"The Cowherd" by Constance Troyon |
'Chauchard, you beat everything! God made the seasons, and it would need a miracle to change them; but you can displace them or unite them at will!' This was the sort of thing that greeted him in his dining room, where flowers and fruit brought from all the countries of the sun turned winter into summer.
This chorus of praise, however, could not always stir the host from his study. His thoughts perhaps were busy with the Louvre, that he was thinking of enriching with some fresh jewel: 'La Vache,' by Troyon, Théodore Rousseau's 'Chataigniers,' or Millet's 'Angélus.'
Or another problem might be haunting this noble man. Determined to leave his habitual guests an ineffaceable memory of himself, he had planned that at their last, supreme gathering around his bier, each of them should have the privilege of carrying one of his pictures at the head of the funeral cortège. To his legatee, the Minister Leygues, would fall as by right Millet's 'Angélus,' which, on account of the price he had paid for it - four millions of our francs of today - seemed to him incontestably the finest of his pictures. But his other friends too much each have a picture assigned to them, in strict accordance with rank, to carry on the day of the funeral.
Left to himself again, Chauchard, with photographs of his friends in his hand, would start reapportioning for the umpteenth time his Corots, Meissoniers, Duprés, Bastien-Lepages, Cabanels, Courbets, Detailles, without ever solving the riddle: Who was to carry the Corot? the Cabanel? At last one day, as he swore aloud in his perplexity, a parrot, flapping its wings on a perch, let fall in a nasal voice a phrase it had heard its master say many a time in a rage: 'Chauchard, you're a bloody fool!'"
To be continued
(Excerpts from "Recollections of a Picture Dealer" by Ambroise Vollard.)