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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50308 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50308)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Romney, by Randall Davies
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Romney
-
-Author: Randall Davies
-
-Release Date: October 25, 2015 [EBook #50308]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROMNEY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Shaun Pinder, Chuck Greif and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ROMNEY
-
- UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME
-
- REYNOLDS
-
- Containing sixteen examples of the master’s work
-
- VELASQUEZ
-
- Containing sixteen illustrations in colour
-
- A. AND C. BLACK, SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W.
-
- [Illustration: LADY HAMILTON WITH A GOAT
-
- Tankerville Chamberlayne, Esq.]
-
-
-
-
- ROMNEY
-
- BY
-
- RANDALL DAVIES
-
- CONTAINING SIXTEEN EXAMPLES IN COLOUR
- OF THE MASTER’S WORK
-
- LONDON
-
- ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK
-
- 1914
-
- PRINTED AT
- THE BALLANTYNE PRESS
- LONDON
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The most obvious gap in the ranks of the portraits by British painters
-in our National Collections is caused by the absence of any work of
-really first-rate importance by George Romney.
-
-_The Parsons Daughter_, in the National Gallery, and the _Mrs.
-Robinson_, at Hertford House, are of the finest quality; but they are
-only heads.
-
-The large portrait of _Mrs. Mark Currie_ is charming, but by no means so
-fine.
-
-In the _Louisa, Countess of Mansfield_, we are nearer to the very best;
-but that is only a temporary loan, and until the public are in
-possession of one or two of his superb whole-length portraits, such as
-Earl Crewe’s _Lady Milnes_, the Marquis of Lansdowne’s _Lord Henry
-Petty_, or the _Lady Bell Hamilton_, they will hardly be able to judge
-the work of Romney as fairly as that of his more fortunate
-contemporaries.
-
-In placing him in the first rank of English painters, however, the
-present generation are only doing him as much honour as he deserves,
-after a century of neglect; and there seems to be no fear of his fame
-diminishing again or his popularity abating.
-
-R. D.
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-1. Lady Hamilton
-with a Goat _Tankerville Chamberlayne, Esq._ _Frontispiece_
-
- _Facing p._
-
-2. The Parson’s Daughter _National Gallery_ 4
-
-3. Thomas John Clavering,
-afterwards eighth Baronet,
-and his sister, Catherine
-Mary _Col. C. W. Napier Clavering_ 8
-
-4. Maria Margaret Clavering,
-afterwards Lady Napier ” ” ” 12
-
-5. Colonel Thomas Thornton ” ” ” 16
-
-6. Miss Ramus _Viscount Hambleden_ 20
-
-7. Mrs. Robinson as “Perdita” _Wallace Collection_ 22
-
-8. William Pitt, the Younger _National Gallery_ 26
-
-9. Portraits of Mr. and
-Mrs. William Lindow (1770) ” ” 28
-
-10. Lady Craven (1778) ” ” 32
-
-11. Mrs. Mark Currie (1789) ” ” 36
-
-12. Portrait of a Lady
-and Child (1782) ” ” 40
-
-13. Lady Hamilton as a
-Bacchante (1786) ” ” 44
-
-14. Emma, Lady Hamilton _National Portrait Gallery_ 46
-
-15. Miss Benedetta Ramus _Viscount Hambleden_ 48
-
-16. Portrait of Romney by
-Himself (unfinished) (1782) _National Portrait Gallery_ 52
-
-
-
-
-GEORGE ROMNEY
-
-
-That Reynolds and Gainsborough were the two greatest portrait painters
-in England during the latter half of the eighteenth century is a
-proposition which no one is likely to question. Both had qualities which
-raised them far above the general, and considerably higher than even the
-foremost of their competitors; and though preference for the work of the
-one or the other of them is often as much a matter of taste as of
-opinion, the pre-eminence of the two is beyond dispute.
-
-When we come to fill the third place, however, the question is not so
-readily settled. There are many candidates who are, or ought to be, in
-the running; and although the fashion of the present time may send up
-the prices of now one now another beyond all that is reasonable and
-sensible, it would be rash to say that the most popular has the best
-right to the position. Only last year, for example, a new planet swam
-into the dealers’ ken, a portrait of _Benjamin Franklin_, painted in
-1762 by Mason Chamberlin, one of the original members of the Royal
-Academy, realising the extraordinary figure of two thousand eight
-hundred guineas; a figure which, as the _Times_ felicitously observes,
-“places the artist on an auction level with Reynolds and Gainsborough.”
-
-Judged by the fickle standard of the auction room, Raeburn, at the
-present moment, would have precedence over Hoppner, and Hoppner, unless
-I am mistaken, over Romney. But who can say whether before another
-season is over, the merits of Lawrence or Beechey, West or Copley, may
-not come up in the market, and impress an uncritical public with ideas
-of beauty and genius which have hitherto escaped their notice?
-
-In my own opinion, George Romney has better claim than any of the others
-to be considered next to Reynolds and Gainsborough as a portrait
-painter, inasmuch as he seems to me to have exhibited more consistently
-the variety of qualities necessary for excellence in that particular
-branch of his art.
-
-In its outward manipulation of charm and beauty, the work of Romney is
-all that an amateur need ask of it, and considerations of mere elegance
-have probably advanced his popularity in the sale room as much as others
-more really important. But charm and beauty of this sort are delusive
-guides and, unless backed by some more enduring test of excellence, will
-lead us downwards only, through the scale of Hoppner, Lawrence, Harlow,
-and Shee, till we find ourselves in the company of the simpering
-beauties of the early and mid-Victorian age, with their sloping
-shoulders and curling ringlets. With Romney we are perfectly safe. No
-twinge of conscience warns us to withstand the allurements of _Lady
-Hamilton_, or the fascination of the _Parson’s Daughter_. We may flirt
-as long and as desperately as we please--in an artistic sense--with
-_Mrs. Mark Currie_, without the slightest stain on our æsthetic morals.
-There is nothing technically meretricious about any of these beauties,
-and the virtue of our taste is only strengthened by the pleasurable
-enjoyment of their society.
-
-And why?
-
-One of the first reasons that occur to me is one that may possibly be
-challenged as being merely paradoxical; namely, that Romney, like
-Reynolds and Gainsborough, was not primarily a portrait painter. That
-all three of them became painters of portraits, and will go down to
-posterity as such, was not because they wished to, but by the accident
-of circumstance. Reynolds was an humble and assiduous disciple of Michel
-Angelo, an earnest seeker after conquests in “the grand style.” Of
-Gainsborough, it was said that music was his pleasure and painting his
-profession; while in that profession, as we know, it was landscape which
-chiefly occupied his mind and most delighted him. And Romney actually
-writes to his friend Hayley, “This cursed portrait-painting. How I am
-shackled with it!”
-
-To explain the paradox we must look back a little into the history of
-painting in England, with a glance
-
-[Illustration: THE PARSON’S DAUGHTER
-
-National Gallery]
-
-at that of portrait-painting in other countries besides. Taking the
-latter view first, we find that the only name, which readily occurs to
-us, of an artist who painted nothing but portraits, is that of Holbein.
-In all the greatest schools of painting, since the days of Cimabue,
-portraiture was, as it were, a “bye-product,” and with a few exceptions
-like Holbein, Velasquez, or Vandyck, there is no great painter who is as
-well known for his portraits as for his other works. In England, until
-the arrival of Reynolds, there was no school of painting at all, and the
-only reason for any painter coming to England was the business, rather
-than the art, of making likenesses of its vigorous inhabitants. In
-England, consequently, when a school of painting was at last
-established, it is hardly surprising to find that the painting of
-portraits was the most considerable branch of it, not only in the early
-days of its commencement, but throughout almost the whole of its
-development; and it was not until comparatively late in its history that
-landscape assumed considerable proportions and finally outgrew the other
-branch.
-
-Had Reynolds and Romney, like Gainsborough, been landscape painters at
-heart, it is probable that such a combination of great talent would have
-resulted in a much earlier triumph for the landscapist, and that we
-should not have had to wait for Turner and Constable to restore the
-balance. For Richard Wilson, the actual founder of the English School of
-landscape, only failed to establish it from want of recognition, and
-there were many others who were fit to achieve great works in landscape
-if it had not been that they were compelled to comply with the popular
-demand for portraiture without regard to their artistic inclinations.
-
-But there was a third branch of the art on which, though unheeded alike
-by the patron and the public, the minds of Romney and of many more of
-the most accomplished artists of the time were bent, namely, the
-historical; and so long as the market was closed to their achievements
-in this direction, it was impossible for even the greatest among them to
-exist without making portraiture their regular business.
-
-Reynolds was wise, or fortunate, enough to satisfy his historical or
-classical aspirations by working them in, so to speak, with his
-portraits; and while his purely allegorical or poetical compositions
-have added little to his reputation, he is never so great, or so
-attractive, as when painting portraits in terms of romance. Nor is he
-less deservedly popular when realising some idyllic fancy like _The Age
-of Innocence_, or _The Strawberry Girl_, _The Infant Samuel_ or
-_Robinetta_--all of which are, in fact, portraits of a single model.
-Benjamin West, on the other hand, though fortunate in obtaining Royal
-approval, and truly royal payment, for his historical compositions,
-found little encouragement from the public in taking to this branch of
-the profession. “As any attempt in history was at that period an almost
-unexampled effort,” wrote James Northcote, R.A., on the exhibition of
-West’s _Pylades and Orestes_ at the Exhibition of 1766, “this picture
-became a matter of much surprise. West’s house was soon filled with
-visitors from all quarters to see it; and those amongst the highest rank
-who were not able to come to his house to satisfy their curiosity,
-desired to have his permission to have it sent to them; nor did they
-fail, every time it was returned to him, to accompany it with
-compliments of the highest commendation on its great merits. But the
-most wonderful part of the story is that notwithstanding all this bustle
-and commendation bestowed upon this justly admired picture, by which Mr.
-West’s servant gained upwards of thirty pounds by showing it, yet no one
-mortal ever asked the price of the work, or so much as offered to give
-him a commission to paint any other subject. Indeed there was one
-gentleman who spoke of it with such praise to his father, that he
-immediately asked him the reason he did not purchase, as he so much
-admired it, when he answered, ‘What could I do if I had it? You surely
-would not have me hang up a modern English picture in my house unless it
-was a portrait?’”
-
-It was in this year that John Singleton Copley exhibited his first
-picture, a boy with a squirrel, in England. He, too, was obsessed with
-the
-
-[Illustration: THOMAS JOHN CLAVERING, AFTERWARDS EIGHTH BARONET, AND HIS
-SISTER, CATHERINE MARY
-
-Col. C. W. Napier Clavering]
-
-historical idea, and carried it so far that he is better known for his
-grand compositions, like the _Death of Chatham_, than for the many very
-excellent portraits he painted. Angelica Kauffmann is remembered only by
-her well-intentioned but rather boneless classical compositions; and
-Fuseli, so far as he is remembered at all, by his weird nightmare
-effects in historical pieces.
-
-Broadly speaking, history was a thankless mistress to the painters, and
-had it not been that Romney chose to paint portraits for the sake of
-accumulating enough money for the pursuit of his own artistic ambitions,
-his reputation as an artist would now be as totally forgotten as are
-those of many whose names it is almost unfair to them to mention in the
-present unappreciative days.
-
-But there is fortunately another aspect of the question. A great deal is
-being said at the present time about the merits and demerits of a
-classical education for boys. On the one hand we hear that it is
-perfectly useless for the ordinary youth to spend the greater part of
-his time at school in the generally hopeless effort of acquiring some
-familiarity with the classical languages. On the other we are told that
-a boy must learn something, and that the training to the mind afforded
-by the study of Latin and Greek is more valuable in after life than the
-acquisition of any practically useful knowledge. Whichever side we may
-incline to in the case of the ordinary everyday boy who is to be sent
-out into the world to make his living in one of a dozen or more
-different walks of life, there can be no question that the whole-hearted
-pursuit of a beloved study, whether of Greek or Latin or Chinese, by a
-man of purpose and character, never fails to improve him in any other
-study which he may wish to undertake. For the higher walks of life, such
-as statesmanship, or the control of large interests, or the influence of
-considerable bodies of opinion, it is generally admitted that the school
-and university training is advantageous. An archbishop is not in these
-days required to address Convocation in Latin, nor is a Prime Minister
-expected to quote Horace in debate. But either can delegate the useful
-duties of life to others, while they themselves are better fitted by
-breadth of view to deal in the largest possible manner with public
-questions. It is for this reason, to return to our paradox, that I
-consider Romney’s excellence in portraiture was due, in a large measure,
-to the fact that he was not willingly a portrait painter. When we see
-that Reynolds came back from Italy filled with the ardour inspired by
-Michel Angelo and Raphael for great painting; when we see Gainsborough,
-torn from his beloved woods and fields to the painting room, both of
-them establishing their reputation with practically nothing but
-portraiture, I hope that the paradox will seem less paradoxical, and
-that it will be agreed that Romney, too, struggling to the last with the
-relentless Muse of his historical fancy, was in reality indebted to her
-for most of his excellence in the department of portraiture where we are
-ready to accord him so high a place. It is only another version of the
-old fable of the treasure which the father induced his boys to dig for
-in the vineyard. How many a fashionable painter would do well for
-himself and for his art by exchanging his brush for a spade!
-
-Anybody can paint a portrait. It is really easier than taking a
-photograph. One has only to look at contemporary representations of the
-younger members of one’s friends’ families in oil or pastel to realise
-that the ordinary person prefers a bad picture to a good photograph.
-There is something gratifying to the latent vanity of the sitter in the
-mere fact of sitting to a painter. In the old days, when there were no
-such things as photographs, the inducement to sit must have been still
-greater, and the demand for portraits enormous. Horace Walpole declares
-that there were no less than two thousand portrait painters in London in
-the middle of the eighteenth century: modern investigation has accounted
-for over seven hundred! To be a portrait painter, clearly, then was not
-to be an artist; and when we come to sift the artists from the mere
-likeness-mongers, we shall almost invariably find that the only great
-portraits were the work of men who excelled in other directions, as we
-have found in the cases of Reynolds and Gainsborough.
-
-Applying this test to Romney, it is quite surprising to discover how
-little is said of his portraiture
-
-[Illustration: MARIA MARGARET CLAVERING, AFTERWARDS LADY NAPIER
-
-Col. C. W. Napier Clavering]
-
-by his two earliest biographers, William Hayley, his life-long friend
-and admirer, and the Reverend John Romney, his son. Nor is there very
-much more, and certainly no indication of his present pre-eminence among
-the British portrait painters, in Allan Cunningham’s lengthy Memoir of
-him published in 1832. It is true that his popularity, amounting to
-serious rivalry of Reynolds at one period, is mentioned incidentally; as
-is also the devotion of his art to Lady Hamilton. But these are only
-considered as diversions, as it were, of his main purpose into a side
-channel. The dream of his life, we are to understand, was the
-achievement of historical compositions.
-
-Certainly he has been unfortunate in his biographers. A more tedious and
-pretentious compilation than the quarto of over four hundred pages
-published by William Hayley in 1809 as “The Life of George Romney,
-Esq.,” I hope it may never be anybody’s fate to peruse. Hayley was a
-second-rate poet--his most considerable work being “The Triumphs of
-Temper”--with a third-rate intellect. “The influence which the
-friendship of Hayley exercised over the life of Romney,” the son of the
-artist writes, “was in many respects injurious. His friendship was
-grounded on selfishness, and the means by which he obtained it was
-flattery. He was able also by a canting kind of hypocrisy to confound
-the distinctions between vice and virtue, and to give a colouring to
-conduct that might and probably did mislead Romney on some occasions. He
-drew him too much from general society, and almost monopolised him to
-himself, and thus narrowed the circle of his acquaintance and friends.
-By having intimated an intention of writing Romney’s Life he made him
-extremely afraid of doing anything that might give offence. He was
-always interfering in his affairs--volunteering his advice; and I have
-much reason to believe that whatever errors the latter may have
-committed, they were simply owing to the counsel or instigation of
-Hayley.”
