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The Great Masters in Painting and Sculpture

Edited by G. C. Williamson




REMBRANDT VAN RIJN




THE GREAT MASTERS IN PAINTING AND SCULPTURE.

_The following Volumes have been issued, price 5s. net each._

    BERNARDINO LUINI. By =George C. Williamson=, Litt.D., Editor of the
    Series.

    VELASQUEZ. By =R. A. M. Stevenson=.

    ANDREA DEL SARTO. By =H. Guinness=.

    LUCA SIGNORELLI. By =Maud Cruttwell=.

    RAPHAEL. By =H. Strachey=.

    CARLO CRIVELLI. By =G. McNeil Rushforth=, M.A., Lecturer in
    Classics, Oriel College, Oxford.

    CORREGGIO. By =Selwyn Brinton=, M.A., Author of "The Renaissance in
    Italian Art."

    DONATELLO. By =Hope Rea=, Author of "Tuscan Artists."

    PERUGINO. By =G. C. Williamson=, Litt.D.

    SODOMA. By the =Contessa Lorenzo Priuli-Bon=.

    LUCA DELLA ROBBIA. By the =Marchesa Burlamacchi=.

    GIORGIONE. By =Herbert Cook=, M.A., F.S.A.

    MEMLINO. By =W. H. James Weale=, late Keeper of the National Art
    Library.

    PIERO DELLA FRANCESCA. By =W. G. Waters=, M.A.

    PINTORICCHIO. By =Evelyn March Phillipps=.

    FRANCIA. By =George C. Williamson=, Litt.D.

    BRUNELLESCHI. By =Leader Scott=.

    MANTEGNA. By =Maud Cruttwell=.

    REMBRANDT VAN RIJN. By =Malcolm Bell=.


    _In preparation._

    WILKIE. By =Lord Ronald Sutherland-Gower=, M.A., F.S.A., Trustee of
    the National Portrait Gallery.

    TINTORETTO. By =J. B. Stoughton Holborn=, M.A. of Merton College,
    Oxford.

    GIOTTO. By =F. Mason Perkins=.

    EL GRECO. By =Manuel B. Cossio=, Litt.D., Ph.D., Director of the
    Musée Pédagogique, Madrid.

    DÜRER. By =Hans W. Singer=, M.A., Ph.D., Assistant Director of the
    Royal Print Room, Dresden.

    PAOLO VERONESE. By =Roger E. Fry=.

    GAUDENZIO FERRARI. By =Ethel Halsey=.

    _Others to follow._

       *       *       *       *       *

LONDON: GEORGE BELL & SONS




[Illustration: Buckingham Palace, London.

The Ship builder & his wife. (1633)]




REMBRANDT VAN RIJN

BY MALCOLM BELL

AUTHOR OF "SIR EDWARD BURNE-JONES: A RECORD AND REVIEW," ETC.

[Illustration: logo]

LONDON

GEORGE BELL & SONS

1901




PREFACE


In order to reduce the volume on Rembrandt, published in 1899, to the
smaller dimensions demanded by the "Great Masters" series, it became
necessary to dispense with some of the material included in it. This, it
is hoped, has been done without seriously affecting the usefulness of
the book. The story of the painter's life and work has been to some
extent compressed, but everything essential has, it is believed, been
retained. The chief omissions are the short descriptions of the pictures
and the lists of the etchings, which, while occupying much space, were
thought to be more suitable to a work of reference than to a handbook.
The student who desires fuller information on these points will find it
in the earlier volume.




CONTENTS


                                             PAGE

=List of Illustrations=                       vii

=Bibliography=                                 ix

=Chronological Table=                        xiii


PART I.--REMBRANDT THE MAN

Chapter I. =Birth and Early Years=              1

       II. =Art Education and Early Works=      8

      III. =Days of Prosperity=                16

       IV. =Days of Decline=                   32


PART II.--REMBRANDT THE PAINTER

        V. =Early Years= (1627-1633)           48

       VI. =Time of Prosperity=                61

      VII. =Years of Decline=                  71


PART III.--REMBRANDT THE ETCHER

     VIII. =The History of the Etchings=       85

       IX. =The Authentic Etchings=            93


=Catalogue of Works=                          117

=Index=                                       157




LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


                                                                     PAGE

The Shipbuilder and his Wife, 1633, _Frontispiece_
                                              _Buckingham Palace_

Portrait of Rembrandt's Mother, about 1628            _The Hague_       6

Portrait of Rembrandt's Father, about 1631               _Cassel_      12

Portrait of Saskia, 1632           _Prince Liechtenstein, Vienna_      18

Rembrandt and Saskia, about 1635                        _Dresden_      24

Portrait of Rembrandt, 1640            _National Gallery, London_      28

Portrait of Saskia, 1641                                _Dresden_      30

Portrait of Hendrickje Stoffels, about 1662              _Louvre_      44

Portrait of Rembrandt, about 1664      _National Gallery, London_      46

Portrait called Coppenol, 1631                    _The Hermitage_      54

Portrait of a Man, 1630-1632            _Imperial Museum, Vienna_      56

Portrait of a Woman, 1630-1632          _Imperial Museum, Vienna_      56

The Anatomy Lesson, 1632                              _The Hague_      58

Portrait of Jan Herman Krul, 1633                        _Cassel_      58

The Elevation of the Cross, 1633                         _Munich_      60

Portrait of an Old Woman, 1634         _National Gallery, London_      62

The Burgomaster Pancras and his Wife,
  about 1635                                  _Buckingham Palace_      62

Portrait of a Man, 1635                _National Gallery, London_      62

Danae, 1636                                       _The Hermitage_      64

Portrait of a Man, 1636            _Prince Liechtenstein, Vienna_      64

Portrait of a Lady, 1636           _Prince Liechtenstein, Vienna_      64

Portrait called Sobieski, 1637                    _The Hermitage_      66

The Man with the Bittern, 1639                          _Dresden_      66

Portrait of Elizabeth Bas, about 1640                 _Amsterdam_      68

Anslo consoling a Widow, 1641                            _Berlin_      68

The Lady with the Fan, 1641                   _Buckingham Palace_      70

Portrait of a Man, 1641                                _Brussels_      70

The Woman taken in Adultery, 1644      _National Gallery, London_      72

A Girl at a Window, 1645                        _Dulwich Gallery_      72

Portrait of a Rabbi, 1645                                _Berlin_      74

A Winter Scene, 1646                                     _Cassel_      74

Christ at Emmaus, 1648                                   _Louvre_      76

John the Baptist preaching, 1656                         _Berlin_      78

The Syndics of the Drapers, 1661                      _Amsterdam_      80


_ETCHINGS_

_The Numbers given are those of Bartsch's Catalogue_

Christ healing the Sick (74)                                           86

Clement de Jonghe (272)                                                90

The Three Trees (212)                                                  92

Rembrandt's Mill (233)                                                 98

Beggars at the Door of a House (176)                                  100

The Shell (159)                                                       102

Jan Lutma (276)                                                       106




BIBLIOGRAPHY


=Amand-Durand.= "Œuvre de Rembrandt reproduit et publié par." 2 parts.
Paris, 1880.

=Baldinucci, Filippo.= "Cominciamento e progresso dell' arte dell'
intagliare in rame." Florence, 1686.

=Bartsch, Adam.= "Catalogue raisonné de toutes les estampes qui forment
l'œuvre de Rembrandt et ceux de ses principaux imitateurs." 2 vols.
Vienna, 1797.

=Bell, Malcolm.= "Rembrandt van Rijn and his Work." 4to. London, 1899.

=Blanc, Charles.= "L'œuvre complet de Rembrandt, décrit et commenté
par." Paris, 1864 and 1880.

=Bode, W.= "Studien zur Geschichte der holländischen Malerei."
Brunswick, 1883.

=Bredius, A.=, and =de Roever, N.= _Oud-Holland._ A magazine published
at Amsterdam.

=Bredius, A.= "Les chefs-d'œuvre du Musée royal d'Amsterdam." Paris,
1890.

=Bredius, A.= "Die Meisterwerke der Königlichen Gemälde Galerie im
Haag." Munich, 1890.

=Burger, W.= "Les Musées de Belgique et de Hollande." Paris, 1858, 1860,
and 1862.

=Busken-Huet.= "Het Land van Rembrandt." Harlem, 1886.

=Chalon, John.= Works of Rembrandt, etched by. London, 1822.

=Claussin, Chevalier de.= "Catalogue raisonné de toutes les estampes qui
forment l'œuvre de Rembrandt." Paris, 1824.

=Claussin, Chevalier de.= "Supplément au Catalogue de Rembrandt." Paris,
1828.

=Dargenville.= "Abrégé de la Vie des plus fameux peintres." Paris, 1745.

=Daulby, Daniel.= "A descriptive catalogue of the works of Rembrandt and
of his scholars." London and Liverpool, 1796.

=Descamps.= "Vies des peintres flamands et hollandais." Marseilles,
1840.

=Dyk, J. van.= "Beschryving van alle de Schilderyen op het Stadhuis van
Amsterdam." Amsterdam, 1758.

=Dutuit, E.= "L'œuvre complet de Rembrandt décrit et catalogué par."
Paris, 1880.

=Eckhoff.= "La femme de Rembrandt." 1862.

=Félibien.= "Entretien sur les Vies et les Ouvrages des plus excellents
peintres." 1666-1688.

=Fromentin, Eugène.= "Les Maitres d'autrefois." Paris, 1877.

=Galland, G.= "Geschichte der holländischen Baukunst und Bildnerei."
Leipzig, 1890.

=Gersaint.= "Catalogue raisonné de toutes les pièces qui forment l'œuvre
de Rembrandt." Paris, 1751.

=Hamerton, P. G.= "Etching and Etchers." London, 1868.

=Hamerton, P. G.= Rembrandt's Etchings. Portfolio. London, 1894.

=Havard, Henri.= "L'art et les artistes hollandais." Paris, 1879.

=Hoogstraten, Samuel van.= "Inleyding tot de hooge School der
Schilderkonst." Rotterdam, 1678.

=Houbraken, Arnold.= "De groote Schoubourgh der nederlandsche
Kontschilders." Amsterdam, 1718-1719.

=Humphreys, Noel.= Rembrandt's Etchings. London, 1871.

=Huygens, Constantin.= "Autobiographie inédite." Library of the Academy
of Sciences, Amsterdam.

=Kolloff, Édouard.= "Rembrandt's Leben und Werke," included in
_Historisches Taschenbuch_ of von Raumer. Leipzig, 1854.

=Langbehn, Dr.= "Rembrandt als Erzieher." Published anonymously,
Leipzig, 1890.

=Lemcke, C.= Rembrandt van Rijn, in the _Kunst and Künstler_, Leipzig,
1877.

=Lippmann, F.= Original drawings by Rembrandt reproduced in Phototype.
London, Berlin, and Paris, 1889-1892.

=Madsen, Karl.= "Studier fra Sverig." Copenhagen, 1892.

=Michel, Emile.= "Rembrandt sa vie, son œuvre et son temps." Paris,
1893.

=Middleton, C. H.= "Notes on the Etched Work of Rembrandt." London,
1877.

=Middleton, C. H.= "A descriptive Catalogue of the Etched Work of
Rembrandt." London, 1878.

=Orlers, J. J.= "Beschryving der Stad Leiden." Leyden, 1641.

=Oud-Holland.= See _Bredius_.

=Piles, R. de.= "Abrégé de la vie des Peintres." 1699.

=Riegel, Herman.= "Beitrage zur niederländischen Kunstgeschichte."
Berlin, 1882.

=Rovinski, Dmitri.= "L'œuvre gravé de Rembrandt." Reproductions of all
the states of all the etchings. St. Petersburg, 1890.

=Sandrart, Joachim de.= "Academia nobilissimae artis pictoriæ."
Nuremberg, 1675-1683.

=Scheltema, Dr.= "Rembrandt, Discours sur sa vie et son génie." Paris,
1866.

=Schmidt, W.= "Handzeichnungen alter Meister in Königlichen Kupferstich
Kabinet zu Munchen. Munich.

=Schneider, L.= "Geschichte der niederländischen Litteratur." Leipzig,
1888.

=Seidlitz, von.= "Rembrandt's Radirungen." Published in Zeitschrift für
bildende Kunst. 1892.

=Seymour Haden, Sir Francis.= "Introductory Remarks to the Catalogue of
the Etched Work of Rembrandt, selected for exhibition at the Burlington
Fine Arts Club, London, 1877."

=Seymour Haden, Sir Francis.= "L'œuvre gravé de Rembrandt." Paris, 1880.

=Seymour Haden, Sir Francis.= "The Etched Work of Rembrandt, True and
False." London, 1895.

=Smith, John.= "Catalogue raisonné of the Works of the most eminent
Dutch, Flemish, and French Painters." London, 1829-1842.

=Springer, Anton.= "Bilder aus der neueren Kunstgeschichte. Vol. II.
Rembrandt und seine Genossen." Bonn, 1886.

=Vosmaer, Charles.= "Rembrandt Hermannsz. Sa vie et ses œuvres." Paris
and the Hague, 1877.

=Weyerman, J. Campo.= "De Levens Beschryvingen der nederlandsche
Konstschilders." The Hague, 1749.

=Willigen, van der.= "Les artistes de Harlem." 1870.

=Willshire, W. H.= "An Introduction to the Study and Collection of
Ancient Prints." London, 1877.

=Wilson, T.= A Descriptive Catalogue of the Prints of Rembrandt.
Published as by "An amateur." London, 1836.

=Woltmann, A.=, and =Woermann, K.= "Geschichte de Malerei." Leipzig.

=Yver, Pierre.= "Supplément au Catalogue raisonné de MM. Gersaint,
Helle, et Glomy." Amsterdam, 1756.




CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE


------+---------------------+---------------------+---------------------+
      |    =Events in=      |  =Principal Work=   |     =Important=
=Year=| =Rembrandt's Life=  |       =Dated=       | =Historical Event=
------+---------------------+---------------------+---------------------+
 1606 |Born July 15th.      |                     |
      |                     |                     |
 1608 |                     |                     |Milton born.
      |                     |                     |
 1609 |                     |                     |Truce between Spain
      |                     |                     |and Holland.
      |                     |                     |
 1610 |                     |                     |The Colony of Virginia
      |                     |                     |established.
      |                     |                     |
 1612 |                     |                     |Henry, Prince of
      |                     |                     |Wales, died.
      |                     |                     |
 1616 |                     |                     |Shakespeare died.
      |                     |                     |
 1618 |                     |                     |Thirty Years' War
      |                     |                     |began.
      |                     |                     |
 1620 |Entered at Leyden    |                     |The Pilgrim Fathers
      |University, and later|                     |landed in New England.
      |Swanenburch's Studio.|                     |
      |                     |                     |
 1622 |                     |                     |Renewal of War with
      |                     |                     |Spain.
      |                     |                     |
 1623 |Went to Lastman's    |                     |Charles went to Spain.
      |Studio.              |                     |
      |                     |                     |
 1624 |Returned to Leyden.  |                     |Manhattan founded.
      |                     |                     |
 1625 |                     |                     |Charles I. came to the
      |                     |                     |throne. Prince
      |                     |                     |Frederick-Henry became
      |                     |                     |Stathouder.
      |                     |                     |
 1627 |First known pictures.|St Paul in Prison.   |Expedition to
      |                     |                     |Rochelle.
      |                     |                     |
 1628 |Gerard Dou became his|Capture of Samson.   |Assassination of
      |pupil.               |                     |Buckingham.
      |                     |                     |
 1629 |                     |Portrait of Himself  |Charter granted to
      |                     |(Gotha).             |Massachusetts.
      |                     |                     |
 1630 |His father died.     |Joseph interpreting  |Puritan emigration to
      |                     |his Dreams.          |New England.
      |                     |                     |
 1631 |Left Leyden for      |Presentation in the  |Dryden born.
      |Amsterdam.           |Temple.              |
      |                     |                     |
 1632 |Living on the        |The Anatomy Lesson.  |Gustavus Adolphus
      |Bloemgracht.         |                     |killed at Lutzen.
      |                     |                     |
 1633 |Moved to Saint       |The Shipbuilder and  |Milton's _L'Allegro_
      |Anthonie's Breestraat|his Wife.            |and _Il Penseroso_.
      |(about).             |                     |
      |                     |                     |
 1634 |Married on June 22nd.|Descent from the     |The Exchange at
      |                     |Cross (Hermitage).   |Amsterdam built.
      |                     |                     |
 1635 |Rombertus born.      |Abraham's Sacrifice. |Ben Jonson died.
      |                     |                     |
 1636 |Living in Nieuwe     |Danae.               |
      |Doelstraat.          |                     |
      |                     |                     |
 1637 |                     |Susannah at the Bath.|Trial of Hampden.
      |                     |                     |
 1638 |Cornelia born.       |Christ and Mary      |Milton's _Lycidas_.
      |                     |Magdalen.            |
      |                     |                     |
 1639 |Moved to             |Resurrection.        |Massinger died.
      |Jode-Breestraat.     |                     |
      |                     |                     |
 1640 |His mother died.     |Portrait of Elizabeth|The Long Parliament
      |                     |Bas.                 |met.
      |                     |                     |
 1641 |Titus born.          |Portrait of Anslo.   |Execution of
      |                     |                     |Strafford.
      |                     |                     |
 1642 |Saskia died.         |The Night Watch.     |The Civil War began.
      |                     |                     |
 1643 |                     |Bathsheba.           |Death of Hampden.
      |                     |                     |
 1644 |                     |Woman taken in       |The Battle of Marston
      |                     |Adultery.            |Moor.
      |                     |                     |
 1645 |                     |Holy Family          |Battle of Naseby.
      |                     |(Hermitage).         |
      |                     |                     |
 1646 |Finished two pictures|Adoration of the     |Charles I. surrendered
      |for the Stathouder.  |Shepherds.           |to the Scots.
      |                     |                     |
 1647 |An estimate made of  |Susannah and the     |William II. became
      |Saskia's property.   |Elders.              |Stathouder.
      |                     |                     |
 1648 |                     |Christ at Emmaus.    |Peace of Westphalia.
      |                     |                     |
 1649 |Hendrickje Stoffels  |No dated picture.    |Execution of
      |first heard of.      |                     |Charles I.
      |                     |                     |
 1650 |                     |Deposition.          |John de Witt became
      |                     |                     |Grand Pensioner.
      |                     |                     |
 1651 |                     |Noli me tangere.     |Battle of Worcester.
      |                     |                     |
 1652 |Hendrickje's first   |Portrait of          |War between England
      |daughter born.       |Bruyningh.           |and Holland.
      |                     |                     |
 1653 |Borrowed money in    |Portrait called Van  |Peace restored.
      |large sums.          |der Hooft.           |
      |                     |                     |
 1654 |Birth of second      |Bathsheba (Louvre).  |Oliver Cromwell,
      |daughter, Cornelia.  |                     |Lord Protector.
      |                     |                     |
 1655 |                     |Joseph accused by    |Cromwell pensioned
      |                     |Potiphar's Wife.     |Manasseh ben Israel.
      |                     |                     |
 1656 |Declared bankrupt.   |Parable of Labourers |War between Spain and
      |                     |in the Vineyard.     |England.
      |                     |                     |
 1657 |Sale of his property |Portrait of Catrina  |Cromwell refused title
      |ordered.             |Hoogh.               |of King.
      |                     |                     |
 1658 |Pictures, etc., sold.|An Old Woman cutting |Cromwell died.
      |                     |her Nails.           |
      |                     |                     |
 1659 |                     |Jacob wrestling with |Treaty of the Hague.
      |                     |the Angel.           |
      |                     |                     |
 1660 |Association formed by|Portrait of Himself  |Charles II. landed at
      |Hendrickje and Titus.|(Louvre).            |Dover.
      |                     |                     |
 1661 |The last known       |The Syndics.         |Mazarin died.
      |etching.             |                     |
      |                     |                     |
 1662 |Hendrickje (probably)|No dated picture.    |Charter given to Royal
      |died.                |                     |Society.
      |                     |                     |
 1663 |                     |Homer.               |
      |                     |                     |
 1664 |Moved to the         |Lucretia.            |War between Holland
      |Lauriergracht.       |                     |and England.
      |                     |                     |
 1665 |Titus awarded his    |Portrait of a Man    |Plague in London.
      |property.            |(Metrop. Mus.,       |
      |                     |New York).           |
      |                     |                     |
 1666 |                     |Portrait of J. de    |Fire of London.
      |                     |Decker.              |
      |                     |                     |
 1667 |                     |Portrait of an Old   |Peace between England
      |                     |Man.                 |and Holland.
      |                     |                     |
 1668 |Titus' marriage and  |The Flagellation.    |Alliance between
      |death.               |                     |Holland, England, and
      |                     |                     |Sweden.
      |                     |                     |
 1669 |Rembrandt died.      |No dated picture.    |
------+---------------------+---------------------+---------------------+




REMBRANDT VAN RIJN




CHAPTER I

BIRTH AND EARLY YEARS


Down to the middle of the present century the story of Rembrandt, as
generally accepted, was nothing but a mass of more or less ill-natured
fiction. His drunkenness, his luxury, his immorality, his avarice, were
heaped together into a somewhat inconsistent midden-heap of infamy. It
was not indeed until his true rank among painters began to be properly
appreciated that it occurred to anyone to ask whether this harsh
judgment did not need revision; nay, more, to inquire upon what evidence
it had been first delivered, and the investigation had not long been set
on foot before the question took the form--"Is there any evidence, good
or bad, at all?"

There were soon many workers in this untried field, and to all the
thanks of the artist's admirers are due, but it is chiefly to M. Charles
Vosmaer that his complete rehabilitation is to be credited, and it is
bare justice to say that without availing himself freely of his
researches and of M. Michel's equally careful and critical marshalling
of the facts, then and since obtained by others, no future historian of
Rembrandt can hope to advance beyond the threshold of his subject. One
by one the cobwebs of myth with which, partly through malice, partly
through ignorance, the master's image had been overwhelmed have been
torn away, and we begin at last to see him as he really was, not
impeccable, but intensely human, a kindly, patient, laborious,
much-tried soul--one whom fortune, not altogether without his own
provoking be it frankly owned, sorely buffeted, but one who, though
well-nigh crushed, was never subdued; one whose courage sustained him to
the last, whose one refuge against her flouts was in his art; who met,
uncomplaining, neglect and contempt in his later years as he had in the
heyday of his career received, unspoiled, unstinted praise and
well-earned fame, and who said of himself in the height of his
prosperity, "When I want rest for my mind, it is not honours I crave,
but liberty."

Much concerning Rembrandt has been revealed by M. Vosmaer and his
fellow-workers, by MM. Bredius and Scheltema, de Vries and Immerzeel,
Elzevier and Eckhoff, van der Willigen, and other patient seekers, but
much, nevertheless, still remains in doubt or darkness.

Even as to the date of his birth, there is considerable uncertainty.
Orlers, a burgomaster of Leyden, in a description of that town published
in 1641, and therefore while not only Rembrandt himself but many people
who must have remembered his birth were still alive, states that
Rembrandt, the son of Hermann, the son of Gerrit, and Neeltje, the
daughter of Willems of Suydtbroeck, was born on the 15th of July 1606,
and later writers for more than two hundred years accepted his
assertion without question. Dr Bredius has, however, shown that on May
25th, 1620, Rembrandt was entered as a student in the Faculty of Letters
at the University of Leyden and his age is given in the same document as
fourteen, _Rembrandt Hermanni Leidensis 14 jare oud_, and as this was
before his birthday in that year the question arises as to whether the
statement means that he was in his fourteenth year or that he had passed
the fourteenth anniversary of his birthday. For, the day of his birth
not being in dispute, if we take the latter and more obvious
interpretation it would necessarily follow that the fourteenth
anniversary was in 1619 and that he completed his first year on 25th May
1606, so that the actual day itself must have been in 1605. There is
further and still conflicting evidence to be reckoned with. In the
British Museum there is a proof of an etched portrait of himself dated
1631 [B. 7], on which is written, in what is believed to be his own
hand, "_aet._ 24, 1631." If this was written before the 15th of July it
would point to 1606 as his birth year, thus agreeing with Orlers'
statement, while if it was written after that day it would imply 1607.
It should, however, be observed that M. Blanc reads the figures on the
etching as 25, and if he be correct in this the choice must lie between
1607 and 1608; while, to add further to the mystification, Mr Sidney
Colvin reads the age as 27, which makes the birth year 1603 or 1604.

Nor is 1607 without further support. Dr Scheltema discovered in the
marriage register of Amsterdam the record of Rembrandt's official
engagement to duly obtain his mother's consent to his marriage, signed
by himself, and in this he gives his age on July 10th, 1634, as
twenty-six, in which case his birthday would have fallen in 1607, but we
know that he was at all times very vague as to dates and figures. On a
delightful pencil drawing on vellum, in the Berlin Museum, of his wife
Saskia, there is an inscription in his handwriting "Dit is naer myn
huysfrow geconterfeit do sy 21 jaer oud was den derden dach als wy
getroudt waeren due 8 junyus 1633"--"This is a portrait of my wife when
she was 21 years old, on the third day after our marriage, the 8th of
June 1633," a simple statement, which nevertheless contains a remarkable
number of errors for so brief a document. Saskia, it is true, was
twenty-one in 1633, but the marriage took place on the 22nd of June and
in the year 1634.

If, then, Rembrandt could misdate an event so intimately connected with
his life's chief joy, how should we expect him to be more accurate about
one, which indeed concerned him nearly, but of which he naturally had no
personal recollection. That he was uncertain we have happily positive
proof, thanks once more to Doctor Bredius, for on the 16th of September
1653, in giving his opinion as an expert in a trial concerning the
authenticity of a certain picture by Paul Bril, he can only declare that
he is about forty-six.

Such is the evidence upon this fortunately not very important point, and
it is small wonder that of the two great authorities, M. Michel and M.
Vosmaer, the first accepts 1606 and the second 1607 as the true date.
The question must still remain an open one, but when we consider that
Rembrandt's mother did not die until 1640, only one year before Orlers
published his book, and at a time when he had probably collected most
of his material, and that nothing is more likely than that he should
have applied to her for details, we may with safety conclude that the
balance of probability is in favour of his date 1606.

Concerning the place of his birth there are no such doubts. If the
visitor to Leyden, on his way from the station to the town, turns sharp
to the right after crossing the second bridge, and on traversing a third
keeps again to the right and continues with that branch of the Rhine
known as the Galgewater on his right hand, he will before long find
himself on the west side of the town, in a triangular open space, washed
on two sides by the moat surrounding it, where once stood the White Gate
guarding the entrance of the high-road from the Hague. On the left side
of this, as one comes in from the country, and at right angles to it,
close to where the buildings of the Zeemans-Kweekschool, or Naval
School, now are, ran a short street called the Weddesteeg, in No. 3 of
which Rembrandt was born.

It must have been a pleasant situation, facing the setting sun, with
nothing but the town ramparts and the gleaming moat between it and the
wide champaign. On the right hand the slow barges crept up and down the
river, on the left the slow carts creaked to and from the town, while in
front the broad sails of windmills swung round, and the whirr of the
stones grinding malt for making beer hummed through the open doors. Up
against the sky rose two, one almost opposite the windows of the house,
the other a little to the left on the border of the Noordeinde, just
inside the gate, of which Rembrandt's father owned half, while his
stepfather Cornelis, the son of Clæs, with his son Clæs, shared the
other half between them.

He was a prosperous and respected man was Hermann, or Harmen--the name
occurs in both forms--the son of Gerrit, called after the fashion of the
time Harmen Gerritsz, to which he himself added van Rijn, as his son did
after him. Besides his own residence, and his share of the mill, he
owned houses within the town and gardens without, with plate and
jewellery and house-plenishings and all things proper about him, and had
been appointed by his fellow-citizens to a municipal office of
importance, representing the ward of the Pelican, in which he lived,
where he did so well what was asked of him that he was selected again
for it some years later. He was at the former date thirty-five or
thirty-six, and at the time when this, his fifth and youngest child but
one, was born, he had been married fifteen years, his wedding-day having
been the 8th of October 1589.

[Illustration: [_Bredius Collection, the Hague_

PORTRAIT OF REMBRANDT'S MOTHER

(ABOUT 1628)]

Rembrandt's childhood, considering the condition of his father, was, we
may be sure, at least a comfortable one, though of details we have none.
We cannot even say where he learned to read and write, for neither of
which exercises did he subsequently exhibit much affection. Probably at
home, where maybe Coppenol, the great master of writing, at that time
included among the fine-arts under the style of Caligraphy, taught him,
and possibly gave him his first lessons in drawing also; for the art he
professed, with its elaboration of curves and flourishes, and its, to
our eyes, somewhat childish pictorial perversions, was a singular
commingling of the two. One thing at least we may feel certain of,
that it was at his mother's knee he began the study of the Bible, which
she herself read so constantly, if we may judge by its frequent
appearance in his portraits of her, and which he, following in her
footsteps, knew so thoroughly and drew upon so often for inspiration.

The next fact we find chronicled is a passage in Orlers to the effect
that his parents sent him to school to learn the Latin tongue, in
preparation for the University of Leyden, that when he came of age he
might by his knowledge serve the City and Republic; and in fulfilment of
this laudable ambition we find that entry on May 25th, 1620, as a
student in the Faculty of Letters, which has already been noted in
another connection. But by this time, by what means we know not, the art
craving was fully aroused, and his parents' ambitious scheme for his
serving the City and Republic was as nothing beside his own irresistible
desire to express himself in form and colour. He proved, we are told,
but an unwilling scholar, the lines of Virgil and Ovid were lifeless to
him, in comparison with those of Lucas van Leyden; and his elders,
yielding with a fortunate wisdom to the inevitable, gave up the effort
to make a statesman of him, and consented to apprentice him, according
to his wish, to a painter to learn first principles from him.




CHAPTER II

ART EDUCATION AND EARLY WORKS


The exact date of this first step on the road to fame is also still
somewhat uncertain. Vosmaer believes it was in 1619, but the assertion
of Orlers that when his parents allowed him to abandon the unloved
Latin, they apprenticed him to a painter, is so precise, that it is
unreasonable to suppose that his father should have returned to the
attack. We may consequently assume that the final desertion of the Muses
and enlistment in the cause of the Arts came after, not before, that
enrolment at the University--that is to say, late in 1620 or perhaps
early in 1621. Further facts go to prove this point. His first
apprenticeship, in accordance with the rules of the Guilds of Saint
Luke, lasted three years, and came to an end therefore in 1623 or early
in 1624. He then went to a second master in Amsterdam, but remained with
him only six months; so that in either case the date of his leaving
Amsterdam and returning to Leyden would have been some time in 1624. Now
there is no doubt that it was in 1624 that this took place, and the only
obvious conclusion is that his first apprenticeship did not commence
before 1620.

The painter who was then chosen for the honour of first guiding the hand
of the young Rembrandt, by which honour he is nowadays almost alone
distinguished, was Jacob van Swanenburch. A man of good position, the
son of one painter, the brother of another, and of an engraver, he was
not, judging by his only known picture, "A Papal Procession in the
Piazza of St Peter," artistically speaking, of much account, and it was
probably more for personal reasons, and because of his propinquity, than
for his conspicuous talents that he was selected. He was able only to
impart "the first elements and the principles" of his art to his young
pupil, as Orlers tells us; but indeed these were all that were needed by
one with such an overmastering personality, with so powerful an artistic
inspiration and energy. So successful was the process that Orlers
describes his advance in craftsmanship as so swift and steady that his
fellow-citizens were completely astounded by it, and could already
foresee the brilliant career to which he was destined. We must, however,
remember in weighing this statement that it was written when that career
was at its most brilliant stage, and is to some extent the proverbial
safe prophecy of one who knows.

That Rembrandt did make considerable progress during the following three
years is, of course, certain; and when his apprenticeship drew to an end
the question arose as to what was to come next. The experience of a
young fellow-artist probably suggested the answer. About the time
Rembrandt entered Swanenburch's studio Jan Lievensz, a fellow-citizen, a
year younger than Rembrandt, who had, however, entered upon his artistic
studies while Rembrandt was still struggling with, or against, the
detested Latin, returned from completing his studies in the studio of
Pieter Lastman at Amsterdam. The father of Jan was a farmer, a man in
the same rank of life as Hermann the miller, and probably had business
connections with him, so that the acquaintanceship between the two sons,
destined to ripen into warm friendship, doubtless began in early
boyhood.

Certain it is, at any rate, that when Jan returned from Lastman's studio
to astound his townsmen with his precocity, the intimacy between him and
Rembrandt became close; in a few years their names seem to have become
as inseparable as those of Damon and Pythias, and it was no doubt from
the enthusiasm of Lievensz that the impulse arose which, in 1624, sent
Rembrandt also to study under Lastman. The experiment, however, was not
a success. Lievensz had remained with him two years; Rembrandt wearied
of it in six months. And, truly, though he enjoyed at that time an
incomprehensibly large measure of popularity and success, Lastman,
though a far better artist than Swanenburch, was not one of those whose
names we nowadays inscribe on the roll of great painters. He had been,
moreover, one of the large group who had trudged to far-away Rome, and
come under the influence of Elsheimer there, and the exotic and
ill-adapted traditions and conventions of the school were not calculated
to appeal to so ardent and eager a seeker after truth as Rembrandt. He
wanted to find nature, and was not to be put off by a diluted
semi-Italian imitation of it; and so, after a few months' trial, he
packed up his paints and canvases, and returned to his family in Leyden
"to study and practise painting alone and in his own way," to quote
again the garrulous Orlers.

