I
THE charm of Fontainebleau is a thing apart. It is a place that people love
even more than they admire. The vigorous forest air, the silence, the majestic
avenues of highway, the wilderness of tumbled boulders, the great age and
dignity of certain groves - these are but ingredients, they are not the secret
of the philtre. The place is sanative; the air, the light, the perfumes, and the
shapes of things concord in happy harmony. The artist may be idle and not fear
the "blues." He may dally with his life. Mirth, lyric mirth, and a vivacious
classical contentment are of the very essence of the better kind of art; and
these, in that most smiling forest, he has the chance to learn or to remember.
Even on the plain of Biere, where the Angelus of Millet still tolls upon the ear
of fancy, a larger air, a higher heaven, something ancient and healthy in the
face of nature, purify the mind alike from dulness and hysteria. There is no
place where the young are more gladly conscious of their youth, or the old
better contented with their age.
The fact of its great and special beauty further recommends this country to
the artist. The field was chosen by men in whose blood there still raced some of
the gleeful or solemn exultation of great art - Millet who loved dignity like
Michelangelo, Rousseau whose modern brush was dipped in the glamour of the
ancients. It was chosen before the day of that strange turn in the history of
art, of which we now perceive the culmination in impressionistic tales and
pictures - that voluntary aversion of the eye from all speciously strong and
beautiful effects - that disinterested love of dulness which has set so many
Peter Bells to paint the river- side primrose. It was then chosen for its
proximity to Paris. And for the same cause, and by the force of tradition, the
painter of to-day continues to inhabit and to paint it. There is in France
scenery incomparable for romance and harmony. Provence, and the valley of the
Rhone from Vienne to Tarascon, are one succession of masterpieces waiting for
the brush. The beauty is not merely beauty; it tells, besides, a tale to the
imagination, and surprises while it charms. Here you shall see castellated towns
that would befit the scenery of dreamland; streets that glow with colour like
cathedral windows; hills of the most exquisite proportions; flowers of every
precious colour, growing thick like grass. All these, by the grace of railway
travel, are brought to the very door of the modern painter; yet he does not seek
them; he remains faithful to Fontainebleau, to the eternal bridge of Gretz, to
the watering-pot cascade in Cernay valley. Even Fontainebleau was chosen for
him; even in Fontainebleau he shrinks from what is sharply charactered. But one
thing, at least, is certain, whatever he may choose to paint and in whatever
manner, it is good for the artist to dwell among graceful shapes. Fontainebleau,
if it be but quiet scenery, is classically graceful; and though the student may
look for different qualities, this quality, silently present, will educate his
hand and eye.
But, before all its other advantages - charm, loveliness, or proximity to
Paris - comes the great fact that it is already colonised. The institution of a
painters' colony is a work of time and tact. The population must be conquered.
The innkeeper has to be taught, and he soon learns, the lesson of unlimited
credit; he must be taught to welcome as a favoured guest a young gentleman in a
very greasy coat, and with little baggage beyond a box of colours and a canvas;
and he must learn to preserve his faith in customers who will eat heartily and
drink of the best, borrow money to buy tobacco, and perhaps not pay a stiver for
a year. A colour merchant has next to be attracted. A certain vogue must be
given to the place, lest the painter, most gregarious of animals, should find
himself alone. And no sooner are these first difficulties overcome, than fresh
perils spring up upon the other side; and the bourgeois and the tourist are
knocking at the gate. This is the crucial moment for the colony. If these
intruders gain a footing, they not only banish freedom and amenity; pretty soon,
by means of their long purses, they will have undone the education of the
innkeeper; prices will rise and credit shorten; and the poor painter must fare
farther on and find another hamlet. "Not here, O Apollo!" will become his song.
