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            <title>The Yellow Book: An Illustrated Quarterly, Volume 2 July 1894</title>
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            <editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
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               <date>2019</date>
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                  <editor>
                     <persName>Henry Harland &amp; Aubrey Beardsley</persName>
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                  <author>Philip Gilbert Hamerton</author>
                  <title>The Yellow Book: A Criticism of Volume I</title>
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                     <publisher>Elkin Mathews &amp; John Lane</publisher>
                     <pubPlace> London </pubPlace>
                     <publisher>Copeland &amp; Day</publisher>
                     <pubPlace>Boston</pubPlace>
                     <date>July 1894</date>
                     <biblScope>Hamerton, Philip Gilbert. "The Yellow Book: A Criticism of Volume
                        I." <emph rend="italic">The Yellow Book</emph>, vol. 2, July 1894, pp. 179-90. <emph
                           rend="italic">Yellow Book Digital Edition</emph>, edited by Dennis Denisoff and
                        Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. <emph rend="italic">Yellow Nineties 2.0</emph>,
                        Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019. 
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            <pb n="207"/>
            <head>
               <title level="a">The Yellow Book <lb/> A Criticism of Volume I </title>
            </head>
            <byline>
               <docAuthor>By <ref target="#PHA">Philip Gilbert Hamerton</ref>, LL.D. </docAuthor>
            </byline>
            <fw type="head">I—The Literature</fw>
            <p>THE Editor and Publishers of THE YELLOW BOOK, who seem<lb/> to know the value of
               originality in all things, have con-<lb/> ceived the entirely novel idea of
               publishing in the current number<lb/> of their quarterly, a review in two parts of
               the number immediately<lb/> preceding it, one part to deal with the literature, and
               another to<lb/> criticise the illustrations.</p>
            <p>I notice that on the cover of THE YELLOW BOOK the literary<lb/> contributions are
               described simply as "Letterpress." This seems<lb/> rather unfortunate, because
               "letterpress" is usually understood <lb/> to mean an inferior kind of writing, which
               is merely an accom-<lb/> paniment to something else, such as engravings, or even
               maps.<lb/> Now, in THE YELLOW BOOK the principle seems to be that one <lb/> kind of
               contribution should <emph rend="italic">not</emph> be made subordinate to another
               ;<lb/> the drawings and the writings are, in fact, independent. Certainly <lb/> the
               writings are composed without the slightest pre-occupation<lb/> concerning the work
               of the graphic artists, and the draughtsmen<lb/> do not illustrate the inventions of
               the scribes. This independ-</p>
            <fw type="catchword">ence</fw>
            <pb n="208"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="pageNum">180</fw> The Yellow Book</fw>
            <p>ence of the two arts is favourable to excellence in both, besides<lb/> making the
               business of the Editor much easier, and giving him <lb/> more liberty of choice.</p>
            <p>The literary contributions include poetry, fiction, short dramatic<lb/> scenes, and
               one or two essays. The Editor evidently attaches<lb/> much greater importance to
               creative than to critical literature, in<lb/> which he is unquestionably right,
               provided only that the work<lb/> which claims to be creative is inspired by a true
               genius for inven-<lb/> tion. The admission of poetry in more than usual quantity
               does<lb/> not surprise us, when we reflect that THE YELLOW BOOK, is<lb/> issued by a
               publishing house which has done more than any other<lb/> for the encouragement of
               modern verse. It is the custom to<lb/> profess contempt for minor poets, and all
               versifiers of our time<lb/> except Tennyson and <ref target="#ASW">Swinburne</ref> are classed as minor poets
               by,<lb/> critics who shrink from the effort of reading metrical compo-<lb/> sitions.