-
-From Hayley, then, we need not expect very much that is likely to be of
-value in the way of criticism. But for one thing he is to be thanked,
-namely the inclusion in his volume of a short sketch of Romney’s
-professional career by John Flaxman, R.A. From this I shall have
-occasion to borrow more than a few illuminating passages, a couple of
-which I now adduce as evidence of how little Romney’s portraiture was
-considered in an estimate of his art specially written at the time of
-his death by one whom Hayley calls “an approved artist”:
-
-“As Romney was gifted with peculiar powers for historical and ideal
-painting, so his heart and soul were engaged in the pursuit of it,
-whenever he could extricate himself from the importunate business of
-portrait painting. It was his delight by day and study by night, and for
-this his food and rest were often neglected.” And again, by way of
-summing up, “A peculiar shyness of disposition kept him from all
-association with public bodies, and led to the pursuit of his studies in
-retirement and solitude which ... allowed him more leisure for
-observation, reflection, and trying his skill in other arts connected
-with his own. And indeed few artists, since the fifteenth century, have
-been able to do so much in so many different branches; for besides his
-beautiful compositions and pictures, which have added to the knowledge
-and celebrity of the English school, he modelled like a sculptor, carved
-ornaments in wood with great delicacy, and could make an architectural
-design in a fine taste, as well as construct every part of the
-building.”
-
-The word “portraits” it will be observed occurs but once in these
-passages; nor does it appear elsewhere in the sketch. If then it be
-admitted that neither Reynolds nor Gainsborough nor Romney were
-primarily portrait painters, and that their pre-eminence arises in a
-high degree from this cause, we shall have arrived at a standpoint from
-which to observe how each of the three was influenced by that cause in a
-different manner, and so obtain a better idea of their several
-excellences than we are likely to obtain from their “auction values.”
-
-In the first place, it is to be remembered that neither Reynolds nor
-Gainsborough was actually averse to painting portraits, whereas we
-have
-
-[Illustration: COLONEL THOMAS THORNTON
-
-Col. C. W. Napier Clavering]
-
-Romney’s written word that he hated it. Sir Joshua, to be sure, speaks
-of his charming little _Strawberry Girl_ as “One of the half-dozen
-original things that no man ever exceeds in his lifetime.” But he was
-quite content to receive as many as a hundred-and-fifty sitters in the
-course of a single year. Gainsborough, too, could go off into raptures
-at the beauties of the young princes and princesses when he was painting
-them at Winsdor, and write a flaming letter to the Royal Academy when
-the royal portraits were not hung as he desired. Both found their
-highest expression in portraiture, as did Romney; but whereas they were
-not slow to realise that their respective gifts, widely different as
-they were, fitted them pre-eminently for this sort of work, it would
-seem that Romney never realised it at all; and while the other two
-brought all their forces, consciously, to the beautification of this
-particular branch of their art, Romney appears to have done no more than
-acquiesce coldly but, be it observed, conscientiously, in the necessity
-for it.
-
-I would therefore submit that the chief characteristics which
-distinguish Romney’s portraits from those of his two greater
-contemporaries are coldness--or rather simplicity--and conscientiousness.
-These are conscious qualities, to which I would add a third, which I
-believe to be unconscious, that is to say, the influence of the
-classical art of the Greeks, which for the sake of brevity I will call
-classicism.
-
-The distinction it seems to me is this. That whereas Reynolds was aiming
-at the grand style, and spared no occasion for employing it in practice
-and expatiating on it in precept, it is impossible to say that he did
-not consciously apply its principles--I say consciously--to every
-portrait he ever undertook. In Gainsborough’s portraits again we
-recognise the hand and the heart of the landscape painter consciously
-employing the terms of his favourite craft, when we find in them the
-same charm, the same natural and easy grace which is the great
-characteristic of his landscape drawings and sketches. While Reynolds
-was painting men and women in terms of art, Gainsborough was painting
-them in terms of nature. Both were applying all the principles which
-they had imbibed from their earliest youth to the particular object on
-which they were engaged.
-
-With Romney, on the other hand, this was clearly not the case. He
-detested having to paint portraits. His mind was wholly attracted to
-allegorical and poetical subjects. Allan Cunningham, writing in 1832,
-almost apologises for mentioning his portraits at all. “A list of all
-the works which Romney executed in those busy days,” he writes, “would
-occupy several pages; it would, however, be absurd to specify many of
-them, since they can possess little interest except for particular
-families.” He then gives a list of eighteen portraits which are
-“remarkable for containing more than one figure, or for their superior
-merit, or on account of the character and station of the individual
-represented,” adding that “in one of these lucky and prosperous years he
-earned by portraiture alone some three thousand six hundred pounds.”
-
-Now if Romney had called upon his Muse to assist him in his portraiture,
-as did Reynolds and Gainsborough, there can be little doubt that his
-popularity would have extended enormously, and that his reputation would
-have been increased in hardly a less degree. But whether it was the
-influence of Hayley, or whether, as is more probable, it was the effect
-of his character and his deep feeling for his art, Romney rarely, if
-ever, permitted his Muse to descend into his painting-room when he was
-executing a commission for a portrait. An honest presentment of his
-sitters was apparently his only concern; he took their money, and he
-conscientiously painted their portraits, in their habits as they lived,
-without any conscious attempt at achieving more.
-
-But in keeping his Muse thus apart, it must not be supposed that he
-succeeded in banishing her from his inmost self. Her influence is to be
-seen and felt in almost every portrait he painted. Rarely as she was
-allowed on the stage--as in the famous group of _Lady Gower and her
-Children_--she was ever present, though behind the scenes; how else can
-one account for the almost classical severity of tone that keeps every
-portrait of Romney’s, however simple, from being merely trivial, pretty,
-or banal?
-
-[Illustration: MISS RAMUS
-
-Viscount Hambleden]
-
-An alternative explanation of the reticence and simplicity of Romney’s
-portraits, his seeming unwillingness to expand into allegorical
-portraiture, is his supposed sensitiveness of temperament. Hayley
-expatiates on this quality to such an extent as to shake our belief in
-its existence; but that it did exist in some degree is unfortunately too
-evident to deny. How much or how little it had to do with the limitation
-of his fancy in portraiture must only be a matter of opinion, but since
-as good evidence of it as any is to be found in the story of three of
-his earliest pictures, we may as well consider it before proceeding
-further.
-
-Almost the first of Romney’s “popular successes” was a family piece
-containing portraits of Sir George Warren, his lady, and their little
-daughter, which was exhibited in 1769. “This picture was highly extolled
-by the public,” says John Romney, “and brought him still more into
-notice. According to a design in one of his sketch-books, Lady Warren is
-represented as seated in a graceful and easy posture, with a fronting
-attitude, but with her face slightly turned to her right, having her
-left elbow leaning upon a pedestal, and the hand extended over her
-daughter’s shoulder, a girl about six or seven years old, who is
-standing by her. The young lady has her hands gently crossed over her
-bosom, and is caressing a little bird which she holds in one hand. Sir
-George, habited in a picturesque style, is standing rather to the left,
-and somewhat more backward in the picture than his lady. He has his
-right arm moderately extended and is directing her attention to a
-distant object. The composition is beautiful, correct, and natural, and
-the simplicity, grace, and feeling expressed in the figure and character
-of Miss Warren are admirable.”
-
-This description, it is to be observed, is not from the picture itself,
-which the writer had never seen, but from the artist’s drawing for it;
-and it is evident that the drawing must have been executed with much
-greater care and particularity than is to be found in most of Romney’s
-sketches. The picture itself is now in the possession of Lord Vernon, at
-Sudbury Hall, Derbyshire, the little daughter having married the
-
-[Illustration: MRS. ROBINSON AS “PERDITA”
-
-Wallace Collection]
-
-first Lord Vernon. Its present owner informed Mr. Humphry Ward that it
-was always supposed to be by Reynolds, and that a professional valuer
-valued it as such for probate in 1883.
-
-That so successful an attempt should be repeated was only natural.
-Hogarth and Highmore had painted some of these “conversation pieces,” as
-they were called, but with indifferent, or at any rate no great amount
-of popular, success, and one might have supposed that a young artist
-would have been ready enough to respond to the encouragement accorded to
-him in this particular class of picture. But no others of the sort are
-known to have been attempted, with one exception. At about the same time
-Romney was engaged in a portrait group of Mr. Leigh and his family.
-Unfortunately, his well-wishing friend Cumberland, the dramatist, in his
-efforts to push Romney to the front, was ill-advised enough to drag
-Garrick to see his pictures. Now Garrick hated Cumberland, and had a
-very poor opinion of him--which is all there is to excuse him for an
-unpardonable exhibition of bad taste. “I brought him to see Romney’s
-pictures,” writes Cumberland, “hoping to interest him in his favour. A
-large family piece unluckily arrested his attention; a gentleman in a
-close-buckled bob-wig, and a scarlet waistcoat laced with gold, with his
-wife and children (some sitting, some standing), had taken possession of
-some yards of canvas, very much, as it appeared, to their own
-satisfaction--for they were perfectly amused in a contented abstinence
-from all thought or action. Upon this unfortunate group, when Garrick
-had fixed his lynx’s eyes, he began to put himself into the attitude of
-the gentleman, and turning to Mr. Romney, ‘Upon my word, Sir,’ he said,
-‘this is a very regular well-ordered family; and that is a very
-bright-rubbed mahogany table at which that motherly good lady is
-sitting; and this worthy gentleman in the scarlet-waistcoat is doubtless
-a very excellent subject (to the State, I mean, if these are all his
-children), but not for your art, Mr. Romney, if you mean to pursue it
-with that success which I hope will attend you.’ The modest artist took
-the hint, as it was meant, in good part, and turned his family with
-their faces to the wall.”
-
-If Romney had been only moderately sensitive we can easily understand
-that an impertinence of this sort (for Cumberland was as dense as he was
-well-meaning in thinking it was intended in good part) would have been
-intolerable from anybody; but when we remember that Garrick was an
-intimate friend of Reynolds, we may readily admit that it had in fact a
-certain influence on Romney’s choice of subject and treatment. We have
-seen that in the other group his success was the result of careful and
-prepared study; but I know of no other sketches of his for family
-groups--except those for the Gower picture--though there are plenty of
-studies of single figures.
-
-A couple of years later, again, he painted the actress Mrs. Yates in the
-character of the Tragic Muse, at whole length. This was twelve years or
-more before Sir Joshua painted his famous picture of Mrs. Siddons, so
-that it is hardly possible to compare the two. But Romney’s picture
-cannot have proved more than a _succès d’estime_. “I have often wished,”
-says Hayley, “that it had been the lot of Romney to paint this great
-actress, one of the most gracefully majestic of our tragic queens, at a
-maturer season of her life, and in the full meridian of his power; for
-in that case I am persuaded the Tragic Muse of Romney would not have
-appeared what at present I must allow her to be, very far inferior, as a
-work of the pencil, to the Tragic Muse of Sir Joshua.” For once we may
-take Hayley’s opinion as more or less correct, for although I am unable
-to pronounce on the merits of the picture, not having seen it, its
-history records what was the popular estimate of it. It was purchased by
-Alderman Boydell, and put up to auction at Christie’s after his death in
-1810, when it was bought in for nine and a half guineas. In 1812 it was
-put up again and there was no bid, and the same in 1817 and 1822. In
-1824 it at last found a purchaser at £10.
-
-As this was, according to John Romney, his first whole length portrait
-of a lady, it would seem probable that he did not receive sufficient
-encouragement to pursue the allegorical treatment of portrait subjects.
-
-But whether we incline to the one view or the other, or perhaps accept a
-commixture of the two in
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM PITT, THE YOUNGER
-
-National Gallery]
-
-such proportions as may seem to each of us most suitable to the facts,
-we find it to be true that from henceforth Romney’s sitters were treated
-as ordinary everyday human beings, and not as gods, goddesses, heroes,
-nymphs, muses, or what not. What he gave them was of his best, so far as
-it went, and, as I have suggested, his best went farther than he was
-conscious of in giving it. Let us now see how his portraiture responds
-to the three tests I ventured to suggest, namely, simplicity,
-conscientiousness, and classicism.
-
-First, then, as to simplicity, by which I mean in this connection
-simplicity of presentment--the plain prosaic record on canvas of the
-likeness of the sitter. When we come to consider the third point,
-classicism, we shall see that this simplicity extends to every
-particular; but for the moment I am only considering the first question
-that arises when a commission for a portrait is given--“How would you
-like to be painted?” In Romney’s studio there seems to have been but one
-answer, namely, “Exactly as I am.” Of accessories there were
-practically none. The portrait was painted and that was all. A portrait
-by Romney is first and foremost a portrait.
-
-Secondly, his conscientiousness. Who would believe, on a view of any of
-Romney’s portraits, that he looked upon portraiture as a cursed
-occupation by which he was shackled? Is there any trace of
-unwillingness, of haste, of slovenliness? Is there any hint that he was
-out of temper with his sitters, or careless in the way he posed them, or
-indifferent to the perfection of his painting? We may miss the animation
-of Gainsborough, or the triumphant glitter of Reynolds in many of his
-sober contemplative faces, but of the perfunctory conventionalisms of
-his contemporaries or the slipshod hurry and make-believe of the modern
-exhibitors we find no suggestion. Whatever he did was done with all his
-strength, if not with all his heart, and no one could complain that his
-portrait suffered from want of painstaking devotion to the subject. His
-care and conscientiousness are as easily seen, too, in his most busy and
-prosperous days as they are in his earliest
-
-[Illustration: PORTRAITS OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM LINDOW
-
-(1770) National Gallery]
-
-portraits, like that of Mr. and Mrs. Lindow, which was painted in 1760
-before he left Lancaster.
-
-John Romney records an amusing instance of his father’s efforts in this
-respect. “I remember his telling me once,” he writes, “what difficulty
-he had with a sitter in order to accomplish a little expression. The
-gentleman was from the country, and an attorney; and though his
-profession required intelligence, yet his countenance gave no indication
-of it. To remove a settled dulness that pervaded his features, Mr.
-Romney made many attempts, starting every popular topic of conversation,
-but all in vain; at length by some uncommon chance, he happened to
-mention hunting; at the sound of which word a ray of animation
-immediately sparkled in the eyes of the sitter, and imparted a certain
-degree of vivacity to his countenance. Mr. Romney took his measure
-accordingly, and led him into the subject; after which he was relieved
-from any further attempts at conversation as the worthy gentleman
-expatiated upon it with spirit until the picture was finished.”
-
-“Even upon persons to whom nature was less parsimonious of her
-favours,” he adds, “he knew that dulness would sometimes intrude, and,
-therefore, always wished that some friends should accompany his sitters,
-both for the purpose already mentioned, and also to relieve himself of
-the double task of painting and of keeping up a forced conversation at
-the same time.”
-
-Lastly, for his classicism, which is the really distinguishing
-characteristic of Romney’s portraits and includes in it all the others.
-“On his arrival in Italy,” Flaxman tells us, “he was witness to new
-scenes of art, and sources of study ... he there contemplated the purity
-and perfection of ancient sculpture, the sublimity of Michel Angelo’s
-Sistine chapel, and the simplicity of Cimabue’s and Giotto’s schools. He
-perceived these qualities [namely, be it observed, sublimity and
-simplicity] distinctly, and judiciously used them in viewing and
-imitating nature; and thus his quick perception and unwearied
-application enabled him by a two years’ residence abroad to acquire as
-great a proficiency in art as is usually attained by foreign studies of
-much longer duration.” And again, “His cartoons ... were examples of
-the sublime and terrible at that time perfectly new in English art. The
-Dream of Atossa, from the Persians of Æschylus, contrasted the
-death-like sleep of the Queen with the Bacchanalian Fury of the Genius
-of Greece. The composition was conducted with the fire and severity of a
-Greek bas-relief.”
-
-How many of the thousands of visitors to the National Gallery would ever
-imagine that this last paragraph was written of the painter of _The
-Parson’s Daughter_, or _Mrs. Mark Currie_? And yet here, I cannot help
-feeling, is the real strength which underlies the structure of even the
-airiest of Romney’s paintings. The roots of genius must grow deep if its
-branches are to grow high. The foundations of a great building must be
-firm. The faintest breeze of enlightened judgment is enough to blow away
-the ornamental bungalows of the Victorian portrait-painters, while
-castle Romney stands as firm as the rock on which it was built.
-
-“In trying to attain excellence in his art,” Flaxman continues, “his
-diligence was unceasing as his gratification in the employment. He
-endeavoured to combine all the possible advantages of the subject
-immediately before him, and to exclude whatever had a tendency to weaken
-it. His compositions, like those of the ancient pictures and
-basso-relievos, told their story by a single group of figures in the
-front, whilst the background is made the simplest possible, rejecting
-all unnecessary episode and trivial ornament, either of secondary groups
-or architectural subdivision. In his compositions the beholder was
-forcibly struck by the sentiment at the first glance, the gradations and
-varieties of which he traced through several characters all conceived in
-an elevated spirit of dignity and beauty, with a lively expression of
-nature in all the parts.”
-
-Although written of his classical compositions, this criticism of
-Flaxman, who was himself more severely classical in his art than the
-Greeks, applies with almost equal truth to his portraits. It throws into
-light the hidden force that gives them their strength, that keeps them
-before us as live men and women instead of painted puppets and dolls.
