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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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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63199 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63199)
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-Project Gutenberg's Stories Pictures Tell Book 6, by Flora Carpenter
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Stories Pictures Tell Book 6
-
-Author: Flora Carpenter
-
-Release Date: September 14, 2020 [EBook #63199]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES PICTURES TELL BOOK 6 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Garcia, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- STORIES PICTURES TELL
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [Illustration: Decoration]
-
- STORIES
- PICTURES TELL
-
- BOOK SIX
-
-
-
-
-
- By
- FLORA L. CARPENTER
-
- Instructor in drawing at Waite High School, Toledo, Ohio
- Formerly supervisor of drawing, Bloomington, Illinois
-
-
-
- Illustrated with Half Tones from
- Original Photographs
-
-
-
-
- RAND McNALLY & COMPANY
- CHICAGO NEW YORK
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1918
- BY RAND MCNALLY & CO.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- THE CONTENTS
-
-
- SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER
-
- PAGE
- “Sir Galahad” _Watts_ 1
- “A Reading from Homer” _Alma-Tadema_ 13
-
-
- NOVEMBER, DECEMBER, AND JANUARY
-
- “The Golden Stairs” _Burne-Jones_ 27
- “Aurora” _Reni_ 37
-
-
- FEBRUARY AND MARCH
-
- “Avenue at Middelharnis” _Hobbema_ 47
- “The Angelus” _Millet_ 58
-
-
- APRIL, MAY, AND JUNE
-
- “Sheep in Spring” (and “Sheep _Mauve_ 68
- in Autumn”)
-
- Review of Pictures and Artists
- Studied
-
- _The Suggestions to Teachers_ 78
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- THE PREFACE
-
-
-Art supervisors in the public schools assign picture-study work in each
-grade, recommending the study of certain pictures by well-known masters.
-As Supervisor of Drawing I found that the children enjoyed this work but
-that the teachers felt incompetent to conduct the lessons as they lacked
-time to look up the subject and to gather adequate material. Recourse to
-a great many books was necessary and often while much information could
-usually be found about the artist, very little was available about his
-pictures.
-
-Hence I began collecting information about the pictures and preparing
-the lessons for the teachers just as I would give them myself to pupils
-of their grade.
-
-My plan does not include many pictures during the year, as this is to be
-only a part of the art work and is not intended to take the place of
-drawing.
-
-The lessons in this grade may be used for the usual drawing period of
-from twenty to thirty minutes, and have been successfully given in that
-time. However, the most satisfactory way of using the books is as
-supplementary readers, thus permitting each child to study the pictures
-and read the stories himself.
-
- FLORA L. CARPENTER
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- STORIES
- PICTURES TELL
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- SIR GALAHAD
-
-
-=Questions to arouse interest.= Who is this man? How is he dressed? What
-do his armor and title “Sir” tell us he is? How many have read
-Tennyson’s poems telling the story of the knights of the Round Table?
-What does Sir Galahad look as if he were about to do? Why do you think
-he is starting on a journey, rather than returning from one? Why do you
-think it must be an important journey? How will he go? What was expected
-of a knight in those days? Tell of some of their good deeds. What would
-you judge the character of this knight to be? Where is he represented in
-this picture? Is he walking, or standing still? looking at something in
-particular, or lost in thought? Does he appear angry, meek, determined,
-hesitating, thoughtful, or dreamy? What do his clasped hands indicate?
-What color is the horse? Upon what part of the man and horse does the
-light fall? What would you consider the main thought expressed in this
-picture?
-
-
- =Original Picture=: Collection Alexander Henderson, M.P., London,
- England.
- =Artist=: George Frederick Watts (wŏts).
- =Birthplace=: London, England.
- =Dates=: Born, 1817; died, 1904.
-
-
-=The story of the picture.= Many wonderful stories have been told of the
-famous knights of the Middle Ages, but none perhaps more interesting
-than the adventures of the knight Sir Galahad when he went in search of
-the Holy Grail.
-
-In those times the greatest praise a boy could hope to receive was “You
-are brave enough to become a knight some day,” or “You are as courteous
-as a knight”; and his greatest ambition was to receive this title as he
-knelt before his sovereign or a superior knight. In those days boys were
-carefully trained for knighthood, just as for any other profession. They
-were sent away from home when very young, and spent at least ten years
-under severe discipline and training.
-
-The boy Galahad had passed through these years of preparation. He had
-been taught to be quick in action,—managing a horse so that he could
-jump on or off while it was in full gallop,—to throw his spear with sure
-aim, to run swiftly, to obey all commands promptly; and, more difficult
-still, he had learned to wait patiently and uncomplainingly when he
-could not understand why he should wait.
-
-Now he was twenty-one years old. Knighthood had been bestowed upon him,
-according to the custom, by a blow with the flat of the sword on his
-shoulder as he knelt, and the words, “Arise, Sir Galahad.” And now he
-was ready to start out on his quest for the Holy Grail.
-
-The Holy Grail was the cup from which Christ drank at the Last Supper.
-It was bought from Pilate by Joseph of Arimathæa, and placed in a castle
-where it was guarded night and day. It was passed on to Joseph’s
-children, who received the charge in sacred trust, continuing to guard
-it faithfully. The cup itself was most mysterious and wonderful. It
-could be seen only by those who were perfectly pure in word, thought,
-and deed. If an evil person came near, it would seem to be borne away,
-completely disappearing from view. The sight of it was as food and new
-life to the one to whom it was revealed, and hence would enable him to
-live forever, make him very wise, and of course preserve him from death
-in battle. But there was one thing it did not do,—it did not take away
-temptation to sin. No matter how perfect the knight, he could still be
-tempted. He must continue to resist evil as long as he lived.
-
-After a time, the Holy Grail was left in the care of a king named
-Amfortas, who, weakly yielding to an evil enchantment, was severely
-punished. Not only was the sight of the Grail denied him, but a spell
-was cast upon him and all his court, so that they lived in a sort of
-trance, neither sleeping nor waking. Thus they must remain and suffer
-until a knight should come, pure in body and soul, who should break the
-spell and set them free.
-
-Many a young man began to plan the quest of the Grail. He must so live
-that by his good thoughts and deeds he might reach the enchanted castle,
-see the Holy Grail, and so set free the unhappy knights. He must be
-perfect, indeed, if he would achieve this, and full of courage,
-perseverance, and patience.
-
-In our picture we see Sir Galahad all ready to mount his snow-white
-horse and start out on his search for the Holy Grail. He is in full
-armor. His coat of mail, which all knights wore, was proof against any
-opponent of the time, except one equally armed and armored. It is said
-that a party of knights could ride unharmed through a host of common
-soldiers. The horses, too, were protected. But if the knight were once
-unhorsed and thrown upon his back, he was so weighed down by the stiff
-and heavy armor that he could not rise again without help. The knight’s
-weapons consisted of the lance, the two-handed sword, and a short, sharp
-dagger.
-
-Sir Galahad had secured his sword and shield in a most mysterious way.
-The sword had been discovered protruding from the side of a wonderful
-rock of red marble jutting out from the surface of a river. This
-wonderful sword no one had been able to draw out of the rock. But when
-Sir Galahad tried, the sword came out without the slightest difficulty,
-and when he placed it in his empty scabbard, it fitted there exactly.
-The shield had been found by Sir Galahad in an old church, where it had
-been left for him by an ancestor, and where it had remained undiscovered
-for those many years.
-
-Then, too, when Sir Galahad came to the Round Table of King Arthur and
-his knights in Camelot, he found them in the midst of a solemn meeting.
-Launcelot had just declared that according to prophecy a knight should
-come that very day who should occupy the Siege Perilous. The Siege
-Perilous was a chair over which the magician Merlin had cast a spell:
-only a stainless knight could sit in it without danger of instant death.
-As Sir Galahad entered the room he was preceded by a strange old man,
-whom none had ever seen before. Then the doors and windows quietly and
-mysteriously closed of their own accord, and the room was filled with a
-strange light. These words, in letters of fire, appeared over the chair:
-“This is Galahad’s seat.” By all these mysterious happenings the knights
-knew that Sir Galahad would be successful in finding the Grail, and many
-accompanied him on his quest.
-
-Sir Galahad met with many adventures on his quest for the Grail and, in
-all of them, came out victorious. At length he reached the Castle of the
-Grail, and here he met his first defeat.
-
-Entering the castle he gazed silently about him, at the feeble old king
-and at the wretched company whom he had come to free from their living
-death. Before him passed the vision of the Grail, which he alone of all
-that company was permitted to see. But it was not enough to see all
-this; he was expected to ask the meaning of what he saw, and by his
-question remove the enchantment. But, overconfident in his own
-knowledge, he tried to solve the mystery without asking, and so was
-forced to depart without success.
-
-Here, at the very moment he was about to succeed, he was found to be
-possessed of the one fault, overconfidence, lacking in that humbleness
-which seeks constantly for higher knowledge. Because of his failure to
-ask the necessary question, the enchanted company had to continue to
-suffer. His personal purity alone was not enough; wisdom was necessary,
-attainable not through himself alone, but from the experience and
-understanding of others. As he left the castle grounds the drawbridge
-closed with a crash, there was a great sound of groaning and of voices
-reproaching him for having failed in his quest, and the castle
-disappeared from his sight. Much discouraged, he sought it again through
-many years, until at last he found it once more, and this time, a much
-wiser man, he asked the vital question, broke the wicked spell, and
-eventually found the Holy Grail.
-
-Tennyson has given us the story in verse in his “Holy Grail.”
-
-This picture is one we often see in homes, as well as in schoolhouses,
-and in many public buildings. It stands for the search for higher ideals
-which we are all making, and so its appeal is universal.
-
-The earnest, uplifted face of the knight is full of youth and beauty.
-The horse, with his great, intelligent eyes, seems to know the
-importance of his errand.
-
-The light comes from before them, brightening the pathway as if it would
-lead them on and on through the tangle of vines and deep woods which
-opposes them.
-
-If you have been fortunate enough to see a suit of armor in some museum,
-you know how the heavy steel coat is planned and how the helmet, which
-Sir Galahad has taken off, will protect his head and face.
-
-It is a moment of deep meditation and prayerful thought, for Sir Galahad
-is about to start out upon an undertaking in which many have failed and
-in which he cannot be sure of success. There is much of humility in his
-expression, nothing of the proud, dashing air of the adventurer.
-
-This earnest, thoughtful youth, starting out full of courage and
-determination, will always have time for the little courtesies of life,
-for they are a part of his creed. A true knight, he has been taught,
-should defend to the uttermost the oppressed, aid the weak, and be
-brave, courteous, chaste, temperate, generous, and pious.
-
-
-=Questions to help the pupil understand the picture.= Who was Sir
-Galahad? Upon what quest is he about to start? What preparation has he
-made for it? How old is he now? How did he receive the title “Sir”? What
-was the Holy Grail? What power had this cup? What could it not do for
-the person who saw it? Why was the sight of the Grail denied to
-
-King Amfortas? What other punishment did he receive? Who could break
-this spell? how? What did Sir Galahad hope to do? How is he dressed?
-What protection was this armor? What might happen if he should be
-unhorsed? What weapons did he carry? How had Sir Galahad secured his
-sword and shield? Tell about the Round Table of King Arthur and the
-Siege Perilous. What happened when Sir Galahad entered? Of what did all
-these mysteries persuade the other knights? What happened when Sir
-Galahad came to the Castle of the Grail? Why did he fail? What was the
-result of this defeat? When did he succeed? What was the result? What is
-the main thought expressed in this picture?
-
-
-=The story of the artist.= George Frederick Watts was born and raised in
-London, England. He learned to draw, we are told, much in the same way
-he learned to talk. His parents encouraged him always, and he seems to
-have had very few obstacles to overcome.
-
-Though Watts entered the Royal Academy school of painting at an early
-age, he did not study there long. His art education was thus gained
-largely by his own efforts and observation. He studied ancient Greek
-sculpture closely and his work was always influenced by the classical
-standard.
-
-Watts lived in an age when the spirit of reform was uppermost, and men
-were preaching, thinking, and living it. No wonder, then, his work is
-full of thoughtful purpose, urging us on to the best that is in us.
-
-He said, “I want to teach people to live ... to teach something higher
-than money making or mere pleasure getting ... to suggest great
-thoughts.” He did not paint, as many others had, for the mere pleasure
-of it, or even from inspiration, but rather for some definite purpose.
-In the Tate Gallery at London is a great collection of the paintings
-which give the artist’s message to the world. In 1843 the Royal
-Commission appointed for the decoration of the new Houses of Parliament
-awarded one of the prizes to Watts for his fresco design. This enabled
-him to study in Italy for three years. There he gained much in the
-richness of his coloring and ease in brush-work.
-
-Of his paintings for the government “The First Naval Victory of the
-English” and “St. George Overcomes the Dragon” are perhaps the best
-known. Other famous pictures by Watts are entitled “Ganymede,” “Orpheus
-and Eurydice,” and “Psyche.” In 1867 Watts became a member of the Royal
-Academy. He worked very hard, producing a great many paintings. With
-noble generosity he donated a large number of pictures to his country,
-particularly portraits of famous men, among them Lord Tennyson, Robert
-Browning, Swinburne, Dante, Gabriel Rossetti, Burne-Jones, and William
-Morris.
-
-The last few years of his life were devoted principally to portrait
-painting. When Tennyson was writing “Elaine,” he asked Watts to tell him
-his idea of a good portrait, and afterwards wrote this description from
-the answer:
-
- “As when a painter, gazing on a face,
- Divinely thro’ all hindrance finds the man
- Behind it, and so paints him that his face,
- The shape and color of a mind and life,
- Lives for his children ever at his best.”
-
-
-=Questions about the artist.= Who was the artist, and where was he born?
-What help did he have in realizing his ambition to become an artist?
-What was his aim in painting pictures? Give in your own words Mr.
-Watts’s idea of what a good portrait should be. What helped him to go to
-Italy? What benefit did he get from his study in Italy? Name some great
-men whose portraits Watts painted.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- A READING FROM HOMER
-
-
-=Questions to arouse interest.= What nationality is represented in this
-picture? Why do you think so? To what are they listening? What do their
-expressions indicate their feelings to be? What musical instruments do
-you see in the picture? From the picture, would you say that the people
-are outdoors or indoors? why?
-
-
- =Artist=: Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema (ăl´m_ä_-tăd´ēm_ȧ_).
- =Birthplace=: Dronrijp, the Netherlands.
- =Dates=: Born, 1836; died, 1912.
-
-
-=The story of the picture.= Let us imagine ourselves in that great
-walled-in city of Athens at the time of its greatest prosperity (fourth
-century B.C.). At whatever gate we enter—and there are many of them—our
-attention will be drawn toward the high, steep hill called the
-Acropolis, around which the city is built. We may reach the top of this
-hill in a chariot driven over a road of marble, or climb the marble
-steps, entering the magnificent gateway where we find many beautiful
-statues, temples, and altars. From this height we obtain a fine view of
-the city, the sea, other small hills, temples, and flat-roofed houses.
-As we look about us, we are surprised at the absence of spires or
-towers. There are no high towers or tall buildings. Most of the houses
-we see are one-story. The reason for this, it is said, is the frequency
-of earthquakes. The exterior of the houses is very plain. They are built
-of common stone, brick, or wood, coated with plaster, and so close to
-the street that if the door opens outward, the owner is compelled to
-knock before opening it in order to avoid injuring the passer-by in the
-street. There are no windows on the lower floor at the front of the
-house.
-
-Beside the door is a statue of Hermes (god of highways, doorways, and
-boundaries and the bringer of good luck), or an altar to Apollo (god of
-light and the sun, and the protector from all evil); and over the door
-we may notice an inscription such as “To the good genius,” followed by
-the name of the master of the house. We raise the handle of the great
-knocker, and scarcely has the sound echoed back to us when the door is
-opened by the porter. We must be careful to step in with our right foot
-first, as it is considered unlucky to cross the threshold with the left
-foot. A long corridor or hall leads us to the open court, where all is
-as beautiful as the exterior is plain. Usually a fountain and flowers
-brighten the marble court, while on each side of it are the banqueting,
-music, sitting, and sleeping rooms, picture galleries, and libraries.
-
-But the Greeks spent so much time out of doors that a house was to them
-only a safe place for their families and their property—a shelter from
-storm. Most of the houses had porticoes or porches, and often the second
-story consisted of nothing but these porches around the open court. The
-flat tiled roofs were used as promenades.
-
-Probably the Greeks in our picture are seated on one of these porches,
-or they may be in one of the summer pavilions which so many wealthy
-Greeks had erected in their yards or grassy plots back of the house.
-Here they spent their afternoons and were entertained with music or by
-the tales of wandering minstrels or readers.
-
-The scene in the picture is represented as if it were in the open air;
-the column and stone wall behind the reader suggest a part of a house.
-In the distance we catch a glimpse of the blue sea. The slightly raised
-seat of the reader indicates that it is a place built expressly for this
-purpose.
-
-Before the Greeks wrote their stories it was the custom of certain bards
-or readers to go about from place to place singing or reciting the
-stories of events which have made their national history. Even when the
-stories were written, these bards were in great favor, for the Greeks
-preferred to hear the music of verse recited, and to feel the thrill of
-enthusiasm which could be aroused by the human voice, and not by a
-lifeless tablet or book.
-
-The swaying form of the reader, his rapt expression, his flashing eye,
-his musical voice rising and falling like the sea,—these were the result
-of inspiration and had power to arouse men to noble actions. In our
-picture we see such a reader giving an interpretation or reading, much
-as our best elocutionists do now. In his hand he holds a long scroll
-from which he reads.
-
-The Greeks used the Egyptian papyrus, and later the more expensive, but
-finer, parchment, to write upon. The reed pen was used, and double
-inkstands for black and red ink, which could be fastened to the belts or
-girdles of the writers. In libraries, the scrolls were arranged on
-shelves with the ends outward, or in pigeon holes. The reader unrolled
-one end of the scroll with one hand, while with the other he rolled up
-the part he had read.
-
-Of all the Greek stories none were more fascinating than those of the
-immortal Homer. According to tradition, Homer was a schoolmaster who,
-growing tired of teaching, began to travel. Wandering about from place
-to place, he finally became blind. After this great affliction came upon
-him, he returned to his native town, where he dictated his two great
-poems, the _Iliad_ and the _Odyssey_. Afterwards he wandered about from
-town to town, singing them, and adding to them as inspiration came. It
-is not even known where he was born, but, according to an old Greek
-epigram,
-
- “Seven rival towns contend for Homer dead,
- Through which the living Homer begged his bread.”
-
-
-He was a beggar, and yet he was a welcome guest at every home, for he
-could play upon his four-stringed harp and sing of the wonderful deeds
-of the Greek gods and heroes.
-
-The subject of Homer’s _Iliad_ is the story of the siege of Troy. In a
-contest between Aphrodite (Venus) and two other goddesses, Aphrodite,
-the goddess of love and beauty, had promised Paris, son of the King of
-Troy, that if he would declare her the most beautiful of the goddesses
-he should have for his wife the handsomest woman of his time, Helen,
-wife of the King of Sparta. Paris granted her request and, going to
-Sparta, with Aphrodite’s aid he carried off Helen to Troy.
-
-Of course her husband, the King of Sparta, objected. He appealed to all
-the Grecian princes to help him, and soon a hundred thousand men sailed
-away in eleven hundred and eighty-six ships across the Ægean Sea, and
-camped before the walls of Troy. The siege lasted ten years.
-
-Troy was finally taken by stratagem. The Greeks pretended to abandon the
-siege, leaving behind them a great wooden horse as an offering to Athena
-(Minerva), goddess of wisdom, and the special defender of citadels.
-
-The Trojans could not find out their reason for building the monster;
-but while they were talking about it and gazing at it some shepherds
-brought into the town a young Greek named Sinon, whom they had captured.
-He told a pitiful story. He said the Greek leader hated him, and had
-induced the Greek soothsayer to declare that he must be put to death as
-a sacrifice for their safe return to Greece. He had escaped, and hidden
-in a swamp until the Greeks had gone.
-
-The Trojans were ready to be kind to any man whom the Greeks hated, and
-he was set free at once.
-
-“But tell us,” said the king, “why that monster of a horse was built.”
-
-Sinon declared it was a sacrifice to Athena because she was angry with
-them. He said, “It was made too large to pass through your gates, for
-they knew that if it was once within your walls it would protect you,
-and victory would come to you instead of to the Greeks.”
