登陆注册
15483200000105

第105章 CHAPTER XX THE STONE MUGS(5)

And with his mother's consent, too. Not that he had asked it in so many words and stood hesitating, fearing to take the divergent path until he could take her willing blessing with him. He had made his decision firmly and against her wishes. She had kept silent at first, and had watched his progress as she had watched his baby steps, tearfully--prayerfully at times--standing ready to catch him if he fell. But that was over now. The bigness of her vision covering margins wide enough for new impressions, impressions which her broad mind, great enough and honest enough to confess its mistakes, always welcomed and understood, had long since made clear to her what in her early anxiety she had ignored:

--that if her son had inherited the creative and imaginative gifts of his father (those gifts which she so little understood), he had also inherited from her a certain spirit of determination, together with that practical turn of mind which had given the men of her own family their eminence. In proof of this she could not but see that the instability which she had so dreaded in his earlier years had given way to a certain fixedness of purpose and firm self-reliance. The thought of this thrilled her as nothing else in his whole career had ever done. All these things helped reconcile her to his choice of a profession.

Oliver, now thoroughly warm and dry, busied himself getting his brushes and paints together and scraping off one of Fred's palettes. Bianchi's bald head and fat, red, smooth-shaven face with its double chin--time had not dealt leniently with the distinguished lithographer--had inspired our hero to attempt a "Franz Hals smear," as Waller called it, and the Pole, when he arrived, was to sit for him in the costume of an old Dutch burgomaster, the big white ruff furnishing the high lights in the canvas.

By the time Oliver had arranged his palette the club had settled itself for work, the smoke from the pipes floating in long lines toward the ceiling, befogging the big white albatross that hung from a wire in the skylight. Munson, who had rubbed in a background of bitumen over a square tile, sat next to Fred, who was picking out, with the end of a wooden match, the outlines of an army-wagon sketched on a plate smeared with color. Simmons was looking over a portfolio that Watson, a new member, had brought with him, filled with a lot of his summer sketches made on the Normandy coast.

One view of the fish-market at Dieppe caught Oliver's eye. The slant of light burnishing the roof of the church to silver and flooding the pavement of the open square, crowded with black figures, the white caps of the fish-women indicated by crisp pats of the brush, pleased our painter immensely.

"Charming, old man," said Oliver, turning to Watson. "How long did it take you?"

"About four hours."

"Looks like it," growled Waller, reaching over Oliver's shoulder and drawing the sketch toward him.

"That's the gospel of 'smear,' Horn," and he tossed it back. "Not a figure in the group has got any drawing in it."

Waller had set his face against the new out-door school, and never lost a chance to ridicule it.

"That's not what Watson is after," exclaimed Oliver.

"The figures are mere accessories. The dominating light is the thing; he's got that"--and he held the sketch close to the overhead gas-jets so that the members could see it the better.

"Dominating light be hanged! What's the use of slobbering puddles of paint over a canvas and calling it plein air, or impressionism, or out-of-doors, or some such rot? Get down to business and DRAW. When you have done that you can talk. It can't be done in four hours, and if some of you fellows keep on the way you're going, you'll never do it in four years."

"A four hours' sketch handled as Watson has this," said Oliver, thoughtfully, "is better than four years' work on one of your Hudson Rivery things.

The sun doesn't stand still long enough for a man to get more than an expression of what he sees--that is if he's after truth. The angle of shadow changes too quickly, and so do the reflected lights."

"What's the matter with the next day?" burst out Waller. "Can't you take up your sketch where you left off? You talk as if every great picture had to be painted before luncheon."

"But there is no 'next day,'" interrupted Watson.

"I entirely agree with Horn." He had been listening to the discussion with silent interest. "No next day like the one on which you began your canvas.

The sky is different--gray, blue, or full of fleecy, sunny clouds. Your shadows are more purple, or blue or gray, depending on your sky overhead, and so are your reflections. If you go on and try to piece out your sketch, you make an almanac of it--not a portrait of what you saw. I can pick out the Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays on that kind of a sketch as soon as I see it. Nature is like a bird--if you want to surprise her, you must let go both barrels when she rises; if you miss her at your first shot you will never have another chance--not at that particular bird."

"Well, but suppose you DO happen to have two days alike," insisted Waller. "I have seen thirty days on a stretch in Venice without a cloud. What then?" The bird simile had evidently not appealed to the great critic.

"Then ten chances to one you are not the same man you were the day before," replied Watson, calmly, laying down his pipe. "You have had bad news from home or your liver is out of order, or worse still, you have seen some new subject which has taken hold of you and your first enthusiasm has oozed away.

If you persist in going on you will either undo what you did yesterday or you will trust to your memory of what you THINK yesterday was, to finish your sketch by. The first fills it full of lies and the second full of yourself; neither have anything to do with nature.

Four hours, Waller, not a minute more. You'll come to it before you die."

