[Rembrandt by Mortimer Menpes]@TWC D-Link book
Rembrandt

CHAPTER III
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At the invitation of the proprietor, who seemed delighted that his goods should be admired, he stayed to "look round." Strewn upon a rosewood, inlaid table were a hundred and more etchings.

Many were quite small, heads of men and women minutely and beautifully wrought; others, larger in size, were Biblical subjects; some were weird and fantastical; one, for example, showed a foreshortened figure lying before an erection, upon which a skinny bird stood with outstretched wings, flanked by ugly angel boys blowing trumpets.
[Illustration: TITUS IN A RED CAP AND A GOLD CHAIN 1657.

The Wallace Collection, London.] "The best are sold," said the gentle proprietor.
The enthusiast was about to ask the name of the artist, when he suddenly caught sight of the _Christ at Emmaus_.

His blood stirred in him.

That little shop became an altar of art, and he an initiate.


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