That so indefatigable and untiring a worker as Rembrandt did not waste
time, when once he was safely established in his father's house, is
certain, for Orlers says that he worked incessantly as long as the light
lasted; but we know of nothing that he produced until three years later,
when he painted two still existing pictures, signing and dating both.

From this time his reputation and that of Lievensz ripened rapidly.
Arent van Buchel, in his "Res Pictoriæ," mentions him in 1628; and
Constantin Huygens, in a manuscript autobiography, discovered in 1891 by
Dr Worp of Groningen, and written probably between 1629 and 1631, was
enthusiastic concerning both, "still beardless yet already famous"--an
appreciation that was not to be without its favourable influence on
Rembrandt's future. Nor was this growing fame productive of mere empty
praise. In February 1628, when he was only one-and-twenty, Gerard Dou,
his first pupil, came to him and remained until he left Leyden for
Amsterdam three years later.

Many causes probably combined to promote this change of residence. On
the twenty-seventh of April 1630 the first break in the united family
circle was brought about by the death of his father. The blow must have
been a heavy one, for he must have been a kindly and sympathetic
companion to his children, if we may judge by the refined and sensitive
face which looks out at us from the portraits believed to be his, and a
merry one to boot, with a pretty humour of his own, if M. Michel be
justified in his conclusion that the etching of the bald man with a
chain (B. 292) is also a portrait of him. The loss further brought
changes into the family arrangements. The eldest brother, as far back
as 1621, had been crippled by an accident, and on March 16th of that
year a life-interest in the estate to the amount of 125 florins per
annum had been formally established for his maintenance, so that the
superintendence of the affairs of the mill fell to the second son
Adriaen, who abandoned his trade of shoe-making to undertake it, and
made nothing, or worse, of it.

The young artist's reputation as a portrait painter had, moreover,
spread to Amsterdam some time before, and many commissions came to him
thence. For a while he merely went over, stayed long enough to do the
work, and returned again to Leyden, but as the demands upon his time
increased this must have proved a wasteful, inconvenient, and finally
impossible proceeding. Leyden, again, was a University town, where
religion and philosophy were more thought of and more sought after than
such a trifle as art, as indeed is still the case in some University
towns that could be mentioned; while Amsterdam was a city of prosperous
traders making more money than they knew how to spend or employ, and
ready enough to devote some of their superfluity to portraits of
themselves and wives, or pictures of incidents and places, and it was
clearly desirable that one able and willing to satisfy their wishes in
this respect should be upon the spot.

[Illustration: [_Cassel Gallery_

PORTRAIT OF REMBRANDT'S FATHER

(ABOUT 1631)]

The little coterie of artists, too, was on the verge of dispersal in any
case, by the loss of Rembrandt's closest tie with it, Jan Lievensz. He
had sold a picture of a man reading by a turf fire to the Prince of
Orange, who had presented it to the English Ambassador, and he in turn
had passed it on to that king of picture lovers, Charles the First,
who had been so well pleased with it that a pressing invitation to visit
England had been sent to the painter, and accepted. Nor, probably, was
it only the chance of obtaining more employment that attracted
Rembrandt. The famous "Anatomy Lesson" bears the date 1632, and, even if
the commission for it had not actually been offered during the preceding
year, it may very well have been suggested in the course of conversation
by the doctor who had added to his name, Clæs Pietersz, that of Tulp,
taking it from a tulip which was carved on the front of his house, who
figures so conspicuously in it. If this were so, it must have been
evident to Rembrandt that to undertake so large and important a picture
while living in another city would mean either risking the uniformity
and continuity of his work, or settling down for a prolonged period in
lodgings in Amsterdam, and this may well have confirmed his decision to
at once establish himself there permanently.

Finally, I like to fancy, though it certainly cannot be proved, that
Rembrandt had already, in one of his flying visits to that city, met the
girl upon whom, while she lived, the larger part of his life's happiness
was to depend. The evidence is, it must be owned, slight, but is not
altogether wanting. Among the pictures of the year 1630, and, according
to M. Michel, even of 1628 and onwards, we find a series of portraits of
a fair-haired girl with a round, full forehead, and rather small eyes
and mouth, which Dr Bode believes to be portraits of the painter's
sister Lysbeth, while M. Michel considers that some of the later ones
are really portraits of Saskia, urging the objection that many of them
were undoubtedly painted after his removal to Amsterdam, whither there
is not the slightest reason to suppose that Lysbeth accompanied him,
what evidence there is pointing directly to the contrary. On the other
hand, M. Michel admits that the type which is known to be Saskia blends
almost indistinguishably with that supposed to be Lysbeth, and offers
the distinctly dubious explanation that Rembrandt was, so to speak, so
imbued with the features of his sister that he unconsciously transferred
them to a large extent to the girl he loved. If, however, as we may
quite reasonably suppose, Rembrandt had met and admired Saskia during
his first stay in Amsterdam, and continued to do so during his
after-visits, the occurrence of her features in his work would be what
we ought to expect.

There was, on the other hand, but a single objection to the scheme--the
parting with his mother; and to such an affectionate and home-loving
nature as Rembrandt's the difficulty can have been no small one. Still,
a man has to do a man's work in this life. Adriaen, his brother, and
Lysbeth, his sister, were there to minister to her comfort, while
Amsterdam was no great distance away; and though, doubtless, it was not
altogether without tears that the widowed Neeltje consented to the
departure of her youngest son, the decision was taken, and the consent
yielded at last.

Indeed, it was inevitable that so great and, at one time, so popular an
artist should, sooner or later, gravitate to the capital of his country;
for, since the decay of Antwerp, Amsterdam was without a rival in the
world for prosperity--the head-centre of commerce, the hub of the
trade-universe. Sir Thomas Overbury, in 1609, describes it as surpassing
"Seville, Lisbon, or any other mart town in Christendom." Evelyn,
writing in 1641, says in his diary, "that it is certainly the most busie
concourse of mortalls now upon the whole earth and the most addicted to
com'erce."

Neither tempest nor battle could check her energy; and throughout the
long desultory war from 1621 to 1648 between Spain and Holland, her
traders hurried to and from the enemy's ports, supplying her even with
the very munitions of war to carry on the contest; while for all this
accumulated wealth there was but a limited outlet. Necessities being
superabundant, it must be either hoarded or expended on luxuries, and
among these pictures held high place. Quoting once more from Evelyn, we
find him writing on August 13th, 1641: "We arrived late at Roterdam,
where was their annual marte or faire, so furnished with pictures
(especially Landskips and Drolleries, as they call those clounish
representations), that I was amaz'd. Some I bought and sent into
England. The reson of this store of pictures and their cheapness
proceedes from their want of land to employ their stock, so that it is
an ordinary thing to find a common Farmer lay out two or three thousand
pounds in this comodity. Their houses are full of them, and they vend
them at their faires to very great gaines." So, for a time, the Dutch
painters drove a thriving trade; and as Amsterdam was by far the richest
city, to Amsterdam the successful painter must needs repair.




CHAPTER III

DAYS OF PROSPERITY


Some time then in 1631 the die was cast, and the removal accomplished.
There is reason to believe that he went at first to stay or lodge with
Hendrick van Uylenborch, a dealer in pictures and other objects of art.
Among his first proceedings on his arrival, was one sufficiently
characteristic of him and destined to be repeated only too often in the
future. He lent Hendrick money, one thousand florins, to be repayable in
a year with three months' notice. Soon after, if not before, this
indiscreet financial operation, as it proved later, he found the
suitable residence he had meanwhile been seeking, on the Bloemgracht, a
canal on the west side of the town, running north-east and south-west
between the Prinsen Gracht and the Lynbaan Gracht, in a district, at
that time on the extreme outskirts of the town, known as the Garden,
from the floral names bestowed upon its streets and canals.

Here he settled to his work, and here in a short time fortune came to
him. The enthusiasm aroused by "The Anatomy Lesson," when it was
finished and hung in its predestined place in the little dissecting-room
or Snijkamer of the Guild of Surgeons in the Nes, near the Dam, was
immediate and immense. The artist leapt at once into the front rank, and
became the fashionable portrait painter of the day. From three
portraits, other than those of his own circle, painted in 1631, and ten
in 1632, the number rose to forty between that year and 1634; or, taking
all the surviving portraits between 1627 and 1631, we have forty-one,
while from the five following years, from 1632 to 1636, there are one
hundred and two. Commissions, indeed, flowed in faster than he could
execute them, so Houbraken assures us, and the not infrequent occurrence
of a pair of portraits, husband and wife, one painted a year or more
after the other, tends to confirm this; so that those who wished to be
immortalised by him had often to wait their turn for months together,
while all the wealth and fashion of the city flocked to the far-off
studio in the outskirts, the more fortunate to give their sittings, the
later comers to put down their names in anticipation of the future
leisure. From the beginning, too, pupils came clamouring to his doors,
Govert Flinck and Ferdinand Bol, Philips Koninck, Geerbrandt van den
Eeckhout, Jan Victors, Leendeert Cornelisz, and others, eager to pay
down their hundred florins a year, as Sandrart says they did, and work
with and for the lion of the day.

Not Fortune alone, however, with her retinue of patrons, and Fame, with
her train of pupils, sought him out; Love, too, came knocking at his
portal, and won a prompt admission. To the many admirable works produced
at this time I shall return later, but three of those painted in 1632
call for further notice now. One is an oval picture, belonging to Herr
Haro of Stockholm, representing the half-length figure of a girl in
profile, facing to the left, fair-haired, and pleasant-looking rather
than pretty; the second, in the Museum at Stockholm, shows us the same
girl in much the same position, but differently dressed; while the
third, in the collection of Prince Liechtenstein at Vienna, is a less
pleasing representation of her in full face, wherein the tendency to
stoutness and the already developing double chin detract from the
piquancy of her expression and make her look more than her actual age,
which we know to have been twenty at the time that these were painted.

We have heard her name casually already, in connection with the
arrangements for Rembrandt's marriage, when discussing the date of his
birth--for this is Saskia van Uylenborch, a cousin of his friend
Hendrick, which fact may haply have had something to do with that ready
loan of a thousand florins. Though poor Rembrandt, be it said, was,
unhappily for him, never backward with loan or gift when he had money to
give or lend. Saskia was born in 1612 at Leeuwarden, the chief town of
Friesland in the north, across the Zuider Zee, and at the time when
Rembrandt met her was an orphan, her mother, Sjukie Osinga, having died
in 1619, and her father, Rombertus, a distinguished lawyer in his native
place, in 1624. The family left behind was a large one, consisting,
besides Saskia, of three brothers, two being lawyers and one a soldier,
and five sisters, all married, who, as soon as the worthy Rombertus was
laid to rest, seem to have begun wrangling among themselves concerning
the estate; the quarrel, chiefly, as it appears, being sustained by the
several brothers-in-law, and leading shortly to an appeal to law.

[Illustration: [_Liechtenstein Gallery, Vienna_

PORTRAIT OF SASKIA

(1632)]

Among the less close relations was a cousin Aaltje, who was married to
Jan Cornelis Sylvius, a minister of the Reformed Church, who, coming
from Friesland, had settled in Amsterdam in 1610, and with them Saskia
was in the habit of coming to stay. Where and when Rembrandt first met
her we do not know. Probably at the house of Hendrick; it may have been,
as has been said, in 1628 or earlier, for, if the acquaintance began in
1631, it ripened rapidly. Without accepting unhesitatingly all M.
Michel's identifications of her, not only in portraits and studies but
in subjects, such as that one which is known as "The Jewish Bride," now
in the collection of Prince Liechtenstein, there is no question that she
sat to him several times during the two years 1632 and 1633. The
attraction was mutual; Rembrandt soon became a welcome visitor to the
Sylvius household, and, in token doubtless of the kindness and
hospitality which he there met with, he etched, in 1634, a portrait of
the good old minister (B. 266).

The course of true love in this case ran smoothly enough; the young
people soon came to an understanding; no difficulties were raised by
Sylvius, who acted as Saskia's guardian; and the marriage was only
deferred till Saskia came of age. The union, indeed, from a worldly
point of view, was unexceptionable. Saskia, it is true, was of a good
family, while Rembrandt sprang from the lower middle class, but he had
already carved out for himself a rank above all pedigrees. Saskia was
twenty, and he, with all his fame, was only twenty-six. The wedding,
then, was decided on, and Rembrandt, painting Saskia yet again, put into
her hands a sprig of rosemary, at that time in Holland an emblem of
betrothal. It was possibly even fixed for some date late in 1633, when
Saskia would have passed her twenty-first birthday.

Just at this time, to confirm, if that had been needed, Rembrandt's
increasing reputation and prospects of future prosperity, he was brought
into business relations with the chief personage in the land, Prince
Frederick-Henry, who in 1625, on the death of his brother Maurice, had
succeeded to the office of Stathouder, as the head of the Republic was
officially entitled. Constantin Huygens, whose earlier enthusiasm for
Rembrandt's work we have already noted, was the Prince's Secretary,
acting in that quality as intermediary in his many dealings with
artists, and clearly found time in the intervals of his duties to
continue his acquaintance with Rembrandt. It was probably on his
recommendation that the artist had painted in 1632 the portrait of his
brother Maurice, and it was certainly at his suggestion that the
Stathouder bought "The Raising of the Cross," now at Munich. Rembrandt,
indeed, says as much in a letter to Huygens, still existing in the
British Museum, in which he invites him to come and inspect the
companion picture, "The Descent from the Cross," for which, though
offering to leave it to the Prince's generosity, he considers two
hundred livres would be a reasonable price. The picture was bought, and
so content was the Prince with his purchase that soon afterwards he
commissioned three other pictures to complete the set. The exact date of
this event is unknown, but it cannot have been long delayed, for, in a
letter written early in 1636 the painter informs Huygens that one of the
three, "The Ascension," is finished and the other two half done.

With such guarantees of continued good fortune, there was nothing, when
Saskia was once of age, to necessitate longer delay, in the completion
of his happiness, but in the autumn she was peremptorily called away to
Franeker, a town in Friesland, between Leeuwarden and the sea, where her
sister Antje, the wife of Johannes Maccovius, professor of Theology, was
lying ill, and where, on November the ninth, she died. This untoward
occurrence put an end to the possibility of an immediate marriage, and
Saskia went to spend the winter with another sister, Hiskia, who was
married to Gerrit van Loo, a secretary of the government, and lived at
Sainte Anne Parrochie, in the extreme north-west of Friesland; while
Rembrandt, discontentedly enough, no doubt, toiled through the long
winter months in his studio at Amsterdam.

In the spring of 1634, however, the sunshine returned again into his
life, and he commemorated the advent, appropriately enough, by painting
the bringer of it in the guise of Flora. The period of mourning was now
at an end, and some time in May, probably, Saskia once more returned to
Hiskia's to make preparation for the approaching day; while Sylvius, as
her representative, and Rembrandt began to arrange the more formal
business matters. On June 10th, as recorded by Dr Scheltema, Sylvius, as
the bride's cousin, engaged to give full consent before the third asking
of the banns; while Rembrandt, on his part, promised to obtain his
mother's permission. Whether he merely wrote to Leyden for this, or
whether, as is more probable, he went in person, we do not know; but in
either case he wasted no time, for on the fourteenth he produced the
necessary documents, and prayed at the same time that the formal
preliminaries might be cut as short as possible. His appeal was
evidently received with favour, for eight days later, on June 22nd, at
Bildt, in the presence of Gerrit and Hiskia van Loo, he was duly
married, first by the civil authorities, and afterwards by the minister
Rodolphe Hermansz Luinga in the Anna-kerk.

As far as domestic happiness depending upon their relations with one
another went, there is every reason to suppose that this union was a
thoroughly successful one; but we cannot help, nevertheless, feeling
some doubts as to whether it was altogether the best that might have
been for Rembrandt. Frank and joyous, but strong-willed, not to say
obstinate, recklessly generous and prodigal, and without a thought for
what the future might bring forth, he needed some firm yet tender hand
to check, without seeming too much to control, his lavish impulses.
Impossible to drive, yet easy enough to lead, a giant in his studio, a
child in his business relations with the world outside its doors, he
should have found some steady practical head to regulate his household
affairs and introduce some order and economy into his haphazard ways.
Such, unfortunately for him in the end, Saskia was not. Devoted to him,
she yielded in everything, and his will was her law. As her love for him
led her to let him do always as he would, so his passion for her led him
to shower costly gifts upon her--pearls and diamonds, gold-work and
silver-work, brocades and embroideries; nothing that could serve to
adorn her was too good or too expensive. She would have been as happy in
plain homespun, as long as he was there; but to give largely was in the
nature of the man, and the very fortune that she brought with her was
an evil, even at the time, in that it led him to further extravagances,
while in the future it proved a still more serious one.

Furthermore, Rembrandt, hot-headed and impetuous as he was, must needs
fling himself into the family quarrels and suits-at-law, taking therein
the part of the one who had stood by him and Saskia at the altar, Gerrit
van Loo, in whom, though he had possibly never set eyes on him till he
went north to his wedding, he had already developed so complete a
confidence that, exactly one month later, on July 22nd, as Dr Scheltema
discovered, he gave him a full power of attorney to act for him in all
affairs connected with the property in Friesland. From this sudden and
violent partisanship still more trouble arose in due course, owing
largely to the fact that his championship of Gerrit was soon after
justified by his winning one of the many cases brought before the court
of Friesland in the course of the prolonged dispute.

For the time, however, there is no doubt their happiness was supreme,
and if for her sake he was energetically brewing the storm that was to
burst upon him later, there were as yet no threatening clouds upon the
horizon. Nor, be it said, was it on her account alone that he scattered
money broadcast. The impulse to collect works of art, pictures,
engravings, casts and statues, armour and curious objects, had begun to
influence him even in early days at Leyden, and had become by that time
a perfect mania. On February 22nd, 1635, we find his name as a purchaser
at the Van Sommeren sale, and thereafter he reappears again and again as
buyer at various auctions. But not even in this could he attempt to be
business-like. Baldinucci, a Florentine, in a volume published in 1686,
gives many interesting details anent Rembrandt, which he obtained at
first hand from one of his later pupils, Bernard Keilh, a Dane, and
among them relates that, when at a sale he saw anything he coveted, he
ran it up in one bid to a wholly impossible price, thus making sure of
it, and at the same time, as he explained, paying honour to his art.

The Van Uylenborch family quarrels happily did not extend to the
sisters, amongst whom the most amicable relations appear to have
prevailed. At any rate, in the summer of 1635, we find Saskia revisiting
Sainte Anne Parrochie, to be with Hiskia during her confinement, and
subsequently at the baptism of the child, a mark of kindly feeling the
more notable in that she herself was about to become a mother. In the
early winter, having returned meanwhile to her home, she gave birth to a
son, who, on December 15th, in the Oudekerk, was christened Rombertus,
after her father. Rembrandt's delight in this small person is indicated
by numerous sketches of him and his mother; but the happiness, like all
that he experienced, was short-lived, for the child did not long survive
its birth.

[Illustration: [_Dresden Gallery_

REMBRANDT AND SASKIA

(ABOUT 1635)]

Rembrandt, at some time before his marriage, had removed from the
Bloemgracht to Saint Antonies Breestraat, in the heart of the city,
close to the Nieuwe Markt, and by 1636 had moved once more to the Nieuwe
Doelstraat, whence the letter to Huygens, already referred to, was
addressed. There can be no doubt that the change was an improvement, for
the artist must then have been at the height of his prosperity and
fame.

Throughout Holland, imitators of his style were springing up, for the
public would have no other. His studio was freely sought by pupils; his
home-life was passed in a circle of trusted friends, and the broadly
sympathetic nature of the man, which aided so largely in raising him to
the first place among portrait painters, is seen in the various pursuits
of these.

Fellow-painters, apart from his pupils, were not conspicuous among them,
and those we find are chiefly landscape painters--Roghman and van der
Helst, Ruysdael and Berchem, van de Cappelle and Jan Asselyn. With
ministers he was largely acquainted, probably through Jan Sylvius, who,
however, died on November 19th, 1638, among them being Alenson, Henry
Swalm, and Anslo; while Tulp probably first introduced the medical
element, Bonus, van der Linden, and Deyman. Several dealers in objects
of art, brought in by Hendrick van Uylenborch, or picked up in the
course of business transactions, were among his friends--Pieter de la
Tombe, Clement de Jonghe, Abraham Francen, and others; while the worthy
though conceited Coppenol, and the jeweller, Jan Lutma, together with
the burgomaster Six, were among those who remained faithful to the last.

Rembrandt's championship of Gerrit van Loo in the family differences
began about this time to bear troublesome fruit. The losers in the
action already mentioned, in the course of the year 1634 seem to have
nursed an especial grudge against Saskia, and, to relieve their ruffled
feelings, had been spreading abroad reports reflecting on her, asserting
that she had "dissipated her paternal inheritance in dress and
ostentation." There was, as far as Rembrandt himself, at least, was
concerned, too much truth in the story to render the scandal altogether
stingless. The thrust at Saskia, moreover, angered him more, probably,
than one at himself alone would have done, and we find him accordingly
rushing headlong into the law-courts with an action for damages against
one Albert van Loo, declaring that "he and his wife were amply, even
superabundantly, provided for."

Whether he was ever called upon to prove this statement does not appear;
probably not, since the court found, in July 1638, that he had not
sufficient grounds for action. It is doubtful how far he could have
established its truth had he been required to do so. There can be small
question that he believed it to be true, though his paying 637 florins
the previous year for a book of drawings and engravings by Lucas van
Leyden, and again, in October of the same year, 530 florins for a
picture of Hero and Leander by Rubens, might only indicate his habitual
indifference to ways and means. We know also that at the time he was
getting from five to six hundred florins for his portraits, but, judging
by the number known to exist--a very imperfect test it need scarcely be
said--the demand for these was beginning to fall off, there being seven
for 1636, four for 1637, two for 1638, and four for 1639, while even
these small numbers include three of himself, and one believed to be his
mother.

The strongest reason for supposing that he was in some financial
embarrassment is found in his correspondence at the beginning of the
latter year with Huygens. Writing in January from the Suijkerbackerij, a
house on the borders of the Binnen-Amstel, whither he had removed at an
unknown date, he announces the completion of the last two of the
Stathouder's commissions, and only fifteen days later he presses for
immediate payment of the 1244 florins due to him, on the grounds that
the money would be then extremely useful to him. Since there was some
delay, he renewed the appeal, though Huygens, on February 17th, had
already given orders for the discharge of the debt. This unceremonious
dunning, though by proxy, of a powerful Prince, does not seem altogether
to indicate that superabundance of which Rembrandt boasted; but there
was, as we know, a special reason, apart from any financial
difficulties, which may have accounted for this urgent need of ready
money.

He had decided to settle himself finally, not long after the birth on
July 1st, 1638, of his second child, a daughter, christened at the
Oudekerk on July 22nd, Cornelia, after his mother, and on January 5th,
1639, had purchased from one Christoffel Thysz a house in the
Joden-Breestraat, now Number 68, for 13,000 florins. Though only one
quarter of this sum had to be paid within one year, the rest being
distributed over the following five or six, he seems for once to have
been actually eager to pay the money, and by May had discharged half the
cost and taken possession.

One birth and three deaths mark the year 1640. The first, of another
daughter, on July 29th, who was also christened Cornelia, the elder
child bearing that name having died in the meantime. The name, however,
seems to have been an ill-omened one, for its second bearer did not
survive a month, its burial being recorded in the Zuiderkerk on August
25th. Of the other deaths the first was that of an aunt of Saskia, who
was possibly also her godmother, as she bore the same name, and
certainly left her some property, since Ferdinand Bol was sent, on
August 30th, to Leeuwarden with formal authority to take possession on
her behalf. The other death must have been, to Rembrandt at any rate, a
far heavier blow, for by it he lost, in September or October, his
mother, to whom he was cordially attached, and from whom his residence
in Amsterdam had only partially separated him, since we know by various
portraits, painted subsequent to 1631, that either he visited her or she
him with considerable frequency.

[Illustration: [_National Gallery, London_

PORTRAIT OF REMBRANDT

(1640)]

An event arising out of the consequent settlement of the estate has
given rise to the suspicion that, then at all events, Rembrandt was in
difficulties, but it is again possible to take another point of view.
The inheritance of each child amounted to 2490 florins, and a further
1600 remained to be divided later. The business was entrusted to Adriaen
and Lysbeth, and Rembrandt, unhesitatingly accepting every suggestion
made by them, contented himself with a mortgage on half the mill, the
redemption of which was to be postponed indefinitely. No sooner,
however, was the arrangement completed than he authorised his brother
Willem to sell his rights for what they would fetch. This may mean, as
M. Michel supposes, that he wanted the money promptly, yet wished to
deal tenderly with a brother who was himself by no means beforehand with
the world; but the two reasons seem somewhat inconsistent with the
facts. That Rembrandt, even though pressed for money himself, should
have practically forgone his due, and consented to take a small annual
interest which he could, in case necessity arose, easily forgo, is quite
reconcilable with what we know of him; but that, having acted so, he
should have at once undone the good he proposed, by selling his claim to
some stranger, who would certainly demand the full letter of his bond,
is hard to believe.

Any other evidence concerning these presumed embarrassments is certainly
against them. At this very time he was cheerfully accepting security for
considerable sums of money lent, in addition to the original one
thousand florins, to Hendrick van Uylenborch; and in later years, when
his affairs came to be inquired into, Lodewyck van Ludick and Adriaen de
Wees, dealers both, swore that between 1640 and 1650 Rembrandt's
collections, without counting the pictures, were worth 11,000 florins,
while a jeweller, Jan van Loo, stated that Saskia had two large
pear-shaped pearls, two rows of valuable pearls forming a necklace and
bracelets, a large diamond in a ring, two diamond earrings, two
enamelled bracelets, and various articles of plate. Finally, Rembrandt
also, at a later date, estimated that his estate at the time of Saskia's
death amounted to 40,750 florins; and though the estimate was made under
circumstances calculated to incline him to exaggerate rather than
diminish the amount, it must be considered as approximately correct.

Poor Saskia was not destined to enjoy much longer her plate and
jewellery. Death, having entered the family, was thenceforth busy. Titia
died at Flushing on June 16th, 1641; and Saskia herself, after the
birth of Titus in September of that year, possibly never enjoyed really
good health again. By the following spring she was unmistakably failing,
and at nine in the morning of June 5th, 1642, she made her will. She was
not even then without hope of recovery, for there are express
stipulations as to any further children she might bear, but the pitiful
irregularity of her signature at the end of the document shows how
forlorn this hope was; and, in fact, she died within the following
fortnight, and was buried on the 19th of June in the Oudekerk, where
Rembrandt subsequently purchased the place of her sepulture.

Upon what this loss must have meant to Rembrandt, with his affectionate
nature and almost morbid devotion to a home-life I need not dwell, nor
did Fate rest content with dealing him this single blow. The great
picture, which forms the chief ornament of the Ryksmuseum at Amsterdam,
"The Sortie of the Company of Banning Cocq," better known under the
inaccurate title of "The Night-Watch," was no sooner completed, in the
course of the same year, than it aroused a storm of vituperative
criticism. The reasons for this I must defer till I come to the
consideration of the paintings, and must only note the fact here, and
the dwindling of Rembrandt's popularity, which appears to have been, to
some extent at least, the consequence.

[Illustration: [_Dresden Gallery_

PORTRAIT OF SASKIA

(1641)]

One dim ray of consolation alone seems to beam through the darkness that
overshadowed him, Lievensz, who had long been absent, first in England
and subsequently in Antwerp, came to settle in Amsterdam, and doubtless
did all that in him lay to comfort his doubly-stricken friend. In the
meantime the business matters so loathed by him, and now aggravated by
their intimate connection with his bereavement, had to be attended to,
though, through the consideration of Saskia's relatives, they were made
as easy for him as well might be. Saskia, by her will, left everything
practically to Rembrandt, confident that he would properly educate Titus
and start him in life. Ostensibly, indeed, her share of the estate was
left to Titus and any other children she might bear, but she expressly
stipulated that he was not to be asked to provide any inventory or
guarantees to anyone whatsoever. She particularly forbade the
interference of any Chamber of Orphans, in especial that at Amsterdam.
Rembrandt alone was to have control, and the property, principal and
interest, was to all intents his own, unless--an important exception as
we shall find--he married again. In that case half of the joint estate
at the time of her death was to be put in trust for the child or
children, though Rembrandt was still to enjoy the interest for life. It
was obvious that the making at once of an inventory of all the property
in his possession was the only right course to pursue, in order that the
share which might eventually revert to Titus should be accurately known,
for Rembrandt was but six-and-thirty, and his re-marriage by no means
impossible. He, however, wished to avoid this course, doubtless through
that over-mastering distaste for business to which I have had and shall
have occasion to refer so often, and having the consent of Hendrick van
Uylenborch, obtained permission from the Chamber of Orphans, on December
19th, to enter into possession of the estate without any estimate of its
value being recorded.




CHAPTER IV

DAYS OF DECLINE


He was then starting upon the downward course which was leading him to
utter ruin. In the course of the following years, Fashion, who had
decreed that he was the one painter to patronise, shook her fickle wings
and flew off to others, and thenceforth decried her former favourite
with the more ignorant dispraise because of her equally ignorant pæans
in the past.

It was in vain that the Stathouder continued his patronage, giving him a
commission for two pictures, "The Circumcision" and "The Adoration of
the Shepherds," for which, on the twenty-ninth of September 1646, he
paid the sum of 2400 florins, just double what he had paid before. It
was in vain that the rising artists could not fail to perceive his
transcendent merits, and that pupils from all Europe sought him out,
Michiel Willemans, Ulric Mayr, and Franz Wulfhagen, Christoph Paudiss,
Juriaen Avens, Bernard Keilh, Cornelis Drost, Nicholas Maes, Carel
Fabritius, Samuel van Hoogstraten, and many more. He had ceased,
apparently, to attract the public. At any rate, though his productive
energy was unabated, his affairs grew ever more and more involved.

In 1647, Saskia's relations began to be alarmed, demanding that the
valuation of the property at the date of her death should be ascertained
without delay, and Rembrandt replied that to the best of his belief it
had been 40,750 florins. It is a little difficult to understand what
right they had to formulate this demand, since, according to the will,
the property was virtually Rembrandt's own, unless he married again, and
this, to all appearance, he had, at that time, no idea of doing, though
rumours to the contrary may well have reached their ears. A certain
Geertje Dircx, the widow of one Abraham Clæsz, who had been engaged,
probably not long after Saskia's death, as nurse to the infant Titus,
who was always delicate, came in time to hope that she might aspire to
rank as his step-mother; on January 24th, 1648, she made her will,
neglecting the relations we know her to have had and bequeathing
everything she legally could to Titus. Within two years, however, on
October 1st, 1649, she repudiated her will, gave Rembrandt warning, and
brought against him the equivalent of an action for breach of promise of
marriage, to which he replied by an affidavit denying that their
relations had ever been other than those of master and servant. In fact,
her pretensions seem to have been only the delusions of her disordered
brain, for in the course of the next year, 1650, she had to be removed
and placed in confinement in a madhouse at Gouda, for which Rembrandt
advanced the expenses, and, needless to say, never got them back.

We have not, moreover, far to seek for a reason for her explosion of
temper in 1649 if she really believed her master meant to marry her, for
on that very same October 1st, in reference to some otherwise
unimportant disturbances of the neighbourhood by a drunken man, we find
a certain Hendrickje Stoffels, of Ransdorp, in Westphalia, giving
evidence on Rembrandt's behalf. Of the subsequent relations between her
and Rembrandt there can be, unfortunately, no doubt whatever. She was at
that time three-and-twenty, and a pleasant-looking girl enough, as her
portrait, now in the Louvre, makes clear, and that her devotion to
Rembrandt was not at all events self-seeking, the future made abundantly
evident. As long as she lived, she remained attached to him, through
evil fortune and ill-report, and, though there was too good reason for
the step, she is generally believed to have never asked or expected him
to "make an honest woman of her," as the phrase goes. To this belief,
however, I hesitate to subscribe; indeed, I incline to the conviction
that the description of her given in a lawsuit on October 27th, 1661, as
his lawful wife, "huysfrouw," the very title he himself gave to Saskia,
was strictly accurate. There is not, it must be admitted, another
particle of direct evidence that it was so, though this in itself is not
to be despised, but there are circumstances not a few that point in the
same direction.

While the connection was irregular, and to begin with, at least, it
undoubtedly was so, there was never any concealment or shamefacedness
about the matter, nor do Rembrandt's friends, not even the respectable
Burgomaster Six, seem to have looked askance upon it. It is true that in
1654 she was summoned, somewhat tardily, before the Consistory of her
church, severely admonished, and forbidden to communicate. That, of
course, was inevitable from their point of view, and only shows how
absolutely open the arrangement was. How improbable it is then that in
later years she should have deliberately perjured herself on the
question when, if it were perjury, the evidence to convict her must have
been overwhelming. There can, indeed, have been no doubt, long before
this church summons, as to the relations between them, for in 1652 she
gave birth to a child which did not, however, survive long, as we know
that it was buried in the Zuiderkerk on August 15th.

