realisation of every
-part of the subject, and curiously true in its
-rendering of the subtle tones of brilliant
-daylight. Only an observer endowed with
-extraordinary keenness of vision, and with absolutely
-inexhaustible patience could have interpreted so
-exactly all the complexities of such a scene. In
-no part of the canvas is it possible to detect any
-relaxation of his strenuous effort after completeness;
-nothing is slurred over, and nothing which
-could add to the persuasiveness of the work is
-omitted.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-044"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-044.jpg" alt="OPHELIA.">
-<br>
-OPHELIA.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The points which are particularly to be noticed
-are the amazing accuracy of the drawing of every
-leaf and twig in the background, the truth with
-which the floating draperies and the river weeds
-lying beneath the surface of the water have been
-rendered, and the brilliant vivacity of the colour,
-which, strong and insistent as it is, entirely
-avoids garishness and rankness of quality.
-There is, too, a delightful tenderness of sentiment
-which suits to perfection a subject full of
-sympathetic suggestion. Not a trace of affectation
-is to be perceived; the sincerity and good
-faith of the artist cannot for an instant be
-doubted, and his understanding of the dramatic
-meaning of the incident chosen is perfectly
-judicious. It would not be easy to find a
-picture which marks more truly the difference
-between the finish that comes from learned
-study, and the mere surface elaboration by
-which an uninspired artist seeks to hide his
-insufficiency of technical knowledge. The
-imitative painter is satisfied if he can deceive the
-eye by tricks of handling, cunningly managed,
-and cares little for the broad effect of his canvas
-as a whole; but Millais, who was a man of
-genius, could never have contented himself with
-the cheap popularity attainable by such devices.
-He took a far larger view of his artistic
-responsibility, and even in his most prolonged and
-assiduous labour he never forgot that the part
-which every touch had to play in the general
-pictorial scheme had to be considered. That
-he should never have lost the unity of effect of
-<i>his Ophelia</i>, though he spent many weeks painting
-the landscape setting of the figure, in a quiet
-corner on the Ewell River, near Kingston, may
-be regarded as a convincing proof of his rare
-fitness for dealing with some of the greater
-problems of open air painting.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-AUTUMN LEAVES
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As an example of his use of poetic and tender
-sentiment this picture is now rightly admired as
-the most fascinating of all the works which he
-produced during his life. It is neither a great
-composition nor an amazing illustration of
-minute patience in technical performance; but
-it has a spontaneous charm of manner that puts
-it among the few modern masterpieces. When
-it was first exhibited it was not properly
-understood by the general public, but expert observers
-even then appreciated its delicate symbolism,
-and saw in it qualities of the noblest kind.
-Mr. Ruskin praised it with generous enthusiasm,
-and not only ranked it as one of the monumental
-canvases of the world, but declared that
-not even to Titian could be assigned a place
-higher than that which Millais had reached by
-this triumphant achievement.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-046"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-046.jpg" alt="AUTUMN LEAVES.">
-<br>
-AUTUMN LEAVES.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Judged as a piece of painting it is surprisingly
-free from all those little artifices which a less
-thoughtful artist would have used to increase
-the strength of his appeal to the attention of the
-public. It is studiously quiet in manner and
-formal in composition, an arrangement of severe
-lines and simple masses, which might easily have
-been made blankly inexpressive if they had been
-managed with less subtle perception of the
-deeper possibilities of the subject. But this
-very reserve gives the picture much of its
-strangely sympathetic beauty, and increases its
-hold upon the feelings of all people who are not
-satisfied with the superficialities of pictorial art.
-The attitudes of the figures, the expressions of
-the faces, the bareness of the landscape against
-which the group of children is set, and the
-solemn stillness of the autumn twilight which
-pervades the whole composition are all of value
-in the carrying out of the artist's intention. The
-lingering sadness of autumn is throughout the
-idea which was in his mind, and the way in
-which this is symbolised in every touch and
-every detail is well-nigh perfect.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The picture is also remarkable because it is
-practically the first in which Millais showed that
-masterly understanding of the character and
-ways of children, which was so often and so
-delightfully displayed in his later production.