Thus Trouville and, the other day, St. Raphael were lost to the arts. Curious
and not always edifying are the shifts that the French student uses to defend
his lair; like the cuttlefish, he must sometimes blacken the waters of his
chosen pool; but at such a time and for so practical a purpose Mrs. Grundy must
allow him licence. Where his own purse and credit are not threatened, he will do
the honours of his village generously. Any artist is made welcome, through
whatever medium he may seek expression; science is respected; even the idler, if
he prove, as he so rarely does, a gentleman, will soon begin to find himself at
home. And when that essentially modern creature, the English or American
girl-student, began to walk calmly into his favourite inns as if into a
drawing-room at home, the French painter owned himself defenceless; he submitted
or he fled. His French respectability, quite as precise as ours, though covering
different provinces of life, recoiled aghast before the innovation. But the
girls were painters; there was nothing to be done; and Barbizon, when I last saw
it and for the time at least, was practically ceded to the fair invader.
Paterfamilias, on the other hand, the common tourist, the holiday shopman, and
the cheap young gentleman upon the spree, he hounded from his villages with
every circumstance of contumely.
This purely artistic society is excellent for the young artist. The lads are
mostly fools; they hold the latest orthodoxy in its crudeness; they are at that
stage of education, for the most part, when a man is too much occupied with
style to be aware of the necessity for any matter; and this, above all for the
Englishman, is excellent. To work grossly at the trade, to forget sentiment, to
think of his material and nothing else, is, for awhile at least, the king's
highway of progress. Here, in England, too many painters and writers dwell
dispersed, unshielded, among the intelligent bourgeois. These, when they are not
merely indifferent, prate to him about the lofty aims and moral influence of
art. And this is the lad's ruin. For art is, first of all and last of all, a
trade. The love of words and not a desire to publish new discoveries, the love
of form and not a novel reading of historical events, mark the vocation of the
writer and the painter. The arabesque, properly speaking, and even in
literature, is the first fancy of the artist; he first plays with his material
as a child plays with a kaleidoscope; and he is already in a second stage when
he begins to use his pretty counters for the end of representation. In that, he
must pause long and toil faithfully; that is his apprenticeship; and it is only
the few who will really grow beyond it, and go forward, fully equipped, to do
the business of real art - to give life to abstractions and significance and
charm to facts. In the meanwhile, let him dwell much among his fellow-craftsmen.
They alone can take a serious interest in the childish tasks and pitiful
successes of these years. They alone can behold with equanimity this fingering
of the dumb keyboard, this polishing of empty sentences, this dull and literal
painting of dull and insignificant subjects. Outsiders will spur him on. They
will say, "Why do you not write a great book? paint a great picture?" If his
guardian angel fail him, they may even persuade him to the attempt, and, ten to
one, his hand is coarsened and his style falsified for life.
And this brings me to a warning. The life of the apprentice to any art is
both unstrained and pleasing; it is strewn with small successes in the midst of
a career of failure, patiently supported; the heaviest scholar is conscious of a
certain progress; and if he come not appreciably nearer to the art of
Shakespeare, grows letter-perfect in the domain of A-B, ab. But the time comes
when a man should cease prelusory gymnastic, stand up, put a violence upon his
will, and, for better or worse, begin the business of creation. This evil day
there is a tendency continually to postpone: above all with painters. They have
made so many studies that it has become a habit; they make more, the walls of
exhibitions blush with them; and death finds these aged students still busy with
their horn-book. This class of man finds a congenial home in artist villages; in
the slang of the English colony at Barbizon we used to call them "Snoozers."
Continual returns to the city, the society of men farther advanced, the study of
great works, a sense of humour or, if such a thing is to be had, a little
religion or philosophy, are the means of treatment. It will be time enough to
think of curing the malady after it has been caught; for to catch it is the very
thing for which you seek that dream-land of the painters' village. "Snoozing" is
a part of the artistic education; and the rudiments must be learned stupidly,
all else being forgotten, as if they were an object in themselves.
