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<h2> BOOK 2. </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I. </h2>
<p>While the market place in Tennis was filling, Archias's white house had
become a heap of smouldering ruins. Hundreds of men and women were
standing around the scene of the conflagration, but no one saw the statue
of Demeter, which had been removed from Hermon's studio just in time. The
nomarch had had it locked up in the neighbouring temple of the goddess.</p>
<p>It was rumoured that the divinity had saved her own statue by a miracle;
Pamaut, the police officer, said that he had seen her himself as,
surrounded by a brilliant light, she soared upward on the smoke that
poured from the burning house. The strategist and the nomarch used every
means in their power to capture the robbers, but without the least
success.</p>
<p>As it had become known that Paseth, Gula's husband, had cast off his wife
because she had gone to Hermon's studio, the magistrates believed that the
attack had been made by the Biamites; yet Paseth was absent from the city
during the assault, and the innocence of the others could also be proved.</p>
<p>Since, for two entire years, piracy had entirely ceased in this
neighbourhood, no one thought of corsairs, and the bodies of the
incendiaries having been consumed by the flames with the white house, it
could not be ascertained to what class the marauders belonged.</p>
<p>The blinded sculptor could only testify that one of the robbers was a
negro, or at any rate had had his face blackened, and that the size of
another had appeared to him almost superhuman. This circumstance gave rise
to the fable that, during the terrible storm of the previous clay, Hades
had opened and spirits of darkness had rushed into the studio of the Greek
betrayer.</p>
<p>The strategist, it is true, did not believe such tales, but the
superstition of the Biamites, who, moreover, aided the Greeks reluctantly
to punish a crime which threatened to involve their own countrymen, put
obstacles in the way of his measures.</p>
<p>Not until he heard of Ledscha's disappearance, and was informed by the
priest of Nemesis of the handsome sum which had been found in the offering
box of the temple shortly after the attack, did he arrive at a conjecture
not very far from the real state of affairs; only it was still
incomprehensible to him what body of men could have placed themselves at
the disposal of a girl's vengeful plan.</p>
<p>On the second day after the fire, the epistrategus of the whole Delta, who
had accidentally come to the border fortress, arrived at Tennis on the
galley of the commandant of Pelusium, and with him Proclus, the grammateus
of the Dionysian artists, the Lady Thyone, Daphne, and her companion
Chrysilla.</p>
<p>The old hero Philippus was detained in the fortress by the preparations
for war.</p>
<p>Althea had returned to Alexandria, and Philotas, who disliked her, had
gone there himself, as Chrysilla intimated to him that he could hope for
no success in his suit to her ward so long as Daphne had to devote herself
to the care of the blinded Hermon.</p>
<p>The epistrategus proceeded with great caution, but his efforts also
remained futile. He ordered a report to be made of all the vessels which
had entered the harbours and bays of the northeastern Delta, but those
commanded by Satabus and his sons gave no cause for investigation; they
had come into the Tanite arm of the Nile as lumber ships from Pontus, and
had discharged beams and planks for the account of a well-known commercial
house in Sinope.</p>
<p>Yet the official ordered the Owl's Nest to be searched. In doing this he
made himself guilty of an act of violence, as the island's right of asylum
still existed, and this incensed the irritable and refractory Biamites the
more violently, the deeper was the reverent awe with which the nation
regarded Tabus, who, according to their belief, was over a hundred years
old. The Biamites honoured her not only as an enchantress and a leech, but
as the ancestress of a race of mighty men. By molesting this aged woman,
and interfering with an ancient privilege, the epistrategus lost the aid
of the hostile fishermen, sailors, and weavers. Any information from their
ranks to him was regarded as treachery; and, besides, his stay in Tennis
could be but brief, as the King, on account of the impending war, had
summoned him back to the capital.</p>
<p>On the third day after his arrival he left Tennis and sailed from Tanis
for Alexandria. He had had little time to attend to Thyone and her guests.</p>
<p>Proclus, too, could not devote himself to them until after the departure
of the epistrategus, since he had gone immediately to Tanis, where, as
head of the Dionysian artists of all Egypt, he had been occupied in
attending to the affairs of the newly established theatre.</p>
<p>On his return to Tennis he had instantly requested to be conducted to the
Temple of Demeter, to inspect the blinded Hermon's rescued work.</p>
