FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113  
114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   >>  
ady for the opening view. The Elector came on the appointed day, and with him came his favorite courtiers from the castle. Then the statue was unveiled. It was very beautiful,-- so beautiful that the prince exclaimed in surprise. He could not look enough, and presently he turned to the artist and shook hands with him, like an old friend. "Herr Grupello," he said, "you are a great artist, and this statue will make your fame even greater than it is; the portrait of me is perfect!" When the courtiers heard this, and saw the friendly hand-grasp, their jealousy of the artist was beyond bounds. Their one thought was, how could they safely do something to humiliate him. They dared not pick flaws in the portrait statue, for the prince had declared it perfect. But at last one of them said, with an air of great frankness, "Indeed, Herr Grupello, the portrait of his Royal Highness is perfect; but permit me to say that the statue of the horse is not quite so successful: the head is too large; it is out of proportion." "No," said another, "the horse is really not so successful; the turn of the neck, there, is awkward." "If you would change the right hind-foot, Herr Grupello," said a third, "it would be an improvement." Still another found fault with the horse's tail. The artist listened, quietly. When they had all finished, he turned to the prince and said, "Your courtiers, Prince, find a good many flaws in the statue of the horse; will you permit me to keep it a few days more, to do what I can with it?" The Elector assented, and the artist ordered a temporary screen built around the statue, so that his assistants could work undisturbed. For several days the sound of hammering came steadily from behind the enclosure. The courtiers, who took care to pass that way, often, were delighted. Each one said to himself, "I must have been right, really; the artist himself sees that something was wrong; now I shall have credit for saving the prince's portrait by my artistic taste!" Once more the artist summoned the prince and his courtiers, and once more the statue was unveiled. Again the Elector exclaimed at its beauty, and then he turned to his courtiers, one after another, to see what they had to say. "Perfect!" said the first. "Now that the horse's head is in proportion, there is not a flaw." "The change in the neck was just what was needed," said the second; "it is very graceful now." "The rear right fo
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113  
114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   >>  



Top keywords:

statue

 

artist

 

courtiers

 

prince

 

portrait

 

Grupello

 
turned
 

Elector

 

perfect

 

successful


change
 

proportion

 

permit

 

unveiled

 

exclaimed

 

beautiful

 

ordered

 

temporary

 
assented
 

finished


beauty

 
screen
 

Perfect

 

needed

 

assistants

 
Prince
 

delighted

 
saving
 

credit

 

quietly


graceful

 

artistic

 

hammering

 

steadily

 

undisturbed

 

summoned

 

enclosure

 
greater
 

friend

 

jealousy


friendly
 
appointed
 

favorite

 
opening
 
castle
 
presently
 

surprise

 

bounds

 

awkward

 

improvement