Lastly, there is something, or there seems to be something, in the very air
of France that communicates the love of style. Precision, clarity, the cleanly
and crafty employment of material, a grace in the handling, apart from any value
in the thought, seem to be acquired by the mere residence; or if not acquired,
become at least the more appreciated. The air of Paris is alive with this
technical inspiration. And to leave that airy city and awake next day upon the
borders of the forest is but to change externals. The same spirit of dexterity
and finish breathes from the long alleys and the lofty groves, from the
wildernesses that are still pretty in their confusion, and the great plain that
contrives to be decorative in its emptiness.
II
In spite of its really considerable extent, the forest of Fontainebleau is
hardly anywhere tedious. I know the whole western side of it with what, I
suppose, I may call thoroughness; well enough at least to testify that there is
no square mile without some special character and charm. Such quarters, for
instance, as the Long Rocher, the Bas-Breau, and the Reine Blanche, might be a
hundred miles apart; they have scarce a point in common beyond the silence of
the birds. The two last are really conterminous; and in both are tall and
ancient trees that have outlived a thousand political vicissitudes. But in the
one the great oaks prosper placidly upon an even floor; they beshadow a great
field; and the air and the light are very free below their stretching boughs. In
the other the trees find difficult footing; castles of white rock lie tumbled
one upon another, the foot slips, the crooked viper slumbers, the moss clings in
the crevice; and above it all the great beech goes spiring and casting forth her
arms, and, with a grace beyond church architecture, canopies this rugged chaos.
Meanwhile, dividing the two cantons, the broad white causeway of the Paris road
runs in an avenue: a road conceived for pageantry and for triumphal marches, an
avenue for an army; but, its days of glory over, it now lies grilling in the sun
between cool groves, and only at intervals the vehicle of the cruising tourist
is seen far away and faintly audible along its ample sweep. A little upon one
side, and you find a district of sand and birch and boulder; a little upon the
other lies the valley of Apremont, all juniper and heather; and close beyond
that you may walk into a zone of pine trees. So artfully are the ingredients
mingled. Nor must it be forgotten that, in all this part, you come continually
forth upon a hill-top, and behold the plain, northward and westward, like an
unrefulgent sea; nor that all day long the shadows keep changing; and at last,
to the red fires of sunset, night succeeds, and with the night a new forest,
full of whisper, gloom, and fragrance. There are few things more renovating than
to leave Paris, the lamplit arches of the Carrousel, and the long alignment of
the glittering streets, and to bathe the senses in this fragrant darkness of the
wood.
In this continual variety the mind is kept vividly alive. It is a changeful
place to paint, a stirring place to live in. As fast as your foot carries you,
you pass from scene to scene, each vigorously painted in the colours of the sun,
each endeared by that hereditary spell of forests on the mind of man who still
remembers and salutes the ancient refuge of his race.
And yet the forest has been civilised throughout. The most savage corners
bear a name, and have been cherished like antiquities; in the most remote,
Nature has prepared and balanced her effects as if with conscious art; and man,
with his guiding arrows of blue paint, has countersigned the picture. After your
farthest wandering, you are never surprised to come forth upon the vast avenue
of highway, to strike the centre point of branching alleys, or to find the
aqueduct trailing, thousand-footed, through the brush. It is not a wilderness;
it is rather a preserve. And, fitly enough, the centre of the maze is not a
hermit's cavern. In the midst, a little mirthful town lies sunlit, humming with
the business of pleasure; and the palace, breathing distinction and peopled by
historic names, stands smokeless among gardens.