<p>He had entered the cella of the sanctuary with the expectation of finding
a peculiar, probably a powerful work, but one repugnant to his taste, and
left it fairly overpowered by the beauty of this noble work of art.</p>
<p>What he had formerly seen of Hermon's productions had prejudiced him
against the artist, whose talent was great, but who, instead of dedicating
it to the service of the beautiful and the sublime, chose subjects which,
to Proclus, did not seem worthy of artistic treatment, or, when they were,
sedulously deprived them of that by which, in his eyes, they gained
genuine value. In Hermon's Olympian Banquet he—who also held the
office of a high priest of Apollo in Alexandria—had even seen an
insult to the dignity of the deity. In the Street Boy Eating Figs, the
connoisseur's eye had recognised a peculiar masterpiece, but he had been
repelled by this also; for, instead of a handsome boy, it represented a
starving, emaciated vagabond.</p>
<p>True to life as this figure might be, it seemed to him reprehensible, for
it had already induced others to choose similar vulgar subjects.</p>
<p>When recently at Althea's performance he had met Hermon and saw how
quickly his beautiful travelling companion allowed herself to be induced
to bestow the wreath on the handsome, black-bearded fellow, it vexed him,
and he had therefore treated him with distant coldness, and allowed him to
perceive the disapproval which the direction taken by his art had awakened
in his mind.</p>
<p>In the presence of Hermon's Demeter, the opinion of the experienced man
and intelligent connoisseur had suddenly changed.</p>
<p>The creator of this work was not only one of the foremost artists of his
day, nay, he had also been permitted to fathom the nature of the deity and
to bestow upon it a perfect form.</p>
<p>This Demeter was the most successful personification of the divine
goodness which rewards the sowing of seed with the harvest. When Hermon
created it, Daphne's image had hovered before his mind, even if he had not
been permitted to use her as a model, and of all the maidens whom he knew
there was scarcely one better suited to serve as the type for the Demeter.</p>
<p>So what he had seen in Pelusium, and learned from women, was true. The
heart and mind of the artist who had created this work were not filled
with the image of Althea—who during the journey had bestowed many a
mark of favour upon the aging man, and with whom he was obliged to work
hand in hand for Queen Arsinoe's plans—but the daughter of Archias,
and this circumstance also aided in producing his change of view.</p>
<p>Hermon's blindness, it was to be hoped, would be cured.</p>
<p>Duty, and perhaps also interest, commanded him to show him frankly how
highly he estimated his art and his last work.</p>
<p>After the arrival of Thyone and Daphne, Hermon had consented to accompany
them on board the Proserpina, their spacious galley. True, he had yielded
reluctantly to this arrangement of his parents' old friend, and neither
she nor Daphne had hitherto succeeded in soothing the fierce resentment
against fate which filled his soul after the loss of his sight and his
dearest friend. As yet every attempt to induce him to bear his terrible
misfortune with even a certain degree of composure had failed.</p>
<p>The Tennis leech, trained by the Egyptian priests at Sais in the art of
healing, who was attached as a pastophorus to the Temple of Isis, in the
city of weavers, had covered the artist's scorched face with bandages, and
earnestly adjured him never in his absence to raise them, and to keep
every ray of light from his blinded eyes. But the agitation which had
mastered Hermon's whole being was so great that, in spite of the woman's
protestations, he lifted the covering again and again to see whether he
could not perceive once more at least a glimmer of the sunlight whose
warming power he felt. The thought of living in darkness until the end of
his life seemed unendurable, especially as now all the horrors which,
hitherto, had only visited him in times of trial during the night assailed
him with never-ceasing cruelty.</p>
<p>The image of the spider often forced itself upon him, and he fancied that
the busy insect was spreading its quickly made web over his blinded eyes,
which he was not to touch, yet over which he passed his hand to free them
from the repulsive veil.</p>
<p>The myth related that because Athene's blow had struck the ambitious
weaver Arachne, she had resolved, before the goddess transformed her into
a spider, to put an end to her disgrace.</p>
<p>How infinitely harder was the one dealt to him! How much better reason he
had to use the privilege in which man possesses an advantage over the
immortals, of putting himself to death with his own hand when he deems the
fitting time has come! What should he, the artist, to whom his eyes
brought whatever made life valuable, do longer in this hideous black
