single out a friend even across the Long Gallery.
The usual people were there: Academicians of the
old school and Academicians of the new; R.A.’s
coming from Kensington and the ’regions of culture,’
and R.A.’s coming from more northerly and provincial
neighbourhoods where art lives a little desolately
and barely, in want of the graces and adornings with
which ‘culture’ professes to provide her.
There were politicians still capable—as
it was only the first week of May—of throwing
some zest into their amusements. There were art-critics
who, accustomed as they were by profession to take
their art in large and rapid draughts, had yet been
unable to content themselves with the one meagre day
allowed by the Academy for the examination of some
800 works, and were now eking out their notes of the
day before by a few supplementary jottings taken in
the intervals of conversation with their lady friends.
There were the great dealers betraying in look and
gait their profound, yet modest, consciousness that
upon them rested the foundations of the artistic order,
and that if, in a superficial conception of things,
the star of an Academician differs from that of the
man who buys his pictures in glory, the truly philosophic
mind assesses matters differently. And, most
important of all, there were the women, old and young,
some in the full freshness of spring cottons, as if
the east wind outside were not mocking the efforts
of the May sun, and others still wrapped in furs,
which showed a juster sense of the caprices of the
English climate. Among them one might distinguish
the usual shades and species: the familiar country
cousin, gathering material for the over-awing of such
of her neighbours as were unable to dip themselves
every year in the stream of London; the women folk
of the artist world, presenting greater varieties
of type than the women of any other class can boast;
and lastly, a sprinkling of the women of what calls
itself ‘London Society,’ as well dressed,
as well mannered, and as well provided with acquaintance
as is the custom of their kind.
In one of the farther rooms, more scantily peopled
as yet than the rest, a tall thin man was strolling
listlessly from picture to picture, making every now
and then hasty references to his catalogue, but in
general eyeing all he saw with the look of one in
whom familiarity with the sight before him had bred
weariness, if not contempt. He was a handsome
man, with a broad brow and a pleasant gentleness of
expression. The eyes were fine and thoughtful,
and there was a combination of intellectual force
with great delicacy of line in the contour of the head
and face which was particularly attractive, especially
to women of the more cultivated and impressionable
sort. His thin grayish hair was rather long—not
of that pronounced length which inevitably challenges
the decision of the bystander as to whether the wearer
be fool or poet, but still long enough to fall a little
carelessly round the head and so take off from the
spruce conventional effect of the owner’s irreproachable
dress and general London air.