Perhaps the last attempt at savage life was that of the harmless humbug who
called himself the hermit. In a great tree, close by the highroad, he had built
himself a little cabin after the manner of the Swiss Family Robinson; thither he
mounted at night, by the romantic aid of a rope ladder; and if dirt be any proof
of sincerity, the man was savage as a Sioux. I had the pleasure of his
acquaintance; he appeared grossly stupid, not in his perfect wits, and
interested in nothing but small change; for that he had a great avidity. In the
course of time he proved to be a chicken- stealer, and vanished from his perch;
and perhaps from the first he was no true votary of forest freedom, but an
ingenious, theatrically-minded beggar, and his cabin in the tree was only
stock-in-trade to beg withal. The choice of his position would seem to indicate
so much; for if in the forest there are no places still to be discovered, there
are many that have been forgotten, and that lie unvisited. There, to be sure,
are the blue arrows waiting to reconduct you, now blazed upon a tree, now posted
in the corner of a rock. But your security from interruption is complete; you
might camp for weeks, if there were only water, and not a soul suspect your
presence; and if I may suppose the reader to have committed some great crime and
come to me for aid, I think I could still find my way to a small cavern, fitted
with a hearth and chimney, where he might lie perfectly concealed. A confederate
landscape-painter might daily supply him with food; for water, he would have to
make a nightly tramp as far as to the nearest pond; and at last, when the hue
and cry began to blow over, he might get gently on the train at some side
station, work round by a series of junctions, and be quietly captured at the
frontier.
Thus Fontainebleau, although it is truly but a pleasure-ground, and although,
in favourable weather, and in the more celebrated quarters, it literally buzzes
with the tourist, yet has some of the immunities and offers some of the repose
of natural forests. And the solitary, although he must return at night to his
frequented inn, may yet pass the day with his own thoughts in the companionable
silence of the trees. The demands of the imagination vary; some can be alone in
a back garden looked upon by windows; others, like the ostrich, are content with
a solitude that meets the eye; and others, again, expand in fancy to the very
borders of their desert, and are irritably conscious of a hunter's camp in an
adjacent county. To these last, of course, Fontainebleau will seem but an
extended tea-garden: a Rosherville on a by-day. But to the plain man it offers
solitude: an excellent thing in itself, and a good whet for company.
III
I was for some time a consistent Barbizonian; ET EGO IN ARCADIA VIXI, it was
a pleasant season; and that noiseless hamlet lying close among the borders of
the wood is for me, as for so many others, a green spot in memory. The great
Millet was just dead, the green shutters of his modest house were closed; his
daughters were in mourning. The date of my first visit was thus an epoch in the
history of art: in a lesser way, it was an epoch in the history of the Latin
Quarter. The PETIT CENACLE was dead and buried; Murger and his crew of sponging
vagabonds were all at rest from their expedients; the tradition of their real
life was nearly lost; and the petrified legend of the VIE DE BOHEME had become a
sort of gospel, and still gave the cue to zealous imitators. But if the book be
written in rose-water, the imitation was still farther expurgated; honesty was
the rule; the innkeepers gave, as I have said, almost unlimited credit; they
suffered the seediest painter to depart, to take all his belongings, and to
leave his bill unpaid; and if they sometimes lost, it was by English and
Americans alone. At the same time, the great influx of Anglo- Saxons had begun
to affect the life of the studious. There had been disputes; and, in one
instance at least, the English and the Americans had made common cause to
prevent a cruel pleasantry. It would be well if nations and races could
communicate their qualities; but in practice when they look upon each other,
they have an eye to nothing but defects. The Anglo-Saxon is essentially
dishonest; the French is devoid by nature of the principle that we call "Fair
Play." The Frenchman marvelled at the scruples of his guest, and, when that
defender of innocence retired over-seas and left his bills unpaid, he marvelled
once again; the good and evil were, in his eyes, part and parcel of the same
eccentricity; a shrug expressed his judgment upon both.
At Barbizon there was no master, no pontiff in the arts. Palizzi bore rule at
Gretz - urbane, superior rule - his memory rich in anecdotes of the great men of
yore, his mind fertile in theories; sceptical, composed, and venerable to the
eye; and yet beneath these outworks, all twittering with Italian superstition,
his eye scouting for omens, and the whole fabric of his manners giving way on
the appearance of a hunchback. Cernay had Pelouse, the admirable, placid
Pelouse, smilingly critical of youth, who, when a full-blown commercial
traveller, suddenly threw down his samples, bought a colour-box, and became the
master whom we have all admired. Marlotte, for a central figure, boasted Olivier
de Penne. Only Barbizon, since the death of Millet, was a headless commonwealth.