In October 1654, a second daughter was born, and was christened on
October 30th, Cornelia, in itself a somewhat significant circumstance.
We cannot, I fear, claim any very subtle delicacy of taste for
Rembrandt, it appertained not to his race or time; but it seems more
than strange that he should have given to an illegitimate child the name
which had been borne by his mother and by two luckless infants of the
dead Saskia. Taking all these facts together, I venture to conjecture
that we may still hope to hear some day of the discovery of proof that
some time, probably between July when she was rebuked, and October when
the child was baptised, Rembrandt, moved perhaps by the public disgrace
of the girl once more about to become the mother of his child, was duly
married to her.

Indeed, if he had not married someone, how came it that in 1665 Louis
Crayers, the guardian of Titus, was able to establish, before the Grand
Council, his claim on behalf of his ward against Rembrandt's estate,
then in bankruptcy, for 20,375 florins, the half of the property at the
time of Saskia's death three-and-twenty years before? Unless Rembrandt
had married again Titus would appear to have had no shadow of a claim
to principal or interest, yet the case was fought out to the bitter end,
and it seems quite incredible that the creditors should have been
ignorant of, or should have failed to produce, so important a piece of
evidence in their favour. Since Titus' claim was allowed, it is obvious
that Rembrandt must have remarried, and, if so, there can be no doubt
that it was to the true and faithful Hendrickje.

I have, however, been led to anticipate too far in the attempt to make
this reasoning clear, and must return to 1649, in which year Rembrandt
took a second step on his road to bankruptcy by ceasing to pay either
instalments of the sum remaining due for the house, or even the interest
upon it. Indications of the approaching disaster now follow thick and
fast. At some time between 1650 and 1652 the pearl necklace which
appears in so many of the pictures was sold to Philips Koninck. In 1651,
so wholly out of favour was Rembrandt's art deemed to be, that Jan de
Baer, a young artist, on leaving the studio of Backer, under whom he had
been studying, after hesitating for awhile as to whether he should turn
to Rembrandt or Van Dyck for further instruction, chose the latter,
because his style was most durable.

By 1653 Rembrandt seems to have finally abandoned himself to the current
which was drifting him so rapidly to wreck. On January 29th he borrowed
4180 florins from Cornelis Witsen on the hopeless undertaking to repay
it in a year, and three days later, on February 1st, his long-suffering
landlord Thysz entered a claim for 8470 florins still owing to him.
Rembrandt, with a sharpness due probably rather to his lawyer than to
himself, demanded that the title-deeds should be delivered to him first.
Then, on March 14th, he borrowed a further 4200 florins from Isaac van
Heertsbeeck, also repayable in a year, and after trying, apparently in
vain, through François de Koster, to recover some of the large sums of
money that must have been owing to him, he obtained from Six yet another
loan on the guarantee of Ludowyck van Ludick. With this temporary relief
he in part paid off Thysz, but 1170 florins still remained to be paid,
and for this amount the creditor obtained a mortgage on the house.

The end was now drawing near. One more effort, however, was made to
avert the crash. A certain Dirck van Cattenburch, a collector of works
of art, presuming that, in the state of Rembrandt's affairs, the large
house in the Breestraat could only be an encumbrance to him, proposed to
relieve him of it by a sufficiently curious arrangement. He was
professedly to sell him another, doubtless a smaller one, for 4000
florins; but, in fact, he was to give Rembrandt the house and 1000
florins in cash. For the remaining 3000 florins Rembrandt was to deliver
pictures and etchings of that value, and furthermore? to etch a
portrait, in a style not less finished than that of Six, of Dirck's
brother Otto, the secretary of Count Brederode of Vianen, which was to
be considered the equivalent of 400 florins. How far this elaborate
transaction was carried out is uncertain. Rembrandt obtained the 1000
florins, and handed over pictures and etchings of his own, or from his
collection, valued by Abraham Francen and van Ludick at over 3000
florins, but we hear no more of the house or the portrait.

It was in vain that his friends seem to have developed a perfect mania
for being etched or painted by him--Six and Tholinx, Deyman the doctor,
the two Harings, father and son--neither loans nor earnings could for
long stave off the evil day. As if ill-luck dogged the family, his
brother Adriaen had so managed to misconduct the business of the mill
that he and the sister Lysbeth were also on the verge of ruin, and
Rembrandt, in the midst of his own troubles, had to come to their
assistance. Small wonder, then, that the end was hastened. On May 17th,
1656, one Jan Verbout was appointed guardian to Titus in the place of
Rembrandt, and on the same day, before the Chamber of Orphans, the
unfortunate artist transferred his rights in the house to his son. Soon
afterwards he was formally declared bankrupt, and on July 25th and the
following day an inventory was made "of paintings, furniture, and
domestic utensils connected with the failure of Rembrandt van Rijn,
formerly living in the Breestraat near the lock of St Anthony." The
inventory still exists, and is full of interest, giving, as it does, a
complete description of every room in the house, from the pictures in
the studio to the saucepans in the kitchen, but want of space forbids
any extended extracts from it here.

The law seems to have moved slower in those days even than in these.
Rembrandt continued for some time to dwell in the house, and, apart from
the business worries, the little family appears to have been a united
and contented one. How united we discover from the will that Titus made
on October 20th, 1657, and rectified on November 22nd. By that time
Rembrandt's utter incapacity for business was probably recognised even
by himself, and all that Titus possessed was left to Hendrickje and her
daughter Cornelia in trust for him. Nevertheless, as if to smooth over
the slur upon his father's improvidence, he provided that Rembrandt
might draw a certain share, on condition that he did not employ it to
pay his debts, a most unlikely use, it is to be feared, for him to put
it to, except, like Falstaff, "upon compulsion." The remainder was to go
to Cornelia on her marriage or coming of age. The whole of the interest,
in the event of Rembrandt's death, was to go to Hendrickje and Cornelia,
and there are certain other arrangements of less importance concerning
the disposal of the property on Cornelia's decease.

A month later the law at last gave forth its pronouncement, and the
commissioners authorised Thomas Jacobsz Haring, an officer of the Court,
to sell the effects of the bankrupt by auction. The worst had befallen;
the home in which he had passed eighteen years, many of them happy, and
all full of industry, was his no more. The little family was temporarily
broken up. Rembrandt moved to the Crown Imperial Inn, kept by one
Schumann in the Kalverstraat, which ran southwards from the Dam, a
handsome and commodious house, which had at one time been the Municipal
Orphanage, and was then the customary place for holding auctions.
Whether Hendrickje, Titus, and Cornelia went with him we do not know. M.
Michel concludes, from the fact that Rembrandt's daily expenses,
included in the records of the case, were three or four florins, that
they certainly did not; but if the already-mentioned provision of 125
florins a year was considered sufficient support for the crippled
brother, more than eight times that amount might surely have sufficed
for four people, two of whom were children.

On December 25th, the sale of Rembrandt's property began in the very
house where he was lodging, but only a small portion of the goods was
then sold.

The wheels of the law, once started, ground evenly and small. On January
30th, 1658, the commissioners ordered the repayment to Witsen and van
Heertsbeeck of the money they had lent. The heirs of Christoffel Thysz
were also paid, in spite of the protests of Louis Crayers, who had by
then replaced Verbout as guardian of Titus, and, as such, asserted his
prior claim on the estate to the extent, according to Rembrandt's own
estimate in 1647, 20,375 florins. The other creditors, taking advantage
of Rembrandt's afore-mentioned failure to make an inventory at the time,
protested loudly that the demand was much exaggerated, and a cloud of
witnesses was summoned to give such evidence as they could concerning
the possessions of the pair at the time that Saskia died. Several of
these statements have already been referred to in this narrative; but,
in addition, Jan Pietersz, a draper, Abraham Wilmerdonx, director of the
East India Company, Hendrick van Uylenborch, Nicholas van Cunysbergen,
and others, gave testimony as to property owned by, or prices paid to,
the bankrupt in former years.

In the meantime, on February 1st, 1658, at the request of Henricus
Torquinius, the official who had charge of the business, the house in
the Breestraat was sold to one Pieter Wiebrantsz, a mason, for 13,600
florins, but for some reason the bargain was not completed, and a second
purchaser came forward with an offer of 12,000. There appear, however,
to have been doubts as to his ability to pay, and it was finally
transferred to a shoemaker, Lieven Simonsz, for 11,218 florins. Finally,
in September, the pictures, engravings, and other objects of art were
sold by auction, bringing in the ridiculous sum of 5000 florins, and all
the possessions that Rembrandt had collected with such loving care and
at so great a cost were scattered to the four winds.

It is pleasant to find that, in all this tribulation, many of his old
friends still stood by him and endeavoured to help him to commissions.
In 1660, for example, Govert Flinck, who was engaged on the decoration
of the Grand Gallery in the Town Hall, having died, it became necessary
to find someone to take his place. Rembrandt had never been much in
favour with the town authorities, but on this occasion, possibly through
the efforts of his old friend Tulp, who had been treasurer in 1658 and
1659, he was invited to carry on the work, and, as M. Michel has
conclusively shown, painted for them a large picture of the conspiracy
of Claudius Civilis. The opposition, however, apparently proved too
strong, for it seems doubtful if the picture was ever seen in the place
it was intended for. It did not, at any rate, remain there long.

On May 5th, 1660, we get another glimpse of the law proceedings when
Heertsbeeck was ordered to pay back the 4200 florins which the Court had
formerly awarded him, though Witsen was allowed to retain his 4180. On
December 15th of the same year Hendrickje made a final effort to restore
to some extent the prosperity of the household. With all proper
circumstance, she entered on that day into partnership with Titus,
legalising an association between them, informally established two years
before, for the purpose of dealing in pictures, engravings, and
curiosities. Both he and she contributed everything that they possessed
to a common fund, and each was to be entitled to a half share of the
stock. Rembrandt, partly, no doubt, from his proved incompetency for
business, partly, perhaps, to keep out of the clutches of the creditors,
was allowed no share whatever in the profits. As, however, it was
necessary that Hendrickje, who knew nothing of such matters, and Titus,
who was not yet of age, should have aid and assistance in the venture,
and as no one was more capable of giving this than Rembrandt, it was
provided that he should make himself as useful as possible in furthering
the interests of the firm, and in return should have board, lodging, and
certain allowances.

It was, perhaps, as judicious an arrangement as could be made for
Rembrandt's sake, but it is not wonderful that the creditors, who saw
all chances of their getting anything further vanishing into thin air,
should have been fierce in their protests. How far the association
prospered we do not know. Probably not too well, for Dr Bredius has
gathered together a mass of evidence to show that a large proportion of
the art-dealers in Amsterdam at that period came to disastrous financial
ends. It served, at any rate, to keep a roof over their heads, and the
wolf from the door, for we find them again settled down, this time in
the Rozengracht, in a house opposite a pleasure garden called the
Doolhof.

In 1661, an old friend again came to his support; for it was probably
van de Cappelle, who was a dyer as well as a painter, who procured for
him the commission to paint "The Syndics of the Drapers' Guild," which
he so splendidly achieved. By this time there is some reason for
supposing that yet another trouble was coming upon Rembrandt. As far as
we know, he never executed any etchings after 1661, and M. Michel
suspected that this might have been due to failing sight. A study,
moreover, of the portraits painted from that time onwards, reveals the
fact that a large majority of them, if not actually all, were
conspicuously, some even enormously, larger than life, and that would in
all probability be a symptom of the same misfortune. These two facts
cannot, of course, be considered as furnishing absolute proof, but they
certainly go to create a probability; nor can we regard the supposition
that the overstrained nerves were giving way at last as in any way
unlikely when we reflect how incessantly Rembrandt had worked his
eyesight, and how minutely finished had been much of his work,
especially among the etchings, many of which were undoubtedly executed
by artificial light, after his day's painting was ended. It would be but
one more burden of distress laid upon those heavily-laden shoulders.

In truth, the story of the few remaining years is but a record of stroke
after stroke. On August 7th, 1661, the faithful Hendrickje was so
seriously ill, that, in spite of its being a Sunday, she made her will,
leaving, as was but right, all her property to Cornelia, but with the
stipulation that, in case of her death, Titus was to inherit, though his
father was to enjoy the income as long as he lived. That she recovered
at that time we know from her appearance on October 27th, as a witness
in the case of the drunken man already referred to; but the recovery
must have been only temporary, for, after this last appearance, we hear
of her no more, though we do not know the exact date of her death. There
is, however, M. Michel believes, a reason for supposing it to have
occurred in the autumn of 1662. On October 27th in that year Rembrandt
sold the vault he had purchased in the Oudekerk, which was no longer his
parish church. It was, nevertheless, an odd thing to do, since poor
little Saskia lay there; and M. Michel, in seeking an explanation,
conjectures that he was at that time under the necessity of providing
for the burial of Hendrickje in the Westerkerk, and that the sale was a
sheer necessity. There is, at any rate, no portrait of her known to have
been painted after 1662, and the conjecture that she died that year is
at least a plausible one.

[Illustration: [_Louvre, Paris_

PORTRAIT OF HENDRICKJE STOFFELS

(ABOUT 1652)]

In the course of the same year, we hear of the last pupil coming to
Rembrandt, Aert de Gelder, whose youthful enthusiasm may have brought
some brightness, we may hope, into the life of the poor broken old man.
Meanwhile, the echoes of the law courts still rumbled in his ears, for,
on December 22nd, Isaac Van Heertsbeeck, who had evidently not complied
with the previous order of the Court in 1660, was again commanded to
refund the 4200 florins, and again appealed.

Rembrandt had by then so completely dropped out of public ken, that we
only get dim and fleeting glimpses of him. In 1664, we hear of him
moving to the Lauriergracht, still farther to the south-east, and it is
not until affairs draw him from seclusion that we learn more of him, and
then only indirectly. We may, perhaps, conclude, however, from the
scarcity of his works during these last years, that his eyes, and
possibly general health, were getting ever worse.

On January 27th, 1665, van Heertsbeeck's protracted struggle came to an
end, and the Grand Council decided that by June 20th the money must be
repaid. On June 19th, Rembrandt and Titus appealed to the law to
anticipate the coming of age of the latter, so that he might be legally
considered of years of discretion before the actual arrival of his
twenty-fifth birthday, a request which must have been connected with a
foreknowledge of the decision delivered the next day, June 20th, in
favour of Louis Crayers. This meant that the rights of Titus to the full
amount of his mother's fortune of 20,375 florins were allowed; but only
6952 florins remained, and of this, on November 5th, Titus was
authorised to take possession in his own name. It was but a scanty
fraction of what he should have had, but it was something, and the
little windfall may have had some part in the return of the family to
the Rozengracht. Of the next two years we know nothing, except that we
learn from a portrait of Jeremias de Decker, a poet who wrote eulogistic
verses on the painter, that neither the man nor the artist was entirely
neglected. The first sounds that come again to us out of the darkness
are those of wedding bells on the occasion of the marriage of Titus with
his cousin Magdalena, the daughter of Cornelia van Uylenborch and of
Albert van Loo, whose quarrel with Rembrandt years before had clearly
been forgotten. The note of merriment was, however, too quickly changed
for one of dolour, for ere the year was out Titus was dead, as we learn
from the record of his burial in the Westerkerk, on September 4th, 1668.

In March 1669, the widowed Magdalena gave birth to a daughter, and, on
the twenty-second of that month, Rembrandt stood by while the only
grandchild he was to see was christened Titia. We catch thereafter some
murmurs of that business which he so hated, in connection with the
settlement of the respective shares which the little Titia and Cornelia
were to draw from the remainder of the old association between their
respective parents; and then again comes silence, until, from an entry
in the Doelboek, the registry of deaths in the Westerkerk, we learn that
the long, slow, downward path has ended, where all paths end, in the
grave.

"Tuesday, 8 October, 1669, Rembrandt van Rijn, painter, on the
Rozengracht, opposite the Doolhof. Leaves two children."

He was buried, at the cost of thirteen florins, at the foot of a
staircase leading up to a pulpit on a pillar on the left-hand side as
you go up the church; but when, some years back, a coffin, supposed to
have been his, was opened, not a trace of his ashes was to be found.

[Illustration: [_National Gallery, London_

PORTRAIT OF REMBRANDT

(ABOUT 1664)]

The subsequent history of the family may be briefly sketched. Within a
fortnight of Rembrandt's death, on October 13th, his daughter-in-law
Magdalena was also dead. On the 16th and 18th of March, and again on
April 15th, Abraham Francen, the old and faithful friend, and Christian
Dusart, acting on behalf of Cornelia, settled with François van Bylert,
acting on behalf of the baby Titia, their respective portions of the
small inheritance. François would seem to have been a kindly guardian,
and Titia to have had a happy home, for, on June 16th, 1686, at the
church of Slooten, she married his son, also named François, a jeweller,
living in the Kloveniers-Burgwal, in the heart of her native town. Here
she bore, and buried also in the Westerkirk, three children, one in
1688, one in 1695, and one in 1698, and herself died November 22nd,
1725, leaving a fourth child, who only survived her three years.

Cornelia married a man named Suythoff, and with him travelled to Java,
where, in the town of Batavia, she gave birth to two sons, one on
December 5th, 1673, called Rembrandt, the other, on July 14th, 1678,
named Hendrick.




REMBRANDT THE PAINTER




CHAPTER V

EARLY YEARS (1627-1633)


Of the blank spaces in the record of Rembrandt's career, none is so long
or so inexplicable as that which begins with his return from Amsterdam
to Leyden in 1624. Here the track breaks off abruptly, and we can be
sure of nothing until we come to the first known pictures signed by him,
and dated 1627.

We will take first the picture discovered by Sir J. C. Robinson about
twenty years ago, and presented by him to the Berlin Gallery. It
represents a wrinkled old man, seated at a table. Papers and account
books lie around him, and are heaped up in the background, and on his
left, resting on a thick volume, stands a fat purse. A pair of scales
are in front of him, and beside them a dozen or so of coins. Lifting a
candle in his left hand, he throws the light of it upon a piece of
money. The work, though promising, is in no way startling, and he would
have been an acute critic who could have foretold from it the lofty
height to which the painter of it was to soar. It is signed, with one of
the ever-varying forms of his signature, R.H., combined in a monogram,
followed by the date 1627.

The other picture known to belong to this first year, "St Paul in
Prison," is in the Museum at Stuttgart [No. 225], and presents much the
same merits of close observation, much the same defects of timid
execution as the last. It represents the saint seated in a straw-strewn
dungeon, lighted by a single beam of sunlight, surrounded by books, with
the sword that symbolises him, meditating before writing. The signature
in this case is a double one: the first, consisting of his full name,
with one of his curious mis-spellings, Rembrand, and underneath fecit;
the second an elaborate R followed by f. 1627, and below the down
stroke, crossing the tail of the R, a smaller L, which Dr Bode suggests
stands for Leydensis.

Three other pictures, all undated, are attributed to this year or the
next, a "Philosopher reading by Candle-light," painted on copper, "A
Study of Himself," at Cassel [No. 208], and a "Portrait of his Mother,"
which was lent for a time to the Ryksmuseum at Amsterdam, but is there
no longer.

In the Cassel picture, small as it is, the breadth and vigour of
treatment, the courage of the work are so remarkable that it is
difficult to believe that it is of the same period as the previous
pictures. It is a study of little more than the head, presenting one of
those effects of contrasted light and shade which he so loved that
pseudo-art slang has nicknamed them of late years Rembrandt effects. The
shadows are a little dark, the contrasts are a little forced, wanting
the true gradations, but the power displayed is so great, the frankness
of the handling so certain that, especially in a photograph, the little
study has all the appearance of a life-sized picture.

There are again two pictures dated in the following year, 1628. "Samson
captured by the Philistines," at Berlin, is a not too successful first
attempt at a composition of several figures, but it is of interest to
the student as showing the sternly practical bent of Rembrandt's
imagination, the intense craving for a strictly probable conception of
the scene which, though at times it led him over the border of the
simple into the absolutely ludicrous, more often gives that wonderfully
impressive vitality and depth of feeling to his pictures. Here, as
elsewhere, he aims not at all at heroic attitudes and over-dramatic
effect; he makes no attempt to invent the scene as it ought to have
looked, but endeavours to realise how it did look. The Philistines, he
knew, were afraid of Samson, and he will not bate a jot of their
terrors. One of them advances in fear and trembling, carefully keeping
Delilah between himself and the object of his dread; while the other
hides unequivocally behind the bed-curtains.

Here, also, we find an instance of his habit of painting in accessories
because they were picturesque and available, quite regardless of their
appropriateness, in the Malay kriss thrust into Samson's belt; and here
we find for the first time that blending of the features of the two
earlier monograms, the R.H. of the one, with the L. of the other, into
the thenceforth frequent combination R.H.L. with the date 1628.

The second picture, bearing the same monogram and date, is in the
possession of Herr Karl von der Heydt of Elberfeld, showing a man in
full armour, standing by a fire in a courtyard, and closely observed by
soldiers and servants, which Dr Bode not unreasonably believes to
represent "The Denial of St Peter." Seven other pictures are attributed
to about that date, one of which is believed by its possessor, Dr
Bredius, to be a "Portrait of Rembrandt's Mother" (_see_ illustration,
p. 6). There are also a copy of this, showing a little more of the
figure, attributed to Rembrandt, but probably by another hand; two
portraits supposed to be "The Painter's Father," one lent by Dr Bredius
to the Museum at the Hague [No. 565], the other in the Museum at Nantes;
a "Portrait of a Boy," at Hinton St George, and a doubtful one of "A
Young Girl," called Rembrandt's sister Lysbeth, at Stockholm [No. 591].
A "Judas with the Price of the Betrayal," in the collection of Baron
Arthur de Schickler of Paris, is considered by M. Michel to be the
identical picture to which Constantin Huygens referred in that eulogy
which has been mentioned in the painter's life. A "Raising of Lazurus,"
in the collection of Mr Yerkes in New York, completes the list.

There is only one picture bearing the date 1629, a small "Portrait of
Himself," at Gotha [No. 181]; but there are eleven others believed to
have been painted about that time. Two are in the Mauritshuis at the
Hague. A "Bust of Himself" [No. 148] is a strong, resolute piece of
work, and a marked advance on all that he had done before. The other
picture at the Hague [No. 598] is supposed to be his elder brother
Adriaen. There is less doubt about a portrait in the Ryksmuseum at
Amsterdam [No. 1248], painted about that time, though bearing a forged
signature and the impossible date 1641. It is that of a man with a
short peaked beard and grey moustaches martially brushed up, and a long
aquiline nose. The same features occur frequently in the earlier
pictures and etchings, and M. Michel has made out a very good case for
their being those of Harmen Gerritsz, the painter's father.

There are three other "Portraits of Himself," "A Head of a Boy," "A
Young Man Laughing," and a "St Peter," all painted about that time; but
of more importance are two small subject-pictures. The first, signed
R.H., but not dated, "Christ at Emmaus," in the possession of Madame
André-Jacquemart of Paris, is the earliest example of that presentment
of a group of figures lighted by artificial light, to which Rembrandt
was so partial. Here, as in most cases, the source of the light is
hidden, as it stands on a table, on the right of the picture, in front
of which Christ is seated, in profile to the left, his silhouette
sharply cut against the radiance. At his feet one of the disciples
kneels. The second, seated in the centre, on the further side of the
table, lifts up his hands in amazement. On the left, in the background,
the secondary softer illumination, so frequently introduced in similar
effects by Rembrandt, is provided by the glow of firelight on two women
engaged in cooking. The other is "The Presentation in the Temple," in
the collection of Consul Weber at Hamburg. Like the last, it is signed,
with the full name Rembrandt however, but is not dated, and the effect
is to some extent marred by the harshness of the contrasts of light and
shade, his later complete grasp of subtle transitions being still
imperfectly developed.

Six out of the seventeen pictures attributed to 1630 or thereabouts are
signed and dated, and one, a reproduction of the "Portrait of his
Father," in the Hermitage at St Petersburg [No. 814], is signed with the
monogram R.H.L., but not dated; while a different portrait of the same,
at Rotterdam [No. 237], is signed R. alone. Four of these are portraits:
one, at Hamburg, of "Maurice Huygens," the brother of the painter's
admirer Constantin; one, in the collection of Count Andrassy at
Buda-Pesth, his own; one, at Cassel, of an unknown "Old Man" [No. 209];
and one, in the Ferdinandeum at Innsbruck, though called "Philon the
Jew," is probably his father. One of the two subject-pictures, in the
Six collection, Amsterdam, is a sketch, broadly but expressively
handled, of "Joseph interpreting his Dreams," signed with the full name
Rembrandt, 1630. The other, signed R.H.L. 1630, in the collection of
Count Stroganoff, is of doubtful import. It represents an old man seated
in a cave, resting his head upon his right hand, while his left rests on
a large book. Beside him lie a cloth embroidered with gold, various gold
vessels, and other objects of value. In the distance is seen a town in
flames, from which the inhabitants are hurriedly escaping. What it is
intended to represent is an unsolved riddle, and the title of "A
Philosopher in Meditation," though convenient to identify it by, has not
otherwise much significance. The remaining eleven pictures are studies
or portraits, of which the old woman, belonging to the Earl of Pembroke,
a bust of "A Young Girl," the property of Dr Bredius, and lent by him to
the Hague Museum, and another "Portrait of an Old Woman" resembling
somewhat in features the picture at Wilton, but known, for some
mysterious reason as, "The Countess of Desmond," may be mentioned.

At what time in 1631 Rembrandt moved to Amsterdam we have no means of
judging, nor can we say with any certainty which pictures of that year
were painted before, which after, his change of residence. A "Bust of
his Father," signed R.H.L. 1631, the property of Mr Fleischmann, was
probably among the former. The "Young Man with the Turban," at Windsor,
must also, presumably, have been painted before his removal, if M.
Michel is justified in his belief that it is a portrait of Gerard Dou.
Of the others we know nothing that points either way.

Rembrandt was now beginning to find himself. The dry precision, the
timid carefulness have disappeared. His hand moves easily about its
appointed task, not indeed, as yet, with the splendid freedom of later
years, but with an assured confidence. He knows what he wants to do, and
begins to feel that he can do it. The commissions that finally
necessitated his establishment in Amsterdam showed him also, we may
suppose, that other people appreciated the fact, and we may, perhaps,
refer to this growing confidence in himself the great increase in the
number of pictures signed that year. There are eleven, bearing both date
and signature, two signed, but undated, and two which, though bearing
neither date nor signature, are believed to have been painted about that
time.

[Illustration: [_Hermitage, St. Petersburg_

PORTRAIT CALLED COPPENOL

(1631)]

Of the first class, a picture of a man reading, in the Museum at
Stockholm [No. 579], known as "St Anastasius," bears yet another version
of the painter's name, the d being absent in this case, so that it reads
Rembrant. A "Holy Family," at Munich [No. 234], signed Rembrandt, is
an example of a propensity, which he never thoroughly shook off, to
over-compose his pictures.

The same over-marked arrangement, though, to a far less degree, is also
observable in the pyramidal group in the otherwise splendid
"Presentation in the Temple," at the Hague [No. 145]. This is signed
with the initials R.H. alone, interlaced, but seven others bear the
three, R.H.L., including the portrait of Gerard Dou, already mentioned;
a portrait, said to be his mother, at Oldenburg [No. 166], wearing a
semi-oriental dress, and reading, from which circumstance the picture
has obtained the name of "The Prophetess Anna"; and the "Portrait of a
Merchant," long called "Coppenol," in the Hermitage at St Petersburg
[No. 808].

Of the two undated pictures, "Zachariah receiving the Prophecy of the
Birth of John the Baptist," in the collection of M. Albert Lehmann,
Paris, bears the full name Rembrandt. The mysterious figure at Berlin
[No. 828=C.=], a young woman in a rich dress, seated by a table, on
which lie pieces of armour, a book, and a lute, while other arms,
including a shield, decorated with a gorgon's head, hang on the wall
above her, gaming for her the fanciful titles "Judith" or "Minerva," has
only vague traces of the initial R. Of the last class, one is a copy,
formerly in the Beresford-Hope collection, of the "Portrait of his
Father," in the Ryksmuseum, the other is a small figure of "Diana
Bathing," in the collection of M. Warneck, Paris.

Once satisfactorily established in Amsterdam, Rembrandt increased his
annual production marvellously. The number of pictures known or believed
to belong to each of the four preceding years, are, in succession, four,
nine, twelve, and twenty, the numbers for the four succeeding years are,
respectively, forty-two, thirty, twenty-six, and twenty-seven; or,
taking the average of each period, we find that the first would give a
little more than eleven pictures per annum, the second, very nearly
thirty. 1632, in especial, when he was new to Amsterdam, was a year of
extraordinary energy.

[Illustration: [_Imperial Museum, Vienna_

PORTRAIT OF A MAN

(1630-1632)]

[Illustration: [_Imperial Museum, Vienna_

PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN

(1630-1632)]

We find also, at the same time, a vast increase in the number of signed
pictures, yet still note a surprising variety in the form the signature
takes. No less than thirty are signed, and all but two of these are also
dated. Nine of them bear the monogram, R.H.L., and ten others have the
same, with, for the first time, the addition van Rijn, while one has the
plain initial R. with van Rijn added. One, forming a sort of transition
with the other group, is signed Rembrandt H.L. van Rijn, and nine are
signed with the full name, in three of which the d is missing.
Thirty-four of the pictures are portraits, and six of them form pairs
representing husband and wife--namely, "Burgomaster Jan Pellicorne, with
his son Caspar," and "Suzanna van Collen, his Wife, and her Daughter,"
in the Wallace collection; an unknown Man and his Wife, in the Imperial
Museum, Vienna, though these four are only believed to belong to that
year; the portraits of "Christian Paul van Beersteyn," and "Volkera
Nicolai Knobbert," his wife, in the possession of Mr Havemeyer of New
York, alone bearing the date. There is also a portrait at Brunswick
[No. 232], fantastically called "Grotius," the companion of which was
painted next year; another, believed, with good reason, to represent "Dr
Tulp," formerly in the collection of the Princess de Sagan, which is
also one of a pair, though the picture of the wife was not painted until
two years later; and a third, in the collection of M. Pereire, Paris, of
a man, whose wife was also not painted till the following year. Twelve
others represent actually or conjecturally known individuals, but two of
these, if, as is probable, they represent the painter's father, must
have been painted earlier, as would also be the case with four others
more doubtfully described, two as his mother, two as his sister. One at
Cassel [No. 212] almost certainly represents "Coppenol, the
Caligraphist," and an admirable picture in Captain Holford's collection,
is undoubtedly "Martin Looten," a merchant of Amsterdam; while, even in
that busy year, he found time once to paint his own portrait. The other
four include the two of "Saskia," already mentioned in the Life, and two
men, one said to be "Matthys Kalkoen," and one, a certain "Joris de
Caulery."

So engaged was he on portraiture, that he only found time for three
small figure subjects, if, indeed, they were painted that year, for none
is dated. One, in the Wallace collection, is "The Good Samaritan"; the
second at Berlin [No. 823], represents "Pluto in his Chariot carrying
off Proserpine," quite the most successful of Rembrandt's rare appeals
to classical mythology for inspiration; while the third at Frankfort
[No. 183], is a somewhat indifferent rendering of "David playing the
Harp before Saul."

I have left to the last, the great work of that year, the famous
"Anatomy Lesson," at the Hague. In producing this, the largest and most
ambitious work he had yet attempted, one, moreover, the success or
failure of which could scarcely help having a marked influence on his
future career, Rembrandt, we cannot but perceive, was not altogether at
his ease. There are obvious signs that the hand that could already move
with such courage and freedom, when the mere satisfying of himself was
in question, was hampered by a return, partial at least, to his earlier
timidity, when so much was at stake. He was so anxious to do his best
that the spontaneity, conspicuous in most of his work, escaped in the
process. The result is a little stiff in consequence, and the work
somewhat dry and frigid; but the life and expression in the various
heads is, nevertheless, so excellent, that it is impossible to regard it
without delight and admiration.

Portraits again took up much of his time in 1633, among them the two
companions to the portraits of the year before, and another pair,
"Willem Burchgraeff," at Dresden [No. 1557], and "Margaretha van
Bilderbeecq," his wife, in Frankfort [No. 182]. The painter's
masterpiece, however, in matrimonial groups, is the "Shipbuilder and his
Wife," at Buckingham Palace.

[Illustration: [_The Hague_

THE ANATOMY LESSON

(1632)]

[Illustration: [_Cassel_

PORTRAIT OF JAN HERMAN KRUL

(1633)]

There are thirteen other signed portraits of that year, including one of
"Jan Herman Krul," at Cassel [No. 213], two of "Saskia"--one at Dresden
[No. 1556]; one, called however, "Lysbeth van Rijn," which belonged to
the late Baroness Hirsch-Gereuth--and two of himself, one, the oval
portrait in the Louvre [No. 412], and the other in the collection of M.
Warneck at Paris. Out of these twelve signatures, only one is the
monogram R.H.L., the other eleven being signed with the full name, and
from only one of these, "A Head of a Girl," in the collection of Prince
Jousoupoff, is the d missing.

Three subject-pictures also belong to that year, in all probability; "An
Entombment," in the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow; a small picture described
as "Petitioners to a Biblical Prince," belonging to M. Léon Bonnat of
Paris; and "A Philosopher in Meditation" [No. 2541], in the Louvre. The
last, indeed, though undated, may almost certainly be attributed to that
year, since its companion, another "Philosopher in Meditation," also in
the Louvre [No. 2540], is signed R. van Rijn, 1631. But the great event
of the year must have been the patronage which came to him from Prince
Frederick-Henry, resulting in the purchase of two pictures, both of
which, in later years, after passing to the gallery at Düsseldorf, were
transferred to Munich.

