<h2><SPAN name="XIX" id="XIX"></SPAN>XIX</h2>
<p>I try at least to recover here, however, some closer notation of W. J.'s
aspects—yet only with the odd effect of my either quite losing him or
but apprehending him again at seated play with his pencil under the
lamp. When I see him he is intently, though summarily, rapidly drawing,
his head critically balanced and his eyebrows working, and when I don't
see him it is because I have resignedly relinquished him. I can't have
been often for him a deprecated, still less an actively rebuffed suitor,
because, as I say again, such aggressions were so little in order for
me; but I remember that on my once offering him my company in
conditions, those of some planned excursion, in which it wasn't desired,
his putting the question of our difference at rest, with the minimum of
explanation, by the responsible remark: "<i>I</i> play with boys who curse
and swear!" I had sadly to recognise that I didn't, that I couldn't
pretend to have come to that yet—and truly, as I look back, either the
unadvisedness and inexpertness of my young contemporaries on all that
ground must have been complete (an interesting note on our general
manners after all,)<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260"></SPAN></span> or my personal failure to grasp must have been.
Besides which I wonder scarce less now than I wondered then in just what
company my brother's privilege was exercised; though if he had but
richly wished to be discouraging he quite succeeded. It wasn't that I
mightn't have been drawn to the boys in question, but that I simply
wasn't qualified. All boys, I rather found, were difficult to play
with—unless it was that they rather found <i>me</i>; but who would have been
so difficult as these? They account but little, moreover, I make out,
for W. J.'s eclipses; so that I take refuge easily enough in the memory
of my own pursuits, absorbing enough at times to have excluded other
views. I also plied the pencil, or to be more exact the pen—even if
neither implement critically, rapidly or summarily. I was so often
engaged at that period, it strikes me, in literary—or, to be more
precise in dramatic, accompanied by pictorial composition—that I must
again and again have delightfully lost myself. I had not on any occasion
personally succeeded, amid our theatric strife, in reaching the
footlights; but how could I have doubted, nevertheless, with our large
theatrical experience, of the nature, and of my understanding, of the
dramatic form? I sacrificed to it with devotion—by the aid of certain
quarto sheets of ruled paper bought in Sixth Avenue for the purpose (my
father's store,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261"></SPAN></span> though I held him a great fancier of the article in
general, supplied but the unruled;) grateful in particular for the happy
provision by which each fourth page of the folded sheet was left blank.
When the drama itself had covered three pages the last one, over which I
most laboured, served for the illustration of what I had verbally
presented. Every scene had thus its explanatory picture, and as each
act—though I am not positively certain I arrived at acts—would have
had its vivid climax. Addicted in that degree to fictive evocation, I
yet recall, on my part, no practice whatever of narrative prose or any
sort of verse. I cherished the "scene"—as I had so vibrated to the idea
of it that evening at Linwood; I thought, I lisped, at any rate I
composed, in scenes; though how much, or how far, the scenes "came" is
another affair. Entrances, exits, the indication of "business," the
animation of dialogue, the multiplication of designated characters, were
things delightful in themselves—while I panted toward the canvas on
which I should fling my figures; which it took me longer to fill than it
had taken me to write what went with it, but which had on the other hand
something of the interest of the dramatist's casting of his <i>personæ</i>,
and must have helped me to believe in the validity of my subject.</p>
<p>From where on these occasions that subject can<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262"></SPAN></span> have dropped for me I am
at a loss to say, and indeed have a strong impression that I didn't at
any moment quite know what I was writing about: I am sure I couldn't
otherwise have written so much. With scenes, when I think, what
certitude did I want more?—scenes being the root of the matter,
especially when they bristled with proper names and noted movements;
especially, above all, when they flowered at every pretext into the very
optic and perspective of the stage, where the boards diverged correctly,
from a central point of vision, even as the lashes from an eyelid,
straight down to the footlights. Let this reminiscence remind us of how
rarely in those days the real stage was carpeted. The difficulty of
composition was naught; the one difficulty was in so placing my figures
on the fourth page that these radiations could be marked without making
lines through them. The odd part of all of which was that whereas my
cultivation of the picture was maintained my practice of the play, my
addiction to scenes, presently quite dropped. I was capable of learning,
though with inordinate slowness, to express ideas in scenes, and was not
capable, with whatever patience, of making proper pictures; yet I
aspired to this form of design to the prejudice of any other, and long
after those primitive hours was still wasting time in attempts at it. I
cared so much for nothing else, and that<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263"></SPAN></span> vaguely redressed, as to a
point, my general failure of acuteness. I nursed the conviction, or at
least I tried to, that if my clutch of the pencil or of the watercolour
brush should once become intense enough it would make up for other
weaknesses of grasp—much as that would certainly give it to do. This
was a very false scent, which had however the excuse that my brother's
example really couldn't but act upon me—the scent was apparently so
true for <i>him</i>; from the moment my small "interest in art," that is my
bent for gaping at illustrations and exhibitions, was absorbing and
genuine. There were elements in the case that made it natural: the
picture, the representative design, directly and strongly appealed to
me, and was to appeal all my days, and I was only slow to recognise the
<i>kind</i>, in this order, that appealed most. My face was turned from the
first to the idea of representation—that of the gain of charm,
interest, mystery, dignity, distinction, gain of importance in fine, on
the part of the represented thing (over the thing of accident, of mere
actuality, still unappropriated;) but in the house of representation
there were many chambers, each with its own lock, and long was to be the
business of sorting and trying the keys. When I at last found deep in my
pocket the one I could more or less work, it was to feel, with
reassurance, that the picture was still after all in <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264"></SPAN></span>essence one's aim.