Even its secondary lights, and those who in my day made the stranger welcome,
have since deserted it. The good Lachevre has departed, carrying his household
gods; and long before that Gaston Lafenestre was taken from our midst by an
untimely death. He died before he had deserved success; it may be, he would
never have deserved it; but his kind, comely, modest countenance still haunts
the memory of all who knew him. Another - whom I will not name - has moved
farther on, pursuing the strange Odyssey of his decadence. His days of royal
favour had departed even then; but he still retained, in his narrower life at
Barbizon, a certain stamp of conscious importance, hearty, friendly, filling the
room, the occupant of several chairs; nor had he yet ceased his losing battle,
still labouring upon great canvases that none would buy, still waiting the
return of fortune. But these days also were too good to last; and the former
favourite of two sovereigns fled, if I heard the truth, by night. There was a
time when he was counted a great man, and Millet but a dauber; behold, how the
whirligig of time brings in his revenges! To pity Millet is a piece of
arrogance; if life be hard for such resolute and pious spirits, it is harder
still for us, had we the wit to understand it; but we may pity his unhappier
rival, who, for no apparent merit, was raised to opulence and momentary fame,
and, through no apparent fault was suffered step by step to sink again to
nothing. No misfortune can exceed the bitterness of such back-foremost progress,
even bravely supported as it was; but to those also who were taken early from
the easel, a regret is due. From all the young men of this period, one stood out
by the vigour of his promise; he was in the age of fermentation, enamoured of
eccentricities. "Il faut faire de la peinture nouvelle," was his watchword; but
if time and experience had continued his education, if he had been granted
health to return from these excursions to the steady and the central, I must
believe that the name of Hills had become famous.
Siron's inn, that excellent artists' barrack, was managed upon easy
principles. At any hour of the night, when you returned from wandering in the
forest, you went to the billiard-room and helped yourself to liquors, or
descended to the cellar and returned laden with beer or wine. The Sirons were
all locked in slumber; there was none to check your inroads; only at the week's
end a computation was made, the gross sum was divided, and a varying share set
down to every lodger's name under the rubric: ESTRATS. Upon the more
long-suffering the larger tax was levied; and your bill lengthened in a direct
proportion to the easiness of your disposition. At any hour of the morning,
again, you could get your coffee or cold milk, and set forth into the forest.
The doves had perhaps wakened you, fluttering into your chamber; and on the
threshold of the inn you were met by the aroma of the forest. Close by were the
great aisles, the mossy boulders, the interminable field of forest shadow. There
you were free to dream and wander. And at noon, and again at six o'clock, a good
meal awaited you on Siron's table. The whole of your accommodation, set aside
that varying item of the ESTRALS, cost you five francs a day; your bill was
never offered you until you asked it; and if you were out of luck's way, you
might depart for where you pleased and leave it pending.