In both we see Rembrandt at his most characteristic--his determination
to tell his story clearly, to concentrate his light upon the chief
figure, the keynote of his theme, to get the true and expressive actions
of his personages, not even yet free of some exaggeration, without
troubling a jot as to the minor detail of correct costume. So, in the
first, "The Elevation of the Cross" [No. 327], the cross, with the tense
figure wrung with anguish, slants right athwart the picture, and stands
out against the murky sky and dim surrounding crowds with startling
incisiveness. So the four men occupied in raising it display an almost
passionate energy; so a soldier wears a more or less classical helmet
and breastplate over a sleeved doublet unknown to Rome; a man behind is
dressed in the peasant's ordinary garb of Rembrandt's day; and another,
wearing a doublet and soft flat cap, seems to be Rembrandt's self; while
the centurion on horseback superintending the carrying out of the
sentence is a frank Turk as to his headgear, a nondescript for the rest
of him. The other, "The Descent from the Cross" [No. 326], while
displaying many of the same qualities, merits and defects alike, is more
deliberately composed, suffers indeed from that over-composition already
noticed, being too obviously built up into that high pyramidal form,
which we found in "The Presentation in the Temple." There is,
nevertheless, a very delicate sentiment of pathos in it, and that
Rembrandt himself was content with it, is shown not only by his
correspondence with Huygens on the subject, but by the fact that he
repeated it on a larger scale during the following year. Yet so
curiously capricious was he in adding or withholding date and signature
that neither has a date, and only "The Descent from the Cross" is
inscribed with what appears to be C. Rlembrant f.

[Illustration: [_Munich Gallery_

THE ELEVATION OF THE CROSS

(1633)]




CHAPTER VI

TIME OF PROSPERITY (1634-1642)


At the one hundred and twenty-nine pictures produced during the
succeeding nine years I can only glance hastily. There are eighteen
works dated 1634, and, no less than seven of them are, or are called,
"Portraits of Himself." One at the Louvre [No. 2553], and two at Berlin
[Nos. 808 and 810], are unmistakably so, and one now in America, a
companion to a "Portrait of Saskia," would seem to be; but the "Portrait
of Rembrandt as an Officer," at the Hague [No. 149], which, however,
bears no date, and one in a helmet, at Cassel [No. 215], bear only the
most general resemblance to him. He furthermore painted a portrait of
"Saskia disguised as Flora," called "The Jewish Bride," in the Hermitage
at St Petersburg [No. 812], a very similar picture in the collection of
M. Schloss, Paris, and a third at Cassel [No. 214]. There are eight
dated portraits, and one probably belonging to that year. Among the
portraits are the pair to the one of "Dr Tulp," and two other pairs,
"Martin Daey" and "Machteld van Doorn," his wife, belonging to Baron
Gustave de Rothschild, and "The Minister Alenson" and "His Wife,"
belonging to M. Schneider, Paris, a "Portrait of Himself in a Cuirass,"
in the Wallace collection, one of "A Young Girl," at Bridgewater House,
and the "Old Lady," in the National Gallery [No. 775]. There are also
four subjects. A replica of "The Descent from the Cross," formerly in
the Cassel Gallery, but removed by Napoleon I. to Malmaison, whence it
passed to the Hermitage [No. 800]. It is of interest historically as
showing that high as Rembrandt's reputation stood at the time, he had
leisure enough to paint this large picture, without any immediate
purchaser in prospect, and it remained in fact on his hands until the
enforced sale in 1656. A second, also in the Hermitage [No. 801], is
"The Incredulity of St Thomas," and a third, in the Prado at Madrid [No.
1544], has been called both "Queen Artemisia receiving the Ashes of
Mausolus" and "Cleopatra at her Toilet." There is also a doubtful
"Tobias restoring his Father's Sight," in the collection of Duc
d'Arenberg at Brussels, but it is a matter of doubt whether the last
figure of the date is 4 or 6. Lastly, there is an undated "Prodigal
Son," belonging to the executors of the late Sir F. Cook, which, in
spite of the signature, must also be regarded as dubious.

There are only two "Portraits of Himself" dated 1635, and one of
"Saskia," but there are two others attributed to about that time, and,
in addition, two large and highly finished pictures, supposed to
represent "Rembrandt and Saskia," both signed Rembrandt, and believed to
have been painted in or near that year. The one at Dresden [No. 1559],
contains, without doubt, portraits of the painter and his wife (_see_
illustration, p. 24). The other, at Buckingham Palace, long known as
"The Burgomaster Pancras and his Wife," is less certain.

[Illustration: [_National Gallery, London_

PORTRAIT OF AN OLD WOMAN

(1634)]

[Illustration: [_Buckingham Palace_

THE BURGOMASTER PANCRAS AND HIS WIFE

(ABOUT 1635)]

[Illustration: [_National Gallery, London_

PORTRAIT OF A MAN

(1635)]

Apart from these, there are nine dated portraits, and five
subject-pictures, together with six portraits and one subject of about
the date. Only two of the portraits bearing dates are in public
galleries, one "A Rabbi," at Hampton Court [No. 381], and one "A Man,"
in the National Gallery [No. 350], while two others of about the date
are the "Portrait of Himself," in the Pitti [No. 60], and "A Young
Woman," at Cassel [No. 216]. In subjects the artist on two occasions
went out of his way to court failure in attempting to represent
classical subjects, with the spirit of which he was utterly out of
sympathy. The homely truthfulness of his art, though it may occasionally
result in details somewhat shocking to the reverent mind, was,
nevertheless, well adapted to set forth the humanising side of Scripture
incidents. His Christ is always more the Son of Man than the God
Incarnate. His Virgin Mary has none of the delicate beauty conceived for
her by Italian painters, but she is first of all, and beyond all, the
type of motherhood. His apostles have none of the heroic dignity of
Michael Angelo's, yet they are without question devout, devoted fishers
of men. But this lack of wish or power to idealise, this persistence in
the search for the true and neglect of the beautiful, is entirely at
variance with the classical tradition. There are no great fundamental
ideas beneath the story of "Actæon, Diana, and Callisto," or "The Rape
of Ganymede," for the artist to bring home to us, and the representation
of the former as coarse, ungainly peasants, as in the picture belonging
to Prince Salm-Salm of Anholt, or of the latter as a fat and extremely
hideous baby boy blubbering in terror as he is howked upwards--no more
dignified phrase will express it--by his shirt-tail in the claws of an
eagle, as in the picture at Dresden [No. 1558], serve only to reveal the
limitations of the artist's imagination without disguise or
compensation.

Three other subject pictures, painted in or about that year, are also in
public galleries: a little sketch of "The Flight into Egypt," at the
Hague [No. 579]; "The Sacrifice of Abraham," in the Hermitage [No. 792];
and "Samson threatening his Father-in-law," at Berlin [No. 802].

Seven pictures only bear the date 1636, of which one formed a further
addition to the collection of Prince Frederick-Henry,--"The Ascension,"
now at Munich [No. 328], quite the least satisfactory of the series.
Rembrandt, indeed, was not in a happy vein this year in his treatment of
subjects. Both the "Samson overpowered by the Philistines," in the
collection of Count Schönborn at Vienna, and Lord Derby's "Belshazzar's
Feast," if it be Rembrandt's, which, though unsigned, is attributed to
that year, are seriously marred by a distinct melodramatic element in
the conception, an extreme exaggeration of pose, gesture, and
expression. On the other hand, we find the most pleasing study of the
nude the painter ever made, in the "Danae," at the Hermitage [No. 802],
which, though the first and third figures of the date have disappeared,
leaving only two sixes, was most probably painted that year.

[Illustration: [_The Hermitage_

DANAE

(1636)]

[Illustration: [_Liechtenstein Gallery, Vienna_

PORTRAIT OF A MAN

(1636)]

[Illustration: [_Liechtenstein Gallery, Vienna_

PORTRAIT OF A LADY

(1636)]

The four remaining pictures are portraits; two, forming a pair, a young
man and his wife, belonging to Prince Liechtenstein of Vienna; one, a
woman, to Mr Byers, Pittsburg, U.S.A.; and also a woman, to Lord
Kinnaird. The "Ecce Homo," in the National Gallery [No. 1400], must
have also been painted that year, if not before, for it is a sketch for
the etching of that date. Other pictures probably dating from that year
are a "Standard Bearer," belonging to Baron Gustave de Rothschild, from
which the last figure of the date is missing; a "Portrait of an Old
Lady," belonging to the Earl of Yarborough; "A Saint," formerly in the
collection of Earl Dudley; "Saint Paul," at Vienna; and the "Portrait of
an Oriental," in the Hermitage [No. 813].

1637 is inscribed on eight pictures, but in one case, that of a
"Portrait of Himself," belonging to Captain Heywood-Lonsdale, there is
some doubt about the correct reading of the last figure, and in that of
"Susannah and the Elders," in the collection of Prince Jousoupoff, the
genuineness of the signature is not above suspicion. No such question,
however, applies to the rendering of the same subject at the Hague [No.
147], the "Portrait of Himself," in the Louvre [No. 2554], the "Portrait
of Henry Swalm," at Antwerp [No. 705], that of another "Minister" at
Bridgewater House, or to the "Portrait of a Man," in the Hermitage [No.
811], once absurdly called "Sobieski," and now, with scarcely less
absurdity, said to be Rembrandt. The remaining work is "The Parable of
the Master of the Vineyard," also in the Hermitage [No. 798]. Two
portraits, one of himself, belonging to Lord Ashburton, and one of a
"Young Woman" lacing her bodice, belonging to Dr Bredius, are also
attributed to that year, as is "The Angel quitting Tobit," in the Louvre
[No. 2536], in which once more Rembrandt's desire for actuality has, as
far as the angel is concerned, led him to the border-line between the
ungraceful and the ridiculous.

In the following year we find him for the first time attempting pure
landscape. One, signed and dated, an entirely imaginary composition, is
in the possession of Herr Georg Rath at Buda-Pesth; another, also signed
and dated, in which he has to some extent compromised by introducing
some small figures illustrating the "Parable of the Good Samaritan," is
in the Czartoryski Museum at Cracow. "Christ and Mary Magdalene at the
Tomb," in Buckingham Palace, though the figures are made of more
importance, may also be included in the transition pictures between
landscape and subject, for the garden, tomb, and distant city are at
least as much insisted on as the figures. The important picture of the
year, however, was a figure subject, "Samson propounding his Riddle to
the Philistines," the great canvas in the Dresden Gallery [No. 1560], a
magnificent piece of work, but, apart from its technical qualities, of
no great interest: the only other pictures dated 1638 being a "Portrait
of an Old Man," in the Louvre [No. 2544], and a "Bust of a Man in
Armour," at Brunswick [No. 237].

[Illustration: [_Hermitage, St. Petersburg_

PORTRAIT CALLED SOBIESKI

(1637)]

[Illustration: [_Dresden Gallery_

THE MAN WITH THE BITTERN

(1639)]

Two more pictures were completed for the Stathouder in 1639, a
"Resurrection" [No. 329], signed and dated, and an "Entombment" [No.
330], unsigned, now with the others at Munich. The only other subject
treated that year, if the date and signature are genuine, which M.
Michel doubts, was "The Good Samaritan" dressing the wounds of the
injured man, in the collection of M. Jules Porgès, for "The
Slaughter-house," belonging to Herr Georg Rath, is a study rather than a
picture; and the "Man with the Bittern" at Dresden [No. 1561] as much
a portrait as a study. Other portraits are the so-called "Lady of
Utrecht," lent by the family Van Weede van Dykveld to the Amsterdam
Museum; that of "Alotte Adriaans," belonging to the executors of the
late Sir F. Cook, a life-sized full-length figure of "A Man," at Cassel
[No. 217], at one time erroneously called "Burgomaster Six," and a
so-called "Portrait of Rembrandt's Mother," at Vienna [No. 1141].

There are six pictures dated 1640--four subjects and two portraits--one
of himself in the National Gallery [No. 672], (_see_ ill., p. 28), and
the famous one of "Paul Doomer," better known as "The Gilder," now in
the possession of Mr Havemeyer of New York. The subjects include the
Duke of Westminster's beautiful "Salutation" and the "Expulsion of Hagar
and Ishmael," in the Victoria and Albert Museum, in both of which,
however, the concentration of light on a small portion is so intense as
to suggest the lime-light of a theatre; the charming version of "The
Holy Family" in the Louvre [No. 2542], known as "The House of the
Carpenter," where the contrasting light and shade, though equally
marked, are reasonably brought about; and the mysterious allegory, in
the Boymans Museum at Rotterdam [No. 238], known as "The Concord of the
Country," containing a rather confused mass of detail and incident, all
obviously meaning something, but what no one can quite decide.

Other pictures supposed to have been painted about the same time are a
"Good Samaritan"; a "Saving of Moses," in which the figures play a part
quite subordinate to the landscape; three pure landscapes, "An Effect
of Storm," at Brunswick [No. 236], one in the Wallace collection; a
study of "Dead Peacocks," belonging to Mr W. C. Cartwright; and several
portraits, the most noteworthy of which is the one of "Elizabeth Bas" in
the Ryksmuseum at Amsterdam [No. 249].

Six pictures again bear the date 1641, and all are portraits except the
great "Offering of Manoah and his Wife," at Dresden [No. 1563], wherein
we are distressed once more by the artist's unfortunate conception of an
angelic being. Two of the portraits form a pair now widely sundered, the
admirable "Lady with the Fan" being at Buckingham Palace, while her
husband has strayed away to Brussels [No. 397]. The portrait of "The
Minister Anslo"--a marvel of life-like expression and superb
painting--is a sad example of art treasures which have been allowed to
leave England of late years, having passed from Lady Ashburnham to
Berlin. The "Portrait of Anna Vymer," on the other hand, the mother of
Burgomaster Six, is one of a very few, if it be not the only one, which
is still in the possession of the descendants of the subject. The
remaining picture is a portrait of a Young Woman, called "Saskia," at
Dresden [No. 1562].

[Illustration: [_Amsterdam Gallery_

PORTRAIT OF ELIZABETH BAS

(ABOUT 1640)]

[Illustration: [_Berlin_

ANSLO CONSOLING A WIDOW

(1641)]

The dated pictures of 1642 are few. There is one subject in the
Hermitage [No. 1777] long known as "The Reconciliation of Jacob and
Esau," but now recorded in the catalogue as "The Reconciliation of David
and Absalom"; while the "Christ taken from the Cross," in the National
Gallery [No. 43], may belong to the same year, since it is a sketch
probably made for the etching which was certainly executed then. There
are also four portraits: one of "A Rabbi," belonging to M. Jules
Porgès of Paris; Lord Iveagh's "Portrait of a Woman"; Mrs Alfred
Morrison's "Portrait of Dr Bonus"; and "An Old Man," at Buda-Pesth [No.
235].

This limited production was probably due to the fact that a large share
of his time must have been taken up by his largest and most famous work,
"The Sortie of the Company of Francis Banning Cocq," for many years
known as "The Night-watch," because time and careless usage had so
blackened it that the original illumination was nearly obscured, and the
figures appeared to be dimly visible by artificial light. The careful
restoration by M. Hopman has, of late years, altered all this, and that
the sortie is taking place by daylight, the condensed, highly localised
daylight of Rembrandt, to be sure, has been established beyond cavil.

One would have supposed that such devoted art-patrons as the Dutch
people of that time, would have hailed with delight the creation of such
a masterpiece by one of themselves, and would have showered praises and
commissions upon its creator. The very contrary seems to have been the
fact; nor is the reason far to seek.

Holland at that time abounded in Guilds and Companies, civil and
military, Boards of Management of this or that Hospital or charitable
Institution, and a perfect craze for being painted in groups animated
one and all. The galleries are full of these "Doelen" and "Regent"
pictures by great and little masters, and dreary objects many of them
are. Each member subscribed his share, and each expected to get his
money's-worth; so the painter was expected to distribute his light and
his positions with an impartial hand, and a comically stiff and formal
collection of effigies was often the result.

To all such considerations Rembrandt was gloriously indifferent. He was
painting a picture of an event in real life, and he meant it to be a
picture and alive, not a mere row of wax figures in a booth; and when he
had finished, the subscribers cried aloud in wrath and consternation.

And indeed it is difficult not to sympathise with the poor amateur
soldiers who had paid to be painted, not to be immortalised. Even if
they could have known, they would have cared very little for the fact
that their picture was to rank in after years among the most famous in
the world, since their worthy citizen-faces were not to be discerned in
it, and no one would care to read the names which, failing to move the
domineering painter, they caused to be inscribed upon an escutcheon in
the background so that they might get some return for their florins.
They had their revenge, however, after a kind, for they left it to
blacken with dirt and smoke; and when their descendants removed it from
the Doelen to the Hotel de Ville they cut it down ruthlessly on either
hand to make it fit a smaller space, as a copy by Lundens in the
National Gallery [No. 289] makes evident.

[Illustration: [_Buckingham Palace_

THE LADY WITH THE FAN

(1641)]

[Illustration: [_Brussels Gallery_

PORTRAIT OF A MAN

(1641)]




CHAPTER VII

YEARS OF DECLINE (1643-1658)


There is still no lack of portraits in 1643. There are two pairs, "The
Gentleman with the Hawk," and "The Lady with the Fan," at Grosvenor
House, which, however, Dr Bode and M. Michel decline to admit among
Rembrandt's works, and "The Dutch Admiral" and "His Wife," now in
America. It is doubtful whether the "Old Woman weighing Money," at
Dresden [No. 1564], ought to be included among the portraits; but there
can be no question about the "Young Man in a Cap and Breastplate," in
the same gallery [No. 1565], the "Old Woman," in the Hermitage [No.
807], called "Rembrandt's Mother," or the "Man," in the collection of Mr
Armour. The other "Old Man," belonging to Mr Schloss of Paris, is
probably only a study; and the "Portrait of a Man," incorrectly called
Six, in the collection of Morris K. Jessup of New York, is but
conjecturally a work of this year. There are three portraits of himself:
one at Weimar, one belonging to Prince Henri of the Pays Bas, one,
signed but undated, at Carlsruhe [No. 238]; and there is a portrait,
called Saskia, at Berlin [No. 812]. The only signed subject of the year
is the "Bathsheba at her Toilet," in the Steengracht collection at the
Hague; but "The Holy Family," at Downton, was painted about that time.

The next year has very small results to show, and might, taken by
itself, support the belief in the sudden unpopularity of Rembrandt were
there not five other years for which we can now find only five pictures,
and several with fewer. All the five of 1644 are signed. Three are
portraits: Captain Holford's "Man with a Sword," Earl Cowper's "Young
Man," and the fancifully named "Constable of Bourbon," in the collection
of Herr Thieme at Leipzig. There is one subject-picture, "The Woman
taken in Adultery," painted for Jan Six, and now in the National Gallery
[No. 45]. Another of the same subject, in the possession of Consul Weber
at Hamburg, bears, according to M. Michel, a forged signature, and is
regarded by him as very doubtful.

[Illustration: [_National Gallery, London_

THE WOMAN TAKEN IN ADULTERY

(1644)]

[Illustration: [_Dulwich Gallery_

A GIRL AT A WINDOW

(1645)]

There are four subject-pictures dated 1645. First and foremost is "The
Holy Family," in the Hermitage [No. 796]. Fine also is "The Tribute
Money," belonging to Mr Beaumont, though much more summarily handled.
The "Daniel's Vision," at Berlin [No. 806], is more careful in
treatment, but the companion picture, "Tobias' Wife with the Goat" [No.
805], is little more than a sketch. At Berlin, also, are two of the five
dated portraits of that year, one of "A Rabbi," in the Museum [No.
828=A=], and one of "J. C. Sylvius," in the collection of Herr von
Carstangen. The Hermitage has one portrait [No. 820], called at one time
"Manasseh ben Israel." A "Portrait of a Young Girl," in the Dulwich
Gallery [No. 206], and "An Orphan Girl of Amsterdam," now in the United
States, are probably works painted for the purpose of study, rather than
portraits; and the same remark applies to the "Portrait of Himself,"
at Buckingham Palace, which, though the last figure of the date is
wanting, was, in all likelihood, a work of that year.

The "Portrait of a Lady," in the collection of Captain Holford; the
little sketch of "An Old Man Seated," belonging to the executors of the
late Sir F. Cook, and "An Old Man," at Dresden [No. 1571], are undated
portraits of about this time; while the "Man reading by a Window," in
the Carlsberg Glyptotek at Copenhagen, if it be really a Rembrandt,
which is doubtful, is an undated subject. There are, furthermore, two
landscapes, both undated, one at Oldenburg [No. 169], and one in the
collection of Mme. Lacroix at Paris.

Another landscape, "A Winter Scene," at Cassel [No. 219], is dated 1646,
as is a "Portrait of a Young Man," belonging to Mr Humphry Ward. There
are also four subject-pictures bearing the same date, two of "The
Adoration of the Shepherds," one in the National Gallery [No. 47],
painted originally for Six, and one at Munich [No. 331], differing
entirely in arrangement; one of "Christ bound to the Column," in the
collection of Herr von Carstangen at Berlin; and the "Holy Family,"
called "The Woodchopper," at Cassel [No. 218].

1647 is inscribed on only five pictures. Two are the portraits called
"Nicholas Berchem," and "His Wife," at Grosvenor House, and a small one
of "An Old Man," at Leeuwarden, in the collection of Baron van Harinxma.
A fourth of "Dr Bonus," in the Six collection, is not dated, but as it
exactly resembles the etching of that year, it is, with much reason,
attributed to it. There is only one subject, "Susannah and the Elders,"
in the Berlin Gallery [No. 828=E=]. Two undated studies also belong to
about that time, a small head and shoulders of "Susannah," belonging to
M. Léon Bonnat of Paris, and the "Woman bathing," at the Louvre [No.
2550]. A large picture of "Joseph's Coat," in the collection of the Earl
of Derby, is one of the most ungraceful and undignified spectacles that
even Rembrandt's stern realism ever produced. Enchanting, on the other
hand, in its truth and delicacy is the "The Shepherds reposing at
Night," in the National Gallery of Ireland, with its contrasted effects
of firelight and moonlit night.

No known portrait bears the date 1648, though one of "A Young Painter
with Papers and Crayon," signed Rembrandt 164--, is believed to belong
to about that year. There are, however, four dated subject-pictures: two
at the Louvre--"Christ at Emmaus" [No. 2539], and "The Good Samaritan"
[No. 2537],--one, "Hannah teaching the Infant Samuel to read," at
Bridgewater House, and one, a different version of "Christ at Emmaus,"
at Copenhagen [No. 292]. A small picture of "Christ on the Cross," in
the collection of Herr Carl Hollitscher at Berlin, was also probably
painted about this time.

[Illustration: [_Royal Museum, Berlin_

PORTRAIT OF A RABBI

(1645)]

[Illustration: [_Cassel Gallery_

A WINTER SCENE

(1646)]

The succeeding year, 1649, is one of the two that has no dated picture,
and were it not for the "Portrait of Marshal Turenne," at Panshanger,
which must have been painted that year--if indeed it be his, which has
recently been doubted--we should have to regard it as utterly barren;
for M. Jules Porgès' "Old Woman" is only supposititiously of that date.
We may be sure, however, that some of the large number of unsigned
pictures attributed to about that time were undoubtedly painted in
the course of it. Of these there are several in public galleries: "The
Slaughter-house," at Glasgow [No. 707], from the date on which the two
last figures are missing; the portrait of "His Brother," in the Emperor
Frederick Museum at Berlin; the "Bust of an Old Man," at Strasburg; the
"Portrait of Himself," at Leipzig; "The Ruin," at Cassel [No. 220]; the
picture, called "The Metamorphosis of Narcissus," at Amsterdam [No.
1251]; and five pictures in the Hermitage: "Abraham entertaining the
Angels" [No. 791], "The Sons of Jacob bringing him Joseph's Coat" [No.
793], "The Disgrace of Haman" [No. 795], "Pallas" [No. 809], and "Hannah
teaching Samuel to read" [No. 822], none of which is dated, though the
second, third, and fifth are signed. There are also in private hands,
two portraits in those of M. Jules Porgès, a portrait in M. Bonnat's,
and others. Dated pictures of the year 1650 are rare. There is a
"Portrait of Himself," in the Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge, and one,
"His Brother," at the Hague [No. 560]; and three subject-pictures,
"Tobit and his Wife," the Duke of Abercorn's "Deposition," and "The
Young Woman in Bed," in the National Gallery, Edinburgh.

The same number of pictures is dated 1651. Four are portraits: one of
himself, belonging to Herr Mendelssohn of Berlin; the "Old Man," in the
possession of the Duke of Devonshire; "The Man with a Baton," in the
Louvre [No. 2551], and "The Girl with a Broom," in the Hermitage [No.
286]. The subject-picture "Christ and Mary Magdalene in the Garden,"
called "Noli me tangere," is at Brunswick [No. 235].

The next two years are very deficient in dated pictures. Two only, "The
Old Man," seated in a chair, belonging to the Duke of Devonshire, and
the "Portrait of Bruyningh," at Cassel [No. 221], are dated 1652; but
the picture of "Hendrickje Stoffels," in the Louvre [No. 2547], and a
"Head of Christ," belonging to M. Rodolphe Kann of Paris, are of about
that year. 1653 has only one, "The Portrait of a Man," wrongly entitled
Van der Hooft, belonging to the Earl of Brownlow, for "The Entombment,"
at Dresden [No. 1566], is but a copy of the picture at Munich [No. 330],
touched up by Rembrandt. Here again we may safely accord to the
seemingly empty year some of the undated pictures of the period, which
include six portraits, one of which, "An Old Man," is in the Hermitage
[No. 818]. "An Old Woman," in the same collection [No. 804], may also
belong to the year, for it is very similar to the two pictures, dated
the following year [Nos. 805 and 806]. The only other undated pictures
which call for special mention are two landscapes: the "Mill," in the
collection of the Marquis of Lansdowne, and the one at Glasgow [No.
705], which is known as "Tobias and the Angel" from the figures in the
foreground.

[Illustration: [_Louvre, Paris_

CHRIST AT EMMAUS

(1648)]

The dated pictures of 1654 are nine portraits and two subjects,
"Bathsheba," at the Louvre [No. 2549], being one, and "The Woman
bathing," at the National Gallery [No. 54], the other. Of the portraits,
one of himself, doubted, however, by Dr Bode, is at Munich, [No. 333],
"An Old Man with a Beard," at Dresden [No. 1567], "An Old Woman," at
Brussels [No. 397=A=], "An Old Jew," "An Old Man," and "An Old Woman,"
besides the two old women being in the Hermitage [Nos. 810, 823, and
825], while "The Young Servant" is at Stockholm [No. 584]. Most, if
not all of these, however, were studies painted because his still
restless energy would not allow him to be idle. The same may be said of
the portraits dated 1655, only two of which we can even suppose to have
been commissions--the companion pictures of "An Old Man," and "An Old
Woman," at Stockholm [Nos. 581 and 582]; the two others bearing dates
being studies of his son "Titus," one in the collection of M. Rodolphe
Kann, the other in that of the Earl of Crawford. The dated picture at
Glasgow [No. 706], like the undated "Man in Armour," at Cassel, is
rather a study of armour than a picture. The portrait at the Louvre [No.
2546], a copy of one at Cassel [No. 225], and the rest of the undated
heads, mostly of small size, painted about that time, are simply
sketches or studies, the only subjects being "The Slaughter-house," in
the Louvre [No. 2548], and two pictures of "Joseph accused by Potiphar's
Wife," differing only in details, one at Berlin [No. 828=E=], and one in
the Hermitage [No. 794], for "The Flight into Egypt," at Buda-Pesth,
though belonging to the period, is undated.

1656, the year of his actual bankruptcy, was an unusually prolific one,
including "The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Johannes Deyman," now in the
Ryksmuseum at Amsterdam, of which, unfortunately, the fire of 1723 has
left only a fragment, [No. 1250]; the "Portrait of Arnold Tholinx,"
belonging to Madame André-Jacquemart of Paris; the "Portrait of an
Architect," at Cassel [No. 224], the signature and date of which,
however, M. Michel declares to be forged; and the companion pictures of
"A Young Man," and "A Young Woman," at Copenhagen [Nos. 273 and 274],
the second of which is alone dated. There are also two undated
"Portraits of Himself," painted about that time--one belonging to Lord
Iveagh, the other to Lady de Rothschild; and an "Old Man," at Dresden
[No. 1568]. In addition to these portraits there are two large
subject-pictures--"The Parable of the Labourers in the Vineyard," at
Frankfort [No. 181], and "Jacob blessing Joseph's Sons," at Cassel [No.
227], besides "The Preaching of St John the Baptist," at Berlin [No.
828=K=]. There are, moreover, two pictures belonging to about that
date--"The Denial of St Peter," in the Hermitage [No. 799], and "Pilate
washing his Hands," in the collection of M. Sedelmeyer at Paris.

One, or perhaps both of these, may belong to the following year, 1657,
which is otherwise lacking in important works, though it includes the
"Portrait of Catrina Hoogh," known as "The Lady with the Parrot,"
belonging to Lord Penrhyn; "The Adoration of the Magi," at Buckingham
Palace; a "Portrait of an Old Woman," belonging to M. Rodolphe Kann; and
one, at Dresden [No. 1569], of "A Man sketching in a Book." It may also
include the "Rabbi," in the National Gallery [No. 190], a "Portrait of a
Boy," at Belvoir Castle, and "An Angel," a mere fragment of a larger
picture, belonging to Mr Sellar.

[Illustration: [_Royal Museum, Berlin_

JOHN THE BAPTIST PREACHING

(1656)]

1658 would seem to have been still more disastrous. Of three signed
pictures, one is a "Portrait of Himself," in the collection of the Earl
of Ilchester; one, "An Old Woman cutting her Nails," belonging to M.
Rodolphe Kann, is undoubtedly a model; and only the "Young Man," in the
Louvre [No. 2545], may be a portrait. Of the unsigned works of that
time, two more are "Portraits of Himself," one belonging to Lord
Ashburton, the other at Vienna [No. 1142], and one, also at Vienna [No.
1144], is probably a "Portrait of Titus," while two "Old Men," one of
which is in the Pitti Palace [No. 12], are presumably models. The
portrait, called "An Admiral," belonging to Mr Schaus of New York, and
that of "Six," in the Six collection were, however, doubtless
commissions. The subjects include one of Rembrandt's infrequent
incursions into classical story in "Baucis and Philemon receiving
Jupiter and Mercury," now belonging to Mr Yerkes of New York, a
"Christ," in the possession of Count Orloff-Davidoff at St Petersburg,
and Lord Wimborne's seated figure of "St Paul."

Few facts are more admirable in Rembrandt's checkered career than the
noble struggle he maintained against misfortune and neglect. That he
suffered there can be no doubt--the careworn face and whitening hair of
the later portraits reveal it all too clearly,--but he stiffened his
back and worked on undismayed.

Of 1659 there are six pictures fully dated, and two believed to have
been, though in each the last figure of the date is missing. Both are
"Portraits of Himself," one at Bridgewater House, and one at Cassel [No.
222], while a dated one, belonging to the Duke of Buccleuch, is a
magnificent representation of the grave, strong face that had met and
supported so much care. Three others are also portraits--"An Old Man,"
in the National Gallery [No. 243], the "Merchant," belonging to the Earl
of Feversham, and "A Man in a Red Cloak," signed Rembran, in the
collection of M. Maurice Kann at Paris. There are also two
subject-pictures, both at Berlin, "Moses breaking the Tables of the Law"
[No. 811], and "Jacob wrestling with the Angel" [No. 828].

[Illustration: [_Amsterdam Gallery_

THE SYNDICS OF THE DRAPERS

(1661)]

To 1660 a large number of pictures is attributed, eighteen being
portraits, and one, "Head of Christ," belonging to M. Maurice Kann,
coming under the head of subject-pictures. Of these only four portraits
are dated, and in two cases there is some doubt as to the last figure.
Two of the dated portraits are of himself; one with the full date is in
the Louvre [No. 2555], and one with a doubtful date belongs to Sir A. D.
Neeld. Both are of extreme interest in their bearing on the personal
history of Rembrandt. The portrait of the year before, belonging to the
Duke of Buccleuch, shows us a man bearing some traces indeed of a
struggle with adversity, but of a not altogether unsuccessful one. The
character has been developed rather than shaken in the strife; the man
is still strong in body, firm in mind; the hair, as far as it can be
made out against the dark background, is still untouched by the hand of
time; yet it is beyond question Rembrandt himself. In the two pictures
now under consideration we find a change truly startling. The hair is
thin and white, the face is wrinkled, the eyes weary. But it is in the
character conveyed that the chief transformation is perceived; he has
sunk suddenly into old age and weakness, the strength, the resolution of
the man have gone out of him--he seems, stout as he was, to have broken
at last. And yet in the next year he painted the finest work he ever
did. There is nothing in his story to account for it. A severe illness
seems the only possible explanation, followed by a remarkable, though
brief, recuperation; but it is, perhaps, the greatest of the many great
puzzles offered to us in the course of his history. Of the other two
portraits, one, though fully signed and dated, is of a doubtful
authenticity; while the date on "The Portrait of an Old Woman,"
belonging to Colonel Lindsay, is uncertain. The pictures painted about
that year are numerous, and include a pair of portraits, husband and
wife, belonging to Prince Jousoupoff; "The Capuchin," in the National
Gallery [No. 166]; and two other figures in monks' robes, one belonging
to Lord Wemyss, the other to Count Stroganoff; Captain Holford's
portrait of a young man supposed to be "Titus"; "The Standard-Bearer,"
formerly at Warwick Castle but now transferred to America, and others.