-
-The Trojans believed every word of this, and ordered the huge horse
-brought within their city, even though they were obliged to take down
-part of the wall in order to make the opening large enough. That night
-the treacherous Sinon opened a door in the body of the horse and let out
-the armed Greeks who were hidden inside. They quietly slipped to the
-ground by means of a rope, killed the watchmen, and opened the gates to
-the Greek army which had returned and was waiting outside. A terrible
-battle followed, in which nearly all the Trojans were killed. Helen was
-taken back to Greece.
-
-In Homer’s _Odyssey_ he tells the adventures of Ulysses, King of Ithaca,
-during the return journey from Troy. Ulysses had been one of the bravest
-of the Greek leaders, and was one of the heroes concealed in the wooden
-horse. The poem is full of vivid description and noble sentiments, both
-pathetic and sublime, and it stirred the hearts of the Greeks with pride
-and joy.
-
-It is easy to see the interest in the faces of the listeners in the
-picture. Partly robed in a rose-colored garment, the reader sits on a
-chair of marble, holding on his knees a roll of papyrus, from which he
-is reading to a group of four persons before him. A wreath of bay leaves
-crowns his head, and as he leans forward his face expresses enthusiasm
-while he tells the thrilling adventures of the hero of Homer’s story.
-
-In the center of the background we see a woman. On her hair is a crown
-of daffodils, and in her left hand something resembling a tambourine.
-She half sits, half reclines, on a marble bench, a resting place which
-the Greeks always preferred to chairs. On the floor near her, in an
-attitude of careless ease, sits a young man who is very likely her
-lover, since he is holding her hand. His face expresses his interest in
-the story. In his right hand he holds a lyre, which suggests that the
-company has been listening to music, and that they will enjoy it again
-after this recital.
-
-How intent their faces are as they follow in imagination all the
-adventures of their sturdy ancestors! Near the center of the picture and
-stretched out gracefully on the marble floor is a youth who appears
-anxious not to lose one word of the story. At the left we see a man
-standing. He wears a crown of flowers on his head, and wraps his long
-cloak closely about him. His face is wild and sad. His appearance seems
-to tell that he has duties elsewhere and ought to leave, but is being
-held by the story.
-
-The people are all dressed in typical Greek costumes. The dress of Greek
-men and women was very much alike. When they appeared on the streets
-they wore a cloak which consisted of a large square piece of cloth so
-wrapped about them as to leave only the right arm free. It required much
-skill to drape it gracefully, and the manner in which this was done
-decided the taste and elegance of the wearer. The women and men of the
-higher classes wore what they called a _chiton_, or dress which
-consisted of two short pieces of cloth sewed or clasped together and
-fastened over the shoulder, leaving open spaces for the arms. It was
-fastened at the waist with a girdle. A man usually wore this _chiton_,
-although he was considered fully dressed in the cloak alone. It was the
-lower classes who wore the tanned skins, so the young man lying on the
-floor is probably a servant.
-
-A touch of bright color is added to this picture by the flowers in the
-girl’s hair and those scattered on the bench beside her.
-
-The flesh painting in this picture is claimed to be the most perfect
-that Alma-Tadema ever did, and the painting of the girl and her lover,
-one of his highest efforts. The reader is the center of interest in the
-picture. The light, the lines, and the position of the figures make this
-apparent.
-
-The painting of these five large figures occupied the artist only eight
-weeks, but the preliminary studies before he began painting took eight
-months.
-
-Alma-Tadema excelled in his painting of marble, and this picture gave
-him every opportunity to display his genius, since nearly the entire
-background is of marble. The delicate colors of the young girl’s
-costume, with the few bright touches of color in the flowers; the
-darker, richer colors of the men’s cloaks; and back of it all the clear
-opalescent colors of marble and the deep blue of the sea beyond give the
-picture a distinctive beauty which is most pleasing to the eye. A close
-student of Greek history, Alma-Tadema has been particular to see that
-every little detail is in harmony, and consistent with the age and
-country.
-
-
-=Questions to help the pupil understand the picture.= What is the center
-of interest in this picture? What lines in the picture direct your eye
-to the reader? How does the light do this? the position of the figures?
-Tell something of Greek life; of Homer; of the siege of Troy. Why did it
-take the artist eight months to get ready to paint this picture?
-
-=To the Teacher=: Each pupil may be asked to draw one Greek ornament
-from some history, encyclopedia, or dictionary.
-
-
- SUBJECTS FOR COMPOSITIONS
-
- A Day in a Greek Home.
- A Greek Library.
- Homer and His Writings.
- A Description of “A Reading from Homer.”
- The Artist.
-
-
-=The story of the artist.= Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, of Dutch parentage,
-was born in the little village of Dronrijp near Leewarden, the
-Netherlands, in the year 1836. When he was very young his father died,
-leaving his mother with a large family and small means, and it was
-decided from the first that Alma-Tadema must learn a good trade or
-profession. His progress at school caused his mother much anxiety, for
-the boy cared for nothing except Roman history, which he began to study
-by himself. Having secured some quaint old coins in the neighborhood, he
-spent much of his time copying the heads of the emperors on the coins.
-
-He soon began to show remarkable talent for painting. A portrait which
-he painted of his sister was exhibited when he was only fifteen years
-old. But his mother wished him to become a lawyer, because she felt it
-would bring the best financial returns. He tried to please her, but a
-serious illness was the result. When the doctor advised the mother to
-let him become an artist she gave her consent, and it is said the boy
-recovered with astonishing rapidity.
-
-He studied at Antwerp many years, winning such success that he sent for
-his mother and sister to come to live with him. Then he began to make a
-special study of Egypt, Greece, and Rome. After his marriage to an
-English lady he moved to London, where he lived the rest of his life.
-
-His love for marble and the polished surfaces of bronze, gold, and other
-metals is clearly shown in most of his pictures. Even his portraits
-usually represent the sitter as glancing in a mirror or in some way
-reflected in it.
-
-Perhaps no other artist has ever made so much use of flowers in his
-pictures. The flowers seem to add the one touch of bright color which
-beautifies the whole picture.
-
-Alma-Tadema gives us a clear understanding of the home life of the
-Greeks and Romans, and so has become known as the “Painter of the
-Ancients.”
-
-Alma-Tadema became a British subject in 1873. His home in St. Johns
-Wood, in the northwest part of London, is described as a most
-interesting place. The first glimpse of it, seen through the trees,
-shows the gilded weather vane in the form of a palette; later, the stone
-pillars of the Roman porch. In all its details the house is carefully
-and beautifully furnished: the brass knocker on the door, the entrance
-into a sort of sun parlor paved with tiles and bright with beautiful
-flowers, and the sound of a fountain near at hand. A flight of marble
-steps leads to a hall in which beautiful painted panels (the gifts of
-friends) are the chief decoration. Great tiger skins cover the floor.
-
-Mrs. Tadema also is an artist, and has her studio on this floor. In her
-studio and the living rooms she has given full sway to her own fancy for
-the sixteenth-century old Dutch, most of their contents having been
-brought from the Netherlands. Alma-Tadema’s taste is purely classical,
-and his studio is consistent in all respects—marble pillars, carved
-wood-work, chairs, and cushions. Here he lived and worked with this
-motto before him:
-
- “As the Sun colours Flowers
- So Art colours Life.”
-
-
-=Questions about the artist.= Of what nationality was the artist? Why
-was his mother so anxious to have him learn a trade or profession? What
-did he like to study? What picture did he exhibit when he was fifteen
-years old? What prevented his becoming a lawyer? What countries did he
-prefer to represent? What materials did he excel in painting? For what
-has he become famous?
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: THE GOLDEN STAIRS
-
-
-
-
- THE GOLDEN STAIRS
-
-
-=Questions to arouse interest.= What does this picture represent? What
-is there unusual about this stairway? Why do you suppose Burne-Jones
-painted the stairs without a railing? What is there unusual about these
-figures? What are they carrying in their hands? Where are they going?
-Where did they come from? Do they seem to be standing still or moving?
-What makes you think so? Are they noisy or quiet in their movements? Why
-do you think so? Why has the leader raised her hand? What can you see in
-the window above the stairs? Is this a sad or a happy procession? Why do
-you think so? What do you like best about this picture?
-
-
- =Original Picture=: Private Collection of Lord Battersea, England.
- =Artist=: Sir Edward Burne-Jones (bûrn-jōnz).
- =Birthplace=: Birmingham, England.
- =Dates=: Born, 1833; died, 1898.
-
-
-=The story of the picture.= The artist, Burne-Jones, was a student and a
-dreamer. As a small, motherless boy he had been left much alone in a
-home in which storybooks were considered wicked, so there were none for
-him to read. His father was a strong churchman and intended his son for
-the ministry. He was endeavoring as best he knew how to fit him for his
-high calling by a training which, though perfectly sincere and honest in
-purpose, was rather gloomy and severe for the delicate, sensitive boy.
-However, little Edward was naturally of an imaginative mind, so he made
-up his own stories. A relative sent him a copy of _Æsop’s Fables_, and
-this book he was permitted to keep. It seems to have brought the turning
-point in the boy’s life. From that time on he dwelt in a fairyland of
-his own making.
-
-When he was sent away to school to prepare for the ministry, he carried
-his fancies with him, adding to them the many legends of Greek
-mythology; of literature, especially those wonderful stories of King
-Arthur’s court; and of the Bible. His desire to become an artist was
-aroused by another student, William Morris, the two spending all their
-spare time drawing and painting. Nevertheless, he was twenty-three years
-old before he saw any of the great masterpieces in painting.
-
-From the very first, Burne-Jones chose subjects which were mysterious,
-fairylike, and unreal, but his pictures were so filled with music,
-beauty, and happiness that it was a delight to look at them.
-
-His idea of a good picture was very different from that of the
-practical, painstaking Millet, who represented everything and everybody
-as they actually appeared before him in the very field or place he had
-found them.
-
-Burne-Jones tells us: “I mean by a picture a beautiful, romantic dream
-of something that never was, never will be, in a light better than any
-light that has ever shone, in a land no one can define or remember, only
-dream.” And so when asked to paint a decoration for a hallway in one of
-the fine old London homes he thought at once of a stairway, and the
-painting of “The Golden Stairs” is the result. It would seem indeed a
-dream, this angel host descending from we know not where and halting at
-that mysterious closed door which leads we know not whither. But hush!
-the leader has half raised her hand, turning this way as if to ask for
-silence. Each figure stops instantly, holding herself motionless, while
-the musical instruments are slightly lowered that all may listen more
-intently. And yet, this is a joyous procession,—the gayly colored
-wreaths of flowers which most of them are wearing, the musical
-instruments, the happy faces, all tell us this is an errand of pleasure.
-Might it not be that this host of angels is descending upon the sleeping
-world to soothe the restless, worried ones, and smooth the puckered,
-aching brows in quiet slumber? Lulled by their gentle music, or the
-rustle of their approaching footsteps, the weary one would soon find
-refreshing sleep.
-
-The light in the picture seems to come from above, yet is all about and
-around the figures, as if they were the source of the illumination. They
-come from a darkened doorway, and enter one quite as dark except for the
-light they bring to it.
-
-The greater part of the picture is painted in shades of gray, but it is
-relieved by the flesh tints, and the gayly colored flowers worn in
-wreaths or scattered on the steps. Here is delicate, exquisite coloring,
-and figures drawn with such careful attention to details that each seems
-complete in itself, yet all are held together in one great harmony.
-
-It is interesting to draw an oblong of this same proportion and then
-represent the curved lines in this picture; it makes us feel the
-movement, swing, and rhythm which come to us like approaching music.
-
-The picture is full of idyllic charm which takes us away from all the
-prosaic details of everyday life to a fairyland where this happy throng
-may come and go with music, flowers, and delight. The calm, thoughtful
-faces, so full of kindly purpose and high ideals, cannot fail to inspire
-us with good thoughts.
-
-The dove in the upper casement window is typical of the peace that
-pervades this scene. The faint, far from earthly, shadows, the bare
-feet, even the stairway without a railing or protection of any kind, all
-suggest that our youthful maidens are celestial beings. Their
-destination we can only guess. Perhaps that is why the picture has had
-several names: “The King’s Wedding,” “Music on the Stairs,” and the one
-by which it is now known, “The Golden Stairs.”
-
-Burne-Jones made many beautiful designs for stained-glass windows, and
-we can but regret that he did not produce this picture in that way also.
-
-
-=Questions to help the pupil understand the picture.= Tell about the
-boyhood and early training of the artist. What book influenced him most?
-How did it affect his choice of subjects to paint? How did he happen to
-become interested in art? How old was he before he first saw a great
-painting? Compare the subjects chosen by Burne-Jones and by Millet as to
-character and feeling. What was Burne-Jones’s idea of a good picture?
-How did he happen to paint “The Golden Stairs”? For what room was it
-intended? What colors did the artist use in this painting? In what ways
-does it suggest music? How would you explain the destination of these
-maidens? their errand? from whence they come? What would you consider
-the chief charm in the picture?
-
-
-=The story of the artist.= We have heard how the small Burne-Jones was
-brought up by a rather strict but ambitious father, and perhaps have
-felt sorry for the boy who used to spend hours before the windows of a
-book store, gazing at the even rows of books with such wistful longing.
-But we need not feel so, for it was this very desire for books and
-stories that led him to use his own imaginative power.
-
-When he was old enough to begin serious preparation for the ministry his
-father sent him to King Edward’s School. Here he earned a scholarship to
-Oxford. When he left home for Oxford it seemed as if his real life had
-begun, for it was here that he met friends who had the same tastes and
-longings as himself. One friend in particular, William Morris, shared
-with him his new-found delight in art. Both had intended to prepare for
-the ministry, but now they decided to give up all else and pursue the
-study of art. So at the age of twenty-three Burne-Jones left Oxford and
-went to London, where he began painting in earnest. From the very first
-he showed great originality both in his subjects and in his manner of
-representation.
-
-Many of his subjects were taken from the Bible, from Greek mythology, or
-from stories of King Arthur’s court. Sometimes he painted with but the
-one idea of making something beautiful, as in this picture of “The
-Golden Stairs.”
-
-Burne-Jones was fortunate in his first teacher, Rossetti, who was a man
-so filled with the beauty of a scene that he must paint it for sheer
-joy. In order to pay for this instruction Burne-Jones made designs for
-stained-glass windows, and became famous for the beauty of these
-windows. The one at Trinity Church, Boston, is called “David Instructing
-Solomon in the Building of the Temple.” At Oxford is the famous Saint
-Cecilia window he designed for Christ Church College.
-
-It seems strange that Burne-Jones should wait until he grew to manhood
-before he discovered that he had the desire and the ability to draw.
-Other artists tell of the years spent in longing, and their constant
-struggle for the sake of their art. But when Burne-Jones made up his
-mind, he spent no time in experiment or even practice. He devoted all
-his time to the one idea which filled his thoughts. He made no effort
-whatever to find out whether his work would meet with popular favor or
-not, beginning at once with what he knew to be his right material.
-
-The only difference to be noticed in his first and his last paintings
-was a difference in the speed and skill with which he handled the
-paints. New ideas occurred to him so rapidly that he formed the habit of
-making quick sketches and putting them aside until he had time to work
-them out carefully.
-
-Burne-Jones had never rebelled against the profession his father chose
-for him. Indeed, he felt satisfied and made every effort to succeed in
-it. Perhaps if he had remained at home, or even if he had not met the
-enthusiastic William Morris just when he did, he might never have
-discovered his power as a painter.
-
-The knowledge of the disappointment at home and the small means at his
-disposal did not hinder him from forsaking the profession his family had
-chosen for him, for was he not following the advice of the great
-painter, Rossetti? Not many young artists have found such a friend as
-Rossetti was to Burne-Jones. He not only gave the desired instruction
-but helped his pupil get such work as he was capable of doing. When the
-glass makers applied to Rossetti for a design for a stained-glass
-window, he declined to undertake the work but recommended his pupil
-instead.
-
-A visit to Italy gave Burne-Jones new inspiration. Later when William
-Morris married and went to live in a house which had been built for him
-at Bexley Heath, he had difficulty in furnishing this house to suit his
-taste and desire for beautiful things. This led Morris to establish a
-firm to make such things. Of course Burne-Jones was heartily in sympathy
-with his friend and put his talents as a designer at the disposal of the
-firm. His wonderful imagination and fine powers of expression produced
-all kinds of decorative work, such as tapestries, embroideries, carved
-chests, book covers, book illustrations, and decorations for pianos,
-screens, and friezes.
-
-Although he received so much praise in his later years, at first he,
-too, had to pass through the fire of criticism and even ridicule. At one
-time Burne-Jones was ridiculed in the pages of _Punch_, while in another
-magazine he was spoken of as the “greenery-yallery Grosvenor-gallery
-young man.” But these criticisms were soon forgotten, and all England
-was proud to honor this artist with medals. In 1894 Burne-Jones was
-given the title of baronet.
-
-
-=Questions about the artist.= Tell about the boyhood of Burne-Jones; his
-education. What kind of subjects did he choose for his paintings? What
-was his idea of a good painting? Who was his first teacher? Why did he
-wait so long before he began to study painting? What can you say of his
-imagination? Tell about William Morris and his new home. What did
-Burne-Jones do for his friend?
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-[Illustation: AURORA]
-
-
-
-
- AURORA
-
-
-=Questions to arouse interest.= What goddess does this represent? Whom
-is she leading? Upon what do they rest? Over what are they passing? What
-has Aurora in her hands? Toward whom is she looking? In what is Apollo
-riding? How many horses has he? What has the cherub in his hand? Which
-way does the flame blow? why? What makes you think they are moving? In
-what direction do their garments blow? Who painted this picture? Why do
-you like it?
-
-
- =Original Picture=: Pavilion of the Rospigliosi Palace, Rome, Italy.
- =Artist=: Guido Reni (gwē’dō rā’nē).
- =Birthplace=: Bologna, Italy.
- =Dates=: Born, 1575; died, 1642.
-
-
-=The story of the picture.= Imagine yourself in that far-famed city of
-Rome, driving through its white streets to the great Quirinal Palace to
-see the original of our picture. The Quirinal, a very large and very
-ordinary looking building, has been the scene of many interesting
-events, and is always used as the meeting place for the cardinals who
-elect the pope. Our drive ends here, but it is only the beginning of our
-journey. After a delightful walk through a courtyard so completely
-surrounded by high stone walls that we should never have guessed its
-existence, we come to another palace. This palace is much more
-beautiful, although not so large. It is called the Rospigliosi Palace
-because it has always belonged to a family of that name. Then we pass on
-through a beautiful garden of magnolias until we reach the pavilion or
-casino of the palace, where we find our picture.
-
-There are several rooms in this pavilion, but it is the middle room
-which holds our attention, for it is up on the ceiling of this room that
-we see Aurora, goddess of the morning, leading the way for the fiery
-steeds of Apollo, the sun god. As we enter, such a glow of color fills
-the room that we know instinctively this must be the place. First, we
-see Aurora herself, flying ahead, scattering the clouds of night and
-showering roses and dewdrops over the sleeping earth. She looks back
-toward Apollo, the sun god, to see if he is following her on his journey
-around the heavens in his chariot of the sun. The horses are restless
-and eager and it takes a steady hand to guide them.
-
-Some idea of the difficulties attending such a journey may be gained
-from the Greek story of Phaëthon. According to this story, Apollo had a
-son named Phaëthon. One day the boy came to him, complaining that the
-other boys made fun of him when he told them who his father was. They
-said they did not believe that a boy who could do nothing at all could
-be the son of the mighty Apollo. This made the father very angry, and
-when Phaëthon asked him to let him do something that should prove to the
-world that he was Apollo’s son, Apollo told the boy he would give him
-permission to do whatever he asked.
-
-The boy quickly asked permission to drive the sun chariot for one day.
-But this request alarmed Apollo, who said, “None but myself may drive
-the flaming car of day,—not even Jupiter, whose terrible right arm
-drives the thunderbolts.”
-
-He urged his son to take back his request before it was too late,
-warning him it would prove his destruction. But the boy was only the
-more anxious to drive, and held his father to his promise.
-
-Then Apollo told Phaëthon of the journey. “The first part of the way,”
-he said, “is so very steep that, although the horses start out in the
-best possible condition, they can hardly climb it; the next part is so
-high up in the heavens that I dare not look down upon the earth and sea
-below, lest I grow dizzy and fall; the last part of the journey is the
-most difficult of all, because the road descends rapidly and it is hard
-to guide the horses. And all this time,” Apollo went on, “the heavens
-are turning around and carrying the stars with them.”