-
-[Illustration: LADY CRAVEN
-
-(1778) National Gallery]
-
-“His heads were various,” says Flaxman, still on the classical
-compositions, but holding the light even more closely to the portraits,
-“the male were decided and grand, the female lovely. His figures
-resembled the antique; the limbs were elegant, and finely formed. His
-drapery was well understood, either forming the figure into a mass with
-one or two deep folds only, or by its adhesion and transparency
-discovering the form of the figure, the lines of which were finely
-varied with the union or expansion of spiral or cascade folds, composing
-with or contrasting the outline and chiaroscuro. He was so passionately
-fond of Greek sculpture that he had filled his study and galleries with
-fine casts from the most perfect statues, groups, basso-relievos and
-busts of antiquity. He would sit and consider these in profound silence
-by the hour; and besides the studies in drawing and painting he made
-from them, he would examine them under all the changes of sunlight and
-daylight; and with lamps prepared on purpose at night he would try their
-effects lighted from above, beneath, in all directions, with rapturous
-admiration.”
-
-Before considering the particulars in which these observations may be
-said to be applicable to Romney’s portraits, it is perhaps worth
-pointing out that the essential difference between the work of Reynolds
-and Romney is to be traced back to the influence exerted on each of them
-by his studies in Italy. Reynolds, perhaps fortunately for British art
-at the time, seems to have taken Michel Angelo and Raphael as the
-founders of painting, and to have confined his study of art,
-accordingly, to them and their successors. Romney, on the other hand,
-while also regarding them as the chiefs, went back from them to the
-antique, taking Cimabue and Giotto on the way. That he particularly
-admired Correggio is stated by Hayley, but that Correggio’s “tenderness
-and grace he often emulated very happily in his figures of women and
-children” is a piece of criticism which I must confess to be beyond me.
-Certainly it cannot be applied to his portraits.
-
-“His drapery was well understood,” says Flaxman; I need not quote the
-rest of the sentence, because it applies in particular to the drapery of
-ladies in the classic period; but in principle, the drapery of Romney’s
-sitters is as simple, because well understood, as that of Atossa. Of all
-painters of women surely there never was one who required such extreme
-simplicity of raiment. The plainest of white or black robes seem to have
-been the rule, and the most common exception to absolute simplicity was
-not in the garment at all, but in the addition of a somewhat elaborate
-and umbrageous hat. Of any pattern on the drapery, I can only recall one
-instance, namely, that of Miss Hannah Milnes, a three-quarter length
-portrait, now in the possession of Earl Crewe. Here there seems to be
-something of the manner of Sir Joshua in several particulars, which is
-possibly a conscious imitation. But in portrait after portrait, and
-certainly in every piece which is most characteristic of Romney, whether
-it is Mrs. Jordan or Lady Hamilton or Mrs. Currie, the plain robe is the
-rule. The magnificent picture of Louisa Countess of Mansfield (in
-profile, seated under a tree) is now on loan from Lord Cathcart at the
-National Gallery, and is hanging close beside Mrs. Mark Currie’s; and
-while both depart from the letter of this rule, they depend for their
-magical effect upon the spirit of it. Lady Mansfield’s flowing robe is
-of a pale yellowish tinge, and a voluminous scarf of grey, almost as
-pale, mingles with the folds of drapery. But as contrasted with the deep
-shadows of the foliage against which the brightly coloured profile is
-set, the general impression is of an exquisitely posed figure in the
-simplest of flowing creamy white robes. No ornament fixes the eye, no
-violent contrast of colour interrupts the rhythm of the whole figure.
-“The design,” says Mr. Roberts in his Catalogue Raisonné, “appears to
-have been adopted from a Greek gem.”
-
-Mrs. Currie’s dress, which I hope I am correct in describing as a frock,
-is of pure white; but it is faintly striped, not I think in colour, but
-in texture; and there are some bows on the elbows, and a sash of pale
-lake.
-
-Anything less reminiscent of a Greek statue than this radiant young
-English beauty in a muslin frock, I am quite willing to admit, it would
-be difficult to think of. At first sight a severely classical taste
-would be more likely to condemn her for the
-
-[Illustration: MRS. MARK CURRIE
-
-(1789) National Gallery]
-
-unmitigated prettiness that is usually associated with the cheapest kind
-of pictorial imbecility. But let her not be condemned unheard. That she
-was an exceedingly pretty woman need hardly be doubted, and that she
-wished to be made as pretty as possible in her portrait may fairly be
-taken for granted. If she had any other qualities it is probable that
-her name would be remembered for them. As it is, Romney has
-conscientiously painted a portrait of her which probably pleased her
-almost as much as it pleases all of us to-day. “In his composition,” we
-remember, “the beholder was forcibly struck by the sentiment at the
-first glance.” How true this is of Mrs. Currie and her prettiness! The
-painter’s whole effort is concentrated on that one quality, and instead
-of dissipating the beholder’s attention with accessories, he soothes it
-with a seeming artlessness which no one but a great painter could nearly
-accomplish. Mrs. Currie’s drapery is of course strictly English--in
-substance at any rate and form. But here again we feel the guiding or
-restraining hand of the Classic Muse, just as we should have seen it had
-Romney been painting Mrs. Currie in the character of Antigone. As it
-was, Romney was speaking English and not Greek; only it is the English,
-as it were, of a finely educated man.
-
-But in placing Romney so high above the crowd of ordinary portrait
-painters, and a little higher than any except Reynolds and Gainsborough,
-it is only fair to consider how far short he fell of equalling those
-two. And it must not be forgotten that the limitations which he imposed
-upon himself were quite as likely to affect his popularity among his
-patrons and their friends as with posterity. Classic simplicity is an
-invaluable quality in the portraiture of everyday men and women,
-especially when the latter are young and pretty; but a gallery of
-portraits by Romney would afford a much narrower view of the
-capabilities of the English School than a similar exhibition of the work
-of Reynolds or Gainsborough. The oft-repeated assertion of Lord
-Chancellor Thurlow that “Reynolds and Romney divide the town, and I am
-of the Romney faction,” must be taken with a considerably larger pinch
-of salt than is popularly accepted with it. In the first place, Romney
-was not at all in fashion until after his return from Rome in 1785, by
-which time Reynolds had been painting portraits for at least twenty
-years. Gainsborough, too, who was by seven years the senior of Romney,
-was quite as many years ahead of him in practice, though he had only
-recently come to London from Bath. In the year 1785 we know that Romney
-earned £3635 from portraits. At this time, so his pupil Robinson
-records, his prices were £20 for a head, £30 for a kit-cat, £40 for a
-half-length, and £80 for a whole length. Taking the average at as low a
-figure as £35, this means about a hundred commissions in his busiest
-year. This is certainly a large number, and Sir Joshua never had more
-than a hundred-and-fifty in a year; but it must not be taken as an
-average for any great length of years.
-
-Again, when we look at the names of his most distinguished patrons, the
-list is not as long or as imposing as those of Reynolds and
-Gainsborough. The latter had the patronage of Royalty, besides a good
-number of the aristocracy, while Reynolds had, if I may be allowed the
-expression, “mopped up” all that was most brilliant in beauty, birth,
-and genius, leaving very little for anybody else. The Catalogue of the
-Exhibition of National Portraits held at South Kensington in 1867,
-enumerates but twenty pictures by Romney, and as many as a hundred and
-fifty by Reynolds.
-
-That Romney’s sensitive disposition and retiring habit of life may in
-some degree account for his not being more widely popular in his own
-time is no doubt true. But apart from any other consideration there is
-no question that a fine portrait by Reynolds is a more satisfying
-possession than any but the very finest by Romney, and a characteristic
-one by Gainsborough more exhilarating. Though there is at least one
-instance in which he “wiped Reynolds’s eye,” namely, with his
-magnificent head of _John Wesley_, which was painted in 1789, when
-Wesley was eighty-six years old. “At the earnest desire of Mrs T.,” the
-old man wrote, “I once more sat for my picture. Mr. Romney is a
-painter
-
-[Illustration: PORTRAIT OF A LADY AND CHILD
-
-(1782) National Gallery]
-
-indeed! He struck off an exact likeness at once, and did more in an hour
-than Sir Joshua did in ten.”
-
-Still, there is a variety of qualities in Reynolds’s and Gainsborough’s
-pictures that we do not find, or expect to find, in those of Romney--a
-fact which must be taken into account in comparing the number of their
-respective portraits exhibited in 1867. The stream of popular taste
-steadily ebbed during the century following Sir Joshua’s death, and it
-is only of late years that Romney has been “discovered” and restored to
-public favour. A great deal of Romney’s present-day popularity I cannot
-help thinking is attributable as much to the delectable quality of his
-ladies’ faces as to the classic simplicity of treatment which makes them
-what they are.
-
-Then, of course, there is Lady Hamilton, to whom, as we find Allan
-Cunningham asserting, many have imputed the chief charm of Romney’s best
-pictures. In these days it is certainly true that her name is
-inseparably associated with Romney’s art in the popular mind, and the
-latest addition to the bibliography of Romney is concerned with nothing
-but Lady Hamilton. Unfortunately for Romney’s reputation both inside
-and outside his painting-room, this lady’s fame has so filled the public
-ear with matters which are altogether distinct from the art of painting,
-that it is almost impossible to appreciate her influence upon Romney’s
-art in anything like its proper proportions. We are as it were between
-two fires--the glamour which she threw over the painter and the glamour
-which he threw over her; and our view of the matter, unless we are
-careful to screen our eyes, is likely to be too highly coloured for the
-ordinary purposes of criticism.
-
-The broad fact seems to be that for nearly a decade the inspiration of
-Emma Lyon poured like sunlight into Romney’s studio, and although before
-it came he had for several years established his reputation and done
-some of his best work in portraiture, its withdrawal, in 1791, was the
-end of all that was happy or successful in his career. “His imagination
-was gone,” says Mr. Humphry Ward; “his health, for many years frail,
-became less robust than ever, and of his portraits and pictures painted
-after 1791, many exhibit signs of decaying powers.”
-
-That he was exceedingly fond of her need not, of course, be doubted. How
-could it be otherwise? But is it any more necessary to dwell upon his
-purely personal relations with her than on those of Sir Joshua Reynolds
-with Kitty Fisher or Nelly O’Brien? For Reynolds, those two
-“professional beauties” were sitters, of whom the painter succeeded in
-painting several beautiful and accomplished portraits. For Romney, Emma
-Lyon was to some extent the embodiment of the Muse whom I have ventured
-to postulate as his guardian angel, when engaged in the perilous
-commerce of painting pretty and fashionable ladies. That she was also
-the veritable embodiment of all that was pleasing to the mortal eye in
-the shape of woman is at least equally certain; but unlike so many of
-her frail sisters, she was a remarkably accomplished and intelligent
-woman. “She performed both in the serious and comic to admiration,”
-writes Romney, in a letter describing an evening at Sir William
-Hamilton’s, “both in singing and acting. Her Nina surpasses everything I
-ever saw, and I believe as a piece of acting nothing ever surpassed it.
-The whole company were in an agony of sorrow. Her acting is simple,
-grand, terrible, and pathetic.”
-
-In another letter, to Hayley in June 1791, he writes, “At present, and
-the greatest part of the summer, I shall be engaged in painting pictures
-from the divine lady. I cannot give her any other epithet, for I think
-her superior to all womankind. I have two pictures to paint of her for
-the Prince of Wales. She says she must see you.... She asked me if you
-would not write my life. I told her you had begun it. Then she said she
-hoped you would have much to say of her in the life, as she prided
-herself in being my model.” And again in the following month “I dedicate
-my time to this charming lady; there is a prospect of her leaving town
-with Sir William for two or three weeks. They are very much hurried at
-present, as everything is going on for their speedy marriage, and all
-the world following and talking of her, so that if she had not more good
-sense than vanity her brain must be turned.
-
-“The pictures I have begun are Joan of Arc, a Magdalen, and a Bacchante,
-for the Prince of Wales,
-
-[Illustration: LADY HAMILTON AS A BACCHANTE
-
-(1786) National Gallery]
-
-and another I am to begin as a companion to the Bacchante. I am also to
-paint a picture of Constance for the Shakespeare Gallery.”
-
-The extent of Romney’s obligations to her, simply as a model, may be
-gathered from a glance at Mr. Roberts’s Catalogue Raisonné of his work.
-Here we find forty-five different pictures of the fair Emma, a figure
-which is about doubled if we count the various versions painted of one
-and another--as a Bacchante, for example, no less than twelve separate
-canvases are enumerated. Nor does this catalogue probably include a good
-many sketches and studies which were left unfinished. Of the various
-characters in which he painted her, apart from pictures which were
-simply portraits, the list includes those of Alope, Ariadne, a
-Bacchante, Cassandra, Circe, Comedy, the Comic Muse, Contemplation,
-Euphrosyne, a Gipsy, Iphigenia, Joan of Arc, a Magdalen, Meditation,
-Miranda, Nature, a Nun, a Pythian Priestess, S. Cecilia, Sensibility, a
-Shepherdess, Sigismunda, the Spinstress. The Sempstress, it may be
-mentioned, was not painted from her, but from Miss Vernon.
-
-Such a catalogue as this is, I suppose, unique in the annals of
-painting. Oddly enough it is paralleled in those of literature--if it be
-not thought too fanciful to quote the example of William Shakespeare.
-For fanciful as at first thought it may seem, it is, nevertheless,
-helpful to an understanding of the relations of the private life of each
-to his particular art.
-
-George Romney, like Shakespeare, was born of humble parents in a remote
-country town. Dalton, in Lancashire, is further from London than
-Stratford, but as I do not pretend to draw the parallel too closely, I
-will confine myself to a short account of Romney’s circumstances only.
-He was born on December 15, 1734. His ancestors, yeomen of good repute,
-lived near Appleby, in Westmorland, but took refuge during the Civil
-Wars in the neighbouring county. His father was a joiner, which in those
-days included the trade of carpenter and cabinet-maker, and George was
-apprenticed to him. How and at what period the love of painting came
-upon him has not been clearly shown. Cumberland asserts that it was
-inspired by the cuts in the
-
-[Illustration: EMMA, LADY HAMILTON
-
-National Portrait Gallery]
-
-_Universal Magazine_. Hayley says that he consumed the time of his
-fellow-workmen in sketching them in various attitudes, while John Romney
-states that Lionardo’s treatise on painting, illustrated by many fine
-engravings, was early in his hands. Cumberland describes him as “a child
-of nature who had never seen or heard of anything that could elicit his
-genius or urge him to emulation, and who became a painter without a
-prototype.” At nineteen, however, he was apprenticed for four years to a
-painter called Count Steele, who was practising in the neighbouring town
-of Kendal. During this time he fell in love with a young lady of some
-little fortune, Mary Abbot, and on October 14, 1756, he carried her
-across the border to Gretna Green and married her.
-
-His precipitate marriage drew upon him the rebuke of his parents, but he
-vindicated himself with some firmness and skill. “If you consider
-everything deliberately,” he wrote, “you will find it to be the best
-affair that ever happened to me; because if I have fortune I shall make
-a better painter than I should otherwise have done, as it will be a
-spur to my application; and my thoughts being now still, and not
-obstructed by youthful follies, I can practise with more diligence and
-success than ever.”
-
-According to Hayley, he soon perceived that his marriage was an obstacle
-to his studies; that he was ruined as an artist, and that he might bid
-farewell to all hopes of fame and glory, although he was devoting
-himself with all his might to his work. “The terror of precluding
-himself from those distant honours,” says Hayley--to whom, by-the-by, we
-are under no obligation to believe more than we wish--“by appearing in
-the world as a young married man, agitated the ambitious artist almost
-to distraction, and made him resolve very soon after his marriage, as he
-had no means of breaking the fetters which he wildly regarded as
-inimical to the improvement and exertion of his genius, to hide them as
-much as possible from his troubled fancy.”
-
-This exordium of Hayley’s is, as it were, in the nature of a
-“preliminary announcement” of the separation between Romney and his
-wife, when five years later he resolved to try his fortune in London.
-
-[Illustration: MISS BENEDETTA RAMUS
-
-Viscount Hambleden]
-
-“In working rapidly and patiently at different places in the north, for
-a few years,” Hayley continues, “by painting heads as large as life at
-the price of two guineas or figures at whole length on a small scale for
-six guineas, he contrived to raise a sum amounting almost to a hundred
-pounds; taking thirty for his own travelling expenses, and leaving the
-residue to support an unoffending partner and two children, he set forth
-alone, without even a letter of recommendation, to try the chances of
-life in the metropolis.”