There are ten pictures bearing the date 1661, one signed, but with the
last figure of the date missing, and three with neither date nor
signature. Of these, however, one, "The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis,"
we know to have been painted that year. A second painted about the time
is "The Circumcision," belonging to Earl Spencer. The third is the
"Venus and Cupid," at the Louvre [No. 2543], if it should not rather be
counted among the portraits, since Dr Bode believes it to represent
Hendrickje Stoffels and her daughter Cornelia. The same doubt as to
classification applies to the "St Matthew," also in the Louvre [No.
2538], and to "A Pilgrim at Prayer," belonging to Consul Weber at
Hamburg. Two figures of "Christ," one at Aschaffenbourg, the other
belonging to Count Raczynski at Posen, complete the list of subjects.
There is only one "Portrait of Himself," belonging to Lord Kinnaird, the
others being one of a man with a knife in his hand, nicknamed,
"Rembrandt's Cook," at Downton; the "Portrait of an old Woman," in the
Museum of Épinal; another "Old Woman," in the possession of Lord
Wantage; "A Man," in the Hermitage [No. 821]; and the misnamed
"Jansenius," belonging to Lord Ashburton. All other works of that year
are, however, eclipsed by the artist's masterpiece, which, if it alone
remained in existence, would compel us to place Rembrandt in the very
highest rank of painters--"The Syndics of the Drapers," at Amsterdam
[No. 1247].

After that eventful year, the record is a thin one. The very next,
indeed, is the other of which no known picture survives. There are a
pair of portraits, the "Man" in the collection of M. Maurice Kann, the
"Woman" in that of M. Rodolphe Kann, which may have been painted that
year; and the same may be said of a portrait called "Hendrickje
Stoffels," at Berlin [No. 823=B=] (_see_ ill., p. 44).

The next year is little better. A picture of "Homer reciting his Poems"
alone bears part of a signature, and f., with the date 1663. It belongs
to Dr Bredius, and is lent by him to the Museum at the Hague [No. 584].
1664, again, is found on but one canvas, "The Death of Lucretia,"
belonging to M. Léon Gauchez of Paris, but "The Unmerciful Servant," in
the Wallace collection, and the "Portrait of Himself," in the National
Gallery [No. 221] (_see_ ill., p. 46), belong to about that time. One, a
"Portrait of an Old Man," in the Metropolitan Museum, New York [No.
274], is dated 1665. A portrait, signed Rembrandt f., in the collection
of Mr Charles Morrison; one of himself, in that of Herr von Carstangen
at Berlin; "The Jewish Bride," at Amsterdam [No. 1252], from the date on
which the last figure is missing; and "David playing before Saul" were
also painted about that year.

1666, however, appears on three portraits--"A Youth," belonging to Lord
Leconfield; "A Woman," in the National Gallery [No. 237]; and "Jeremias
de Decker," a poet who was one of Rembrandt's rare clients in his later
years, at the Hermitage [No. 827]. The "Portrait of an Old Man," at
Dresden [No. 1570], and two of himself--one at Vienna [No. 1143], signed
but undated, and one in the Uffizi [No. 452]--were in all probability
painted either that year, the one before, or the succeeding one, 1667,
to which we can otherwise accord only one, a "Portrait of an Old Man,"
belonging to the Earl of Northbrook.

And now the tale is nearly told; 1668 occurs but once, on "The
Flagellation," in the Grand-Ducal Museum at Darmstadt, absolutely the
last known work of his; though three others--"Esther, Haman, and
Ahasuerus," belonging to the King of Roumania; a large "Family Group,"
at Brunswick [No. 232]; and "The Prodigal Son," in the Hermitage [No.
797], are believed to date from that year, or possibly even the next and
last.

There is still a considerable number of pictures to which no very
approximate date can be assigned, but as the attempt to fully consider
all the work that Rembrandt did would far exceed all reasonable limits
of space, I must reluctantly leave the reader who would seek further to
such assistance as the catalogue of pictures at the end of this volume
may afford him.




REMBRANDT THE ETCHER




CHAPTER VIII

HISTORY OF THE ETCHINGS


We have seen how Rembrandt the painter, after having risen to the
foremost place among his fellow-craftsmen in Holland, fell a victim to
the always unaccountable change of fashion that has cast a blight upon
many another man. Now, however, that we come to consider his etched
work, we have, to some extent, a different tale to tell. From the first
the products of his needle seem to have been appreciated and sought
after, in certain, though perhaps limited, circles. Houbraken mentions
Clement de Jonghe, whose shrewd yet kindly face is found among the
gallery of portraits etched by Rembrandt, Jan Pietersen Zoomer, and
Pieter de la Tombe, as having made collections of his etchings; and in
the inventory of the property left by the first of these at his death,
on February 11th, 1679, we find a list of seventy-four plates etched by
Rembrandt; but it is not therefore to be hastily concluded that
Rembrandt himself ever made any important addition to his income by the
sale of them.

Indeed, the chief foundation of the belief can be shown to be frail and
untrustworthy. This is the familiar title of the etching, "Christ
healing the Sick," which has been known for many years as "The Hundred
Guilder Print," that having been, according to the story, the sum the
artist obtained for a single proof. The amount, even if he had obtained
it, was hardly excessive--some nine pounds; but the facts show clearly
that he never did. He exchanged a copy, still in existence, with his
friend Jan Zoomer, who has left in writing on the back of it, "Given me
by my intimate friend Rembrandt in exchange for 'The Pest' of M.
Anthony," to which he may possibly have attached the value of a hundred
guilders, though there is not a particle of evidence for even this.
Gersaint, when making the catalogue, published in 1751, after his death,
by Helle and Glomy, was informed that the famous proof was exchanged
with a Roman merchant, and the equivalent, like Falstaff s men in
buckram, had swelled to seven engravings, which were definitely valued
at one hundred guilders; and thence the tradition and the name arose.
What, one wonders, would the gossips, who gasped amazed at such a price,
have thought could some seer have succeeded in making them believe that,
little more than a hundred years later, in 1858, that very same proof
with old Jan Zoomer's writing still upon it would be competed for so
fiercely at public auction, that M. Dutuit paid cheerfully for it eleven
hundred pounds; while even that was not a record price, since another
copy was sold the year before at the Palmer sale for eleven hundred and
eighty.

[Illustration: CHRIST HEALING THE SICK. (B. 74)

(1649-50)]

Still, though this piece of evidence must be abandoned, there would seem
to be no doubt that the etchings were admired even in his lifetime, and,
from the fact that Clement de Jonghe and Zoomer were art-dealers, we
may fairly conclude that part at least of their collections appertained
to their stock-in-trade. It is scarcely probable, indeed, that such
highly-finished works as the larger "Raising of Lazarus," "Christ
healing the Sick," "Christ preaching," "The Three Crosses," "The Good
Samaritan," "The Three Trees," and others, landscapes in especial, were
carried out without any subsequent attempts on Rembrandt's part to
profit by them; and there is good reason for supposing that the
portraits of Jan Uijtenbogaerd and Jan Cornelis Sylvius with their
inscriptions and laudatory verses, were intended for sale among the
followers and admirers of the two eminent ministers; but the fact
remains that we can only assert with any confidence that two out of all
the etchings were expressly made for publication, "The Descent from the
Cross," and the "Ecce Homo," and neither of these, though signed by
Rembrandt "cum privilegio," as issuing from his studio, and executed
under his directions, according to the custom of the day, was worked
upon by him to any great extent.

The numerous other portraits, the four illustrations to Manasseh ben
Israel's work, _Piedra Gloriosa_, and that to _Der Zeeværts-Lof_, were
doubtless commissions, but the payments were probably not large, since
we found in the proposal made by Dirck van Cattenburch, in 1654, that an
etched plate "not less finished than that of Six," was estimated at no
more than four hundred florins, which, considering the amount of work
entailed, was not magnificent.

When we have recalled the partnership formally entered into between
Hendrickje and Titus on December 15, 1660, which has already been
explained in telling the story of the artist's life, we have come to the
end of the reasons for concluding that the artist made money by his
etching needle.

Whence, then, it may be asked, the various proofs now in existence, the
first and second, third and fourth states for which collectors pay such
surprising prices, prices more often regulated by the rarity of the
state than by its special artistic merits? Perhaps some of them were put
into circulation by the firm of Hendrickje and Titus. There is,
certainly, no mention of the plates in the inventory of the sale, and it
is therefore possible that this pathetic little association for the
support of a broken-down artist may have found it profitable in a small
way to issue new impressions of these earlier completed plates, though
it is significant in this connection, unless we can accept the theory
suggested before, that Rembrandt's eyesight was failing, that at the
very time when etchings were most needed he ceased to produce them.

In a very large number of cases, I suspect, they were given as presents
to any sympathetic soul who had enough taste to appreciate them for
their merits, or intelligence enough to foresee that they might some day
prove of value. In the case of a portrait, at any rate, we know that he
gave proofs to his sitter as the work went on, for on one of the first
portrait of Sylvius, done in 1634, there is a note in Rembrandt's hand
showing that it was one of four presented by him to the minister.

Others, again, would be given to fellow-artists, such as Lievensz, who
etched also. Many undoubtedly came from the sixty portfolios of leather,
which we find recorded in the inventory, where they had lain from the
day when Rembrandt, having learnt the lesson or attained the effect he
desired, had flung them carelessly aside to go on to some further
problem. For, there seems little doubt that he never himself regarded
them with any very serious consideration. They were for him only steps
in his onward progress. He did them because he wanted to do them,
without any thoughts of fame or profit, and he signed and dated them, or
left them unsigned and undated, in the most haphazard and capricious
way, good and bad alike, with the most complete indifference as to
whether they were calculated to enhance his reputation or not. It was,
therefore, by the inevitable irony of fate, that for these alone, for
many years, was he judged worthy of remark. While Gerard de Lairesse in
his _Groote Schilderboek_, published in 1714, was condescendingly
assuring a listening public that Rembrandt's paintings were not
"absolutely bad," Houbraken was recording the struggles of collectors to
get possession of his etchings, and their consequent increase in
price--struggles and increasings, which have gone on augmenting without
intermission to the present day, until even a small representative
collection of them is a luxury for the very rich alone, an absolutely
perfect one of all the differing states unobtainable by a many times
millionaire.

In the eighteenth century there were already famous collections of the
etchings: such as those of de Burgy and van Leyden in Holland itself; of
Marolles, Coypel, Silvestre, and Mariette in France; of Barnard,
Sloane, Cracherode, Fawkener, and Lord Aylesford in England; and it was
inevitable that the making of collections could not go on satisfactorily
for long, unless there was some sort of general agreement as to what was
and what was not to be included in them, so that before long the need
for some catalogue to establish at any rate the preliminary basis of an
agreement on disputed points became an absolute necessity.

Gersaint was the first to make the attempt, but died before his task was
finished. His manuscript, however, was put up for sale, and bought by
les Sieurs Helle and Glomy, as they call themselves upon the title-page
of the volume in duodecimo which, after making the "necessary
augmentations" of Gersaint's material, they published at Paris in 1751.
An English translation of this was published by T. Jefferys in London
the following year, and four years later, in 1756, Pierre Yver, an
art-dealer in Amsterdam, published in that city a "Supplément," with
additions and corrections. Forty years later these two works, collated
and again translated into English, were the foundation of an amended
catalogue by Daniel Daulby, published in London and Liverpool in 1796. A
year later Adam Bartsch, keeper of the prints in the Library at Vienna,
published there a catalogue in two octavo volumes, which to this day
remains the chief standard of appeal, though Wilson, Charles Blanc,
Vosmaer, Middleton, and others, have rejected some of the etchings which
he accepted, and included others which he ignored.

[Illustration: CLEMENT DE JONGHE. (B. 272)

(1651)]

There is no doubt that Bartsch was too generous in his admissions, but
to what extent he carried his over-generosity is still a matter of
dispute. The Chevalier de Claussin, writing in 1824, and borrowing
freely, though without acknowledgment, from Bartsch, struck out 10,
leaving 365; and Wilson, publishing in London in 1836, under the title
of "an amateur," while owning his obligations to Bartsch, rejected 6,
but added others, making 369. Vosmaer, in 1877, counted 353; Middleton,
in the following year, reduced these to 329; Charles Blanc, in the 1880
edition of his work, raised the number again to 353. M. de Seidlitz, in
1890, obtained and collated the opinions of all the best living
authorities, and, after an ample discussion of doubtful points, accepted
260; while M. Legros, adopting heroic methods of criticism, will only
admit 71 as being certainly by Rembrandt, with an additional 42 which
might be, or 113 at the most.

What, it may well be asked by the bewildered amateur, is the reason of
these surprising differences? Surely, he may well say, there must be
some criterion to hold by. The answer is simple, if unsatisfactory:
there is not, there never has been, there never can be. There is no
style to judge by; for Rembrandt had half-a-dozen styles at least, and
employed them all together or separately as he listed. The signature is
no guide, for many beautiful works of his have none, and many that are
not his bear forged ones. The subject cannot help us, for he treated
alike the most sacred incidents and the grossest improprieties. The
merit of the work is no less dubious ground for judgment; for while
producing, over and over again, masterpieces of the art that have never
been equalled, he at other times, through carelessness, indifference,
or perhaps ill-health, turned out and left for future ages stuff which
most far inferior men would have obliterated there and then. We can only
decide each for ourselves that such or such a plate is in no way worthy
of Rembrandt, but, unless we have the courage of M. Legros, we cannot go
on to assert definitely that therefore it is not his.

[Illustration: THE THREE TREES. (B. 212)

(1643)]




CHAPTER IX

THE AUTHENTIC ETCHINGS


In the entire absence of any evidence to the contrary, we are reasonably
safe in concluding that the two etchings dated 1628 were, if not
actually the first, among the very first he ever did; and, regarded in
this light, they are truly astonishing. Both are called Rembrandt's
mother, though the one in full face (B. 352) seems to represent a woman
in a much humbler station of life than the stately old lady in the other
(B. 354), while both, furthermore, seem to portray a woman much more
advanced in years than his mother was at that time.

In the first the kindly old lady, whoever she may be, wears a large
white hood shading her forehead. The right side of her face, with the
exception of the prominence of the cheekbone, is in shadow, and the
strong light falling on the left side of the head brings into relief the
wrinkles by the nose and at the corner of the mouth, and the soft fleshy
forms of the cheek and jaw. The seemingly toothless mouth is slightly
open above the strong square chin. The work is simple and
straightforward, but admirably expressive of the varied forms, and the
roundness and solidity of the little head are excellent. The second (B.
354) is slighter and broader in handling, the forms are expressed with
greater freedom, the elaboration of the modelling in the one being often
replaced by a single significant line, but the shadows are somewhat
forced, which results, especially in the hollow of the cheek and on the
right temple, in an excessive and unpleasant blackness. Yet the dash and
surety of the line-work is very fine, and to the student it is well
worth careful study through a lens. The first excels in delicacy, the
second in strength.

The only etching actually known to have been executed in 1629 is the
first of many portraits of himself (B. 338), very broadly and strongly
etched, and worked upon in places with two needles fastened side by
side, a useless device, to which he never again resorted. There are
fifteen dated etchings of the year 1630. Among these are no less than
six portraits or studies of himself, including an excellent "Portrait in
a fur cap and light dress" (B. 24), and an admirably etched study of
expression known as "Rembrandt with haggard eyes" (B. 320), which is,
rather, a humorous sketch of amazed bewilderment. He also, for the first
time, attempted a composition with several figures--"The Presentation in
the Temple" (B. 51), distinguished as the one with the angel, which,
however, was not altogether a success, owing to insufficient biting. A
spirited note of "An Old Beggar Man conversing with a Woman" (B. 164),
and various small heads, including two profiles of the same "Bald Man"
(B. 292 and 294), which M. Michel has given sound reasons for believing
to be Rembrandt's father, make up the number.

He was again his own model twice in 1631--one, with a broad hat and
mantle (B. 7), being the most elaborately finished piece of work he had
yet attempted. There are also two "Portraits of his Mother" (B. 348 and
349); one said to be "His Father" (B. 263) though made after his death;
a brilliant little sketch of a "Blind Fiddler" (B. 138), and others.
There are only three dated etchings of 1632--a little figure called "The
Persian" (B. 152), the first of several pictures of "St Jerome" (B.
101), a subject which had a singular fascination for the artist, and the
group of "The Rat-killer" (B. 121). Three also bear the date 1633, "An
Old Woman" etched no lower than the chin (B. 351), very doubtfully
identified as his mother; a badly overbitten "Portrait of Himself" with
a scarf round his neck (B. 17); and one subject, "The Descent from the
Cross" (B. 81), which came so utterly to grief in the biting, owing
apparently to bad grounding, that it was at once abandoned, only three
impressions being known, and a second undertaken, though not by himself,
the work having been carried out under his supervision by some unknown
pupil. Another equally important plate bearing this date, "The Good
Samaritan" (B. 90), is included among the disputed etchings.

The year 1634, which brought Saskia into his home, also naturally enough
brought her portrait into the list of etchings. One, with pearls in her
hair (B. 347), is certainly a likeness of her, and M. Michel believes it
to have been the companion plate to one of Rembrandt (B. 2), executed
about the same time. Another charming piece of work, "A Young Woman
Reading" (B. 345), though not a portrait, was also very possibly studied
from Saskia. For subjects both the Old and New Testaments supplied
inspiration, the first for a decidedly seventeenth-century Dutch
rendering of "Joseph and Potiphar's Wife" (B. 39), the second for the
earliest treatment of a favourite subject "Christ and the Disciples at
Emmaus" (B. 88). "Christ driving the Money-lenders from the Temple" (B.
69), a crowded and unsatisfactory composition, the central figure of
which was borrowed from Durer; the "Martyrdom of St Stephen" (B. 97),
with some singularly bad drawing in it; and another, "St Jerome" (B.
102), were the subjects treated in 1635, which is more notable for a
vivacious "Portrait of Johannes Uijtenbogaerd" (B. 279); a splendid
little study of "A Mountebank" (B. 129), a model of direct etching from
nature wherein there is not a superfluous line, though everything that
should be is expressed; and a skilful piece of chiaroscuro, "The Pancake
Woman" (B. 124).

1636 has only four etchings to show--"The Prodigal Son" (B. 91), a
boldly-handled piece of work, superbly executed, full of movement and
expression, but marred by the revolting hideousness of the faces; the
excellent portrait of "Manasseh ben Israel" (B. 269); a charming little
revelation of domestic contentment, "Rembrandt and his Wife" (B. 19);
and a sheet of sketches, including a very pleasing head of Saskia (B.
365). 1637 has only one etching of importance, "Abraham dismissing
Hagar" (B. 30); but for sheer skill in craftsmanship the "Young Man
seated in Meditation" (B. 268) would be difficult to match.

Rembrandt's unfortunate lack of the sense of beauty is nowhere so
glaringly made manifest as in the preposterous "Adam and Eve" (B. 28) of
1638; nor are the faces in an etching of that year, rejected, however,
by Sir Seymour Haden, of the brothers listening to "Joseph relating His
Dreams" (B. 37) much less absurd, though they are to a considerable
extent atoned for by the dignified Jacob, the very human interest of
Rachel, and the simple earnestness of Joseph himself. The "St
Catherine," otherwise known as "The Little Jewish Bride" (B. 342), and a
"Portrait of Himself with a Mezetin Cap and Feather" (B. 20), are the
only others of the year. In the following year he achieved, with
conspicuous success, the most ambitious etching he had yet attempted,
the magnificent "Death of the Virgin" (B. 99), which, with the exception
of the unfortunate angels hovering above, is admirable alike in
conception and execution, attaining by straightforward simplicity the
full pathos of the scene. The truthfulness and variety of attitude and
expression, the wholly effective yet unforced arrangement of the
composition, and the perfection of the chiaroscuro are beyond praise,
and justify the somewhat bold assertion that beyond this the etcher's
art cannot go. It is no matter for wonder, therefore, that this splendid
plate seems to have absorbed most of the time he could devote to etching
that year, for a little sketch of "A Jew in a High Cap" (B. 133), and
the fine "Portrait of Himself leaning on a Stone Sill" (B. 21), alone
share the date with it. His interest or his leisure would indeed appear
to have been exhausted for some time, since only two small etchings,
"The Beheading of St John the Baptist" (B. 92), and "An Old Man with a
divided Fur Cap" (B. 265), are dated 1640.

A return of energy, however, marked 1641, from which year we have twelve
dated plates; among them, the first three, to our certain knowledge, of
a long series of landscapes, the elaborate study known as "Rembrandt's
Mill" (B. 233), the beautiful "Cottage and Barn" (B. 225), and the
"Landscape with a Cottage and Mill Sail" (B. 226). There are four
subjects from scripture--a "Virgin and Child in the Clouds" (B. 61),
"The Baptism of the Eunuch" (B. 98), one called "Jacob and Laban" (B.
118), and "The Angel departing from Tobit and his Family" (B. 43), in
which his inability to perceive the absurd and undignified is once again
demonstrated in the inflated petticoat and foreshortened legs which are
all that is seen of the angel. A little night-effect, "The Schoolmaster"
(B. 128), and the grand and very rare "Portrait of Anslo" (B. 271), are
the most important of the remainder. With the exception of a "Bearded
Man seated at a Table in an Arbour" (B. 257), the only etchings of 1642
were three sacred subjects, all small, and two of them, "The Raising of
Lazarus" (B. 72) and "The Descent from the Cross" (B. 82), mere
sketches. The finished plate represents "St Jerome" (B. 105),
distinguished as being in Rembrandt's dark manner, seated reading at a
table in a room lighted only by one window high up in front of him, so
that the contrasts of light and shade are strong, and the effect very
excellent.

[Illustration: REMBRANDT'S MILL (B. 233)

(1641)]

1643 has only two signed etchings, but both are masterpieces of out-door
work--"The Hog" (B. 157), and the justly-renowned "Three Trees" (B.
212). There is only one etching dated 1644, a landscape with figures,
called "The Shepherd and his Family" (B. 220).

A superb combination of pure etching and dry-point dates from 1645--the
"View of Omval, near Amsterdam" (B. 209), one of the most entirely
satisfactory of the etchings, both for perfection of workmanship and
beauty of effect. The transition from the loving care bestowed upon the
splendid study of the gnarled and shattered willow-tree in front,
through the more broadly yet quite adequately expressed foliage behind
it on the left, to the slight yet all-sufficient treatment of the river
and landscape beyond it on the right, shows a precise adaptation of the
necessary means to the desired end, which, had no other line of
Rembrandt's etching come down to us, would have been enough to stamp him
as the finest known exponent of the art. A second landscape of that year
is a study of a boat-house, known as "The Grotto" (B. 231); and a third,
the one known as "Six's Bridge" (B. 208), a masterly little sketch from
nature. As an example of the utmost expressiveness with the fewest
necessary means, of a thorough grasp of the essentials and rejection of
superfluities, and of a profound mastery of technical methods, this
etching cannot easily be over-estimated. An outline sketch of the
"Repose in Egypt" (B. 58), and a more highly finished "Abraham
conversing with Isaac" just previous to the projected sacrifice (B. 34),
are the only subject-etchings of that year, which is further remarkable
for the absence of any portraits or studies of heads.

The next few years are singularly devoid of dated etchings. There are
three from 1646--a small sketch of "An Old Beggar Woman" (B. 170); a
subject known as "Ledikant" (B. 186), one of those frank improprieties
to the perpetration of which Rembrandt, with the freedom of his time,
more than once degraded his talents, from our modern point of view; and
a direct study from the nude model, "A Man seated on the Ground" (B.
196). 1647 has only two, both highly-finished endeavours to realise a
wholly pictorial effect--an endeavour which, however successful, is
always to some extent a mis-application of the art, a deliberate
sacrifice of its special advantages, in order to attain an object more
easily and efficiently obtainable in other ways. Still, regarded as
attempts to express the full tonality, there is much to admire and study
in these two portraits of "Six" (B. 285), and "Ephraim Bonus" (B. 278),
the Jewish physician, descending a staircase, with his right hand on the
banister, as if pausing on his return from visiting a patient, a
reversed reproduction of the picture in the Six collection already
referred to.

[Illustration: BEGGARS AT THE DOOR OF A HOUSE. (B. 176)

(1648)]

In 1648 he once more undertook a "Portrait of Himself" (B. 22), a very
different presentment from the earlier ones, with their feathered caps
and embroidered cloaks, their flowing locks and brushed up moustaches.
Time and trouble have told upon him, and it is pathetic to contrast the
proud elegance of the Rembrandt of 1639 (B. 21), his fine clothes, rich
velvet cap flung carelessly on one side of his long curling hair, and
his self-satisfied air, with this grave, soberly-clad, middle-aged man,
in his plain, high, square-topped, broad-brimmed hat, and dark working
blouse. His cavalier curls are cropped, his once airily upturned
moustache trimmed short, the dainty tuft upon his chin is gone. He has
grown stout, his throat hangs in puffy folds below his chin, his nose
has coarsened, and he bears his two-and-forty years but badly; but if
his face has aged, it has also strengthened, he has learned as well as
suffered, and, if there is no longer in his eyes the look of undoubting
self-approval, there is still the same keen, penetrating gaze of
observation, and a wiser self-confidence born of trials and labours past
and overcome. Among all the portraits of Rembrandt, real or supposed,
there is none which makes one feel so strongly that here, indeed, one is
face to face with him, as he saw himself when he sat drawing from the
mirror in front of him.

[Illustration: THE SHELL (B. 159)

(1650)]

Another splendid example of that year is the "Beggars at the Door of a
House" (B. 176), a masterpiece of composition and workmanship. It has
all the rich effect of a highly-laboured piece of work, yet a careful
study of it shows how simple and direct are the means actually employed;
for the elaborately-finished effect, it will be found, is due, not to
the multiplication of lines, but to the absolute rightness and
appropriateness of the comparatively few that are used. The crispness
and firmness of the drawing are quite magnificent, and it is
satisfactory to know that this marvellous little plate, simple and
unsensational as it is, comes third, according to M. Amand Durand, in
popularity with the purchasers of reproductions. Yet another masterpiece
of the same year is "The Jews' Synagogue" (B. 126); and a fourth etching
is "The Marriage of Jason and Creusa" (B. 112), a composition of many
figures, made to illustrate his friend Jan Six's tragedy of Medea,
published that year, in which, as usual with him, the attempt to convey
the classical spirit was scarcely successful.

There is no etching which we can definitely assign to 1649. In 1650, on
the other hand, we have six, including four landscapes, to which he
again turned his attention after an interval of five years. These are "A
Village by the High-Road" (B. 217), with its big tree and high-gabled
cottages; the excellent "Village with a Square Tower" (B. 218); the
"Canal with Swans" (B. 235); and the sketch of "A Canal with a Large
Boat" (B. 236) lying broadside on athwart the foreground, which is,
however, chiefly interesting from the background, which has given rise
to a question as to whether Rembrandt was about that time on his travels
to some place unknown. This hilly distance, with the steep cliff on the
left, and the Italian-looking tower in the centre, certainly bears no
resemblance to anything in his ordinary surroundings, but there is
nothing in it to assure us that it was done from nature, and as we know
that he more than once adapted a landscape from some Italian master,
generally Titian, it would be rash to found any conclusion on the
resemblance.

A remarkable instance of patient and loving care is seen in the "Shell"
(B. 159), an astonishingly truthful and minute study of still life,
which is equally attractive in the first state against a plain white
background, and in the second against a nearly black one, which,
however, may have been added by some other hand. The sixth etching of
that year, "Christ appearing to the Disciples" (B. 89), is a sketch in
outline with a little tentative shading here and there, and, though
handled with freedom and boldness, has little of interest or beauty to
recommend it.

During 1651 he devoted himself once and once only to each class of work;
for there is one subject, "The Flight into Egypt" (B. 53), showing
Joseph carrying a lantern, and leading the ass bearing the Virgin and
Child through the night; one landscape, "The Goldweigher's Field" (B.
234)--so called from the view including the country-house of his friend
Uijtenbogaerd, the treasurer, whose portrait, etched by Rembrandt, is
known as "The Goldweigher"; and one portrait, "Clement de Jonghe" (B.
272), one of the best, if not the best, he ever did. Still fewer
etchings were produced in 1652, and one of the two, the larger "Christ
disputing with the Doctors" (B. 65), is only a sketch--in places,
indeed, it degenerates to a mere scrawl--displaying, for Rembrandt, an
unwonted amount of indifferent and inexpressive drawing; but the other,
a landscape, generally known in England as the "Vista" (B. 222), with
the two large trees on the left and the dense wood in the centre, is,
perhaps, the finest specimen of work in pure dry-point ever produced.

1653 is, again, a blank as far as dated etchings are concerned, but to
1654 belong eight, seven of which are subjects from the New Testament; a
"Circumcision" (B. 47), known as the one with the cask and net; a sketch
of "The Holy Family crossing a Rill during the Flight into Egypt" (B.
55), in which the figures are clumsily and unpleasantly thrown into
relief by a band of shadow closely following their outlines in very
naïve fashion, but which, nevertheless, contains a great deal of bold
and expressive drawing; "Jesus and His Parents returning from Jerusalem"
(B. 60), in which we have another instance of an altogether foreign
landscape, which might as well be adduced in evidence of his foreign
travels as that of four years before. In this case, however, it has
evidently been so closely copied from an unknown original that there can
be no doubt that there is somewhere, or at any rate was then, a drawing
of the subject, and there is, furthermore, a very high degree of
probability that the drawing was by Titian. The figures are full of
movement, and there is, in especial, much animation in the young Christ,
who, led by His father, himself leads His mother, turning half backwards
as He walks to speak to her, but the types of the heads, especially that
of the Virgin Mary, are disagreeably ugly and vulgar. The Virgin in "The
Holy Family with the Serpent" (B. 63), has, on the other hand, an
unusual amount of grace, but this, it has to be admitted, is due to the
fact that it is borrowed from Mantegna, and the plate is otherwise an
indifferent piece of work. "Christ and the Disciples at Emmaus" (B. 87)
is, again, no more than a sketch, presenting with much vividness the
actions of surprise on the part of the two disciples and of the
serving-man descending the stairs in front; but here, as so often
elsewhere, Rembrandt has failed to rise to any sense of the sublimity or
dignity of Christ, and as, in this example, he sits in full face in the
very centre of the picture, the fault cannot well be overlooked or
condoned. A far more satisfactory production, indeed the best of the
year, is "The Descent from the Cross by Torchlight" (B. 83), with its
bold drawing and coarse yet effective handling, but, like all the work
of 1654, it has serious and obvious defects; while the last to be noted,
"The Game of Golf" or Kolf (B. 125), is yet another instance of
Rembrandt's contentedly signing a work which would disgrace a man
without a tithe of his genius, and is one of those plates which, if it
be authentic--and no one else that I know of disputes it--renders any
test of genuineness by workmanship impossible.

1655 saw Rembrandt employed once more as an illustrator, the book being
one entitled "Piedra gloriosa ò de la estatua de Nebucadnezar," by his
friend Manasseh ben Israel, for which he etched four subjects on one
plate, afterwards sub-divided--"Jacob's Dream," "The Combat of David and
Goliath," "Nebuchadnezzar's Dream," and "The Vision of Ezekiel" (B. 36).
"Abraham's Sacrifice" (B. 35), of the same year, is another of those
bold and rapid sketches in which Rembrandt seems to have dashed at his
subject and realised it by sheer force of energy, caring little about
detail, shading where he wanted shadows, and omitting them where he
wanted light, without any regard to where light and shade would have
been, yet putting such vitality, such genuine, undeniable, human feeling
into it, that even bad drawing passes unnoticed. The swirl of the
broad-winged angel swooping down from behind on Abraham, grasping his
left arm just above he elbow to hold back the knife, while with his
right he removes Abraham's right hand from the eyes of the resignedly
kneeling Isaac, is marvellous. The startled surprise of Abraham is
amazingly true; and, carried away by the vigour of the actions and the
sound breadth of the work, we ignore the fact that Abraham is
left-handed, and that the angel has no forearm. Another equally bold
work in outline is "Christ before Pilate" (B. 76), with its wonderful
crowd of figures in the foreground relieved against the platform on
which Christ and Pilate stand surrounded by soldiers. The only
highly-finished work of the year is the "Portrait of Thomas Jacobsz
Haring" (B. 275), known as "The Young Haring," to distinguish it from
the etching of his father "The Old Haring."

There are only two etchings dated 1656,--"Abraham entertaining the
Angels" (B. 29), in which yet again we have forced upon us the
incapacity of Rembrandt's mind to evolve an acceptable supernatural
figure, and the splendid "Portrait of Jan Lutma" (B. 276). It is
impossible to look on this and doubt that it is an admirable likeness of
a delightful old man. With what a shrewd humorous expression he sits in
that high-backed arm-chair, surmounted by lions' heads, which figures in
so many of Rembrandt's portraits at that time. How broad and easy, yet
neither over-laboured nor careless, is the handling. Rembrandt never
worked better, and one cannot but feel convinced, in regarding the
result, that, to both artist and sitter, the work was a labour of love,
and the sittings periods of mutual enjoyment. In this, the last dated
portrait we have, he reached the highest pitch of excellence he ever
attained.

