hair. Close to the spectator a woman has risen
in amazement, and stretches across the table to show
the wine in her cup to those opposite; her dark red
dress intercepts and enhances the mass of gathered
light. It is rather curious, considering the
subject of the picture, that one cannot distinguish
either the bride or the bride-groom; but the fourth
figure from the Madonna in the line of women, who
wears a white head-dress of lace and rich chains of
pearls in her hair, may well be accepted for the former,
and I think that between her and the woman on the Madonna’s
left hand the unity of the line of women is intercepted
by a male figure: be this as it may, this fourth
female face is the most beautiful, as far as I recollect,
that occurs in the works of the painter, with the
exception only of the Madonna in the Flight into
Egypt. It is an ideal which occurs indeed
elsewhere in many of his works, a face at once dark
and delicate, the Italian cast of feature moulded with
the softness and childishness of English beauty some
half a century ago; but I have never seen the ideal
so completely worked out by the master. The face
may best be described as one of the purest and softest
of Stothard’s conceptions, executed with all
the strength of Tintoret. The other women are
all made inferior to this one, but there are beautiful
profiles and bendings of breasts and necks along the
whole line. The men are all subordinate, though
there are interesting portraits among them; perhaps
the only fault of the picture being that the faces
are a little too conspicuous, seen like balls of light
among the crowd of minor figures which fill the background
of the picture. The tone of the whole is sober
and majestic in the highest degree; the dresses are
all broad masses of colour, and the only parts of
the picture which lay claim to the expression of wealth
or splendour are the head-dresses of the women.
In this respect the conception of the scene differs
widely from that of Veronese, and approaches more
nearly to the probable truth. Still the marriage
is not an important one; an immense crowd, filling
the background, forming superbly rich mosaic of colour
against the distant sky. Taken as a whole the
picture is perhaps the most perfect example which human
art has produced of the utmost possible force and
sharpness of shadow united with richness of local
colour. In all the other works of Tintoret, and
much more of other colourists, either the light and
shade or the local colour is predominant; in the one
case the picture has a tendency to look as if painted
by candle-light, in the other it becomes daringly
conventional, and approaches the conditions of glass-painting.
This picture unites colour as rich as Titian’s
with light and shade as forcible as Rembrandt’s,
and far more decisive.
There are one or two other interesting pictures of the early Venetian school in this sacristy, and several important tombs in the adjoining cloister; among which that of Francesco Dandolo, transported here from the Church of the Frari, deserves especial attention.