-
-That was in 1762; and for a much longer period than Shakespeare, and
-with no occasional visits to his family, Romney worked in London and
-became more and more famous, until, as we have seen, his decline set in.
-
-“The summer of 1799 came,” writes Allan Cunningham, “but Romney could
-neither enjoy the face of nature, nor feel pleasure in his studio and
-gallery. A visible mental languor sat upon his brow--not diminishing but
-increasing; he had laid aside his pencils; his swarm of titled sitters,
-whose smile in other days rendered passing time so agreeable, were
-moved off to a Lawrence, a Shee, or a Beechey; and thus left lonely and
-disconsolate among whole cartloads of paintings, which he had not the
-power to complete, his gloom and his weakness gathered and grew upon
-him.... In these moments his heart and his eye turned towards the
-north--where his son, a man affectionate and kind, resided; and where
-his wife, surviving the cold neglect and long estrangement of her
-husband, lived yet to prove the depth of a woman’s love, and show to the
-world that she would have been more worthy of appearing at his side,
-even when earls sat for their pictures, and Lady Hamilton was enabling
-him to fascinate princes with his Calypsos and Cassandras. Romney
-departed from Hampstead, and taking the northern coach arrived among his
-friends at Kendal in the summer of 1799. The exertion of travelling and
-the presence of her whom he once had warmly loved overpowered him; he
-grew more languid and more weak, and finding fireside happiness he
-resolved to remain where he was; he purchased a house and authorised the
-sale of that on Hampstead Hill.”
-
-So much for the parallel as concerned the private life of either. But
-what about his art? Where in Shakespeare’s literary career are we to
-find anything comparable with the influence of Emma Lyon on Romney’s
-painting during the crowning decade of his accomplishment? I suggest as
-the answer, that during a similar period, of about the same duration,
-namely from about 1593 to 1603, we may trace a similar influence on the
-poet, which is embodied in a series of masterpieces numbering over a
-hundred, namely, most if not all, of the first hundred and twenty-five
-of “Shakespeare’s Sonnets.” They were all written to one person, and in
-such terms of art as have led others besides Alexander Dyce to suppose
-that they were really addressed to the poet’s muse rather than to any
-corporeal being. As in the case of Romney, the author has been maligned
-by the undiscerning vulgar for supposed deviations from the strict path
-of virtue in his relations with his friend. But for any one who has an
-understanding of the spirit of art there is nothing in either case to
-support the allegation. Had Shakespeare and Romney looked no farther
-than their own hearths for artistic inspiration, the world would have
-been the poorer: that is all.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of Romney’s classical or historical pictures the world knows almost as
-little as it cares about them. “I have made many grand designs,” he
-himself wrote in 1794, “I have formed a system of original subjects,
-moral and my own, and I think one of the grandest that has been thought
-of--but nobody knows it.” Cunningham, after disposing shortly of his
-portraits, proceeds to state that the historical and domestic pictures,
-finished and unfinished, deserve a more minute examination; that they
-embrace a wide range of reading and observation and are numerous beyond
-all modern example. But with the exception of _Titania and her Indian
-Votaries_ and _Milton Dictating to his Daughters_, which were mentioned
-by Flaxman, and various fancy portraits of Lady Hamilton, he does not
-specify a single finished example. His explanation is that “for one
-finely finished there are five half done, and for five half done there
-are at least a dozen merely commenced on the canvas.”
-
-[Illustration: PORTRAIT OF ROMNEY BY HIMSELF (UNFINISHED)
-
-(1782) National Portrait Gallery]
-
-So far as these canvases are concerned, there is no doubt that the
-majority of them have been destroyed; but there are still in existence a
-large quantity of drawings and sketches on paper, both in pencil and in
-India ink, for classical compositions. As many of these are probably
-rough ideas for his lost pictures, it is perhaps worth mentioning a few
-of the subjects enumerated by Cunningham among the unfinished
-productions, which may help to identify the sketches, besides, as
-Cunningham says, “showing the range of his mind, and also his want of
-patience to render his works worthy of admission to public galleries.”
-The principal are as follows: _King Lear Asleep_, _King Lear Awake_,
-_Ceyx and Alcyone_, _The Death of Niobe’s Children_, _The Cumean Sibyl
-Foretelling the Destiny of Aeneas_, _Electra and Orestes at the Tomb of
-Agammemnon_, _Thetis Supplicating Jupiter_, _Thetis Comforting
-Achilles_, _Damon and Musidora_, _Homer Reciting his Verses_, _David and
-Saul_, _Macbeth and Banquo_, _The Descent of Odin_, _The Ghost of
-Clytemnestra_, _Eurydice vanishing from Orpheus_, _Harpalice_, _A
-Thracian Princess defending her wounded Father_, _Antigone with the
-Corpse of Polynices_, _A Witch displaying her Magical Powers_,
-_Resuscitation by Force of Magic_, _Doll Tearsheet_, _Cupid and Psyche_.
-
-Besides these there are a number of portrait sketches, which though not
-so numerous, are much more charming, in spite of their being exceedingly
-rough and slight. They must have been simply notes, and can seldom have
-been intended for more than fixing an idea in the painter’s mind. I have
-as many as a dozen in my own possession which I have picked up here and
-there in the dealers’ portfolios, and there are probably a good number
-of them in existence. Rough as they are, they are certainly deserving of
-more attention than is usually accorded to them; for though Romney never
-seems to have enjoyed the process of committing a portrait to paper as
-Gainsborough did, these business-like notes of pose and chiaroscuro give
-us a good insight into his methods of setting to work. Perhaps the taste
-of a future generation will prefer the rough-hewn idea of a great
-portrait painter to the finished achievement of Benwell or Buck in
-little.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-Boydell, Alderman, 26
-
-
-Cathcart, Lord, 35
-
-Chamberlin, Mason, 2
-
-Cimabue, 5, 30, 34
-
-Copley, John Singleton, 8
-
-Copley’s _Death of Chatham_, 9
-
-Correggio, 34
-
-Cumberland, 23, 46
-
-Cunningham, Allan, 13, 19, 41
-
-Currie, Mrs. Mark, 3, 31, 35, 36
-
-
-Dalton, 46
-
-
-Exhibition of National Portraits, 40
-
-
-Flaxman, John, R.A., 15, 30, 31, 32, 34
-
-Fuseli, Henry, R.A., 9
-
-
-Gainsborough, Thomas, 11, 16, 17, 28, 40
-
-Garrick, David, 23, 24
-
-Giotto, 30, 34
-
-
-Hamilton, Lady, 13, 41-43
- influence on Romney’s painting, 51
- Romney’s portraits of, 45
-
-Hayley, William, 13, 25, 47
- influence over Romney, 14, 20
-
-Highmore, 23
-
-Hogarth, William, 23
-
-Holbein, Hans, 5
-
-
-Kauffmann, Angelica, 9
-
-
-Michelangelo, 30, 34
-
-
-Northcote, James, R.A., 7
-
-
-Pictures by George Romney
- _Bacchante_, 44
- _Constance_, 45
- _Joan of Arc_, 44
- _John Wesley_, 40
- _Lady Gower and her Children_, 20
- _Lady Hamilton_, 3, 35
- _Louisa, Countess of Mansfield_, 35, 36
- _Magdalen_, 44
- _Milton dictating to his Daughters_, 52
- _Miss Hannah Milnes_, 35
- _Mr. and Mrs. Lindow_, 29
- _Mr. Leigh and his Family_, 23
- _Mrs. Jordan_, 35
- _Mrs. Yates as The Tragic Muse_, 25
- _The Dream of Atossa_, 31
- _The Parson’s Daughter_, 3, 31
- “_The Triumphs of Temper_,” 13
- _The Warren Family_, 21
- _Titania and her Indian Votaries_, 52
- “_Tragic Muse_,” 26
-
-
-Raphael, 34
-
-Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 4, 5, 7, 11, 16, 28, 34, 40
-
-Roberts, Mr., Catalogue Raisonné, 36, 45
-
-Romney, George, birth of, 46
- apprenticed to joinery, 46
- apprenticeship to Count Steele, 47
- classicism, 30
- conscientiousness, 28
- distaste for portrait painting, 4
- first full-length portrait of a lady, 26
- influence of Hayley upon, 14
- in London, 49
- letters to Hayley, 44
- life of, by William Hayley, 13
- marriage to Mary Abbot at Gretna Green, 47
- place among portrait painters, 38
- portraits compared with those of Reynolds and Gainsborough, 18
- prices obtained for pictures, 39
- principal pictures, list of, 53, 54
- return to Kendal, 50
- separation from his wife, 48
- simplicity of treatment, 27
-
-Romney, Rev. John, 13, 21, 29, 47
-
-
-Shakespeare Gallery, 45
-
-Shakespeare, William, 46
-
-
-Thurlow, Lord Chancellor, 38
-
-
-Vandyck, 5
-
-Velasquez, 5
-
-Vernon, Lord, 22
-
-
-Walpole, Horace, 12
-
-Ward, Mr. Humphry, 23, 42
-
-West, Benjamin, 7
-
-West’s “_Pylades and Orestes_,” 7
-
-Wilson, Richard, Founder of the English School of Landscape, 6
-
-
- PRINTED AT
- THE BALLANTYNE PRESS
- LONDON
-
-
-Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:
-
-trival, pretty, or banal=> trivial, pretty, or banal {pg 20}
-
-scarlet waistcoast=> scarlet waistcoat {pg 24}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Romney, by Randall Davies
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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-
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-Title: Romney
-
-Author: Randall Davies
-
-Release Date: October 25, 2015 [EBook #50308]
-
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROMNEY ***
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-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/cover_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="320" height="500" alt="cover"
-class="imgplain" /></a>
-</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""
-style="border: 2px black solid;margin: auto auto 2% auto;max-width:50%;
-padding:1%;">
-<tr><td><p>Some typographical errors have been corrected;
-<a href="#transcrib">a list follows the text</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="c"><a href="#LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS">List of Illustrations</a><br />
-<span class="nonvis">(In certain versions of this etext [in certain browsers],
-clicking directly on the image will bring up a larger version of the illustration.)</span></p>
-
-<p class="c"><a href="#INDEX">Index:</a>
-<a href="#B">B</a>,
-<a href="#C">C</a>,
-<a href="#D">D</a>,
-<a href="#E">E</a>,
-<a href="#F">F</a>,
-<a href="#G">G</a>,
-<a href="#H">H</a>,
-<a href="#K">K</a>,
-<a href="#M">M</a>,
-<a href="#N">N</a>,
-<a href="#P">P</a>,
-<a href="#R">R</a>,
-<a href="#S">S</a>,
-<a href="#T">T</a>,
-<a href="#V">V</a>,
-<a href="#W">W</a></p>
-<p class="c">(etext transcriber's note)</p></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="cb"><big>R O M N E Y</big></p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="center">UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" class="c"><big>REYNOLDS</big></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" class="c">Containing sixteen examples<br /> of the master’s work</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" class="c"><big>VELASQUEZ</big></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center" class="c">Containing sixteen illustrations in colour</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="center"><span class="smcap">A. and C. Black, Soho Square, London, W.</span></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_i" id="page_i"></a>{i}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_ii" id="page_ii"></a>{ii}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_001" id="ill_001"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_004_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_004_sml.jpg" width="396" height="500" alt="LADY HAMILTON WITH A GOAT
-
-Tankerville Chamberlayne, Esq." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">LADY HAMILTON WITH A GOAT
-<br />
-Tankerville Chamberlayne, Esq.</span>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_iii" id="page_iii"></a>{iii}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<h1><img src="images/romney.png"
- class="imgwidth"
-width="450"
-height="109"
-alt="ROMNEY"
-/></h1>
-
-<p class="cb">BY<br />
-RANDALL DAVIES<br /><br />
-<br />
-CONTAINING SIXTEEN EXAMPLES IN COLOUR<br />
-OF THE MASTER’S WORK<br /><br />
-<br />
-LONDON<br />
-ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK<br />
-1914<br />
-<br /><br />
-<small>PRINTED AT<br />
-THE BALLANTYNE PRESS<br />
-LONDON</small>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_iv" id="page_iv"></a>{iv}</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_v" id="page_v"></a>{v}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE</h2>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">The</span> most obvious gap in the ranks of the portraits by British painters
-in our National Collections is caused by the absence of any work of
-really first-rate importance by George Romney.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Parsons Daughter</i>, in the National Gallery, and the <i>Mrs.
-Robinson</i>, at Hertford House, are of the finest quality; but they are
-only heads.</p>
-
-<p>The large portrait of <i>Mrs. Mark Currie</i> is charming, but by no means so
-fine.</p>
-
-<p>In the <i>Louisa, Countess of Mansfield</i>, we are nearer to the very best;
-but that is only a temporary loan, and until the public are in
-possession of one or two of his superb whole-length portraits, such as
-Earl Crewe’s <i>Lady Milnes</i>, the Marquis of Lansdowne’s <i>Lord Henry
-Petty</i>, or the <i>Lady Bell Hamilton</i>, they will hardly be able to judge
-the work of Romney as fairly as that of his more fortunate
-contemporaries.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_vi" id="page_vi"></a>{vi}</span></p>
-
-<p>In placing him in the first rank of English painters, however, the
-present generation are only doing him as much honour as he deserves,
-after a century of neglect; and there seems to be no fear of his fame
-diminishing again or his popularity abating.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-R. D.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_vii" id="page_vii"></a>{vii}</span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<h2><a name="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-
-<tr><td align="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_001">1.</a></td><td valign="top">Lady Hamilton with a Goat </td><td> <i>Tankerville Chamberlayne, Esq.</i></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#ill_001"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><i>Facing p.</i></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_002">2.</a></td><td valign="top">The Parson’s Daughter </td><td> <i>National Gallery</i></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_004">4</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_003">3.</a></td><td valign="top">Thomas John Clavering,<br /> afterwards eighth Baronet,<br /> and his sister, Catherine Mary</td><td><i>Col. C. W. Napier Clavering</i></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_008">8</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_004">4.</a></td><td valign="top">Maria Margaret Clavering,<br /> afterwards Lady Napier</td><td><span class="ditto">”</span><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="ditto">”</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_012">12</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_005">5.</a></td><td valign="top">Colonel Thomas Thornton</td><td><span class="ditto">”</span><span class="ditto">”</span><span class="ditto">”</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_016">16</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_006">6.</a></td><td valign="top">Miss Ramus </td><td> <i>Viscount Hambleden</i></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_020">20</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_007">7.</a></td><td valign="top">Mrs. Robinson as “Perdita” </td><td> <i>Wallace Collection</i></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_022">22</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_008">8.</a></td><td valign="top">William Pitt, the Younger </td><td> <i>National Gallery</i></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_026">26</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_009">9.</a></td><td valign="top">Portraits of Mr. and<br /> Mrs. William Lindow (1770)</td><td><span class="ditto">”</span><span class="ditto">”</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_028">28</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_010">10.</a></td><td valign="top">Lady Craven (1778)</td><td><span class="ditto">”</span><span class="ditto">”</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_032">32</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_011">11.</a></td><td valign="top">Mrs. Mark Currie (1789)</td><td><span class="ditto">”</span><span class="ditto">”</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_036">36</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_012">12.</a></td><td valign="top">Portrait of a Lady and Child (1782)</td><td><span class="ditto">”</span><span class="ditto">”</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_040">40</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_013">13.</a></td><td valign="top">Lady Hamilton as a Bacchante (1786)</td><td><span class="ditto">”</span><span class="ditto">”</span></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_044">44</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_014">14.</a></td><td valign="top">Emma, Lady Hamilton </td><td> <i>National Portrait Gallery</i></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_046">46</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_015">15.</a></td><td valign="top">Miss Benedetta Ramus </td><td> <i>Viscount Hambleden</i></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_048">48</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="right" valign="top"><a href="#ill_016">16.</a></td><td valign="top">Portrait of Romney by<br /> Himself (unfinished) (1782) </td><td> <i>National Portrait Gallery</i></td><td align="right" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_052">52</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_001" id="page_001"></a>{1}</span></p>
-
-<h1>GEORGE &nbsp; ROMNEY</h1>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">That</span> Reynolds and Gainsborough were the two greatest portrait painters
-in England during the latter half of the eighteenth century is a
-proposition which no one is likely to question. Both had qualities which
-raised them far above the general, and considerably higher than even the
-foremost of their competitors; and though preference for the work of the
-one or the other of them is often as much a matter of taste as of
-opinion, the pre-eminence of the two is beyond dispute.</p>
-
-<p>When we come to fill the third place, however, the question is not so
-readily settled. There are many candidates who are, or ought to be, in
-the running; and although the fashion of the present time may send up
-the prices of now one now another beyond all that is reasonable and
-sensible, it would be rash to say that the most popular has the best<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_002" id="page_002"></a>{2}</span>
-right to the position. Only last year, for example, a new planet swam
-into the dealers’ ken, a portrait of <i>Benjamin Franklin</i>, painted in
-1762 by Mason Chamberlin, one of the original members of the Royal
-Academy, realising the extraordinary figure of two thousand eight
-hundred guineas; a figure which, as the <i>Times</i> felicitously observes,
-“places the artist on an auction level with Reynolds and Gainsborough.”</p>
-
-<p>Judged by the fickle standard of the auction room, Raeburn, at the
-present moment, would have precedence over Hoppner, and Hoppner, unless
-I am mistaken, over Romney. But who can say whether before another
-season is over, the merits of Lawrence or Beechey, West or Copley, may
-not come up in the market, and impress an uncritical public with ideas
-of beauty and genius which have hitherto escaped their notice?</p>
-
-<p>In my own opinion, George Romney has better claim than any of the others
-to be considered next to Reynolds and Gainsborough as a portrait
-painter, inasmuch as he seems to me to have exhibited more<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_003" id="page_003"></a>{3}</span> consistently
-the variety of qualities necessary for excellence in that particular
-branch of his art.</p>
-
-<p>In its outward manipulation of charm and beauty, the work of Romney is
-all that an amateur need ask of it, and considerations of mere elegance
-have probably advanced his popularity in the sale room as much as others
-more really important. But charm and beauty of this sort are delusive
-guides and, unless backed by some more enduring test of excellence, will
-lead us downwards only, through the scale of Hoppner, Lawrence, Harlow,
-and Shee, till we find ourselves in the company of the simpering
-beauties of the early and mid-Victorian age, with their sloping
-shoulders and curling ringlets. With Romney we are perfectly safe. No
-twinge of conscience warns us to withstand the allurements of <i>Lady
-Hamilton</i>, or the fascination of the <i>Parson’s Daughter</i>. We may flirt
-as long and as desperately as we please&mdash;in an artistic sense&mdash;with
-<i>Mrs. Mark Currie</i>, without the slightest stain on our æsthetic morals.