night, brightened by no sunbeam?</p>
<p>He was often overwhelmed, too, by the remembrance of the terrible end of
the friend in whom he saw the only person who might have given him
consolation in this distress, and the painful thought of his poverty.</p>
<p>He was supported solely by what his art brought and his wealthy uncle
allowed him. The Demeter which Archias had ordered had been partially paid
for in advance, and he had intended to use the gold—a considerable
sum—to pay debts in Alexandria. But it was consumed with the rest of
his property—tools, clothing, mementoes of his dead parents, and a
few books which contained his favourite poems and the writings of his
master, Straton.</p>
<p>These precious rolls had aided him to maintain the proud conviction of
owing everything which he attained or possessed solely to himself. It had
again become perfectly clear to him that the destiny of earth-born mortals
was not directed by the gods whom men had invented after their own
likeness, in order to find causes for the effects which they perceived,
but by deaf and blind chance. Else how could even worse misfortune,
according to the opinion of most people, have befallen the pure, guiltless
Myrtilus, who so deeply revered the Olympians and understood how to honour
them so magnificently by his art, than himself, the despiser of the gods?</p>
<p>But was the death for which he longed a misfortune?</p>
<p>Was the Nemesis who had so swiftly and fully granted the fervent prayer of
an ill-used girl also only an image conjured up by the power of human
imagination?</p>
<p>It was scarcely possible!</p>
<p>Yet if there was one goddess, did not that admit the probability of the
existence of all the others?</p>
<p>He shuddered at the idea; for if the immortals thought, felt, acted, how
terribly his already cruel fate would still develop! He had denied and
insulted almost all the Olympians, and not even stirred a finger to the
praise and honour of a single one.</p>
<p>What marvel if they should choose him for the target of their resentment
and revenge?</p>
<p>He had just believed that the heaviest misfortune which can befall a man
and an artist had already stricken him. Now he felt that this, too, had
been an error; for, like a physical pain, he realized the collapse of the
proud delusion of being independent of every power except himself, freely
and arbitrarily controlling his own destiny, owing no gratitude except to
his own might, and being compelled to yield to nothing save the
enigmatical, pitiless power of eternal laws or their co-operation, so
incomprehensible to the human intellect, called "chance," which took no
heed of merit or unworthiness.</p>
<p>Must he, who had learned to silence and to starve every covetous desire,
in order to require no gifts from his own uncle and his wealthy kinsman
and friend, and be able to continue to hold his head high, as the most
independent of the independent, now, in addition to all his other woe, be
forced to believe in powers that exercised an influence over his every
act? Must he recognise praying to them and thanking them as the demand of
justice, of duty, and wisdom? Was this possible either?</p>
<p>And, believing himself alone, since he could not see Thyone and Daphne,
who were close by him, he struck his scorched brow with his clinched fist,
because he felt like a free man who suddenly realizes that a rope which he
can not break is bound around his hands and feet, and a giant pulls and
loosens it at his pleasure.</p>
<p>Yet no! Better die than become for gods and men a puppet that obeys every
jerk of visible and invisible hands.</p>
<p>Starting up in violent excitement, he tore the bandage from his face and
eyes, declaring, as Thyone seriously reprimanded him, that he would go
away, no matter where, and earn his daily bread at the handmill, like the
blind Ethiopian slave whom he had seen in the cabinetmaker's house at
Tennis.</p>
<p>Then Daphne spoke to him tenderly, but her soothing voice caused him
keener pain than his old friend's stern one.</p>
<p>To sit still longer seemed unendurable, and, with the intention of
regaining his lost composure by pacing to and fro, he began to walk; but
at the first free step he struck against the little table in front of
Thyone's couch, and as it upset and the vessels containing water fell with
it, clinking and breaking, he stopped and, as if utterly crushed, groped
his way back, with both arms outstretched, to the armchair he had quitted.</p>
<p>If he could only have seen Daphne press her handkerchief first to her
eyes, from which tears were streaming, and then to her lips, that he might
not hear her sobs, if he could have perceived how Thyone's wrinkled old
face contracted as if she were swallowing a colocynth apple, while at the
same time she patted his strong shoulder briskly, exclaiming with forced
cheerfulness: "Go on, my boy! The steed rears when the hornet stings! Try
again, if it only soothes you! We will take everything out of your way.