-
-But even as he spoke, Aurora threw open the cloud curtains which hid the
-earth, and there appeared the road upon which she cast her roses while
-beckoning to the eager boy. Hardly listening to his father’s anxious
-warnings, Phaëthon jumped into the golden chariot, grasped the reins of
-the four fiery steeds, and off they started.
-
-At first he remembered what Apollo had said, and was careful, but he
-soon grew reckless, driving at full speed. The horses, knowing it was
-not their master’s hand, took the bits between their teeth and were soon
-out of his control. For a time they followed the road, but when that was
-lost they began to descend toward the earth so rapidly it seemed as if
-they would be dashed to pieces. Then up again they started in reckless,
-dizzy flight. At times they came so close to fields and woods as to
-scorch and blacken them. Other fields they did not pass, and these were
-frostbitten.
-
-Then a great wail of complaint went up from the earth. This cry was
-heard by Jupiter, the most powerful of the gods, who, looking earth-ward
-and discovering the cause of all this trouble, was very angry. With his
-terrible right arm he drove a thunderbolt at the reckless youth, and in
-an instant Phaëthon fell from the chariot headlong into the sea. The
-horses, finding themselves free, returned to Apollo, and never since
-then has any hand but his been permitted to guide them.
-
-The Greeks declared that the great desert of Sahara in Africa is the
-place where the sun’s chariot scorched the earth, and that it was then
-that the African negroes were burned black. Phaëthon’s boy friend, who
-was constantly diving down into the water trying to recover his body,
-was turned into a swan, and Phaëthon’s weeping sisters were changed into
-poplar trees.
-
-In our picture we see Apollo holding the reins, accompanied by the Hours
-and preceded by Aurora and the cherub torch-bearer or morning star. They
-seem to be moving rapidly on their way, borne up by the clouds. The sky
-is a brilliant, golden yellow, and its fleecy clouds are tinged with
-purple. The graceful figures of the Hours are each represented in pale
-or brighter-colored draperies according to the time of day to which they
-belong. Aurora herself is clothed in rainbow hues, her draperies flying
-with her swift progress. Far below we see the land and sea, wrapped in
-slumber, awaiting the coming of the dawn.
-
-
-=Questions to help the pupil understand the picture.= Where is the
-original painting of the “Aurora”? What goddess does it represent? What
-is the Greek myth concerning her? What part has Apollo in this picture?
-How many horses does he drive? How are the Hours represented? What does
-the cherub carrying a torch represent? In what direction does the flame
-of the torch blow? Why is Apollo’s journey so difficult? Who was
-Phaëthon? What did he ask of Apollo? Why did he wish to do this? Why was
-Apollo alarmed? Tell about Phaëthon’s journey, and what happened to him.
-Upon what does the chariot seem to rest? Over what are they passing?
-What colors did the artist use in this painting?
-
-
- =To the Teacher=:
-
- SUBJECTS FOR COMPOSITIONS
-
- Aurora, Goddess of the Morning.
- Apollo, the Sun God.
- The Story of Phaëthon, Apollo’s Son.
-
-=The story of the artist.= Guido Reni was born in the little village of
-Bologna, Italy. As a small child he gave every promise of becoming an
-accomplished musician. His father, himself a gifted performer, began to
-teach him to play the flute and harpsichord as soon as he was old enough
-to handle the instruments. Guido had a beautiful voice, and the father
-hoped to make a fine musician of him. But the boy also had a beautiful,
-sunshiny face which attracted the attention of an artist, who asked
-permission to paint him as an angel in several pictures. After watching
-this artist at work, Guido began to wish to paint pictures, too, and was
-permitted to take a few lessons.
-
-His first picture was a surprise to the artist, causing him to urge
-Guido’s father to allow the boy to develop his talent. About this time,
-too, Guido began to make all kinds of interesting figures in clay, and
-his fingers were always busy.
-
-At thirteen years of age he so excelled the other pupils of the artist
-that he was allowed to teach some of them.
-
-Later Guido went to Rome, where he remained for twenty years in great
-favor. He then moved to Bologna and there opened a large school for art
-students. He made his home in Bologna during the rest of his life. Guido
-Reni might have lived all his life in splendor and ease, for he earned
-great sums of money; but as his fame grew he became more and more
-extravagant in his habits, and so was always in debt. He was obliged to
-paint hurriedly, and to the utmost of his genius, that he might have
-more pictures to sell.
-
-However, his keen sense of beauty did not desert him, and his popularity
-continued to the end. He was especially skillful in representing
-beautiful upraised faces of women and children. One day a young nobleman
-met Guido Reni and asked him where he found such lovely models for his
-paintings. He said the other artists were wondering about it and thought
-him very selfish to keep them to himself. Guido replied in a mysterious
-voice, “Come to my studio, signor, and I will show you my beautiful
-model.” So, filled with delight and eager anticipation, the nobleman
-tiptoed after the artist up the stairs to the studio. You can imagine
-how he must have felt when Guido Reni called his color-grinder, who has
-been described as “a great greasy fellow, with a brutal look,” and posed
-him.
-
-As the color-grinder sat quietly looking up through the skylight, Guido
-took a pencil and after sketching very rapidly for a few minutes, showed
-his guest a sketch of a beautiful Magdalen gazing upward. Then turning
-to his visitor, he said earnestly, “Dear Count, say to your ‘other
-artists’ that a beautiful idea must be in the imagination, and in that
-case any model will serve.”
-
-Guido Reni had the greatest admiration for the paintings of Raphael and
-went to Rome just to study them.
-
-As he loved to work with clay himself, he spent much of his time in Rome
-studying the beautiful pieces of statuary there. He tells us that his
-favorites were the Venus de Medici and Niobe.
-
-Pleasant and courteous to all, he made friends everywhere and was
-greatly beloved. Once when he was very ill his friends hired musicians
-to play just outside his door. This pleased him greatly, as he was
-always passionately fond of music. He said to them, “And what, then,
-will be the melodies of Paradise?”
-
-Guido Reni was a great favorite of Pope Paul V and many of his pictures
-were painted for the Pope. When he returned from Rome to Bologna, he
-found himself more popular than ever and quite overwhelmed with orders
-for pictures.
-
-Of all his paintings, the “Aurora” is generally considered his best. The
-story is told of a little girl who had lived all her life in the
-country. Upon her first visit to her uncle in the city, she discovered a
-large and splendid copy of the “Aurora” in his living room. One morning
-her uncle came into the room and found his little niece gazing at the
-picture in rapt admiration.
-
-“Well, Mary,” he said, “what do you think of it?”
-
-“Oh, uncle,” she replied, “I like it ‘cause they are in such a hurry.”
-
-So young and old have found one reason or another for liking this
-picture.
-
-Guido Reni painted many portraits as well as many historical and
-mythological pictures. Some of the best known of Guido’s paintings are:
-“Reclining Venus with Cupid,” “St. Michael and the Dragon,” “Beatrice
-Cenci,” “Little Bacchus Drinking,” and “The Mater Dolorosa of Solimena.”
-
-
-=Questions about the artist.= Where was the artist born? What two
-talents had he? How did he happen to study painting? How did he succeed
-with his first picture? What was his progress? Why was he never rich?
-What subjects did he choose? What did the young nobleman ask him? Tell
-of the nobleman’s visit to the artist’s studio. Whose paintings did
-Guido Reni admire greatly? What statues? How was he able to make so many
-friends? What was his masterpiece? What did the little country girl say
-about it? Name some of his paintings.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-[Illustration: AVENUE AT MIDDELHARNIS
-
-
-
-
- AVENUE AT MIDDELHARNIS
-
-
-=Questions to arouse interest.= What occupies the most important part of
-this picture? Describe the trees bordering the road. Where does the road
-lead? What does it pass on its way to the village? Where must the artist
-have been standing? why do you think so? What can you say about the
-perspective of this road? How much of this picture is sky? What kind of
-lines predominate—curved, straight, vertical, or horizontal? In what
-country do you think it is? Why is it so level? What are the people in
-the picture doing? What do you like best about this picture?
-
-
- =Original Picture=: National Gallery, London, England.
- =Artist=: Meyndert Hobbema (hŏb’ĕ mä).
- =Birthplace=: Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
- =Dates=: Born, 1638; died, 1709.
-
-
-=The story of the picture.= There is a little village in the Netherlands
-by the name of Middelharnis, and if we should go there to-day we should
-find just such an avenue of trees as this one in our picture. The
-artist, Hobbema, spent many years in this village, painting scenes in
-and around it. Probably he traveled over this very road countless times.
-It would seem as if we, too, were walking down the road guarded by those
-tall, slender trees which border each side of it. They are poplar trees,
-trimmed so high that we scarcely recognize them. They lead direct to the
-little village beyond, which we see between the tree trunks.
-
-Since the village is almost surrounded by the North Sea, its high church
-tower is not only picturesque by day but useful at night as a lighthouse
-or beacon to guide the sailor to a safe port.
-
-In our picture the sun is half hidden in a sky as full of fleecy clouds
-as the sky near the North Sea generally is.
-
-We must expect no hills nor elevations of any kind in the Netherlands, a
-land lying lower than the ocean. The great protecting dikes and the many
-canals extending in every direction make it one of the most interesting
-of countries.
-
-In the picture we see on each side of the road a deep ditch full of
-water. These ditches irrigate the land, flowing into deeper, wider
-canals on which sail boats of various sizes and kinds.
-
-It is said that every true Hollander can skate. In the winter, when
-these canals are frozen, young and old go about upon their various
-errands on skates. It is a common sight then to see women skating to
-market, carrying upon their heads heavy baskets filled with rolls of
-butter, cheese, eggs, or other provisions. The children skate to school,
-and men go about their business in this same pleasant way. It is easy to
-reach all parts of the village or city by these canals, for there are so
-many of them; in some cities the people have no streets, but use canals
-instead.
-
-At the right of our picture we catch a glimpse of a thrifty, well-kept
-nursery garden full of shrubs and fruit trees, which the man is busily
-trimming. He works contentedly, for all about him he sees the evidences
-of prosperity and peace.
-
-Coming toward us along this straight and level road is a huntsman
-carrying his gun over his shoulder and preceded by his dog. A path leads
-away from the road to the picturesque little cottage or farmhouse at the
-right. Two peasants, a man and a woman, stand in the path talking. We do
-not doubt they will turn to greet our hunter, for it is a friendly
-countryside, where all are treated cordially.
-
-We cannot see much on the extreme left of the picture except the trees
-which grow luxuriantly, and a flat meadow land which reaches almost to
-the village. It is a common, everyday sort of landscape, yet its charm
-seems to lie in this very fact.
-
-We would know at once if the perspective were not correct, for we have
-solved just such problems ourselves with the tree tops, or perhaps
-telegraph poles, and it gives us an added sense of pleasure to be able
-to understand just the problem Hobbema had to solve as he placed his
-easel in the middle of the road and started to paint his great canvas.
-
-The light is rather uncertain on this cloudy day. The artist used little
-color except grays and a peculiar green which he delighted in using in
-all his paintings. A touch of brighter color appears in the cheerful red
-of the roofs of his houses, which suggest something of the homely
-comfort and cleanliness that may be found in most Dutch homes.
-
-The most striking characteristic of Hobbema’s painting is his severe
-combination of vertical and horizontal lines. The positive vertical
-lines of the tree trunks standing so tall and straight against the wide
-expanse of sky are reëchoed in the shorter but equally slender trunks of
-the fruit trees in the nursery garden, and of the trees at the side of
-the path leading to the farmhouse; also in the two straight figures
-standing in the path, and again in the church tower in the distance.
-
-The horizontal lines are equally positive. They separate the garden from
-the road; they appear in the road itself, and in the horizon line
-beyond. If we make a sketch of the important lines in this picture, we
-find them either vertical or horizontal, and much more severe in outline
-than the usual diagonal or curving lines we have grown accustomed to
-looking for.
-
-Critics seem to vary as to the feeling with which this picture inspires
-them, although all agree upon its value as a masterpiece. Some declare
-there is a sort of hopelessness in the landscape which suggests the
-unhappy life of the artist, who often went hungry, and whose paintings
-were not appreciated until after his death. To them the scene is full of
-hopeless beauty, suggesting all kinds of joys which are never realized,
-yet continue just out of reach throughout a long and cheerless life. So
-it is a sad beauty, and gives one a feeling of desolation even in a land
-where all is prosperity.
-
-Other critics see only the thrifty, contented life of the Netherlands
-peasant, who by his intelligence and labor has overcome even the sea
-itself, and compelled it, by means of dikes and canals, to add to his
-safety and comfort.
-
-We know how much Hobbema must have loved his work, for he received no
-return for it during his lifetime, unless it was the joy of work; and
-yet he persevered.
-
-Can we not imagine him on a pleasant day, seated or standing at his
-easel in the middle of this road, quite forgetting poverty and even
-hunger, as he painted this beautiful landscape before him? Hobbema was
-certainly daring and full of courage when he attempted so severe and
-unusual a composition as this. He has placed his road almost exactly in
-the center of the picture, balancing the sides quite evenly, yet he has
-not made it monotonous or tiresome. The eye is constantly discovering
-new beauties in the landscape or the inclosing sky. Only a master could
-produce a work such as this.
-
-
-=Questions to help the pupil understand the picture.= What country is
-represented in this picture? What kind of trees are those bordering the
-road? To what do they lead the eye?
-
-Of what use could the church tower, in the distance, be? Why is the
-Netherlands such a level country? What can you see on each side of the
-road? Of what use are the canals? What is the man doing in the garden?
-Who else can you see in the picture? What colors did the artist use? How
-can you tell whether the perspective of the road is correct or not? What
-can you say of the sky? What can you say of the balance in the
-composition? the kinds of lines? What kind of a day is represented? What
-do some of the critics say about this picture? What is so unusual about
-this composition? Why do most artists avoid placing the center of
-interest in the middle of the picture? Why do you like this picture?
-
-
-=The story of the artist.= We know very little about the artist,
-Meyndert Hobbema, except that he was a Hollander possessing so great a
-love for his native land that he continued to represent it on canvas in
-spite of the fact that his countrymen were quite indifferent to him and
-his work. His pictures were disposed of somehow, perhaps given away, for
-when a hundred years after his death the world suddenly began to value
-them, it was found that he had left enough canvases to have made him the
-wealthiest man in the country. Yet he died in the almshouse, and was
-buried beside his wife in a pauper’s grave. Now all the Netherlands
-would give him honor, but so neglected was he during his life that it is
-impossible to find out even where he was born. Three cities claim this
-honor, but it is generally conceded that he was born at Amsterdam. It is
-certain he was married and died there. We determine the date of his
-birth by the date and his age as given in the record of his marriage.
-
-Hobbema’s paintings were so real that the people, who were used to more
-fanciful, idealized pictures, thought his commonplace and of no especial
-interest. Now they recognize the great sympathy with, and insight into,
-the very life of their country which Hobbema possessed in rare measure.
-He made it real to us, too, in his scenes of thrift and industry,
-prosperity, and smiling peace.
-
-We are told that Hobbema was “a plain, practical, matter-of-fact” man
-and his pictures make us think he must have been. Like him, they are
-plain, unassuming, and natural; free from artificial grace or fancy. He
-did not hunt for scenes of unusual beauty with romantic or weird
-stories, but chose some pleasing view near at hand and painted it just
-as it was.
-
-Sometimes he painted the same scene several times from exactly the same
-position. If all his works could be placed in one gallery for
-exhibition, we might find it rather monotonous to see so many just
-alike.
-
-But although he did not have the inventive genius of Burne-Jones or of
-many other artists, his paintings were always true to nature. He has
-been called the painter of the afternoon sun because he seemed so fond
-of the sunlight showing through the trees and casting long shadows
-across the fields.
-
-Many believe that Hobbema must have been a pupil of Ruysdael’s because
-their work was so much alike. We know that they lived in the same place
-at the same time and it is generally believed they were friends. Dealers
-often substituted the name of one for that of the other and later, when
-corrections were attempted, it was impossible to tell which was
-Hobbema’s work and which Ruysdael’s, because both had painted the same
-subjects.
-
-At one time Hobbema was appointed gauger for the town. It was his duty
-to measure the quantity of all liquids imported into Holland. This
-position must have paid a fairly good salary, for Hobbema was married
-directly after his appointment. It must have taken all his time, too,
-for he painted very little for nearly twenty years. The fact that he had
-a means of livelihood did not spur him on to greater efforts. He painted
-only when he felt like it, not very often, and small, unimportant
-pictures. Whether he lost this office before or after his wife’s death
-is not known, but for some reason or other his last years were spent in
-extreme poverty.
-
-Twenty-six years after his death his pictures began to sell, and soon
-picture dealers were scouring the country for his works.
-
-His landscapes are not full of people, animals, or anything that might
-disturb the calm, quiet restfulness of the scenes. Like Ruysdael, he too
-was compelled to call upon other artists to draw the few figures he did
-use, as he found this part most difficult.
-
-One thing we may be sure of when we look at his paintings, and that is,
-they were faithful representations of the place before him. So we may
-know just how this road leading to the village of Middelharnis really
-looked more than two centuries ago.
-
-Other famous paintings by Hobbema are entitled: “Showery Weather,”
-“Village with Water Mills,” “Woody Landscape,” “Ruins of Brederode
-Castle,” “Forest Scene,” “Cottage in a Wood,” and “Entrance to a Wood.”
-
-
-=Questions about the artist.= What kind of a man do you think Hobbema
-must have been? Why? In what ways do his pictures resemble him? What
-kind of pictures did he like to paint? What time of day? Why might an
-exhibition of all his paintings prove monotonous?
-
-What would you consider one of the best things about his paintings? What
-other great artist lived at this time and in the same place? How did
-their paintings resemble each other? What office did Hobbema hold? What
-were some of his duties? How did this position affect his work? What
-became of his paintings? Why was he so poor? Why were his paintings not
-appreciated? How are they regarded now? Why do you think Hobbema must
-have loved his work?
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-[Illustration: THE ANGELUS By Permission of Braun & Co., Paris and New
-York]
-
-
-
-
- THE ANGELUS
-
-
-=Questions to arouse interest.= In what attitude are these peasants
-standing? What have they been doing? With what have they been working?
-What can you see in the background? From what direction does the light
-come? What time of day do you think it is? in what country? Why have
-they stopped their work? Who of you can tell what the Angelus is? What
-feeling does this picture give you—one of sadness, peace, quiet, noise
-prosperity, poverty, or happiness?
-
-
- =Original Picture=: Collection Chauchard, Paris.
- =Artist=: Jean François Millet (mē´lĕ).
- =Birthplace=: Gruchy, France.
- =Dates=: Born, 1814; died, 1875.
-
-
-=The story of the picture.= Although our print is only black and white,
-we are made to feel the brightness of the sunset in this picture. The
-horizon, veiled in a haze, shows the church tower of the distant village
-faintly silhouetted against the sky, while the sinking sun casts its
-long shadows across the field. But our eyes do not dwell long on sky,
-church, or field, for the two figures draw our gaze. The bright rays
-from the setting sun fall directly upon the woman, who faces the west;
-the man, turning toward her, is partly in shadow.
-
-No doubt these two peasants have been working in the fields, the man
-digging potatoes, as we may judge by those in the basket and the two
-well-filled bags on the wheelbarrow. As he digs them, the woman gathers
-them up in her basket and empties them into the sacks. Thus busily
-engaged, they suddenly hear the church bell; its great tone coming far
-across the field reminds them that it is the hour of prayer. So putting
-down the pitchfork and basket, they stand with bowed heads as they
-repeat the evening prayer.
-
-The artist wished to paint a picture that would make us hear the bell
-sounding clearly across the deep stillness of the open field. He wished
-to make us feel, as do these peasants, the quiet solemnity of the hour.
-
-Even as a little boy Millet was greatly impressed by the sound of the
-Angelus, or bell for prayers, which was rung each morning, noon, and
-night. One of his earliest remembrances was of a time when the villagers
-bought new bells for the church, and he went with his mother and a
-neighbor to see them before they were hung. It seems that two of the old
-bells had been used to make a cannon, the third was broken, and these
-new bells were in the church waiting to be baptized before they could be
-hung in the tower. They seemed immense to the small boy, and of course
-they must have been larger than he. Millet tells of the delight and awe
-he felt when the neighbor struck the bells with the great key to the
-church door, which she carried in her hand.