-There is nothing technically meretricious about any of these beauties,
-and the virtue of our taste is<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_004" id="page_004"></a>{4}</span> only strengthened by the pleasurable
-enjoyment of their society.</p>
-
-<p>And why?</p>
-
-<p>One of the first reasons that occur to me is one that may possibly be
-challenged as being merely paradoxical; namely, that Romney, like
-Reynolds and Gainsborough, was not primarily a portrait painter. That
-all three of them became painters of portraits, and will go down to
-posterity as such, was not because they wished to, but by the accident
-of circumstance. Reynolds was an humble and assiduous disciple of Michel
-Angelo, an earnest seeker after conquests in “the grand style.” Of
-Gainsborough, it was said that music was his pleasure and painting his
-profession; while in that profession, as we know, it was landscape which
-chiefly occupied his mind and most delighted him. And Romney actually
-writes to his friend Hayley, “This cursed portrait-painting. How I am
-shackled with it!”</p>
-
-<p>To explain the paradox we must look back a little into the history of
-painting in England, with a glance<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_005" id="page_005"></a>{5}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_002" id="ill_002"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_019_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_019_sml.jpg" width="498" height="500" alt="THE PARSON’S DAUGHTER
-
-National Gallery" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">THE PARSON’S DAUGHTER
-<br />
-National Gallery</span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">at that of portrait-painting in other countries besides. Taking the
-latter view first, we find that the only name, which readily occurs to
-us, of an artist who painted nothing but portraits, is that of Holbein.
-In all the greatest schools of painting, since the days of Cimabue,
-portraiture was, as it were, a “bye-product,” and with a few exceptions
-like Holbein, Velasquez, or Vandyck, there is no great painter who is as
-well known for his portraits as for his other works. In England, until
-the arrival of Reynolds, there was no school of painting at all, and the
-only reason for any painter coming to England was the business, rather
-than the art, of making likenesses of its vigorous inhabitants. In
-England, consequently, when a school of painting was at last
-established, it is hardly surprising to find that the painting of
-portraits was the most considerable branch of it, not only in the early
-days of its commencement, but throughout almost the whole of its
-development; and it was not until comparatively late in its history that
-landscape assumed considerable proportions and finally outgrew the other
-branch.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_006" id="page_006"></a>{6}</span></p>
-
-<p>Had Reynolds and Romney, like Gainsborough, been landscape painters at
-heart, it is probable that such a combination of great talent would have
-resulted in a much earlier triumph for the landscapist, and that we
-should not have had to wait for Turner and Constable to restore the
-balance. For Richard Wilson, the actual founder of the English School of
-landscape, only failed to establish it from want of recognition, and
-there were many others who were fit to achieve great works in landscape
-if it had not been that they were compelled to comply with the popular
-demand for portraiture without regard to their artistic inclinations.</p>
-
-<p>But there was a third branch of the art on which, though unheeded alike
-by the patron and the public, the minds of Romney and of many more of
-the most accomplished artists of the time were bent, namely, the
-historical; and so long as the market was closed to their achievements
-in this direction, it was impossible for even the greatest among them to
-exist without making portraiture their regular business.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_007" id="page_007"></a>{7}</span></p>
-
-<p>Reynolds was wise, or fortunate, enough to satisfy his historical or
-classical aspirations by working them in, so to speak, with his
-portraits; and while his purely allegorical or poetical compositions
-have added little to his reputation, he is never so great, or so
-attractive, as when painting portraits in terms of romance. Nor is he
-less deservedly popular when realising some idyllic fancy like <i>The Age
-of Innocence</i>, or <i>The Strawberry Girl</i>, <i>The Infant Samuel</i> or
-<i>Robinetta</i>&mdash;all of which are, in fact, portraits of a single model.
-Benjamin West, on the other hand, though fortunate in obtaining Royal
-approval, and truly royal payment, for his historical compositions,
-found little encouragement from the public in taking to this branch of
-the profession. “As any attempt in history was at that period an almost
-unexampled effort,” wrote James Northcote, R.A., on the exhibition of
-West’s <i>Pylades and Orestes</i> at the Exhibition of 1766, “this picture
-became a matter of much surprise. West’s house was soon filled with
-visitors from all quarters to see it; and those amongst the highest rank
-who<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_008" id="page_008"></a>{8}</span> were not able to come to his house to satisfy their curiosity,
-desired to have his permission to have it sent to them; nor did they
-fail, every time it was returned to him, to accompany it with
-compliments of the highest commendation on its great merits. But the
-most wonderful part of the story is that notwithstanding all this bustle
-and commendation bestowed upon this justly admired picture, by which Mr.
-West’s servant gained upwards of thirty pounds by showing it, yet no one
-mortal ever asked the price of the work, or so much as offered to give
-him a commission to paint any other subject. Indeed there was one
-gentleman who spoke of it with such praise to his father, that he
-immediately asked him the reason he did not purchase, as he so much
-admired it, when he answered, ‘What could I do if I had it? You surely
-would not have me hang up a modern English picture in my house unless it
-was a portrait?’&nbsp;”</p>
-
-<p>It was in this year that John Singleton Copley exhibited his first
-picture, a boy with a squirrel, in England. He, too, was obsessed with
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_009" id="page_009"></a>{9}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_003" id="ill_003"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_027_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_027_sml.jpg" width="389" height="500" alt="THOMAS JOHN CLAVERING, AFTERWARDS EIGHTH BARONET, AND HIS
-SISTER, CATHERINE MARY
-
-Col. C. W. Napier Clavering" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">THOMAS JOHN CLAVERING, AFTERWARDS EIGHTH BARONET, AND HIS
-SISTER, CATHERINE MARY
-<br />
-Col. C. W. Napier Clavering</span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">historical idea, and carried it so far that he is better known for his
-grand compositions, like the <i>Death of Chatham</i>, than for the many very
-excellent portraits he painted. Angelica Kauffmann is remembered only by
-her well-intentioned but rather boneless classical compositions; and
-Fuseli, so far as he is remembered at all, by his weird nightmare
-effects in historical pieces.</p>
-
-<p>Broadly speaking, history was a thankless mistress to the painters, and
-had it not been that Romney chose to paint portraits for the sake of
-accumulating enough money for the pursuit of his own artistic ambitions,
-his reputation as an artist would now be as totally forgotten as are
-those of many whose names it is almost unfair to them to mention in the
-present unappreciative days.</p>
-
-<p>But there is fortunately another aspect of the question. A great deal is
-being said at the present time about the merits and demerits of a
-classical education for boys. On the one hand we hear that it is
-perfectly useless for the ordinary youth to spend the greater part of
-his time at school in the generally<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_010" id="page_010"></a>{10}</span> hopeless effort of acquiring some
-familiarity with the classical languages. On the other we are told that
-a boy must learn something, and that the training to the mind afforded
-by the study of Latin and Greek is more valuable in after life than the
-acquisition of any practically useful knowledge. Whichever side we may
-incline to in the case of the ordinary everyday boy who is to be sent
-out into the world to make his living in one of a dozen or more
-different walks of life, there can be no question that the whole-hearted
-pursuit of a beloved study, whether of Greek or Latin or Chinese, by a
-man of purpose and character, never fails to improve him in any other
-study which he may wish to undertake. For the higher walks of life, such
-as statesmanship, or the control of large interests, or the influence of
-considerable bodies of opinion, it is generally admitted that the school
-and university training is advantageous. An archbishop is not in these
-days required to address Convocation in Latin, nor is a Prime Minister
-expected to quote Horace in debate. But either can delegate the useful
-duties of life to others, while they themselves are better fitted<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_011" id="page_011"></a>{11}</span> by
-breadth of view to deal in the largest possible manner with public
-questions. It is for this reason, to return to our paradox, that I
-consider Romney’s excellence in portraiture was due, in a large measure,
-to the fact that he was not willingly a portrait painter. When we see
-that Reynolds came back from Italy filled with the ardour inspired by
-Michel Angelo and Raphael for great painting; when we see Gainsborough,
-torn from his beloved woods and fields to the painting room, both of
-them establishing their reputation with practically nothing but
-portraiture, I hope that the paradox will seem less paradoxical, and
-that it will be agreed that Romney, too, struggling to the last with the
-relentless Muse of his historical fancy, was in reality indebted to her
-for most of his excellence in the department of portraiture where we are
-ready to accord him so high a place. It is only another version of the
-old fable of the treasure which the father induced his boys to dig for
-in the vineyard. How many a fashionable painter would do well for
-himself and for his art by exchanging his brush for a spade!<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_012" id="page_012"></a>{12}</span></p>
-
-<p>Anybody can paint a portrait. It is really easier than taking a
-photograph. One has only to look at contemporary representations of the
-younger members of one’s friends’ families in oil or pastel to realise
-that the ordinary person prefers a bad picture to a good photograph.
-There is something gratifying to the latent vanity of the sitter in the
-mere fact of sitting to a painter. In the old days, when there were no
-such things as photographs, the inducement to sit must have been still
-greater, and the demand for portraits enormous. Horace Walpole declares
-that there were no less than two thousand portrait painters in London in
-the middle of the eighteenth century: modern investigation has accounted
-for over seven hundred! To be a portrait painter, clearly, then was not
-to be an artist; and when we come to sift the artists from the mere
-likeness-mongers, we shall almost invariably find that the only great
-portraits were the work of men who excelled in other directions, as we
-have found in the cases of Reynolds and Gainsborough.</p>
-
-<p>Applying this test to Romney, it is quite surprising to discover how
-little is said of his portraiture<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_013" id="page_013"></a>{13}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_004" id="ill_004"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_035_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_035_sml.jpg" width="393" height="500" alt="MARIA MARGARET CLAVERING, AFTERWARDS LADY NAPIER
-
-Col. C. W. Napier Clavering" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">MARIA MARGARET CLAVERING, AFTERWARDS LADY NAPIER
-<br />
-Col. C. W. Napier Clavering</span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">by his two earliest biographers, William Hayley, his life-long friend
-and admirer, and the Reverend John Romney, his son. Nor is there very
-much more, and certainly no indication of his present pre-eminence among
-the British portrait painters, in Allan Cunningham’s lengthy Memoir of
-him published in 1832. It is true that his popularity, amounting to
-serious rivalry of Reynolds at one period, is mentioned incidentally; as
-is also the devotion of his art to Lady Hamilton. But these are only
-considered as diversions, as it were, of his main purpose into a side
-channel. The dream of his life, we are to understand, was the
-achievement of historical compositions.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly he has been unfortunate in his biographers. A more tedious and
-pretentious compilation than the quarto of over four hundred pages
-published by William Hayley in 1809 as “The Life of George Romney,
-Esq.,” I hope it may never be anybody’s fate to peruse. Hayley was a
-second-rate poet&mdash;his most considerable work being “The Triumphs of
-Temper”&mdash;with a third-rate intellect.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_014" id="page_014"></a>{14}</span> “The influence which the
-friendship of Hayley exercised over the life of Romney,” the son of the
-artist writes, “was in many respects injurious. His friendship was
-grounded on selfishness, and the means by which he obtained it was
-flattery. He was able also by a canting kind of hypocrisy to confound
-the distinctions between vice and virtue, and to give a colouring to
-conduct that might and probably did mislead Romney on some occasions. He
-drew him too much from general society, and almost monopolised him to
-himself, and thus narrowed the circle of his acquaintance and friends.
