| PART 5
Chapter 11
 (continued)"Here, if you please," he said, moving on one side with his
 nimble gait and pointing to his picture, "it's the exhortation to
 Pilate.  Matthew, chapter xxvii," he said, feeling his lips were
 beginning to tremble with emotion.  He moved away and stood
 behind them. For the few seconds during which the visitors were gazing at the
 picture in silence Mihailov too gazed at it with the indifferent
 eye of an outsider.  For those few seconds he was sure in
 anticipation that a higher, juster criticism would be uttered by
 them, by those very visitors whom he had been so despising a
 moment before.  He forgot all he had thought about his picture
 before during the three years he had been painting it; he forgot
 all its qualities which had been absolutely certain to him--he
 saw the picture with their indifferent, new, outside eyes, and
 saw nothing good in it.  He saw in the foreground Pilate's
 irritated face and the serene face of Christ, and in the
 background the figures of Pilate's retinue and the face of John
 watching what was happening.  Every face that, with such agony,
 such blunders and corrections had grown up within him with its
 special character, every face that had given him such torments
 and such raptures, and all these faces so many times transposed
 for the sake of the harmony of the whole, all the shades of color
 and tones that he had attained with such labor--all of this
 together seemed to him now, looking at it with their eyes, the
 merest vulgarity, something that had been done a thousand times
 over.  The face dearest to him, the face of Christ, the center of
 the picture, which had given him such ecstasy as it unfolded
 itself to him, was utterly lost to him when he glanced at the
 picture with their eyes.  He saw a well-painted (no, not even
 that--he distinctly saw now a mass of defects) repetition of
 those endless Christs of Titian, Raphael, Rubens, and the same
 soldiers and Pilate.  It was all common, poor, and stale, and
 positively badly painted--weak and unequal.  They would be
 justified in repeating hypocritically civil speeches in the
 presence of the painter, and pitying him and laughing at him when
 they were alone again. The silence (though it lasted no more than a minute) became too
 intolerable to him.  To break it, and to show he was not
 agitated, he made an effort and addressed Golenishtchev. |