"Morse replied by throwing open the blinds and permitting the broad daylight, for it was now ten o"clock, to stream in upon them.
""Indeed," said Coleridge, "I had no conception of this; but the work has pleased me exceedingly. It is admirably written; pray, who is its author?"
"He was informed that it was the production of Washington Irving. It is needless to say that, during the long residence of Irving in London, they became warm friends.
"At this period Mr. Abernethy was in the full tide of his popularity as a surgeon, and Allston, who had for some little time had a grumbling pain in his thigh, proposed to Morse to accompany him to the house of the distinguished surgeon to consult him on the cause of the ailment.
"As Allston had his hand on the bell-pull, the door was opened and a visitor pa.s.sed out, immediately followed by a coa.r.s.e-looking person with a large, s.h.a.ggy head of hair, whom Allston at once took for a domestic.
He accordingly enquired if Mr. Abernethy was in.
""What do you want of Mr. Abernethy?" demanded this uncouth-looking person with the harshest possible Scotch accent.
""I wished to see him," gently replied Allston, somewhat shocked by the coa.r.s.eness of his reception. "Is he at home?"
""Come in, come in, mon," said the same uncouth personage.
""But he may be engaged," responded Allston. "Perhaps I had better call another time."
""Come in, mon, I say," replied the person addressed; and, partly by persuasion and partly by force, Allston, followed by Morse, was induced to enter the hall, which they had no sooner done than the person who admitted them closed the street door, and, placing his back against it, said:--
""Now, tell me what is your business with Mr. Abernethy. I am Mr.
Abernethy."
""I have come to consult you," replied Allston, "about an affection--"
""What the de"il hae I to do with your affections?" bluntly interposed Abernethy.
""Perhaps, Mr. Abernethy," said Allston, by this time so completely overcome by the apparent rudeness of the eminent surgeon as to regret calling on him at all, "you are engaged at present, and I had better call again."
""De"il the bit, de"il the bit, mon," said Abernethy. "Come in, come in."
And he preceded them to his office, and examined his case, which proved to be a slight one, with such gentleness as almost to lead them to doubt whether Abernethy within his consulting-room, and Abernethy whom they had encountered in the pa.s.sage, was really the same personage."
While Morse was enjoying all these new experiences in England, the good people at home were jogging along in their accustomed ruts, but were deeply interested in the doings of the absent son and brother.
His mother writes on January 11, 1813:--
"Your letters are read with great pleasure by your acquaintance. I do not show those in which you say anything on _politics,_ as I do not approve your _change_, and think it would only prejudice others. For that reason I do not wish you to write on that subject, as I love to read all your observations to your friends.
"We cannot get Edwards to be a ladies" man at all. He will not visit among the young ladies; he is as old as fifty, at least."
This same youthful misogynist and philosopher also writes to his brother on January 11: "I intend soon writing another letter in which I shall prove to your satisfaction that poetry is much superior to painting. You a.s.serted the contrary in one of your letters, and brought an argument to prove it. I shall show the fallacy of that argument, and bring those to support my doctrine which are incontrovertible."
A letter from his friend, Mrs. Jarvis, the sister of his erstwhile flame, Miss Jannette Hart, informs him of the marriage of another sister to Captain Hull of the navy, commander of the Const.i.tution. In this letter, written on March 4, 1813, at Bloomingdale, New York City, Mrs. Jarvis says:--
"I am in general proud of the spirit of my countrymen, but there is too little attention paid to the fine arts, to men of taste and science. Man here is weighed by his purse, not by his mind, and, according to the preponderance of that, he rises or sinks in the scale of individual opinion. A fine painting or marble statue is very rare in the houses of the rich of this city, and those individuals who would not pay fifty pounds for either, expend double that sum to vie with a neighbor in a piece of furniture.
"But do not tell tales. I would not say this to an Englishman, and I trust you have not yet become one. This, however, is poor encouragement for you to return to your native country. I hope better things of that country before you may return."
A friend in Philadelphia writes to him on May 3, 1813:--
"Your favor I received from the hands of Mr. King, and have been very much gratified with the introduction it afforded me to this worthy gentleman. You have doubtless heard of his safe arrival in our city, and of his having commenced his career in America, where, I am sorry to say, the arts are not, as yet, so much patronized as I hope to see them. Those of us who love them are too poor, and those who are wealthy regard them but little. I think, however, I have already witnessed an improvement in this respect, and the rich merchants and professional men are becoming more and more liberal in their patronage of genius, when they find it among native Americans.
"From the favorable circ.u.mstances under which your studies are progressing; from the unrivalled talents of the gentleman who conducts them; and, without flattery, suffer me to add, from the early proofs of your own genius, I antic.i.p.ate, in common with many of our fellow citizens, the addition of one artist to our present roll whose name shall stand high among those of American painters.
"In your companion Leslie we also calculate on a very distinguished character.
"Our Academy of Fine Arts has begun the all-important study of the live figure. Mr. Sully, Mr. Peale, Mr. Fainnan, Mr. King, and several others have devoted much attention to this branch of the school, and I hope to see it in their hands highly useful and improving.
"The last annual exhibition was very splendid _for us_. Some very capital landscapes were produced, many admirable portraits and one or two historical pictures.
