Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 04 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 256 pages of information about Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great.

Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 04 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 256 pages of information about Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great.

The woman who stepped out of high society and won the love of this stern yet gentle old man must have been of a mental and spiritual quality to command our highest praise.  The world loves Vittoria Colonna because she loved Michelangelo, and led him away from strife and rivalry and toil.

REMBRANDT

The eyes and the mouth are the supremely significant features of the human face.  In Rembrandt’s portraits the eye is the center wherein life, in its infinity of aspect, is most manifest.  Not only was his fidelity absolute, but there is a certain mysterious limpidity of gaze that reveals the soul of the sitter.  A “Rembrandt” does not give up its beauties to the casual observer—­it takes time to know it, but once known, it is yours forever.

    —­Emile Michel

[Illustration:  Rembrandt]

Swimming uneasily in my ink-bottle is a small preachment concerning names, and the way they have been evolved, and lost, or added to.  Some day I will fish this effusion out and give it to a waiting world.  Those of us whose ancestors landed at Plymouth or Jamestown are very proud of our family names, and even if we trace quite easily to Castle Garden we do not always discard the patronymic.

Harmen Gerritsz was a young man who lived in the city of Leyden, Holland, in the latter part of the Sixteenth Century.  The letters “sz” at the end of his name stood for “szoon” and signified that he was the szoon of Mynheer Gerrit.

Now Harmen Gerritsz duly served an apprenticeship with a miller, and when his time expired, being of an ambitious nature, he rented a mill on the city wall, and started business for himself.  Shortly after he very naturally married the daughter of a baker.

All of Mr. Harmen Gerritsz’s customers called him Harmen, and when they wished to be exact they spoke of him as Harmen van Ryn—­that is to say, Harmen of the Rhine, for his mill was near the river.  “Out West,” even now, if you call a man Mister, he will probably inquire what it is you have against him.

Mr. and Mrs. Harmen lived in the mill, and as years went by were blessed with a nice little family of six children.  The fifth child is the only one that especially interests us.  They named him Rembrandt.

Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Ryn, he called himself when he entered at the grammar-school at Leyden, aged fourteen.  His father’s first name being Harmen, he simply took that, and discarded the Gerrit entirely, according to the custom of the time.  In fact, all our Johnsons are the sons of John, and the names Peterson, Thompson and Wilson, in feudal times, had their due and proper significance.  Then when we find names with a final ending of “s,” such as Robbins, Larkins and Perkins, we are to understand that the owner is the son of his father.  And so we find Rembrandt Harmenszoon in his later years writing his name Harmensz and then simply Harmens.

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Project Gutenberg
Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 04 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.