On Tuesdays and Fridays masters spent the morning at Amitrano's, criticising the work done. In France the painter earns little unless he paints po...
Philip did not find living in Paris as cheap as he had been led to believe and by February had spent most of the money with which he started. He was t...
In March there was all the excitement of sending in to the Salon. Clutton, characteristically, had nothing ready, and he was very scornful of the two ...
When Philip returned to Amitrano's he found that Fanny Price was no longer working there. She had given up the key of her locker. He asked Mrs. Ot...
The story which Philip made out in one way and another was terrible. One of the grievances of the women-students was that Fanny Price would never shar...
Philip could not get the unhappy event out of his head. What troubled him most was the uselessness of Fanny's effort. No one could have worked har...
Two months passed.It seemed to Philip, brooding over these matters, that in the true painters, writers, musicians, there was a power which drove them ...
Next day Philip arrived at Blackstable. Since the death of his mother he had never lost anyone closely connected with him; his aunt's death shocke...
Taking the paper with him Mr. Carey retired to his study. Philip changed his chair for that in which his uncle had been sitting (it was the only comfo...
The examination Philip had passed before he was articled to a chartered accountant was sufficient qualification for him to enter a medical school. He ...