-By having intimated an intention of writing Romney’s Life he made him
-extremely afraid of doing anything that might give offence. He was
-always interfering in his affairs&mdash;volunteering his advice; and I have
-much reason to believe that whatever errors the latter may have
-committed, they were simply owing to the counsel or instigation of
-Hayley.”</p>
-
-<p>From Hayley, then, we need not expect very much that is likely to be of
-value in the way of criticism. But for one thing he is to be thanked,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_015" id="page_015"></a>{15}</span>
-namely the inclusion in his volume of a short sketch of Romney’s
-professional career by John Flaxman, R.A. From this I shall have
-occasion to borrow more than a few illuminating passages, a couple of
-which I now adduce as evidence of how little Romney’s portraiture was
-considered in an estimate of his art specially written at the time of
-his death by one whom Hayley calls “an approved artist”:</p>
-
-<p>“As Romney was gifted with peculiar powers for historical and ideal
-painting, so his heart and soul were engaged in the pursuit of it,
-whenever he could extricate himself from the importunate business of
-portrait painting. It was his delight by day and study by night, and for
-this his food and rest were often neglected.” And again, by way of
-summing up, “A peculiar shyness of disposition kept him from all
-association with public bodies, and led to the pursuit of his studies in
-retirement and solitude which ... allowed him more leisure for
-observation, reflection, and trying his skill in other arts connected
-with his own. And indeed few artists, since the fifteenth<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_016" id="page_016"></a>{16}</span> century, have
-been able to do so much in so many different branches; for besides his
-beautiful compositions and pictures, which have added to the knowledge
-and celebrity of the English school, he modelled like a sculptor, carved
-ornaments in wood with great delicacy, and could make an architectural
-design in a fine taste, as well as construct every part of the
-building.”</p>
-
-<p>The word “portraits” it will be observed occurs but once in these
-passages; nor does it appear elsewhere in the sketch. If then it be
-admitted that neither Reynolds nor Gainsborough nor Romney were
-primarily portrait painters, and that their pre-eminence arises in a
-high degree from this cause, we shall have arrived at a standpoint from
-which to observe how each of the three was influenced by that cause in a
-different manner, and so obtain a better idea of their several
-excellences than we are likely to obtain from their “auction values.”</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, it is to be remembered that neither Reynolds nor
-Gainsborough was actually averse to painting portraits, whereas we
-have<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_017" id="page_017"></a>{17}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_005" id="ill_005"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_043_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_043_sml.jpg" width="418" height="500" alt="COLONEL THOMAS THORNTON
-
-Col. C. W. Napier Clavering" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">COLONEL THOMAS THORNTON
-<br />
-Col. C. W. Napier Clavering</span>
-</div>
-
-<p>Romney’s written word that he hated it. Sir Joshua, to be sure, speaks
-of his charming little <i>Strawberry Girl</i> as “One of the half-dozen
-original things that no man ever exceeds in his lifetime.” But he was
-quite content to receive as many as a hundred-and-fifty sitters in the
-course of a single year. Gainsborough, too, could go off into raptures
-at the beauties of the young princes and princesses when he was painting
-them at Winsdor, and write a flaming letter to the Royal Academy when
-the royal portraits were not hung as he desired. Both found their
-highest expression in portraiture, as did Romney; but whereas they were
-not slow to realise that their respective gifts, widely different as
-they were, fitted them pre-eminently for this sort of work, it would
-seem that Romney never realised it at all; and while the other two
-brought all their forces, consciously, to the beautification of this
-particular branch of their art, Romney appears to have done no more than
-acquiesce coldly but, be it observed, conscientiously, in the necessity
-for it.</p>
-
-<p>I would therefore submit that the chief characteristics<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_018" id="page_018"></a>{18}</span> which
-distinguish Romney’s portraits from those of his two greater
-contemporaries are coldness&mdash;or rather simplicity&mdash;and
-conscientiousness. These are conscious qualities, to which I would add a
-third, which I believe to be unconscious, that is to say, the influence
-of the classical art of the Greeks, which for the sake of brevity I will
-call classicism.</p>
-
-<p>The distinction it seems to me is this. That whereas Reynolds was aiming
-at the grand style, and spared no occasion for employing it in practice
-and expatiating on it in precept, it is impossible to say that he did
-not consciously apply its principles&mdash;I say consciously&mdash;to every
-portrait he ever undertook. In Gainsborough’s portraits again we
-recognise the hand and the heart of the landscape painter consciously
-employing the terms of his favourite craft, when we find in them the
-same charm, the same natural and easy grace which is the great
-characteristic of his landscape drawings and sketches. While Reynolds
-was painting men and women in terms of art, Gainsborough was painting
-them in terms of nature. Both were applying all the principles which
-they had<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_019" id="page_019"></a>{19}</span> imbibed from their earliest youth to the particular object on
-which they were engaged.</p>
-
-<p>With Romney, on the other hand, this was clearly not the case. He
-detested having to paint portraits. His mind was wholly attracted to
-allegorical and poetical subjects. Allan Cunningham, writing in 1832,
-almost apologises for mentioning his portraits at all. “A list of all
-the works which Romney executed in those busy days,” he writes, “would
-occupy several pages; it would, however, be absurd to specify many of
-them, since they can possess little interest except for particular
-families.” He then gives a list of eighteen portraits which are
-“remarkable for containing more than one figure, or for their superior
-merit, or on account of the character and station of the individual
-represented,” adding that “in one of these lucky and prosperous years he
-earned by portraiture alone some three thousand six hundred pounds.”</p>
-
-<p>Now if Romney had called upon his Muse to assist him in his portraiture,
-as did Reynolds and Gainsborough, there can be little doubt that his<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_020" id="page_020"></a>{20}</span>
-popularity would have extended enormously, and that his reputation would
-have been increased in hardly a less degree. But whether it was the
-influence of Hayley, or whether, as is more probable, it was the effect
-of his character and his deep feeling for his art, Romney rarely, if
-ever, permitted his Muse to descend into his painting-room when he was
-executing a commission for a portrait. An honest presentment of his
-sitters was apparently his only concern; he took their money, and he
-conscientiously painted their portraits, in their habits as they lived,
-without any conscious attempt at achieving more.</p>
-
-<p>But in keeping his Muse thus apart, it must not be supposed that he
-succeeded in banishing her from his inmost self. Her influence is to be
-seen and felt in almost every portrait he painted. Rarely as she was
-allowed on the stage&mdash;as in the famous group of <i>Lady Gower and her
-Children</i>&mdash;she was ever present, though behind the scenes; how else can
-one account for the almost classical severity of tone that keeps every
-portrait of Romney’s, however simple, from being merely trivial, pretty,
-or banal?<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_021" id="page_021"></a>{21}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_006" id="ill_006"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_051_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_051_sml.jpg" width="413" height="500" alt="MISS RAMUS
-
-Viscount Hambleden" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">MISS RAMUS
-<br />
-Viscount Hambleden</span>
-</div>
-
-<p>An alternative explanation of the reticence and simplicity of Romney’s
-portraits, his seeming unwillingness to expand into allegorical
-portraiture, is his supposed sensitiveness of temperament. Hayley
-expatiates on this quality to such an extent as to shake our belief in
-its existence; but that it did exist in some degree is unfortunately too
-evident to deny. How much or how little it had to do with the limitation
-of his fancy in portraiture must only be a matter of opinion, but since
-as good evidence of it as any is to be found in the story of three of
-his earliest pictures, we may as well consider it before proceeding
-further.</p>
-
-<p>Almost the first of Romney’s “popular successes” was a family piece
-containing portraits of Sir George Warren, his lady, and their little
-daughter, which was exhibited in 1769. “This picture was highly extolled
-by the public,” says John Romney, “and brought him still more into
-notice. According to a design in one of his sketch-books, Lady Warren is
-represented as seated in a graceful and easy posture, with a fronting
-attitude, but with her face slightly<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_022" id="page_022"></a>{22}</span> turned to her right, having her
-left elbow leaning upon a pedestal, and the hand extended over her
-daughter’s shoulder, a girl about six or seven years old, who is
-standing by her. The young lady has her hands gently crossed over her
-bosom, and is caressing a little bird which she holds in one hand. Sir
-George, habited in a picturesque style, is standing rather to the left,
-and somewhat more backward in the picture than his lady. He has his
-right arm moderately extended and is directing her attention to a
-distant object. The composition is beautiful, correct, and natural, and
-the simplicity, grace, and feeling expressed in the figure and character
-of Miss Warren are admirable.”</p>
-
-<p>This description, it is to be observed, is not from the picture itself,
-which the writer had never seen, but from the artist’s drawing for it;
-and it is evident that the drawing must have been executed with much
-greater care and particularity than is to be found in most of Romney’s
-sketches. The picture itself is now in the possession of Lord Vernon, at
-Sudbury Hall, Derbyshire, the little daughter having married the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_023" id="page_023"></a>{23}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_007" id="ill_007"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_057_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_057_sml.jpg" width="406" height="500" alt="MRS. ROBINSON AS “PERDITA”
-
-Wallace Collection" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">MRS. ROBINSON AS “PERDITA”
-<br />
-Wallace Collection</span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">first Lord Vernon. Its present owner informed Mr. Humphry Ward that it
-was always supposed to be by Reynolds, and that a professional valuer
-valued it as such for probate in 1883.</p>
-
-<p>That so successful an attempt should be repeated was only natural.
-Hogarth and Highmore had painted some of these “conversation pieces,” as
-they were called, but with indifferent, or at any rate no great amount
-of popular, success, and one might have supposed that a young artist
-would have been ready enough to respond to the encouragement accorded to
-him in this particular class of picture. But no others of the sort are
-known to have been attempted, with one exception. At about the same time
-Romney was engaged in a portrait group of Mr. Leigh and his family.
-Unfortunately, his well-wishing friend Cumberland, the dramatist, in his
-efforts to push Romney to the front, was ill-advised enough to drag
-Garrick to see his pictures. Now Garrick hated Cumberland, and had a
-very poor opinion of him&mdash;which is all there is to excuse him for an
-unpardonable exhibition of bad taste. “I brought him to see Romney<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_024" id="page_024"></a>{24}</span>’s
-pictures,” writes Cumberland, “hoping to interest him in his favour. A
-large family piece unluckily arrested his attention; a gentleman in a
-close-buckled bob-wig, and a scarlet waistcoat laced with gold, with his
-wife and children (some sitting, some standing), had taken possession of
-some yards of canvas, very much, as it appeared, to their own
-satisfaction&mdash;for they were perfectly amused in a contented abstinence
-from all thought or action. Upon this unfortunate group, when Garrick
-had fixed his lynx’s eyes, he began to put himself into the attitude of
-the gentleman, and turning to Mr. Romney, ‘Upon my word, Sir,’ he said,
-‘this is a very regular well-ordered family; and that is a very
-bright-rubbed mahogany table at which that motherly good lady is
-sitting; and this worthy gentleman in the scarlet-waistcoat is doubtless
-a very excellent subject (to the State, I mean, if these are all his
-children), but not for your art, Mr. Romney, if you mean to pursue it
-with that success which I hope will attend you.’ The modest artist took
-the hint, as it was meant, in good part, and turned his family with
-their faces to the wall.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_025" id="page_025"></a>{25}</span></p>
-
-<p>If Romney had been only moderately sensitive we can easily understand
-that an impertinence of this sort (for Cumberland was as dense as he was
-well-meaning in thinking it was intended in good part) would have been
-intolerable from anybody; but when we remember that Garrick was an
-intimate friend of Reynolds, we may readily admit that it had in fact a
-certain influence on Romney’s choice of subject and treatment. We have
-seen that in the other group his success was the result of careful and
-prepared study; but I know of no other sketches of his for family
-groups&mdash;except those for the Gower picture&mdash;though there are plenty of
-studies of single figures.</p>
-
-<p>A couple of years later, again, he painted the actress Mrs. Yates in the
-character of the Tragic Muse, at whole length. This was twelve years or
-more before Sir Joshua painted his famous picture of Mrs. Siddons, so
-that it is hardly possible to compare the two. But Romney’s picture
-cannot have proved more than a <i>succès d’estime</i>. “I have often wished,”
-says Hayley, “that it had been the lot of Romney to paint this great
-actress, one of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_026" id="page_026"></a>{26}</span> most gracefully majestic of our tragic queens, at a
-maturer season of her life, and in the full meridian of his power; for
-in that case I am persuaded the Tragic Muse of Romney would not have
-appeared what at present I must allow her to be, very far inferior, as a
-work of the pencil, to the Tragic Muse of Sir Joshua.” For once we may
-take Hayley’s opinion as more or less correct, for although I am unable
-to pronounce on the merits of the picture, not having seen it, its
-history records what was the popular estimate of it. It was purchased by
-Alderman Boydell, and put up to auction at Christie’s after his death in
-1810, when it was bought in for nine and a half guineas. In 1812 it was
-put up again and there was no bid, and the same in 1817 and 1822. In
-1824 it at last found a purchaser at £10.</p>
-
-<p>As this was, according to John Romney, his first whole length portrait
-of a lady, it would seem probable that he did not receive sufficient
-encouragement to pursue the allegorical treatment of portrait subjects.</p>
-
-<p>But whether we incline to the one view or the other, or perhaps accept a
-commixture of the two in<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_027" id="page_027"></a>{27}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_008" id="ill_008"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_065_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_065_sml.jpg" width="386" height="500" alt="WILLIAM PITT, THE YOUNGER
-
-National Gallery" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">WILLIAM PITT, THE YOUNGER
-<br />
-National Gallery</span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">such proportions as may seem to each of us most suitable to the facts,
-we find it to be true that from henceforth Romney’s sitters were treated
-as ordinary everyday human beings, and not as gods, goddesses, heroes,
-nymphs, muses, or what not. What he gave them was of his best, so far as
-it went, and, as I have suggested, his best went farther than he was
-conscious of in giving it. Let us now see how his portraiture responds
-to the three tests I ventured to suggest, namely, simplicity,
-conscientiousness, and classicism.</p>
-
-<p>First, then, as to simplicity, by which I mean in this connection
-simplicity of presentment&mdash;the plain prosaic record on canvas of the
-likeness of the sitter. When we come to consider the third point,
-classicism, we shall see that this simplicity extends to every
-particular; but for the moment I am only considering the first question
-that arises when a commission for a portrait is given&mdash;“How would you
-like to be painted?” In Romney’s studio there seems to have been but one
-answer, namely, “Exactly as I am.” Of accessories there were<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_028" id="page_028"></a>{28}</span>
-practically none. The portrait was painted and that was all. A portrait
-by Romney is first and foremost a portrait.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly, his conscientiousness. Who would believe, on a view of any of
-Romney’s portraits, that he looked upon portraiture as a cursed
-occupation by which he was shackled? Is there any trace of
-unwillingness, of haste, of slovenliness? Is there any hint that he was
-out of temper with his sitters, or careless in the way he posed them, or
-indifferent to the perfection of his painting? We may miss the animation
-of Gainsborough, or the triumphant glitter of Reynolds in many of his
-sober contemplative faces, but of the perfunctory conventionalisms of
-his contemporaries or the slipshod hurry and make-believe of the modern
-exhibitors we find no suggestion. Whatever he did was done with all his
-strength, if not with all his heart, and no one could complain that his
-portrait suffered from want of painstaking devotion to the subject. His
-care and conscientiousness are as easily seen, too, in his most busy and
-prosperous days as they are in his earliest<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_029" id="page_029"></a>{29}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_009" id="ill_009"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_071_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_071_sml.jpg" width="421" height="500" alt="PORTRAITS OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM LINDOW
-
-(1770) National Gallery" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">PORTRAITS OF MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM LINDOW
-<br />
-(1770) National Gallery</span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">portraits, like that of Mr. and Mrs. Lindow, which was painted in 1760
-before he left Lancaster.</p>
-
-<p>John Romney records an amusing instance of his father’s efforts in this
-respect. “I remember his telling me once,” he writes, “what difficulty
-he had with a sitter in order to accomplish a little expression. The
-gentleman was from the country, and an attorney; and though his
-profession required intelligence, yet his countenance gave no indication
-of it. To remove a settled dulness that pervaded his features, Mr.
-Romney made many attempts, starting every popular topic of conversation,
-but all in vain; at length by some uncommon chance, he happened to
-mention hunting; at the sound of which word a ray of animation
-immediately sparkled in the eyes of the sitter, and imparted a certain
-degree of vivacity to his countenance. Mr. Romney took his measure
-accordingly, and led him into the subject; after which he was relieved
-from any further attempts at conversation as the worthy gentleman
-expatiated upon it with spirit until the picture was finished.”</p>
-
-<p>“Even upon persons to whom nature was less<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_030" id="page_030"></a>{30}</span> parsimonious of her
-favours,” he adds, “he knew that dulness would sometimes intrude, and,
-therefore, always wished that some friends should accompany his sitters,
-both for the purpose already mentioned, and also to relieve himself of
-the double task of painting and of keeping up a forced conversation at
-the same time.”</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, for his classicism, which is the really distinguishing
-characteristic of Romney’s portraits and includes in it all the others.
-“On his arrival in Italy,” Flaxman tells us, “he was witness to new
-scenes of art, and sources of study ... he there contemplated the purity
-and perfection of ancient sculpture, the sublimity of Michel Angelo’s
-Sistine chapel, and the simplicity of Cimabue’s and Giotto’s schools. He
-perceived these qualities [namely, be it observed, sublimity and
-simplicity] distinctly, and judiciously used them in viewing and
-imitating nature; and thus his quick perception and unwearied
-application enabled him by a two years’ residence abroad to acquire as
-great a proficiency in art as is usually attained by foreign studies of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_031" id="page_031"></a>{31}</span>much longer duration.” And again, “His cartoons ... were examples of
-the sublime and terrible at that time perfectly new in English art. The
-Dream of Atossa, from the Persians of Æschylus, contrasted the
-death-like sleep of the Queen with the Bacchanalian Fury of the Genius
-of Greece. The composition was conducted with the fire and severity of a
-Greek bas-relief.”</p>
-
-<p>How many of the thousands of visitors to the National Gallery would ever
-imagine that this last paragraph was written of the painter of <i>The
-Parson’s Daughter</i>, or <i>Mrs. Mark Currie</i>? And yet here, I cannot help
-feeling, is the real strength which underlies the structure of even the
-airiest of Romney’s paintings. The roots of genius must grow deep if its
-branches are to grow high. The foundations of a great building must be
-firm. The faintest breeze of enlightened judgment is enough to blow away
-the ornamental bungalows of the Victorian portrait-painters, while
-castle Romney stands as firm as the rock on which it was built.</p>
-
-<p>“In trying to attain excellence in his art,” Flaxman continues, “his
-diligence was unceasing as his<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_032" id="page_032"></a>{32}</span> gratification in the employment. He
-endeavoured to combine all the possible advantages of the subject
-immediately before him, and to exclude whatever had a tendency to weaken
-it. His compositions, like those of the ancient pictures and
-basso-relievos, told their story by a single group of figures in the
-front, whilst the background is made the simplest possible, rejecting
-all unnecessary episode and trivial ornament, either of secondary groups
-or architectural subdivision. In his compositions the beholder was
-forcibly struck by the sentiment at the first glance, the gradations and
-varieties of which he traced through several characters all conceived in
-an elevated spirit of dignity and beauty, with a lively expression of
-nature in all the parts.”</p>
-
-<p>Although written of his classical compositions, this criticism of
-Flaxman, who was himself more severely classical in his art than the
-Greeks, applies with almost equal truth to his portraits. It throws into
-light the hidden force that gives them their strength, that keeps them
-before us as live men and women instead of painted puppets and dolls.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_033" id="page_033"></a>{33}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_010" id="ill_010"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_079_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_079_sml.jpg" width="398" height="500" alt="LADY CRAVEN
-
-(1778) National Gallery" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">LADY CRAVEN
-<br />
-(1778) National Gallery</span>
-</div>
-
-<p>“His heads were various,” says Flaxman, still on the classical
-compositions, but holding the light even more closely to the portraits,
-“the male were decided and grand, the female lovely. His figures
-resembled the antique; the limbs were elegant, and finely formed. His
-drapery was well understood, either forming the figure into a mass with
-one or two deep folds only, or by its adhesion and transparency
-discovering the form of the figure, the lines of which were finely
-varied with the union or expansion of spiral or cascade folds, composing
-with or contrasting the outline and chiaroscuro. He was so passionately
-fond of Greek sculpture that he had filled his study and galleries with
-fine casts from the most perfect statues, groups, basso-relievos and
-busts of antiquity. He would sit and consider these in profound silence
-by the hour; and besides the studies in drawing and painting he made
-from them, he would examine them under all the changes of sunlight and
-daylight; and with lamps prepared on purpose at night he would try their
-effects lighted from above, beneath, in all directions, with rapturous
-admiration.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_034" id="page_034"></a>{34}</span></p>
-
-<p>Before considering the particulars in which these observations may be
-said to be applicable to Romney’s portraits, it is perhaps worth
-pointing out that the essential difference between the work of Reynolds
-and Romney is to be traced back to the influence exerted on each of them
-by his studies in Italy. Reynolds, perhaps fortunately for British art
-at the time, seems to have taken Michel Angelo and Raphael as the
-founders of painting, and to have confined his study of art,
-accordingly, to them and their successors. Romney, on the other hand,
-while also regarding them as the chiefs, went back from them to the
-antique, taking Cimabue and Giotto on the way. That he particularly
-admired Correggio is stated by Hayley, but that Correggio’s “tenderness
-and grace he often emulated very happily in his figures of women and
-children” is a piece of criticism which I must confess to be beyond me.
