Part 10 (2/2)

Roderick Hudson Henry James 76720K 2022-07-22

Roderick, however, was less to be congratulated than Gloriani had taken it into his head to believe. He was discontented with his work, he applied himself to it by fits and starts, he declared that he did n't know what was coming over him; he was turning into a man of moods. ”Is this of necessity what a fellow must come to”--he asked of Rowland, with a sort of peremptory flash in his eye, which seemed to imply that his companion had undertaken to insure him against perplexities and was not fulfilling his contract--”this d.a.m.nable uncertainty when he goes to bed at night as to whether he is going to wake up in a working humor or in a swearing humor? Have we only a season, over before we know it, in which we can call our faculties our own? Six months ago I could stand up to my work like a man, day after day, and never dream of asking myself whether I felt like it. But now, some mornings, it 's the very devil to get going. My statue looks so bad when I come into the studio that I have twenty minds to smash it on the spot, and I lose three or four hours in sitting there, moping and getting used to it.”

Rowland said that he supposed that this sort of thing was the lot of every artist and that the only remedy was plenty of courage and faith.

And he reminded him of Gloriani's having forewarned him against these sterile moods the year before.

”Gloriani 's an a.s.s!” said Roderick, almost fiercely. He hired a horse and began to ride with Rowland on the Campagna. This delicious amus.e.m.e.nt restored him in a measure to cheerfulness, but seemed to Rowland on the whole not to stimulate his industry. Their rides were always very long, and Roderick insisted on making them longer by dismounting in picturesque spots and stretching himself in the sun among a heap of overtangled stones. He let the scorching Roman luminary beat down upon him with an equanimity which Rowland found it hard to emulate. But in this situation Roderick talked so much amusing nonsense that, for the sake of his company, Rowland consented to be uncomfortable, and often forgot that, though in these diversions the days pa.s.sed quickly, they brought forth neither high art nor low. And yet it was perhaps by their help, after all, that Roderick secured several mornings of ardent work on his new figure, and brought it to rapid completion. One afternoon, when it was finished, Rowland went to look at it, and Roderick asked him for his opinion.

”What do you think yourself?” Rowland demanded, not from pusillanimity, but from real uncertainty.

”I think it is curiously bad,” Roderick answered. ”It was bad from the first; it has fundamental vices. I have shuffled them in a measure out of sight, but I have not corrected them. I can't--I can't--I can't!” he cried pa.s.sionately. ”They stare me in the face--they are all I see!”

Rowland offered several criticisms of detail, and suggested certain practicable changes. But Roderick differed with him on each of these points; the thing had faults enough, but they were not those faults.

Rowland, unruffled, concluded by saying that whatever its faults might be, he had an idea people in general would like it.

”I wish to heaven some person in particular would buy it, and take it off my hands and out of my sight!” Roderick cried. ”What am I to do now?” he went on. ”I have n't an idea. I think of subjects, but they remain mere lifeless names. They are mere words--they are not images.

What am I to do?”

Rowland was a trifle annoyed. ”Be a man,” he was on the point of saying, ”and don't, for heaven's sake, talk in that confoundedly querulous voice.” But before he had uttered the words, there rang through the studio a loud, peremptory ring at the outer door.

Roderick broke into a laugh. ”Talk of the devil,” he said, ”and you see his horns! If that 's not a customer, it ought to be.”

The door of the studio was promptly flung open, and a lady advanced to the threshold--an imposing, voluminous person, who quite filled up the doorway. Rowland immediately felt that he had seen her before, but he recognized her only when she moved forward and disclosed an attendant in the person of a little bright-eyed, elderly gentleman, with a bristling white moustache. Then he remembered that just a year before he and his companion had seen in the Ludovisi gardens a wonderfully beautiful girl, strolling in the train of this conspicuous couple. He looked for her now, and in a moment she appeared, following her companions with the same nonchalant step as before, and leading her great snow-white poodle, decorated with motley ribbons. The elder lady offered the two young men a sufficiently gracious salute; the little old gentleman bowed and smiled with extreme alertness. The young girl, without casting a glance either at Roderick or at Rowland, looked about for a chair, and, on perceiving one, sank into it listlessly, pulled her poodle towards her, and began to rearrange his top-knot. Rowland saw that, even with her eyes dropped, her beauty was still dazzling.

”I trust we are at liberty to enter,” said the elder lady, with majesty.

”We were told that Mr. Hudson had no fixed day, and that we might come at any time. Let us not disturb you.”

Roderick, as one of the lesser lights of the Roman art-world, had not hitherto been subject to incursions from inquisitive tourists, and, having no regular reception day, was not versed in the usual formulas of welcome. He said nothing, and Rowland, looking at him, saw that he was looking amazedly at the young girl and was apparently unconscious of everything else. ”By Jove!” he cried precipitately, ”it 's that G.o.ddess of the Villa Ludovisi!” Rowland in some confusion, did the honors as he could, but the little old gentleman begged him with the most obsequious of smiles to give himself no trouble. ”I have been in many a studio!” he said, with his finger on his nose and a strong Italian accent.

”We are going about everywhere,” said his companion. ”I am pa.s.sionately fond of art!”

Rowland smiled sympathetically, and let them turn to Roderick's statue.

He glanced again at the young sculptor, to invite him to bestir himself, but Roderick was still gazing wide-eyed at the beautiful young mistress of the poodle, who by this time had looked up and was gazing straight at him. There was nothing bold in her look; it expressed a kind of languid, imperturbable indifference. Her beauty was extraordinary; it grew and grew as the young man observed her. In such a face the maidenly custom of averted eyes and ready blushes would have seemed an anomaly; nature had produced it for man's delight and meant that it should surrender itself freely and coldly to admiration. It was not immediately apparent, however, that the young lady found an answering entertainment in the physiognomy of her host; she turned her head after a moment and looked idly round the room, and at last let her eyes rest on the statue of the woman seated. It being left to Rowland to stimulate conversation, he began by complimenting her on the beauty of her dog.

”Yes, he 's very handsome,” she murmured. ”He 's a Florentine. The dogs in Florence are handsomer than the people.” And on Rowland's caressing him: ”His name is Stenterello,” she added. ”Stenterello, give your hand to the gentleman.” This order was given in Italian. ”Say buon giorno a lei.”

Stenterello thrust out his paw and gave four short, shrill barks; upon which the elder lady turned round and raised her forefinger.

”My dear, my dear, remember where you are! Excuse my foolish child,” she added, turning to Roderick with an agreeable smile. ”She can think of nothing but her poodle.”

”I am teaching him to talk for me,” the young girl went on, without heeding her mother; ”to say little things in society. It will save me a great deal of trouble. Stenterello, love, give a pretty smile and say tanti complimenti!” The poodle wagged his white pate--it looked like one of those little pads in swan's-down, for applying powder to the face--and repeated the barking process.

”He is a wonderful beast,” said Rowland.

”He is not a beast,” said the young girl. ”A beast is something black and dirty--something you can't touch.”

”He is a very valuable dog,” the elder lady explained. ”He was presented to my daughter by a Florentine n.o.bleman.”

”It is not for that I care about him. It is for himself. He is better than the prince.”

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