IV
Theoretically, the house was open to all corners; practically, it was a kind
of club. The guests protected themselves, and, in so doing, they protected
Siron. Formal manners being laid aside, essential courtesy was the more rigidly
exacted; the new arrival had to feel the pulse of the society; and a breach of
its undefined observances was promptly punished. A man might be as plain, as
dull, as slovenly, as free of speech as he desired; but to a touch of
presumption or a word of hectoring these free Barbizonians were as sensitive as
a tea-party of maiden ladies. I have seen people driven forth from Barbizon; it
would be difficult to say in words what they had done, but they deserved their
fate. They had shown themselves unworthy to enjoy these corporate freedoms; they
had pushed themselves; they had "made their head"; they wanted tact to
appreciate the "fine shades" of Barbizonian etiquette. And once they were
condemned, the process of extrusion was ruthless in its cruelty; after one
evening with the formidable Bodmer, the Baily of our commonwealth, the erring
stranger was beheld no more; he rose exceeding early the next day, and the first
coach conveyed him from the scene of his discomfiture. These sentences of
banishment were never, in my knowledge, delivered against an artist; such would,
I believe, have been illegal; but the odd and pleasant fact is this, that they
were never needed. Painters, sculptors, writers, singers, I have seen all of
these in Barbizon; and some were sulky, and some blatant and inane; but one and
all entered at once into the spirit of the association. This singular society is
purely French, a creature of French virtues, and possibly of French defects. It
cannot be imitated by the English. The roughness, the impatience, the more
obvious selfishness, and even the more ardent friendships of the Anglo-Saxon,
speedily dismember such a commonwealth. But this random gathering of young
French painters, with neither apparatus nor parade of government, yet kept the
life of the place upon a certain footing, insensibly imposed their etiquette
upon the docile, and by caustic speech enforced their edicts against the
unwelcome. To think of it is to wonder the more at the strange failure of their
race upon the larger theatre. This inbred civility - to use the word in its
completest meaning - this natural and facile adjustment of contending liberties,
seems all that is required to make a governable nation and a just and prosperous
country.
Our society, thus purged and guarded, was full of high spirits, of laughter,
and of the initiative of youth. The few elder men who joined us were still young
at heart, and took the key from their companions. We returned from long stations
in the fortifying air, our blood renewed by the sunshine, our spirits refreshed
by the silence of the forest; the Babel of loud voices sounded good; we fell to
eat and play like the natural man; and in the high inn chamber, panelled with
indifferent pictures and lit by candles guttering in the night air, the talk and
laughter sounded far into the night. It was a good place and a good life for any
naturally- minded youth; better yet for the student of painting, and perhaps
best of all for the student of letters. He, too, was saturated in this
atmosphere of style; he was shut out from the disturbing currents of the world,
he might forget that there existed other and more pressing interests than that
of art. But, in such a place, it was hardly possible to write; he could not drug
his conscience, like the painter, by the production of listless studies; he saw
himself idle among many who were apparently, and some who were really, employed;
and what with the impulse of increasing health and the continual provocation of
romantic scenes, he became tormented with the desire to work. He enjoyed a
strenuous idleness full of visions, hearty meals, long, sweltering walks, mirth
among companions; and still floating like music through his brain, foresights of
great works that Shakespeare might be proud to have conceived, headless epics,
glorious torsos of dramas, and words that were alive with import. So in youth,
like Moses from the mountain, we have sights of that House Beautiful of art
which we shall never enter. They are dreams and unsubstantial; visions of style
that repose upon no base of human meaning; the last heart- throbs of that
excited amateur who has to die in all of us before the artist can be born. But
they come to us in such a rainbow of glory that all subsequent achievement
appears dull and earthly in comparison. We were all artists; almost all in the
age of illusion, cultivating an imaginary genius, and walking to the strains of
some deceiving Ariel; small wonder, indeed, if we were happy! But art, of
whatever nature, is a kind mistress; and though these dreams of youth fall by
their own baselessness, others succeed, graver and more substantial; the
symptoms change, the amiable malady endures; and still, at an equal distance,
the House Beautiful shines upon its hill-top.
V
Gretz lies out of the forest, down by the bright river. It boasts a mill, an
ancient church, a castle, and a bridge of many sterlings. And the bridge is a
piece of public property; anonymously famous; beaming on the incurious
dilettante from the walls of a hundred exhibitions. I have seen it in the Salon;
I have seen it in the Academy; I have seen it in the last French Exposition,
excellently done by Bloomer; in a black-and-white by Mr. A. Henley, it once
adorned this essay in the pages of the MAGAZINE OF ART. Long-suffering bridge!
And if you visit Gretz to-morrow, you shall find another generation, camped at
the bottom of Chevillon's garden under their white umbrellas, and doggedly
painting it again.