               The truth is that poetry and painting are much more<lb/> nearly on a level in this
               respect than people are willing to admit.<lb/> Many a painter and many a poet has
               delicate perceptions and<lb/> a cultivated taste without the gigantic creative force
               that is neces-<lb/> sary to greatness in his art. </p>
            <p>Mr. <ref target="#RGA">Le Gallienne</ref>'s "Tree- Worship" is full of the
               sylvan<lb/> sense, the delight in that forest life which we can scarcely help<lb/>
               believing to be conscious. It contains some perfect stanzas and<lb/> some magnificent
               verses. As a stanza nothing can be more<lb/> perfect than the fourth on page 58, and
               the fourth on the pre-<lb/> ceding page begins with a rarely powerful line. The only
               weak<lb/> points in the poem are a few places in which even poetic truth<lb/> has not
               been perfectly observed. For example, in the first line<lb/> on page 58, the heart of
               the tree is spoken of as being remarkable<lb/> for its softness, a new and unexpected
               characteristic in heart of oak.<lb/> On the following page the tree is described as a
               green and welcome</p>
            <fw type="catchword">"coast"</fw>
            <pb n="209"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">By Philip Gilbert Hamerton, LL.D. <fw type="pageNum">181</fw>
            </fw>
            <p>"coast" to the sea of air. No single tree has extent enough to<lb/> be a coast of the
               air-ocean ; at most it is but a tiny green islet<lb/> therein. In the last stanza but
               one Mr. Le Gallienne speaks of<lb/> "the roar of sap." This conveys the idea of a
               noisy torrent,<lb/> whereas the marvel of sap is that it is steadily forced
               upwards<lb/> through a mass of wood by a quietly powerful pressure. I dislike<lb/>
               the fallacious theology of the last stanza as being neither scientific<lb/> nor
               poetical. Mr. <ref target="#EBE">Benson</ref>'s little poem, <emph rend="italic"
                  >Δαιμονιζόμενοϛ</emph> is lightly<lb/> and cleverly versified, and tells the story
               of a change of temper,<lb/> almost of nature, in very few words. The note of Mr. <ref
                  target="#HWA">Watson</ref>'s<lb/> two sonnets is profoundly serious, even solemn,
               and the work-<lb/> manship firm and strong ; the reader may observe, in the
               second<lb/> sonnet, the careful preparation for the last line and the force with<lb/>
               which it strikes upon the ear. Surely there is nothing frivolous<lb/> or fugitive in
               such poetry as this ! I regret the publication of<lb/> "Stella Maris," by Mr. <ref
                  target="#ASY">Arthur Symons</ref>; the choice of the title<lb/> is in itself
               offensive. It is taken from one of the most beautiful<lb/> hymns to the Holy Virgin
               (Ave, maris Stella !), and applied to a<lb/> London street-walker, as a star in the
               dark sea of urban life. We<lb/> know that the younger poets make art independent of
               morals, and<lb/> certainly the two have no necessary connection ; but why should<lb/>
               poetic art be employed to celebrate common fornication ? Ros-<lb/> setti's "Jenny"
               set the example, diffusely enough. </p>
            <p>The two poems by Mr. <ref target="#EGO">Edmund Gosse</ref>, "Alere Flammam"<lb/> and
               "A Dream of November," have each the great quality of<lb/> perfect unity. The first
               is simpler and less fanciful than the<lb/> second. Both in thought and execution it
               reminds me strongly<lb/> of Matthew Arnold. Whether there has been any conscious<lb/>
               imitation or not, " Alere Flammam " is pervaded by what is best<lb/> in the classical
               spirit. Mr. <ref target="#JDA">John Davidson</ref>'s two songs are<lb/> sketches in
               town and country, impressionist sketches well done in</p>
            <fw type="catchword">a laconic</fw>
            <pb n="210"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="pageNum">182</fw> The Yellow Book</fw>
            <p>a laconic and suggestive fashion. Mr. Davidson has a good<lb/> right to maledict
                  "<ref target="#EMAT">Elkin Mathews</ref> &amp; <ref target="#JLA">John Lane</ref>"
               for having<lb/> revived the detestable old custom of printing catchwords at the<lb/>
               lower corner of the page. The reader has just received the full<lb/> impression of
