After the sickening
stench of personality in theatrical life," the great Madame Orloff told
the doctor with her usual free-handed use of language, "it is like
breathing a thin, pure air to be here again with our dear inhuman old Vieyra.
He hypnotizes me into his own belief that nothing matters -- not broken hearts,
nor death, nor success, nor first love, nor old age -- nothing but the
chiaroscuro of his latest acquisition."
The picture-dealer
looked at her in silence, bringing the point of his white beard up to his chin
with a meditative fist. The big surgeon gazed about him with appreciative eyes,
touched his mustache to his gold-lined coffee-cup, and sighed contentedly.
"You're not the only one, my dear Olga," he said, "who finds
Vieyra's hard heart a blessing. When I am here in his magnificent old den, listening
to one of his frank accounts of his own artistic acumen and rejoicing in his
beautiful possessions, why the rest of the world -- real humanity -- seems in
retrospect like one great hospital full of shrieking incurables."
"Oh, humanity --
!" The actress thrust it away with one of her startling, vivid gestures.
"You think it very
clever, my distinguished friends, to discuss me before my face," commented
the old picture-dealer indifferently. He fingered the bright-colored
decorations on his breast, looking down at them with absent eyes. After a
moment he added, "and to show your in-ti-mate knowledge of my
character."
Only its careful
correctness betrayed the foreignness of his speech.
"Oh, character --
!" Madame Orloff repudiated the conception in a vague murmur.
There was a pause in
which the three gazed idly at the fire's reflection in the brass of the superb
old andirons. Then, "Haven't you something new to show us?" asked the
woman. "Some genuine Masaccio, picked up in a hill-town monastery -- a
real Ribera?"
The small old Jew drew
a long breath. "Yes, I have something new." He hesitated, opened his
lips, closed them again and, looking at the fire, "Oh yes, very new indeed
-- new to me."
"Is it here?"
The great surgeon looked about the picture- covered walls.
"No; I have it in
-- you know, what you call the inner sanctuary -- the light here is not good
enough."
The actress stood up,
her glittering dress flashing a thousand eyes at the fire. "Let me see
it," she commanded. "I would like to see something new to you."
"You shall amuse
yourself by identifying the artist without my aid," said old Vieyra.
He opened a door, held
back a portiere, let his guests pass through into a darkened room, turned on a
softly brilliant light, and: "Whom do you make the artist?" he said.
He did not look at the picture. He looked at the faces of his guests, and after
a long silent pause, he smiled faintly into his beard. "Let us go back to
the fire," he said, and clicked them into darkness again.
"And what do you
say?" he asked as they sat down.
"By Jove!"
cried the doctor. "By Jove!"
Madame Orloff turned on
the collector the sombre glow of her deep-set eyes. "I have dreamed
it," she said.
"It is real,"
said Vieyra. "You are the first to see it. I wished to observe how --
"
"It's an unknown
Vermeer!" The doctor brought his big white hand down loudly on this
discovery. "Nobody but Vermeer could have done the plaster wall in the
sunlight. And the girl's strange gray head-dress must be seventeenth-century
Dutch of some province I don't -- "
"I am a rich man,
for a picture-dealer," said Vieyra, "but only national governments
can afford to buy Vermeers nowadays."
"But you picked it
up from some corner, some attic, some stable -- "
"Yes, I picked it
up from a stable," said the collector.
The actress laid her
slender, burning fingers on his cool old hand. "Tell us -- tell us,"
she urged. "There is something different here."
"Yes, there is
something different," he stirred in his chair and thrust out his lips.
"So different that I don't know if you -- "
"Try me! try
me!" she assured him ardently. "You have educated me well to your
standards all these years."
At this he looked at
her, startled, frowning, attentive, and ended by shaking off her hand.
"No, I will not tell you."
"You shall --
" her eyes commanded, adjured him. There was a silence. "I will
understand," she said under her breath.