You need not mind the water-jars. The potter will make new ones!"</p>
<p>Then Hermon threw back his burning head, rested it against the back of the
chair, and did not stir until the bandage was renewed.</p>
<p>How comfortable it felt!</p>
<p>He knew, too, that he owed it to Daphne; the matron's fingers could not be
so slender and delicate, and he would have been more than glad to raise
them to his lips and thank her; but he denied himself the pleasure.</p>
<p>If she really did love him, the bond between them must now be severed;
for, even if her goodness of heart extended far enough to induce her to
unite her blooming young existence to his crippled one, how could he have
accepted the sacrifice without humiliating himself? Whether such a
marriage would have made her happy or miserable he did not ask, but he was
all the more keenly aware that if, in this condition, he became her
husband, he would be the recipient of alms, and he would far rather, he
mentally repeated, share the fate of the negro at the handmill.</p>
<p>The expression of his features revealed the current of his thoughts to
Daphne, and, much as she wished to speak to him, she forced herself to
remain silent, that the tones of her voice might not betray how deeply she
was suffering with him; but he himself now longed for a kind word from her
lips, and he had just asked if she was still there when Thyone announced a
visit from the grammateus Proclus.</p>
<p>He had recently felt that this man was unfriendly to him, and again his
anger burst forth. To be exposed in the midst of his misery to the scorn
of a despiser of his art was too much for his exhausted patience.</p>
<p>But here he was interrupted by Proclus himself, who had entered the
darkened cabin where the blind man remained very soon after Thyone.</p>
<p>Hermon's last words had betrayed to the experienced courtier how well he
remembered his unkind remarks, so he deferred the expression of his
approval, and began by delivering the farewell message of the
epistrategus, who had been summoned away so quickly.</p>
<p>He stated that his investigations had discovered nothing of importance,
except, perhaps, the confirmation of the sorrowful apprehension that the
admirable Myrtilus had been killed by the marauders. A carved stone had
been found under the ashes, and Chello, the Tennis goldsmith, said he had
had in his own workshop the gem set in the hapless artist's shoulder
clasp, and supplied it with a new pin.</p>
<p>While speaking, he took Hermon's hand and gave him the stone, but the
artist instantly used his finger tips to feel it.</p>
<p>Perhaps it really did belong to the clasp Myrtilus wore, for, although
still unpractised in groping, he recognised that a human head was carved
in relief upon the stone, and Mrytilus's had been adorned with the
likeness of the Epicurean.</p>
<p>The damaged little work of art, in the opinion of Proclus and Daphne,
appeared to represent this philosopher, and at the thought that his friend
had fallen a victim to the flames Hermon bowed his head and exerted all
his strength of will in order not to betray by violent sobs how deeply
this idea pierced his heart.</p>
<p>Thyone, shrugging her shoulders mournfully, pointed to the suffering
artist. Proclus nodded significantly, and, moving nearer to Hermon,
informed him that he had sought out his Demeter and found the statue
uninjured. He was well aware that it would be presumptuous to offer
consolation in so heavy an affliction, and after the loss of his dearest
friend, yet perhaps Hermon would be glad to hear his assurance that he,
whose judgment was certainly not unpractised, numbered his work among the
most perfect which the sculptor's art had created in recent years.</p>
<p>"I myself best know the value of this Demeter," the sculptor broke in
harshly. "Your praise is the bit of honey which is put into the mouth of
the hurt child."</p>
<p>"No, my friend," Proclus protested with grave decision. "I should express
no less warmly the ardent admiration with which this noble figure of the
goddess fills me if you were well and still possessed your sight. You were
right just now when you alluded to my aversion, or, let us say, lack of
appreciation of the individuality of your art; but this noble work changes
everything, and nothing affords me more pleasure than that I am to be the
first to assure you how magnificently you have succeeded in this statue."</p>
<p>"The first!" Hermon again interrupted harshly. "But the second and third