               the London scene, when he is disturbed by the<lb/> isolated word FOXES, which
               destroys the impression and puzzles<lb/> him. London streets are not, surely, very
               favourable to foxes !<lb/> He then turns the page and finds that the word is the
               first in the<lb/> rural poem which follows. How Tennyson would have growled<lb/> if
               the printer had put the name of some intrusive beast at the foot<lb/> of one of his
               poems ! Even in prose the custom is still intoler-<lb/> able ; it makes one read the
               word twice over as thus (pp. 159, 60),<lb/> "Why doesn't the wretched publisher
               publisher bring it out !" </p>
            <p>We find some further poetry in Mr. <ref target="#RGAR">Richard Garnett</ref>'s
               transla-<lb/> tions from Luigi Tansillo. Not having access just now to the<lb/>
               original Italian, I cannot answer for their fidelity, but they are<lb/> worth
               reading, even in English, and soundly versified. </p>
            <p>It is high time to speak of the prose. The essays are "A Defence<lb/> of Cosmetics,"
               by Mr. <ref target="#MBE">Max Beerbohm</ref>, and "Reticence in Litera-<lb/> ture,"
               by Mr. <ref target="#AWA">Arthur Waugh</ref>. I notice that a critic in the New<lb/>
               York <emph rend="italic">Nation</emph> says that the Whistlerian affectations of Mr.
               Beerbohm <lb/> are particularly intolerable. I understood his essay to be merely a<lb/>
               <emph rend="italic">jeu d'esprit</emph>, and found that it amused me, though the
               tastes and<lb/> opinions ingeniously expressed in it are precisely the opposite
               of<lb/> my own. Mr. Beerbohm is (or pretends to be) entirely on the<lb/> side of
               artifice against nature. The difficulty is to determine<lb/> what <emph rend="italic"
                  >is</emph> nature. The easiest and most "natural" manners of a<lb/> perfect
               English lady are the result of art, and of a more advanced<lb/> art than that
               indicated by more ceremonious manners. Mr. Beer-<lb/> bohm says that women in the
               time of Dickens appear to have<lb/> been utterly natural in their conduct, "flighty,
               gushing, blushing,</p>
            <fw type="catchword">fainting,</fw>
            <pb n="211"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">By Philip Gilbert Hamerton, LL.D. <fw type="pageNum">183</fw>
            </fw>
            <p>fainting, giggling, and shaking their curls." Much of that con-<lb/> duct may have
               been as artificial as the curls themselves, and<lb/> assumed only to attract
               attention. Ladies used to faint on the<lb/> slightest pretext, not because it was
               natural but because it was the<lb/> fashion ; when it ceased to be the fashion they
               abandoned the<lb/> practice. Mr. Waugh's essay on "Reticence in Literature" is<lb/>
               written more seriously, and is not intended to amuse. He defends<lb/> the principle
               of reticence, but the only sanction that he finds for<lb/> it is a temporary
               authority imposed by the changing taste of the<lb/> age. We are consequently never
               sure of any permanent law that<lb/> will enforce any reticence whatever. A good proof
               of the extreme<lb/> laxity of the present taste is that Mr. Waugh himself has
               been<lb/> able to print at length three of the most grossly sensual stanzas in<lb/>
               Mr. Swinburne's "Dolores." Reticence, however, is not con-<lb/> cerned only with
               sexual matters. There is, for instance, a flagrant<lb/> want of reticence in the
               lower political press of France and<lb/> America, and the same violent kind of
               writing, often going as far<lb/> beyond truth as beyond decency, is beginning to be
               imitated in<lb/> England. One rule holds good universally ; all high art is reticent,<lb/>
               <emph rend="italic">e.g.</emph>, in Dante's admirable way of telling the story of
               Francesca<lb/> through her own lips. </p>
            <p>Mr. <ref target="#HJA">Henry James</ref>, in "The Death of the Lion," shows his
               usual<lb/> elegance of style, and a kind of humour which, though light enough<lb/> on
               the surface, has its profound pathos. It is absolutely essential,<lb/> in a short
               story, to be able to characterise people and things in a<lb/> very few words. Mr.