-The young girls who are grouped round the fire
-of faded leaves are painted with inimitable grace
-and tenderness. Their unconscious naturalness
-is wholly charming, their unstudied ease of
-gesture is extraordinarily well rendered; and
-there is in the purity of the delicate little faces
-a suggestion of the innocence of childhood
-which is exquisitely fresh and attractive. Yet
-no impossible idealisation spoils the truth of the
-painting. They are frankly children who play
-their parts in it, not little angels with none of
-the instincts of human beings.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE VALE OF REST
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although the public, after having become
-accustomed to the artist's uncompromising
-Pre-Raphaelitism, must have been warned by the
-symbolism of <i>Autumn Leaves</i> of the coming
-change in his methods, the appearance of his
-<i>Vale of Rest</i> at the Academy in 1859 caused
-a very definite sensation. People then found
-themselves called upon to accept him as a
-didactic and imaginative moralist. He had,
-indeed, entered upon his transition, and had
-moved far from the literalism of <i>Christ in the House
-of His Parents</i>, and the obvious actuality of
-<i>Ophelia</i>, towards the closely impending
-declaration of those individual preferences which
-were to guide him in the work of the latter half
-of his life. <i>The Vale of Rest</i> is said to have
-been of all his paintings the one that Millais
-estimated most highly; and it is with justice
-reckoned among the most brilliant achievements
-which mark great moments in his career.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is certainly the picture which combines
-most surely his power of thought, and his
-capacity for stating forcibly and dramatically the
-things which he imagined. There is in it a
-manly sincerity which cannot be questioned,
-and there is besides a kind of solemn beauty
-that comes from his instinctive avoidance of
-sensationalism and from his naturally correct
-preference for simplicity of treatment. This
-simplicity and sincerity of manner can always
-be found in his best paintings, and when applied,
-as in <i>The Vale of Rest</i>, to the avowal of a strong
-conviction must be regarded as accountable for
-the extraordinary persuasiveness of his art. An
-artist of less straightforward habit of mind would
-have sought to complicate his statement by
-adding little things with the idea of stimulating
-the curiosity of the observer; but Millais was
-content, when he had found a subject inherently
-dignified and impressive, to leave it to tell its
-own story and not to embroider it with trivial
-accessories. To this reticence is due the
-monumental character of <i>The Vale of Rest</i>; there is
-nothing in it to distract attention, and nothing
-which could jar on the imagination, and so
-diminish the value of the lesson which it is
-intended to teach.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps the greatest triumph of all is the way
-in which the picture, despite the sadness, the
-grimness almost, of the subject, escapes
-morbidity. It would have been so easy to introduce
-into it a touch of fantastic mysticism, or to spoil
-its mystery by asserting too plainly the moral of
-the story, but the artist has been proof against
-every temptation, and has gone through with the
-work in the way that his wholesome instincts
-told him would be most correct. The dominant
-note is one of peace, and the restfulness of the
-secluded convent graveyard in which the last act
-of the drama of life is played typifies truly the
-long sleep which comes at last to end the troubles
-and strivings of humanity. None of the turmoil
-of the world intrudes into this vale of rest, and
-even nature herself is in sympathy with its gentle
-calm.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-SOUVENIR OF VELASQUEZ
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If the <i>Vale of Rest</i> marks significantly the
-transition through which Millais passed before
-he finally found the way that he followed for the
-last thirty years of his life, the <i>Souvenir of
-Velasquez</i> shows decisively what was the nature
-of the change that came over his art. Between
-1859 and 1867 he seemed to have settled down
-into a habit of careful and rather laborious
-manipulation and to have become a confirmed
-lover of high finish and a scrupulous exponent
-of what were almost unnecessary realities. But
-suddenly, in 1868, he threw all this minute
-precision aside and avowed himself to be a robust
-impressionist, glorying in his power to give by a
-few large and summary touches a vivid suggestion
-of many facts, and eager to render great effects
-rather than microscopically analysed and elaborately
-assorted details. There was no mistaking
-this change and no explaining it away. It meant
-that he had abandoned once and for ever all
-that had remained to him of the restrictions of
-the Pre-Raphaelite method and had begun to
-apply its principles in such a way that he could
-aim henceforth at the highest flights of executive
-expression.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Among the many pictures which he produced
-at this period to prove how completely the wish
-to rival the great executants of other schools had
-possessed him, the <i>Souvenir of Velasquez</i> stands
-out as the cleverest in craftsmanship, and the
-most delightful in feeling. It is not merely an
-amazingly direct piece of brushwork in which
-every touch shows the hand of a master of
-technical contrivance, but as a reflection of the
-spirit of childhood it deserves, as well, to be
-spoken of as a veritable inspiration. The beauty
-of the face is very remarkable, and there is
-a pretty stateliness in the pose of the young
-sitter which accords perfectly with the old-world
-costume in which she is represented. As the