-Certainly it cannot be applied to his portraits.</p>
-
-<p>“His drapery was well understood,” says Flaxman; I need not quote the
-rest of the sentence, because it applies in particular to the drapery of
-ladies in the classic<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_035" id="page_035"></a>{35}</span> period; but in principle, the drapery of Romney’s
-sitters is as simple, because well understood, as that of Atossa. Of all
-painters of women surely there never was one who required such extreme
-simplicity of raiment. The plainest of white or black robes seem to have
-been the rule, and the most common exception to absolute simplicity was
-not in the garment at all, but in the addition of a somewhat elaborate
-and umbrageous hat. Of any pattern on the drapery, I can only recall one
-instance, namely, that of Miss Hannah Milnes, a three-quarter length
-portrait, now in the possession of Earl Crewe. Here there seems to be
-something of the manner of Sir Joshua in several particulars, which is
-possibly a conscious imitation. But in portrait after portrait, and
-certainly in every piece which is most characteristic of Romney, whether
-it is Mrs. Jordan or Lady Hamilton or Mrs. Currie, the plain robe is the
-rule. The magnificent picture of Louisa Countess of Mansfield (in
-profile, seated under a tree) is now on loan from Lord Cathcart at the
-National Gallery, and is hanging close beside Mrs. Mark Currie’s; and
-while<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_036" id="page_036"></a>{36}</span> both depart from the letter of this rule, they depend for their
-magical effect upon the spirit of it. Lady Mansfield’s flowing robe is
-of a pale yellowish tinge, and a voluminous scarf of grey, almost as
-pale, mingles with the folds of drapery. But as contrasted with the deep
-shadows of the foliage against which the brightly coloured profile is
-set, the general impression is of an exquisitely posed figure in the
-simplest of flowing creamy white robes. No ornament fixes the eye, no
-violent contrast of colour interrupts the rhythm of the whole figure.
-“The design,” says Mr. Roberts in his Catalogue Raisonné, “appears to
-have been adopted from a Greek gem.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Currie’s dress, which I hope I am correct in describing as a frock,
-is of pure white; but it is faintly striped, not I think in colour, but
-in texture; and there are some bows on the elbows, and a sash of pale
-lake.</p>
-
-<p>Anything less reminiscent of a Greek statue than this radiant young
-English beauty in a muslin frock, I am quite willing to admit, it would
-be difficult to think of. At first sight a severely classical taste
-would be more likely to condemn her for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_037" id="page_037"></a>{37}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_011" id="ill_011"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_087_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_087_sml.jpg" width="395" height="500" alt="MRS. MARK CURRIE
-
-(1789) National Gallery" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">MRS. MARK CURRIE
-<br />
-(1789) National Gallery</span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">unmitigated prettiness that is usually associated with the cheapest kind
-of pictorial imbecility. But let her not be condemned unheard. That she
-was an exceedingly pretty woman need hardly be doubted, and that she
-wished to be made as pretty as possible in her portrait may fairly be
-taken for granted. If she had any other qualities it is probable that
-her name would be remembered for them. As it is, Romney has
-conscientiously painted a portrait of her which probably pleased her
-almost as much as it pleases all of us to-day. “In his composition,” we
-remember, “the beholder was forcibly struck by the sentiment at the
-first glance.” How true this is of Mrs. Currie and her prettiness! The
-painter’s whole effort is concentrated on that one quality, and instead
-of dissipating the beholder’s attention with accessories, he soothes it
-with a seeming artlessness which no one but a great painter could nearly
-accomplish. Mrs. Currie’s drapery is of course strictly English&mdash;in
-substance at any rate and form. But here again we feel the guiding or
-restraining hand of the Classic Muse, just as we should have seen it had
-Romney<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_038" id="page_038"></a>{38}</span> been painting Mrs. Currie in the character of Antigone. As it
-was, Romney was speaking English and not Greek; only it is the English,
-as it were, of a finely educated man.</p>
-
-<p>But in placing Romney so high above the crowd of ordinary portrait
-painters, and a little higher than any except Reynolds and Gainsborough,
-it is only fair to consider how far short he fell of equalling those
-two. And it must not be forgotten that the limitations which he imposed
-upon himself were quite as likely to affect his popularity among his
-patrons and their friends as with posterity. Classic simplicity is an
-invaluable quality in the portraiture of everyday men and women,
-especially when the latter are young and pretty; but a gallery of
-portraits by Romney would afford a much narrower view of the
-capabilities of the English School than a similar exhibition of the work
-of Reynolds or Gainsborough. The oft-repeated assertion of Lord
-Chancellor Thurlow that “Reynolds and Romney divide the town, and I am
-of the Romney faction,” must be taken with<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_039" id="page_039"></a>{39}</span> a considerably larger pinch
-of salt than is popularly accepted with it. In the first place, Romney
-was not at all in fashion until after his return from Rome in 1785, by
-which time Reynolds had been painting portraits for at least twenty
-years. Gainsborough, too, who was by seven years the senior of Romney,
-was quite as many years ahead of him in practice, though he had only
-recently come to London from Bath. In the year 1785 we know that Romney
-earned £3635 from portraits. At this time, so his pupil Robinson
-records, his prices were £20 for a head, £30 for a kit-cat, £40 for a
-half-length, and £80 for a whole length. Taking the average at as low a
-figure as £35, this means about a hundred commissions in his busiest
-year. This is certainly a large number, and Sir Joshua never had more
-than a hundred-and-fifty in a year; but it must not be taken as an
-average for any great length of years.</p>
-
-<p>Again, when we look at the names of his most distinguished patrons, the
-list is not as long or as imposing as those of Reynolds and
-Gainsborough. The latter had the patronage of Royalty, besides a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_040" id="page_040"></a>{40}</span> good
-number of the aristocracy, while Reynolds had, if I may be allowed the
-expression, “mopped up” all that was most brilliant in beauty, birth,
-and genius, leaving very little for anybody else. The Catalogue of the
-Exhibition of National Portraits held at South Kensington in 1867,
-enumerates but twenty pictures by Romney, and as many as a hundred and
-fifty by Reynolds.</p>
-
-<p>That Romney’s sensitive disposition and retiring habit of life may in
-some degree account for his not being more widely popular in his own
-time is no doubt true. But apart from any other consideration there is
-no question that a fine portrait by Reynolds is a more satisfying
-possession than any but the very finest by Romney, and a characteristic
-one by Gainsborough more exhilarating. Though there is at least one
-instance in which he “wiped Reynolds’s eye,” namely, with his
-magnificent head of <i>John Wesley</i>, which was painted in 1789, when
-Wesley was eighty-six years old. “At the earnest desire of Mrs T.,” the
-old man wrote, “I once more sat for my picture. Mr. Romney is a
-painter<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_041" id="page_041"></a>{41}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_012" id="ill_012"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_095_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_095_sml.jpg" width="399" height="500" alt="PORTRAIT OF A LADY AND CHILD
-
-(1782) National Gallery" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">PORTRAIT OF A LADY AND CHILD
-<br />
-(1782) National Gallery</span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">indeed! He struck off an exact likeness at once, and did more in an hour
-than Sir Joshua did in ten.”</p>
-
-<p>Still, there is a variety of qualities in Reynolds’s and Gainsborough’s
-pictures that we do not find, or expect to find, in those of Romney&mdash;a
-fact which must be taken into account in comparing the number of their
-respective portraits exhibited in 1867. The stream of popular taste
-steadily ebbed during the century following Sir Joshua’s death, and it
-is only of late years that Romney has been “discovered” and restored to
-public favour. A great deal of Romney’s present-day popularity I cannot
-help thinking is attributable as much to the delectable quality of his
-ladies’ faces as to the classic simplicity of treatment which makes them
-what they are.</p>
-
-<p>Then, of course, there is Lady Hamilton, to whom, as we find Allan
-Cunningham asserting, many have imputed the chief charm of Romney’s best
-pictures. In these days it is certainly true that her name is
-inseparably associated with Romney’s art in the popular mind, and the
-latest addition to the bibliography of Romney is concerned with nothing
-but Lady Hamilton. Unfortunately for Romney’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_042" id="page_042"></a>{42}</span> reputation both inside
-and outside his painting-room, this lady’s fame has so filled the public
-ear with matters which are altogether distinct from the art of painting,
-that it is almost impossible to appreciate her influence upon Romney’s
-art in anything like its proper proportions. We are as it were between
-two fires&mdash;the glamour which she threw over the painter and the glamour
-which he threw over her; and our view of the matter, unless we are
-careful to screen our eyes, is likely to be too highly coloured for the
-ordinary purposes of criticism.</p>
-
-<p>The broad fact seems to be that for nearly a decade the inspiration of
-Emma Lyon poured like sunlight into Romney’s studio, and although before
-it came he had for several years established his reputation and done
-some of his best work in portraiture, its withdrawal, in 1791, was the
-end of all that was happy or successful in his career. “His imagination
-was gone,” says Mr. Humphry Ward; “his health, for many years frail,
-became less robust than ever, and of his portraits and pictures painted
-after 1791, many exhibit signs of decaying powers.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_043" id="page_043"></a>{43}</span></p>
-
-<p>That he was exceedingly fond of her need not, of course, be doubted. How
-could it be otherwise? But is it any more necessary to dwell upon his
-purely personal relations with her than on those of Sir Joshua Reynolds
-with Kitty Fisher or Nelly O’Brien? For Reynolds, those two
-“professional beauties” were sitters, of whom the painter succeeded in
-painting several beautiful and accomplished portraits. For Romney, Emma
-Lyon was to some extent the embodiment of the Muse whom I have ventured
-to postulate as his guardian angel, when engaged in the perilous
-commerce of painting pretty and fashionable ladies. That she was also
-the veritable embodiment of all that was pleasing to the mortal eye in
-the shape of woman is at least equally certain; but unlike so many of
-her frail sisters, she was a remarkably accomplished and intelligent
-woman. “She performed both in the serious and comic to admiration,”
-writes Romney, in a letter describing an evening at Sir William
-Hamilton’s, “both in singing and acting. Her Nina surpasses everything I
-ever saw, and I believe as a piece of acting nothing ever surpassed it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_044" id="page_044"></a>{44}</span>
-The whole company were in an agony of sorrow. Her acting is simple,
-grand, terrible, and pathetic.”</p>
-
-<p>In another letter, to Hayley in June 1791, he writes, “At present, and
-the greatest part of the summer, I shall be engaged in painting pictures
-from the divine lady. I cannot give her any other epithet, for I think
-her superior to all womankind. I have two pictures to paint of her for
-the Prince of Wales. She says she must see you.... She asked me if you
-would not write my life. I told her you had begun it. Then she said she
-hoped you would have much to say of her in the life, as she prided
-herself in being my model.” And again in the following month “I dedicate
-my time to this charming lady; there is a prospect of her leaving town
-with Sir William for two or three weeks. They are very much hurried at
-present, as everything is going on for their speedy marriage, and all
-the world following and talking of her, so that if she had not more good
-sense than vanity her brain must be turned.</p>
-
-<p>“The pictures I have begun are Joan of Arc, a Magdalen, and a Bacchante,
-for the Prince of Wales,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_045" id="page_045"></a>{45}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_013" id="ill_013"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_103_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_103_sml.jpg" width="411" height="500" alt="LADY HAMILTON AS A BACCHANTE
-
-(1786) National Gallery" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">LADY HAMILTON AS A BACCHANTE
-<br />
-(1786) National Gallery</span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">and another I am to begin as a companion to the Bacchante. I am also to
-paint a picture of Constance for the Shakespeare Gallery.”</p>
-
-<p>The extent of Romney’s obligations to her, simply as a model, may be
-gathered from a glance at Mr. Roberts’s Catalogue Raisonné of his work.
-Here we find forty-five different pictures of the fair Emma, a figure
-which is about doubled if we count the various versions painted of one
-and another&mdash;as a Bacchante, for example, no less than twelve separate
-canvases are enumerated. Nor does this catalogue probably include a good
-many sketches and studies which were left unfinished. Of the various
-characters in which he painted her, apart from pictures which were
-simply portraits, the list includes those of Alope, Ariadne, a
-Bacchante, Cassandra, Circe, Comedy, the Comic Muse, Contemplation,
-Euphrosyne, a Gipsy, Iphigenia, Joan of Arc, a Magdalen, Meditation,
-Miranda, Nature, a Nun, a Pythian Priestess, S. Cecilia, Sensibility, a
-Shepherdess, Sigismunda, the Spinstress. The Sempstress, it may be
-mentioned, was not painted from her, but from Miss Vernon.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_046" id="page_046"></a>{46}</span></p>
-
-<p>Such a catalogue as this is, I suppose, unique in the annals of
-painting. Oddly enough it is paralleled in those of literature&mdash;if it be
-not thought too fanciful to quote the example of William Shakespeare.
-For fanciful as at first thought it may seem, it is, nevertheless,
-helpful to an understanding of the relations of the private life of each
-to his particular art.</p>
-
-<p>George Romney, like Shakespeare, was born of humble parents in a remote
-country town. Dalton, in Lancashire, is further from London than
-Stratford, but as I do not pretend to draw the parallel too closely, I
-will confine myself to a short account of Romney’s circumstances only.