So there had been in a manner continuity, been not so much waste as one
had sometimes ruefully figured; so many wastes are sweetened for memory
as by the taste of the economy they have led to or imposed and from the
vantage of which they could scarce look better if they had been current
and blatant profit. Wasn't the very bareness of the field itself
moreover a challenge, in a degree, to design?—not, I mean, that there
seemed to one's infant eyes too few things to paint: as to that there
were always plenty—but for the very reason that there were more than
anyone noticed, and that a hunger was thus engendered which one cast
about to gratify. The gratification nearest home was the imitative, the
emulative—that is on my part: W. J., I see, needed no reasons, no
consciousness other than that of being easily able. So he drew because
he could, while I did so in the main only because he did; though I think
we cast about, as I say, alike, making the most of every image within
view. I doubt if he made more than I even then did, though earlier able
to account for what he made. Afterwards, on other ground and in richer
air, I admit, the challenge was in the fulness and not in the bareness
of aspects, with their natural result of hunger appeased; exhibitions,
illustrations abounded in Paris and London—the reflected image hung
everywhere about; so that if there<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265"></SPAN></span> we daubed afresh and with more
confidence it was not because no-one but because everyone did. In fact
when I call our appetite appeased I speak less of our browsing vision,
which was tethered and insatiable, than of our sense of the quite normal
character of our own proceedings. In Europe we knew there was Art, just
as there were soldiers and lodgings and concierges and little boys in
the streets who stared at us, especially at our hats and boots, as at
things of derision—just as, to put it negatively, there were
practically no hot rolls and no iced water. Perhaps too, I should add,
we didn't enjoy the works of Mr. Benjamin Haydon, then clustered at the
Pantheon in Oxford Street, which in due course became our favourite
haunt, so infinitely more, after all, than we had enjoyed those arrayed
at the Düsseldorf collection in Broadway; whence the huge canvas of the
Martyrdom of John Huss comes back to me in fact as a revelation of
representational brightness and charm that pitched once for all in these
matters my young sense of what should be.</p>
<p>Ineffable, unsurpassable those hours of initiation which the Broadway of
the 'fifties had been, when all was said, so adequate to supply. If one
wanted pictures there <i>were</i> pictures, as large, I seem to remember, as
the side of a house, and of a bravery of colour and lustre of surface
that I was never afterwards to see surpassed. We were shown <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266"></SPAN></span>without
doubt, under our genial law here too, everything there was, and as I
cast up the items I wonder, I confess, what ampler fare we could have
dealt with. The Düsseldorf school commanded the market, and I think of
its exhibition as firmly seated, going on from year to year—New York,
judging now to such another tune, must have been a brave patron of that
manufacture; I believe that scandal even was on occasion not evaded,
rather was boldly invoked, though of what particular sacrifices to the
pure plastic or undraped shocks to bourgeois prejudice the comfortable
German genius of that period may have been capable history has kept no
record. New accessions, at any rate, vividly new ones, in which the
freshness and brightness of the paint, particularly lustrous in our
copious light, enhanced from time to time the show, which I have the
sense of our thus repeatedly and earnestly visiting and which comes back
to me with some vagueness as installed in a disaffected church, where
gothic excrescences and an ecclesiastical roof of a mild order helped
the importance. No impression here, however, was half so momentous as
that of the epoch-making masterpiece of Mr. Leutze, which showed us
Washington crossing the Delaware in a wondrous flare of projected
gaslight and with the effect of a revelation to my young sight of the
capacity of accessories to<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267"></SPAN></span> "stand out." I live again in the thrill of
that evening—which was the greater of course for my feeling it, in my
parents' company, when I should otherwise have been in bed. We went
down, after dinner, in the Fourteenth Street stage, quite as if going to
the theatre; the scene of exhibition was near the Stuyvesant Institute
(a circumstance stirring up somehow a swarm of associations, echoes
probably of lectures discussed at home, yet at which my attendance had
doubtless conveniently lapsed,) but Mr. Leutze's drama left behind any
paler proscenium. We gaped responsive to every item, lost in the marvel
of the wintry light, of the sharpness of the ice-blocks, of the sickness
of the sick soldier, of the protrusion of the minor objects, that of the
strands of the rope and the nails of the boots, that, I say, on the part
of everything, of its determined purpose of standing out; but that,
above all, of the profiled national hero's purpose, as might be said, of
standing <i>up</i>, as much as possible, even indeed of doing it almost on
one leg, in such difficulties, and successfully balancing. So memorable
was that evening to remain for me that nothing could be more strange, in
connection with it, than the illustration by the admired work, on its in
after years again coming before me, of the cold cruelty with which time
may turn and devour its children. The picture, more or less entombed in
its relegation, was lividly <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268"></SPAN></span>dead—and that was bad enough. But half the
substance of one's youth seemed buried with it. There were other
