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Lost Leaders by Andrew Lang
page 108 of 126 (85%)
wander off in search of new veins, as a general rule. It would be unkind
to draw attention to personal proofs of this truism. He who has done
well with babies in fancy dresses will go on doing well with infants in
masquerade. There are moments when the arrival of Cronus to swallow the
whole family of painted babes, as he did his own, would be not unwelcome;
when an artistic Herod would be applauded for a general massacre of the
Burlington House innocents. But this may be only the jaundiced theory of
a jaded critic. The mothers of England are a much more important set of
judges, and they like the babies. Then the bishops, though a little
monotonous, must be agreeable to their flocks; while the hunting dogs,
and pugs, and kittens, and monks, and Venetian girls--_la blonde et la
brune_--and the Highland rivers of the colour of porter "with a head on
it," and the mackerel-hued sea, and the marble, and the martyrs, and the
Mediterranean--they are all dear to various classes of our teeming
population. The critic may say he has seen them all before, he knows
them off by heart; but then so does he know Raphael's infants, and
Botticelli's madonnas, and Fra Angelico's angel trumpeters, and Vecelli's
blue hills, and Robusti's doges, and Lionardo's smiling, enigmatic
ladies. He does not say he is tired of these, but that is only his
eternal affectation. He is afraid, perhaps, to say that the old masters
bore him--that is a compliment reserved for contemporaries. Let it be
admitted that in all ages artists have had their grooves, like other men,
and have reproduced themselves and their own best effects. But, as this
is inevitably true, how careful they should be that the effects are
really of permanent value and beauty! Realistic hansom cabs, and babies
in strange raiment, and schoolgirls of the last century, and Masters of
Hounds, are scarcely of so much permanent value as the favourite types
and characters which Lionardo and Carpaccio repeat again and again. We
no more think Claude monotonous than we think "the quiet coloured end of
evening" flat and stale. But we may, and must, tire of certain modern
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