CHAPTER IX. THE ARTIST’S SECRET
There was an artist once, and he painted
a picture. Other artists had colours richer and
rarer, and painted more notable pictures. He painted
his with one colour, there was a wonderful red glow
on it; and the people went up and down, saying, “We
like the picture, we like the glow.”
The other artists came and said, “Where
does he get his colour from?” They asked him;
and he smiled and said, “I cannot tell you”;
and worked on with his head bent low.
And one went to the far East and bought
costly pigments, and made a rare colour and painted,
but after a time the picture faded. Another read
in the old books, and made a colour rich and rare,
but when he had put it on the picture it was dead.
But the artist painted on. Always
the work got redder and redder, and the artist grew
whiter and whiter. At last one day they found
him dead before his picture, and they took him up
to bury him. The other men looked about in all
the pots and crucibles, but they found nothing they
had not.
And when they undressed him to put
his grave-clothes on him, they found above his left
breast the mark of a wound-it was an old,
old wound, that must have been there all his life,
for the edges were old and hardened; but Death, who
seals all things, had drawn the edges together, and
closed it up.
And they buried him. And still
the people went about saying, “Where did he
find his colour from?”
And it came to pass that after a while
the artist was forgotten-but the work lived.
St. Leonards-on-Sea.