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<h1>THE COLOUR OF LIFE</h1>
<p>Contents:</p>
<p>The Colour of Life<br/>
A Point Of Biography<br/>
Cloud<br/>
Winds of the World<br/>
The Honours of Mortality<br/>
At Monastery Gates<br/>
Rushes and Reeds<br/>
Eleonora Duse<br/>
Donkey Races<br/>
Grass<br/>
A Woman in Grey<br/>
Symmetry and Incident<br/>
The Illusion of Historic Time<br/>
Eyes</p>
<h2>THE COLOUR OF LIFE</h2>
<p>Red has been praised for its nobility as the colour of life.
But the true colour of life is not red. Red is the colour of violence,
or of life broken open, edited, and published. Or if red is indeed
the colour of life, it is so only on condition that it is not seen.
Once fully visible, red is the colour of life violated, and in the act
of betrayal and of waste. Red is the secret of life, and not the
manifestation thereof. It is one of the things the value of which
is secrecy, one of the talents that are to be hidden in a napkin.
The true colour of life is the colour of the body, the colour of the
covered red, the implicit and not explicit red of the living heart and
the pulses. It is the modest colour of the unpublished blood.</p>
<p>So bright, so light, so soft, so mingled, the gentle colour of life
is outdone by all the colours of the world. Its very beauty is
that it is white, but less white than milk; brown, but less brown than
earth; red, but less red than sunset or dawn. It is lucid, but
less lucid than the colour of lilies. It has the hint of gold
that is in all fine colour; but in our latitudes the hint is almost
elusive. Under Sicilian skies, indeed, it is deeper than old ivory;
but under the misty blue of the English zenith, and the warm grey of
the London horizon, it is as delicately flushed as the paler wild roses,
out to their utmost, flat as stars, in the hedges of the end of June.</p>
<p>For months together London does not see the colour of life in any
mass. The human face does not give much of it, what with features,
and beards, and the shadow of the top-hat and <i>chapeau</i> <i>melon</i>
of man, and of the veils of woman. Besides, the colour of the
face is subject to a thousand injuries and accidents. The popular
face of the Londoner has soon lost its gold, its white, and the delicacy
of its red and brown. We miss little beauty by the fact that it
is never seen freely in great numbers out-of-doors. You get it
in some quantity when all the heads of a great indoor meeting are turned
at once upon a speaker; but it is only in the open air, needless to
say, that the colour of life is in perfection, in the open air, “clothed
with the sun,” whether the sunshine be golden and direct, or dazzlingly
diffused in grey.</p>
<p>The little figure of the London boy it is that has restored to the
landscape the human colour of life. He is allowed to come out
of all his ignominies, and to take the late colour of the midsummer
north-west evening, on the borders of the Serpentine. At the stroke
of eight he sheds the slough of nameless colours—all allied to
the hues of dust, soot, and fog, which are the colours the world has
chosen for its boys—and he makes, in his hundreds, a bright and
delicate flush between the grey-blue water and the grey-blue sky.
Clothed now with the sun, he is crowned by-and-by with twelve stars
as he goes to bathe, and the reflection of an early moon is under his
feet.</p>
<p>So little stands between a gamin and all the dignities of Nature.
They are so quickly restored. There seems to be nothing to do,
but only a little thing to undo. It is like the art of Eleonora
Duse. The last and most finished action of her intellect, passion,
and knowledge is, as it were, the flicking away of some insignificant
thing mistaken for art by other actors, some little obstacle to the
way and liberty of Nature.</p>
<p>All the squalor is gone in a moment, kicked off with the second boot,
and the child goes shouting to complete the landscape with the lacking
colour of life. You are inclined to wonder that, even undressed,
he still shouts with a Cockney accent. You half expect pure vowels
and elastic syllables from his restoration, his spring, his slenderness,
his brightness, and his glow. Old ivory and wild rose in the deepening
midsummer sun, he gives his colours to his world again.</p>
<p>It is easy to replace man, and it will take no great time, where
Nature has lapsed, to replace Nature. It is always to do, by the
happily easy way of doing nothing. The grass is always ready to
grow in the streets—and no streets could ask for a more charming
finish than your green grass. The gasometer even must fall to
pieces unless it is renewed; but the grass renews itself. There
is nothing so remediable as the work of modern man—“a thought
which is also,” as Mr Pecksniff said, “very soothing.”
And by remediable I mean, of course, destructible. As the bathing
child shuffles off his garments—they are few, and one brace suffices
him—so the land might always, in reasonable time, shuffle off
its yellow brick and purple slate, and all the things that collect about
railway stations. A single night almost clears the air of London.</p>
<p>But if the colour of life looks so well in the rather sham scenery
of Hyde Park, it looks brilliant and grave indeed on a real sea-coast.
To have once seen it there should be enough to make a colourist.
O memorable little picture! The sun was gaining colour as it neared
setting, and it set not over the sea, but over the land. The sea
had the dark and rather stern, but not cold, blue of that aspect—the
dark and not the opal tints. The sky was also deep. Everything
was very definite, without mystery, and exceedingly simple. The
most luminous thing was the shining white of an edge of foam, which
did not cease to be white because it was a little golden and a little
rosy in the sunshine. It was still the whitest thing imaginable.
And the next most luminous thing was the little child, also invested
with the sun and the colour of life.</p>
<p>In the case of women, it is of the living and unpublished blood that
the violent world has professed to be delicate and ashamed. See
the curious history of the political rights of woman under the Revolution.
On the scaffold she enjoyed an ungrudged share in the fortunes of party.
Political life might be denied her, but that seems a trifle when you
consider how generously she was permitted political death. She
was to spin and cook for her citizen in the obscurity of her living
hours; but to the hour of her death was granted a part in the largest
interests, social, national, international. The blood wherewith
she should, according to Robespierre, have blushed to be seen or heard
in the tribune, was exposed in the public sight unsheltered by her veins.</p>
<p>Against this there was no modesty. Of all privacies, the last
and the innermost—the privacy of death—was never allowed
to put obstacles in the way of public action for a public cause.
Women might be, and were, duly suppressed when, by the mouth of Olympe
de Gouges, they claimed a “right to concur in the choice of representatives
for the formation of the laws”; but in her person, too, they were
liberally allowed to bear political responsibility to the Republic.
Olympe de Gouges was guillotined. Robespierre thus made her public
and complete amends.</p>
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