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<h2> Chapter XIX. The heart of the artist. </h2>
<p>I am almost too comfortable with Mrs. Bobby. In fact I wished to be just a
little miserable in Belvern, so that I could paint with a frenzy.
Sometimes, when I have been in a state of almost despairing loneliness and
gloom, the colours have glowed on my canvas and the lines have shaped
themselves under my hand independent of my own volition. Now, tucked away
in a corner of my consciousness is the knowledge that I need never be
lonely again unless I choose. When I yield myself fully to the sweet
enchantment of this thought, I feel myself in the mood to paint sunshine,
flowers, and happy children's faces; yet I am sadly lacking in
concentration, all the same. The fact is, I am no artist in the true sense
of the word. My hope flies ever in front of my best success, and that
momentary success does not deceive me in the very least. I know exactly
how much, or rather how little, I am worth; that I lack the imagination,
the industry, the training, the ambition, to achieve any lasting results.
I have the artistic temperament in so far that it is impossible for me to
work merely for money or popularity, or indeed for anything less than the
desire to express the best that is in me without fear or favour. It would
never occur to me to trade on present approval and dash off unworthy stuff
while I have command of the market. I am quite above all that, but I am
distinctly below that other mental and spiritual level where art is
enough; where pleasure does not signify; where one shuts oneself up and
produces from sheer necessity; where one is compelled by relentless law;
where sacrifice does not count; where ideas throng the brain and plead for
release in expression; where effort is joy, and the prospect of doing
something enduring lures the soul on to new and ever new endeavour: so I
shall never be rich or famous.</p>
<p>What shall I paint to-day? Shall it be the bit of garden underneath my
window, with the tangle of pinks and roses, and the cabbages growing
appetisingly beside the sweet-williams, the woodbine climbing over the
brown stone wall, the wicket-gate, and the cherry-tree with its fruit
hanging red against the whitewashed cottage? Ah, if I could only paint it
so truly that you could hear the drowsy hum of the bees among the thyme,
and smell the scented hay-meadows in the distance, and feel that it is
midsummer in England! That would indeed be truth, and that would be art.
Shall I paint the Bobby baby as he stoops to pick the cowslips and the
flax, his head as yellow and his eyes as blue as the flowers themselves;
or that bank opposite the gate, with its gorse bushes in golden bloom, its
mountain-ash hung with scarlet berries, its tufts of harebells blossoming
in the crevices of rock, and the quaint low clock-tower at the foot? Can I
not paint all these in the full glow of summer-time in my secret heart
whenever I open the door a bit and admit its life-giving warmth and
beauty? I think I can, if I can only quit dreaming.</p>
<p>I wonder how the great artists worked, and under what circumstances they
threw aside the implements of their craft, impatient of all but the throb
of life itself? Could Raphael paint Madonnas the week of his betrothal?
Did Thackeray write a chapter the day his daughter was born? Did Plato
philosophise freely when he was in love? Were there interruptions in the
world's great revolutions, histories, dramas, reforms, poems, and marbles
when their creators fell for a brief moment under the spell of the little
blind tyrant who makes slaves of us all? It must have been so. Your
chronometer heart, on whose pulsations you can reckon as on the procession
of the equinoxes, never gave anything to the world unless it were a system
of diet, or something quite uncoloured and unglorified by the imagination.</p>
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