-title implies, the general arrangement and
-treatment of the picture were suggested by the
-practice of the great Spanish master, but this
-<i>Souvenir</i> is a great deal more than a copy of the
-methods of another artist; it has in full measure
-the personal qualities by which almost everything
-that Millais touched was distinguished.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-052"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-052.jpg" alt="THE NORTH-WEST PASSAGE.">
-<br>
-THE NORTH-WEST PASSAGE.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That this performance was not a happy
-accident, one of those chance successes which
-sometimes come to an artist as a result of a
-fortunate combination of circumstances, was
-put beyond doubt by the character of his
-contributions to the Academy exhibitions during the
-next half dozen years. He fully maintained the
-high level of executive performance at which he
-had arrived, and continued steadily to widen the
-scope of his activity. There seemed to be no
-problem of handling which he was unprepared
-to attack and no difficulty that he feared as
-insurmountable.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE NORTH-WEST PASSAGE
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this work, painted in 1874, he displayed
-his strength in a large and ambitious
-composition. As a subject picture it may fairly be
-reckoned as the most complete assertion of
-his mature conviction that he ever put before
-the public. Its motive was one calculated to
-appeal vividly to his militant instincts, and was
-suited in every way to his robust and energetic
-personality. The idea of indomitable perseverance
-in the face of apparently overwhelming
-dangers, of tenacious effort to triumphantly
-accomplish a great intention, was quite in
-accordance with his natural sympathies; and the
-picture has therefore an inner significance to
-which almost as much interest attaches as to its
-outward aspect of unhesitating certainty. It is,
-perhaps, a little unequal in execution, but parts
-of it are magnificent, and especially the head of
-the old seaman, who sits at the table and listens
-to the story of Arctic exploration that is being
-read to him by the girl seated at his feet. The
-sitter for this splendid study of rugged age was
-Mr. Trelawny, the friend of Shelley and Byron.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-According to his usual custom Millais did
-little more than suggest in the picture the story
-implied by the title. <i>The North-West Passage</i>
-is not an illustrative painting of adventures in
-the Arctic region, but a piece of domestic genre
-on a large scale intended rather to stimulate the
-imagination than to record something actually
-accomplished. But to every thinking man it is
-wanting in nothing that gives interest to a work
-of art. It teaches an admirable lesson and
-points a moral well worth attention; and in its
-combination of strenuousness and simple directness,
-it reflects exactly the nature of one of the
-frankest and least self-conscious of men. The
-canvas is a tribute to the many great personalities
-whose lives have been devoted to the making of
-our national history, and, rightly understood, it
-is an eloquent appeal to us all to follow worthily
-in their footsteps.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-A YEOMAN OF THE GUARD
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another masterpiece exhibited three years
-later has now found a permanent resting-place in
-the National Gallery. This riotous and gorgeous
-exercise in strong colour could only have
-been accomplished by an artist whose splendid
-audacity was equalled by his knowledge of his
-craft. The scarlet uniform, with its lavish
-embroidery of black and gold and picturesque
-fashion, was something that exactly suited his
-fancy; and he revelled in his struggle with the
-many problems of technique which such a subject
-presented for solution. Yet there is little
-sign in the picture that he found it more than
-usually exacting; and there is no evidence that
-he devoted to it an exceptional amount of
-labour. It is particularly memorable for its
-consistent and thorough treatment, for the sound
-judgment with which every variation of the colour
-and every component part of the design have
-been managed; and it seems to have been
-carried through without hesitation or change of
-intention. It is an unfaltering record of a clearly
-defined impression, and is not less interesting
-on account of the sensitive and characteristic
-rendering of the worn, old face of the model
-than as a piece of still life painting of quite
-extraordinary force. The qualities that make it
-great are those which distinguish the productions
-of none but the unquestionable masters of
-pictorial art.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THOMAS CARLYLE
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-056"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-056.jpg" alt="THOMAS CARLYLE.">
-<br>
-THOMAS CARLYLE.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The <i>Portrait of Thomas Carlyle</i> has qualities
-scarcely less commanding, though it did not
-offer such opportunities for the display of
-masterly contrivance as were afforded by the <i>Yeoman
-of the Guard</i>. To deal with masses of strong
-colour, or to attempt audacities of brushwork,
-would not have been correct in a simple
-presentation of a modern man. But even without
-any spectacular additions this picture is a
-remarkable one, because it reveals so plainly the
-discernment of character which had much to do
-with the success that Millais gained in
-portraiture. He cannot be said to have spared
-Carlyle in his analysis, nor to have tried to
-soften off the angularities of disposition which
-made the grim old sage more feared than loved
-by the people with whom he came in contact.
