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Abbey
by
At Harper’s Abbey came into competition with strong men. In the office was a young fellow by the name of Reinhart and another by the name of Alexander–they used to call him Alexander the Great, and he has nearly proved his title.
A little later came Howard Pyle, Joseph Fennel and Alfred Parsons. Young Abbey did his work with much good-cheer, and sought to place himself with the best. For a time he drew just like Alexander, then like Reinhart; next, Parsons was his mentor. Finally he drifted out on a sea of his own, and this seems to have been in the year of the Centennial Exhibition. Harper’s sent the young man over to Philadelphia, or perhaps he went of his own accord; anyway, he haunted the art-rooms at the Exhibition, and got a lesson there that spurred his genius as it had never been spurred before.
He was then twenty-four years old. His salary had been increased to ten dollars a week, fifteen, twenty-five: if he wanted money for “expenses” he applied to the cashier. There is more good honest velvet in an Expense-Account than in the Stock Exchange, which true saying has nothing to do with Abbey. At the “Centennial” Abbey discovered the Arthurian Legend–fell over it, just as William Morris fell over the Icelandic Sagas when past fifty. Abbey had been called the “Stage-Coachman” at Harper’s, because he had developed a faculty for picturing old taverns at that exciting moment when horses were being changed and the driver, in a bell-crowned white hat and wonderful waistcoat, tosses his lines to a fellow in tight hair-cut and still tighter breeches, and a woman in big hoops gets out of the stage with many bandboxes and a birdcage. The way Abbey breathed into the scene the breath of life was wonderful–just a touch of comedy, without caricature! “If it is in Seventeen Hundred Seventy-six, give it to Abbey,” said the Managing Editor, with a growl–for Managing Editors, being beasts, always growl.
Abbey and Parsons had walked to Philadelphia and back, taking two weeks for the trip, sketching on the way stagecoaches, taverns, tall houses and old wooden bridges, all pinned together–just these and nothing else, save Independence Hall. Later, they went to Boston and did Faneuil Hall, inside and out, King’s Chapel and the State House, and a house or two out Quincyway, including the Adams cottage, where lived two Presidents, and where now resides one William Spear, the only honorary male member of the Daughters of the Revolution. Mr. Spear dominates the artistic bailiwick and performs antique antics for Art’s sake: it was Mr. Spear who posed as Tony Lumpkin for Mr. Abbey.
Abbey had done Washington Irving’s Knickerbocker tales and the various “Washington’s Headquarters.” He worked exclusively in black and white–crayon, pencil or pen and ink. His hand had taken on a style–powdered wigs, spit-curls, hoops, flaring sunbonnets, cocked hats and the tallyho! These were his properties. He worked from model plus imagination. He had exhausted the antique in America–he thirsted to refresh his imagination in England. The Centennial Exhibition had done its deadly work–Abbey and Parsons were dissatisfied–they wanted to see more. Back of the stagecoach times lay the days of the castle. Back of the musket was the blunderbuss, and back of these were the portcullis, the moat, the spear and coats of mail.
A deluxe edition of “Herrick” was proposed by the Publishing Department: some say the Art Department made the suggestion. Anyway, there was a consultation in the manager’s office, and young Abbey was to go to England to look up the scene and with his pencil bring the past up to the present.
Abbey was going to England, that is just all there was about it, and Harper and Brothers did not propose to lose their hold upon him. Salary was waived, but expenses were advanced, and the understanding was that Abbey was Harper’s man. This was in Eighteen Hundred Seventy-eight, with Abbey’s twenty-sixth birthday yet to come. Abbey had gone around and bidden everybody good-by, including his old-time chum, Alfred Parsons. Parsons was going to the dock to see him off.