The bridge taken for granted, Gretz is a less inspiring place than Barbizon.
I give it the palm over Cernay. There is something ghastly in the great empty
village square of Cernay, with the inn tables standing in one corner, as though
the stage were set for rustic opera, and in the early morning all the painters
breaking their fast upon white wine under the windows of the villagers. It is
vastly different to awake in Gretz, to go down the green inn- garden, to find
the river streaming through the bridge, and to see the dawn begin across the
poplared level. The meals are laid in the cool arbour, under fluttering leaves.
The splash of oars and bathers, the bathing costumes out to dry, the trim canoes
beside the jetty, tell of a society that has an eye to pleasure. There is
"something to do" at Gretz. Perhaps, for that very reason, I can recall no such
enduring ardours, no such glories of exhilaration, as among the solemn groves
and uneventful hours of Barbizon. This "something to do" is a great enemy to
joy; it is a way out of it; you wreak your high spirits on some cut-and-dry
employment, and behold them gone! But Gretz is a merry place after its kind:
pretty to see, merry to inhabit. The course of its pellucid river, whether up or
down, is full of gentle attractions for the navigator: islanded reed-mazes
where, in autumn, the red berries cluster; the mirrored and inverted images of
trees, lilies, and mills, and the foam and thunder of weirs. And of all noble
sweeps of roadway, none is nobler, on a windy dusk, than the highroad to Nemours
between its lines of talking poplar.
But even Gretz is changed. The old inn, long shored and trussed and
buttressed, fell at length under the mere weight of years, and the place as it
was is but a fading image in the memory of former guests. They, indeed, recall
the ancient wooden stair; they recall the rainy evening, the wide hearth, the
blaze of the twig fire, and the company that gathered round the pillar in the
kitchen. But the material fabric is now dust; soon, with the last of its
inhabitants, its very memory shall follow; and they, in their turn, shall suffer
the same law, and, both in name and lineament, vanish from the world of men.
"For remembrance of the old house' sake," as Pepys once quaintly put it, let me
tell one story. When the tide of invasion swept over France, two foreign
painters were left stranded and penniless in Gretz; and there, until the war was
over, the Chevillons ungrudgingly harboured them. It was difficult to obtain
supplies; but the two waifs were still welcome to the best, sat down daily with
the family to table, and at the due intervals were supplied with clean napkins,
which they scrupled to employ. Madame Chevillon observed the fact and
reprimanded them. But they stood firm; eat they must, but having no money they
would soil no napkins.
VI
Nemours and Moret, for all they are so picturesque, have been little visited
by painters. They are, indeed, too populous; they have manners of their own, and
might resist the drastic process of colonisation. Montigny has been somewhat
strangely neglected, I never knew it inhabited but once, when Will H. Low
installed himself there with a barrel of PIQUETTE, and entertained his friends
in a leafy trellis above the weir, in sight of the green country and to the
music of the falling water. It was a most airy, quaint, and pleasant place of
residence, just too rustic to be stagey; and from my memories of the place in
general, and that garden trellis in particular - at morning, visited by birds,
or at night, when the dew fell and the stars were of the party - I am inclined
to think perhaps too favourably of the future of Montigny. Chailly-en-Biere has
outlived all things, and lies dustily slumbering in the plain - the cemetery of
itself. The great road remains to testify of its former bustle of postilions and
carriage bells; and, like memorial tablets, there still hang in the inn room the
paintings of a former generation, dead or decorated long ago. In my time, one
man only, greatly daring, dwelt there. From time to time he would walk over to
Barbizon like a shade revisiting the glimpses of the moon, and after some
communication with flesh and blood return to his austere hermitage. But even he,
when I last revisited the forest, had come to Barbizon for good, and closed the
roll of Chaillyites. It may revive - but I much doubt it. Acheres and Recloses
still wait a pioneer; Bourron is out of the question, being merely Gretz over
again, without the river, the bridge, or the beauty; and of all the possible
places on the western side, Marlotte alone remains to be discussed. I scarcely
know Marlotte, and, very likely for that reason, am not much in love with it. It
seems a glaring and unsightly hamlet. The inn of Mother Antonie is unattractive;
and its more reputable rival, though comfortable enough, is commonplace.
