CHAPTER XII
Story-Telling as an Art
The artist in colors works out his conception
of a picture upon canvas. It is finished,
and he steps aside. Personally he has
nothing further to do with the presentation of
that picture. But if his own individuality has
not entered into the work, if something of
himself has not permeated it, it can never be
a work of true art.
The story-teller also presents a picture—a word picture—and, like that of the artist of the brush, if her own individuality has not entered into it, if something of herself has not permeated it, it can not be true art. But, unlike the painter, her picture is never completed; she is never able to step aside and say, "It is finished." And here the story-teller has the advantage of the painter, for each re-telling of her story is a new presentation, and in each re-telling her own personality may lend a deeper pathos, a rarer glint of humor, a more searching vision of truth.