| PART 5
Chapter 10
 (continued)He had sketched this new pose, when all at once he recalled the
 face of a shopkeeper of whom he had bought cigars, a vigorous
 face with a prominent chin, and he sketched this very face, this
 chin on to the figure of the man.  He laughed aloud with delight.
 The figure from a lifeless imagined thing had become living, and
 such that it could never be changed.  That figure lived, and was
 clearly and unmistakably defined.  The sketch might be corrected
 in accordance with the requirements of the figure, the legs,
 indeed, could and must be put differently, and the position of
 the left hand must be quite altered; the hair too might be thrown
 back.  But in making these corrections he was not altering the
 figure but simply getting rid of what concealed the figure.  He
 was, as it were, stripping off the wrappings which hindered it
 from being distinctly seen.  Each new feature only brought out
 the whole figure in all its force and vigor, as it had suddenly
 come to him from the spot of tallow.  He was carefully finishing
 the figure when the cards were brought him. "Coming, coming!" He went in to his wife. "Come, Sasha, don't be cross!" he said, smiling timidly and
 affectionately at her.  "You were to blame.  I was to blame. 
 I'll make it all right."  And having made peace with his wife he
 put on an olive-green overcoat with a velvet collar and a hat,
 and went towards his studio.  The successful figure he had
 already forgotten.  Now he was delighted and excited at the visit
 of these people of consequence, Russians, who had come in their
 carriage. Of his picture, the one that stood now on his easel, he had at
 the bottom of his heart one conviction--that no one had ever
 painted a picture like it.  He did not believe that his picture
 was better than all the pictures of Raphael, but he knew that
 what he tried to convey in that picture, no one ever had
 conveyed.  This he knew positively, and had known a long while,
 ever since he had begun to paint it.  But other people's
 criticisms, whatever they might be, had yet immense consequence
 in his eyes, and they agitated him to the depths of his soul. 
 Any remark, the most insignificant, that showed that the critic
 saw even the tiniest part of what he saw in the picture, agitated
 him to the depths of his soul.  He always attributed to his
 critics a more profound comprehension than he had himself, and
 always expected from them something he did not himself see in the
 picture.  And often in their criticisms he fancied that he had
 found this. |