登陆注册
19661200000095

第95章 CHAPTER XXXVIII(1)

THE winter of 1854-55 I spent in Rome. Here I made the acquaintance of Leighton, then six-and-twenty. I saw a good deal of him, as I lived almost entirely amongst the artists, taking lessons myself in water colours of Leitch. Music also brought us into contact. He had a beautiful voice, and used to sing a good deal with Mrs. Sartoris - Adelaide Kemble - whom he greatly admired, and whose portrait is painted under a monk's cowl, in the Cimabue procession.

Calling on him one morning, I found him on his knees buttering and rolling up this great picture, preparatory to sending it to the Academy. I made some remark about its unusual size, saying with a sceptical smile, 'It will take up a lot of room.'

'If they ever hang it,' he replied; 'but there's not much chance of that.'

Seeing that his reputation was yet to win, it certainly seemed a bold venture to make so large a demand for space to begin with. He did not appear the least sanguine. But it was accepted; and Prince Albert bought it before the Exhibition opened.

Gibson also I saw much of. He had executed a large alto-rilievo monument of my mother, which is now in my parish church, and the model of which is on the landing of one of the staircases of the National Gallery. His studio was always an interesting lounge, for he was ever ready to lecture upon antique marbles. To listen to him was like reading the 'Laocoon,' which he evidently had at his fingers' ends. My companion through the winter was Mr. Reginald Cholmondeley, a Cambridge ally, who was studying painting.

He was the uncle of Miss Cholmondeley the well-known authoress, whose mother, by the way, was a first cousin of George Cayley's, and also a great friend of mine.

On my return to England I took up my abode in Dean's Yard, and shared a house there with Mr. Cayley, the Yorkshire member, and his two sons, the eldest a barrister, and my friend George. Here for several years we had exceedingly pleasant gatherings of men more or less distinguished in literature and art. Tennyson was a frequent visitor - coming late, after dinner hours, to smoke his pipe. He varied a good deal, sometimes not saying a word, but quietly listening to our chatter. Thackeray also used to drop in occasionally.

George Cayley and I, with the assistance of his father and others, had started a weekly paper called 'The Realm.' It was professedly a currency paper, and also supported a fiscal policy advocated by Mr. Cayley and some of his parliamentary clique. Coming in one day, and finding us hard at work, Thackeray asked for information. We handed him a copy of the paper. 'Ah,' he exclaimed, with mock solemnity, '"The Rellum," should be printed on vellum.' He too, like Tennyson, was variable. But this depended on whom he found.

In the presence of a stranger he was grave and silent. He would never venture on puerile jokes like this of his 'Rellum' - a frequent playfulness, when at his ease, which contrasted so unexpectedly with his impenetrable exterior.

He was either gauging the unknown person, or feeling that he was being gauged. Monckton Milnes was another. Seeing me correcting some proof sheets, he said, 'Let me give you a piece of advice, my young friend. Write as much as you please, but the less you print the better.'

'For me, or for others?'

'For both.'

George Cayley had a natural gift for, and had acquired considerable skill, in the embossing and working of silver ware. Millais so admired his art that he commissioned him to make a large tea-tray; Millais provided the silver. Round the border of the tray were beautifully modelled sea-shells, cray-fish, crabs, and fish of quaint forms, in high relief.

Millais was so pleased with the work that he afterwards painted, and presented to Cayley, a fine portrait in his best style of Cayley's son, a boy of six or seven years old.

Laurence Oliphant was one of George Cayley's friends.

Attractive as he was in many ways, I had little sympathy with his religious opinions, nor did I comprehend Oliphant's exalted inspirations; I failed to see their practical bearing, and, at that time I am sorry to say, looked upon him as an amiable faddist. A special favourite with both of us was William Stirling of Keir. His great work on the Spanish painters, and his 'Cloister Life of Charles the Fifth,' excited our unbounded admiration, while his BONHOMIE and radiant humour were a delight we were always eager to welcome.

George Cayley and I now entered at Lincoln's Inn. At the end of three years he was duly called to the Bar. I was not; for alas, as usual, something 'turned up,' which drew me in another direction. For a couple of years, however, I 'ate' my terms - not unfrequently with William Harcourt, with whom Cayley had a Yorkshire intimacy even before our Cambridge days.

Old Mr. Cayley, though not the least strait-laced, was a religious man. A Unitarian by birth and conviction, he began and ended the day with family prayers. On Sundays he would always read to us, or make us read to him, a sermon of Channing's, or of Theodore Parker's, or what we all liked better, one of Frederick Robertson's. He was essentially a good man. He had been in Parliament all his life, and was a broad-minded, tolerant, philosophical man-of-the-world. He had a keen sense of humour, and was rather sarcastical; but, for all that, he was sensitively earnest, and conscientious.

I had the warmest affection and respect for him. Such a character exercised no small influence upon our conduct and our opinions, especially as his approval or disapproval of these visibly affected his own happiness.