               James has this talent, as for example in his<lb/> description of the ducal seat at
               Bigwood : "very grand and frigid,<lb/> all marble and precedence." We know Bigwood,
               after that, as if<lb/> we had been there and have no desire to go. So of the Princess
               :<lb/> "She has been told everything in the world and has never per-<lb/> ceived
               anything, and the <emph rend="italic">echoes of her education</emph>," etc., p. 42.
               The</p>
            <fw type="catchword">moral</fw>
            <fw type="footer">The Yellow Book—Vol. II. <emph>L</emph>
            </fw>
            <pb n="212"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="pageNum">184</fw> The Yellow Book </fw>
            <p>moral of the story is the vanity and shallowness of the world's<lb/> professed
               admiration for men of letters, and the evil, to them, or<lb/> going out of their way
               to suck the sugar-plums of praise. The<lb/> next story, "Irremediable," shows the
               consequences of marrying a<lb/> vulgar and ignorant girl in the hope of improving
               her, the diffi-<lb/> culty being that she declines to be improved. The situation
               is<lb/> powerfully described, especially the last scene in the repulsive,<lb/>
               disorderly little home. The most effective touch reveals<lb/> Willoughby's constant
               vexation because his vulgar wife "never<lb/> did any one mortal thing efficiently or
               well," just the opposite of<lb/> the constant pleasure that clever active women give
               us by their<lb/> neat and rapid skill. "The Dedication," by Mr. <ref target="#FSI"
                  >Fred Simpson</ref>,<lb/> is a dramatic representation of the conflict between
               ambition and<lb/> love—not that the love on the man's side is very earnest, or
               the<lb/> conflict in his mind very painful, as ambition wins the day only<lb/> too
               easily when Lucy is thrown over. "The Fool's Hour," by<lb/> Mr. <ref target="#PCR"
                  >Hobbes</ref> and Mr. <ref target="#GMO">George Moore</ref>, is a slight little
               drama<lb/> founded on the idea that youth must amuse itself in its own<lb/> way, and
               cannot be always tied to its mamma's apron-strings. It<lb/> is rather French than
               English in the assumption that youth must<lb/> of necessity resort to theatres and
               actresses. Of the two sketches<lb/> by Mr. <ref target="#HHA">Harland</ref>, that on
               white mice is clever as a supposed remini-<lb/> scence of early boyhood, but rather
               long for its subject, the other,<lb/> "A Broken Looking-Glass," is a powerful little
               picture of the<lb/> dismal end of an old bachelor who confesses to himself that
               his<lb/> life has been a failure, equally on the sides of ambition and enjoy-<lb/>
               ment. One of my friends tells me that it is impossible for a<lb/> bachelor to be
               happy, yet he may invest money in the Funds ! In<lb/> Mr. <ref target="#HCR"
                  >Crackanthorpe</ref>'s "Modern Melodrama," he describes for us<lb/> the first
               sensations of a girl when she sees death in the near<lb/> future. It is pathetic,
               tragical, life-like in language, with the</p>
            <fw type="catchword">defects </fw>
            <pb n="213"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">By Philip Gilbert Hamerton, LL.D. <fw type="pageNum">185</fw>
            </fw>
            <p>defects of character and style that belong to a close representation<lb/> of nature.