pictorial evenings, I may add, not all of which had the thrill. Deep the
disappointment, on my own part, I remember, at Bryan's Gallery of
Christian Art, to which also, as for great emotions, we had taken the
omnibus after dinner. It cast a chill, this collection of worm-eaten
diptychs and triptychs, of angular saints and seraphs, of black Madonnas
and obscure Bambinos, of such marked and approved "primitives" as had
never yet been shipped to our shores. Mr. Bryan's shipment was presently
to fall, I believe, under grave suspicion, was to undergo in fact fatal
exposure; but it appealed at the moment in apparent good faith, and I
have not forgotten how, conscious that it was fresh from Europe—"fresh"
was beautiful in the connection!—I felt that my yearning should all
have gone out to it. With that inconsequence to handle I doubt whether I
proclaimed that it bored me—any more than I have ever noted till now
that it made me begin badly with Christian art. I like to think that the
collection consisted without abatement of frauds and "fakes" and that if
these had been honest things my perception wouldn't so have slumbered;
yet the principle of interest had been somehow compromised, and I think
I have never since stood before a real Primitive, a primitive of the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269"></SPAN></span>primitives, without having first to shake off the grey mantle of that
night. The main disconcertment had been its ugly twist to the name of
Italy, already sweet to me for all its dimness—even could dimness have
prevailed in my felt measure of the pictorial testimony of home,
testimony that dropped for us from the ample canvas of Mr. Cole, "the
American Turner" which covered half a side of our front parlour, and in
which, though not an object represented in it began to stand out after
the manner of Mr. Leutze, I could always lose myself as soon as look. It
depicted Florence from one of the neighbouring hills—I have often since
wondered which, the picture being long ago lost to our sight; Florence
with her domes and towers and old walls, the old walls Mr. Cole had
engaged for, but which I was ruefully to miss on coming to know and love
the place in after years. Then it was I felt how long before my
attachment had started on its course—that closer vision was no
beginning, it only took up the tale; just as it comes to me again
to-day, at the end of time, that the contemplative monk seated on a
terrace in the foreground, a constant friend of my childhood, must have
been of the convent of San Miniato, which gives me the site from which
the painter wrought. We had Italy again in the corresponding room
behind—a great abundance of Italy I was free to think while I revolved
between <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270"></SPAN></span>another large landscape over the sofa and the classic marble
bust on a pedestal between the two back windows, the figure, a part of
the figure, of a lady with her head crowned with vine-leaves and her
hair disposed with a laxity that was emulated by the front of her dress,
as my next younger brother exposed himself to my derision by calling the
bit of brocade (simulated by the chisel) that, depending from a single
shoulder-strap, so imperfectly covered her. This image was known and
admired among us as the Bacchante; she had come to us straight from an
American studio in Rome, and I see my horizon flush again with the first
faint dawn of conscious appreciation, or in other words of the critical
spirit, while two or three of the more restrictive friends of the house
find our marble lady very "cold" for a Bacchante. Cold indeed she must
have been—quite as of the tombstone temperament; but that objection
would drop if she might only be called a Nymph, since nymphs were mild
and moderate, and since discussion of a work of art mainly hung in those
days on that issue of the producible <i>name</i>. I fondly recall, by the
same token, that playing on a certain occasion over the landscape above
the sofa, restrictive criticism, uttered in my indulged hearing,
introduced me to what had probably been my very first chance, on such
ground, for active participation. The picture, from the hand of a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271"></SPAN></span>
French painter, M. Lefèvre, and of but slightly scanter extent than the
work of Mr. Cole, represented in frank rich colours and as a so-called
"view in Tuscany" a rural scene of some exuberance, a broken and
precipitous place, amid mountains and forests, where two or three
bare-legged peasants or woodmen were engaged, with much emphasis of
posture, in felling a badly gashed but spreading oak by means of a tense
rope attached to an upper limb and at which they pulled together.
"Tuscany?—are you sure it's Tuscany?" said the voice of restrictive
criticism, that of the friend of the house who in the golden age of the
precursors, though we were still pretty much precursors, had lived
longest in Italy. And then on my father's challenge of this demur: "Oh
in Tuscany, you know, the colours are much softer—there would be a
certain haze in the atmosphere." "Why, of course," I can hear myself now
blushingly but triumphantly intermingle—"the softness and the haze of
our Florence there: isn't Florence in Tuscany?" It had to be parentally
admitted that Florence was—besides which our friend had been there and
knew; so that thereafter, within our walls, a certain <i>malaise</i> reigned,
for if the Florence was "like it" then the Lefèvre couldn't be, and if
the Lefèvre was like it then the Florence couldn't: a lapse from old
convenience—as from the moment we couldn't name the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272"></SPAN></span> Lefèvre where were
we? All of which it might have been open to me to feel I had uncannily
promoted.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273"></SPAN></span></p>
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