will be lacking in Alexandria. What a pleasure it is to pour the gifts of
sympathy upon one to whom we wish ill! But, however successful my Demeter
may be, you would have awarded the prize twice over to the one by
Myrtilus."</p>
<p>"Wrong, my young friend!" the statesman protested with honest zeal. "All
honour to the great dead, whose end was so lamentable; but in this contest—let
me swear it by the goddess herself!—you would have remained victor;
for, at the utmost, nothing can rank with the incomparable save a work of
equal merit, and—I know life and art—two artists rarely or
never succeed in producing anything so perfect as this masterpiece at the
same time and in the same place."</p>
<p>"Enough!" gasped Hermon, hoarse with excitement; but Proclus, with
increasing animation, continued: "Brief as is our acquaintance, you have
probably perceived that I do not belong to the class of flatterers, and in
Alexandria it has hardly remained unknown to you that the younger artists
number me, to whom the office of judge so often falls, among the sterner
critics. Only because I desire their best good do I frankly point out
their errors. The multitude provides the praise. It will soon flow upon
you also in torrents, I can see its approach, and as this blindness, if
the august Aesculapius and healing Isis aid, will pass away like a dreary
winter night, it would seem to me criminal to deceive you about your own
ability and success. I already behold you creating other works to the
delight of gods and men; but this Demeter extorts boundless, enthusiastic
appreciation; both as a whole, and in detail, it is faultless and worthy
of the most ardent praise. Oh, how long it is, my dear, unfortunate
friend, since I could congratulate any other Alexandrian with such joyful
confidence upon the most magnificent success! Every word—you may
believe it!—which comes to you in commendation of this last work
from lips unused to eulogy is sincerely meant, and as I utter it to you I
shall repeat it in the presence of the King, Archias, and the other
judges."</p>
<p>Daphne, with hurried breath, deeply flushed cheeks, and sparkling eyes,
had fairly hung upon the lips of the clever connoisseur. She knew Proclus,
and his dreaded, absolutely inconsiderate acuteness, and was aware that
this praise expressed his deepest conviction. Had he been dissatisfied
with the statue of Demeter, or even merely superficially touched by its
beauty, he might have shrunk from wounding the unfortunate artist by
censure, and remained silent; but only something grand, consummate, could
lead him to such warmth of recognition.</p>
<p>She now felt it a misfortune that she and Thyone had hitherto been
prevented, by anxiety for their patient, from admiring his work. Had it
still been light, she would have gone to the temple of Demeter at once;
but the sun had just set, and Proclus was obliged to beg her to have
patience.</p>
<p>As the cases were standing finished at the cabinetmaker's, the statue had
been packed immediately, under his own direction, and carried on board his
ship, which would convey it with him to the capital the next day.</p>
<p>While this arrangement called forth loud expressions of regret from Daphne
and the vivacious matron, Hermon assented to it, for it would at least
secure the ladies, until their arrival in Alexandria, from a painful
disappointment.</p>
<p>"Rather," Proclus protested with firm dissent, "it will rob you for some
time of a great pleasure, and you, noble daughter of Archias, probably of
the deepest emotion of gratitude with which the favour of the immortals
has hitherto rendered you happy; yet the master who created this genuine
goddess owes the best part of it to your own face."</p>
<p>"He told me himself that he thought of me while at work," Daphne admitted,
and a flood of the warmest love reached Hermon's ears in her agitated
tones, while, greatly perplexed, he wondered with increasing anxiety
whether the stern critic Proclus had really been serious in the
extravagant eulogium, so alien to his reputation in the city.</p>
<p>Myrtilus, too, had admired the head of his Demeter, and—this he
himself might admit—he had succeeded in it, and yet ought not the
figure, with its too pronounced inclination forward, which, it is true,
corresponded with Daphne's usual bearing, and the somewhat angular bend of
the arms, have induced this keen-sighted connoisseur to moderate the