               "A Lost Masterpiece," by <ref target="#GEG">George Egerton</ref>, is not so<lb/>
               interesting as the author's "Keynotes," though it shows the same<lb/> qualities of
               style. The subject is too unfruitful, merely a literary<lb/> disappointment, because
               a bright idea has been chased away.<lb/> "A Sentimental Cellar," by Mr. <ref
                  target="#GSA">George Saintsbury</ref>, written in<lb/> imitation of the essayists
               of the eighteenth century, associates the<lb/> wines in a cellar with the loves and
               friendships of their owner.<lb/> To others the vinous treasures would be "good wine
               and nothing<lb/> more" ; to their present owner they are "a casket of magic
               liquors,"<lb/> a museum in which he lives over again "the vanished life of the<lb/>
               past." The true French bookless <emph rend="italic">bourgeois</emph> often calls his
               cellar<lb/> his <emph rend="italic">bibliothèque</emph>, meaning that he values its
               lore as preferable to that<lb/> of scholarship ; but Mr. Saintsbury's Falernianus
               associates his<lb/> wines with sentiment rather than with knowledge. </p>
            <p>On the whole, the literature in the first number of THE<lb/> YELLOW BOOK, is
               adequately representative of the modern English<lb/> literary mind, both in the
               observation of reality and in style. It<lb/> is, as I say, really literature and not
               letterpress. I rather regret,<lb/> for my own part, the general brevity of the pieces
               which restricts<lb/> them to the limits of the sketch, especially as the stories
               cannot be<lb/> continued after the too long interval of three months. As to
               this,<lb/> the publishers know their own business best, and are probably<lb/> aware
               that the attention of the general public, though easily<lb/> attracted, is even more
               easily fatigued.</p>
            <pb n="214"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="pageNum">186</fw> The Yellow Book</fw>
            <fw type="head">II—The Illustrations </fw>
            <p>ON being asked to undertake the second part of this critical<lb/> article, I accepted
               because one has so rarely an opportunity of<lb/> saying anything about works of art
               to which the reader can quite<lb/> easily refer. To review an exhibition of pictures
               in London or Paris<lb/> is satisfactory only when the writer imagines himself to be
               address-<lb/> ing readers who have visited it, and are likely to visit it again.<lb/>
               When an illustration appears in one of the art periodicals, it may<lb/> be
               accompanied by a note that adds something to its interest, but<lb/> no one expects
               such a note to be really critical. In the present<lb/> instance, on the contrary, we
               are asked to say what we think,<lb/> without reserve, and as we have had nothing to
               do with the choice<lb/> of the contributors, and have not any interest in the sale of
               the<lb/> periodical, there is no reason why we should not. </p>
            <p>To begin with the cover. The publishers decided not to have<lb/> any ornament beyond
               the decorative element in the figure design<lb/> which is to be changed for every new
               number. What is per-<lb/> manent in the design remains, therefore, of an extreme
               simplicity<lb/> and does not attract attention. The yellow colour adopted is<lb/>
               glaring, and from the aesthetic point of view not so good as a quiet<lb/> mixed tint
               might have been ; however, it gives a title to the<lb/> publication and associates
               itself so perfectly with the title that it<lb/> has a sufficient <emph rend="italic"
                  >raison d'être</emph>, whilst it contrasts most effectively<lb/> with black.
               Though white is lighter than any yellow, it has not the<lb/> same active and
               stimulating quality. The drawing of the masquers<lb/> is merely one of Mr. <ref
                  target="#ABE">Aubrey Beardsley</ref>'s fancies and has no par-<lb/> ticular
               signification. We see a plump and merry lady laughing</p>
            <fw type="catchword">boisterously</fw>
            <pb n="215"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">By Philip Gilbert Hamerton, LL.D. <fw type="pageNum">187</fw>
            </fw>
            <p>boisterously whilst she seems to be followed by a man who gazes<lb/> intently upon
               the beauties of her shoulder. It is not to be classed<lb/> amongst the finest of Mr.
               Beardsley's designs, but it shows some<lb/> of his qualities, especially his extreme
               economy of means. So does<lb/> the smaller drawing on the back or the volume, which
               is a fair<lb/> example of his ready and various invention. See how the candle-<lb/>
               flame is blown a little to one side, how the candle gutters on that<lb/> side, and
               how the smoke is affected by the gust of air. Observe,<lb/> too, the contrasts
               between the faces, not that they are attractive<lb/> faces. There seems to be a
               peculiar tendency in Mr. Beardsley's<lb/> mind to the representation of types without
               intellect and without<lb/> morals. Some of the most dreadful faces in all art are to
               be found<lb/> in the illustrations (full of exquisite ornamental invention) to Mr.<lb/>
               <ref target="#OWI">Oscar Wilde</ref>'s "Salome." We have two unpleasant ones here
               in<lb/> "l'Education Sentimentale." There is distinctly a sort of corrup-<lb/> tion
               in Mr. Beardsley's art so far as its human element is concerned,<lb/> but not at all
               in its artistic qualities, which show the perfection of<lb/> discipline, of
               self-control, and of thoughtful deliberation at the very<lb/> moment of invention.
