“One goes to the Academy in
self-defence,” said Reginald. “It
is the one topic one has in common with the Country
Cousins.”
It is almost a religious observance with them, said the
Other. A kind of artistic Mecca, and when the good ones die they go-
“To the Chantrey Bequest.
The mystery is what they find to talk about
in the country.”
“There are two subjects of conversation
in the country: Servants, and Can fowls be made
to pay? The first, I believe, is compulsory,
the second optional.”
“As a function,” resumed
Reginald, “the Academy is a failure.”
“You think it would be tolerable without the
pictures?”
“The pictures are all right,
in their way; after all, one can always look
at them if one is bored with one’s surroundings,
or wants to avoid an imminent acquaintance.”
“Even that doesn’t always
save one. There is the inevitable female whom
you met once in Devonshire, or the Matoppo Hills, or
somewhere, who charges up to you with the remark that
it’s funny how one always meets people one knows
at the Academy. Personally, I don’t
think it funny.”
“I suffered in that way just
now,” said Reginald plaintively, “from
a woman whose word I had to take that she had met
me last summer in Brittany.”
“I hope you were not too brutal?”
“I merely told her with engaging
simplicity that the art of life was the avoidance
of the unattainable.”
“Did she try and work it out
on the back of her catalogue?”
“Not there and then. She
murmured something about being ‘so clever.’
Fancy coming to the Academy to be clever!”
“To be clever in the afternoon
argues that one is dining nowhere in the evening.”
“Which reminds me that I can’t
remember whether I accepted an invitation from you
to dine at Kettner’s to-night.”
“On the other hand, I can remember
with startling distinctness not having asked you to.”
“So much certainty is unbecoming
in the young; so we’ll consider that settled.
What were you talking about? Oh, pictures.
Personally, I rather like them; they are so refreshingly
real and probable, they take one away from the unrealities
of life.”
“One likes to escape from oneself occasionally.”
“That is the disadvantage of
a portrait; as a rule, one’s bitterest friends
can find nothing more to ask than the faithful unlikeness
that goes down to posterity as oneself. I hate
posterity-it’s so fond of having
the last word. Of course, as regards portraits,
there are exceptions.”
“For instance?”
“To die before being painted by Sargent is to
go to heaven prematurely.”
“With the necessary care and impatience, you
may avoid that catastrophe.”
“If you’re going to be
rude,” said Reginald, “I shall dine with
you to-morrow night as well. The chief vice
of the Academy,” he continued, “is its
nomenclature. Why, for instance, should an obvious
trout-stream with a palpable rabbit sitting in the
foreground be called ’an evening dream of unbeclouded
peace,’ or something of that sort?”
“You think,” said the
Other, “that a name should economise description
rather than stimulate imagination?”
“Properly chosen, it should
do both. There is my lady kitten at home, for
instance; I’ve called it Derry.”
Suggests nothing to my imagination but protracted sieges and
religious animosities. Of course, I dont know your kitten-
“Oh, you’re silly.
It’s a sweet name, and it answers to it-when
it wants to. Then, if there are any unseemly
noises in the night, they can be explained succinctly:
Derry and Toms.”
“You might almost charge for
the advertisement. But as applied to pictures,
don’t you think your system would be too subtle,
say, for the Country Cousins?”
“Every reformation must have
its victims. You can’t expect the fatted
calf to share the enthusiasm of the angels over the
prodigal’s return. Another darling weakness
of the Academy is that none of its luminaries must
‘arrive’ in a hurry. You can see
them coming for years, like a Balkan trouble or a
street improvement, and by the time they have painted
a thousand or so square yards of canvas, their work
begins to be recognised.”
“Someone who Must Not be Contradicted
said that a man must be a success by the time he’s
thirty, or never.”
“To have reached thirty,”
said Reginald, “is to have failed in life.”