[The Newcomes by William Makepeace Thackeray]@TWC D-Link book
The Newcomes

CHAPTER XI
20/28

She even had a little old paint-box, and showed you one or two ivory miniatures out of the drawer.

She gave John James what little knowledge of drawing she had, and handed him over her invaluable recipes for mixing water-colours--"for trees in foregrounds, burnt sienna and indigo"-- "for very dark foliage, ivory black and gamboge"-- "for flesh-colour," etc.etc.John James went through her poor little course, but not so brilliantly as she expected.

She was forced to own that several of her pupils' "pieces" were executed much more dexterously than Johnny Ridley's.

Honeyman looked at the boy's drawings from time to time, and said, "Hm, ha!--very clever--a great deal of fancy, really." But Honeyman knew no more of the subject than a deaf and dumb man knows of music.

He could talk the art cant very glibly, and had a set of Morghens and Madonnas as became a clergyman and a man of taste; but he saw not with eyes such as those wherewith Heaven had endowed the humble little butler's boy, to whom splendours of Nature were revealed to vulgar sights invisible, and beauties manifest in forms, colours, shadows of common objects, where most of the world saw only what was dull, and gross, and familiar.


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