<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER III</h2>
<h3>THE ARTISTS' COLONY</h3>
<p>It was between eight and nine o'clock on the same
beautiful May morning. Arvid Falk, after the scene
with his brother, was strolling through the streets,
dissatisfied with himself, his brother, and the whole
world. He would have preferred to see the sky
overcast, to be in bad company. He did not believe
that he was a blackguard, but he was disappointed
with the part he had played; he was accustomed to
be severe on himself, and it had always been drummed
into him that his brother was a kind of stepfather
to whom he owed great respect, not to say reverence.
But he was worried and depressed by other thoughts
as well. He had neither money nor prospect of work.
The last contingency was, perhaps, the worse of the
two, for to him, with his exuberant imagination,
idleness was a dangerous enemy.</p>
<p>Brooding over these disagreeable facts, he had
reached Little Garden Street; he sauntered along,
on the left pavement, passed the Dramatic Theatre,
and soon reached High Street North. He walked
on aimlessly; the pavement became uneven; wooden
cottages took the place of the stone houses; badly
dressed men and women were throwing suspicious
glances at the well-dressed stranger who was visiting
their quarter at such an early hour; famished dogs
growled threateningly at him. He hastened past
groups of gunners, labourers, brewers' men, laundresses,
and apprentices, and finally came to Great
Hop-Garden Street. He entered the Hop-Garden.
The cows belonging to the Inspector-General of<span class="pagenum">[25]</span>
Ordnance were grazing in the fields; the old, bare
apple trees were making the first efforts to put forth
buds; but the lime trees were already in leaf and
squirrels were playing up and down the branches.
He passed the merry-go-round and came to the
avenue leading to the theatre; here he met some
truant schoolboys engaged in a game of buttons;
a little further a painter's apprentice was lying in
the grass on his back staring at the clouds through
the dome of foliage; he was whistling carelessly,
indifferent to the fact that master and men were
waiting for him, while flies and other insects drowned
themselves in his paint-pots.</p>
<p>Falk had walked to the top of the hill and had come
to the duck-pond; he stood still for a while, studying
the metamorphoses of the frogs; watching the
leeches; catching a water-spider. Then he began
to throw stones. The exercise brought his blood into
circulation; he felt rejuvenated, a schoolboy playing
truant, free, defiantly free! It was freedom bought
by great self-sacrifice. The thought of being able
to commune with nature freely and at will, made him
glad; he understood nature better than men who had
only ill-treated and slandered him; his unrest
disappeared; he rose and continued his way further
into the country.</p>
<p>Walking through the Cross, he came into Hop-Garden
Street North. Some of the boards were
missing in the fence facing him, and there was a
very plainly marked footpath on the other side. He
crept through the hole, disturbing an old woman who
was gathering nettles, crossed the large tobacco field
where a colony of villas has now sprung up, and found
himself at the gate of "Lill-Jans."</p>
<p>There was no doubt of its being spring in the little
settlement, consisting of three cottages snugly nestling
among elders and apple trees, and sheltered from the
north wind by the pine-wood on the other side of the
High Road. The visitor was regaled with a perfect
little idyll. A cock, perched on the shafts of a water<span class="pagenum">[26]</span>cart,
was basking in the sun and catching flies, the bees
hung in a cloud round the bee-hives, the gardener
was kneeling by the hot-beds, sorting radishes; the
warblers and brand-tails were singing in the gooseberry
bushes, while lightly clad children chased the
fowls bent on examining the germinative capacity
of various newly sown seeds. A brilliant blue sky
spanned the scene and the dark forest framed the
background.</p>
<p>Two men were sitting close to the hot-beds, in the
shelter of the fence. One of them, wearing a tall,
black hat and a threadbare, black suit, had a long,
narrow, pale face, and looked like a clergyman.