exalted strain of his praise? Or was the whole really so admirable that it
would have seemed petty to find fault with the less successful details? At
any rate, Proclus's eulogy ought to give him twofold pleasure, because his
art had formerly repelled him, and Hermon tried to let it produce this
effect upon him. But it would not do; he was continually overpowered by
the feeling that under the enthusiastic homage of the intriguing Queen
Arsinoe's favourite lurked a sting which he should some day feel. Or could
Proclus have been persuaded by Thyone and Daphne to help them reconcile
the hapless blind man to his hard fate?</p>
<p>Hermon's every movement betrayed the great anxiety which filled his mind,
and it by no means escaped Proclus's attention, but he attributed it to
the blinded sculptor's anguish in being prevented, after so great a
success, from pursuing his art further.</p>
<p>Sincerely touched, he laid his slender hand on the sufferer's muscular
arm, saying: "A more severe trial than yours, my young friend, can
scarcely be imposed upon the artist who has just attained the highest
goal, but three things warrant you to hope for recovery—your
vigorous youth, the skill of our Alexandrian leeches, and the favour of
the immortal gods. You shrug your shoulders? Yet I insist that you have
won this favour by your Demeter. True, you owe it less to yourself than to
yonder maiden. What pleasure it affords one whom, like myself, taste and
office bind to the arts, to perceive such a revolution in an artist's
course of creation, and trace it to its source! I indulged myself in it
and, if you will listen, I should like to show you the result."</p>
<p>"Speak," replied Hermon dully, bowing his head as if submitting to the
inevitable, while Proclus began:</p>
<p>"Hitherto your art imitated, not without success, what your eyes showed
you, and if this was filled with the warm breath of life, your work
succeeded. All respect to your Boy Eating Figs, in whose presence you
would feel the pleasure he himself enjoyed while consuming the sweet
fruit. Here, among the works of Egyptian antiquity, there is imminent
danger of falling under the tyranny of the canon of proportions which can
be expressed in figures, or merely even the demands of the style hallowed
by thousands of years, but in a subject like the 'Fig-eater' such a
reproach is not to be feared. He speaks his own intelligible language, and
whoever reproduces it without turning to the right or left has won, for he
has created a work whose value every true friend of art, no matter to what
school he belongs, prizes highly.</p>
<p>"To me personally such works of living reality are cordially welcome. Yet
art neither can nor will be satisfied with snatches of what is close at
hand; but you are late-born, sons of a time when the two great tendencies
of art have nearly reached the limits of what is attainable to them. You
were everywhere confronted with completed work, and you are right when you
refuse to sink to mere imitators of earlier works, and therefore return to
Nature, with which we Hellenes, and perhaps the Egyptians also, began. The
latter forgot her; the former—we Greeks—continued to cling to
her closely."</p>
<p>"Some few," Hermon eagerly interrupted the other, "still think it worth
the trouble to take from her what she alone can bestow. They save
themselves the toilsome search for the model which others so successfully
used before them, and bronze and marble still keep wonderfully well. Bring
out the old masterpieces. Take the head from this one, the arm from that,
etc. The pupil impresses the proportions on his mind. Only so far as the
longing for the beautiful permits do even the better ones remain faithful
to Nature, not a finger's breadth more."</p>
<p>"Quite right," the other went on calmly. "But your objection only brings
one nearer the goal. How many who care only for applause content
themselves to-day, unfortunately, with Nature at second hand! Without
returning to her eternally fresh, inexhaustible spring, they draw from the
conveniently accessible wells which the great ancients dug for them."</p>
<p>"I know these many," Hermon wrathfully exclaimed. "They are the brothers
of the Homeric poets, who take verses from the Iliad and Odyssey to piece
out from them their own pitiful poems."</p>
<p>"Excellent, my son!" exclaimed Thyone, laughing, and Daphne remarked that
the poet Cleon had surprised her father with such a poem a few weeks