-
-No wonder, then, that this picture was one of Millet’s favorites, for it
-reminded him of his boyhood home and brought back memories of the
-thoughts and experiences of his childhood. Grown to manhood, and himself
-a peasant, he, too, had heard the Angelus sounded forth from the village
-church tower, and had dropped his work to bow his head in prayer. The
-quiet and peace of such moments had left a deep impression which he
-wished to share with us.
-
-The long stretch of field suggests the industry of the peasants; the
-distant church and their bowed heads against the bright sky tell us of
-their faith.
-
-Can you not see them on their homeward journey, the man pushing the
-wheelbarrow with its heavy load, while the woman carries the basket? It
-looks as if it would be a long, tiresome tramp across the uneven field
-to the village so dimly visible in the distance.
-
-This is the time of year when the peasants’ work is hardest, for during
-the winter there is little farm work to do. We are told that the women
-spend their winter days in spinning, weaving cloth, and making clothes,
-while the men weave baskets, make their garden tools, and do what little
-work there is to do.
-
-The very simplicity of this landscape, with its lack of details, is part
-of its great charm. The quiet dignity of the man and woman, standing
-with bowed heads, the peace and quiet of the scene, and, above all, the
-sound of the sweet-toned Angelus, give us a feeling of restfulness and
-peace.
-
-The horizon line is high in this picture, yet the sky space is large
-enough to contain the heads and shoulders of our two peasants. In this
-way we are made to feel that although they are bound to earth and are a
-part of it, their thoughts soar higher. There is another life besides
-the one of toil and privation.
-
-At the time Millet painted this great picture he was wretchedly poor. He
-sent the picture to a friend in Paris, begging him to sell it and send
-the money as soon as possible. It sold for less than five hundred
-dollars. Yet not many years ago a French collector paid one hundred and
-fifty thousand dollars for this same picture.
-
-
- THE ANGELUS
-
- “They stand within the field at prayer,
- The rustic man and maid,
- While silvery thro’ the amber air
- The angel’s song is played!
-
- “They bow their heads in gratitude
- For gift of life and health;
- And for content—their highest good,
- And love—their only wealth.
-
- “There is a closeness to the soil
- In both their garb and mien
- That tells of happiness and toil,
- And quiet peace serene.
-
- “A lark above them sings and sings
- A song of hope and youth.
- Theirs is the joy of common things—
- The beauty of the truth!”
- —_Edward Wilbur Mason_
-
-
-=Questions to help the pupil understand the picture.= What time of day
-does this picture represent? What can you see in the distance? In what
-direction is the woman facing? How can you tell? What have these
-peasants been doing? Why have they stopped their work? Why is the
-picture called “The Angelus”? Tell about Millet and the new bells for
-the church. Tell something of the life of these peasants. How did the
-artist Millet know so much about their life? What can you say about the
-composition of this picture? What was the financial condition of the
-artist when he painted this picture? What did he do with this painting?
-About how much is it worth now?
-
-
-=The story of the artist.= Let us try to imagine the artist, Jean
-François Millet, as a young man nineteen years old on his first visit to
-the great city of Paris. Brought up on a farm among the lowliest of the
-French peasants, he had met few except those with whom he labored in the
-fields or those who, poorer than they, were made welcome under the ever
-hospitable roof of the elder Millets. These neighbors and friends were
-mostly sailors or farmers, who looked upon the journey to Paris as a
-great event, as indeed it was. For weeks the kind old grandmother had
-kept her spinning wheel busy, spinning and weaving the cloth for his new
-suit of clothes. She was the tailor who cut, stitched, and pressed them.
-All her savings of years had been sewed into a belt and given to him for
-this journey. As he stood in the doorway, waiting for the old stagecoach
-which presently came rattling down the stone road of the village, he
-must have felt anew the great sacrifices they were all so willing to
-make to send him where he could study his beloved art.
-
-In Paris, Millet presented an unusual appearance—six feet in height,
-slender, a downy beard on his face, his brown hair hanging to his
-shoulders. All his belongings were neatly packed in the sailor’s canvas
-bag which he carried over his shoulder. Is it any wonder that many did
-not see the straightforward, honest, manly look of the calm gray eyes?
-There was in that gaze and in the rude bearing a certain quiet
-confidence and strength which only the home folks recognized and valued.
-The boy could draw, and draw well they knew, and had not the drawing
-master of the village told them he would surely one day become a great
-artist?
-
-Tired from the three days’ ride in the old stagecoach, jostled by the
-hurrying crowds, for it was evening and all were on their way home, he
-stood confused. A policeman, catching sight of the stupid-looking youth
-blocking the sidewalk with his great bag, asked him where he wanted to
-go. Is it any wonder that he answered, “Back to Gruchy”? We are told
-that he even inquired when the next coach left for Gruchy, but there was
-none until morning.
-
-The policeman sent him to a boarding house of moderate prices, and the
-next morning he started out to find the great art gallery of the Louvre.
-He had attempted to inquire the way at the boarding house, but the
-boarders laughed at his Normandy accent and strange appearance and he
-did not wait for the answer. And so he wandered the streets for three
-days, not daring to ask the way for fear of being laughed at again,
-until at last he stood before the great gallery, recognizing it at once
-by the pictures he had seen of it.
-
-In writing of it years later, Millet says: “My feelings were too great
-for words, and I closed my eyes lest I be dazzled by the sight, and then
-dared not open them lest I should find it all a dream. And if I ever
-reach Paradise I know my joy will be no greater than it was that first
-morning when I realized that I stood within the Louvre Palace.”
-
-In the meantime he had found a room and place to board near by. The
-landlady having suggested that he had better not carry much money about
-with him, he immediately gave her all he had to keep for him; that was
-the last he saw of his money.
-
-He spent a week just visiting the Louvre, and finally became acquainted
-with a student who was copying one of the paintings. This student took
-him to the artist Delaroche, who, after looking at his sketches, gladly
-admitted him as a pupil.
-
-The other students were greatly amused at Millet’s awkward appearance
-and called him the “man of the woods.” It was almost impossible to
-persuade him to talk, and his answers to all questions were in
-monosyllables; but if pressed too hard he could use his fists
-effectively. They soon found out, too, that he could paint, and paint
-well. All idea of going home was given up, and Millet spent twelve years
-in Paris, enduring poverty and hunger but working faithfully and long.
-When he went back to his home for a visit he was so nearly starved that
-he fell fainting on the ground when he tried to work in the fields.
-
-Millet painted landscapes, portraits, and signs, but fortune never
-seemed to smile on him long at a time. People said his pictures did not
-sell because he painted such common things and such poor people instead
-of choosing beautiful girls or fine gentlemen for his models.
-
-But he painted the people he knew about and loved best—the French
-peasants—and as their lives were full of toil, he must represent them at
-their labor.
-
-Returning to Paris, and finding his life there still one of continuous
-struggle with poverty, Millet with his wife and children went to live at
-Barbizon, a small village a day’s ride from Paris. Many descriptions
-have been written and pictures painted of the modest white stone cottage
-with its clinging vines and its thrifty gardens in which he spent the
-rest of his life.
-
-It was not until the last few years of his life that he ceased to be
-wretchedly poor, for then at last his pictures were appreciated and he
-received the profit and honor that were his due.
-
-He died at Barbizon, January 20, 1875.
-
-
-=Questions about the artist.= Tell about Millet’s early training and the
-preparations made for his journey to Paris. How did he travel? Describe
-his first evening in Paris. How did he find the great gallery of the
-Louvre? Why did he not inquire the way? What became of his money? With
-whom did he study, and how did this happen? What did the other students
-call him? Why did they do this? How many years did he stay in Paris?
-What was his success there? Why did his pictures not sell? Where did he
-finally go to live? When were his paintings appreciated?
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-[Illustration: SHEEP IN SPRING]
-
-
-
-
- SHEEP IN SPRING
-
-
-=Questions to arouse interest.= What is there in this picture that
-suggests the time of year? What are the sheep doing? How many have
-watched sheep eat grass? Why do the shepherd and his dog stand in front
-of them? Of what use is the shepherd’s crook or staff? What do you see
-in the distance? Do you think this is a scene in our own country or in
-some foreign country? How are the sheep farthest away represented? Where
-does the light fall upon the sheep and upon the man? What kinds of lines
-are there in this picture? Tell some of the duties of a shepherd; of a
-shepherd’s dog. Why do sheep need so much care? Of what use are they?
-Why do you like this picture?
-
-
- =Original Picture=: Metropolitan Museum, New York City.
- =Artist=: Anton Mauve (mōv).
- =Birthplace=: Zaandam, the Netherlands
- =Dates=: Born, 1838; died, 1888.
-
-
-=The story of the picture.= The artist has taken us to his own native
-country, showing us the beauties of the fields in spring, and giving us
-much of their feeling of calm and contentment. The shepherd has led his
-sheep safely past the freshly plowed field which we see at the left of
-the picture, and now he stands in front of them so they will go more
-slowly and eat the grass closer. If one of the sheep should go too fast
-he would probably reach out with his long crook, which he would place
-around the sheep’s neck, and draw it back. The dog, too, would do his
-part to keep it where it ought to be. Sheep prefer to run ahead, taking
-a bit of grass here and a bit there, but when they are held back by the
-man and dog as in this picture, they will mow the grass as closely and
-thoroughly as if a lawnmower had passed over it.
-
-As we look at the picture we find that, though few details are shown,
-the sheep in the first row are distinct, while the rest are merely
-suggested. Anton Mauve has become famous for this very thing—the
-omission of minor details in his pictures and the simplicity with which
-he thus tells his story.
-
-We feel the warmth and vigor of this beautiful day in spring, the fresh
-green grass with here and there a flower to relieve the green, the soft
-green leaves of the young and slender trees planted on each side of the
-road at the right of the picture. This road probably leads direct to the
-farmhouse we see in the distance. The long meadow, too, seems to reach
-as far as that same farmhouse, and no doubt will provide pasture all
-summer for the sheep. Their fleecy white wool will grow long. Then will
-come sheep-shearing time, and the wool will be sent away to be woven
-into cloth.
-
-In the picture the light falls strongly upon the backs of the sheep, on
-the head and shoulders of the man, and on the wooden shoes he wears.
-
-The dog stands there expectant, ready to pursue any wayward sheep. It is
-wonderful how much these shepherd dogs know, and how much they help
-their owners. In some countries the sheep are kept out in the fields or
-among the hills all night. The shepherd rolls himself up in a blanket
-and sleeps securely near them, knowing full well that the faithful dog
-will remain on guard, allowing none to stray away or come to harm.
-
-Sometimes, when the shepherd wishes to collect his flock and drive them
-to the fold or inclosure for the night, many of them have wandered up
-into the mountains to almost inaccessible heights, but the dog will find
-them, every one. He has a way of making the sheep understand what they
-are expected to do. He circles around and around them so quickly that
-none can escape, and he seems to have some mysterious way of counting
-them, for if one is missing off he goes, seldom failing to return with
-it.
-
-The story is told of a shepherd who, with but one dog, was guarding
-seven hundred lambs. At midnight they suddenly took fright and, dividing
-into three sections, disappeared over the hills. The man could do
-nothing until daylight, but the morning found the lambs gathered in a
-valley and guarded by the faithful dog, from whose vigilance not one had
-escaped.
-
-These intelligent shepherd dogs can be made to understand their masters’
-wishes even at a great distance, for they understand and obey motions
-made with the hands.
-
-Sheep are more helpless than most animals, because they cannot defend
-themselves against wild animals and because, having no sense of
-locality, they are so easily lost or led astray.
-
-If a flock of sheep is attacked by wolves, and there are several dogs
-guarding the flock, very often the dogs will circle around the sheep
-until they have crowded them as close together as they can; then one of
-the dogs will continue walking around them, while the others attack and
-usually beat off the wolves.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Sheep in Autumn_
-]
-
-Anton Mauve has painted a companion picture to this one. The two
-pictures hang on the same wall in the Metropolitan Museum, New York
-City. The companion picture is called “Sheep in Autumn,” and, as the
-name suggests, it represents a scene in the fall of the year.
-
-The first picture brings to our mind visions of green meadows, newly
-ploughed fields, tender grass, and tiny green leaves, quickening into
-life and beauty with the arrival of the mild days of spring; but the
-second picture has a different story to tell. It is autumn now; the
-leaves and grass have ripened to a reddish brown, and the grain has been
-gathered from the field at the right of the picture.
-
-The sheep are turned away from us here, and it is not necessary for the
-shepherd and his dog to hold them back. There is no young and tender
-grass to tempt them, and they are going home. There are many young lambs
-with the flock now, born since their mothers went out to pasture, and
-they lag behind the rest as if the journey were a long one. We can
-almost hear the shrill bleating of the little lambs mingled with the
-deeper calls of the sheep as they move along the road.
-
-The shepherd, this time an old man in the autumn of his life, tenderly
-carries a little weak lamb under his arm. Perhaps after it has rested,
-he will take up another tired one. The dog looks older too. No doubt he
-has had a hard summer of it with the care of all these sheep and their
-lambs.
-
-By the long shadows, Mauve has told us that it is the end of the day as
-well as the end of the year.
-
-There is a strong appeal in this picture when we think of the homecoming
-of this little company—the tired young lambs following their mothers,
-the tired dog that will now have a long rest, and the kind old shepherd
-with the helpless lamb under his arm.
-
-Through both these pictures Mauve has expressed the same sympathy with,
-and love for, nature and its many changes of season and weather. It is
-difficult indeed to choose one for study in preference to the other, and
-it is perhaps for that reason that they are usually studied together.
-
-In our picture of the sheep in spring, with all its suggestions of
-growth and beauty, the grass and leaves are luxuriant, and yet the days
-and nights are still too cool for the sheep to be sheared. When the warm
-days come, the shepherd will probably drive his flock to the river or
-some clear stream where, in spite of strugglings to escape, their long,
-woolly coats will be scrubbed and cleaned. Then when the wool is
-thoroughly dried it will be cut off with large shears and sent to the
-manufactories, where it will be made into cloth for the garments we
-wear.
-
-Long ago, in our great grandmother’s day, wool was carded, spun, and
-woven into cloth by hand. Many families still keep the old spinning
-wheels and hand looms which were used in those times.
-
-
-=Questions to help the pupil understand the picture.= In what country
-was this picture painted? What time of year is represented? Why does the
-shepherd keep the sheep back? How can he prevent them from going too
-fast? How do the sheep prefer to eat the grass? What can you see at the
-right of the picture? What is on each side of this road? To what does it
-lead? Of what use are the sheep? In what ways can the dog help the
-shepherd? How does he keep the sheep together? Tell about the dog and
-the seven hundred lambs. How can a trained dog understand his master
-even at a distance? In what ways are sheep helpless? How can a dog
-protect them from wolves? What is the companion picture to this one
-called? How does it differ from this painting? Which one do you like
-best? Why? Where are the original paintings?
-
-
-=The story of the artist.= Anton Mauve was born near the sea in a little
-village called Zaandam, the Netherlands. His father was a Protestant
-clergyman in this thriving little town known for its oil and paper mills
-and its extensive timber trade. When Anton was but a boy, the family
-moved to Haarlem where he grew to manhood.
-
-His talent for drawing was soon discovered, but it did not meet with any
-favor at home. His father’s strong objections to his becoming an artist
-were finally overcome by a compromise. If Anton would promise to win a
-diploma as a drawing master, so that he would be sure of earning his
-living in case he failed as an artist, then his father would give his
-consent. As definite rules were laid down for teaching drawing, and
-these rules permitted little or no originality, Anton Mauve found his
-promise very hard to keep. However, he persevered. When the course was
-finished, he packed his grip and with little in his purse started for
-the village of Oosterbeek where a number of other artists lived and
-worked. Later he settled in Amsterdam where he worked hard, earning
-enough with his painting to support himself.
-
-Mauve painted a great number of pictures, many of them in water color.
-He is best known by his flocks of sheep, which he represents in all
-seasons and in every kind of weather. Although he lived by the sea, very
-few of Mauve’s pictures were of the sea, for he preferred the country
-roads leading through green fields, with here and there a flock of sheep
-or herd of cattle. He seldom painted a landscape without some figure in
-it—a wood-cart, a man on horseback, a peasant woman, or a woodcutter
-were his most frequent models. The birch tree, with its graceful,
-silvery stem was his favorite tree.
-
-It is said that Mauve was in the habit of making his sketches on his
-cuffs, and by keeping the colors in his mind he was able from these
-suggestions to paint the pictures which soon brought him fame and honor.
-
-
-=Questions about the artist.= Who painted this picture? Where was he
-born? What compromise did he make with his father? Why did he find it
-difficult to do his part? What did he do then? What subjects might we
-have expected him to choose for his paintings? What subjects did he
-choose? Upon what did he often make his first sketches? How did he
-finish these pictures? What were his favorite models? What was his
-favorite tree?
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- THE SUGGESTIONS TO TEACHERS
-
-
-=Studying the picture.= Several days before the lesson is to be taken
-up, the picture to be studied should be placed where every pupil can see
-it.
-
-First of all, the children should find out for themselves what is in the
-picture. The questions accompanying the story of each picture are
-intended to help them to do this.
-
-=Language work.= The pupils should be encouraged in class to talk freely
-and naturally. In this way the lesson becomes a language exercise in
-which the pupils will gain in freedom of expression and in the ability
-to form clear mental images.
-
-If a lesson does not occupy the entire drawing period, the children
-should be asked to retell the story of the picture.
-
-=Dramatization and drawing.= Most of the stories told by the pictures
-lend themselves readily to dramatization and, whenever practicable, such
-stories should be acted out. The stories also offer numerous interesting
-situations that may be used as subjects for drawing lessons.
-
-=The review lesson.= The review lesson should cover all pictures and
-artists studied throughout the year. At this time other pictures
-available by the same artists should be on exhibition.
-
-The review work may be conducted as a contest in which the pictures are
-held up, one at a time, while the class writes the name of the picture
-and the artist on slips of paper which have been prepared and numbered
-for that purpose. One teacher who used this device surprised her class
-by presenting those whose lists were correct with their choice of any of
-the large-sized Perry pictures studied.
-
-Many teachers, however, will prefer to use this time for composition
-work, although the description of pictures is often given as an English
-lesson. Pupils may write a description of their favorite picture. In
-fact, the lessons can be made to correlate with history, geography,
-English, spelling, reading, or nature study.
-
-In any event the real purpose of the work is that the pupils shall
-become so familiar with the pictures that they will recognize them as
-old friends whenever and wherever they may see them.
-
-It is hoped that acquaintance with the picture and the interest awakened
-by its story will grow into a fuller appreciation and understanding of
-the artist’s work. Thus the children will have many happy hours and will
-learn to love the good, the true, and the beautiful in everything about
-them.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- ● Transcriber’s Notes:
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
- when a predominant form was found in this book.