-The face is frankly that of a man who has been
-soured by the warfare of life; it is hard,
-dogmatic, fierce perhaps, and certainly intolerant,
-but it is keenly intellectual and shrewdly
-reflective. There is courage and firmness of
-conviction in every line, and the instinct of the
-tenacious fighter is declared in all the rugged and
-rough-hewn features. The unflinching gaze of
-the angry eyes, deep-set under the lowering
-brows, is wonderfully suggested, and the cynical,
-contemptuous mouth is magnificently drawn
-without any trace of caricature. That such a man
-should have summed up humanity as "mostly
-fools" would seem natural enough to every one
-who studies this portrait; the Carlyle that
-Millais has put on record for us does not look like
-a lover of his species, nor like a man who would
-find much pleasure in the society of his fellows.
-Perhaps the painter has been too severe&mdash;to
-such a breezy enthusiast Carlyle must have been
-more than a little repellent&mdash;but he has
-indisputably been perfectly consistent in his
-statement of what he considered to be the right
-reading of the complex character of his famous
-sitter.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-THE CHIEF WORKS OF MILLAIS IN PUBLIC GALLERIES, ETC.
-</h3>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-NATIONAL GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Yeoman of the Guard. 1876. 4 ft. 7 in. by
-3 ft. 8 in. (1494.)
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone.
-1879. 4 ft. 1 in. by 3 ft. (1666.)
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-TATE GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Ophelia. 1852. 2 ft. 6 in. by 3 ft. 8 in. (1506.)
-Tate Gift.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Vale of Rest. 1858. 3 ft. 4 in. by 5 ft. 7 in.
-(1507.) Tate Gift.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Knight Errant. 1870. 6 ft. by 4 ft. 5 in.
-(1508.) Tate Gift.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The North-West Passage. 1874. 5 ft. 9 in. by
-7 ft. 4 in. (1509.) Tate Gift.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Mercy&mdash;St. Bartholomew's Day&mdash;1572. 1886.
-6 ft. 1 in. by 4 ft. 4 in. (1510.) Tate Gift.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Saint Stephen. 1895. 5 ft. by 3 ft. 9 in.
-(1563.) Tate Gift.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-A Disciple. 1895. 4 ft. 1 in. by 2 ft. 11 in.
-(1564.) Tate Gift.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Speak! Speak! 1895. 5 ft. 6 in. by 6 ft. 11 in.
-(1584.) Chantrey Bequest.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Order of Release&mdash;1746. 1853. 3 ft. 4 in. by
-2 ft. 5 in. (1657.) Tate Gift.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Boyhood of Raleigh. (1691.) 4 ft. by
-4 ft. 8 in. Gift of Lady Tate. (1870.)
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-A Maid offering a Basket of Fruit to a
-Cavalier. 6 in. by 4½ in. (1807.)
-Bequeathed by Mr. Henry Vaughan.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Charles I. and his Son in the Studio of Van
-Dyck. 6¼ in. by 4½ in. (1808.)
-Bequeathed by Mr. Henry Vaughan.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Equestrian Portrait. 1882. 10 ft. 5 in. by
-7 ft. 7 in. (1503.) Anonymous donor.
-</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 3%">
-N.B. Sir Edwin Landseer painted the gray
-palfrey with the gorgeous accoutrements,
-intending it for an equestrian portrait of
-Queen Victoria, but this was never carried
-out, and ultimately the picture was sent to
-Millais, who painted his daughter, now
-Mrs. James, in this old riding costume,
-together with the page, the dog, and the
-background, and called the picture "Nell
-Gwynne." It is also sometimes known as
-Diana Vernon.