               Certainly he is a man of genius, and<lb/> perhaps, as he is still very young, we may
               hope that when he has<lb/> expressed his present mood completely, he may turn his
               thoughts<lb/> into another channel and see a better side of human life. There<lb/>
               is, of course, nothing to be said against the lady who is touching<lb/> the piano on
               the title-page of THE YELLOW BOOK, nor against<lb/> the portrait of Mrs. Patrick
               Campbell opposite page 126, except<lb/> that she reminds one of a giraffe. It is
               curious how the idea of<lb/> extraordinary height is conveyed in this drawing without
               a single<lb/> object for comparison. I notice in Mr. Beardsley's work a
               persistent<lb/> tendency to elongation ; for instance, in the keys of the piano
               on<lb/> the title-page which in their perspective look fifteen inches long.<lb/> He
               has a habit, too, of making faces small and head-dresses enor-</p>
            <fw type="catchword">mous. </fw>
            <pb n="216"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="pageNum">188</fw> The Yellow Book </fw>
            <p>mous. The rarity of beauty in his faces seems in contradiction<lb/> with his
               exquisite sense of beauty in curving lines, and the<lb/> singular grace as well as
               rich invention of his ornaments. He<lb/> can, however, refuse himself the pleasure of
               such invention when<lb/> he wants to produce a discouraging effect upon the mind.
               See,<lb/> for instance, the oppressive plainness of the architecture in the<lb/>
               background to the dismal "Night Piece." </p>
            <p>It is well known that the President of the Royal Academy,<lb/> unlike most English
               painters, is in the habit of making studies.<lb/> In his case these studies are
               uniformly in black and white chalk on<lb/> brown paper. Two of them are reproduced in
               THE YELLOW<lb/> BOOK, one being for drapery, and the other for the nude form<lb/>
               moving in a joyous dance with a light indication of drapery that<lb/> conceals
               nothing. The latter is a rapid sketch of an intention and<lb/> is full of life both
               in attitude and execution, the other is still and<lb/> statuesque. <ref target="#FLE"
                  >Sir Frederic</ref> is a model to all artists in one very rare<lb/> virtue, that
               of submitting himself patiently, in his age, to the same<lb/> discipline which
               strengthened him in youth. </p>
            <p>I find a curious and remarkable drawing by Mr. <ref target="#JPE">Pennell</ref> of
               that<lb/> strangely romantic place Le Puy en Velay, whose rocks are crowned<lb/> with
               towers or colossal statues, whilst houses cluster at their feet.<lb/> The subject is
               dealt with rather in the spirit of Dürer, but with a<lb/> more supple and more modern
               kind of skill. It is topography,<lb/> though probably with considerable artistic
               liberty. I notice one<lb/> of Dürer's licences in tonic relations. The sky, though
               the sun is<lb/> setting (or rising) is made darker than the hills against it,
               and<lb/> darker even than the two remoter masses of rock which come<lb/> between us
               and the distance. The trees, too, are shaded capri-<lb/> ciously, some poplars in the
               middle distance being quite dark whilst<lb/> nearer trees are left without shade or
               local colour. In a word,<lb/> the tonality is simply arbitrary, and in this kind of
               drawing it</p>
            <fw type="catchword">matters</fw>
            <pb n="217"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">By Philip Gilbert Hamerton, LL.D. <fw type="pageNum">189</fw>
            </fw>
            <p>matters very little. Mr. Pennell has given us a delightful bit of<lb/> artistic
               topography showing the strange beauty of a place that he<lb/> always loves and
               remembers. </p>
            <p>Mr. <ref target="#WSI">Sickert</ref> contributed two drawings. "The Old Oxford<lb/>
