登陆注册
14824400000020

第20章

Still, there remained in the family two younger daughters, and Charlie, besides Miss Patsey and Mrs. Hubbard. By the exertions and guidance of Patsey, the assistance of friends, and their own good conduct, the young people, in due time, were all growing up, endowed with good principles, good educations, and with respectable prospects opening before them. At the period of our narrative, the third daughter hoped shortly to become an under-governess in the school where she had been educated; and Mary, the youngest of the family, had such a decided taste for music, that it was thought she would have no difficulty in supporting herself, by giving lessons, in the course of two or three years. Of all the family, Charlie was the one that caused his friends the most anxiety. He was a fine, spirited, intelligent boy; and Uncle Josie had promised to procure a situation for him, with his son-in-law, a commission-merchant and auctioneer, in New York. This plan was very pleasing to Mrs. Hubbard and Miss Patsey; but, unfortunately, Charlie seemed to have no taste for making money, and a fondness for pictures and pencils, that amounted almost to a passion. Here was an unexpected obstacle; Charlie was the pet and spoiled child of the family. All the rest of the young people had been quite satisfied with the different means of support that had offered for each; and they had followed their respective careers with so much quiet good sense, that Charlie's remonstrances against the counting-house, and his strong fancy for an artist's life, was something quite new, and which Miss Patsey scarcely knew how to answer. There was nothing in the least poetical or romantic about Patsey Hubbard, who was all honest kindness and straight-forward common sense. She had no feeling whatever for the fine arts; never read a work of imagination; scarcely knew one tune from another; and had never looked with pleasure at any picture, but one, a portrait of her own respected father, which still occupied the place of honour in their little parlour, nearly covering one side of the wall. This painting, to speak frankly, was anything but a valuable work of art, or a good likeness of the worthy minister. The face was flat and unmeaning, entirely devoid of expression or relief; the body was stiff and hard, like sheet-iron, having, also, much the color of that material, so far as it was covered by the black ministerial coat. One arm was stretched across a table, conspicuous from a carrot-coloured cloth, and the hand was extended over a pile of folios; but it looked quite unequal to the task of opening them. The other arm was disposed of in some manner satisfactory to the artist, no doubt, but by no means easy for the spectator to discover, since the brick-coloured drapery which formed the back-ground to the whole, certainly encroached on the side where nature had placed it. Such as it was, however, Miss Patsey admired this painting more than any she had ever seen, and its gilt frame was always carefully covered with green gauze, no longer necessary to preserve the gilding, but rather to conceal its blackened lustre; but Charlie's sister belonged to that class of amateurs who consider the frame as an integral part of the work of art. It was, perhaps, the most promising fact regarding any future hopes of young Hubbard's, as an artist, that this same portrait was far from satisfying his taste, uncultivated as it was. Charlie was, for a long time, so much ashamed of his passion for drawing, that he carefully concealed the little bits of paper on which he made his sketches, as well as the few old, coarse engravings he had picked up to copy. But, one day, Miss Patsey accidentally discovered these treasures between the leaves of a number of the Longbridge Freeman, carefully stowed away in an old chest of drawers in the little garret-room where Charlie slept. She found there a head of Washington; one of Dr. Blair; a view of Boston; and an old French print called L'Ete, representing a shepherdess making hay in high-heeled shoes and a hoop; there were copies of these on bits of paper of all sizes, done with the pen or lead-pencil; and lastly, a number of odd-looking sketches of Charlie's own invention. The sight of these labours of art, was far from giving Miss Patsey pleasure, although it accounted for the surprising disappearance of her writing-paper, and the extraordinary clipping, she had remarked, of late, on all notes and letters that were left lying about, from which every scrap of white paper was sure to be cut off. She spoke to Charlie on the subject, and, of course, he had to confess. But he did not reform; on the contrary, matters soon grew worse, for he began to neglect his studies. It happened that he passed the whole summer at home, as the school where his brother had been assistant, and he himself a pupil, was broken up. At last, Miss Patsey talked to him so seriously, about wasting time on trifles, that Charlie, who was a sensible, warm-hearted boy, and well aware of the exertions his sister had made for him, promised amendment, and actually burnt all his own sketches, though the precious engravings were still preserved. This improvement only lasted a while, however, when he again took to drawing. This time he resolutely respected Miss Patsey's paper, but that only made matters worse, for he became more ambitious; he began to sketch from nature; and, having a special fancy for landscape, he used to carry his slate and arithmetic into the fields; and, instead of becoming more expert in compound interest, he would sit for hours composing pictures, and attempting every possible variety in the views of the same little mill-pond, within a short distance of the house. He soon became quite expert in the management of his slate and pencil, and showed a good deal of ingenuity in rubbing in and out the white shading on the black ground, something in the manner of a stump-drawing; but, of course, these sketches all disappeared before Charlie went to take his regular lesson in book-keeping, from the neighbour who had promised to keep him in practice until the winter, when he was to enter the counting-house.