[Illustration: JAN LUTMA. (B. 276)

(1656)]

In 1657, as far as we know, he executed only one etching, "St Francis
praying" (B. 107), unfinished, and chiefly notable for the fine study of
a tree which it contains. Three figures of nude women, "A Woman
preparing to dress after Bathing" (B. 199), "A Woman sitting with her
Feet in Water" (B. 200), and a so-called "Negress lying down" (B. 205),
are dated 1658, while 1659 was marked by two very diverse subjects, "St
Peter and St John at the Gate of the Temple" (B. 94), and "Jupiter
disguised as a Satyr discovering the sleeping Antiope" (B. 203).

Throughout 1660 Rembrandt would seem to have left his etching needle to
rust in idleness, but he resumed it once more in 1661, and produced a
study of the nude, "A Woman with her Back turned sitting cross-legged
upon a Bed, holding an Arrow in her right Hand" (B. 202); and with this
the list of authentic dated etchings is brought to a close.

There are one hundred and one etchings generally accepted as Rembrandt's
to which no date can positively be assigned, but lack of space forbids
our considering them at length, and we must be content to review them
somewhat hastily, dwelling only on those of special importance. The
earlier years, from 1628 or 1629 to about 1635, are chiefly
characterised by a number of small portraits of himself, and of various
unknown old men and old women, and by a remarkable series of sketches of
beggars and peasants. About 1631 we find the first study from the nude,
"Diana bathing" (B. 201), altogether excellent as an example of
well-directed line, devoted, however, to a coarse and unshapely figure.
Of approximately the same date is a masterly portrait of "An Old Lady,"
in all probability Rembrandt's mother (B. 343), seated at a table,
turned in three-quarter face to the right, her hands lightly folded in
her lap, which is worthy of remark as showing how rapidly Rembrandt
mastered all the available styles of etching, and how subtly and
skilfully he combined them.

A little later, the assigned dates ranging between 1633 and 1636, we
have the first portrait, outside his family circle, to which we can
definitely attach a name, that of the minister "Jan Cornelis Sylvius"
(B. 266), with whose family Saskia was staying before her marriage. If,
as we may imagine, it was undertaken to ingratiate himself with people
so important to him, or later out of gratitude for their good offices,
we can only hope that they were not over-critical, for it must be
confessed that this exercise in pure dry-point is about as bad an
example as could be found. A sheet of sketches (B. 367), dating from
1635 or 1636, is noteworthy for the charming "Head of Saskia" included
in it, and a "Portrait of Himself in a flat cap and slashed vest" (B.
26), slightly but beautifully etched, as undoubtedly an admirable
presentment of himself as he appeared about 1638. Four scripture
subjects are, a sketch of "The Flight into Egypt" (B. 54), dating
anywhere between 1630 and 1640; a "Holy Family," known as "The Virgin
with the Linen" (B. 62), dating between 1632 and 1640; a beautiful
little "Crucifixion" (B. 80), dating from 1634 or 1635; and "An Old Man
caressing a Boy," who stands between his knees (B. 33), dating from 1638
or 1639, believed by some authorities to represent "Abraham caressing
Isaac."

There are, altogether, forty-eight etchings attributed with every
probability of correctness to the years before 1640, many of which
deserve more attention than we can spare them; while two, "A Sketch of a
Tree" (B. 372), and "The Presentation in the vaulted Temple" (B. 49),
are placed by some a year or two earlier, by others a year or two later,
than that year. To the year itself probably belongs a landscape "A large
Tree by a House" (B. 207), and to it or to the following year "The
Virgin mourning the Death of Jesus" (B. 85), "The Flute-Player" (B.
188), and "A View of Amsterdam" (B. 210); while to 1641 are generally
assigned two sketches of lion-hunts (B. 115 and 116), more remarkable
for energy of action then accuracy of drawing; a vigorous "Battle-Scene"
(B. 117); "The Draughtsman" (B. 130), and "A Portrait of a Boy" (B.
310). Other landscapes, of doubtful date, but almost certainly of some
year between 1640 and 1650, are, "The Bull" (B. 253), "A Village with a
River and Sailing Vessel" (B. 228), the beautiful "Landscape with a Man
sketching" (B. 219), and the "Landscape with a ruined Tower" (B. 223).
Portraits of known originals are those of "Jan Asselyn" (B. 277), a
fellow-artist, a dwarfed, deformed little man, nicknamed by his
contemporaries the little Crab, whose personal failings evidently did
not weigh on him, for he stands gazing at the spectator with a superb
air of ludicrous conceit; and a magnificent one of the same "Jan
Sylvius" (B. 280) with whom Rembrandt had so conspicuously failed
before, so full of life and movement that it is hard to believe, though
an indubitable fact, that it was etched from a study in 1645 or 1646,
seven or eight years after the death of the minister. The scripture
subjects of this decade include an oval "Crucifixion" (B. 79), and "The
Triumph of Mordecai" (B. 40).

In the debatable land between the late forties and the early fifties
there are two magnificent works, one, oddly included in the usual
classifications among the portraits, "Dr Faustus" (B. 270), the other
the famous Hundred Guilder print, "Jesus Christ healing the Sick" (B.
74). There are, all told, twenty-eight etchings dating between 1640 and
1650.

Only eighteen of uncertain date are placed between 1650 and the end of
Rembrandt's career as an etcher in 1661, but they are nearly all worthy
of more space than can be devoted to them. One is a landscape, "The
Sportsman" (B. 211). Five are portraits, one of "A Youth," long known as
Rembrandt, but undoubtedly his son Titus (B. 11); the large one of
"Coppenol" (B. 283), probably among the last of the etchings, but
beautifully and minutely finished in an exquisitely delicate fashion,
though the hands are less well expressed than usual with Rembrandt, who,
whether in painting or drawing, delighted in bringing out with care the
full character revealed by them; a portrait in dry-point of "Dr Arnoldus
Tholinx" (B. 284), of which it would be impossible to speak too highly;
a less admirable one of "Abraham Francen" (B. 273), whose long and
faithful friendship with the painter has been referred to in the _Life_;
and one of Jacob Haring (B. 274), known as "The Old Haring."

There are nine scripture subjects of the period, two from the Old
Testament, "King David at Prayer" (B. 41), a strong and unhesitating
piece of work, in which, however, the face of the king is somewhat too
simply expressed, but was probably not considered by Rembrandt as
finished; and "Tobit Blind" (B. 42), scarcely more than a sketch, but
full of the sentiment of helpless blindness. Of the seven subjects from
the New Testament two are of the first importance, "Christ preaching"
(B. 67), known as the little La Tombe, because, it is supposed, the
plate came into the possession of the dealer of that name; and the
"Three Crosses" (B. 78), the former being an etching heightened by
dry-point, the second a work in dry-point throughout. "Jesus Christ
entombed" (B. 86) is a powerful and effective etching dating probably
from the early fifties, and "The Presentation in the Temple" (B. 50),
further identified as being in Rembrandt's dark manner, from about the
middle of the decade. "The Nativity" (B. 45), of about the same time, is
an exquisite little composition expressed with the utmost simplicity
compatible with the desired result. In "Christ in the Garden of Olives"
(B. 75), on the other hand, this rapidity of work has been carried too
far, and degenerates into sheer carelessness, though, apart from
details, the arrangement of the masses of light and shade is good.
"Christ and the Samaritan Woman" (B. 70), dating from 1657 or 1658, is
drawn with precision and delicacy, but the device of relieving the face
of the woman by a dark and impossible shadow on a building in the
background, is scarcely a happy or successful one. A figure of "A Nude
Woman sitting by a Dutch stove" (B. 197), a portrait of "A Goldsmith at
his Work" (B. 123), and "A Sheet of Sketches" (B. 364), of which only
three copies are known, bring the tale of etchings to which an
approximate date may be assigned to a conclusion.

There remain seventeen, concerning the probable dates of which
conjectures vary so widely, that it is safer to admit we do not know,
and cannot guess with any prospect of success. Thus the clever little
sketch of "Two Beggars walking towards the right" (B. 144), has been
dated 1629, 1634, and 1648; another "Beggar leaning upon a Stick" (B.
162), 1631 and 1641, and a pathetic little composition of "Christ's Body
carried to the Tomb" (B. 84), 1632 and 1645; while the small "Portrait
of Coppenol" (B. 282), has been attributed by one to 1632, but by
another to as far away as 1651. Other plates of equally uncertain date
are five landscapes--the exquisite "Landscape with a Flock of Sheep" (B.
224), and the no less admirable "Peasant with Milk Pails" (B. 213); "The
Cottage with white Pales" (B. 232), "The Canal" (B. 221), the "Landscape
with an Obelisque" (B. 227), and the "Landscape with a Cow drinking" (B.
237). Three are scripture subjects--"The Adoration of the Shepherds" (B.
46), a hurriedly executed night effect, dating between 1632 and 1640
according to Vosmaer, from 1652 according to Middleton; a second night
effect, "The Repose in Egypt" (B. 57), also assigned by Vosmaer to some
date between 1632 and 1640, by M. Michel to 1641 or 1642, and by
Middleton to 1647; and a very indifferent "St Peter" (B. 96), with a
signature and date which Middleton reads 1645, Vosmaer 1655. Another
dated plate is "The Bathers" (B. 195), which, according to M. Michel,
was originally dated 1631, the 3 having subsequently been altered by
Rembrandt into a 5. As to the why and wherefore of such an
incomprehensible error on the artist's part, he offers no conjecture,
but that the etching does not, at any rate, belong to the earlier year
is indicated by the fact that it is signed Rembrandt in full, while all
the certain plates of that year are signed with a monogram, the first to
bear the full name being the "St Jerome" (B. 101) of 1632. A third plate
bearing a date, concerning the interpretation of which the authorities
differ, is the mysterious allegorical one "The Phœnix" (B. 110), Vosmaer
and Wilson making it 1648, M. Michel and Middleton 1658; while a fourth,
"A Sheet of Sketches with a head of Himself" (B. 370), is dated so
indistinctly that it has been read as 1630, 1631, and 1650. As, however,
it is signed with a monogram, it certainly belongs to one of the earlier
years. "The Star of the Kings" (B. 113), a subject from contemporary
life, representing a party of boys carrying a large illuminated star
through the streets of a town at Epiphany, dating either from 1641 or
1652, is the last to be mentioned of the undisputed etchings.


DISPUTED ETCHINGS AND DRAWINGS

At the question of the disputed etchings we have not space even to
glance. It is a delicate and difficult one, and could only be treated to
any advantage at considerable length. It is, furthermore, one of
interest to experts and collectors alone, and so directly opposite in
many cases are their opinions that it is certain no finality can ever be
hoped for. The reader who desires to enter upon this thorny ground must
content himself with pinning his faith finally to one or another
recognised authority, and abiding by his decision; unless, having first
thoroughly studied the undisputed etchings, he is prepared to undertake
the trial and judgment of each for himself, in which case he will,
without doubt, sooner or later find himself differing on one point or
another with every previous writer on the subject.

The less ambitious reader, who wishes only to know and appreciate what
Rembrandt beyond question did do, will be wiser to confine himself to a
study of the undisputed plates. In them he will find ample justification
for the high position to which Rembrandt as an etcher has been elevated
by his successors in the art. Beginning with the early etchings of
himself or the members of his family, often mere drawings on copper,
with little or no appeal to the variety of line and tone obtainable in
etching, he may follow the artist's sure and rapid development, until he
finds him master of every method the art permits. He may trace the
progress of his work, from a first sketch of an idea, dashed off on the
copper in one sitting, to the high perfection of such an elaborate
portrait as that of "Burgomaster Six." He will further perceive, as was
first pointed out by Sir F. Seymour Haden, how during the first ten
years he confined himself almost entirely to pure etching, how during
the following ten he began more and more to supplement his work with
additions in dry-point, and how during the last ten years he to a
considerable extent expressed himself by means of the point alone. He
will, in especial, discover, if he compares Rembrandt's etched work with
that of other masters, and without doing so he can never rightly
understand it, that it is not in technique, masterly as that often is,
so much as in expressiveness that his pre-eminence lies. It is in the
mental qualities more than in the manual, that he so incomparably
excels. Drawing often carelessly, blind or indifferent to superficial
beauties, he, nevertheless, gets straight to the heart of the matter,
grasps the essentials, and feels clearly and records frankly and simply
all that speaks to the fundamental humanity in himself, and must
therefore strike an answering chord in the breasts of his fellow-men. It
is in this perceiving and revealing the true inwardness of the matter,
through and apart from the mere accidents of environment, that he is
unapproachable, far more than in the strength and direction of line,
depth of shadow or brightness of light, application of acid or scraping
of copper. In such a plate as the "Blind Tobit" (B. 42) there is not a
detail of the technique which other men could not have done as well; but
for such another presentment of the hurried, helpless groping for the
door by a blind, weak old man not yet inured to the perpetual darkness
that has fallen on him, we must wait for a second Rembrandt--and the
wait is likely to be long.

Of the drawings I propose to speak very briefly. In the first place,
their name is legion, and to treat them properly would take a volume in
itself, such a volume as we may hope some day to see written. M. Michel
gives a list of nearly nine hundred, which does not pretend to be a full
one. The British Museum alone contains ninety authentic drawings and a
considerable number of more or less doubtful ones. In the second place,
their qualities are such as to appeal almost exclusively to the artist.
Rembrandt's impetuous energy did not lend itself to the production of
the minute and elegant drawings characteristic of so many Italian
masters. He made the drawing for the sake of what it had to tell him,
not for the purpose of creating a thing beautiful in itself. An idea
crossed his mind, or an object struck his eye, and straightway he jotted
it down with whatever came the handiest in the simplest possible manner
consistent with the necessity that the note so made should subsequently
recall to his memory the idea or object.

Most attractive, perhaps, to the amateur, are the numberless little
sketches of landscapes, just the simple everyday scenes that caught his
eye during his daily walks, jotted down on the spot, briefly, but with
extraordinary truth and vivacity, and always with a sense of balance and
proportion, and an intuition of the salient points, transmuted by his
own genius into gems of reticent perfection.




CATALOGUE OF WORKS

ARRANGED ACCORDING TO THE GALLERIES IN WHICH THEY HANG

    _The following abbreviations are used in this list.--S. = signed, C.
    = canvas, P. = panel._

    _Where a number is given, thus_ [No. 6], _it is the number of the
    Catalogue of the Gallery. The dates given must in some cases be
    accepted as approximate only._


  AUSTRIA-HUNGARY

  BUDA-PESTH, ACADEMY.
    =Portrait of an Old Man with a white beard=. S. 1640. P. 28-2/5 ×
      21-4/5. [No. 235.]
    =Repose of the Holy Family=. 1655.

  COLLECTION OF COUNT J. ANDRASSY.
    =Portrait of Himself=. S. 1630. P. 19-3/5 × 15-1/5.

  COLLECTION OF MR GEORGE VON RATH.
    =Mountain Landscape=. S. 1638. P. 22 × 28-3/5.
    =Slaughtered Ox=. S. 1639. P. 21-1/5 × 17-1/5.
    =Portrait of a Woman=. S. 1660. P. 29-2/5 × 20-2/5.

  CRACOW, CZARTORYSKI MUSEUM.
    =Landscape=. S. 1638. P. 17-3/4 × 25-1/4.

  INNSBRUCK, FERDINANDEUM.
    =Head of an Old Man=. S. 1630. P. 8-4/5 × 6-4/5.

  PRAGUE. COUNT NOSTITZ.
    =An Old Man=. S. 1634. C. 58 × 54. [No. 269.]

  TARNOWITZ, GALICIA. COUNT TARNOWSKI.
    =Polish Horseman=. 1655. C. 46 × 53-2/5.

  VIENNA, ACADEMY.
    =Portrait of a Young Woman=. S. 1632. C. 39-1/5 × 28-4/5.

  COUNT KÖNIGSWARTER.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1640. C. 23 × 17-1/2.

  PRINCE LIECHTENSTEIN.
    =Portrait of Saskia=. S. 1632. P. 23-3/5 × 17-3/5.
    =Young Girl at her Toilet=, called the Jewish fiancée. S. 1632.
      C. 43-1/5 × 37-1/5.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1635. C. 36-4/5 × 28-4/5.
    =Portrait of a Man=. S. 1636.
    =Portrait of a Woman=. Companion to above. S. 1636.

  PRINCE LUBOMIRSKI.
    =Study of Rembrandt with his Mouth open=. 1629.
      P. 17-3/5 × 13-1/5.

  FRANZ XAVIER MEYER.
    =A Philosopher reading by Candlelight=. 1627. Copper,
      5-3/5 × 5-3/5. A very doubtful picture.

  IMPERIAL MUSEUM.
    =Portrait of a Man=. 1630. P. 36-2/5 × 28. [No. 1139.]
    =Portrait of a Woman=. P. 36-2/5 × 28. [No. 1140.]
    =St Paul=. 1636. C. 50-2/5 × 44.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt's Mother=. S. 1639. P. 32 × 24-4/5.
      [No. 1141.]
    =Portrait of Himself=. 1658. C. 45-1/5 × 32-2/5. [No. 1142.]
    =Young Man Singing=. 1658. C. 28-2/5 × 28-4/5. [No. 1144.]
    =Portrait of Himself=. S. 1668. P. 20 × 16-2/5. [No. 1143.]

  COUNT SCHÖNBORN-BUCHHEIM.
    =Samson captured by the Philistines=. S. 1636. C. 95-1/5 × 114-4/5.

  A. STRASSER.
    =Study of an Angel=. 1655. P. 10-2/5 × 9-2/5.


  BELGIUM

  ANTWERP, MUSEUM.
    =Portrait of Henry Swalm=, known as "Portrait of a Burgomaster."
      S. 1637. C. 55-3/5 × 43-3/5. [No. 705.]
    =The Young Fisher=. S. 1659. P. 9-1/3 × 7-1/5 [No. 294.]
    =Saskia=. C. 44-4/5 × 33-3/5. [No. 293.]
    =Portrait of an Old Jew=. P. 9-1/3 × 7-3/5. [No. 295.]

  BRUSSELS, DUC D'ARENBERG.
    =Tobias curing his Father's Blindness=.  S. 163--.  P. 19-1/5 ×
      15-3/5.

  COUNT MERODE-WESTERLOO.
    =St Peter repenting in Prison=.  S. 1631.  P. 23-2/5 × 19-1/5.

  MUSEUM.
    =Portrait of a Man=. S. 1641. C. 42 × 33-1/5. [No. 397.]
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. S. 1654. P. 27-3/5 × 28. [No. 397a.]


  BRITISH ISLES

  LONDON. NATIONAL GALLERY.
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. S. 1634. P. 27 × 21. [No. 775.]
    =Portrait of a Man=. S. 1635. C. 30-1/8 × 22-1/2. [No. 850.]
    =Ecce Homo=. Grisaille. 1636. C. 21-3/8 × 17-3/4. [No. 1400.]
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1640. C. 39 × 31-1/2. [No. 672.]
    =The Woman taken in Adultery=. S. 1644. P. 32-1/2 × 25-1/2. [No. 45.]
    =Adoration of the Shepherds=. S. 1646. C. 25 × 22. [No. 47.]
    =A Woman Bathing=. S. 1654. P. 24 × 18-1/4. [No. 54.]
    =Portrait of a Rabbi=. S. 1657(?). C. 30 × 26. [No. 190.]
    =Portrait of an Old Man=. S. 1659. C. 39 × 32-3/4. [No. 243.]
    =Portrait of a Monk=. 1660. C. 34-1/2 × 25-1/2. [No. 166.]
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. 1664. C. 33 × 27-1/2. [No. 221.]
    =Portrait of a Woman=. S. 1666. C. 26-1/4 × 23-1/4. [No. 237.]
    =Portrait of a Jew Merchant=. C. 53 × 41. [No. 51.]
    =Landscape=. P. 22 × 34. [No. 72.]
    =Christ taken down from the Cross=. P. 13 × 11. [No. 43.]
    =Portrait of a Burgomaster=. C. 50-1/2 × 38. [No. 1674.]
    =Portrait of an Old Lady=. C. 50-1/2 × 38. [No. 1675.]

  HERTFORD HOUSE COLLECTION.
    =Portrait of Burgomaster Pellicorne and his Son Caspar=. S. 1632.
      C. 61 × 48.
    =Suzanna van Collen, Wife of Pellicorne, and her Daughter=. S. 1632.
      C. 61 × 48-1/4.
    =The Good Samaritan=. 1632. P. 9-3/4 × 8.
    =Portrait of a Boy=. S. 1633. Copper, 8 × 6-3/4.
    =Portrait of Himself=. S. 1633-1635. P. 26 × 20.
    =Portrait of a Young Negro=, known as the Black Archer. Oval. 1640.
      P. 26 × 20.
    =Landscape=. 1640. P. 18 × 25.
    =Portrait of Himself=. S. 1640. P. 25 × 19-1/4.
    =Portrait of Himself=. 1660. 8-1/2 × 6.
    =Portrait of Titus=. 1658. C. 26-1/2 × 22.
    =The Unmerciful Servant=. 1664. C. 70-1/2 × 86-1/4.

  BUCKINGHAM PALACE.
    =The Shipbuilder and his Wife=. S. 1633. C. 44 × 65. [No. 16.]
    =The Burgomaster Pancras and his Wife=. Called Rembrandt and Saskia.
      S. 1635. C. 60 × 77. [No. 30.]
    =Christ and Mary Magdalene at the Tomb=. S. 1638. P. 23-1/2 × 19-1/2.
      [No. 41.]
    =Portrait of a Lady=. S. 1641. C. 41 × 33. [No. 162.]
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 164--. P. 27 × 23. [No. 174.]
    =The Adoration of the Magi=. S. 1657. P. 48 × 40-1/2. [No. 154.]
    =A Jewish Rabbi=. C. 30 × 38-7/8. [No. 131.]

  HAMPTON COURT.
    =Portrait of a Rabbi=. S. 1635. P. 28 × 24. [No. 381.]

  EDINBURGH. NATIONAL GALLERY.
    =A Young Woman in Bed=. S. 1650. P. 32 × 26-1/2.

  DUBLIN. NATIONAL GALLERY.
    =Portrait of a Young Man=. Said to be Louis van der Linden. 1631.
      P. 27 × 21-1/2.
    =Shepherds reposing at Night=. S. 1647. P. 13-1/2 × 19. [No. 115.]
    =Descent From the Cross=. S. 1650. C. 70 × 77-1/2. Lent by the Duke of
      Abercorn.
    =Portrait of an Old Man=. S. P. 24 × 18. [No. 48.]

  GLASGOW. CORPORATION GALLERIES.
    =The Slaughter-house=. S. 16--. P. 28 × 20. [No. 707.]
    =Tobias and the Angel=. 1654. P. 29-1/2 × 26. [No. 705.]
    =A Man in Armour=. S. 1655. C. 53-1/2 × 40-1/2. [No. 706.]
    =The Painter's Study=. P. 20 × 24. [No. 709.]
    =Jeremiah mourning over the Destruction of Jerusalem=. C. 15-1/2 × 12.
      [No. 714.]
    =Study of an Old Man=. P. 9 × 8. [No. 711.]
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. P. 26 × 20. [No. 710.]

  HUNTERIAN MUSEUM.
    =Entombment=. 1634. P. 12-4/5 × 16.

  CAMBRIDGE. FITZWILLIAM MUSEUM.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1650. C. 54 × 46-2/5. [No. 152.]

  DULWICH COLLEGE.
    =A Young Man=. S. 1632. P. 11-1/4 × 9. [No. 189.]
    =A Young Girl at a Window=. S. 1645. C. 31 × 25. [No. 206.]

  WINDSOR CASTLE.
    =A Young Man=. S. 1631. P. 25 × 19.
    =An Old Woman=, known as the Countess of Desmond.
      1631. P. 23-1/2 × 18.

  ALTHORP PARK. THE EARL SPENCER, K.G.
    =A Boy=, formerly called a portrait of William III. P. 1660.
      C. 24-1/2 × 21.
    =Woman with Flowers=. 1660. C. 38 × 35-1/2.
    =The Circumcision=. P. 1661. C. 21-1/2 × 28-1/2.
    =Rembrandt's Mother=. C. 56 × 39.

  ASHRIDGE PARK. THE EARL BROWNLOW.
    =Portrait of a Jew=. S. 1632. P. 27 × 23.
    =Portrait of a Man=, said to be Peter Cornelius van
      Hooft, the poet. S. 1653. C. 55 × 52-1/2.
    =Isaac and Esau=. P. 22-1/2 × 27.
    =Landscape=. A very doubtful picture. P. 8 × 9-1/2.
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. C. 29-1/2 × 24-1/2.

  BASILDON PARK. CHARLES MORRISON.
    =Portrait of a Young Woman=, called Rembrandt's daughter. S. 1665.
      C. 39-1/2 × 33.

  BELVOIR CASTLE. DUKE OF RUTLAND.
    =A Young Man=. S. 1660. C. 31 × 26-1/2.

  BOWOOD. MARQUESS OF LANSDOWNE.
    =The Mill=. 1654. C. 34 × 40-1/2.

  BRIGHTON. WILLIAM CHAMBERLIN.
    =Portrait of a Man-at-Arms=. S. P. 26 × 20.

  BROOM HALL, DUNFERMLINE. LORD ELGIN.
    =Portrait of Saskia=. S. 1633. P. 26 × 19-1/5.

  CANFORD MANOR, WIMBORNE. LORD WIMBORNE.
    =St Paul=. S. 1658.
    =Portrait of a Man=. 1660.

  CASTLE HOWARD. THE EARL OF CARLISLE.
    =Portrait of a Young Artist drawing=. S. 164--. Life-size. 1648.

  CHATSWORTH. DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE, K.G.
    =Portrait of a Rabbi=. S. 1635. P. 40 × 31-1/2.

  DOWNTON CASTLE. A. R. BOUGHTON KNIGHT.
    =The Cradle=. 1643-1645. P. 24 × 30-1/2.
    =Portrait of a Man=, known as "Rembrandt's Cook." S. 1661. C. 34
      × 29-1/2.
    =The Holy Family=. P. 30 × 25.

  DRAYTON MANOR. SIR ROBERT PEEL.
    =The Finding of Moses=. 1635. C. oval, 18-4/5 × 23-3/5.

  DUNCOMBE PARK. THE EARL OF FEVERSHAM.
    =A Merchant=. S. 1659. C. 45 × 38.

  EDINBURGH. ARTHUR SANDERSON.
    =His Mother in a Hood=. 1630. P. 14-2/5 × 12-1/5.
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. S. 1635. C. 51-3/5 × 39-3/5.

  RICHARD SAUNDERSON (in 1836).
    =Abraham receiving the Angels=.

  GLASGOW. WILLIAM BEATTIE.
    =Study of Himself=. 1629. P. 10-1/5 × 8-3/5.

  GOSFORD HOUSE. EARL OF WEMYSS AND MARCH.
    =A Monk reading=. S. 1660. C. 29 × 24.

  THE GRANGE, ALRESFORD. LORD ASHBURTON.
    =Portrait of a Man=. 1635. P. 30 × 25.
    =Portrait of an Old Man=. 1637. C. 48 × 37-1/2.
    =Portrait of Lieven Willemsz van Coppenol=. About 1650. P. 14 × 11.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. About 1658. C. 30 × 25-1/2.
    =Portrait of a Man=, said to be Cornelius Jansenius. P. 32 × 26.

  GRITTLETON. SIR A. D. NEELD, =Bart.=
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1660. C. 23-1/2 × 20.
    =Portrait of a Burgomaster=. S. P. 15 × 12.

  HINTON ST GEORGE. THE EARL POULETT.
    =Portrait of a Boy=. S. 1628.

  KEDDLESTON HALL. REV. LORD SCARSDALE.
    =Portrait of an Old Man=. S. 1645. C. 34 × 27.

  KNOWSLEY HALL. THE EARL OF DERBY, K.G.
    =The Feast of Belshazzar=. 1636. Doubtful Rembrandt.
      C. 65 × 81-1/2.

  LONDON. W. C. ALEXANDER.
    =Rembrandt's Mother=. 1628. P. 8-3/4 × 6-3/4.
    =The Painter's Sister=. Doubtful. C. 27 × 20-1/2.

  WENTWORTH B. BEAUMONT.
    =The Tribute Money=. S. 1645. C. 25 × 33-1/2.

  ALFRED BEIT.
    =St Francis Praying=. S. 1637. P. 23-1/5 × 18-4/5.
    =Portrait of a Young Man=. 1660. C. 40 × 32-1/2.

  R. B. BERENS.
    =Portrait of the Painter=. An early work. P. 24 × 18

  BRIDGEWATER HOUSE. EARL OF ELLESMERE.
    =A Young Woman=, aged 18. S. 1634. P. 27-1/2 × 21.
    =A Young Woman=. Oval. 1635.
    =Portrait of a Burgomaster=, or, a Minister. S. 1637.
      C. 52 × 38.
    =Hannah hearing the Young Samuel repeat his Prayers=.
      S. 1648. P. 16 × 18.
    =Study of an Old Man=. 1655.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 165--. C. 26-1/2 × 20-3/4.

  MONTAGUE HOUSE. DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH, K.G.
    =Portrait of Saskia=. S. 1633. C. 48-1/2 × 38-1/2.
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. S. 1655. C. 31-1/2 × 26.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1659. C. 31 × 25-1/2.

  BARONESS BURDETT-COUTTS.
    =A Forest Scene=. P. 16 × 14.

  W. C. CARTWRIGHT.
    =Dead Peacocks=. S. 1640. C. 54 × 50-1/2.

  THE EARL OF CRAWFORD, K.G.
    =Portrait of Titus=. S. 1655. C. 29-1/2 × 24-1/2.

  THE EARL OF DERBY, K.G.
    =A Rabbi=. S. 1635. P. 28 × 21.
    =Joseph's Coat=. 1647. C. 48 × 38.

  DEVONSHIRE HOUSE. THE DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE, K.G.
    =An Old Man=. S. 1651. C. 28-1/2 × 25.
    =An Old Man=. S. 1652. C. 43 × 34.

  GEORGE C. W. FITZWILLIAM.
    =Portrait of a Man=. 1632. P. 22-1/2 × 18-1/2.

  F. FLEISCHMANN.
    =Rembrandt's Father=. S. 1631. P. 23 × 19-1/2.

  ALEXANDER HENDERSON.
    =Burgomaster Six=. 1655. C. 36-1/2 × 29.
    =Portrait of his Wife, Margaretha, Daughter of Dr. Tulp=. S. 1655. P.
      36-1/2 × 29.

  CAPTAIN HEYWOOD-LONSDALE.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1635 or 8. P. 25 × 20.

  DORCHESTER HOUSE. CAPTAIN G. L. HOLFORD.
    =Martin Looten=. S. 1632. P. 36 × 29-1/2.
    =A Man with a Sword=. S. 1644. C. 39 × 34.
    =Portrait of a Lady=, incorrectly called the wife of Jan Sylvius.
      1645. C. 49 × 40.
    =Portrait of Titus=. S. 1660. C. 29 × 24-1/2.

  LORD FRANCIS PELHAM HOPE. (Collection sold in 1898.)
    =A Lady and Gentleman=. S. 1633. C. 51 × 42.
    =The Ship of St Peter=. S. 1635. C. 63 × 50.

  THE EARL OF HOPETOUN.
    =Rembrandt's Mother=. Oval. P. 27 × 21.

  R. W. HUDSON.
    =An Old Man=. S. 1635. P. 26-4/5 × 21-3/5.

  THE EARL OF ILCHESTER.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1658. C. 51-1/2 × 40.

  VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM.
    =Abraham dismissing Hagar and Ishmael=. S. 1640. P. 15 × 20-1/2.

  LORD IVEAGH.
    =Portrait of a Woman=. S. 1642. C. 42 × 36.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. 1663. C. 45 × 37-1/2.

  MRS JOSEPH.
    =Portrait of Saskia=. S. 1636. P. 26 × 20-1/2.

  LESSER (1893).
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. S. 1635. C.

  COLONEL LINDSAY (1893).
    =Portrait of a Very Old Woman=. S. 1660. C. 30 × 25-2/5.

  MRS ALFRED MORRISON.
    =Portrait of Dr Bonus=. S. 1642. C. 41 × 30.

  DUKE OF NEWCASTLE.
    =Portrait of an Orator=. C. 37-1/2 × 29-1/2.

  THE EARL OF NORTHBROOK.
    =Landscape=. 1640. P. 8-1/2 × 11.
    =Portrait of an Old Man=. S. 1667. C. 27 × 22-1/2.

  LORD PENRHYN.
    =Portrait of Catrina Hoogh=. S. 1657. C. 49-1/2 × 38-1/2.

  JAMES REISS
    =Landscape=. P. 11-1/2 × 16.

  MRS OWEN ROE.
    =Portrait of a Man=. C. 40 × 33.

  LADY DE ROTHSCHILD.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1656. C. 35 × 28.

  EDWARD H. SCOTT.
    =Rembrandt's Father's Mill=. C. 32-1/2 × 42.

  COLONEL STERLING.
    =Portrait of a Man=. C. 23 × 17.

  STEPHEN TUCKER.
    =The Angel departing from Tobit=. P. 25-1/2 × 19-1/2.

  SIR CHARLES TURNER.
    =Portrait of a Girl=. 1650. P. 8-2/5 × 7-1/5.

  LORD WANTAGE.
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. S. 1661. C. 29-1/2 × 25.