-</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 3%">
-It is initialled both by Landseer and
-Millais, and the date is that of its completion
-by Millais.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Earl of Beaconsfield. A copy by Boyle
-from Millais' portrait.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Thomas Carlyle. 1877. An unfinished
-portrait. 3 ft. 9 in. by 2 ft. 10 in.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-William Wilkie Collins, the novelist.
-11 in. by 7 in.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-John Leech, caricaturist. In water-colours.
-11 in. by 9 in.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-BIRMINGHAM ART GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Widow's Mite. 1869. 3 ft. 10 in. by
-2 ft. 7 in. (171.)
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Blind Girl. 1856. Pre-Raphaelite work.
-2 ft. 8 in. by 1 ft. 9 in. (172.) Presented
-by the Rt. Hon. William Kenrick.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-BRITISH AND FOREIGN BIBLE SOCIETY, QUEEN VICTORIA ST., LONDON.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of the Earl of Shaftesbury. 1877.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-CHRIST CHURCH, OXFORD.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of the Rt. Hon. W. E. Gladstone. 1885.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-FITZWILLIAM MUSEUM, CAMBRIDGE.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Bridesmaid. ("All Hallows' E'en.") 1851.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-THE GARRICK CLUB, LONDON.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of Sir Henry Irving. 1884.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-INSTITUTE OF CIVIL ENGINEERS, LONDON.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of Sir John Fowler, Bart., C.E. 1868.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-LEEDS ART GALLERY
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent" style="margin-left: 3%">
-Childhood. &nbsp; }<br>
-Youth. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; } A series of panels for lunettes<br>
-Manhood. &nbsp;&nbsp; } formerly in the Judges' Lodgings in<br>
-Age. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; } Leeds. Painted in 1847.<br>
-Music. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; }<br>
-Art. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; }<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-LIVERPOOL ART GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Lorenzo and Isabella. 1849. Pre-Raphaelite
-work. 4 ft. 9 in. by 3 ft. 4 in. Purchased
-in 1884. (337.)
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Martyr of the Solway, in 1680. 1870.
-1 ft. 10 in. by 2 ft. 4 in. Presented by
-Mr. George Holt in 1895. (525.)
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-MANCHESTER ART GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Autumn Leaves. 1856. Pre-Raphaelite work.
-3 ft. 5 in. by 2 ft. 5 in. (144.) Bought from
-the Leathart Collection.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-A Flood. 1870. 3 ft. 2 in. by 4 ft. 8 in.
-(145.) From the Matthews Collection.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-"Victory, O Lord!" 1871. 6 ft. 4 in. by
-4 ft. 6 in. (171.) Bought from the
-Executors of Mrs. Reiss, 1894.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-THE CORPORATION OF MANCHESTER.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of Bishop Fraser. 1880.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of Queen Alexandra when Princess
-of Wales. 1886.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-NATIONAL GALLERY OF CANADA.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of the Marquis of Lorne, now Duke
-of Argyll. 1884.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-NEW SOUTH WALES GALLERY, AUSTRALIA.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Captive. 1882.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-THE CORPORATION OF OLDHAM.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of T. O. Barlow, R.A. 1886.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-OXFORD UNIVERSITY GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of Thomas Combe. 1850.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Return of the Dove to the Ark. 1851.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-THE ROYAL ACADEMY, BURLINGTON HOUSE DIPLOMA GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-A Souvenir of Velazquez. 1868.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-ROYAL HOLLOWAY COLLEGE, EGHAM.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Princes in the Tower. 1878.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-The Princess Elizabeth. 1879.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-SHAKESPEARE MUSEUM, STRATFORD ON-AVON.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of Lord Ronald Gower. 1876.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S HOSPITAL, LONDON.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of Sir James Paget. 1872.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of Luther Holden, P.R.C.S. 1880.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of the Rev. John Caird, D.D. 1881.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-THE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON.
-</p>
-
-<p class="paint">
-Portrait of George Grote. 1871.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- CHISWICK PRESS: PRINTED BY CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.<br>
- TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br><br></p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIR JOHN EVERETT MILLAIS ***</div>
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