同类推荐
  • 大云无想经

    大云无想经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 题濠州钟离寺

    题濠州钟离寺

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说十吉祥经

    佛说十吉祥经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 兰室秘藏

    兰室秘藏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 胡涂世界

    胡涂世界

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 印沙佛文

    印沙佛文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 智动九天

    智动九天

    这里有不一样的玄幻,大千位面,武者纵横!诸天万域,百族争锋!这里有不一样的规则,乾坤无极,帝尊天地!张智机缘巧合之下得到外时空功法《太极》,从此踏上了武道通天之路。
  • 王俊凯因为遇见你

    王俊凯因为遇见你

    因为遇见你,我学会珍惜,就算面对再多暴风雨打击……两人为了爱情,经历了风吹雨打,才得以在一起。
  • 又是月季芬芳时

    又是月季芬芳时

    情感是人类永恒的话题,世间永远说不完也不清楚的就是情感,世间哪怕说了千遍万遍也不会感到厌倦的就是情感。人们常说只要人人都献出一点爱,世界将变成美好的人间。人世间由爱组成,无论是亲情、爱情还是友情,我们都需要,我们都离不开。离开了情感,离开了爱,人活着就失去了意义,就如月枯木死灰,人的生命就失去了光彩,失去了价值。无论情感的形式如何千变万化,但其性质永远不变,都是人们发自内心的不求回报的为对方为他人的付出。现实生活中有许多人总埋怨他人冷默无情,埋怨他人给自己的爱太少,却不知情感的付出是双向,你给予别人多少,别人同样会回报你多少。
  • 剑道征途

    剑道征途

    在这个剑道没落的时代,一名对剑痴狂的少年,如何将剑道重现昔日的辉煌。
  • 混在大唐闯江湖

    混在大唐闯江湖

    混在大唐闯江湖,美人相伴,与我再战风流!————————————————————————各位看官,觉得能看的,收藏走一走,手里有推荐票的,麻烦送一送,能打分的,麻烦给个五星好评,小谢在此拜谢各位了!
  • 第六界学院

    第六界学院

    神与魔连年不断的战争却发生在人界,肆意毁灭人界为人类带来无数灾难。1802年,一位生活在当时冰岛的时空魔法师因被通缉逃到了所罗门群岛,并在这里开启了新空间的传送门。而他所建立的新空间被叫做第六界,他从人界中带来那些没有存在感的人,从精灵界带来强大的精灵,人通过在学院里训练成为操纵魂隐的御灵卫,以第六界为盾保卫人界,抵抗神与魔。。。
  • 古云谣——阳

    古云谣——阳

    讲述梦想成为大侠的少年,穿越异世后的成长经历。穿越了前世今生,只为与君共醉一场。
  • tfboys之穿越到清朝

    tfboys之穿越到清朝

    穿越就穿越为什么和tfboys穿越,和他们穿越就穿越干嘛把冰姐,俪姐,baby姐,颖姐,涛姐,··············他们带上,带上就带上,我们还要和他们·························烦死了
  • 奇异新人类

    奇异新人类

    我曾经立誓要守护整个世界和我所爱的的人,可是我错了。我太自大了啊。其实以我的能力,只能守护那么的几个人而已。可惜他们,全都一个一个地离开我了。