  T. HUMPHRY WARD.
    =An Old Man=. 1630 or 1658. C. 20 × 14-3/4.
    =A Young Man=. S. 1646. C. 28 × 23.
    =The Dismissal of Hagar=. P. 26 × 22-1/2.

  GROSVENOR HOUSE. DUKE OF WESTMINSTER, K.G.
    =The Salutation=. [No. 33.] S. 1640. P. 22 × 18-1/2.
    =Portrait of a Gentleman with a Hawk=. [No. 14.] S. 1643. C. 44
      × 37-1/2.
    =A Lady with a Fan=. [No. 15.] S. 1643. C. 44 × 37-1/2.
    =Portrait of Nicholas Berchem=. [NO. 19.] S. 1647. Cedar panel,
      28-1/2 × 25-1/2.
    =Portrait of his Wife=. [No. 20], the daughter of Jan Wils. S. 1647.
      Cedar panel, 28-1/2 × 25.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. P. 15-1/2 × 11-1/2.
    =Landscape=. [No. 83.] P. 39 × 61.

  HENRY WILLETT.
    =Portrait of a Man=. P. 20 × 17.

  SIR MATTHEW WILSON.
    =Portrait of a Lady=. Oval. P. 27 × 21.

  THE EARL OF YARBOROUGH.
    =Portrait of an Old Lady=. 1637. P. 40-1/2 × 35.

  NEW HALL, BODENHAM. ALFRED BUCKLEY.
    =Sketch of a Man's Head=. P. 9 × 7.

  PANSHANGER. THE EARL COWPER, K.G.
    =Portrait of a Man=. S. 1644. C. 44-1/2 × 42.
    =Portrait of Marshal Turenne=. 1649. C. 113 × 94.
    =Head of a Man=. P. 12-1/2 × 9-1/2.

  PETWORTH. LORD LECONFIELD.
    =Portrait of the Painter's Sister=. S. 1631. P. 25 × 18-1/2.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1632. Oval. P. 25 × 18-1/2.
    =Portrait of a Lady=. S. 1635. C. 49 × 39-1/2.
    =Portrait of a Youth=. S. 1666. C. 29 × 24.
    =Girl with a Rosebud=. S. P. 32 × 25.

  RICHMOND. THE EXECUTORS OF THE LATE SIR FRANCIS COOK.
    =The Painter's Sister=. S. 1632. Oval. P. 27 × 21.
    =Portrait of Alotte Adriaans, Wife of Elias Van Trip=. S. 1639.
      P. 25-1/2 × 22.
    =Tobit and His Wife=.  S. 1650.  P. 16-1/4 × 21-1/4.
    =Study of an Old Man=. P. 13-1/2 × 10-1/2.
    =The Prodigal Son=. S. 1634. A very doubtful picture. C. 51 × 66.

  ROSSIE PRIORY, INCHTURE, PERTHSHIRE. LORD KINNAIRD.
    =Portrait of a Young Woman=. S. 1636.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1661. C. 36 × 30.

  WELBECK ABBEY, NOTTS. DUKE OF PORTLAND.
    =Head of a Boy=. S. 1634. P. 17 × 14.

  WILTON HOUSE. THE EARL OF PEMBROKE.
    =An Old Woman Reading=. S. 1631. C. 29 × 24.

  WOBURN ABBEY. DUKE OF BEDFORD.
    =Portrait of an Old Man=. 1632.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. 1635. C. 34-1/2 × 30-1/2.

  PRESENT OWNERS UNKNOWN.
    =Portrait of a Saint=. S. 1635. C. 43 × 38.
    =Portrait of a Lady=. P. 29-1/2 × 23.
    =Landscape=. C. 14 × 18-1/2.


  DENMARK.

  COPENHAGEN. NEW CARLSBERG GLYPTOTEK.
    =Man Reading=. 1645. C. 24-1/2 × 28.

  COUNT MOLTKE.
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. [NO. 32.] 1654. C.

  COPENHAGEN. MUSEUM.
    =Christ at Emmaus=. [No. 292.] S. 1648. C. 33-1/2 × 42-1/2.
    =Portrait of a Young Man=. [No. 273.] S. 1656. C.
      29 × 25.
    =Portrait of a Young Woman=. [No. 274.] Companion to the last.
      S. 1656. C. 29 × 25.


  FRANCE.

  PARIS. THE LOUVRE.
    =A Philosopher in Meditation=. [No. 2540, Grand Gallery.] S. 1633.
      P. 11-3/5 × 13-1/5.
    =A Philosopher in Meditation=. [No. 2541, Grand Gallery.] 1633.
      P. 11-1/5 × 9-1/5.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. [No. 2552, Salle XV.] S. 1633. C. 23-1/5
      × 18.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. [No. 2553, Grand Gallery.] S. 1634. P.
      27-1/5 × 21-1/5.
    =The Angel Raphael leaving Tobit=. [No. 2536, Grand Gallery.] S. 1637.
      P. 27-1/5 × 20-4/5.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. [No. 2554, Grand Gallery.] S. 1637. P. 32
      × 24-4/5.
    =Portrait of an Old Man=. [No. 2544, Grand Gallery.] S. 1638. Oval.
      P. 36 × 22-2/5.
    =The Carpenter's Home=. [No. 2542, Salon Carré.] S. 1640. P. 16-2/5
      × 13-3/5.
    =A Woman Bathing=. [No. 2550, Salle Lacaze.] 1647. P. 24-4/5 × 19-1/5.
    =Christ at Emmaus=. [No. 2539, Salon Carré.] S. 1648. P. 27-1/5 × 26.
    =The Good Samaritan=. [No. 2537, Grand Gallery.] S. 1648. P. 45-3/5
      × 54.
    =Portrait of a Man=. [No. 2551, Salle Lacaze.] S. 1651. C. 33-1/5 ×
      26-2/5.
    =Portrait of Hendrickje Stoffels=. [No. 2547, Salon Carré.] P. about
      1652. C. 28-4/5 × 24.
    =Bathsheba, or a Woman bathing=. [No. 2549, Salle Lacaze.] S. 1654.
      C. 56-4/5 × 56-4/5.
    =Portrait of a Man=. [No. 2546, Grand Gallery.] 1655. P. 10-2/5 ×
      7-3/5.
    =The Slaughter-house=. [No. 2548, Grand Gallery.] S. 1655. P. 37-3/5
      × 27-3/5.
    =Portrait of a Young Man=. [No. 2545, Salon Carré.] S. 1658. C. 29-1/5
      × 24-2/5.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. [No. 2555, Salon Carré.] S. 1660. C. 44-2/5
      × 34.
    =Saint Matthew=. [No. 2538, Grand Gallery.] S. 1661. C. 38-2/5 ×
      32-2/5.
    =Venus and Cupid=. [No. 2543, Grand Gallery.] 1661. C. 44 × 35-1/5.

  ÉPINAL. MUSEUM.
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. [No. 101.] S. 1661. C. 45-3/5 × 32.

  NANTES. MUSEUM.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt's Father=. [No. 522, attributed to van Vliet.]
      1628. P. 7 × 5-2/5.

  PARIS. MME. ANDRÉ-JACQUEMART.
    =Christ at Emmaus=. S. R.H. 1629. Paper on panel 15-3/5 × 16-4/5.
    =Portrait of Lysbeth van Rijn=. S. 1632. C. 26 × 20-2/5.
    =Portrait of Arnold Tholinx=. S. 1656. C. 30-2/5 × 25-1/5.

  LÉON BONNAT.
    =Petitioners To a Biblical King=. 1633. P. 11-2/5 × 10-3/5.
    =Jean Six at a Window=. Very doubtful. P. 10 × 8.
    =Figure of Susannah=. Oval. 1647. P. 8-4/5 × 7.
    =Tasters in a Cellar=. 1650. P. 19-4/5 × 25-1/5.
    =Portrait of an Old Man=. 1650. P. 22 × 17-3/5.
    =Portrait of a Rabbi=. 1655. P. 8-7/25 × 9-39/50.
    =Head of an Old Man=. 1660. P. 10 × 8-4/5.

  MARQUIS BONI DE CASTELLANE.
    =Portrait of Nicholas Ruts=. S. 1631. P. 46 × 34-1/2.

  PRINCE DE CHALAIS.
    =Portrait of a Man=.

  LÉON GAUCHEZ.
    =Lucretia=. S. 1664. C. 46-2/5 × 39-1/5.

  LEOPOLD GOLDSCHMIDT.
    =Portrait of a Woman=. Called Rembrandt's cook. 1655. C. 29-4/5
      × 24-3/5.

  HARJES.
    =Old Man With a White Beard=. C. 25-1/5 × 23-1/5.

  BARONESS HIRSCH-GEREUTH (THE LATE).
    =Portrait of his Sister, or Saskia=. Oval. S. 1633. P. 23 × 17-3/5.

  MAURICE KANN.
    =Head of Christ=. 1660. C. 18-3/5 × 14-4/5.
    =A Man in a Red Cloak=. S. 1659. P. 15-2/5 × 12-2/5.
    =Portrait of a Man=. P. between 1666 and 1668. C. 36-2/5 × 29-4/5.

  RODOLPHE KANN.
    =Head of Christ=. 1652. P. 10-2/5 × 8.
    =Portrait of Titus=. S. 1655. C. 31-3/5 × 23-3/5.
    =Portrait of a Rabbi=. 1655. P. 10 × 7-4/5.
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. S. 1657. P. 8-4/5 × 7-1/5.
    =Old Woman cutting her Nails=. S. 1658. C. 50-2/5 × 40.
    =Portrait of a Young Woman=. 1668. C. 37-1/5 × 29-1/5.

  MME. LACROIX.
    =Landscape, with Swans=. 1645. C. 25-3/5 × 17-1/5.

  ALBERT LEHMANN.
    =Zachariah receiving the Prophecy of the Birth of John the Baptist=.
      S. 1632. P. 22-2/5 × 19-1/5.

  PAUL MATHEY.
    =Head of an Old Man=. P. 20 × 24.

  HENRY PEREIRE.
    =Portrait of a Man=. S. 1632. P. 24 × 18-4/5.
    =Portrait of Cornelia Pronck=. Wife of the man. S. 1633. P. 24 ×
      18-4/5.

  JULES PORGÈS.
    =The Good Samaritan=. S. 1639. C. 38-1/5 × 50.
    =Portrait of a Rabbi=. S. 1642. P. 30 × 24-2/5.
    =An Old Woman meditating over a Book=. 1649. C. 39-1/5 × 31-1/5.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt's Brother=. 1650. P. 22-2/5 × 17-1/5.
    =Portrait of a Woman holding a Book=. 1650. P. 22-2/5 × 17-1/5.

  COUNTESS EDMOND DE POURTALÈS.
    =Portrait of a Young Man rising from a Chair=. S. 1633. C. 50 × 40.

  BARON ALPHONSE DE ROTHSCHILD.
    =Portrait of an Old Woman=. S. 1632. P. 30-3/5 × 23.

  BARON GUSTAVE DE ROTHSCHILD.
    =Portrait of Martin Daey=. S. 1634. C. 82-4/5 × 52-4/5.
    =Portrait of Machteld van Doorn, Wife of Martin Daey=. C. 82-4/5
      × 52-4/5.
    =The Standard-Bearer=. S. 1636. C. 50 × 42.

  BARONESS NATHANIEL DE ROTHSCHILD.
    =Portrait of a Boy=. S. 1633. P. 17-3/5 × 13-1/5.

  BARON N. DE ROTHSCHILD.
    =Portrait of Anthoni Copal=. S. 1635. P. 33-1/5 × 26-4/5.

  DURAND RUEL.
    =David playing before Saul=. 1663. C. 52-1/5 × 65-3/5.

  BARON ARTHUR DE SCHICKLER.
    =Judas with the Price of the Betrayal=. 1629. C. 31-3/5 × 41-1/5.

  A. SCHLOSS.
    =Portrait of Saskia=. Oval. 1634. P. 26-4/5 × 21.
    =Old Man=. S. 1643. P. 10 × 7-3/5.

  HENRI SCHNEIDER.
    =Hans Alenson=. S. 1634. C. 71-1/5 × 52-4/5.
    =The Wife of Alenson=. S. 1634. C. 71-1/5 × 52-4/5.

  CHARLES SEDELMEYER.
    =Pilate washing his Hands=. 1656. C. 51-1/5 × 72.

  CHARLES WALTNER.
    =An Old Rabbi=. 1654-56. C. 32-4/5 × 26.

  E. WARNECK.
    =Diana bathing=. 1631. P. 7-1/5 × 6-4/5.
    =Rembrandt laughing=. S. 1633. P. 8-1/5 × 7.
    =Study of a Rabbi=. 1650 To 1655. P. 8-4/5 × 7-2/5.
    =Study of a Young Boy=. 1654. P. 9-1/5 × 7-4/5.

  DR MELVIL WASSERMANN.
    =Study of his Father=. 1630. P. 11-2/5 × 9-1/5.
    =Portrait of an Old Man=. 1633. P. 10-2/5 × 8-2/5.

  ROUEN. M. DUTUIT.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1631. P. 32-2/5 × 21-3/5.

  TOURS. MUSEUM.
    =Portrait of His Father=. [No. 437.] A copy of the one in the Museum
      at Nantes. 1628. P. 6 × 4.


  GERMANY.

  BERLIN GALLERY. ROYAL MUSEUM.
    =The Money-Changer=. [No. 828 D.] S. 1627. P. 12-1/5 × 16-4/5.
    =Judith=, or =Minerva=. [No. 828 C.] 1631. P. 23-3/5 × 19-1/5.
    =The Rape of Proserpina=. [No. 823.] 1632. P. 33-1/5 × 31-1/5.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 810.] S. 1634. P. 22-4/5 × 18-4/5.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 808.] 1634. P. 22 × 18-2/5.
    =Samson threatening his Father-in-law= [No. 802], formerly called The
      Duke of Gueldres. S. 1635. C. 62-2/5 × 51-3/5.
    =Portrait of the Minister Anslo consoling a Widow=. S. 1641.
      C. 73-3/5 × 89-3/5.
    =Portrait of Saskia=. [No. 812.] S. 1643. P. 28-4/5 × 23-1/5.
    =Portrait of a Rabbi=. [No. 828 A.] S. 1645. C. 44 × 32-4/5.
    =The Wife of Tobias with the Goat=. [No. 805.] S. 1645. P. 8 × 10-4/5.
    =Joseph's Dream=. [No. 806.] S. 1645. P. 8 × 10-4/5.
    =Susannah and the Elders=. [No. 828 E.] S. 1647. P. 30-2/5 × 36-2/5.
    =Daniel's Vision=. [No. 828 F.] 1650. C. 38-2/5 × 46-2/5.
    =Joseph accused by Potiphar's Wife=. [No. 828 H.] S. 1655. C. 41-1/2
      × 34.
    =Study of an Old Man=. [No. 828 J.] 1655. C. 20-2/5 × 14-4/5.
    =John the Baptist preaching=. [No. 828 K.] S. 1656. C. 25 × 31.
    =Jacob Wrestling with the Angel=. [No. 828.] S. 1659. C. 54-4/5 ×
      46-2/5.
    =Moses breaking the Tables of the Law=. [No. 811.] S. 1659. C. 66-4/5
      × 54.
    =Portrait of Hendrickje Stoffels=. [No. 828 B.] 1662. C. 34-4/5 × 26.

  ALTFRANKEN. COUNT LUCKNER.
    =Portrait of Saskia=. S. 1635. P. 39-1/5 × 28.

  ANHOLT. PRINCE OF SALM-SALM.
    =Diana, Actæon, and Callisto=. S. 1635. C. 28-4/5 × 38.

  ASCHAFFENBOURG. ROYAL MUSEUM.
    =The Risen Christ=. S. 1661. C. 32 × 25-1/5.

  BERLIN. VON CARSTANGEN.
    =Portrait of J. C. Sylvius=. S. 1645. C. 52 × 44.
    =Christ at the Column=. 1646. P. 13-3/5 × 11-1/5.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1665. C. 32-4/5 × 25-1/5.

  EMPEROR FREDERICK MUSEUM.
    =Rembrandt's Brother=. 1650. C. 26-4/5 × 20-3/5.

  CARL HOLLITSCHER.
    =St Paul in Meditation=. 1635. C. 47-1/5 × 38.
    =Christ on the Cross=. 1648. P. 14 × 9-3/5.

  ROBERT VON MENDELSSOHN.
    =Rembrandt=. S. 1651. P. 26-2/5 × 21-1/5.

  SANS-SOUCI.
    =The Capture of Samson=. S. 1628. P. 24 × 19-3/5.

  JAMES SIMON.
    =Portrait of a Young Girl=. S. 1634. P. 17-3/5 × 14-2/5.

  BONN. PROFESSOR G. MARTIUS.
    =An Old Woman=. 1640. P. 27-1/5 × 22-1/5.

  BRUNSWICK. GRAND DUCAL MUSEUM.
    =An Unknown Man=. [No. 232.] 1631. P. 25-2/5 × 19-1/5.
    =Portrait of a Woman=. [No. 233.] S. 1633. P. 25-2/5 × 19-1/5.
    =Portrait of a Man=. [No. 237.] S. 1638. P. 32-4/5 × 27.
    =Stormy Landscape=. [No. 236.] S. 1640. P. 20-4/5 × 28-4/5.
    =Noli Me Tangere=. [No. 235.] S. 1651. C. 26 × 31-3/5.
    =Portrait of a Family=. [No. 238] S. 1668. C. 50-2/5 × 66-3/5.

  CARLSRUHE. GRAND DUCAL MUSEUM.
    =Portrait of Himself=. [No. 238.] S. 1645. P. 29-3/5 × 23-3/5.

  CASSEL. MUSEUM.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 208.] 1627. P. 8 × 6-2/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 209.] S. 1630. P. 26-2/5 × 22-2/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 210.] S. 1632. P. 20 × 15-3/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 211.] S. 1632. P. 23-3/5 × 19-3/5.
    =Portrait=, said to be Coppenol. [No. 212.] S. 1632. C. 40 × 31-1/5.
    =Jan Herman Krul=. [No. 213.] S. 1633. C. 49-1/5 × 37-3/5.
    =Saskia=. [No. 214.] 1634. P. 39-1/5 × 30-4/5.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 215.] S. 1634. P. 31-3/5 × 25-3/5.
    =A Young Woman=. [No. 216.] 1635. P. 28-4/5 × 23-3/5.
    =A Man=. [No. 217.] S. 1639. C. 79-1/5 × 48-2/5.
    =Holy Family=. [No. 218.] Called "The Woodchopper." S. 1646. P. 18
      × 26-4/5.
    =A Winter Landscape=. [No. 219.] S. 1646. P. 6-2/5 × 8-4/5.
    =The Ruin=. [No. 220.] S. 1650. P. 26-2/5 × 34-2/5.
    =Portrait of Bruyningh=. [No. 221.] S. 1652. C. 42 × 36.
    =Man in Armour=, known as "The Watch." [No. 223.] S. 1655. C. 45-1/5
      × 36.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 226.] 1655. P. 8 × 6.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 225.] 1657. P. 8 × 6-2/3.
    =An Architect, or Geometrician=. [No. 224.] 1656. C. 48 × 36.
    =Jacob Blessing Joseph's Sons=. [No. 227.] S. 1656. C. 69-3/5 × 80.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. [No. 222.] S. 1659. C. 29-1/5 × 23-3/5.

  COLOGNE. BARON A. VON OPPENHEIM.
    =A Young Girl=. 1655. P. 8-2/5 × 7.

  DARMSTADT. GRAND-DUCAL GALLERY.
    =The Flagellation=. [No. 347.] S. 1668. C. 37-3/5 × 29-1/5.

  DRESDEN. ROYAL GALLERY.
    =Saskia=. [No. 1556.] S. 1633. P. 21 × 17-3/5.
    =A Man=. [No. 1557.] Willem Burchgraeff. [No. 182.] S. 1633. P. 27
      × 21.
    =The Capture of Ganymede=. [No. 1558.] S. 1635. C. 68-3/5 × 52.
    =Rembrandt and Saskia=. [No. 1559.] S. 1635. C. 64 × 52-4/5.
    =The Marriage of Samson=. [No. 1560.] S. 1638. C. 50-2/5 × 70-2/5.
    =The Man with the Bittern=. [No. 1661.] S. 1639. P. 48-2/5 × 35-3/5.
    =Saskia holding a Pink=. [No. 1562.] S. 1641. P. 39-1/5 × 32-4/5.
    =The Sacrifice of Manoah=. [No. 1563.] S. 1641. C. 96-2/5 × 114.
    =Old Woman weighing Gold=. [No. 1564.] C. 44-4/5 × 39-3/5.
    =A Young Man=. [No. 1565.] S. 1643. C. 30-4/5 × 26-4/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 1571.] 1645. C. 37-3/5 × 30-4/5.
    =The Entombment=. [No. 1566.] S. 1653. C. 38-4/5 × 27-3/5.
    =An Old Man with a Beard=. [No. 1567.] S. 1654. P. 40 × 30-4/5.
    =Portrait of a Man=. [No. 1568.] 1656. C. 35-4/5 × 27-2/5.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 1569.] S. 1657. C. 34-1/5 × 26.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 1570.] 1666. C. 32-4/5 × 28-2/5.

  ELBERFELD. KARL VON DER HEYDT.
    =The Denial of St Peter=. S. 1628. Copper, 8-4/5 × 6-4/5.
    =A Lady=. S. 1635. P. 30-4/5 × 25-3/5.

  FRANKFORT. STÆDEL ART INSTITUTE.
    =David playing before Saul=. [No. 183.] P. 24-4/5 × 20.
    =Portrait of Margaretha van Bilderbeecq=. [No. 182.] Oval. S. 1633.
      P. 26-4/5 × 22-2/5.
    =Parable of the Labourers in the Vineyard=. [No. 181.] S. 1656. C.
      61-1/5 × 54-4/5.

  GOTHA. MUSEUM.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 181.] S. 1629. P. 7-1/5 × 5-3/5.

  HAMBURG. KUNST-HALLE.
    =Maurice Huygens=. S. 1632. C. 52 × 44.

  CONSUL WEBER.
    =Presentation in the Temple=. S. 1630. P. 22 × 17-3/5.
    =The Woman taken in Adultery=. 1644. C. 45-3/5 × 54.
    =A Pilgrim at Prayer=. S. 1661. C. 36 × 31-1/5.

  LEIPZIG. JULIUS O. GOTTCHALD.
    =Study of an Old Man=. 1630. P. 8-1/5 × 6-4/5.

  MUSEUM.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 347.] 1654. P. 10-2/5 × 8-2/5.

  ALFRED THIEME.
    =The Good Samaritan=. 1640. C. 12-2/5 × 15.
    =Portrait called the Constable of Bourbon=. S. 1644. C. 36-2/5 ×
      29-3/5.

  METZ. MUSEUM.
    =An Old Man=. S. 1633. P. 23-3/5 × 17-3/5.

  MUNICH. ROYAL GALLERY.
    =Holy Family=. [No. 324.] S. 1631. C. 77-1/5 × 52.
    =Portrait of a Turk=. [No. 325.] S. 1633. P. 33-3/5 × 25-1/5.
    =The Descent from the Cross=. [No. 326.] S. 1633. P. 35-3/5 × 26.
    =The Elevation of the Cross=. [No. 327.] 1633. C. 38-2/5 × 28-4/5.
    =The Ascension=. [No. 328.] S. 1636. C. 36-4/5 × 26-4/5.
    =The Entombment=. [No. 330.] 1638. C. 37-1/5 × 27-3/5.
    =The Resurrection=. [No. 329.] S. 1639. C. 37-3/5 × 28.
    =The Adoration of the Shepherds=. [No. 331.] S. 1646. C. 38-4/5 ×
      28-4/5.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 333.] S. 1654. P. 32-4/5 × 26-4/5.

  DR MARTIN SCHUBART.
    =An Old Man=. 1632. P. 25 × 18-3/5.

  NORDKIRCHEN. COUNT ESTERHAZY.
    =A Young Man=. S. 1629.

  NUREMBERG. MUSEUM.
    =Rembrandt= [No. 298], in armour. S. 1629. P. 15-3/5 × 12-4/5.
    =Saint Paul=. 1629.

  OLDENBURG. AUGUSTEUM.
    =The Prophetess Anna=, or the painter's mother. [No. 166.] S. 1631.
      C. 24 × 19-1/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 167.] S. 1632. C. 26-3/5 × 20-2/5.
    =Landscape=. [No. 169.] 1645. P. 11-3/5 × 16.

  POSEN. COUNT EDWARD RACZYNSKI.
    =Christ=. S. 1661. C. 39 × 32-3/5.

  SCHWERIN. GRAND DUCAL MUSEUM.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 854.] S. 1630. P. 27-1/5 × 20-4/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 855.] 1656. C. 22-4/5 × 18-4/5.

  STRASBURG. MUSEUM.
    =An Old Man=, holding a scroll. 1650. C. 24-2/5 × 18-2/5.

  STUTTGART. MUSEUM.
    =St Paul in Prison=. [No. 225.] S. 1627. P. 28 × 23-1/5.

  WEIMAR. GRAND DUKE OF SAXE-WEIMAR.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. S. 1643. C. 24-2/5 × 19-1/5.


  HOLLAND.

  THE HAGUE. MAURITSHUIS, ROYAL MUSEUM.
    =Rembrandt's Mother=. [No. 556, Room XIV.] 1628. P. 7 × 5.
    =Rembrandt's Father=. [No. 565, Room XIV.] 1628. P. 18-4/5 × 15-3/5.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 148, Room XIV.] 1629. P. 14-4/5 × 11-3/5.
    =A Man Laughing=. [No. 598, Room XIV.] 1630. P. 6 × 4-4/5.
    =A Young Girl=. [No. 577, Room XIV.] S. 1630. P. 22 × 18.
    =The Presentation in the Temple=. [No. 145, Room XIV.] S. 1631. P.
      24 × 19-1/5.
    =The Anatomy Lesson of Professor Pieterszoon Tulp=. [No. 146, Room
      XIII.] S. 1632. C. 64-4/5 × 86-2/5.
    =Rembrandt As an Officer=. [No. 149, Room XIV.] S. 1634. P. 24-4/5
      × 18-4/5.
    =The Flight Into Egypt=. [No. 579, Room XIV.] S. 1636. P. 15-1/5 ×
      14.
    =A Woman at Her Toilet=. [No. 552, Room XIV.] S. 1637. P. 29 × 25.
    =Susannah at the Bath=. [No. 147, Room XIV.] S. 1637. P. 18-4/5 ×
      15-3/5.
    =Portrait Believed To Be Rembrandt's Brother Adriaen=. [No. 560,
      Room XIV.] S. 1650. C. 31-1/5 × 26-2/5.
    =Homer Reciting His Poems=. [No. 584, Room XIV.] S. 1663. C. 43-1/5
      × 32-4/5.

  AMSTERDAM. RYKSMUSEUM.
    =Rembrandt's Father=. [No. 1248.] 1629. C. 21-3/5 × 18-2/5.
    =A Young Lady, Known As the Lady of Utrecht=. S. 1639. P. 42-2/5 ×
      32-2/5.
    =Elizabeth Bas [No. 1249], Widow of Admiral Swartenhout=. 1640. C.
      46-2/5 × 35-1/5.
    =The Sortie of the Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq= [No.
      1246], Called "the Night Watch." S. 1642. C. 143-3/5 × 174.
    =Mythological Subject=. [No. 1251.] 1650. C. 34 × 26-4/5.
    =The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Johannes Deyman=. [No. 1250.] S. 1656. C.
      40 × 52-4/5.
    =The Syndics of the Drapers=. [No. 1247.] S. 1661. C. 74 × 109-3/5.
    =The Jewish Bride=. [No. 1252.] S. 1665. C. 47-1/5 × 65-3/5.

  DR C. HOFSTEDE DE GROOT.
    =Rembrandt's Sister=. 1630. P. 5-1/4 × 3-3/4.

  SIX COLLECTION.
    =Joseph Interpreting His Dreams=. S. 1630. Cardboard, 20 × 15-1/5.
    =Anna Vymer=. S. 1641. P. 40 × 32.
    =Portrait of Ephraim Bonus=. 1647. P. 7-3/5 × 6.
    =Burgomaster Six=. 1660. C. 44 × 40.

  THE HAGUE. DR BREDIUS.
    =A Woman Praying=. 1654. P. 7-3/4 × 6.

  PRINCE HENRI DES PAYS-BAS.
    =Rembrandt=. S. 1643. C. 24-2/3 × 19-1/5.

  D. F. SCHEURLEER.
    =Head of a Boy=. 1629. 10-2/5 × 8-1/5.

  STEENGRACHT COLLECTION.
    =The Toilet of Bathsheba=. S. 1643. P. 20-4/5 × 30-2/5.

  LEEUWARDEN. BARON VAN HARINXMA THOE SLOOTEN.
    =Portrait of an Old Man=. S. 1644. P. 9-2/5 × 8-1/5.

  ROTTERDAM. BOYMANS MUSEUM.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt's Father=. [No. 237, Room B.] S. 1630. Oval.
      P. 29-1/5 × 22-2/5.
    =The Peace of the Country=. [No. 238, Room D.] S. 1640. P. 29-3/5
      × 40.


  ITALY.

  FLORENCE. PITTI PALACE.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 60, Room 5.] 1635. C. 24-4/5 × 20-4/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 16, Room 6.] S. 1658. C. 40-4/5 × 33-1/5.

  UFFIZI.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. [No. 451, Room 13.] 1655. C. 28-4/5 × 23-1/5.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. [No. 452, Room 13.] 1666. C. 28-4/5 × 23-1/5.

  SIGNOR FABRI.
    =Study of an Old Man=. P. 23-3/5 × 18-4/5.

  MILAN. BRERA.
    =A Woman=. [No. 449.] S. 1632. P. 22 × 19-1/5.


  ROUMANIA.

  SINAIA. THE KING OF ROUMANIA.
    =Esther, Haman, and Ahasuerus=. 1668. C. 94 × 76.


  RUSSIA.

  ST PETERSBURG. THE HERMITAGE.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt's Father=. [No. 814.] S. 1630. P. 14-2/5 ×
      10-2/5.
    =Portrait of a Man=. [No. 808.] S. 1631. C. 45-1/5 × 36-4/5.
    =The Descent From the Cross=. [No. 800.] S. 1634. C. 63-1/5 × 46-4/5.
    =The Incredulity of St Thomas=. [No. 801.] S. 1634. P. 22 × 20-2/5.
    =The Jewish Bride=. [No. 812.] S. 1634. C. 50 × 40-2/5.
    =A Young Man= [No. 828]. S. 1634. P. 28 × 20-4/5.
    =The Sacrifice of Isaac=. [No. 792.] S. 1635. C. 77-1/5 × 53-1/5.
    =Portrait of an Oriental=. [No. 813.] S. 1636. C. 39-3/5 × 30-2/5.
    =Danae=. [No. 892.] S. 1636. C. 74 × 82.
    =Portrait of a Man, called Sobieski=. [No. 811.] S. 1637. P. 38-4/5
      × 26-3/5.
    =The Parable of the Master of the Vineyard=. [No. 798.] S. 1637. P.
      12-2/5 × 16-4/5.
    =An Old Woman=. [No. 829.] S. 1643. P. 30-2/5 × 22-2/5.
    =The Reconciliation of David and Absalom=. [No.  1777.] S. 1642. P.
      30 × 24-3/5.
    =Rembrandt's Mother=. [No. 807.] S. 1643. P. 31-3/5 × 24-2/5.
    =The Holy Family=. [No. 796.] S. 1645. C. 46-4/5 × 36-2/5.
    =Portrait of a Man, erroneously called Manasseh Ben Israel=. [No.
      820.] S. 1645. C. 51-3/5 × 44-4/5.
    =Abraham Receiving the Angels=. [No. 791.] 1650. C. 48-3/5 × 65.
    =The Sons of Jacob showing him Joseph's Coat=. [No. 793.] S. 1650.
      C. 61-4/5 × 67-1/5.
    =The Disgrace of Haman=. [No. 795.] S. 1650. C. 50-4/5 × 46-4/5.
    =Pallas=. [No. 809.] 1650. C. 46-4/5 × 36-2/5.
    =Hannah Teaching the Infant Samuel to Read=. [No. 822.] S. 1650. C.
      46-4/5 × 37-3/5.
    =Girl with a Broom=. [No. 826.] S. 1651. C. 43-3/5 × 36-4/5.
    =An Old Woman=. [No. 804.] 1654. C. 53-1/5 × 42-4/5.
    =An Old Woman=. [No. 805.] S. 1654. C. 43-3/5 × 33-3/5.
    =An Old Woman=. [No. 806.] S. 1654. C. 29-3/5 × 25-1/5.
    =An Old Jew=. [No. 810.] S. 1654. C. 43-3/5 × 33-3/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 818.] 1654. C. 43-1/5 × 34-2/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 823.] S. 1654. C. 35-1/5 × 28-4/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 824.] S. 1654. C. 29-3/5 × 25-1/5.
    =Joseph Accused by Potiphar's Wife=. [No. 794.] S. 1655. C. 42 ×
      38-4/5.
    =St Peter's Denial=. [No. 799.] S. 1656. C. 61-1/5 × 67-1/5.
    =A Young Woman=. [No. 819.] S. 1656. C. 40-4/5 × 34-4/5.
    =Young Woman trying on an Earring=. [No. 817.] S. 1657. P. 16 ×
      14-1/5.
    =A Young Man=. [No. 825.] 1660. C. 28-4/5 × 22-2/5.
    =Portrait of a Man=. [No. 821.] S. 1661. C. 28-2/5 × 24-2/5.
    =Portrait of Jeremias de Decker, the Poet=. [No. 827.] S. 1666. P.
      28-2/5 × 22-2/5.
    =The Prodigal Son=. [No. 797.] 1669. C. 104-4/5 × 100.
    =An Old Jew=. [No. 815.] S. P. 20-2/5 × 16-4/5.