"The most conspicuous paintings were Mr. Peale"s picture of the "Roman Charity" (or, if you please, the "Grecian Daughter," for Murphy has it so), and Mr. Sully"s "Lady of the Lake.""
In a letter of May 30, 1818, to a friend, Morse says:--
"You ask in your letter what books I read and what I am painting. The little time that I can spare from painting I employ in reading and studying the old poets, Spenser, Chaucer, Dante, Ta.s.so, etc. These are necessary to a painter.
"As to painting, I have just finished a large picture, eight feet by six feet six inches, the subject, the "Death of Hercules," which is now in the Royal Academy Exhibition at Somerset House. I have been flattered by the newspapers which seldom praise young artists, and they do me the honor to say that my picture, with that of another young man by the name of Monroe, form a distinguishing trait in this year"s exhibition....
"This praise I consider much exaggerated. Mr. West, however, who saw it as soon as I had finished it, paid me many compliments, and told me that, were I to live to his age, I should never make a better composition. This I consider but a compliment and as meant only to encourage me, and as such I receive it.
"I mention these circ.u.mstances merely to show that I am getting along as well as can be expected, and, if any credit attaches to me, I willingly resign it to my country, and feel happy that I can contribute a mite to her honor.
"The American character stands high in this country as to the production of artists, but in nothing else (except, indeed, I may now say _bravery_). Mr. West now stands at the head, and has stood ever since the arts began to flourish in this country, which is only about fifty years.
Mr. Copley next, then Colonel Trumbull. Stuart in America has no rival here. As these are now old men and going off the stage, Mr. Allston succeeds in the prime of life, and will, in the opinion of the greatest connoisseurs in this country, carry the art to greater perfection than it ever has been carried either in ancient or modern times.... After him is a young man from Philadelphia by the name of Leslie, who is my room-mate."
How fallible is contemporary judgment on the claims of so-called genius to immortality. "For many are called, but few are chosen."
In another letter to his parents written about this time, after telling of his economies in order to make the money, advanced so cheerfully but at the cost of so much self-sacrifice on their part, last as long as possible, he adds:
"My greatest expense, next to _living_, is for canvas, frames, colors, etc., and visiting galleries. The frame of my large picture, which I have just finished, cost nearly twenty pounds, besides the canvas and colors, which cost nearly eight pounds more, and the frame was the cheapest I could possibly get. Mr. Allston"s frame cost him sixty guineas.
"Frames are very expensive things, and, on that account, I shall not attempt another large picture for some time, although Mr. West advises me to paint _large_ as much as possible.
"The picture which I have finished is "The Death of Hercules"; the size is eight feet by six feet six inches. This picture I showed to Mr. West a few weeks ago, and he was extremely pleased with it and paid me very many high compliments; but as praise comes better from another than from one"s self, I shall send you a complimentary note which Mr. West has promised to send me on the occasion.
"I sent the picture to the Exhibition at Somerset House which opens on the 3d of May, and have the satisfaction not only of having it received, but of having the praises of the council who decide on the admission of pictures. Six hundred were refused admission this year, so you may suppose that a picture (of the size of mine, too) must possess some merit to be received in preference to six hundred. A small picture may be received even if it is not very good, because it will serve to fill up some little s.p.a.ce which would otherwise be empty, but a large one, from its excluding many smaller ones, must possess a great deal in its favor in order to be received.
"If you recollect I told you I had completed a model of a single figure of the same subject. This I sent to the Society of Arts at the Adelphi, to stand for the prize (which is offered every year for the best performance in painting, sculpture, and architecture and is a _gold medal_).
"Yesterday I received the note accompanying this, by which you will see that it is adjudged to me in sculpture this year. It will be delivered to me in public on the 13th of May or June, I don"t know which, but I shall give you a particular account of the whole process as soon as I have received it.... I cannot close this letter without telling you how much I am indebted to that excellent man Mr. Allston. He is extremely partial to me and has often told me that he is proud of calling me his pupil. He visits me every evening and our conversation is generally upon the inexhaustible subject of our divine art, and upon _home_ which is next in our thoughts.
"I know not in what terms to speak of Mr. Allston. I can truly say I do not know the slightest imperfection in him. He is amiable, affectionate, learned, possessed of the greatest powers of mind and genius, modest, una.s.suming, and, above all, a religious man.... I could write a quire of paper in his praise, but all I could say of him would give you but a very imperfect idea of him....
"You must recollect, when you tell friends that I am studying in England, that I am a pupil of Allston and not Mr. West. They will not long ask who Mr. Allston is; he will very soon astonish the world. He claims me as his pupil, and told me a day or two since, in a jocose manner, that he should have a battle with Mr. West unless he gave up all pretension to me."
We gain further information concerning Morse"s first triumphs, his painting and his statuette from the following reminiscences of a friend, Mr. Dunlap:--
"It was about the year 1812 that Allston commenced his celebrated picture of the "Dead Man restored to Life by touching the Bones of Elisha," which is now in the Pennsylvania Academy of Arts. In the study of this picture he made a model in clay of the head of the dead man to a.s.sist him in painting the expression. This was the practice of the most eminent old masters. Morse had begun a large picture to come out before the British public at the Royal Academy Exhibition. The subject was the "Dying Hercules," and, in order to paint it with the more effect, he followed the example of Allston and determined to model the figure in clay. It was his first attempt at modelling.