White Lies by Charles Reade
page 84 of 493 (17%)
page 84 of 493 (17%)
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"That I will, now it is worth having: dear me, I never reckoned on that. Finish it directly," cried this peremptory young person. "First I must trouble you to stand out there near the tree." "Me? what for?" "Because art loves contrasts. The tree is a picture of age and gradual decay; by its side then I must place a personification of youth and growing loveliness." She did not answer, but made a sort of defiant pirouette, and went where she was bid, and stood there with her back to the artist. "That will never do," said he; "you really must be so good as to turn round." "Oh, very well." And when she came round, behold her color had risen mightily. Flattery is sweet. This child of nature was delighted, and ashamed it should be seen that she was. And so he drew her, and kept looking off the paper at her, and had a right in his character of artist to look her full in the face; and he did so with long lingering glances. To be sure, they all began severe and businesslike with half-closed eyes, and the peculiar hostile expression art puts on; but then they always ended open-eyed, and so full and tender, that she, poor girl, who was all real gold, though sham brass, blushed and blushed, and did not know which way to look not to be scorched up by his eye like a tender flower, or blandly absorbed like |
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