- ○ Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_);
- text that was bold by “equal” signs (=bold=).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Stories Pictures Tell Book 6, by Flora Carpenter
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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's Stories Pictures Tell Book 6, by Flora Carpenter
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Stories Pictures Tell Book 6
-
-Author: Flora Carpenter
-
-Release Date: September 14, 2020 [EBook #63199]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES PICTURES TELL BOOK 6 ***
-
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-
-
-Produced by David Garcia, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
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-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'><span class='xxlarge'>STORIES PICTURES TELL</span></h1>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='box2'>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/decoration.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xxlarge'>STORIES</span></div>
- <div><span class='xxlarge'>PICTURES TELL</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'>BOOK SIX</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><i>By</i></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>FLORA L. CARPENTER</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'><i>Instructor in drawing at Waite High School, Toledo, Ohio</i></span></div>
- <div><span class='small'><i>Formerly supervisor of drawing, Bloomington, Illinois</i></span></div>
- <div class='c004'><b><i>Illustrated with Half Tones from</i></b></div>
- <div><b><i>Original Photographs</i></b></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>RAND McNALLY &amp; COMPANY</span></div>
- <div>CHICAGO&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><i>Copyright, 1918</i></div>
- <div><span class='sc'>By Rand McNally &amp; Co.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/publogo.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c007'>THE CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c005'>
- <div><span class='sc'>September and October</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='60%' />
-<col width='30%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Sir Galahad”</td>
- <td class='c009'><i>Watts</i></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#sir'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“A Reading from Homer”</td>
- <td class='c009'><i>Alma-Tadema</i></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#homer'>13</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c005'>
- <div><span class='sc'>November, December, and January</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='60%' />
-<col width='30%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“The Golden Stairs”</td>
- <td class='c009'><i>Burne-Jones</i></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#stairs'>27</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Aurora”</td>
- <td class='c009'><i>Reni</i></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#aurora'>37</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c005'>
- <div><span class='sc'>February and March</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='60%' />
-<col width='30%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Avenue at Middelharnis”</td>
- <td class='c009'><i>Hobbema</i></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#avenue'>47</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“The Angelus”</td>
- <td class='c009'><i>Millet</i></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#angelus'>58</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c005'>
- <div><span class='sc'>April, May, and June</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='60%' />
-<col width='30%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Sheep in Spring” (and “Sheep in Autumn”)</td>
- <td class='c009'><i>Mauve</i></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#sheep'>68</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Review of Pictures and Artists Studied</td>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><i>The Suggestions to Teachers</i></td>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#suggs'>78</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c007'>THE PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c011'>Art supervisors in the public schools assign picture-study
-work in each grade, recommending the study of certain pictures
-by well-known masters. As Supervisor of Drawing I found
-that the children enjoyed this work but that the teachers felt
-incompetent to conduct the lessons as they lacked time to
-look up the subject and to gather adequate material. Recourse
-to a great many books was necessary and often while
-much information could usually be found about the artist,
-very little was available about his pictures.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Hence I began collecting information about the pictures
-and preparing the lessons for the teachers just as I would
-give them myself to pupils of their grade.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>My plan does not include many pictures during the year,
-as this is to be only a part of the art work and is not intended
-to take the place of drawing.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The lessons in this grade may be used for the usual drawing
-period of from twenty to thirty minutes, and have been successfully
-given in that time. However, the most satisfactory way
-of using the books is as supplementary readers, thus permitting
-each child to study the pictures and read the stories himself.</p>
-<div class='c013'><span class='sc'>Flora L. Carpenter</span></div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c005'>
- <div><span class='xxlarge'>STORIES</span></div>
- <div><span class='xxlarge'>PICTURES TELL</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='sir' class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/a008.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c007'>SIR GALAHAD</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to arouse interest.</b> Who is
-this man? How is he dressed? What do his
-armor and title “Sir” tell us he is? How many
-have read Tennyson’s poems telling the story
-of the knights of the Round Table? What does
-Sir Galahad look as if he were about to do?
-Why do you think he is starting on a journey,
-rather than returning from one? Why do you
-think it must be an important journey? How
-will he go? What was expected of a knight
-in those days? Tell of some of their good
-deeds. What would you judge the character
-of this knight to be? Where is he represented
-in this picture? Is he walking, or standing
-still? looking at something in particular, or
-lost in thought? Does he appear angry, meek,
-determined, hesitating, thoughtful, or dreamy?
-What do his clasped hands indicate? What
-color is the horse? Upon what part of the
-man and horse does the light fall? What would
-you consider the main thought expressed in
-this picture?</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>Original Picture</b>: Collection Alexander Henderson, M.P., London, England.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Artist</b>: George Frederick Watts (wŏts).</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Birthplace</b>: London, England.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Dates</b>: Born, 1817; died, 1904.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the picture.</b> Many wonderful
-stories have been told of the famous knights
-of the Middle Ages, but none perhaps more
-interesting than the adventures of the knight
-Sir Galahad when he went in search of the
-Holy Grail.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In those times the greatest praise a boy
-could hope to receive was “You are brave
-enough to become a knight some day,” or “You
-are as courteous as a knight”; and his greatest
-ambition was to receive this title as he knelt
-before his sovereign or a superior knight. In
-those days boys were carefully trained for
-knighthood, just as for any other profession.
-They were sent away from home when very
-young, and spent at least ten years under
-severe discipline and training.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The boy Galahad had passed through these
-years of preparation. He had been taught
-to be quick in action,—managing a horse so
-that he could jump on or off while it was in
-full gallop,—to throw his spear with sure aim,
-to run swiftly, to obey all commands promptly;
-and, more difficult still, he had learned to wait
-patiently and uncomplainingly when he could
-not understand why he should wait.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Now he was twenty-one years old. Knighthood
-had been bestowed upon him, according to
-the custom, by a blow with the flat of the sword
-on his shoulder as he knelt, and the words,
-“Arise, Sir Galahad.” And now he was ready
-to start out on his quest for the Holy Grail.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The Holy Grail was the cup from which
-Christ drank at the Last Supper. It was
-bought from Pilate by Joseph of Arimathæa,
-and placed in a castle where it was guarded
-night and day. It was passed on to Joseph’s
-children, who received the charge in sacred
-trust, continuing to guard it faithfully. The
-cup itself was most mysterious and wonderful.
-It could be seen only by those who were perfectly
-pure in word, thought, and deed. If an evil
-person came near, it would seem to be borne
-away, completely disappearing from view. The
-sight of it was as food and new life to the one
-to whom it was revealed, and hence would
-enable him to live forever, make him very
-wise, and of course preserve him from death
-in battle. But there was one thing it did not
-do,—it did not take away temptation to sin.
-No matter how perfect the knight, he could
-still be tempted. He must continue to resist
-evil as long as he lived.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>After a time, the Holy Grail was left in the
-care of a king named Amfortas, who, weakly
-yielding to an evil enchantment, was severely
-punished. Not only was the sight of the Grail
-denied him, but a spell was cast upon him and
-all his court, so that they lived in a sort of
-trance, neither sleeping nor waking. Thus
-they must remain and suffer until a knight
-should come, pure in body and soul, who should
-break the spell and set them free.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Many a young man began to plan the quest
-of the Grail. He must so live that by his good
-thoughts and deeds he might reach the enchanted
-castle, see the Holy Grail, and so set free the
-unhappy knights. He must be perfect, indeed,
-if he would achieve this, and full of courage,
-perseverance, and patience.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In our picture we see Sir Galahad all ready
-to mount his snow-white horse and start out
-on his search for the Holy Grail. He is in
-full armor. His coat of mail, which all knights
-wore, was proof against any opponent of the
-time, except one equally armed and armored.
-It is said that a party of knights could ride
-unharmed through a host of common soldiers.
-The horses, too, were protected. But if the
-knight were once unhorsed and thrown upon
-his back, he was so weighed down by the stiff
-and heavy armor that he could not rise again
-without help. The knight’s weapons consisted
-of the lance, the two-handed sword, and a
-short, sharp dagger.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Sir Galahad had secured his sword and
-shield in a most mysterious way. The sword
-had been discovered protruding from the side
-of a wonderful rock of red marble jutting out
-from the surface of a river. This wonderful
-sword no one had been able to draw out of the
-rock. But when Sir Galahad tried, the sword
-came out without the slightest difficulty, and
-when he placed it in his empty scabbard, it
-fitted there exactly. The shield had been found
-by Sir Galahad in an old church, where it had
-been left for him by an ancestor, and where
-it had remained undiscovered for those many
-years.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Then, too, when Sir Galahad came to the
-Round Table of King Arthur and his knights
-in Camelot, he found them in the midst of a
-solemn meeting. Launcelot had just declared
-that according to prophecy a knight should
-come that very day who should occupy the
-Siege Perilous. The Siege Perilous was a chair
-over which the magician Merlin had cast a
-spell: only a stainless knight could sit in it
-without danger of instant death. As Sir Galahad
-entered the room he was preceded by a
-strange old man, whom none had ever seen
-before. Then the doors and windows quietly
-and mysteriously closed of their own accord, and
-the room was filled with a strange light. These
-words, in letters of fire, appeared over the chair:
-“This is Galahad’s seat.” By all these mysterious
-happenings the knights knew that Sir
-Galahad would be successful in finding the
-Grail, and many accompanied him on his quest.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Sir Galahad met with many adventures on
-his quest for the Grail and, in all of them,
-came out victorious. At length he reached the
-Castle of the Grail, and here he met his first
-defeat.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Entering the castle he gazed silently about
-him, at the feeble old king and at the wretched
-company whom he had come to free from their
-living death. Before him passed the vision of
-the Grail, which he alone of all that company
-was permitted to see. But it was not enough
-to see all this; he was expected to ask the meaning
-of what he saw, and by his question remove
-the enchantment. But, overconfident in his
-own knowledge, he tried to solve the mystery
-without asking, and so was forced to depart
-without success.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Here, at the very moment he was about to
-succeed, he was found to be possessed of the
-one fault, overconfidence, lacking in that
-humbleness which seeks constantly for higher
-knowledge. Because of his failure to ask the
-necessary question, the enchanted company had
-to continue to suffer. His personal purity
-alone was not enough; wisdom was necessary,
-attainable not through himself alone, but from
-the experience and understanding of others.
-As he left the castle grounds the drawbridge
-closed with a crash, there was a great sound of
-groaning and of voices reproaching him for
-having failed in his quest, and the castle disappeared
-from his sight. Much discouraged, he
-sought it again through many years, until at
-last he found it once more, and this time, a
-much wiser man, he asked the vital question,
-broke the wicked spell, and eventually found
-the Holy Grail.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Tennyson has given us the story in verse
-in his “Holy Grail.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>This picture is one we often see in homes,
-as well as in schoolhouses, and in many public
-buildings. It stands for the search for higher
-ideals which we are all making, and so its appeal
-is universal.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The earnest, uplifted face of the knight is
-full of youth and beauty. The horse, with his
-great, intelligent eyes, seems to know the importance
-of his errand.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The light comes from before them, brightening
-the pathway as if it would lead them on and
-on through the tangle of vines and deep woods
-which opposes them.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>If you have been fortunate enough to see a
-suit of armor in some museum, you know how
-the heavy steel coat is planned and how the
-helmet, which Sir Galahad has taken off, will
-protect his head and face.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>It is a moment of deep meditation and
-prayerful thought, for Sir Galahad is about to
-start out upon an undertaking in which many
-have failed and in which he cannot be sure of
-success. There is much of humility in his expression,
-nothing of the proud, dashing air of
-the adventurer.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>This earnest, thoughtful youth, starting out
-full of courage and determination, will always
-have time for the little courtesies of life, for they
-are a part of his creed. A true knight, he has
-been taught, should defend to the uttermost
-the oppressed, aid the weak, and be brave, courteous,
-chaste, temperate, generous, and pious.</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to help the pupil understand the
-picture.</b> Who was Sir Galahad? Upon what
-quest is he about to start? What preparation
-has he made for it? How old is he now? How
-did he receive the title “Sir”? What was
-the Holy Grail? What power had this cup?
-What could it not do for the person who saw
-it? Why was the sight of the Grail denied to</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>King Amfortas? What other punishment did
-he receive? Who could break this spell? how?
-What did Sir Galahad hope to do? How is he
-dressed? What protection was this armor?
-What might happen if he should be unhorsed?
-What weapons did he carry? How had Sir
-Galahad secured his sword and shield? Tell
-about the Round Table of King Arthur and
-the Siege Perilous. What happened when
-Sir Galahad entered? Of what did all these
-mysteries persuade the other knights? What
-happened when Sir Galahad came to the Castle
-of the Grail? Why did he fail? What was
-the result of this defeat? When did he succeed?
-What was the result? What is the main
-thought expressed in this picture?</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the artist.</b> George Frederick
-Watts was born and raised in London, England.
-He learned to draw, we are told, much in the
-same way he learned to talk. His parents encouraged
-him always, and he seems to have
-had very few obstacles to overcome.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Though Watts entered the Royal Academy
-school of painting at an early age, he did not
-study there long. His art education was thus
-gained largely by his own efforts and observation.
-He studied ancient Greek sculpture
-closely and his work was always influenced by
-the classical standard.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Watts lived in an age when the spirit of
-reform was uppermost, and men were preaching,
-thinking, and living it. No wonder, then, his
-work is full of thoughtful purpose, urging us
-on to the best that is in us.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>He said, “I want to teach people to live
-... to teach something higher than money
-making or mere pleasure getting ... to suggest
-great thoughts.” He did not paint, as
-many others had, for the mere pleasure of it,
-or even from inspiration, but rather for some
-definite purpose. In the Tate Gallery at London
-is a great collection of the paintings which
-give the artist’s message to the world. In
-1843 the Royal Commission appointed for the
-decoration of the new Houses of Parliament
-awarded one of the prizes to Watts for his
-fresco design. This enabled him to study in
-Italy for three years. There he gained much
-in the richness of his coloring and ease in brush-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Of his paintings for the government “The
-First Naval Victory of the English” and “St.
-George Overcomes the Dragon” are perhaps the
-best known. Other famous pictures by Watts
-are entitled “Ganymede,” “Orpheus and Eurydice,”
-and “Psyche.” In 1867 Watts became
-a member of the Royal Academy. He worked
-very hard, producing a great many paintings.
-With noble generosity he donated a large
-number of pictures to his country, particularly
-portraits of famous men, among them Lord
-Tennyson, Robert Browning, Swinburne, Dante,
-Gabriel Rossetti, Burne-Jones, and William
-Morris.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The last few years of his life were devoted
-principally to portrait painting. When Tennyson
-was writing “Elaine,” he asked Watts to
-tell him his idea of a good portrait, and afterwards
-wrote this description from the answer:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“As when a painter, gazing on a face,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Divinely thro’ all hindrance finds the man</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Behind it, and so paints him that his face,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The shape and color of a mind and life,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Lives for his children ever at his best.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions about the artist.</b> Who was the
-artist, and where was he born? What help did
-he have in realizing his ambition to become
-an artist? What was his aim in painting
-pictures? Give in your own words Mr. Watts’s
-idea of what a good portrait should be. What
-helped him to go to Italy? What benefit did
-he get from his study in Italy? Name some
-great men whose portraits Watts painted.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div id='homer' class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/p012.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c007'>A READING FROM HOMER</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to arouse interest.</b> What nationality
-is represented in this picture? Why do
-you think so? To what are they listening?
-What do their expressions indicate their feelings
-to be? What musical instruments do you see
-in the picture? From the picture, would you
-say that the people are outdoors or indoors?
-why?</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>Artist</b>: Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema (ăl´m<i>ä</i>-tăd´ēm<i>ȧ</i>).</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Birthplace</b>: Dronrijp, the Netherlands.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Dates</b>: Born, 1836; died, 1912.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the picture.</b> Let us imagine
-ourselves in that great walled-in city of Athens
-at the time of its greatest prosperity (fourth
-century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>). At whatever gate we enter—and
-there are many of them—our attention will
-be drawn toward the high, steep hill called the
-Acropolis, around which the city is built. We
-may reach the top of this hill in a chariot driven
-over a road of marble, or climb the marble
-steps, entering the magnificent gateway where
-we find many beautiful statues, temples, and
-altars. From this height we obtain a fine view
-of the city, the sea, other small hills, temples,
-and flat-roofed houses. As we look about us,
-we are surprised at the absence of spires or
-towers. There are no high towers or tall
-buildings. Most of the houses we see are
-one-story. The reason for this, it is said, is
-the frequency of earthquakes. The exterior
-of the houses is very plain. They are built of
-common stone, brick, or wood, coated with
-plaster, and so close to the street that if the
-door opens outward, the owner is compelled to
-knock before opening it in order to avoid injuring
-the passer-by in the street. There are no
-windows on the lower floor at the front of the
-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Beside the door is a statue of Hermes (god
-of highways, doorways, and boundaries and the
-bringer of good luck), or an altar to Apollo
-(god of light and the sun, and the protector
-from all evil); and over the door we may notice
-an inscription such as “To the good genius,”
-followed by the name of the master of the house.
-We raise the handle of the great knocker, and
-scarcely has the sound echoed back to us when
-the door is opened by the porter. We must be
-careful to step in with our right foot first, as it
-is considered unlucky to cross the threshold
-with the left foot. A long corridor or hall leads
-us to the open court, where all is as beautiful
-as the exterior is plain. Usually a fountain and
-flowers brighten the marble court, while on
-each side of it are the banqueting, music,
-sitting, and sleeping rooms, picture galleries,
-and libraries.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>But the Greeks spent so much time out of
-doors that a house was to them only a safe
-place for their families and their property—a
-shelter from storm. Most of the houses had
-porticoes or porches, and often the second story
-consisted of nothing but these porches around
-the open court. The flat tiled roofs were used
-as promenades.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Probably the Greeks in our picture are
-seated on one of these porches, or they may be
-in one of the summer pavilions which so many
-wealthy Greeks had erected in their yards or
-grassy plots back of the house. Here they
-spent their afternoons and were entertained
-with music or by the tales of wandering minstrels
-or readers.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The scene in the picture is represented as
-if it were in the open air; the column and stone
-wall behind the reader suggest a part of a house.
-In the distance we catch a glimpse of the blue
-sea. The slightly raised seat of the reader indicates
-that it is a place built expressly for this
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Before the Greeks wrote their stories it was
-the custom of certain bards or readers to go
-about from place to place singing or reciting
-the stories of events which have made their
-national history. Even when the stories were
-written, these bards were in great favor, for
-the Greeks preferred to hear the music of verse
-recited, and to feel the thrill of enthusiasm
-which could be aroused by the human voice,
-and not by a lifeless tablet or book.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The swaying form of the reader, his rapt expression,
-his flashing eye, his musical voice rising
-and falling like the sea,—these were the result
-of inspiration and had power to arouse men to
-noble actions. In our picture we see such a
-reader giving an interpretation or reading,
-much as our best elocutionists do now. In
-his hand he holds a long scroll from which
-he reads.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The Greeks used the Egyptian papyrus, and
-later the more expensive, but finer, parchment,
-to write upon. The reed pen was used, and
-double inkstands for black and red ink, which
-could be fastened to the belts or girdles of the
-writers. In libraries, the scrolls were arranged
-on shelves with the ends outward, or in pigeon
-holes. The reader unrolled one end of the
-scroll with one hand, while with the other he
-rolled up the part he had read.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Of all the Greek stories none were more
-fascinating than those of the immortal Homer.
-According to tradition, Homer was a schoolmaster
-who, growing tired of teaching, began
-to travel. Wandering about from place to
-place, he finally became blind. After this
-great affliction came upon him, he returned to
-his native town, where he dictated his two great
-poems, the <i>Iliad</i> and the <i>Odyssey</i>. Afterwards
-he wandered about from town to town, singing
-them, and adding to them as inspiration came.
-It is not even known where he was born, but,
-according to an old Greek epigram,</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Seven rival towns contend for Homer dead,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Through which the living Homer begged his bread.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>He was a beggar, and yet he was a welcome
-guest at every home, for he could play upon his
-four-stringed harp and sing of the wonderful
-deeds of the Greek gods and heroes.</p>
-<p class='c012'>The subject of Homer’s <i>Iliad</i> is the story
-of the siege of Troy. In a contest between
-Aphrodite (Venus) and two other goddesses,
-Aphrodite, the goddess of love and beauty, had
-promised Paris, son of the King of Troy, that
-if he would declare her the most beautiful of
-the goddesses he should have for his wife the
-handsomest woman of his time, Helen, wife of
-the King of Sparta. Paris granted her request
-and, going to Sparta, with Aphrodite’s aid he
-carried off Helen to Troy.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Of course her husband, the King of Sparta,
-objected. He appealed to all the Grecian
-princes to help him, and soon a hundred thousand
-men sailed away in eleven hundred and
-eighty-six ships across the Ægean Sea, and
-camped before the walls of Troy. The siege
-lasted ten years.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Troy was finally taken by stratagem. The
-Greeks pretended to abandon the siege, leaving
-behind them a great wooden horse as an offering
-to Athena (Minerva), goddess of wisdom, and
-the special defender of citadels.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The Trojans could not find out their reason
-for building the monster; but while they were
-talking about it and gazing at it some shepherds
-brought into the town a young Greek named
-Sinon, whom they had captured. He told a
-pitiful story. He said the Greek leader hated
-him, and had induced the Greek soothsayer to
-declare that he must be put to death as a sacrifice
-for their safe return to Greece. He had
-escaped, and hidden in a swamp until the
-Greeks had gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The Trojans were ready to be kind to any
-man whom the Greeks hated, and he was set
-free at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>“But tell us,” said the king, “why that
-monster of a horse was built.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Sinon declared it was a sacrifice to Athena
-because she was angry with them. He said,
-“It was made too large to pass through your
-gates, for they knew that if it was once within
-your walls it would protect you, and victory
-would come to you instead of to the Greeks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The Trojans believed every word of this, and
-ordered the huge horse brought within their
-city, even though they were obliged to take
-down part of the wall in order to make the
-opening large enough. That night the treacherous
-Sinon opened a door in the body of the
-horse and let out the armed Greeks who were
-hidden inside. They quietly slipped to the
-ground by means of a rope, killed the watchmen,
-and opened the gates to the Greek army which
-had returned and was waiting outside. A
-terrible battle followed, in which nearly all the
-Trojans were killed. Helen was taken back to
-Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In Homer’s <i>Odyssey</i> he tells the adventures
-of Ulysses, King of Ithaca, during the return
-journey from Troy. Ulysses had been one of
-the bravest of the Greek leaders, and was one
-of the heroes concealed in the wooden horse.