同类推荐
  • The Red One

    The Red One

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Life in the Iron-Mills

    Life in the Iron-Mills

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 填词浅说

    填词浅说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 修养

    修养

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Cloister and the Hearth

    The Cloister and the Hearth

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 殇雨

    殇雨

    一夜风雨酝酿着一个惊天大阴谋,他在别人的安排下,一步一步走向真相,到发现真相......
  • 腹黑男孩

    腹黑男孩

    一个腹黑男孩的成长日记!他可爱?他欠抽?他是不是拥有两种性格?天使与恶魔的结合体!从十五岁起爱上了一个比他大三岁的火爆龙!从此他便用自己永远长不大的娃娃脸对她纠纠缠!更是为她险些丧命!五年后的一天,当她再度遇见他的时候,他却不认识自己?为什么会这样?面对这种结局的火爆龙,她是该伤心离去,还是勇往直前?用自己最不性感的一面,再次把他勾引到手?(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 哈喽,我的前夫大人

    哈喽,我的前夫大人

    “你不会以为我是真的爱着你吧!这是五千万的支票,你把离婚协议签了吧!”三年前,她一直引以为傲的爱情,最后换来的却是一场虚假的戏码,和他决绝的抛弃。被他逼着签字之后,无情的逐出了家门。她伤心欲绝,痛苦流涕。看着他淡漠的冷笑,心里如同死灰一片。当三年后再次回到阔别已久的故乡,她已经完全变了模样。他狂热的想要她再回到他身边。她身边却已是酷男护航,帅哥保驾。他已无法靠近她的身边。她嘴角勾笑看着狼狈的他。
  • 萝莉出逃请支招

    萝莉出逃请支招

    为了逃家,她出尽各种招数。他正要同意时,她却被哥哥强行带回了家。某片小树林里,因为不小心偷听了一段分手戏码,某人就对她死缠烂打。“你到底要闹哪样嘛?!”小萝莉不满的看着他。他笑的邪佞,“小丫头,我想要圈养你!”
  • 黑化专宠:妖夫难上位!

    黑化专宠:妖夫难上位!

    “叮咚!恭喜亡灵巫戚月顺利完成S级任务,获得精品大礼一份,接受请按一,拒绝请按二。”系统提示音在巫戚月神识中响起。“这次又是哪样技能?一笑倾城还是媚眼如丝?”巫戚月嘴角微抽,咬牙切齿的问。坑爹的系统抽风多次,准又是什么垃圾技能。“亡灵巫戚月猜错,取消S级技能【昏厥】,改为附送妖男一只。”
  • 城市风流

    城市风流

    身具异禀的孤儿石琦,是燕京市第一保镖的嫡传弟子。在追查暗算自己的真凶的过程中,邂逅了燕京市第一家族大小姐和有一半人类血统的异族女子——海妖。随着追查的深入,杀手组织天使联盟浮出水面。由此,石琦携手二美开始了与一系列惊天阴谋的角力。【感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持】
  • 人鱼嫁到:沫绝恋心

    人鱼嫁到:沫绝恋心

    纵使天怒,也不能阻止我爱你。面位大陆转移重叠,灵兽异世居然来到了我们所生活的华夏大陆。可是又互相看不见。传说一族的人鱼,竟出现在毫无灵气的华夏大陆,开启血脉传承的封印。解开八个面位的秘密。华丽又神秘的种族,逆天的修炼,神兽为宠,人鱼的圣愈与空间之术......神族之子遭受袭击,喝了九转重生水,却被富豪收养......慵懒霸道又帅气???沫白不服!这难道就是被收养和孤儿的区别?
  • 万星域

    万星域

    宇宙孕育了无数种文明,可随着时代的更替,那些文明却总是忽然破灭,只留下了断壁残垣的遗迹。它们的灭亡,好像昭示着某种禁忌。银河系,在古武文明后,又诞生了科技文明,它最终是否也逃离不了命运的牢笼?……古冥,天裂峡谷奇特的环境将他的灵魂剥离,和生命金属合二为一。且看他如何凭借生命金属,解开文明衰亡之谜!?
  • 青春的爱恋

    青春的爱恋

    一个王子身边必须要跟着一个恶魔,因为有了这个恶魔,才能衬托出王子的完美。毫无疑问,曹旭是王子,而梁舟就是那个恶魔。迷惘的青春里,一曲甜蜜的苦涩正在酝酿,而真正的幸福却从未曾走远……
  • 东家,你嘴里叼的是姑娘

    东家,你嘴里叼的是姑娘

    后来,安平县的说书人经常讲谢家酒馆的老板是怎么被人坑,怎么被人蒙,怎么被人拐,怎么被骗,最后被人怎么压的故事。然而,真相应该是谢家酒馆的老板坑人,蒙人,拐人,骗人,然后压人的故事。阿酒:东家,他们为什么都对咱们指指点点的?谢春深(怒):我才不知道为什么呢!阿酒:哦。谢春深内心:呼!我才不告诉你他们认为咱俩是断袖……情节虚构,切勿模仿