"You will not
understand," he said in the same tone; but aloud he began: "I heard
of it first from an American picture-dealer over here scraping up a
mock-Barbizon collection for a new millionaire. He wanted to get my judgment,
he said, on a canvas that had been brought in to him by a cousin of his
children's governess. I was to be sure to see it when I went to New York -- you
knew, did you not, that I had been called to New York to testify in the
prosecution of Paullsen for selling a signed copy?"
"Did you really
go?" asked the doctor. "I thought you swore that nothing could take
you to America."
"I went,"
said the old man grimly. "Paullsen did me a bad turn once, thirty years
ago. And while I was there I went to see the unknown canvas. The dealer half
apologized for taking my time -- said he did not as a rule pay any attention to
freak things brought in from country holes by amateurs, but -- I remember his
wording -- this thing, some ways he looked at it, didn't seem bad
somehow."
The collector paused,
passed his tongue over his lips, and said briefly: "Then he showed it to
me. It was the young girl and kitten in there."
"By Jove!"
cried the doctor.
"You have too
exciting a profession, my good old dear," said the actress. "Some day
you will die of a heart failure."
"Not after living
through that!"
"What did you tell
him?"
"I asked for the
address of the cousin of his childrens' governess. When I had it I bought a
ticket to the place, and when I reached there I found myself at the end of all
things -- an abomination of desolation. Do you know America, either of
you?"
The doctor shook his
head.
"I have toured
there three times," said the actress.
"Did you ever hear
of a place called Pennsylvania?"
Madame Orloff smiled.
"It is as large as five Englands."
"It is inhabited
by an insufferable sect of fanatics called Quakers, who live in preposterously
ugly little wooden houses of the most naked cleanliness, who will not swear,
who have no priests and no doctrine, apparently, but the blasphemous one that
color, sacred, holy color is an evil thing, and that gray is the only virtuous
-- "
The actress laughed.
"There are other people in Pennsylvania," she protested.
Vieyra ignored her.
"In a wretched huddle of little houses they call a village I found the
cousin, a seller of letter-paper and cheap chromos, who knew nothing of the
picture except that it was brought to him to sell by the countryman who sold
him butter. I found the address of the butter-maker, and drove endless miles
over execrable roads to his house, and encountered his mother, a stolid,
middle-aged woman, who looked at me out of the most uncanny quiet eyes -- all
the fanatics there have the extraordinary eyes -- from under a strange, gray
head-dress, and asked: 'Is it about the picture? For you don't want to let on
to anybody but me. Nobody but the family knows he paints 'em!'"
At this the doctor
burst out: "Gracious powers! You don't mean he is a living man!"
"Let him
alone!" The actress turned with a lithe petulance on the big Briton.
"And there I had
it all," the narrator went on; "the old woman could tell me what I
wished to know, she said. He was her uncle, the only brother of her mother, and
he had brought up her and her brothers and sisters. She knew -- oh, she knew
with good reason, all of his life. All, that is, but the beginning. She had
heard from older Quakers that he had been wild in his youth (he had always
been, she told me gravely, queer) and she knew that he had travelled far in his
young days, very, very far.
"'To New York?' I
ventured.
"'Oh, no, beyond
that. Across the water.'
"'To Paris?'
"That she didn't
know. It was a foreign country at least, and he had stayed there two, three
years, until he was called back by her father's death -- his brother-in-law's
-- to take care of his mother, and his sister and the children. Here her mind went
back to my question, and she said she had something perhaps I could tell from,
where he had been. She kept it in her Bible. He had given it to her when she
was a child as a reward the day she had kept her little brother from falling in
the fire. She brought it out. It was a sketch, hasty, vigorous, suggestive,
haunting as the original itself, of the Leonardo da Vinci Ste. Anne.
"Yes, I told her,
now I knew where he had been. And they had called him back from there -- here?
"'When my father
died,' she repeated, 'my uncle was all my grandmother and my mother had. We
were five little children, and the oldest not seven, and we were all very
poor.'
"'How old was your
uncle then?' I asked.
"'A young man --
he was younger than my mother. Perhaps he was twenty-five.'
"I looked at the
sketch in my hand. Twenty-five, and called back from Paris -- here!