-The poem is full of vivid description and
-noble sentiments, both pathetic and sublime,
-and it stirred the hearts of the Greeks with
-pride and joy.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>It is easy to see the interest in the faces of
-the listeners in the picture. Partly robed in a
-rose-colored garment, the reader sits on a chair
-of marble, holding on his knees a roll of papyrus,
-from which he is reading to a group of
-four persons before him. A wreath of bay
-leaves crowns his head, and as he leans forward
-his face expresses enthusiasm while he
-tells the thrilling adventures of the hero of
-Homer’s story.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In the center of the background we see a
-woman. On her hair is a crown of daffodils,
-and in her left hand something resembling a
-tambourine. She half sits, half reclines, on a
-marble bench, a resting place which the Greeks
-always preferred to chairs. On the floor near
-her, in an attitude of careless ease, sits a young
-man who is very likely her lover, since he is
-holding her hand. His face expresses his
-interest in the story. In his right hand he
-holds a lyre, which suggests that the company
-has been listening to music, and that they will
-enjoy it again after this recital.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>How intent their faces are as they follow in
-imagination all the adventures of their sturdy
-ancestors! Near the center of the picture and
-stretched out gracefully on the marble floor is
-a youth who appears anxious not to lose one
-word of the story. At the left we see a man
-standing. He wears a crown of flowers on his
-head, and wraps his long cloak closely about
-him. His face is wild and sad. His appearance
-seems to tell that he has duties elsewhere and
-ought to leave, but is being held by the story.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The people are all dressed in typical Greek
-costumes. The dress of Greek men and women
-was very much alike. When they appeared on
-the streets they wore a cloak which consisted of
-a large square piece of cloth so wrapped about
-them as to leave only the right arm free. It
-required much skill to drape it gracefully, and
-the manner in which this was done decided the
-taste and elegance of the wearer. The women
-and men of the higher classes wore what they
-called a <i>chiton</i>, or dress which consisted of two
-short pieces of cloth sewed or clasped together
-and fastened over the shoulder, leaving open
-spaces for the arms. It was fastened at the
-waist with a girdle. A man usually wore this
-<i>chiton</i>, although he was considered fully dressed
-in the cloak alone. It was the lower classes
-who wore the tanned skins, so the young man
-lying on the floor is probably a servant.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>A touch of bright color is added to this
-picture by the flowers in the girl’s hair and those
-scattered on the bench beside her.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The flesh painting in this picture is claimed
-to be the most perfect that Alma-Tadema ever
-did, and the painting of the girl and her lover,
-one of his highest efforts. The reader is the
-center of interest in the picture. The light, the
-lines, and the position of the figures make this
-apparent.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The painting of these five large figures
-occupied the artist only eight weeks, but the
-preliminary studies before he began painting
-took eight months.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Alma-Tadema excelled in his painting of
-marble, and this picture gave him every opportunity
-to display his genius, since nearly the
-entire background is of marble. The delicate
-colors of the young girl’s costume, with the few
-bright touches of color in the flowers; the darker,
-richer colors of the men’s cloaks; and back of it
-all the clear opalescent colors of marble and the
-deep blue of the sea beyond give the picture a
-distinctive beauty which is most pleasing to the
-eye. A close student of Greek history, Alma-Tadema
-has been particular to see that every
-little detail is in harmony, and consistent with
-the age and country.</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to help the pupil understand the
-picture.</b> What is the center of interest in this
-picture? What lines in the picture direct your
-eye to the reader? How does the light do this?
-the position of the figures? Tell something of
-Greek life; of Homer; of the siege of Troy.
-Why did it take the artist eight months to get
-ready to paint this picture?</p>
-<p class='c017'><b>To the Teacher</b>: Each pupil may be asked
-to draw one Greek ornament from some
-history, encyclopedia, or dictionary.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>Subjects for Compositions</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A Day in a Greek Home.</div>
- <div class='line'>A Greek Library.</div>
- <div class='line'>Homer and His Writings.</div>
- <div class='line'>A Description of “A Reading from Homer.”</div>
- <div class='line'>The Artist.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the artist.</b> Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema,
-of Dutch parentage, was born in the
-little village of Dronrijp near Leewarden, the
-Netherlands, in the year 1836. When he was
-very young his father died, leaving his mother
-with a large family and small means, and it was
-decided from the first that Alma-Tadema must
-learn a good trade or profession. His progress
-at school caused his mother much anxiety, for
-the boy cared for nothing except Roman
-history, which he began to study by himself.
-Having secured some quaint old coins in the
-neighborhood, he spent much of his time copying
-the heads of the emperors on the coins.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>He soon began to show remarkable talent
-for painting. A portrait which he painted of
-his sister was exhibited when he was only fifteen
-years old. But his mother wished him to become
-a lawyer, because she felt it would bring
-the best financial returns. He tried to please her,
-but a serious illness was the result. When the
-doctor advised the mother to let him become
-an artist she gave her consent, and it is said
-the boy recovered with astonishing rapidity.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>He studied at Antwerp many years, winning
-such success that he sent for his mother and sister
-to come to live with him. Then he began to
-make a special study of Egypt, Greece, and Rome.
-After his marriage to an English lady he moved
-to London, where he lived the rest of his life.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>His love for marble and the polished surfaces
-of bronze, gold, and other metals is clearly
-shown in most of his pictures. Even his portraits
-usually represent the sitter as glancing in
-a mirror or in some way reflected in it.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Perhaps no other artist has ever made so
-much use of flowers in his pictures. The
-flowers seem to add the one touch of bright
-color which beautifies the whole picture.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Alma-Tadema gives us a clear understanding
-of the home life of the Greeks and Romans,
-and so has become known as the “Painter of the
-Ancients.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Alma-Tadema became a British subject in
-1873. His home in St. Johns Wood, in the
-northwest part of London, is described as a
-most interesting place. The first glimpse of
-it, seen through the trees, shows the gilded
-weather vane in the form of a palette; later,
-the stone pillars of the Roman porch. In all
-its details the house is carefully and beautifully
-furnished: the brass knocker on the door, the
-entrance into a sort of sun parlor paved with tiles
-and bright with beautiful flowers, and the sound
-of a fountain near at hand. A flight of marble
-steps leads to a hall in which beautiful painted
-panels (the gifts of friends) are the chief decoration.
-Great tiger skins cover the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Mrs. Tadema also is an artist, and has her
-studio on this floor. In her studio and the
-living rooms she has given full sway to her
-own fancy for the sixteenth-century old Dutch,
-most of their contents having been brought
-from the Netherlands. Alma-Tadema’s taste
-is purely classical, and his studio is consistent
-in all respects—marble pillars, carved wood-work,
-chairs, and cushions. Here he lived and
-worked with this motto before him:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“As the Sun colours Flowers</div>
- <div class='line in1'>So Art colours Life.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions about the artist.</b> Of what nationality
-was the artist? Why was his mother so
-anxious to have him learn a trade or profession?
-What did he like to study? What picture
-did he exhibit when he was fifteen years old?
-What prevented his becoming a lawyer? What
-countries did he prefer to represent? What
-materials did he excel in painting? For what
-has he become famous?</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div id='stairs' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/p026.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c007'>THE GOLDEN STAIRS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to arouse interest.</b> What does
-this picture represent? What is there unusual
-about this stairway? Why do you suppose
-Burne-Jones painted the stairs without a railing?
-What is there unusual about these figures?
-What are they carrying in their hands? Where
-are they going? Where did they come from?
-Do they seem to be standing still or moving?
-What makes you think so? Are they noisy
-or quiet in their movements? Why do you
-think so? Why has the leader raised her hand?
-What can you see in the window above the
-stairs? Is this a sad or a happy procession?
-Why do you think so? What do you like
-best about this picture?</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>Original Picture</b>: Private Collection of Lord Battersea, England.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Artist</b>: Sir Edward Burne-Jones (bûrn-jōnz).</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Birthplace</b>: Birmingham, England.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Dates</b>: Born, 1833; died, 1898.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the picture.</b> The artist, Burne-Jones,
-was a student and a dreamer. As a
-small, motherless boy he had been left much
-alone in a home in which storybooks were
-considered wicked, so there were none for him
-to read. His father was a strong churchman
-and intended his son for the ministry. He was
-endeavoring as best he knew how to fit him
-for his high calling by a training which, though
-perfectly sincere and honest in purpose, was
-rather gloomy and severe for the delicate,
-sensitive boy. However, little Edward was
-naturally of an imaginative mind, so he made up
-his own stories. A relative sent him a copy of
-<i>Æsop’s Fables</i>, and this book he was permitted
-to keep. It seems to have brought the turning
-point in the boy’s life. From that time on he
-dwelt in a fairyland of his own making.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>When he was sent away to school to prepare
-for the ministry, he carried his fancies with
-him, adding to them the many legends of Greek
-mythology; of literature, especially those wonderful
-stories of King Arthur’s court; and of
-the Bible. His desire to become an artist was
-aroused by another student, William Morris,
-the two spending all their spare time drawing
-and painting. Nevertheless, he was twenty-three
-years old before he saw any of the great
-masterpieces in painting.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>From the very first, Burne-Jones chose
-subjects which were mysterious, fairylike, and
-unreal, but his pictures were so filled with
-music, beauty, and happiness that it was a
-delight to look at them.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>His idea of a good picture was very different
-from that of the practical, painstaking Millet,
-who represented everything and everybody as
-they actually appeared before him in the very
-field or place he had found them.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Burne-Jones tells us: “I mean by a picture
-a beautiful, romantic dream of something that
-never was, never will be, in a light better than
-any light that has ever shone, in a land no one
-can define or remember, only dream.” And so
-when asked to paint a decoration for a hallway
-in one of the fine old London homes he thought
-at once of a stairway, and the painting of “The
-Golden Stairs” is the result. It would seem
-indeed a dream, this angel host descending
-from we know not where and halting at that
-mysterious closed door which leads we know
-not whither. But hush! the leader has half
-raised her hand, turning this way as if to
-ask for silence. Each figure stops instantly,
-holding herself motionless, while the musical
-instruments are slightly lowered that all may
-listen more intently. And yet, this is a
-joyous procession,—the gayly colored wreaths
-of flowers which most of them are wearing, the
-musical instruments, the happy faces, all tell us
-this is an errand of pleasure. Might it not be
-that this host of angels is descending upon the
-sleeping world to soothe the restless, worried
-ones, and smooth the puckered, aching brows
-in quiet slumber? Lulled by their gentle music,
-or the rustle of their approaching footsteps, the
-weary one would soon find refreshing sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The light in the picture seems to come from
-above, yet is all about and around the figures,
-as if they were the source of the illumination.
-They come from a darkened doorway, and
-enter one quite as dark except for the light
-they bring to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The greater part of the picture is painted
-in shades of gray, but it is relieved by the flesh
-tints, and the gayly colored flowers worn in
-wreaths or scattered on the steps. Here is
-delicate, exquisite coloring, and figures drawn
-with such careful attention to details that each
-seems complete in itself, yet all are held together
-in one great harmony.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>It is interesting to draw an oblong of this
-same proportion and then represent the curved
-lines in this picture; it makes us feel the movement,
-swing, and rhythm which come to us like
-approaching music.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The picture is full of idyllic charm which
-takes us away from all the prosaic details of
-everyday life to a fairyland where this happy
-throng may come and go with music, flowers,
-and delight. The calm, thoughtful faces, so
-full of kindly purpose and high ideals, cannot
-fail to inspire us with good thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The dove in the upper casement window is
-typical of the peace that pervades this scene.
-The faint, far from earthly, shadows, the bare
-feet, even the stairway without a railing or
-protection of any kind, all suggest that our
-youthful maidens are celestial beings. Their
-destination we can only guess. Perhaps that
-is why the picture has had several names:
-“The King’s Wedding,” “Music on the Stairs,”
-and the one by which it is now known, “The
-Golden Stairs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Burne-Jones made many beautiful designs
-for stained-glass windows, and we can but
-regret that he did not produce this picture
-in that way also.</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to help the pupil understand the
-picture.</b> Tell about the boyhood and early
-training of the artist. What book influenced
-him most? How did it affect his choice of
-subjects to paint? How did he happen to
-become interested in art? How old was he
-before he first saw a great painting? Compare
-the subjects chosen by Burne-Jones and by
-Millet as to character and feeling. What
-was Burne-Jones’s idea of a good picture? How
-did he happen to paint “The Golden Stairs”?
-For what room was it intended? What colors
-did the artist use in this painting? In what
-ways does it suggest music? How would you
-explain the destination of these maidens? their
-errand? from whence they come? What would
-you consider the chief charm in the picture?</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the artist.</b> We have heard how
-the small Burne-Jones was brought up by a
-rather strict but ambitious father, and perhaps
-have felt sorry for the boy who used to spend
-hours before the windows of a book store,
-gazing at the even rows of books with such
-wistful longing. But we need not feel so, for
-it was this very desire for books and stories
-that led him to use his own imaginative power.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>When he was old enough to begin serious
-preparation for the ministry his father sent him
-to King Edward’s School. Here he earned a
-scholarship to Oxford. When he left home for
-Oxford it seemed as if his real life had begun,
-for it was here that he met friends who had
-the same tastes and longings as himself. One
-friend in particular, William Morris, shared
-with him his new-found delight in art. Both
-had intended to prepare for the ministry, but
-now they decided to give up all else and pursue
-the study of art. So at the age of twenty-three
-Burne-Jones left Oxford and went to London,
-where he began painting in earnest. From
-the very first he showed great originality both
-in his subjects and in his manner of representation.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Many of his subjects were taken from the
-Bible, from Greek mythology, or from stories
-of King Arthur’s court. Sometimes he painted
-with but the one idea of making something
-beautiful, as in this picture of “The Golden
-Stairs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Burne-Jones was fortunate in his first
-teacher, Rossetti, who was a man so filled with
-the beauty of a scene that he must paint it
-for sheer joy. In order to pay for this instruction
-Burne-Jones made designs for stained-glass
-windows, and became famous for the beauty of
-these windows. The one at Trinity Church,
-Boston, is called “David Instructing Solomon
-in the Building of the Temple.” At Oxford
-is the famous Saint Cecilia window he designed
-for Christ Church College.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>It seems strange that Burne-Jones should
-wait until he grew to manhood before he discovered
-that he had the desire and the ability
-to draw. Other artists tell of the years spent
-in longing, and their constant struggle for the
-sake of their art. But when Burne-Jones made
-up his mind, he spent no time in experiment or
-even practice. He devoted all his time to the
-one idea which filled his thoughts. He made
-no effort whatever to find out whether his
-work would meet with popular favor or not,
-beginning at once with what he knew to be
-his right material.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The only difference to be noticed in his first
-and his last paintings was a difference in the
-speed and skill with which he handled the
-paints. New ideas occurred to him so rapidly
-that he formed the habit of making quick
-sketches and putting them aside until he had
-time to work them out carefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Burne-Jones had never rebelled against the
-profession his father chose for him. Indeed, he
-felt satisfied and made every effort to succeed
-in it. Perhaps if he had remained at home, or
-even if he had not met the enthusiastic William
-Morris just when he did, he might never have
-discovered his power as a painter.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The knowledge of the disappointment at
-home and the small means at his disposal did
-not hinder him from forsaking the profession
-his family had chosen for him, for was he not
-following the advice of the great painter, Rossetti?
-Not many young artists have found such
-a friend as Rossetti was to Burne-Jones. He
-not only gave the desired instruction but helped
-his pupil get such work as he was capable of
-doing. When the glass makers applied to
-Rossetti for a design for a stained-glass window,
-he declined to undertake the work but
-recommended his pupil instead.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>A visit to Italy gave Burne-Jones new
-inspiration. Later when William Morris married
-and went to live in a house which had been
-built for him at Bexley Heath, he had difficulty
-in furnishing this house to suit his taste and
-desire for beautiful things. This led Morris
-to establish a firm to make such things. Of
-course Burne-Jones was heartily in sympathy
-with his friend and put his talents as a designer
-at the disposal of the firm. His wonderful
-imagination and fine powers of expression produced
-all kinds of decorative work, such as
-tapestries, embroideries, carved chests, book
-covers, book illustrations, and decorations for
-pianos, screens, and friezes.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Although he received so much praise in his
-later years, at first he, too, had to pass through
-the fire of criticism and even ridicule. At one
-time Burne-Jones was ridiculed in the pages
-of <i>Punch</i>, while in another magazine he was
-spoken of as the “greenery-yallery Grosvenor-gallery
-young man.” But these criticisms were
-soon forgotten, and all England was proud to
-honor this artist with medals. In 1894 Burne-Jones
-was given the title of baronet.</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions about the artist.</b> Tell about
-the boyhood of Burne-Jones; his education.
-What kind of subjects did he choose for his
-paintings? What was his idea of a good
-painting? Who was his first teacher? Why
-did he wait so long before he began to study
-painting? What can you say of his imagination?
-Tell about William Morris and his new
-home. What did Burne-Jones do for his friend?</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div id='aurora' class='figcenter id007'>
-<img src='images/p036.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c007'>AURORA</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to arouse interest.</b> What goddess
-does this represent? Whom is she leading?
-Upon what do they rest? Over what are they
-passing? What has Aurora in her hands?
-Toward whom is she looking? In what is
-Apollo riding? How many horses has he?
-What has the cherub in his hand? Which way
-does the flame blow? why? What makes you
-think they are moving? In what direction
-do their garments blow? Who painted this
-picture? Why do you like it?</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>Original Picture</b>: Pavilion of the Rospigliosi Palace, Rome, Italy.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Artist</b>: Guido Reni (gwē’dō rā’nē).</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Birthplace</b>: Bologna, Italy.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Dates</b>: Born, 1575; died, 1642.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the picture.</b> Imagine yourself
-in that far-famed city of Rome, driving through
-its white streets to the great Quirinal Palace to
-see the original of our picture. The Quirinal,
-a very large and very ordinary looking building,
-has been the scene of many interesting events,
-and is always used as the meeting place for the
-cardinals who elect the pope. Our drive ends
-here, but it is only the beginning of our journey.
-After a delightful walk through a courtyard so
-completely surrounded by high stone walls
-that we should never have guessed its existence,
-we come to another palace. This palace
-is much more beautiful, although not so large.
-It is called the Rospigliosi Palace because it
-has always belonged to a family of that name.
-Then we pass on through a beautiful garden of
-magnolias until we reach the pavilion or casino
-of the palace, where we find our picture.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>There are several rooms in this pavilion, but
-it is the middle room which holds our attention,
-for it is up on the ceiling of this room that we
-see Aurora, goddess of the morning, leading the
-way for the fiery steeds of Apollo, the sun god.
-As we enter, such a glow of color fills the room
-that we know instinctively this must be the
-place. First, we see Aurora herself, flying
-ahead, scattering the clouds of night and
-showering roses and dewdrops over the sleeping
-earth. She looks back toward Apollo, the
-sun god, to see if he is following her on his
-journey around the heavens in his chariot of
-the sun. The horses are restless and eager and
-it takes a steady hand to guide them.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Some idea of the difficulties attending such
-a journey may be gained from the Greek story
-of Phaëthon. According to this story, Apollo
-had a son named Phaëthon. One day the boy
-came to him, complaining that the other boys
-made fun of him when he told them who his
-father was. They said they did not believe that
-a boy who could do nothing at all could be the
-son of the mighty Apollo. This made the father
-very angry, and when Phaëthon asked him to
-let him do something that should prove to the
-world that he was Apollo’s son, Apollo told the
-boy he would give him permission to do whatever
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The boy quickly asked permission to drive
-the sun chariot for one day. But this request
-alarmed Apollo, who said, “None but myself
-may drive the flaming car of day,—not even
-Jupiter, whose terrible right arm drives the
-thunderbolts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>He urged his son to take back his request
-before it was too late, warning him it would
-prove his destruction. But the boy was only
-the more anxious to drive, and held his father
-to his promise.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Then Apollo told Phaëthon of the journey.
