they lacked the traces of what is called "honest toil."
"And the pictures, how do they come on?" she asked of Theobald, after a long pause.
"Finely, finely! I have here a friend whose sympathy and encouragement give me new faith and ardor."
Our hostess turned to me, gazed at me a moment rather inscrutably, and then tapping her forehead with the gesture she had used a minute before, "He has a magnificent genius!" she said, with perfect gravity.
"I'm inclined to think so," I answered, with a smile.
"Eh, why do you smile?" she cried. "If you doubt it, you must see the bambino! " And she took the lamp and conducted me to the other side of the room, where on the wall, in a plain black frame, hung a large drawing in red chalk. Beneath it was festooned a little bowl for holy-water. The drawing represented a very young child, entirely naked, half nestling back against his mother's gown, but with his two little arms outstretched, as if in the act of benediction. It was executed with singular freedom and power, and yet seemed vivid with the sacred bloom of infancy. A sort of dimpled elegance and grace, mingled with its boldness, recalled the touch