"'When did he go
back?'
"'Oh, he never
went back.' She told me this quite placidly, as she said everything else. 'He
never went back at all.'
"He had stayed
there the rest of his life, and worked the little farm that was all his sister
had, and made a living for them -- not large, the farm being poor and he not a
first-class farmer, but still enough. He had always been kind to them -- if he
was quite queer and absent. She had heard her grandmother say that at first,
the first ten years, perhaps, he had had strange, gloomy, savage fits, like a
person possessed that you read of in the Bible; but she herself could never
remember him as anything but quiet and smiling. He had a very queer smile,
unlike any one else, as I would notice for myself when I went to see him about
the picture. You could tell him by that, and by his being very lame.
"That brought me
back with a start. I rushed at her with questions. 'How about the picture? Were
there others? Were there many? Had he always painted? Had he never shown them
to any one? Was he painting now?
"She could not
tell me much. It had been a detail of their common life she had but absently
remarked, as though she had lived with a man who collected snail-shells, or
studied the post-marks on letters. She had never noticed -- that was the answer
to most of my questions. No, she did not think there were very many now, though
he must have painted 'most a million. He was always at it, every minute he
could spare from farming. But they had been so poor he had not felt he could
afford many canvases. The paints cost a good deal too. So he painted them over
and over, first one thing and then another, as he happened to fancy. He painted
in the horse- barn. 'Had a place rigged up,' in her phrase, in one corner of
the room where the hay was stored, and had cut a big window in the roof that
was apt to let in water on the hay if the rain came from the east.
"'What did he
paint?' 'Oh, anything. He was queer about that. He'd paint anything! He did one
picture of nothing but the corner of the barn-yard, with a big white sow and
some little pigs in the straw, early in the morning, when the dew was on everything.
He had thought quite a lot of that, but he had had to paint over it to make the
picture of her little sister with the yellow kittie -- the one she'd sent down
to the village to try to sell, the one -- '
"'Yes, yes,' I
told her, 'the one I saw. But did he never try to sell any himself? Did he
never even show them to any one?'
"She hesitated,
tried to remember, and said that once when they were very poor, and there was a
big doctor's bill to pay, he had sent a picture down to New York. But it was sent
back. They had made a good deal of fun of it, the people down there, because it
wasn't finished off enough. She thought her uncle's feelings had been hurt by
their letter. The express down and back had cost a good deal too, and the only
frame he had got broken. Altogether, she guessed that discouraged him. Anyhow,
he'd never tried again. He seemed to get so after a while that he didn't care
whether anybody liked them or even saw them or not -- he just painted them to
amuse himself, she guessed. He seemed to get a good deal of comfort out of it.
It made his face very still and smiling to paint. Nobody around there so much
as knew he did it, the farm was so far from neighbors.
"'Twas a real
lonely place, she told me, and she had been glad to marry and come down in the
valley to live closer to folks. Her uncle had given her her wedding outfit. He
had done real well by them all, and they were grateful; and now he was getting
feeble and had trouble with his heart, they wanted to do something for him.
They had thought, perhaps, they could sell some of his pictures for enough to
hire a man to help him with the farm work. She had heard that pictures were
coming into fashion more than they had been, and she had borrowed that one of
her little sister and the kittie, and without her uncle's knowing anything
about it, had sent it off. She was about discouraged waiting for somebody down
in the city to make up his mind whether he'd buy it or not.
"I asked her a
thousand other questions but she could answer none of them. The only detail I
could get from her being an account of her uncle's habit of 'staring' for
sometimes a half an hour at something, without once looking away. She'd seen
him stop that way, when he'd be husking corn maybe, and stare at a place where
a sunbeam came in on a pile of corn. It put him back quite considerable in his
work, that habit, but they had nothing to complain of. He'd done well by them,
when you considered they weren't his own children.
"'Hadn't he ever
tried to break away?' I asked her, amazed. 'To leave them? To go back?'
"She told me: 'Oh,
no, he was the only support his mother and his sister had, and there were all
the little children. He had to stay.'"