-“The first part of the way,” he said, “is so very
-steep that, although the horses start out in
-the best possible condition, they can hardly
-climb it; the next part is so high up in the
-heavens that I dare not look down upon the
-earth and sea below, lest I grow dizzy and fall;
-the last part of the journey is the most difficult
-of all, because the road descends rapidly and it
-is hard to guide the horses. And all this time,”
-Apollo went on, “the heavens are turning around
-and carrying the stars with them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>But even as he spoke, Aurora threw open
-the cloud curtains which hid the earth, and
-there appeared the road upon which she cast
-her roses while beckoning to the eager boy.
-Hardly listening to his father’s anxious warnings,
-Phaëthon jumped into the golden chariot,
-grasped the reins of the four fiery steeds, and
-off they started.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>At first he remembered what Apollo had
-said, and was careful, but he soon grew reckless,
-driving at full speed. The horses, knowing it
-was not their master’s hand, took the bits between
-their teeth and were soon out of his
-control. For a time they followed the road,
-but when that was lost they began to descend
-toward the earth so rapidly it seemed as if they
-would be dashed to pieces. Then up again
-they started in reckless, dizzy flight. At times
-they came so close to fields and woods as to
-scorch and blacken them. Other fields they did
-not pass, and these were frostbitten.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Then a great wail of complaint went up from
-the earth. This cry was heard by Jupiter, the
-most powerful of the gods, who, looking earth-ward
-and discovering the cause of all this
-trouble, was very angry. With his terrible right
-arm he drove a thunderbolt at the reckless
-youth, and in an instant Phaëthon fell from
-the chariot headlong into the sea. The horses,
-finding themselves free, returned to Apollo, and
-never since then has any hand but his been
-permitted to guide them.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The Greeks declared that the great desert
-of Sahara in Africa is the place where the
-sun’s chariot scorched the earth, and that it
-was then that the African negroes were burned
-black. Phaëthon’s boy friend, who was constantly
-diving down into the water trying to
-recover his body, was turned into a swan, and
-Phaëthon’s weeping sisters were changed into
-poplar trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In our picture we see Apollo holding the
-reins, accompanied by the Hours and preceded
-by Aurora and the cherub torch-bearer or morning
-star. They seem to be moving rapidly on
-their way, borne up by the clouds. The sky
-is a brilliant, golden yellow, and its fleecy
-clouds are tinged with purple. The graceful
-figures of the Hours are each represented in pale
-or brighter-colored draperies according to the
-time of day to which they belong. Aurora
-herself is clothed in rainbow hues, her draperies
-flying with her swift progress. Far below we
-see the land and sea, wrapped in slumber, awaiting
-the coming of the dawn.</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to help the pupil understand the
-picture.</b> Where is the original painting of the
-“Aurora”? What goddess does it represent?
-What is the Greek myth concerning her?
-What part has Apollo in this picture? How
-many horses does he drive? How are the Hours
-represented? What does the cherub carrying
-a torch represent? In what direction does the
-flame of the torch blow? Why is Apollo’s
-journey so difficult? Who was Phaëthon?
-What did he ask of Apollo? Why did he wish
-to do this? Why was Apollo alarmed? Tell
-about Phaëthon’s journey, and what happened
-to him. Upon what does the chariot seem to
-rest? Over what are they passing? What
-colors did the artist use in this painting?</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>To the Teacher</b>:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>Subjects for Compositions</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Aurora, Goddess of the Morning.</div>
- <div class='line'>Apollo, the Sun God.</div>
- <div class='line'>The Story of Phaëthon, Apollo’s Son.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'><b>The story of the artist.</b> Guido Reni was
-born in the little village of Bologna, Italy. As
-a small child he gave every promise of becoming
-an accomplished musician. His father, himself
-a gifted performer, began to teach him to play
-the flute and harpsichord as soon as he was old
-enough to handle the instruments. Guido had a
-beautiful voice, and the father hoped to make
-a fine musician of him. But the boy also had
-a beautiful, sunshiny face which attracted the
-attention of an artist, who asked permission to
-paint him as an angel in several pictures. After
-watching this artist at work, Guido began to
-wish to paint pictures, too, and was permitted
-to take a few lessons.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>His first picture was a surprise to the artist,
-causing him to urge Guido’s father to allow the
-boy to develop his talent. About this time, too,
-Guido began to make all kinds of interesting
-figures in clay, and his fingers were always busy.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>At thirteen years of age he so excelled the
-other pupils of the artist that he was allowed
-to teach some of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Later Guido went to Rome, where he remained
-for twenty years in great favor. He
-then moved to Bologna and there opened a
-large school for art students. He made his
-home in Bologna during the rest of his life.
-Guido Reni might have lived all his life in
-splendor and ease, for he earned great sums of
-money; but as his fame grew he became more
-and more extravagant in his habits, and so was
-always in debt. He was obliged to paint hurriedly,
-and to the utmost of his genius, that he
-might have more pictures to sell.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>However, his keen sense of beauty did not
-desert him, and his popularity continued to the
-end. He was especially skillful in representing
-beautiful upraised faces of women and children.
-One day a young nobleman met Guido Reni
-and asked him where he found such lovely
-models for his paintings. He said the other
-artists were wondering about it and thought
-him very selfish to keep them to himself. Guido
-replied in a mysterious voice, “Come to my
-studio, signor, and I will show you my beautiful
-model.” So, filled with delight and eager
-anticipation, the nobleman tiptoed after the
-artist up the stairs to the studio. You can
-imagine how he must have felt when Guido
-Reni called his color-grinder, who has been
-described as “a great greasy fellow, with a
-brutal look,” and posed him.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>As the color-grinder sat quietly looking up
-through the skylight, Guido took a pencil and
-after sketching very rapidly for a few minutes,
-showed his guest a sketch of a beautiful
-Magdalen gazing upward. Then turning to
-his visitor, he said earnestly, “Dear Count, say
-to your ‘other artists’ that a beautiful idea
-must be in the imagination, and in that case
-any model will serve.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Guido Reni had the greatest admiration
-for the paintings of Raphael and went to Rome
-just to study them.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>As he loved to work with clay himself, he
-spent much of his time in Rome studying the
-beautiful pieces of statuary there. He tells us
-that his favorites were the Venus de Medici
-and Niobe.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Pleasant and courteous to all, he made
-friends everywhere and was greatly beloved.
-Once when he was very ill his friends hired
-musicians to play just outside his door. This
-pleased him greatly, as he was always passionately
-fond of music. He said to them, “And
-what, then, will be the melodies of Paradise?”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Guido Reni was a great favorite of Pope
-Paul V and many of his pictures were painted
-for the Pope. When he returned from Rome to
-Bologna, he found himself more popular than
-ever and quite overwhelmed with orders for
-pictures.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Of all his paintings, the “Aurora” is generally
-considered his best. The story is told of
-a little girl who had lived all her life in the
-country. Upon her first visit to her uncle in
-the city, she discovered a large and splendid
-copy of the “Aurora” in his living room. One
-morning her uncle came into the room and
-found his little niece gazing at the picture in
-rapt admiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>“Well, Mary,” he said, “what do you think
-of it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>“Oh, uncle,” she replied, “I like it ‘cause
-they are in such a hurry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>So young and old have found one reason or
-another for liking this picture.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Guido Reni painted many portraits as well
-as many historical and mythological pictures.
-Some of the best known of Guido’s paintings
-are: “Reclining Venus with Cupid,” “St. Michael
-and the Dragon,” “Beatrice Cenci,” “Little
-Bacchus Drinking,” and “The Mater Dolorosa
-of Solimena.”</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions about the artist.</b> Where was the
-artist born? What two talents had he? How
-did he happen to study painting? How did
-he succeed with his first picture? What was
-his progress? Why was he never rich? What
-subjects did he choose? What did the young
-nobleman ask him? Tell of the nobleman’s
-visit to the artist’s studio. Whose paintings
-did Guido Reni admire greatly? What statues?
-How was he able to make so many friends?
-What was his masterpiece? What did the little
-country girl say about it? Name some of his
-paintings.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div id='avenue' class='figcenter id008'>
-<img src='images/p047.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c007'>AVENUE AT MIDDELHARNIS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to arouse interest.</b> What occupies
-the most important part of this picture?
-Describe the trees bordering the road. Where
-does the road lead? What does it pass on its
-way to the village? Where must the artist
-have been standing? why do you think so?
-What can you say about the perspective of
-this road? How much of this picture is sky?
-What kind of lines predominate—curved,
-straight, vertical, or horizontal? In what country
-do you think it is? Why is it so level?
-What are the people in the picture doing?
-What do you like best about this picture?</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>Original Picture</b>: National Gallery, London, England.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Artist</b>: Meyndert Hobbema (hŏb’ĕ mä).</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Birthplace</b>: Amsterdam, the Netherlands.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Dates</b>: Born, 1638; died, 1709.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the picture.</b> There is a little
-village in the Netherlands by the name of
-Middelharnis, and if we should go there to-day
-we should find just such an avenue of trees as
-this one in our picture. The artist, Hobbema,
-spent many years in this village, painting scenes
-in and around it. Probably he traveled over
-this very road countless times. It would seem
-as if we, too, were walking down the road
-guarded by those tall, slender trees which
-border each side of it. They are poplar trees,
-trimmed so high that we scarcely recognize
-them. They lead direct to the little village
-beyond, which we see between the tree trunks.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Since the village is almost surrounded by
-the North Sea, its high church tower is not only
-picturesque by day but useful at night as a
-lighthouse or beacon to guide the sailor to a
-safe port.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In our picture the sun is half hidden in a
-sky as full of fleecy clouds as the sky near the
-North Sea generally is.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>We must expect no hills nor elevations of
-any kind in the Netherlands, a land lying lower
-than the ocean. The great protecting dikes
-and the many canals extending in every direction
-make it one of the most interesting of
-countries.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In the picture we see on each side of the road
-a deep ditch full of water. These ditches irrigate
-the land, flowing into deeper, wider canals
-on which sail boats of various sizes and kinds.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>It is said that every true Hollander can
-skate. In the winter, when these canals are
-frozen, young and old go about upon their
-various errands on skates. It is a common sight
-then to see women skating to market, carrying
-upon their heads heavy baskets filled with rolls
-of butter, cheese, eggs, or other provisions.
-The children skate to school, and men go about
-their business in this same pleasant way. It is
-easy to reach all parts of the village or city
-by these canals, for there are so many of them;
-in some cities the people have no streets, but
-use canals instead.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>At the right of our picture we catch a glimpse
-of a thrifty, well-kept nursery garden full of
-shrubs and fruit trees, which the man is busily
-trimming. He works contentedly, for all about
-him he sees the evidences of prosperity and
-peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Coming toward us along this straight and
-level road is a huntsman carrying his gun over
-his shoulder and preceded by his dog. A path
-leads away from the road to the picturesque
-little cottage or farmhouse at the right. Two
-peasants, a man and a woman, stand in the
-path talking. We do not doubt they will turn
-to greet our hunter, for it is a friendly countryside,
-where all are treated cordially.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>We cannot see much on the extreme left
-of the picture except the trees which grow
-luxuriantly, and a flat meadow land which
-reaches almost to the village. It is a common,
-everyday sort of landscape, yet its charm
-seems to lie in this very fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>We would know at once if the perspective
-were not correct, for we have solved just such
-problems ourselves with the tree tops, or perhaps
-telegraph poles, and it gives us an added
-sense of pleasure to be able to understand just
-the problem Hobbema had to solve as he placed
-his easel in the middle of the road and started
-to paint his great canvas.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The light is rather uncertain on this cloudy
-day. The artist used little color except grays
-and a peculiar green which he delighted in
-using in all his paintings. A touch of brighter
-color appears in the cheerful red of the roofs
-of his houses, which suggest something of the
-homely comfort and cleanliness that may be
-found in most Dutch homes.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The most striking characteristic of Hobbema’s
-painting is his severe combination of
-vertical and horizontal lines. The positive
-vertical lines of the tree trunks standing so
-tall and straight against the wide expanse of
-sky are reëchoed in the shorter but equally
-slender trunks of the fruit trees in the nursery
-garden, and of the trees at the side of the path
-leading to the farmhouse; also in the two straight
-figures standing in the path, and again in the
-church tower in the distance.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The horizontal lines are equally positive.
-They separate the garden from the road; they
-appear in the road itself, and in the horizon line
-beyond. If we make a sketch of the important
-lines in this picture, we find them either
-vertical or horizontal, and much more severe
-in outline than the usual diagonal or curving
-lines we have grown accustomed to looking for.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Critics seem to vary as to the feeling with
-which this picture inspires them, although all
-agree upon its value as a masterpiece. Some
-declare there is a sort of hopelessness in the
-landscape which suggests the unhappy life of
-the artist, who often went hungry, and whose
-paintings were not appreciated until after his
-death. To them the scene is full of hopeless
-beauty, suggesting all kinds of joys which are
-never realized, yet continue just out of reach
-throughout a long and cheerless life. So it is a
-sad beauty, and gives one a feeling of desolation
-even in a land where all is prosperity.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Other critics see only the thrifty, contented
-life of the Netherlands peasant, who by his
-intelligence and labor has overcome even the
-sea itself, and compelled it, by means of dikes
-and canals, to add to his safety and comfort.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>We know how much Hobbema must have
-loved his work, for he received no return for it
-during his lifetime, unless it was the joy of
-work; and yet he persevered.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Can we not imagine him on a pleasant day,
-seated or standing at his easel in the middle
-of this road, quite forgetting poverty and even
-hunger, as he painted this beautiful landscape
-before him? Hobbema was certainly daring
-and full of courage when he attempted so
-severe and unusual a composition as this. He
-has placed his road almost exactly in the center
-of the picture, balancing the sides quite evenly,
-yet he has not made it monotonous or tiresome.
-The eye is constantly discovering new beauties
-in the landscape or the inclosing sky. Only a
-master could produce a work such as this.</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to help the pupil understand the
-picture.</b> What country is represented in this
-picture? What kind of trees are those bordering
-the road? To what do they lead the eye?</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Of what use could the church tower, in the
-distance, be? Why is the Netherlands such
-a level country? What can you see on each
-side of the road? Of what use are the canals?
-What is the man doing in the garden? Who
-else can you see in the picture? What colors
-did the artist use? How can you tell whether
-the perspective of the road is correct or not?
-What can you say of the sky? What can you
-say of the balance in the composition? the kinds
-of lines? What kind of a day is represented?
-What do some of the critics say about this
-picture? What is so unusual about this composition?
-Why do most artists avoid placing
-the center of interest in the middle of the
-picture? Why do you like this picture?</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the artist.</b> We know very little
-about the artist, Meyndert Hobbema, except
-that he was a Hollander possessing so great a
-love for his native land that he continued to
-represent it on canvas in spite of the fact that
-his countrymen were quite indifferent to him
-and his work. His pictures were disposed of
-somehow, perhaps given away, for when a
-hundred years after his death the world suddenly
-began to value them, it was found that he had
-left enough canvases to have made him the
-wealthiest man in the country. Yet he died in
-the almshouse, and was buried beside his wife
-in a pauper’s grave. Now all the Netherlands
-would give him honor, but so neglected was he
-during his life that it is impossible to find out
-even where he was born. Three cities claim
-this honor, but it is generally conceded that he
-was born at Amsterdam. It is certain he was
-married and died there. We determine the
-date of his birth by the date and his age as
-given in the record of his marriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Hobbema’s paintings were so real that the
-people, who were used to more fanciful, idealized
-pictures, thought his commonplace and of no
-especial interest. Now they recognize the great
-sympathy with, and insight into, the very life
-of their country which Hobbema possessed in
-rare measure. He made it real to us, too,
-in his scenes of thrift and industry, prosperity,
-and smiling peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>We are told that Hobbema was “a plain,
-practical, matter-of-fact” man and his pictures
-make us think he must have been. Like him,
-they are plain, unassuming, and natural; free
-from artificial grace or fancy. He did not
-hunt for scenes of unusual beauty with romantic
-or weird stories, but chose some pleasing view
-near at hand and painted it just as it was.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Sometimes he painted the same scene several
-times from exactly the same position. If all
-his works could be placed in one gallery for
-exhibition, we might find it rather monotonous
-to see so many just alike.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>But although he did not have the inventive
-genius of Burne-Jones or of many other artists,
-his paintings were always true to nature. He
-has been called the painter of the afternoon sun
-because he seemed so fond of the sunlight showing
-through the trees and casting long shadows
-across the fields.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Many believe that Hobbema must have
-been a pupil of Ruysdael’s because their work
-was so much alike. We know that they lived
-in the same place at the same time and it is
-generally believed they were friends. Dealers
-often substituted the name of one for that of
-the other and later, when corrections were
-attempted, it was impossible to tell which was
-Hobbema’s work and which Ruysdael’s, because
-both had painted the same subjects.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>At one time Hobbema was appointed gauger
-for the town. It was his duty to measure the
-quantity of all liquids imported into Holland.
-This position must have paid a fairly good
-salary, for Hobbema was married directly after
-his appointment. It must have taken all his
-time, too, for he painted very little for nearly
-twenty years. The fact that he had a means
-of livelihood did not spur him on to greater
-efforts. He painted only when he felt like it,
-not very often, and small, unimportant pictures.
-Whether he lost this office before or after his
-wife’s death is not known, but for some reason
-or other his last years were spent in extreme
-poverty.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Twenty-six years after his death his pictures
-began to sell, and soon picture dealers were
-scouring the country for his works.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>His landscapes are not full of people, animals,
-or anything that might disturb the calm, quiet
-restfulness of the scenes. Like Ruysdael, he
-too was compelled to call upon other artists
-to draw the few figures he did use, as he found
-this part most difficult.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>One thing we may be sure of when we look
-at his paintings, and that is, they were faithful
-representations of the place before him.
-So we may know just how this road leading to
-the village of Middelharnis really looked more
-than two centuries ago.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Other famous paintings by Hobbema are
-entitled: “Showery Weather,” “Village with
-Water Mills,” “Woody Landscape,” “Ruins of
-Brederode Castle,” “Forest Scene,” “Cottage
-in a Wood,” and “Entrance to a Wood.”</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions about the artist.</b> What kind of
-a man do you think Hobbema must have been?
-Why? In what ways do his pictures resemble
-him? What kind of pictures did he like to
-paint? What time of day? Why might an
-exhibition of all his paintings prove monotonous?</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>What would you consider one of the best things
-about his paintings? What other great artist
-lived at this time and in the same place? How
-did their paintings resemble each other? What
-office did Hobbema hold? What were some
-of his duties? How did this position affect
-his work? What became of his paintings?
-Why was he so poor? Why were his paintings
-not appreciated? How are they regarded now?
-Why do you think Hobbema must have loved
-his work?</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div id='angelus' class='figcenter id009'>
-<img src='images/p058.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic009'>
-<p>By Permission of Braun &amp; Co., Paris and New York</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c007'>THE ANGELUS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to arouse interest.</b> In what
-attitude are these peasants standing? What
-have they been doing? With what have they
-been working? What can you see in the background?
-From what direction does the light
-come? What time of day do you think it
-is? in what country? Why have they stopped
-their work? Who of you can tell what the
-Angelus is? What feeling does this picture
-give you—one of sadness, peace, quiet, noise
-prosperity, poverty, or happiness?</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>Original Picture</b>: Collection Chauchard, Paris.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Artist</b>: Jean François Millet (mē´lĕ).</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Birthplace</b>: Gruchy, France.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Dates</b>: Born, 1814; died, 1875.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the picture.</b> Although our print
-is only black and white, we are made to feel the
-brightness of the sunset in this picture. The
-horizon, veiled in a haze, shows the church tower
-of the distant village faintly silhouetted against
-the sky, while the sinking sun casts its long
-shadows across the field. But our eyes do not
-dwell long on sky, church, or field, for the two
-figures draw our gaze. The bright rays from
-the setting sun fall directly upon the woman,
-who faces the west; the man, turning toward
-her, is partly in shadow.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>No doubt these two peasants have been
-working in the fields, the man digging potatoes,
-as we may judge by those in the basket and the
-two well-filled bags on the wheelbarrow. As
-he digs them, the woman gathers them up in
-her basket and empties them into the sacks.