With his stout but deformed body, drooping eyelids,
and Mongolian moustache, the other one belonged to
the type of civilized peasant. He was very badly
dressed and might have been many things: a vagabond,
an artisan, or an artist; he looked seedy, but
seedy in an original way.</p>
<p>The lean man, who obviously felt chilly, although
he sat right in the sun, was reading to his friend from
a book; the latter looked as though he had tried all
the climates of the earth and was able to stand them
all equally well.</p>
<p>As Falk entered the garden gate from the high road,
he could distinctly hear the reader's words through
the fence, and he thought it no breach of confidence
to stand still for a while and listen.</p>
<p>The lean man was reading in a dry, monotonous
voice, a voice without resonance, and his stout friend
every now and then acknowledged his appreciation
by a snort which changed occasionally into a grunt
and became a splutter whenever the words of wisdom
to which he was listening surpassed ordinary human
understanding.</p>
<p>"'The highest principles are, as already stated,
three; one, absolutely unconditioned, and two,
relatively unconditioned ones. <i>Pro primo</i>: the
absolutely first, purely unconditioned principle,
would express the action underlying all consciousness<span class="pagenum">[27]</span>
and without which consciousness cannot exist. This
principle is the identity A—A. It endures and
cannot be disposed of by thought when all empirical
definitions of consciousness are prescinded. It is
the original fact of consciousness and must therefore,
of necessity, be acknowledged. Moreover, it is not
conditioned like every other empirical fact, but as
consequence and substance of a voluntary act entirely
unconditioned.'"</p>
<p>"Do you follow, Olle?" asked the reader,
interrupting himself.</p>
<p>"It's amazing! It is not conditioned like every
other empirical fact. Oh! What a man! Go on!
Go on!"</p>
<p>"'If it is maintained,'" continued the reader,
"'that this proposition without any further proof be
true....'"</p>
<p>"Oh! I say! What a rascal! without any further
proof be true," repeated the grateful listener, bent
on dissipating all suspicion that he had not grasped
what had been read, "without any <i>further</i> reason,
how subtle, how subtle of him to say that instead
of simply saying 'without any reason.'"</p>
<p>"Am I to continue? Or do you intend to go on
interrupting me?" asked the offended reader.</p>
<p>"I won't interrupt again. Go on! Go on!"</p>
<p>"Well, now he draws the conclusion (really excellent):
'If one ascribes to oneself the ability to state
a proposition——'"</p>
<p>Olle snorted.</p>
<p>"'One does not propose thereby A (capital A),
but merely that A—A, if and in so far as A exists
at all. It is not a question of the essence of an assertion
but only of its form. The proposition A—A is
therefore conditioned (hypothetically) as far as its
essence is concerned, and unconditioned only as far as
its form goes.'</p>
<p>"Have you noticed the capital A?"</p>
<p>Falk had heard enough; this was the terribly
profound philosophy of Upsala, which had strayed to<span class="pagenum">[28]</span>
Stockholm to conquer and subdue the coarse instincts
of the capital. He looked at the fowls to see
whether they had not tumbled off their roosts; at
the parsley whether it had not stopped growing
while made to listen to the profoundest wisdom ever
proclaimed by human voice at Lill-Jans; he was
surprised to find that the sky had not fallen after
witnessing such a feat of mental strength. At
the same time his base human nature clamoured
for attention: his throat was parched, and he
decided to ask for a glass of water at one of the
cottages.</p>
<p>Turning back he strolled towards the hut on the
right-hand side of the road, coming from town. The
door leading into a large room—once a bakery—from
an entrance-hall the size of a travelling trunk,
stood open. The room contained a bed-sofa, a broken
chair, an easel, and two men. One of them, wearing
only a shirt and a pair of trousers kept up by a leather
belt, was standing before the easel. He looked like
a journeyman, but he was an artist making a sketch for
an altar-piece. The other man was a youth with
clear-cut features and, considering his environment,
well-made clothes. He had taken off his coat,
turned back his shirt and was serving as the artist's
model. His handsome, noble face showed traces of
a night of dissipation, and every now and then he
dozed, each time reprimanded by the master who
seemed to have taken him under his protection. As
Falk was entering the room he heard the burden of
one of these reprimands:</p>
<p>"That you should make such a hog of yourself
and spend the night drinking with that loafer Sell�n,
and now be standing here wasting your time instead
of being at the Commercial School! The right
shoulder a little higher, please; that's better! Is it
true that you've spent all the money for your rent
and daren't go home? Have you nothing left?