-He was born on December 15, 1734. His ancestors, yeomen of good repute,
-lived near Appleby, in Westmorland, but took refuge during the Civil
-Wars in the neighbouring county. His father was a joiner, which in those
-days included the trade of carpenter and cabinet-maker, and George was
-apprenticed to him. How and at what period the love of painting came
-upon him has not been clearly shown. Cumberland asserts that it was
-inspired by the cuts in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_047" id="page_047"></a>{47}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_014" id="ill_014"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_109_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_109_sml.jpg" width="406" height="500" alt="EMMA, LADY HAMILTON
-
-National Portrait Gallery" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">EMMA, LADY HAMILTON
-<br />
-National Portrait Gallery</span>
-</div>
-
-<p><i>Universal Magazine</i>. Hayley says that he consumed the time of his
-fellow-workmen in sketching them in various attitudes, while John Romney
-states that Lionardo’s treatise on painting, illustrated by many fine
-engravings, was early in his hands. Cumberland describes him as “a child
-of nature who had never seen or heard of anything that could elicit his
-genius or urge him to emulation, and who became a painter without a
-prototype.” At nineteen, however, he was apprenticed for four years to a
-painter called Count Steele, who was practising in the neighbouring town
-of Kendal. During this time he fell in love with a young lady of some
-little fortune, Mary Abbot, and on October 14, 1756, he carried her
-across the border to Gretna Green and married her.</p>
-
-<p>His precipitate marriage drew upon him the rebuke of his parents, but he
-vindicated himself with some firmness and skill. “If you consider
-everything deliberately,” he wrote, “you will find it to be the best
-affair that ever happened to me; because if I have fortune I shall make
-a better painter than I should otherwise have done, as it will<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_048" id="page_048"></a>{48}</span> be a
-spur to my application; and my thoughts being now still, and not
-obstructed by youthful follies, I can practise with more diligence and
-success than ever.”</p>
-
-<p>According to Hayley, he soon perceived that his marriage was an obstacle
-to his studies; that he was ruined as an artist, and that he might bid
-farewell to all hopes of fame and glory, although he was devoting
-himself with all his might to his work. “The terror of precluding
-himself from those distant honours,” says Hayley&mdash;to whom, by-the-by, we
-are under no obligation to believe more than we wish&mdash;“by appearing in
-the world as a young married man, agitated the ambitious artist almost
-to distraction, and made him resolve very soon after his marriage, as he
-had no means of breaking the fetters which he wildly regarded as
-inimical to the improvement and exertion of his genius, to hide them as
-much as possible from his troubled fancy.”</p>
-
-<p>This exordium of Hayley’s is, as it were, in the nature of a
-“preliminary announcement” of the separation between Romney and his
-wife, when five years later he resolved to try his fortune in London.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_049" id="page_049"></a>{49}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_015" id="ill_015"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_115_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_115_sml.jpg" width="416" height="500" alt="MISS BENEDETTA RAMUS
-
-Viscount Hambleden" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">MISS BENEDETTA RAMUS
-<br />
-Viscount Hambleden</span>
-</div>
-
-<p>“In working rapidly and patiently at different places in the north, for
-a few years,” Hayley continues, “by painting heads as large as life at
-the price of two guineas or figures at whole length on a small scale for
-six guineas, he contrived to raise a sum amounting almost to a hundred
-pounds; taking thirty for his own travelling expenses, and leaving the
-residue to support an unoffending partner and two children, he set forth
-alone, without even a letter of recommendation, to try the chances of
-life in the metropolis.”</p>
-
-<p>That was in 1762; and for a much longer period than Shakespeare, and
-with no occasional visits to his family, Romney worked in London and
-became more and more famous, until, as we have seen, his decline set in.</p>
-
-<p>“The summer of 1799 came,” writes Allan Cunningham, “but Romney could
-neither enjoy the face of nature, nor feel pleasure in his studio and
-gallery. A visible mental languor sat upon his brow&mdash;not diminishing but
-increasing; he had laid aside his pencils; his swarm of titled sitters,
-whose smile in other days rendered passing time so agreeable,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_050" id="page_050"></a>{50}</span> were
-moved off to a Lawrence, a Shee, or a Beechey; and thus left lonely and
-disconsolate among whole cartloads of paintings, which he had not the
-power to complete, his gloom and his weakness gathered and grew upon
-him.... In these moments his heart and his eye turned towards the
-north&mdash;where his son, a man affectionate and kind, resided; and where
-his wife, surviving the cold neglect and long estrangement of her
-husband, lived yet to prove the depth of a woman’s love, and show to the
-world that she would have been more worthy of appearing at his side,
-even when earls sat for their pictures, and Lady Hamilton was enabling
-him to fascinate princes with his Calypsos and Cassandras. Romney
-departed from Hampstead, and taking the northern coach arrived among his
-friends at Kendal in the summer of 1799. The exertion of travelling and
-the presence of her whom he once had warmly loved overpowered him; he
-grew more languid and more weak, and finding fireside happiness he
-resolved to remain where he was; he purchased a house and authorised the
-sale of that on Hampstead Hill.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_051" id="page_051"></a>{51}</span></p>
-
-<p>So much for the parallel as concerned the private life of either. But
-what about his art? Where in Shakespeare’s literary career are we to
-find anything comparable with the influence of Emma Lyon on Romney’s
-painting during the crowning decade of his accomplishment? I suggest as
-the answer, that during a similar period, of about the same duration,
-namely from about 1593 to 1603, we may trace a similar influence on the
-poet, which is embodied in a series of masterpieces numbering over a
-hundred, namely, most if not all, of the first hundred and twenty-five
-of “Shakespeare’s Sonnets.” They were all written to one person, and in
-such terms of art as have led others besides Alexander Dyce to suppose
-that they were really addressed to the poet’s muse rather than to any
-corporeal being. As in the case of Romney, the author has been maligned
-by the undiscerning vulgar for supposed deviations from the strict path
-of virtue in his relations with his friend. But for any one who has an
-understanding of the spirit of art there is nothing in either case to
-support the allegation. Had Shakespeare and Romney looked no<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_052" id="page_052"></a>{52}</span> farther
-than their own hearths for artistic inspiration, the world would have
-been the poorer: that is all.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>Of Romney’s classical or historical pictures the world knows almost as
-little as it cares about them. “I have made many grand designs,” he
-himself wrote in 1794, “I have formed a system of original subjects,
-moral and my own, and I think one of the grandest that has been thought
-of&mdash;but nobody knows it.” Cunningham, after disposing shortly of his
-portraits, proceeds to state that the historical and domestic pictures,
-finished and unfinished, deserve a more minute examination; that they
-embrace a wide range of reading and observation and are numerous beyond
-all modern example. But with the exception of <i>Titania and her Indian
-Votaries</i> and <i>Milton Dictating to his Daughters</i>, which were mentioned
-by Flaxman, and various fancy portraits of Lady Hamilton, he does not
-specify a single finished example. His explanation is that “for one
-finely finished there are five half done, and for five half done there
-are at least a dozen merely commenced on the canvas.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_053" id="page_053"></a>{53}</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="ill_016" id="ill_016"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/i_123_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_123_sml.jpg" width="402" height="500" alt="PORTRAIT OF ROMNEY BY HIMSELF (UNFINISHED)
-
-(1782) National Portrait Gallery" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">PORTRAIT OF ROMNEY BY HIMSELF (UNFINISHED)
-<br />
-(1782) National Portrait Gallery</span>
-</div>
-
-<p>So far as these canvases are concerned, there is no doubt that the
-majority of them have been destroyed; but there are still in existence a
-large quantity of drawings and sketches on paper, both in pencil and in
-India ink, for classical compositions. As many of these are probably
-rough ideas for his lost pictures, it is perhaps worth mentioning a few
-of the subjects enumerated by Cunningham among the unfinished
-productions, which may help to identify the sketches, besides, as
-Cunningham says, “showing the range of his mind, and also his want of
-patience to render his works worthy of admission to public galleries.”
-The principal are as follows: <i>King Lear Asleep</i>, <i>King Lear Awake</i>,
-<i>Ceyx and Alcyone</i>, <i>The Death of Niobe’s Children</i>, <i>The Cumean Sibyl
-Foretelling the Destiny of Aeneas</i>, <i>Electra and Orestes at the Tomb of
-Agammemnon</i>, <i>Thetis Supplicating Jupiter</i>, <i>Thetis Comforting
-Achilles</i>, <i>Damon and Musidora</i>, <i>Homer Reciting his Verses</i>, <i>David and
-Saul</i>, <i>Macbeth and Banquo</i>, <i>The Descent of Odin</i>, <i>The Ghost of
-Clytemnestra</i>, <i>Eurydice vanishing from Orpheus</i>, <i>Harpalice</i>, <i>A
-Thracian Princess defending<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_054" id="page_054"></a>{54}</span> her wounded Father</i>, <i>Antigone with the
-Corpse of Polynices</i>, <i>A Witch displaying her Magical Powers</i>,
-<i>Resuscitation by Force of Magic</i>, <i>Doll Tearsheet</i>, <i>Cupid and Psyche</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Besides these there are a number of portrait sketches, which though not
-so numerous, are much more charming, in spite of their being exceedingly
-rough and slight. They must have been simply notes, and can seldom have
-been intended for more than fixing an idea in the painter’s mind. I have
-as many as a dozen in my own possession which I have picked up here and
-there in the dealers’ portfolios, and there are probably a good number
-of them in existence. Rough as they are, they are certainly deserving of
-more attention than is usually accorded to them; for though Romney never
-seems to have enjoyed the process of committing a portrait to paper as
-Gainsborough did, these business-like notes of pose and chiaroscuro give
-us a good insight into his methods of setting to work. Perhaps the taste
-of a future generation will prefer the rough-hewn idea of a great
-portrait painter to the finished achievement of Benwell or Buck in
-little.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_055" id="page_055"></a>{55}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</h2>
-
-<p class="c">
-<a href="#B">B</a>,
-<a href="#C">C</a>,
-<a href="#D">D</a>,
-<a href="#E">E</a>,
-<a href="#F">F</a>,
-<a href="#G">G</a>,
-<a href="#H">H</a>,
-<a href="#K">K</a>,
-<a href="#M">M</a>,
-<a href="#N">N</a>,
-<a href="#P">P</a>,
-<a href="#R">R</a>,
-<a href="#S">S</a>,
-<a href="#T">T</a>,
-<a href="#V">V</a>,
-<a href="#W">W</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="nind">
-<a name="B" id="B"></a><span class="smcap">Boydell</span>, Alderman, <a href="#page_026">26</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="C" id="C"></a><span class="smcap">Cathcart</span>, Lord, <a href="#page_035">35</a><br />
-
-Chamberlin, Mason, <a href="#page_002">2</a><br />
-
-Cimabue, <a href="#page_005">5</a>, <a href="#page_030">30</a>, <a href="#page_034">34</a><br />
-
-Copley, John Singleton, <a href="#page_008">8</a><br />
-
-Copley’s <i>Death of Chatham</i>, <a href="#page_009">9</a><br />
-
-Correggio, <a href="#page_034">34</a><br />
-
-Cumberland, <a href="#page_023">23</a>, <a href="#page_046">46</a><br />
-
-Cunningham, Allan, <a href="#page_013">13</a>, <a href="#page_019">19</a>, <a href="#page_041">41</a><br />
-
-Currie, Mrs. Mark, <a href="#page_003">3</a>, <a href="#page_031">31</a>, <a href="#page_035">35</a>, <a href="#page_036">36</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="D" id="D"></a><span class="smcap">Dalton</span>, <a href="#page_046">46</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="E" id="E"></a><span class="smcap">Exhibition</span> of National Portraits, <a href="#page_040">40</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="F" id="F"></a><span class="smcap">Flaxman</span>, John, R.A., <a href="#page_015">15</a>, <a href="#page_030">30</a>, <a href="#page_031">31</a>, <a href="#page_032">32</a>, <a href="#page_034">34</a><br />
-
-Fuseli, Henry, R.A., <a href="#page_009">9</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="G" id="G"></a><span class="smcap">Gainsborough</span>, Thomas, <a href="#page_011">11</a>, <a href="#page_016">16</a>, <a href="#page_017">17</a>, <a href="#page_028">28</a>, <a href="#page_040">40</a><br />
-
-Garrick, David, <a href="#page_023">23</a>, <a href="#page_024">24</a><br />
-
-Giotto, <a href="#page_030">30</a>, <a href="#page_034">34</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="H" id="H"></a><span class="smcap">Hamilton</span>, Lady, <a href="#page_013">13</a>, <a href="#page_041">41-43</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">influence on Romney’s painting, <a href="#page_051">51</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Romney’s portraits of, <a href="#page_045">45</a></span><br />
-
-Hayley, William, <a href="#page_013">13</a>, <a href="#page_025">25</a>, <a href="#page_047">47</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">influence over Romney, <a href="#page_014">14</a>, <a href="#page_020">20</a></span><br />
-
-Highmore, <a href="#page_023">23</a><br />
-
-Hogarth, William, <a href="#page_023">23</a><br />
-
-Holbein, Hans, <a href="#page_005">5</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="K" id="K"></a><span class="smcap">Kauffmann</span>, Angelica, <a href="#page_009">9</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="M" id="M"></a><span class="smcap">Michelangelo</span>, <a href="#page_030">30</a>, <a href="#page_034">34</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="N" id="N"></a><span class="smcap">Northcote</span>, James, R.A., <a href="#page_007">7</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="P" id="P"></a><span class="smcap">Pictures</span> by George Romney<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Bacchante</i>, <a href="#page_044">44</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Constance</i>, <a href="#page_045">45</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Joan of Arc</i>, <a href="#page_044">44</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>John Wesley</i>, <a href="#page_040">40</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Lady Gower and her Children</i>, <a href="#page_020">20</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Lady Hamilton</i>, <a href="#page_003">3</a>, <a href="#page_035">35</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Louisa, Countess of Mansfield</i>, <a href="#page_035">35</a>, <a href="#page_036">36</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Magdalen</i>, <a href="#page_044">44</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Milton dictating to his Daughters</i>, <a href="#page_052">52</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Miss Hannah Milnes</i>, <a href="#page_035">35</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Mr. and Mrs. Lindow</i>, <a href="#page_029">29</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Mr. Leigh and his Family</i>, <a href="#page_023">23</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Mrs. Jordan</i>, <a href="#page_035">35</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Mrs. Yates as The Tragic Muse</i>, <a href="#page_025">25</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>The Dream of Atossa</i>, <a href="#page_031">31</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>The Parson’s Daughter</i>, <a href="#page_003">3</a>, <a href="#page_031">31</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">“<i>The Triumphs of Temper</i>,” <a href="#page_013">13</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>The Warren Family</i>, <a href="#page_021">21</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Titania and her Indian Votaries</i>, <a href="#page_052">52</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">“<i>Tragic Muse</i>,” <a href="#page_026">26</a></span><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="R" id="R"></a><span class="smcap">Raphael</span>, <a href="#page_034">34</a><br />
-
-Reynolds, Sir Joshua, <a href="#page_004">4</a>, <a href="#page_005">5</a>, <a href="#page_007">7</a>, <a href="#page_011">11</a>, <a href="#page_016">16</a>, <a href="#page_028">28</a>, <a href="#page_034">34</a>, <a href="#page_040">40</a><br />
-
-Roberts, Mr., Catalogue Raisonné, <a href="#page_036">36</a>, <a href="#page_045">45</a><br />
-
-Romney, George, birth of, <a href="#page_046">46</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">apprenticed to joinery, <a href="#page_046">46</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">apprenticeship to Count Steele, <a href="#page_047">47</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">classicism,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_056" id="page_056"></a>{56}</span> <a href="#page_030">30</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conscientiousness, <a href="#page_028">28</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">distaste for portrait painting, <a href="#page_004">4</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">first full-length portrait of a lady, <a href="#page_026">26</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">influence of Hayley upon, <a href="#page_014">14</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in London, <a href="#page_049">49</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letters to Hayley, <a href="#page_044">44</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">life of, by William Hayley, <a href="#page_013">13</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">marriage to Mary Abbot at Gretna Green, <a href="#page_047">47</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">place among portrait painters, <a href="#page_038">38</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">portraits compared with those of Reynolds and Gainsborough, <a href="#page_018">18</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">prices obtained for pictures, <a href="#page_039">39</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">principal pictures, list of, <a href="#page_053">53</a>, <a href="#page_054">54</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">return to Kendal, <a href="#page_050">50</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">separation from his wife, <a href="#page_048">48</a></span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">simplicity of treatment, <a href="#page_027">27</a></span><br />
-
-Romney, Rev. John, <a href="#page_013">13</a>, <a href="#page_021">21</a>, <a href="#page_029">29</a>, <a href="#page_047">47</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="S" id="S"></a><span class="smcap">Shakespeare</span> Gallery, <a href="#page_045">45</a><br />
-
-Shakespeare, William, <a href="#page_046">46</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="T" id="T"></a><span class="smcap">Thurlow</span>, Lord Chancellor, <a href="#page_038">38</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="V" id="V"></a><span class="smcap">Vandyck</span>, <a href="#page_005">5</a><br />
-
-Velasquez, <a href="#page_005">5</a><br />
-
-Vernon, Lord, <a href="#page_022">22</a><br />
-
-<br />
-<a name="W" id="W"></a><span class="smcap">Walpole</span>, Horace, <a href="#page_012">12</a><br />
-
-Ward, Mr. Humphry, <a href="#page_023">23</a>, <a href="#page_042">42</a><br />
-
-West, Benjamin, <a href="#page_007">7</a><br />
-
-West’s “<i>Pylades and Orestes</i>,” <a href="#page_007">7</a><br />
-
-Wilson, Richard, Founder of the English School of Landscape, <a href="#page_006">6</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="c">
-PRINTED AT<br />
-THE BALLANTYNE PRESS<br />
-LONDON<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><a name="transcrib" id="transcrib"></a></p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""
-style="padding:2%;border:3px dotted gray;">
-<tr><th align="center">Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:</th></tr>
-<tr><td align="center"><span class="errata">trival</span>, pretty, or banal=> trivial, pretty, or banal {pg 20}</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="center">scarlet <span class="errata">waistcoast</span>=> scarlet waistcoat {pg 24}</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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