"That depends on what you have got to paint with," snapped out Jack Bedford, who was trying to clean a dingy-looking palette with a knife.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 宠妃有道:战神王爷欺负人

    宠妃有道:战神王爷欺负人

    从今天开始,你,李琉璃,就是本王的女人,至于婚礼什么的,不是不重要吗?某王霸道抢亲时的台词。既然你咬了本王,那本王不回礼岂不是我不对!某王厚颜调戏自家侧妃。你当本王是什么人了?很抱歉,告诉你,你对本王,丝毫没有吸引力。某王欲擒故纵如是说。穿越来的侧妃也不是吃素的,如果我说喜欢你呢?先是柔情攻略。答应我,以后不要离开我,好吗?再是小鸟依人。某王一腔铁血也化绕指柔:琉璃,过来我这。终是对这替身侧妃动了真情:琉璃,若不是你这张脸,我恐怕也不会爱上你吧?可心一旦选择,就再难逃开:离儿,别怕!对不起,琉璃……他的王手持利剑穿过她身子,帝王将相本就无情,她终于明白了啊!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 重生之神级召唤

    重生之神级召唤

    赵无命穿越了,他并没有向其他穿越群众那样穿越到各种异界,而是穿越到了一个类似地球的地方,并且成为了一名光荣的卦师。无意之中他获得了其家族的传承。算命,你找我,逆天改命举手之劳。医术,你找我,起死回生不在话下。风水,你找我,寻龙点穴小菜一碟。……山,医,命,卜,相无所不知,无所不能,无处不在,无法无天。
  • 拆的一手好cp

    拆的一手好cp

    一个直男的次元空间的修复之旅,外带一直萌萌哒的系统。“主银,空间发生崩坏了。”“关我什么事.""主银,你不听话,会死的哦。”“ok,我去就是了。”“说好的只拆尼,现在是怎么回事!!”“伦家不造哦~”“滚!”纯属恶搞,情节与动漫原情节不相相符,较真读者求放过~
  • 独宠狂妃之王妃要逆天

    独宠狂妃之王妃要逆天

    穿越是人人知晓的一词,牛逼女主光环玩转后宫,收美男,斗女配,小说是如此的美好。如果将女主换成无能的宅女又会是怎样的情景?如果穿越之地是混乱的时空她又会怎样的生存?第一,她没有牛逼的技能,第二,她没有倾国的容貌,第三,她没有超人的运气。她有的,只是拼搏与奋斗,再加上一点点疯狂……看她如何疯狂的变成混乱之地强大的存在,又会留下怎样的历史。
  • 一剑钟情

    一剑钟情

    慕轻寒由于操作过硬,在游戏中一直被当成男生,这天却被本服第一大神逼亲——大神没听过传闻吗?大神口味就这么重吗?!大神集美貌与智慧与一身,还是Y大传奇,在国外当交换生牛得飞起,这逼亲不给理由就算了,问一下还直接奔现处理,让她瞬间成了大众情敌首位!讲点道理好吗?虽然帅的人不用讲道理……紧跟着他就登门入室了,还顺手帮她灭光了追求者,以压倒性的姿态。“或许你不记得了,有一天我刚从副本里出来,而你……”而她……到底怎么样嘛,话说到一半吊人胃口什么的太讨厌啦!于是慕轻寒脸顶大写的纠结开始思索,似乎在某个副本门口,她真的干了一件了不起的事情……
  • 记忆树叶

    记忆树叶

    存在于记忆深处的树叶,仿佛刻画着我们一去不返的年轮。那清晰的纹路为何犹如一道道伤痕,痛的清澈……
  • 御令甲子策天

    御令甲子策天

    这一世,天圆地方;这一陆上,四国争强。他是昊天境内一边境的少年,这个少年,注定命中与身边的大事有着千丝万缕的联系;在知晓了惊天秘密而引来杀身之祸,在阴谋阳谋之中几度垂死挣扎,多少被隐匿的故事浮出水面,多少关系乾坤万物的决策在等待着他;而一切的一切,皆因御令而起。(此书原名御令,不过既然已有人在起点注册过这个名字,那就顺手稍微修改了一下)
  • 穿越之都市闲修

    穿越之都市闲修

    在遥远的不知名的异域时空的某个大陆,彩霞漫天,祥云密布,四海清平,博览不惊,整个大陆一片祥和。一道流星划过大陆南部的天空,落入南方边陲,消失不见。叶飞,带着坚毅之志和着神奇的莲花空间穿越到这个异世界的南方边陲的小城,一切在这个陌生的地方重头开始。既来之,则安之,叶飞边享受和珍惜这个美好又休闲的新的青春时代,一边修炼奋斗走向人生巅峰!
  • 邪王轻宠:嫡女毒妃

    邪王轻宠:嫡女毒妃

    前世,她纯正善良却被王爷丈夫亲手灭了全家。这一世,她逆天重生,得罪她的人,全都不得好死!惩庶妹,诱“渣”夫,护爹娘,保沈家。等等,前世中山狼原是今世良人?吃干抹净不说,还说上一世不是故意的?
  • 真仙真指语录

    真仙真指语录

    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。