Not one farthing?"</p>
<p>"I still have some, but it won't go far." The<span class="pagenum">[29]</span>
young man pulled a scrap of paper out of his trousers
pocket, and straightening it out, produced two
notes for a crown each.</p>
<p>"Give them to me, I'll take care of them for
you," exclaimed the master, seizing them with
fatherly solicitude.</p>
<p>Falk, who had vainly tried to attract their attention,
thought it best to depart as quietly as he had come.
Once more passing the manure heap and the two
philosophers, he turned to the left. He had not gone
far when he caught sight of a young man who had put
up his easel at the edge of a little bog planted with
alder trees, close to the wood. He had a graceful,
slight, almost elegant figure, and a thin, dark face.
He seemed to scintillate life as he stood before his
easel, working at a fine picture. He had taken off
his coat and hat and appeared to be in excellent
health and spirits; alternately talking to himself and
whistling or humming snatches of song.</p>
<p>When Falk was near enough to have him in profile
he turned round.</p>
<p>"Sell�n! Good morning, old chap!"</p>
<p>"Falk! Fancy meeting you out here in the wood!
What the deuce does it, mean? Oughtn't you to be
at your office at this time of day?"</p>
<p>"No! But are you living out here?"</p>
<p>"Yes; I came here on the first of April with some
pals. Found life in town too expensive—and,
moreover, landlords are so particular."</p>
<p>A sly smile played about one of the corners of his
mouth and his brown eyes flashed.</p>
<p>"I see," Falk began again; "then perhaps you
know the two individuals who were sitting by the
hot-beds just now, reading?"</p>
<p>"The philosophers? Of course, I do! The tall
one is an assistant at the Public Sales Office at a
salary of eighty crowns per annum, and the short
one, Olle Montanus, ought to be at home at his
sculpture—but since he and Ygberg have taken up
philosophy, he has left off working and is fast going<span class="pagenum">[30]</span>
down hill. He has discovered that there is something
sensual in art."</p>
<p>"What's he living on?"</p>
<p>"On nothing at all! Occasionally he sits to the
practical Lundell and then he gets a piece of black
pudding. This lasts him for about a day. In the
winter Lundell lets him lie on his floor; 'he helps
to warm the room,' he says, and wood is very dear;
it was very cold here in April."</p>
<p>"How can he be a model? He looks such a God-help-me
sort of chap."</p>
<p>"He poses for one of the thieves in Lundell's
"Descent from the Cross," the one whose bones are
already broken; the poor devil's suffering from hip
disease; he does splendidly when he leans across the
back of a chair; sometimes the artist makes him turn
his back to him; then he represents the other
thief."</p>
<p>"But why doesn't he work himself? Has he no
talent?"</p>
<p>"Olle Montanus, my dear fellow, is a genius, but
he won't work. He's a philosopher and would have
become a great man if he could have gone to college.
It's really extraordinary to listen to him and Ygberg
talking philosophy; it's true, Ygberg has read more,
but in spite of that Montanus, with his subtle brain,
succeeds in cornering him every now and again;
then Ygberg goes away and reads some more, but he
never lends the book to Montanus."</p>
<p>"I see! And you like Ygberg's philosophy?"
asked Falk.</p>
<p>"Oh! It's subtle, wonderfully subtle! You like
Fichte, don't you? I say! What a man!"</p>
<p>"Who were the two individuals in the cottage?"
asked Falk, who did not like Fichte.</p>
<p>"Oh. You saw them too? One of them was the
practical Lundell, a painter of figures, or rather,
sacred subjects; the other one was my friend
Rehnhjelm."</p>
<p>He pronounced the last few words with the utmost<span class="pagenum">[31]</span>
indifference, so as to heighten their effect as much as
possible.</p>
<p>"Rehnhjelm?"</p>
<p>"Yes; a very nice fellow."</p>
<p>"He was acting as Lundell's model."</p>
<p>"Was he? That's like Lundell! He knows how
to make use of people; he is extraordinarily practical.
