PAGE 6
A Rejected Titian
by
“Then the man, he’s an old Jew on the Grand Canal–Raffman, you know him? He got out another picture, the Bonifazio. The Williamses began to get up steam over that, too. They hung over that thing Mr. Williams bought, that Savoldo or Domenico Tintoretto, and prowled about the churches and the galleries finding traces of it here in the style of this picture and that; in short, we all got into a fever about pictures, and Miss Vantweekle invested all the money an aunt had given her before coming abroad, in that Bonifazio.
“I must say that Miss Vantweekle held off some time, was doubtful about the picture; didn’t feel that she wanted to put all her money into it. But she caught fire in the general excitement, and I may say”–here a sad sort of conscious smile crept over the young professor’s face–“at that time I had a good deal of influence with her. She bought the picture, we brought it home, and put it up at the other end of the hall. We spent hours over that picture, studying out every line, placing every color. We made up our minds soon enough that it wasn’t a Bonifazio, but we began to think–now don’t laugh, or I’ll pitch you over the balcony–it was an early work by Titian. There was an attempt in it for great things, as Mr. Williams said: no small man could have planned it. One night we had been talking for hours about them, and we were all pretty well excited. Mr. Williams suggested getting Watkins’s opinion. Maud–Miss Vantweekle said, loftily, ‘Oh! it does not make any difference what the critics say about it, the picture means everything to me’; and I, like a fool, felt happier than ever before in my life. The next morning Mr. Williams telegraphed you and set off.”
He waited.
“And when he returned?”
“It’s been hell ever since.”
He was in no condition to see the comic side of the affair. Nor was Miss Vantweekle. She was on my wife’s bed in tears.
“All poor Aunt Higgins’s present gone into that horrid thing,” she moaned, “and all the dresses I was planning to get in Paris. I shall have to go home looking like a perfect dowd!”
“But think of the influence it has been in your life–the education you have received from that picture. How can you call all that color, those noble faces, ‘that horrid thing?'” I said, reprovingly. She sat upright.
“See here, Jerome Parker, if you ever say anything like that again, I will never speak to you any more, or to Jane, though you are my cousins.”
“They have tried to return the picture,” my wife explained. “Professor Painter and Uncle Ezra took it over yesterday; but, of course, the Jew laughed at them.”
“‘A copy!’ he said.” Maud explained, “Why, it’s no more a copy than Titian’s ‘Assumption.’ He could show us the very place in a palace on the Grand Canal where it had hung for four hundred years. Of course, all the old masters used the same models, and grouped their pictures alike. Very probably Titian had a picture something like it. What of that? He defied us to find the exact original.”
“Well,” I remarked, soothingly, “that ought to comfort you, I am sure. Call your picture a new Titian, and sell it when you get home.”
“Mr. Watkins says that’s an old trick,” moaned Maud, “that story about the palace. He says old Raffman has a pal among the Italian nobility, and works off copies through him all the time. I won’t say anything about Uncle Ezra; he has been as kind and good as he can be, only a little too enthusiastic. But Professor Painter!”
She tossed her head.
The atmosphere in the Palazzo Palladio for the next few days was highly charged.
At dinner Uncle Ezra placidly made remarks about the Domenico Tintoretto, almost vaingloriously, I thought. “Such a piece of Venice to carry away. We missed it so much, those days you had it in Rome. It is so precious that I cannot bear to pack it up and lose sight of it for five months. Mary, just see that glorious piece of color over there.”