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Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 04 - Little Journeys to the Homes of Eminent Painters by Elbert Hubbard
page 224 of 267 (83%)
fragments, and when he had set his pupils to copying these he considered
his day's work done.

Joshua wrote glowing letters home, telling of all he did. "While I am at
work I am the happiest creature alive," he said. Hudson set Joshua to
copying Guercino's works, and kept the lad at it so steadily that he was
really never able to draw from Nature correctly thereafter.

After a year, Craunch came up from the country to see how his ward was
getting along. Joshua showed him the lions of the city; and painted his
picture, making so fine a portrait that when Mr. Craunch got back home he
threw away the one made by Warmell.

Once at an exhibition Joshua met Alexander Pope, whom he had seen several
times at Hudson's studio. Pope remembered him and shook hands. Joshua was
so inflated by the honor that he hastened home to write a letter to his
mother and tell her all about it.

According to the terms of agreement with Hudson, Joshua was bound to stay
four years; but now two years had passed, and one fine day in sudden
wrath Hudson told him to pack up his kit and go.

The trouble was that Joshua could paint better than Hudson--every pupil
in the school knew it. When the scholars wanted advice they went to
Reynolds, and some of them, being sons of rich men, paid Reynolds for
helping them.

Then Reynolds had painted a few portraits on his own account and had kept
the money, as he had a perfect right to do. Hudson said he hadn't, for he
was bound as an apprentice to him.
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