before. It was a marvellous bit of botchwork, and yet there was a certain
meaning in the production, compiled solely from Homeric verses.</p>
<p>"Diomed's Hecuba," observed Proclus, "and the Aphrodite by Hippias, which
were executed in marble, originated in the same way, and deserve no better
fate, although they please the great multitude. But, praised be my lord,
Apollo, our age can also boast of other artists. Filled with the spirit of
the god, they are able to model truthfully and faithfully even the forms
of the immortals invisible to the physical eye. They stand before the
spectator as if borrowed from Nature, for their creators have filled them
with their own healthy vigour. Our poor Myrtilus belonged to this class
and, after your Demeter, the world will include you in it also."</p>
<p>"And yet," answered Hermon in a tone of dissent, "I remained faithful to
myself, and put nothing, nothing at all of my own personality, into the
forms borrowed from Nature."</p>
<p>"What need of that was there?" asked Proclus with a subtle smile. "Your
model spared you the task. And this at last brings me to the goal I
desired to reach. As the great Athenians created types for eternity, so
also does Nature at times in a happy hour, for her own pleasure, and such
a model you found in our Daphne.-No contradiction, my dear young lady! The
outlines of the figure—By the dog! Hermon might possibly have found
forms no less beautiful in the Aphrosion, but how charming and lifelike is
the somewhat unusual yet graceful pose of yours! And then the heart, the
soul! In your companionship our artist had nothing to do except lovingly
to share your feelings in order to have at his disposal everything which
renders so dear to us all the giver of bread, the preserver of peace, the
protector of marriage, the creator and supporter of the law of moderation
in Nature, as well as in human existence. Where would all these traits be
found more perfectly united in a single human being than in your person,
Daphne, your quiet, kindly rule?"</p>
<p>"Oh, stop!" the girl entreated. "I am only too well aware—"</p>
<p>"That you also are not free from human frailties," Proclus continued,
undismayed. "We will take them, great or small as they may be, into the
bargain. The secret ones do not concern the sculptor, who does not or will
not see them. What he perceives in you, what you enable him to recognise
through every feature of your sweet, tranquillizing face, is enough for
the genuine artist to imagine the goddess; for the distinction between the
mortal and the immortal is only the degree of perfection, and the human
intellect and artist soul can find nothing more perfect in the whole
domain of Demeter's jurisdiction than is presented to them in your nature.
Our friend yonder seized it, and his magnificent work of art proves how
nearly it approaches the purest and loftiest conception we form of the
goddess whom he had to represent. It is not that he deified you, Daphne;
he merely bestowed on the divinity forms which he recognised in you."</p>
<p>Just at that moment, obeying an uncontrollable impulse, Hermon pulled the
bandage from his eyes to see once more the woman to whom this warm homage
was paid.</p>
<p>Was the experienced connoisseur of art and the artist soul in the right?</p>
<p>He had told himself the same thing when he selected Daphne for a model,
and her head reproduced what Proclus praised as the common possession of
Daphne and Demeter. Truthful Myrtilus had also seen it. Perhaps his work
had really been so marvellously successful because, while he was engaged
upon it, his friend had constantly stood before his mind in all the charm
of her inexhaustible goodness.</p>
<p>Animated by the ardent desire to gaze once more at the beloved face, to
which he now owed also this unexpectedly great success, he turned toward
the spot whence her voice had reached him; but a wall of violet mist,
dotted with black specks, was all that his blinded eyes showed him, and
with a low groan he drew the linen cloth over the burns.</p>
<p>This time Proclus also perceived what was passing in the poor artist's
mind, and when he took leave of him it was with the resolve to do his
utmost to brighten with the stars of recognition and renown the dark night
of suffering which enshrouded this highly gifted sculptor, whose
unexpectedly great modesty had prepossessed him still more in his favour.</p>
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