-Thus busily engaged, they suddenly hear the
-church bell; its great tone coming far across
-the field reminds them that it is the hour of
-prayer. So putting down the pitchfork and
-basket, they stand with bowed heads as they
-repeat the evening prayer.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The artist wished to paint a picture that
-would make us hear the bell sounding clearly
-across the deep stillness of the open field. He
-wished to make us feel, as do these peasants,
-the quiet solemnity of the hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Even as a little boy Millet was greatly
-impressed by the sound of the Angelus, or bell
-for prayers, which was rung each morning,
-noon, and night. One of his earliest remembrances
-was of a time when the villagers bought
-new bells for the church, and he went with his
-mother and a neighbor to see them before they
-were hung. It seems that two of the old bells
-had been used to make a cannon, the third was
-broken, and these new bells were in the church
-waiting to be baptized before they could be
-hung in the tower. They seemed immense
-to the small boy, and of course they must have
-been larger than he. Millet tells of the delight
-and awe he felt when the neighbor struck the
-bells with the great key to the church door,
-which she carried in her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>No wonder, then, that this picture was one
-of Millet’s favorites, for it reminded him of his
-boyhood home and brought back memories of
-the thoughts and experiences of his childhood.
-Grown to manhood, and himself a peasant, he,
-too, had heard the Angelus sounded forth from
-the village church tower, and had dropped his
-work to bow his head in prayer. The quiet
-and peace of such moments had left a deep
-impression which he wished to share with us.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The long stretch of field suggests the industry
-of the peasants; the distant church and their
-bowed heads against the bright sky tell us of
-their faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Can you not see them on their homeward
-journey, the man pushing the wheelbarrow
-with its heavy load, while the woman carries
-the basket? It looks as if it would be a long,
-tiresome tramp across the uneven field to the
-village so dimly visible in the distance.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>This is the time of year when the peasants’
-work is hardest, for during the winter there is
-little farm work to do. We are told that the
-women spend their winter days in spinning,
-weaving cloth, and making clothes, while the
-men weave baskets, make their garden tools,
-and do what little work there is to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The very simplicity of this landscape, with
-its lack of details, is part of its great charm.
-The quiet dignity of the man and woman,
-standing with bowed heads, the peace and
-quiet of the scene, and, above all, the sound of
-the sweet-toned Angelus, give us a feeling of
-restfulness and peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The horizon line is high in this picture, yet
-the sky space is large enough to contain the
-heads and shoulders of our two peasants. In
-this way we are made to feel that although
-they are bound to earth and are a part of it,
-their thoughts soar higher. There is another
-life besides the one of toil and privation.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>At the time Millet painted this great picture
-he was wretchedly poor. He sent the picture
-to a friend in Paris, begging him to sell it and
-send the money as soon as possible. It sold for
-less than five hundred dollars. Yet not many
-years ago a French collector paid one hundred
-and fifty thousand dollars for this same picture.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in9'>THE ANGELUS</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“They stand within the field at prayer,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>The rustic man and maid,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>While silvery thro’ the amber air</div>
- <div class='line in3'>The angel’s song is played!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“They bow their heads in gratitude</div>
- <div class='line in3'>For gift of life and health;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And for content—their highest good,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>And love—their only wealth.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“There is a closeness to the soil</div>
- <div class='line in3'>In both their garb and mien</div>
- <div class='line in1'>That tells of happiness and toil,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>And quiet peace serene.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“A lark above them sings and sings</div>
- <div class='line in3'>A song of hope and youth.</div>
- <div class='line'>Theirs is the joy of common things—</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The beauty of the truth!”</div>
- <div class='c013'>—<i>Edward Wilbur Mason</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to help the pupil understand the
-picture.</b> What time of day does this picture
-represent? What can you see in the distance?
-In what direction is the woman facing? How
-can you tell? What have these peasants been
-doing? Why have they stopped their work?
-Why is the picture called “The Angelus”?
-Tell about Millet and the new bells for the
-church. Tell something of the life of these
-peasants. How did the artist Millet know so
-much about their life? What can you say
-about the composition of this picture? What
-was the financial condition of the artist when he
-painted this picture? What did he do with
-this painting? About how much is it worth
-now?</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the artist.</b> Let us try to imagine
-the artist, Jean François Millet, as a young
-man nineteen years old on his first visit to the
-great city of Paris. Brought up on a farm
-among the lowliest of the French peasants, he
-had met few except those with whom he
-labored in the fields or those who, poorer than
-they, were made welcome under the ever
-hospitable roof of the elder Millets. These
-neighbors and friends were mostly sailors or
-farmers, who looked upon the journey to Paris
-as a great event, as indeed it was. For weeks
-the kind old grandmother had kept her spinning
-wheel busy, spinning and weaving the cloth
-for his new suit of clothes. She was the tailor
-who cut, stitched, and pressed them. All her
-savings of years had been sewed into a belt and
-given to him for this journey. As he stood in
-the doorway, waiting for the old stagecoach
-which presently came rattling down the stone
-road of the village, he must have felt anew
-the great sacrifices they were all so willing to
-make to send him where he could study his
-beloved art.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In Paris, Millet presented an unusual appearance—six
-feet in height, slender, a downy beard
-on his face, his brown hair hanging to his
-shoulders. All his belongings were neatly
-packed in the sailor’s canvas bag which he
-carried over his shoulder. Is it any wonder
-that many did not see the straightforward,
-honest, manly look of the calm gray eyes?
-There was in that gaze and in the rude bearing
-a certain quiet confidence and strength which
-only the home folks recognized and valued.
-The boy could draw, and draw well they knew,
-and had not the drawing master of the village
-told them he would surely one day become a
-great artist?</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Tired from the three days’ ride in the old
-stagecoach, jostled by the hurrying crowds,
-for it was evening and all were on their way
-home, he stood confused. A policeman, catching
-sight of the stupid-looking youth blocking
-the sidewalk with his great bag, asked him where
-he wanted to go. Is it any wonder that he
-answered, “Back to Gruchy”? We are told
-that he even inquired when the next coach
-left for Gruchy, but there was none until
-morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The policeman sent him to a boarding house
-of moderate prices, and the next morning he
-started out to find the great art gallery of the
-Louvre. He had attempted to inquire the
-way at the boarding house, but the boarders
-laughed at his Normandy accent and strange
-appearance and he did not wait for the answer.
-And so he wandered the streets for three days,
-not daring to ask the way for fear of being
-laughed at again, until at last he stood before
-the great gallery, recognizing it at once by the
-pictures he had seen of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In writing of it years later, Millet says:
-“My feelings were too great for words, and I
-closed my eyes lest I be dazzled by the sight,
-and then dared not open them lest I should find
-it all a dream. And if I ever reach Paradise
-I know my joy will be no greater than it was
-that first morning when I realized that I stood
-within the Louvre Palace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In the meantime he had found a room and
-place to board near by. The landlady having
-suggested that he had better not carry much
-money about with him, he immediately gave her
-all he had to keep for him; that was the last he
-saw of his money.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>He spent a week just visiting the Louvre,
-and finally became acquainted with a student
-who was copying one of the paintings. This
-student took him to the artist Delaroche, who,
-after looking at his sketches, gladly admitted
-him as a pupil.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The other students were greatly amused at
-Millet’s awkward appearance and called him the
-“man of the woods.” It was almost impossible
-to persuade him to talk, and his answers to all
-questions were in monosyllables; but if pressed
-too hard he could use his fists effectively. They
-soon found out, too, that he could paint, and
-paint well. All idea of going home was given
-up, and Millet spent twelve years in Paris,
-enduring poverty and hunger but working
-faithfully and long. When he went back to
-his home for a visit he was so nearly starved
-that he fell fainting on the ground when he
-tried to work in the fields.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Millet painted landscapes, portraits, and
-signs, but fortune never seemed to smile on him
-long at a time. People said his pictures did not
-sell because he painted such common things and
-such poor people instead of choosing beautiful
-girls or fine gentlemen for his models.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>But he painted the people he knew about and
-loved best—the French peasants—and as their
-lives were full of toil, he must represent them
-at their labor.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Returning to Paris, and finding his life there
-still one of continuous struggle with poverty,
-Millet with his wife and children went to live
-at Barbizon, a small village a day’s ride from
-Paris. Many descriptions have been written
-and pictures painted of the modest white stone
-cottage with its clinging vines and its thrifty
-gardens in which he spent the rest of his life.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>It was not until the last few years of his
-life that he ceased to be wretchedly poor, for
-then at last his pictures were appreciated and he
-received the profit and honor that were his due.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>He died at Barbizon, January 20, 1875.</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions about the artist.</b> Tell about
-Millet’s early training and the preparations
-made for his journey to Paris. How did he
-travel? Describe his first evening in Paris.
-How did he find the great gallery of the Louvre?
-Why did he not inquire the way? What
-became of his money? With whom did he
-study, and how did this happen? What did
-the other students call him? Why did they
-do this? How many years did he stay in Paris?
-What was his success there? Why did his
-pictures not sell? Where did he finally go to
-live? When were his paintings appreciated?</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div id='sheep' class='figcenter id010'>
-<img src='images/p068.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c007'>SHEEP IN SPRING</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to arouse interest.</b> What is
-there in this picture that suggests the time of
-year? What are the sheep doing? How many
-have watched sheep eat grass? Why do the
-shepherd and his dog stand in front of them?
-Of what use is the shepherd’s crook or staff?
-What do you see in the distance? Do you
-think this is a scene in our own country or in
-some foreign country? How are the sheep
-farthest away represented? Where does the
-light fall upon the sheep and upon the man?
-What kinds of lines are there in this picture?
-Tell some of the duties of a shepherd; of a
-shepherd’s dog. Why do sheep need so much
-care? Of what use are they? Why do you
-like this picture?</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>Original Picture</b>: Metropolitan Museum, New York City.</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Artist</b>: Anton Mauve (mōv).</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Birthplace</b>: Zaandam, the Netherlands</div>
- <div class='line'><b>Dates</b>: Born, 1838; died, 1888.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the picture.</b> The artist has
-taken us to his own native country, showing
-us the beauties of the fields in spring, and giving
-us much of their feeling of calm and contentment.
-The shepherd has led his sheep safely
-past the freshly plowed field which we see at
-the left of the picture, and now he stands in
-front of them so they will go more slowly and
-eat the grass closer. If one of the sheep should
-go too fast he would probably reach out with
-his long crook, which he would place around
-the sheep’s neck, and draw it back. The dog,
-too, would do his part to keep it where it ought
-to be. Sheep prefer to run ahead, taking a bit
-of grass here and a bit there, but when they
-are held back by the man and dog as in this
-picture, they will mow the grass as closely
-and thoroughly as if a lawnmower had passed
-over it.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>As we look at the picture we find that,
-though few details are shown, the sheep in the
-first row are distinct, while the rest are merely
-suggested. Anton Mauve has become famous
-for this very thing—the omission of minor
-details in his pictures and the simplicity with
-which he thus tells his story.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>We feel the warmth and vigor of this
-beautiful day in spring, the fresh green grass
-with here and there a flower to relieve the
-green, the soft green leaves of the young and
-slender trees planted on each side of the road
-at the right of the picture. This road probably
-leads direct to the farmhouse we see in the
-distance. The long meadow, too, seems to
-reach as far as that same farmhouse, and no
-doubt will provide pasture all summer for the
-sheep. Their fleecy white wool will grow long.
-Then will come sheep-shearing time, and the
-wool will be sent away to be woven into cloth.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In the picture the light falls strongly upon
-the backs of the sheep, on the head and shoulders
-of the man, and on the wooden shoes he wears.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The dog stands there expectant, ready to
-pursue any wayward sheep. It is wonderful
-how much these shepherd dogs know, and how
-much they help their owners. In some countries
-the sheep are kept out in the fields or among
-the hills all night. The shepherd rolls himself
-up in a blanket and sleeps securely near them,
-knowing full well that the faithful dog will
-remain on guard, allowing none to stray away
-or come to harm.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Sometimes, when the shepherd wishes to
-collect his flock and drive them to the fold or
-inclosure for the night, many of them have
-wandered up into the mountains to almost
-inaccessible heights, but the dog will find them,
-every one. He has a way of making the sheep
-understand what they are expected to do. He
-circles around and around them so quickly that
-none can escape, and he seems to have some
-mysterious way of counting them, for if one is
-missing off he goes, seldom failing to return
-with it.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The story is told of a shepherd who, with
-but one dog, was guarding seven hundred lambs.
-At midnight they suddenly took fright and,
-dividing into three sections, disappeared over
-the hills. The man could do nothing until
-daylight, but the morning found the lambs
-gathered in a valley and guarded by the faithful
-dog, from whose vigilance not one had escaped.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>These intelligent shepherd dogs can be made
-to understand their masters’ wishes even at a
-great distance, for they understand and obey
-motions made with the hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Sheep are more helpless than most animals,
-because they cannot defend themselves against
-wild animals and because, having no sense of
-locality, they are so easily lost or led astray.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>If a flock of sheep is attacked by wolves, and
-there are several dogs guarding the flock, very
-often the dogs will circle around the sheep
-until they have crowded them as close together
-as they can; then one of the dogs will continue
-walking around them, while the others attack
-and usually beat off the wolves.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id011'>
-<img src='images/p072.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic011'>
-<p><i>Sheep in Autumn</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>Anton Mauve has painted a companion
-picture to this one. The two pictures hang on
-the same wall in the Metropolitan Museum,
-New York City. The companion picture is
-called “Sheep in Autumn,” and, as the name
-suggests, it represents a scene in the fall of
-the year.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The first picture brings to our mind visions
-of green meadows, newly ploughed fields, tender
-grass, and tiny green leaves, quickening into life
-and beauty with the arrival of the mild days
-of spring; but the second picture has a different
-story to tell. It is autumn now; the leaves and
-grass have ripened to a reddish brown, and the
-grain has been gathered from the field at the
-right of the picture.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The sheep are turned away from us here,
-and it is not necessary for the shepherd and
-his dog to hold them back. There is no young
-and tender grass to tempt them, and they are
-going home. There are many young lambs
-with the flock now, born since their mothers
-went out to pasture, and they lag behind the
-rest as if the journey were a long one. We
-can almost hear the shrill bleating of the little
-lambs mingled with the deeper calls of the
-sheep as they move along the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The shepherd, this time an old man in the
-autumn of his life, tenderly carries a little weak
-lamb under his arm. Perhaps after it has
-rested, he will take up another tired one.
-The dog looks older too. No doubt he has had
-a hard summer of it with the care of all these
-sheep and their lambs.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>By the long shadows, Mauve has told us
-that it is the end of the day as well as the end
-of the year.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>There is a strong appeal in this picture
-when we think of the homecoming of this
-little company—the tired young lambs following
-their mothers, the tired dog that will now
-have a long rest, and the kind old shepherd
-with the helpless lamb under his arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Through both these pictures Mauve has
-expressed the same sympathy with, and love
-for, nature and its many changes of season and
-weather. It is difficult indeed to choose one
-for study in preference to the other, and it is
-perhaps for that reason that they are usually
-studied together.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In our picture of the sheep in spring, with
-all its suggestions of growth and beauty, the
-grass and leaves are luxuriant, and yet the
-days and nights are still too cool for the sheep
-to be sheared. When the warm days come, the
-shepherd will probably drive his flock to the
-river or some clear stream where, in spite of
-strugglings to escape, their long, woolly coats will
-be scrubbed and cleaned. Then when the wool
-is thoroughly dried it will be cut off with large
-shears and sent to the manufactories, where it
-will be made into cloth for the garments we wear.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Long ago, in our great grandmother’s day,
-wool was carded, spun, and woven into cloth
-by hand. Many families still keep the old
-spinning wheels and hand looms which were
-used in those times.</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions to help the pupil understand
-the picture.</b> In what country was this picture
-painted? What time of year is represented?
-Why does the shepherd keep the sheep back?
-How can he prevent them from going too fast?
-How do the sheep prefer to eat the grass?
-What can you see at the right of the picture?
-What is on each side of this road? To what
-does it lead? Of what use are the sheep? In
-what ways can the dog help the shepherd?
-How does he keep the sheep together? Tell
-about the dog and the seven hundred lambs.
-How can a trained dog understand his master
-even at a distance? In what ways are sheep
-helpless? How can a dog protect them from
-wolves? What is the companion picture to
-this one called? How does it differ from this
-painting? Which one do you like best? Why?
-Where are the original paintings?</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>The story of the artist.</b> Anton Mauve was
-born near the sea in a little village called
-Zaandam, the Netherlands. His father was a
-Protestant clergyman in this thriving little
-town known for its oil and paper mills and its
-extensive timber trade. When Anton was but
-a boy, the family moved to Haarlem where
-he grew to manhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>His talent for drawing was soon discovered,
-but it did not meet with any favor at home. His
-father’s strong objections to his becoming an
-artist were finally overcome by a compromise.
-If Anton would promise to win a diploma as a
-drawing master, so that he would be sure of
-earning his living in case he failed as an artist,
-then his father would give his consent. As
-definite rules were laid down for teaching drawing,
-and these rules permitted little or no
-originality, Anton Mauve found his promise
-very hard to keep. However, he persevered.
-When the course was finished, he packed his
-grip and with little in his purse started for the
-village of Oosterbeek where a number of other
-artists lived and worked. Later he settled in
-Amsterdam where he worked hard, earning
-enough with his painting to support himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Mauve painted a great number of pictures,
-many of them in water color. He is best known
-by his flocks of sheep, which he represents
-in all seasons and in every kind of weather.
-Although he lived by the sea, very few of
-Mauve’s pictures were of the sea, for he preferred
-the country roads leading through green
-fields, with here and there a flock of sheep or
-herd of cattle. He seldom painted a landscape
-without some figure in it—a wood-cart, a man
-on horseback, a peasant woman, or a woodcutter
-were his most frequent models. The
-birch tree, with its graceful, silvery stem was
-his favorite tree.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>It is said that Mauve was in the habit of
-making his sketches on his cuffs, and by keeping
-the colors in his mind he was able from these
-suggestions to paint the pictures which soon
-brought him fame and honor.</p>
-<p class='c011'><b>Questions about the artist.</b> Who painted
-this picture? Where was he born? What
-compromise did he make with his father? Why
-did he find it difficult to do his part? What
-did he do then? What subjects might we have
-expected him to choose for his paintings?
-What subjects did he choose? Upon what did
-he often make his first sketches? How did he
-finish these pictures? What were his favorite
-models? What was his favorite tree?</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='suggs' class='c007'>THE SUGGESTIONS TO TEACHERS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c011'><b>Studying the picture.</b> Several days before the lesson is to
-be taken up, the picture to be studied should be placed where
-every pupil can see it.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>First of all, the children should find out for themselves
-what is in the picture. The questions accompanying the
-story of each picture are intended to help them to do this.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'><b>Language work.</b> The pupils should be encouraged in class
-to talk freely and naturally. In this way the lesson becomes
-a language exercise in which the pupils will gain in freedom
-of expression and in the ability to form clear mental images.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>If a lesson does not occupy the entire drawing period, the
-children should be asked to retell the story of the picture.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'><b>Dramatization and drawing.</b> Most of the stories told by the
-pictures lend themselves readily to dramatization and, whenever
-practicable, such stories should be acted out. The stories
-also offer numerous interesting situations that may be used
-as subjects for drawing lessons.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'><b>The review lesson.</b> The review lesson should cover all pictures
-and artists studied throughout the year. At this time
-other pictures available by the same artists should be on
-exhibition.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>The review work may be conducted as a contest in which
-the pictures are held up, one at a time, while the class writes
-the name of the picture and the artist on slips of paper which
-have been prepared and numbered for that purpose. One
-teacher who used this device surprised her class by presenting
-those whose lists were correct with their choice of any of the
-large-sized Perry pictures studied.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>Many teachers, however, will prefer to use this time for
-composition work, although the description of pictures is often
-given as an English lesson. Pupils may write a description of
-their favorite picture. In fact, the lessons can be made to
-correlate with history, geography, English, spelling, reading, or
-nature study.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>In any event the real purpose of the work is that the pupils
-shall become so familiar with the pictures that they will recognize
-them as old friends whenever and wherever they may see
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c012'>It is hoped that acquaintance with the picture and the
-interest awakened by its story will grow into a fuller appreciation
-and understanding of the artist’s work. Thus the children
-will have many happy hours and will learn to love the good,
-the true, and the beautiful in everything about them.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<p class='c012'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnbox'>
-
- <ul class='ul_1 c005'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Notes:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
- form was found in this book.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c012'>&nbsp;</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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