Lippincott's Magazine, December, 1885 by Various
page 36 of 237 (15%)
page 36 of 237 (15%)
|
Long before we reached _Ye Hutte_ from Cookham station--Ye Hutte set amid bushy and climbing roses upon a prominent knoll of the many-knolled Dean--we ceased to wonder that our picturesque imaginings of the region we were passing through had been so various. Artists were before us, artists behind us, artists on every side of us, two sketching-umbrellas glinting like great tropical flowers in a corn-field, another like a huge daisy in the dim vista of a long lane. "C---- lodges in that red cottage, B---- in the next one, H---- in this tumble-down farm-house, the L----s in that row of laborers' cottages, the D----s in the inn," said Mona, tripping lightly over well-known names, whose most accustomed place is in the exhibition catalogues. Through the open windows of a hideous brick row, built to hold as many laborers' families all the year round and as many Bohemian summer artists as can crowd therein, we caught glimpses of tapestries worth their weight in gold. One well-known artist has taken possession of the end of this uncomely row, intended for a supply-shop to the neighborhood. This shop is his studio, which he has filled with treasures of Japanese art. As a Cookhamite assured us, "Mr. C---- goes in for the _Japanesque_;" and he screens the large display-windows intended for cheese, raisins, and potted meats with smiling mandarins and narrow-eyed houris under octopus-like trees. At the rear of the same "Row" we recognized a broad-hatted figure once familiar to us in the Quartier Latin and the artistic _auberges_ of the Forest of Fontainebleau. The very personification of _insouciance_ and _laissez-aller_, he whose tiny bedroom-studio up-stairs ran riot with color caught among California mountains, in cool gray France and |
|