Marlotte has a name; it is famous; if I were the young painter I would leave it
alone in its glory.
VII
These are the words of an old stager; and though time is a good conservative
in forest places, much may be untrue to-day. Many of us have passed Arcadian
days there and moved on, but yet left a portion of our souls behind us buried in
the woods. I would not dig for these reliquiae; they are incommunicable
treasures that will not enrich the finder; and yet there may lie, interred below
great oaks or scattered along forest paths, stores of youth's dynamite and dear
remembrances. And as one generation passes on and renovates the field of tillage
for the next, I entertain a fancy that when the young men of to-day go forth
into the forest they shall find the air still vitalised by the spirits of their
predecessors, and, like those "unheard melodies" that are the sweetest of all,
the memory of our laughter shall still haunt the field of trees. Those merry
voices that in woods call the wanderer farther, those thrilling silences and
whispers of the groves, surely in Fontainebleau they must be vocal of me and my
companions? We are not content to pass away entirely from the scenes of our
delight; we would leave, if but in gratitude, a pillar and a legend.
One generation after another fall like honey-bees upon this memorable forest,
rifle its sweets, pack themselves with vital memories, and when the theft is
consummated depart again into life richer, but poorer also. The forest, indeed,
they have possessed, from that day forward it is theirs indissolubly, and they
will return to walk in it at night in the fondest of their dreams, and use it
for ever in their books and pictures. Yet when they made their packets, and put
up their notes and sketches, something, it should seem, had been forgotten. A
projection of themselves shall appear to haunt unfriended these scenes of
happiness, a natural child of fancy, begotten and forgotten unawares. Over the
whole field of our wanderings such fetches are still travelling like
indefatigable bagmen; but the imps of Fontainebleau, as of all beloved spots,
are very long of life, and memory is piously unwilling to forget their
orphanage. If anywhere about that wood you meet my airy bantling, greet him with
tenderness. He was a pleasant lad, though now abandoned. And when it comes to
your own turn to quit the forest, may you leave behind you such another; no
Antony or Werther, let us hope, no tearful whipster, but, as becomes this not
uncheerful and most active age in which we figure, the child of happy hours.
No art, it may be said, was ever perfect, and not many noble, that has not
been mirthfully conceived.
And no man, it may be added, was ever anything but a wet blanket and a cross
to his companions who boasted not a copious spirit of enjoyment. Whether as man
or artist let the youth make haste to Fontainebleau, and once there let him
address himself to the spirit of the place; he will learn more from exercise
than from studies, although both are necessary; and if he can get into his heart
the gaiety and inspiration of the woods he will have gone far to undo the evil
of his sketches. A spirit once well strung up to the concert-pitch of the
primeval out-of-doors will hardly dare to finish a study and magniloquently
ticket it a picture. The incommunicable thrill of things, that is the
tuning-fork by which we test the flatness of our art. Here it is that Nature
teaches and condemns, and still spurs up to further effort and new failure. Thus
it is that she sets us blushing at our ignorant and tepid works; and the more we
find of these inspiring shocks the less shall we be apt to love the literal in
our productions. In all sciences and senses the letter kills; and to-day, when
cackling human geese express their ignorant condemnation of all studio pictures,
it is a lesson most useful to be learnt. Let the young painter go to
Fontainebleau, and while he stupefies himself with studies that teach him the
mechanical side of his trade, let him walk in the great air, and be a servant of
mirth, and not pick and botanise, but wait upon the moods of nature. So he will
learn - or learn not to forget - the poetry of life and earth, which, when he
has acquired his track, will save him from joyless reproduction.
[1882.]
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