His Masterpiece eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 520 pages of information about His Masterpiece.

His Masterpiece eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 520 pages of information about His Masterpiece.

The spring and summer sped by amidst great quietude.  They went out less often; they had almost given up the boat, which finished rotting against the bank, for it was quite a job to take the little one with them among the islets.  But they often strolled along the banks of the Seine, without, however, going farther afield than a thousand yards or so.  Claude, tired of the everlasting views in the garden, now attempted some sketches by the river-side, and on such days Christine went to fetch him with the child, sitting down to watch him paint, until they all three returned home with flagging steps, beneath the ashen dusk of waning daylight.  One afternoon Claude was surprised to see Christine bring with her the old album which she had used as a young girl.  She joked about it, and explained that to sit behind him like that had roused in her a wish to work herself.  Her voice was a little unsteady as she spoke; the truth was that she felt a longing to share his labour, since this labour took him away from her more and more each day.  She drew and ventured to wash in two or three water-colours in the careful style of a school-girl.  Then, discouraged by his smiles, feeling that no community of ideas would be arrived at on that ground, she once more put her album aside, making him promise to give her some lessons in painting whenever he should have time.

Besides, she thought his more recent pictures very pretty.  After that year of rest in the open country, in the full sunlight, he painted with fresh and clearer vision, as it were, with a more harmonious and brighter colouring.  He had never before been able to treat reflections so skilfully, or possessed a more correct perception of men and things steeped in diffuse light.  And henceforth, won over by that feast of colours, she would have declared it all capital if he would only have condescended to finish his work a little more, and if she had not remained nonplussed now and then before a mauve ground or a blue tree, which upset all her preconceived notions of colour.  One day when she ventured upon a bit of criticism, precisely about an azure-tinted poplar, he made her go to nature and note for herself the delicate bluishness of the foliage.  It was true enough, the tree was blue; but in her inmost heart she did not surrender, and condemned reality; there ought not to be any blue trees in nature.

She no longer spoke but gravely of the studies hanging in the dining-room.  Art was returning into their lives, and it made her muse.  When she saw him go off with his bag, his portable easel, and his sunshade, it often happened that she flung herself upon his neck, asking: 

‘You love me, say?’

‘How silly you are!  Why shouldn’t I love you?’

‘Then kiss me, since you love me, kiss me a great deal, a great deal.’

Then accompanying him as far as the road, she added: 

’And mind you work; you know that I have never prevented you from working.  Go, go; I am very pleased when you work.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
His Masterpiece from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.