But come along, let's worry him; it's the only fun I
have out here. Then, perhaps, you'll hear Montanus
speaking, and that's really worth while."</p>
<p>Less for the sake of hearing Montanus speaking
than for the sake of obtaining a glass of water, Falk
followed Sell�n, helping him to carry easel and paintbox.</p>
<p>The scene in the cottage was slightly changed;
the model was now sitting on the broken chair, and
Montanus and Ygberg on the bed-sofa. Lundell was
standing at his easel, smoking; his seedy friends
watched him and his old, snoring cherry-wood pipe; the
very presence of a pipe and tobacco raised their spirits.</p>
<p>Falk was introduced and immediately Lundell
monopolized him, asking him for his opinion of the
picture he was painting. It was a Rubens, at least as
far as the subject went, though anything but a Rubens
in colour and drawing. Thereupon Lundell dilated
on the hard times and difficulties of an artist, severely
criticized the Academy, and censured the Government
for neglecting native art. He was engaged in
sketching an altar-piece, although he was convinced
that it would be refused, for nobody could succeed
without intrigues and connexions. And he scrutinized
Falk's clothes, wondering whether <i>he</i> might be a
useful connexion.</p>
<p>Falk's appearance had produced a different effect
on the two philosophers. They scented a man of
letters in him, and hated him because he might rob
them of the reputation they enjoyed in the small
circle. They exchanged significant glances, immediately
understood by Sell�n, who found it impossible
to resist the temptation of showing off his friends<span class="pagenum">[32]</span>
in their glory, and, if possible, bring about an encounter.
He soon found an apple of discord, aimed,
threw, and hit.</p>
<p>"What do you say to Lundell's picture, Ygberg?"</p>
<p>Ygberg, not expecting to be called upon to speak
so soon, had to consider his answer for a few seconds.
Then he made his reply, raising his voice, while
Olle rubbed his back to make him hold himself
straight.</p>
<p>"A work of art may, in my opinion, be divided into
two categories: subject and form. With regard
to the subject in this work of art there is no denying
that it is profound and universally human; the
motive, properly speaking, is in itself fertile, and
contains all the potentialities of artistic work. With
regard to the form which of itself shall <i>de facto</i> manifest
the idea, that is to say the absolute identity, the
being, the ego—I cannot help saying that I find it less
adequate."</p>
<p>Lundell was obviously flattered. Olle smiled his
sunniest smile as if he were contemplating the
heavenly hosts; the model was asleep and Sell�n
found that Ygberg had scored a complete success.
All eyes were turned on Falk who was compelled to
take up the gauntlet, for no one doubted that Ygberg's
criticism was a challenge.</p>
<p>Falk was both amused and annoyed. He was
searching the limbo of memory for philosophical
air-guns, when he caught sight of Olle Montanus,
whose convulsed face betrayed his desire to speak.
Falk loaded his gun at random with Aristotle and
fired.</p>
<p>"What do you mean by adequate? I cannot
recollect that Aristotle made use of that word in his
Metaphysics."</p>
<p>Absolute silence fell on the room; everybody felt
that a fight between the artist's colony and the
University of Upsala was imminent. The interval
was longer than was desirable, for Ygberg was
unacquainted with Aristotle and would have died<span class="pagenum">[33]</span>
sooner than have admitted it. As he was not quick
at repartee, he failed to discover the breach which
Falk had left open; but Olle did, caught Aristotle
with both hands and flung him back at his opponent.</p>
<p>"Although I'm not a learned man, I venture to
question whether you, Mr. Falk, have upset your
opponent's argument? In my opinion <i>adequate</i>
may be used and accepted as a definition in a logical
conclusion, in spite of Aristotle not having mentioned
the word in his Metaphysics. Am I right, gentlemen?