The actress broke in
fiercely: "Oh, stop! stop! it makes me sick to hear about. I could boil
them in oil, that family! Quick! You saw him? You brought him away? You --
"
"I saw him,"
said Vieyra, "yes, I saw him."
Madame Orloff leaned
toward him, her eyebrows a line of painful attention.
"I drove that
afternoon up to a still tinier village in the mountains near where he lived,
and there I slept that night -- or, at least, I lay in a bed."
"Of course, you
could not sleep," broke in the listening woman; "I shall not
to-night."
"When dawn came I
dressed and went out to wander until people should be awake. I walked far,
through fields, and then through a wood as red as red-gold -- like nothing I
ever saw. It was in October, and the sun was late to rise. When I came out on
an uplying heath, the mists were just beginning to roll away from the valley
below. As I stood there, leaning against a tree in the edge of the wood, some
cows came by, little, pinched, lean cows, and a young dog bounding along, and
then, after them, slowly, an old man in gray -- very lame."
The actress closed her
eyes.
"He did not see
me. He whistled to the dog and stroked his head, and then as the cows went
through a gate, he turned and faced the rising sun, the light full on his face.
He looked at the valley coming into sight through the mists. He was so close to
me I could have tossed a stone to him -- I shall never know how long he stood
there -- how long I had that face before me."
The narrator was
silent. Madame Orloff opened her eyes and looked at him piercingly.
"I cannot tell you
-- I cannot!" he answered her. "Who can tell of life and death and a
new birth? It was as though I were thinking with my fingernails, or the hair of
my head -- a part of me I had never before dreamed had feeling. My eyes were
dazzled. I could have bowed myself to the earth like Moses before the burning
bush. How can I tell you -- ? How can I tell you?"
"He was -- ?"
breathed the woman.
"Hubert van Eyck
might have painted God the Father with those eyes -- that mouth -- that face of
patient power -- of selfless, still beatitude. -- Once the dog, nestling by his
side, whimpered and licked his hand. He looked down, he turned his eyes away
from his vision, and looked down at the animal and smiled. Jehovah! What a
smile. It seemed to me then that if God loves humanity, he can have no kinder
smile for us. And then he looked back across the valley -- at the sky, at the
mountains, at the smoke rising from the houses below us -- he looked at the
world -- at some vision, some knowledge -- what he saw -- what he saw -- !
"I did not know
when he went. I was alone in that crimson wood.
"I went back to
the village. I went back to the city. I would not speak to him till I had some
honor worthy to offer him. I tried to think what would mean most to him. I
remembered the drawing of the Ste. Anne. I remembered his years in Paris, and I
knew what would seem most honor to him. I cabled Drouot of the Luxembourg
Gallery. I waited in New York till he came. I showed him the picture. I told
him the story. He was on fire!
"We were to go
back to the mountains together, to tell him that his picture would hang in the
Luxembourg, and then in the Louvre -- that in all probability he would be
decorated by the French government, that other pictures of his would live for
all time in Paris, in London, in Brussels -- a letter came from the woman, his
niece. He was dead."
The actress fell back
in her chair, her hands over her face.
The surgeon stirred
wrathfully. "Heavens and earth, Vieyra, what a beastly, ghastly, brutally
tragic horror are you telling us, anyhow!"
The old Jew moistened
his lips and was silent. After a moment he said: "I should not have told
you. I knew you could not understand."
Madame Orloff looked up
sharply. "Do you mean -- is it possible that you mean that if we had seen
him -- had seen that look -- we would -- that he had had all that an artist --
"
The picture-dealer
addressed himself to her, turning his back on the doctor. "I went back to
the funeral, to the mountains. The niece told me that before he died he smiled
suddenly on them all and said: 'I have had a happy life.' I had taken a palm to
lay on his coffin, and after I had looked long at his dead face, I put aside
the palm. I felt that if he had lived I could never have spoken to him -- could
never have told him."
The old Jew looked down
at the decorations on his breast, and around at the picture-covered walls. He
made a sweeping gesture.
"What had I to
offer him?" he said.