  PRINCE JOUSOUPOFF.
    =Head of a Young Boy=. S. 1633. P. 7-22/25 × 6-17/25.
    =Susannah and the Elders=. S. 1637.
    =A Young Man=. 1660. C. 32-4/5 × 39-1/5.
    =A Lady With an Ostrich Feather=. 1660. C. 33 × 39-3/5.

  PRINCE OF LEUCHTEMBERG.
    =Rembrandt=. [No. 108]. 1643. P. 30 × 24-4/5.

  COUNT A. W. ORLOFF-DAVIDOFF.
    =Christ=. 1660. C. 43-19/25 × 38-4/5.

  COUNT S. STROGANOFF.
    =A Philosopher in Meditation=. S. 1630. P. 23-2/5 × 18-23/50
    =A Young Monk=. S. 1660. C. 32-2/5 × 26-4/5.


  SPAIN.

  MADRID. PRADO.
    =Queen Artemisia receiving the Ashes of Mausolus=. [No. 1544.]
      Otherwise Known As Cleopatra at her toilet. S. 1634. C. 56-4/5 ×
      61-1/5.


  SWEDEN.

  STOCKHOLM. ROYAL MUSEUM.
    =A Young Girl=. [No. 591.] 1630. P. 23-3/5 × 24-4/5.
    =St Anastasius=. [No. 579.] S. 1631. P. 24 × 19-1/5.
    =Saskia=. [No. 583.] S. 1632. C. 28-4/5 × 21-3/5.
    =Study of an Old Man as St Peter=. [No. 1349.] S. 1632. C. 32-4/5
      × 24-4/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 585.] S. 1633.
    =The Young Servant=. S. 1654. C. 31-1/5 × 25-1/5.
    =An Old Man=. [No. 581.] S. 1655. C. 35-3/5 × 29-1/5.
    =An Old Woman=. [No. 582.] S. 1655. C. 35-3/5 × 29-1/5.
    =The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis=. [No. 578.] 1661. C. 78-2/5
      × 123-3/5.

  VANAS. COUNT AXEL DE WACHTMEISTER.
    =A Young Man=. S. 1632. P. 25-1/10 × 18-2/5.
    =A Young Man=. 1643. C. 42 × 36.


  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.

  CHICAGO. ARMOUR.
    =Portrait of a Man=. S. 1643. C. 33-3/5 × 26-4/5.

  P. C. HANFORD.
    =An Accountant by a Table=. C. 40-4/5 × 32.

  NEW YORK. W. H. BEERS.
    =Rembrandt's Father=. 1632. C. 30 × 24-4/5.

  ROBERT W. DE FOREST.
    =Head of a Young Man=. 25-1/2 × 19-1/2.

  H. O. HAVEMEYER.
    =Portrait of Christian Paul van Beersteyn=, Burgomaster of Delft. S.
      1632.
    =Portrait of Volkera Nicolai Knobbert=, wife of Beersteyn. S. 1632.
    =Portrait of Paulus Doomer=, called "The Gilder." S. 1640. P. 29-1/5
      × 21-3/5.
    =A Woman=, aged 87. S. 1640 or 1646. C. 27-3/5 × 24.

  ROBERT HOE.
    =Young Gipsy holding a Medallion=. 1650. C.

  MORRIS K. JESSUP.
    =Portrait of a Young Man=, erroneously called Six.
    =Portrait of his Wife=.

  METROPOLITAN MUSEUM.
    =A Man=. [no. 277.] 1640. C. 30-3/4 × 24-3/4.
    =An Old Man=. [no. 274.] S. 1665. C. 27-5/8 × 24-3/8.
    =The Mills=. [no. 276.] C. 21-1/2 × 26-1/4.
    =The Adoration of the Shepherds=. [No. 278.] P. 24-3/8 × 20-7/16.

  J. PIERPONT MORGAN.
    =Portrait of Rembrandt=. C. 43-1/2 × 33-1/2.

  R. MORTIMER.
    =Portrait of a Young Man putting on His Armour=. 1634. C. 40-2/5
      × 33-3/5.

  W. SCHAUS.
    =Portrait of an Admiral=, erroneously called "Van Tromp." 1658. P.
      36 × 29-3/4.

  CHARLES STEWART SMITH.
    =St John=. Oval. S. 1632. P. 25 × 19.

  C. T. YERKES.
    =The Raising of Lazarus=. 1628. P. 16-4/5 × 14.
    =Joris de Caulery=. S. 1632.
    =Portrait of a Rabbi=. 1635. P. 25 × 20-4/5.
    =Philemon and Baucis=. S. 1658. P. 21-3/5 × 27-3/5.

  PHILADELPHIA. P. A. B. WIDENER.
    =Portrait of Saskia=. 1633. P. 23-3/5 × 18-1/5.

  PITTSBURGH. A. M. BYERS.
    =Portrait of Saskia=. S. 1636. P. 31-2/5 × 26-2/5.

  SAN FRANCISCO. WILLIAM H. CROCKER.
    =Portrait of a Young Boy=. P. 16-2/5 × 14.

  UNKNOWN OWNERS.
    =A Young Man, Called Tulp=. S. 1634. P. 28-4/5 × 20-2/5.
    =Portrait of a Young Woman=. S. 1634. P. 28-4/5 × 20-2/5.
    =A Man=, called Matthys Kalkoen. S. 1632. C. 44-4/5 × 36.
    =Portrait of Saskia=. S. 1634.
    =Portrait called "The Dutch Admiral."= S. 1643.
    =Portrait of a Lady=. S. 1643.
    =An Orphan Girl of Amsterdam=. S. 1645. C. 64 × 33-3/5.
    "=The Standard-Bearer=." 1662. C. 56 × 58.
    =Portrait Called Six=. S. C. 48 × 36-4/5.




INDEX


  _Abraham caressing Isaac_ (etching), 108

  _Abraham conversing with Isaac_ (etching), 99

  _Abraham dismissing Hagar_ (etching), 96

  _Abraham entertaining the Angels_, 75;
    (etching), 106

  _Abraham's Sacrifice_, 64;
    (etching), 105

  _Actæon, Diana, and Callisto_, 63

  _Adam and Eve_ (etching), 96

  _Admiral, Portrait of an_, 79

  _Adoration of the Magi, The_, 78

  _Adoration of the Shepherds, The_, 32, 73;
    (etching), 112

  Adriaen, Rembrandt's Brother, 12, 14, 28, 38;
    _Portrait of_, 51

  _Adriaans, Alotte, Portrait of_, 67

  Alenson, the  Minister, 25;
    _Portraits of, and his wife_, 61

  Amsterdam, prosperity of, 14, 15

  _Amsterdam, View of_ (etching), 109

  _Anatomy Lesson, The_, 13, 16, 58;
    _ill._, 58

  _Anatomy Lesson of Dr Deyman, The_, (1656), 77

  _Angel, An_, 78

  _Angel quitting Tobit, The_, 65;
    (etching), 98

  _Anna_, 55

  Anslo, the Minister, 25;
    _Portrait of_ 68;
    _ill._, 68

  _Architect, An_, 77

  _Artemisia receiving the Ashes of Mausolus_, 62

  _Ascension, The_, 20, 64

  Asselyn, Jan, 25;
    _Portrait of_ (etching), 109


  _Baptism of the Eunuch, The_ (etching), 98

  Bartsch, Adam, 90

  _Bas, Elizabeth, Portrait of_, 68;
    _ill._, 68

  _Bathers, The_ (etching), 112

  _Bathsheba_ (Louvre), 76

  _Bathsheba at her Toilet_, 71

  _Battle-Scene_ (etching), 109

  _Baucis and Philemon receiving Jupiter and Mercury_, 79

  _Beersteyn Christian Paul van, Portrait of_, 56

  _Beggars at the Door of a House_ (etching), 101;
    _ill._, 100

  Beggars, etchings of, 101, 112

  _Belshazzar's Feast_, 64

  _Berchem, Nicholas; Portraits of, and his wife_, 73

  _Bilderbeecq, Margaretha van, Portrait of_, 58

  _Blind Fiddler, The_ (etching), 95

  Bonus, Dr Ephraim, 25;
    _Portraits of_ 69, 73;
    (etching), 100

  _Boy, Portrait of a_ (Hinton St George), 51;
    (Belvoir Castle), 78;
    _head of a_, 52;
    (etching), 109

  _Bruyningh, Portrait of_, 76

  _Bull, The_ (etching), 109

  _Burchgraeff, Willem, Portrait of_, 58


  _Canal, The_ (etching), 112

  _Canal with a Large Boat_ (etching), 102

  _Canal with Swans_ (etching), 102

  Cappelle, Van de, 25

  _Capuchin, The_, 81

  Cattenburch, Dirck van, 37, 87

  _Caulery, Joris de, Portrait of_, 57

  _Christ, Head of_ (M. Rudolphe Kann), 76;
    (M. Maurice Kann), 80

  _Christ, Half-length portraits of_
    (St. Petersburg), 79;
    (Aschaffenbourg), 81

  _Christ appearing to the Disciples_ (etching), 103

  _Christ and Mary Magdalene at the Tomb_, 66

  _Christ and Mary Magdalene in the Garden_, 75

  _Christ and the Disciples at Emmaus_ (etchings), 96, 104

  _Christ and the Samaritan Woman_ (etching), 111

  _Christ at Emmaus_ (Mme. André-Jacquemart), 51;
    (Louvre), 74;
    _ill._, 74;
    (Copenhagen), 74

  _Christ before Pilate_ (etching), 106

  _Christ bound to the Column_, 73

  _Christ disputing with the Doctors_ (etching), 103

  _Christ driving the Money-Lenders from the Temple_ (etching), 96

  _Christ Entombed_ (etching), 111

  _Christ healing the Sick_ (etching), 85, 87, 110;
    _ill._, 86

  _Christ in the Garden of Olives_ (etching), 111

  _Christ on the Cross_, 74

  _Christ preaching_ (etching), 87, 111

  _Christ taken from the Cross_, 68

  _Christ's Body carried to the Tomb_ (etching), 112

  _Circumcision, The_, 32, 81;
    (etching), 103

  _Cleopatra at her Toilet_, 62

  _Collen, Suzanna van, Portrait of_, 56

  _Concord of the Country, The_, 67

  _Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis, The_, 41, 81

  _Constable of Bourbon_, 72

  Coppenol, 6, 25;
    _Portraits of_, 55, 57;
    _ill._, 54;
    (etchings), 110, 112

  Cornelia, daughter of Rembrandt and Hendrickje, 35, 39, 46, 47

  _Cottage and Barn_ (etching), 98

  _Cottage with white Pales_ (etching), 112

  _Cradle, The_, 76

  Crayers, Louis, 35, 40, 45

  _Crucifixion, The_ (etchings), 108, 110


  _Daey, Martin, Portrait of_, 61

  _Danae_, 64;
    _ill._, 64

  _Daniel's Vision_, 72

  _David and Absalom, Reconciliation of_, 68

  _David and Goliath, Combat of_ (etching), 105

  _David at Prayer_ (etching), 111

  _David playing before Saul_ (Frankfort), 57;
    (1665), 83

  _Dead Peacocks_, 68

  _Death of the Virgin, The_ (etching), 97

  Decker, Jeremias de, 45;
    _Portrait of_, 83

  _Deposition, The_ (Duke of Abercorn), 75

  _Descent from the Cross, The_, 20, 60, 62;
    (etchings), 87, 95, 98, 105

  _Desmond, The Countess of_, 54

  Deyman, Dr, 25, 38

  _Diana bathing_, 55;
    (etching), 107

  Dircx, Geertje, 33

  _Doomer Paul, Portrait of_, 67

  _Doorn, Machteld van, Portrait of_, 61

  Dou, Gerard, Rembrandt's first pupil, 11;
    _Portrait of_, 54, 55

  _Draughtsman, The_ (etching), 109

  Drawings, Rembrandt's, 115

  _Dutch Admiral and his Wife, The_, 71


  _Ecce Homo_, 65; (etching), 87

  Elevation of the Cross, The, 59;
    _ill._, 60

  _Entombment, The_ (Glasgow), 59;
    (Munich), 66; (Dresden), 76

  _Esther, Haman, and Ahasuerus_, 83

  Etchings, The, early appreciation of, 85;
    the various states, 88;
    catalogues of, 90, 91;
    authentic etchings, 93;
    disputed etchings, 113;
    qualities of the etchings, 114, 115


  _Family Group_ (Brunswick), 83

  _Faustus, Dr_ (etching), 110

  _Flagellation, The_, 83

  _Flight into Egypt, The_ (The Hague), 64;
    (Buda-Pesth), 77;
    (etchings), 103, 108

  _Flute Player, The_ (etching), 109

  Francen, Abraham, 25, 47;
    _Portrait of_ (etching), 110

  Frederick-Henry, Prince (Stathouder),
    commissions to Rembrandt, 20, 27, 32, 59


  _Game of Golf, The_ (etching), 105

  Gelder, Aert de, 44

  _Gentleman with the Hawk, The_, 71

  Gerritsz, Harmen, Rembrandt's father, 6, 11;
    _Portraits of_, 11, 52, 53, 54, 55, 57;
    _ill._, 12;
    (etchings), 94, 95

  _Gilder, The_, 67

  _Girl, Head of a_, 59

  _Girl with a Broom_, 75

  _Goldsmith at his Work, A_ (etching), 111

  _Goldweigher, The_ (etching), 103

  _Goldweigher's Field, The_ (etching), 103

  _Good Samaritan_, The (Wallace Collection), 57;
    (Cracow), 66;
    (M. Porgès), 66;
    (circa 1640), 67;
    (Louvre), 74;
    (etchings), 87, 95

  _Grotius_, 57

  _Grotto, The_ (etching), 99


  _Hagar and Ishmael, Expulsion of_, 67

  _Haman, The Disgrace of_, 75

  _Hannah  teaching Samuel to read_ (Bridgewater House), 74;
    (St Petersburg), 75

  Haring, Jacob, 38;
    _Portrait of_ (etching), 110

  Haring, Thomas Jacobsz, 38, 39;
    _Portrait of_ (etching) 106

  Harmen Gerritsz, _see_ Gerritsz

  Heertsbeeck, Isaac van, 36, 40, 41, 44, 45

  Hendrickje, her relations with Rembrandt, 34, 35;
    her children, 35;
    partnership with Titus, 42, 88;
    her will, 44;
    her death, 44;
    _Portraits of_ (Louvre), 34, 76, 81;
    (Berlin), 82;
    _ill._, 44

  _Hog, The_ (etching), 98

  _Holy Family, The_ (Munich), 55;
    (Louvre), 67;
    (Downton), 71;
    (St Petersburg), 72;
    (Cassel), 73;
    (etching), 108

  _Holy Family crossing a Rill during the Flight into Egypt_, 103

  _Holy Family with the Serpent, The_ (etching), 104

  _Homer reciting his Poems_, 82

  _Hoogh, Catrina, Portrait of_, 78

  _House of the Carpenter, The_, 67

  _Hundred Guilder Print, The_, 85, 86, 110

  Huygens, Constantin, 11, 20, 27

  _Huygens, Maurice, Portrait of_, 53


  _Jacob and Esau, Reconciliation of_, 68

  _Jacob and Laban_ (etching), 98

  _Jacob blessing Joseph's Sons_, 78

  _Jacob wrestling with the Angel_, 80

  _Jacob's Dream_ (etching), 105

  _Jacob's Sons bringing him Joseph's Coat_, 75

  _Jansenius_, 82

  _Jesus and His Parents returning from Jerusalem_ (etching), 104

  _Jew in a High Cap, A_ (etching), 97

  _Jews' Synagogue, The_ (etching), 101

  _Jewish Bride, The_ (Prince Liechtenstein), 19;
    (St Petersburg), 61;
    (Amsterdam), 83

  _Jewish Bride, The Little_ (etching), 97

  _John the Baptist preaching_, 78;
    _ill._, 78

  _John the Baptist, Beheading of_, (etching), 97

  Jonghe,  Clement de, 25, 85, 87;
    _Portrait of_ (etching), 103; _ill._, 90

  _Joseph accused by Potiphar's Wife_, 77

  _Joseph and Potiphar's Wife_ (etching), 96

  _Joseph interpreting his Dreams_, 53

  _Joseph relating his Dreams_ (etchings), 97

  _Joseph's Coat_, 74

  _Judas with the Price of the Betrayal_, 51

  _Judith_, 55

  _Jupiter and Antiope_ (etching), 107


  _Kalkoen, Matthys, Portrait of_, 57

  _Knobbert, Volkera Nicolai, Portrait of_, 56

  _Krul, Jan Herman, Portrait of_, 58;
    _ill._, 58


  _Lady, Portrait of a_ (Capt. Holford), 73

  _Lady of Utrecht, The_, 67

  _Lady with the Fan, The_ (Buckingham Palace), 68;
    _ill._, 70;
    (Grosvenor House), 71

  _Lady with the Parrot, The_, 78

  Landscapes by Rembrandt, 66, 67, 73, 76, 98, 102, 109

  _Landscape with Cottage and Mill Sail_ (etching), 98

  _Landscape with a Cow drinking_ (etching), 112

  _Landscape with a Flock of Sheep_ (etching), 112

  _Landscape with a Man sketching_ (etching), 109

  _Landscape with an Obelisque_ (etching), 112

  _Landscape with a ruined Tower_ (etching), 109

  _Large Tree by a House_ (etching), 109

  Lastman, Pieter, 9, 10

  La Tombe, Pieter de, 25, 85, 111

  _Ledikant_ (etching), 100

  Lievensz, Jan, 9, 11, 12, 30, 89

  _Lion Hunt, A_ (etchings), 109

  _Looten, Martin, Portrait of_, 57

  _Lucretia, Death of, The_, 82

  Lutma, Jan, 25;
    _Portrait of_ (etching), 106;
    _ill._, 106

  Lysbeth, Rembrandt's Sister, 13, 14, 28, 38;
    _Portraits of_, 51, 57, 58


  _Man, Portrait of a_ (National Gallery), 63;
    (St Petersburg), 65, 82;
    (Cassel), 67;
    (Brussels), 68;
    _ill._, 70;
    (Mr Armour), 71;
    (Mr M. K. Jessup), 71;
    (Earl of Brownlow), 76;
    (M. Kann), 82

  _Man and his Wife, Portraits of a_ (Vienna), 56;
    _ill._, 56;
    (Prince Liechtenstein), 64;
    _ill._, 64;
    (Prince Jousoupoff), 81

  _Man in Armour_ (Brunswick), 66;
    (Glasgow), 77;
    (Cassel), 77

  _Man in a Red Cloak_ (M. Kann), 79

  _Man reading by a Window_ (Copenhagen), 73

  _Man sketching in a Book_ (Dresden), 78

  _Man with a Sword_ (Capt. Holford), 72

  _Man with a Baton_ (Louvre), 75

  _Man with the Bittern_ (Dresden), 67;
    _ill._, 66

  _Man seated on the Ground_ (etching), 100

  _Man in an Arbour_ (etching), 98

  Manasseh ben Israel, his "Piedra Gloriosa," 87, 105;
    _Portrait of_, 72;
    (etching), 96

  _Manoah and his Wife, The Offering of_, 68

  _Marriage of Jason and Creusa, The_ (etching), 101

  _Merchant, Portrait of a_ (St Petersburg), 55;
    (Lord Feversham), 79

  _Metamorphosis of Narcissus, The_, 75

  _Mill, The_, 76

  _Minerva_, 55

  _Minister, Portrait of a_, 65

  _Monks, figures of_, 81

  _Mordecai, The Triumph of_ (etching), 110

  _Moses breaking the Tables of the Law_, 80

  _Moses, The Saving of_, 67

  _Mountebank, A_ (etching), 96


  _Nativity, The_ (etching), 111

  _Nebuchadnezzar's Dream_ (etching), 105

  _Negress, A_ (etching), 107

  Neeltje, Rembrandt's Mother, 2, 7, 14, 28;
    _Portraits of_, see _Rembrandt's Mother_

  _Night-Watch, The_, 30, 69

  _Noli me tangere_, 75


  _Old Man caressing a Boy_ (etching), 108

  _Old Beggar Man conversing with a Woman_ (etching), 94

  _Old Beggar Woman_ (etching), 100

  _Old Jew_ (St Petersburg), 76

  _Old Lady, Portrait of an_ (National Gallery), 61;
    _ill._, 62;
    (Earl of Yarborough), 65;
    _see_ also _Old Woman_

  _Old Man, Portrait of an_ (Berlin), 48;
    (Cassel), 53;
    (Louvre), 66;
    (Buda-Pesth), 69;
    (M. Schloss, Paris), 71;
    (Lady Cook), 73;
    (Dresden), 73, 76, 78, 83;
    (Leeuwarden), 73;
    (Strasburg), 75;
    (Duke of Devonshire), 75, 76;
    (St Petersburg), 76;
    (Stockholm), 77;
    (Pitti), 79;
    (Nat. Gallery), 79;
    (Col. Lindsay), 81;
    (New York), 82;
    (Earl of Northbrook), 83

  _Old Man with a divided Fur Cap_ (etching), 97

  _Old Woman, Portraits of an_ (Wilton House), 53;
    (St Petersburg), 71, 76;
    (M. Porgès), 74;
    (Brussels), 76;
    (Stockholm), 77;
    (M. Kann), 78;
    (Épinal), 82;
    (Lord Wantage), 82;
    (etchings), 95, 108

  _Old Woman Sleeping_ (etching), 105

  _Old Woman weighing Money_ (Dresden), 71

  _Omval, View of_ (etching), 99

  _Oriental, Portrait of an_, 65

  _Oriental Heads_ (etching), 127

  _Orphan Girl of Amsterdam, An_, 72


  _Pallas_, 75

  _Pancake Woman, The_ (etching), 96

  _Pancras, Burgomaster, and his Wife_, 62;
    _ill._, 62

  _Parable of the Labourers in the Vineyard_, 78

  _Parable of the Master of the Vineyard_, 65

  _Peasant with Milk Pails_ (etching), 112

  _Pellicorne, Burgomaster Jan, Portrait of_, 56

  _Persian, The_ (etching), 95

  _Petitioners to a Biblical Prince_, 59

  _Philon the Jew_, 53

  _Philosopher in Meditation, A_ (Stroganoff Collection), 53;
    (Louvre), 59

  _Philosopher reading by Candlelight_, 49

  _Phœnix_, The (etching), 113

  "Piedra Gloriosa," Rembrandt's illustrations to, 87, 105

  _Pilate washing his Hands_, 78

  _Pilgrim at Prayer, A_, 81

  _Pluto carrying off Proserpine_, 57

  _Presentation in the Temple, The_ (Hamburg), 52;
    (The  Hague), 55, 60;
    (etchings), 94, 111

  _Presentation in the Vaulted Temple_, The (etching), 109

  _Prodigal Son, The_, 62, 83;
    (etching), 96


  _Rabbi, A_ (Hampton Court), 63;
    (M. Porgès), 68;
    (Berlin), 72;
    _ill._, 74;
    (Nat. Gallery), 78;
    (Duke of Devonshire), 128

  _Raising of the Cross, The_, 20

  _Raising of Lazarus, The_, 51;
    (etchings), 87, 98

  _Rape of Ganymede, The_, 63

  _Rat-Killer, The_ (etching), 95

  Rembrandt, date of birth discussed, 2, 3;
    birthplace, 5;
    his father, 6;
    entered as a student at Leyden University, 7;
    apprenticed to Swanenburch, 8, 9;
    under Lastman at Amsterdam, 10;
    return to Leyden, 10;
    removal to Amsterdam, 11;
    _the Anatomy Lesson_, 13, 16;
    early portraits, 13, 16, 17;
    meeting with Saskia, 19;
    marriage, 22;
    early extravagance, 23;
    his first child, 24;
    family quarrels, 23, 26;
    his friends, 25;
    birth and death of two daughters, 27;
    financial difficulties, 26, 28, 29;
    birth of Titus, 30;
    death of Saskia, 30;
    decline of prosperity, 32, 36;
    relations with Hendrickje Stoffels, 34, 35;
    bankruptcy, 38;
    sale of his property, 39, 40;
    fresh commissions, 41, 43;
    failing sight, 43;
    death of Hendrickje, 44;
    his last pupil, 44;
    death of Rembrandt, 46

  _Rembrandt, Portraits of himself_--
    (Count Andrassy), 53;
    (Lord Ashburton), 65, 79;
    (Berlin), 61;
    (Bridgewater House), 79;
    (Duke of Buccleuch), 79, 80;
    (Buckingham Palace), 72;
    (Cambridge), 75;
    (Carlsruhe), 71;
    (Herr von Carstangen), 83;
    (Cassel), 49, 61, 79; (Gotha), 51;
    (The Hague), 51, 61;
    (Heywood-Lonsdale), 65;
    (Lord Ilchester), 78;
    (Lord Iveagh), 78;
    (Lord Kinnaird), 82;
    (Leipzig), 75;
    (Louvre), 61, 65, 80;
    (Herr Mendelssohn), 75;
    (Munich), 78;
    (Nat. Gallery), 67, 82;
    _ill._, 28, 46;
    (Sir A. D. Neeld), 80;
    (Prince Henri of the Pays Bas), 71;
    (Pitti), 63;
    (Lady de Rothschild), 78;
    (Uffizi), 83;
    (Vienna), 79, 83;
    (Wallace Collection), 61;
    (Warneck Collection), 58;
    (Weimar), 71
    Etchings, 3, 94, 95, 97, 100, 108

  _Rembrandt's Brother_, Portrait of (Berlin), 75;
    (The Hague), 75

  "_Rembrandt's Cook_" (Downton), 82

  _Rembrandt's Father_, see Gerritsz

  _Rembrandt and his Wife_ (etching), 96

  _Rembrandt's Mother, Portraits of_, 49, 51, 55, 57, 67, 71;
    _ill._, 6;
    (etchings), 93, 95, 108

  _Rembrandt's Mill_ (etching), 98;
    _ill._, 98

  _Repose in Egypt_ (etchings), 99, 112

  _Resurrection, The_, 66

  Robinson, Sir J. C., 48

  _Ruin, The_, 75


  _Saint, A_, 65

  _St Anastasius_, 54

  _St Catherine_ (etching), 97

  _St Francis praying_ (etching), 107

  _St Jerome_ (etchings), 95, 96, 98, 113

  _St Matthew_, 81

  _St Paul_ (Vienna), 65;
    (Lord Wimborne), 79

  _St Paul in Prison_ (Stuttgart), 49

  _St Peter_, 52;
    (etching), 112

  _St Peter, The Denial of_ (Elberfeld), 51;
    (St Petersburg), 78

  _St Peter and St John at the Gate of the Temple_ (etchings), 107

  _St Stephen, The Martyrdom of_ (etching), 96

  _St Thomas, Incredulity of_, 62

  _Salutation, The_, 67

  _Samson captured by the Philistines_ (Berlin), 50

  _Samson overpowered by the Philistines_ (Count Schonborn), 64

  _Samson propounding his Riddle to the Philistines_, 66

  _Samson threatening his Father-in-Law_, 64

  Saskia, Early Portraits of, 14, 17, 18, 57;
    _ill._, 18;
    her birth and family, 18;
    first meeting with Rembrandt, 19;
    marriage, 22;
    her character, 22;
    children, 24, 27, 30;
    death, 30;
    her will, 31;
    _Portraits of_ (Dresden), 58;
    (St Petersburg), 61;
    (M. Schloss), 61;
    (Cassel), 61;
    1635, 62;
    Rembrandt and Saskia (Dresden), 62;
    _ill._, 24;
    (Buckingham Palace), 62;
    (Berlin), 71;
    (etchings), 95, 108;
    pencil drawing of (at Berlin), 4

  _Schoolmaster, The_ (etching), 98

  Six, Burgomaster, 25, 34, 38;
    _Portrait of_, (Six Collection), 79;
    (etching), 100, 114

  _Six's Bridge_ (etching), 99

  _Shell, The_ (etching), 102; _ill._, 102

  _Shepherds reposing at Night_, 74

  _Shipbuilder and his Wife, The_, 58;
    _ill._, Frontispiece

  Sketches, sheets of (etchings), 112, 113

  _Slaughter-house, The_ (Herr Rath), 66;
    (Glasgow), 75;
    (Louvre), 77

  _Sobieski_, 65;
    _ill._, 66

  _Sortie of the Banning Cocq Company_, 30, 69

  _Sportsman, The_ (etching), 110

  _Standard Bearer, The_ (Baron G. de Rothschild), 65;
    (in America), 81

  _Star of the Kings, The_ (etching), 113

  Stoffels, Hendrickje, _see_ Hendrickje

  _Storm, an Effect of_,  67

  _Susannah and the Elders_ (Prince Jousoupoff), 65;
    (Berlin), 73

  _Susannah_, Study of, 74

  Swalm, Henry, 25;
    _Portrait of_, 65

  Swanenburch, Jacob van, 8

  Sylvius, Jan Cornelis, 18, 21, 25;
    Portrait of, 72;
    (etchings), 87, 88, 108, 109

  _Syndics of the Drapers' Guild, The_, 43, 82;
    _ill._, 80


  Tholinx, Arnold, 38;
    _Portrait of_, 77;
    (etching), 110

  _Three Crosses, The_ (etching), 87, 111

  _Three Trees, The_ (etching), 87, 98,
    _ill._, 92

  Titia, Rembrandt's Granddaughter, 46, 47

  Titus, Rembrandt's Son, 30, 33, 35;
    his will, 38, 39;
    partnership with Hendrickje, 42;
    marriage, 46;
    death, 46;
    _Portraits of_ (M. Kann), 77;
    (Earl of Crawford), 77;
    (Vienna), 79;
    (Capt. Holford), 81;
    (etching), 110

  _Tobias and the Angel_, 76

  _Tobias restoring his Father's Sight_, 62

  _Tobias' Wife with the Goat_, 72

  _Tobit and his Wife_, 75

  _Tobit Blind_ (etching), 111, 115

  _Tree, Sketch of a_ (etching), 109

  _Tribute Money, The_, 72

  Tulp, Dr, 13, 25, 41;
    _Portraits of_, 57

  _Turenne, Marshal, Portrait of_, 74


  Uijtenbogaerd, Jan, _Portraits of_ (etchings), 87, 96, 103

  _Unmerciful Servant, The_, 82

  Uylenborch, Hendrick van, 16, 25, 29, 31, 40

  Uylenborch, Magdalena van, wife of Titus, 46, 47

  Uylenborch, Saskia van--_see_ Saskia.


  Van Loo, Albert, 26, 46

  Van Loo, Gerrit and Hiskia, 21, 22, 23, 25

  _Venus and Cupid_, 81

  _Virgin mourning the Death of Jesus, The_ (etching), 109

  _Virgin and Child in the Clouds, The_ (etching), 98

  _Vision of Ezekiel, The_ (etching), 105

  _Village by the High Road_ (etching), 102

  _Village with a River and Sailing Vessel_ (etching), 109

  _Village with a Square Tower_ (etching), 102

  _Vista, The_ (etching), 103

  _Vymer, Anna, Portrait of_, 68


  _Winter Scene, A_, 73;
    _ill._, 74

  _Woman, Portrait of a_ (Mr Byers), 64;
    (Lord Kinnaird), 64;
    (Lord Iveagh), 69;
    (M. Kann), 82;
    and see _Old Woman_

  _Woman bathing_ (Louvre), 74;
    (Nat. Gallery), 76

  _Woman taken in Adultery, The_, 72;
    _ill._, 72

  _Woman by a Dutch Stove_ (etching), 111

  _Woman preparing to dress after Bathing_ (etching), 107

  _Woman with her Feet in Water_ (etching), 107

  _Woman with an Arrow_ (etching), 107

  _Woodchopper, The_, 73


  _Young Girl, Portrait of a_ (Stockholm), 51;
    (The Hague), 53;
    (Bridgewater House), 61;
    (Dulwich), 72;
    _ill._, 72

  _Young Man, Portrait of a_ (Earl Cowper), 72;
    (Mr Humphry Ward), 73;
    (Copenhagen), 77;
    (Louvre), 78

  _Young Man and his Wife_ (Prince Liechtenstein), 64

  _Young Man in a Cap and Breastplate_ (Dresden), 71

  _Young Man laughing_, 52

  _Young Man with the Turban_, 54

  _Young Man seated in Meditation_ (etching), 96

  _Young Painter with Paper and Crayon_, 74

  _Young Servant_ (Stockholm), 76

  _Young Woman, Portrait of a_ (Cassel), 63;
    (Dr Bredius), 65;
    (Dresden), 68;
    (Copenhagen), 78

  _Young Woman in Bed_ (Edinburgh), 75

  _Young Woman reading_ (etching), 95

  _Youth_ (Lord Leconfield), 83


  _Zachariah receiving the Prophecy of the Birth of John the
    Baptist_, 55

  "Zeewærts-Lof, Der," 87

  Zoomer, Jan Pietersen, 85, 86, 87

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