I don't know, I'm not a learned man and
Mr. Falk has made a study of these things."</p>
<p>He had spoken with half-closed eyelids; now he
closed them entirely and looked impudently shy.</p>
<p>There was a general murmur of "Olle is right."</p>
<p>Falk realized that this was a matter to be handled
without mittens, if the honour of Upsala was to be
safeguarded; he made a pass with the philosophical
pack of cards and threw up an ace.</p>
<p>"Mr. Montanus has denied the antecedent or said
simply: <i>nego majorem!</i> Very well! I, on my part,
declare that he has been guilty of a <i>posterius prius</i>;
when he found himself on the horns of a dilemma he
went astray and made a syllogism after <i>ferioque</i>
instead of <i>barbara</i>. He has forgotten the golden rule:
<i>C�sare camestres festino baroco secundo</i>; and therefore
his conclusion became weakened. Am I right
gentlemen?"</p>
<p>"Quite right, absolutely right," replied everybody,
except the two philosophers who had never held a
book of logic in their hands.</p>
<p>Ygberg looked as if he had bitten on a nail, and
Olle grinned as if a handful of snuff had been thrown
into his eyes; but his native shrewdness had discovered
the tactical method of his opponent. He
resolved not to stick to the point, but to talk of
something else. He brought out everything he had
learned and everything he had heard, beginning with
the Criticism of Fichte's Philosophy to which Falk
had been listening a little while ago from behind<span class="pagenum">[34]</span>
the fence. The discussion went on until the morning
was nearly spent.</p>
<p>In the meantime Lundell went on painting, his foul
pipe snoring loudly. The model had fallen asleep
on the broken chair, his head sinking deeper and
deeper until, about noon, it hung between his knees;
a mathematician could have calculated the time when
it would reach the centre of the earth.</p>
<p>Sell�n was sitting at the open window enjoying
himself; but poor Falk, who had been under the
impression that this terrible philosophy was a thing
of the past, was compelled to continue throwing
fistfuls of philosophic snuff into the eyes of his
antagonists. The torture would never have come
to an end if the model's centre of gravity had not
gradually shifted to one of the most delicate parts
of the chair; it gave way and the Baron fell on the
floor. Lundell seized the opportunity to inveigh
against the vice of drunkenness and its miserable
consequences for the victim as well as for others;
by others he meant, of course, himself.</p>
<p>Falk, anxious to come to the assistance of the
embarrassed youth, eagerly asked a question bound
to be of general interest.</p>
<p>"Where are the gentlemen going to dine?"</p>
<p>The room grew silent, so silent that the buzzing of
the flies was plainly audible; Falk was quite unconscious
of the fact that he had stepped on five corns
at one and the same moment. It was Lundell who
broke the silence. He and Rehnhjelm were going to
dine at the "Sauce-Pan," their usual restaurant,
for they had credit there; Sell�n objected to the place
because he did not like the cooking, and had not yet
decided on another establishment; he looked at
the model with an anxious, inquiring glance. Ygberg
and Montanus were too "busy" and "not going to
cut up their working-day" by "dressing and going
up to town." They were going to get something
out here, but they did not say what.</p>
<p>A general dressing began, principally consisting of<span class="pagenum">[35]</span>
a wash at the old garden-pump. Sell�n, who was a
dandy, had hidden a parcel wrapped in a newspaper
underneath the bed-sofa, from which he produced
collar, cuffs and shirt-front, made of paper. He
knelt for a long time before the pump, gazing into
the trough, while he put on a brownish-green tie, a
present from a lady, and arranged his hair in a particular
style.</p>
<p>When he had rubbed his shoes with a bur leaf,
brushed his hat with his coat sleeve, put a grape-hyacinth
in his buttonhole and seized his cinnamon
cane, he was ready to go. To his question whether
Rehnhjelm would be ready soon, Lundell replied
that he would be hours yet, as he required his assistance
in drawing; Lundell always devoted the time
from twelve to two to drawing. Rehnhjelm submitted
and obeyed, although he found it hard to part with
Sell�n, of whom he was fond, and stay with Lundell
whom he disliked.</p>
<p>"We shall meet to-night at the Red Room," said
Sell�n, comforting him, and all agreed, even the
philosophers and the moral Lundell.</p>
<p>On their way to town Sell�n initiated his friend Falk
into some of the secrets of the colonists. As for
himself, he had broken with the Academy, because
his views on art differed from theirs; he knew that
he had talent and would eventually be successful,
although success might be long in coming. It was,
of course, frightfully difficult to make a name without
the Royal Medal. There were also natural obstacles
in his way. He was a native of the barren coast of
Halland and loved grandeur and simplicity; but
critics and public demanded detail and trifles;
therefore his pictures did not sell; he could have
painted what everybody else painted, but he scorned
to do so.</p>
<p>Lundell, on the other hand, was a practical man—Sell�n
always pronounced the word <i>practical</i> with a
certain contempt—he painted to please the public.
