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His Last Cent
by
On the way back to the studio the two stopped to look in a shop-window, when Jack gave a cry of delight and pressed his nose against the glass to get a better view of a small picture by Monet resting on an easel.
“By the gods, Sam!–isn’t that a corker! See the way those trees are painted! Look at the air and light in it–not a value out of scale–perfectly charming!–charming,” and he dived into the shop before Sam. could check him.
In a moment he was out again, shaking his head, chewing his under-lip, and taking another devouring look at the canvas.
“What do they want for it, Jack?” asked Sam–his standard of merit was always the cost of a thing.
“About half what it’s worth–six hundred dollars.”
“Whew!” burst out Sam; “that’s nearly as much as I make in a year. I wouldn’t give five dollars for it.”
Jack’s face was still pressed against the glass of the window, his eyes riveted on the canvas. He either did not hear or would not answer his friend’s criticism.
“Buy it, Jack,” Sam continued, with a laugh, the hopelessness of the purchase making him the more insistent. “Hang it under the lamp, old man–I’ll pay for the candles.”
“I would,” said Jack, gravely and in perfect seriousness, “only the governor’s allowance isn’t due for a week, and the luncheon took my last cent.”
The next day, after business hours, Sam, in the goodness of his heart, called to comfort Jack over the loss of the Monet–a loss as real to the painter as if he had once possessed it–he had in that first glance through the window-pane; every line and tone and brush-mark was his own. So great was Sam’s sympathy for Jack, and his interest in the matter, that he had called upon a real millionaire and had made an appointment for him to come to Jack’s studio that same afternoon, in the hope that he would leave part of his wealth behind him in exchange for one of Jack’s masterpieces.
Sam found Jack flat on the floor, his back supported by a cushion propped against the divan. He was gloating over a small picture, its frame tilted back on the upright of his easel. It was the Monet!
“Did he loan it to you, old man?” Sam inquired.
“Loan it to me, you quill-driver! No, I bought it!”
“For how much?”
“Full price–six hundred dollars. Do you suppose I’d insult Monet by dickering for it?”
“What have you got to pay it with?” This came in a hopeless tone.
“Not a cent! What difference does that make? Samuel, you interest me. Why is it your soul never rises above dollars and cents?”
“But, Jack–you can’t take his property and—-“
“I can’t–can’t I? His property! Do you suppose Monet painted it to please that one-eyed, double-jointed dealer, who don’t know a picture from a hole in the ground! Monet painted it for me–me, Samuel–ME–who gets more comfort out of it than a dozen dealers–ME–and that part of the human race who know a good thing when they see it. You don’t belong to it, Samuel. What’s six hundred or six millions to do with it? It’s got no price, and never will have any price. It’s a work of art, Samuel–a work of art. That’s one thing you don’t understand and never will.”
“But he paid his money for it and it’s not right—-“
“Of course–that’s the only good thing he has done–paid for it so that it could get over here where I could just wallow in it. Get down here, you heathen, take off your shoes and bow three times to the floor and then feast your eyes. You think you’ve seen landscapes before, but you haven’t. You’ve only seen fifty cents’ worth of good canvas spoiled by ten cents’ worth of paint. I put it that way, Samuel, because that’s the only way you’ll understand it. Look at it! Did you ever see such a sky? Why, it’s like a slash of light across a mountain-pool! I tell you–Samuel–that’s a masterpiece!”