               Music Hall" has some very good qualities, especially the most<lb/> important quality
               of all, that of making us feel as if we were<lb/> there. The singer on the stage
               (whose attitude has been very<lb/> closely observed) is strongly lighted by
               convergent rays. According<lb/> to my recollection the rays themselves are much more
               visible in<lb/> reality than they are here, but it is possible that the artist
               may<lb/> have intentionally subdued their brightness in order to enhance<lb/> that of
               the figure itself. The musicians and others are good,<lb/> except that they are too
               small, if the singing girl (considering her<lb/> distance) is to be taken as the
               standard of comparison. The<lb/> pen-sketch of "A Lady Reading" is not so
               satisfactory. I know,<lb/> of course, that it is offered only as a very slight and
               rapid sketch,<lb/> and that it is impossible, even for a Rembrandt, to draw
               accurately<lb/> in a hurry, but there is a formlessness in some important parts
               of<lb/> this sketch (the hands, for instance) which makes it almost without<lb/>
               interest for me. It is essentially painter's pen work, and does not<lb/> show any
               special mastery of pen and ink. </p>
            <p>The very definite pen-drawing by Mr. <ref target="#LHO">Housman</ref> called
               "The<lb/> Reflected Faun" is open to the objection that the reflections in<lb/> the
               water are drawn with the same hardness as the birds and faun<lb/> in the air. The
               plain truth is that the style adopted, which in its<lb/> own way is as legitimate as
               any other, does not permit the artist to<lb/> represent the natural appearance of
               water. This kind of pen-<lb/> drawing is founded on early wood-engraving which filled
               the whole<lb/> space with decorative work, even to the four corners. </p>
            <p>Mr. <ref target="#WRO">Rothenstein</ref> is a modern of the moderns. His two
               slight<lb/> portrait-sketches are natural and easy, and there is much life in the</p>
            <fw type="catchword">"Portrait</fw>
            <pb n="218"/>
            <fw type="runningHead">
               <fw type="pageNum">190</fw> The Yellow Book</fw>
            <p>"Portrait of a Gentleman." The "Portrait of a Lady," by Mr.<lb/>
               <ref target="#CFU">Furse</ref>, is of a much higher order. It has a noble gravity,
               and it<lb/> shows a severity of taste not common in the portraiture of our<lb/> time
               ; it is essentially a distinguished work. Mr. <ref target="#JNE">Nettleship</ref>
               gives<lb/> us an ideal portrait of Minos, not in his earthly life, as king of<lb/>
               Crete, but in his infernal capacity as supreme judge of the dead.<lb/> The face is
               certainly awful enough and implacable : </p>
            <lg type="stanza">
               <l>Stavvi Minòs orribilmente, e ringhia :</l>
               <l rend="indent">Esamina le colpe nell'entrata ;</l>
               <l rend="indent">Giudica e manda, secondo ch'avvinghia.</l>
            </lg>
            <p>The book-plate designed by Mr. Beardsley for Dr. Propert has<lb/> the usual qualities
               of the inventor. It seems to tell a tale of hope-<lb/> less love. The other
               book-plate, by Mr. <ref target="#RBE">Anning Bell</ref>, is remark-<lb/> able for its
               pretty and ingenious employment of heraldry which<lb/> so easily becomes mechanical
               when the draughtsman is not an<lb/> artist.</p>
            <p>On the whole, these illustrations decidedly pre-suppose real<lb/> artistic culture in
               the public. They do not condescend in any<lb/> way to what might be guessed at as the
               popular taste. I notice<lb/> that the Editor and Publishers have a tendency to look
               to young<lb/> men of ability for assistance in their enterprise, though they
               accept<lb/> the criticism of those who now belong to a preceding generation. </p>
         </div>
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</TEI>