He never suffered from indisposition; it was true<span class="pagenum">[36]</span>
he had left the Academy, but for secret, practical
reasons; moreover, in spite of his assertion, he had
not broken with it entirely. He made a good income
out of his illustrations for magazines and, although
he had little talent, he was bound to make his fortune
some day, not only because of the number of his connexions,
but also because of his intrigues. It was
Montanus who had put him up to those; he was
the originator of more than one plan which Lundell had
successfully carried out. Montanus was a genius,
although he was terribly unpractical.</p>
<p>Rehnhjelm was a native of Norrland. His father
had been a wealthy man; he had owned a large
estate which was now the property of his former
inspector. The old aristocrat was comparatively
poor; he hoped that his son would learn a lesson
from the past, take an inspector's post and eventually
restore the family to its former position by the
acquisition of a new estate. Buoyed up with this
hope, he had sent him to the Commercial School to
study agricultural book-keeping, an accomplishment
which the youth detested. He was a good fellow
but a little weak, and allowing himself to be influenced
by Lundell, who did not scorn to take the
fee for his preaching and patronage in natura.</p>
<p>In the meantime Lundell and the Baron had started
work; the Baron was drawing, while the master
lay on the sofa, supervising the work, in other words,
smoking.</p>
<p>"If you'll put your back into your work, you
shall come to dinner with me at the 'Brass-Button,'"
promised Lundell, feeling rich with the two crowns
which he had saved from destruction.</p>
<p>Ygberg and Montanus had sauntered up the
wooded eminence, intending to sleep away the dinner
hour; Olle beamed after his victories, but Ygberg was
depressed; his pupil had surpassed him. Moreover,
his feet were cold and he was unusually hungry, for
the eager discussion of dinner had awakened in him
slumbering feelings successfully suppressed for the<span class="pagenum">[37]</span>
last twelve months. They threw themselves under
a pine tree; Ygberg hid the precious, carefully
wrapped up book, which he always refused to lend
to Olle, under his head, and stretched himself full-length
on the ground; he looked deadly pale, cold
and calm like a corpse which has abandoned all hope
of resurrection. He watched some little birds above
his head picking at the pine seed and letting the
husks fall down on him; he watched a cow, the
picture of robust health, grazing among the alders;
he saw the smoke rising from the gardener's kitchen
chimney.</p>
<p>"Are you hungry, Olle?" he asked in a feeble
voice.</p>
<p>"No!" replied Olle, casting covetous looks at the
wonderful book.</p>
<p>"Oh! to be a cow!" sighed Ygberg, crossing his
hands on his chest and giving himself up to all-merciful
sleep.</p>
<p>When his low breathing had become regular, the
waking friend gently pulled the book from its hiding-place,
without disturbing the sleeper; then he
turned over and lying on his stomach he began to
devour the precious contents, forgetting all about
the "Sauce-Pan" and the "Brass-Button." <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></SPAN></span></p>
<p class="break"></p>
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