Barbara's Heritage - Young Americans Among the Old Italian Masters by Deristhe L. Hoyt
page 163 of 240 (67%)
page 163 of 240 (67%)
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"Yes," replied Mr. Sumner, rising, "especially in the frescoes that we
shall see by and by. It would have been utterly impossible for him to have executed all these with his own hand. Let us now go out into this next gallery through which we entered, and look at the _Transfiguration_." So they went into the small room which is dedicated wholly to three large pictures:--the _Transfiguration_ and _Madonna di Foligno_ by Raphael, and the _Communion of St. Jerome_ by Domenichino. "Raphael's last picture, which he left unfinished!" murmured Bettina, and she took an almost reverential attitude before it. "How very, very different from the _Coronation_!" exclaimed Barbara, after some moments of earnest study. "That is so utterly simple, so quiet! This is more than dramatic!" "Raphael's whole lifetime of painting lies between the two," replied Mr. Sumner, who had been intently watching her face as he stood beside her. "Do you like this, Mr. Sumner? I do not think I do, really," said Miss Sherman, as she dropped into a chair, her eyes denoting a veiled displeasure, which was also apparent in the tones of her voice. "It is a difficult picture to judge," replied Mr. Sumner, slowly. "I wish you all could have studied many others before studying this one. But, indeed, you are so familiar with Raphael's pictures that you need only to recall them to mind. This was painted under peculiar circumstances,--in competition, you remember, with Sebastian del Piombo's _Resurrection of Lazarus_; and Sebastian was a pupil of Michael |
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