The Collectors, by Frank Jewett 
Mather 
 
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Title: The Collectors 
Author: Frank Jewett Mather 
Release Date: August 4, 2004 [eBook #13114] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
COLLECTORS*** 
E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Project Gutenberg Beginners 
Projects, Mary Meehan, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed 
Proofreading Team 
 
THE COLLECTORS
Being Cases mostly under the Ninth and Tenth Commandments 
by 
FRANK JEWETT MATHER, Junr. 
1912 
 
Comprising a Ballade, wherein the Wrongfulness of Art Collecting is 
conceded, and as well Certain Stories: Campbell Corot, which recounts 
the career of an able and candid Picture Forger. The del Puente 
Giorgione, which tells of an artful Great Lady and an Artless Expert. 
The Lombard Runes, a mere interlude, but revealing a certain duplicity 
in Professional Seekers for Truth. Their Cross, so called from an 
inanimate Object of Price which wrought Woe to a well meaning New 
York Couple. The Missing St Michael, a tale of Italianate Americans 
which is full of Vanities and, though alluring to the Sophisticated, quite 
unfit for the Simple Reader. The Lustred Pots, again a mere interlude, 
but of a grim sort, as it grazes the Sixth Commandment and The 
Balaklava Coronal, which, notwithstanding its exotic title, is mostly of 
our own People, showing the Triumph of a resourceful Dealer over two 
Critics and a Captain of Industry. To which seven stories are added 
some Reflections upon Art Collecting, setting forth Excuses and 
Palliations for a Practice usually regarded as Pernicious. 
 
FOREWORD 
Of the seven stories of art collecting that make up this book "Campbell 
Corot" and the "Missing St. Michael" first appeared under the 
pseudonym of Francis Cotton, in "Scribner's Magazine," and are now 
reprinted by its courteous permission. Similar acknowledgment is due 
the "Nation" for allowing the sketch on art collecting to be republished. 
Many readers will note the similarity between the story "The del Puente 
Giorgione" and Paul Bourget's brilliant novelette, "La Dame qui a 
perdu son Peintre." My story was written in the winter of 1907, and it
was not until the summer of 1911 that M. Bourget's delightful tale 
came under my eye. Clearly the same incident has served us both as 
raw material, and the noteworthy differences between the two versions 
should sufficiently advise the reader how little either is to be taken as a 
literal record of facts or estimate of personalities. 
 
CONTENTS 
A Ballade of Art Collectors 
Campbell Corot 
The del Puente Giorgione 
The Lombard Runes 
Their Cross 
The Missing St. Michael 
The Lustred Pots 
The Balaklava Coronal 
On Art Collecting 
 
A BALLADE OF ART COLLECTORS 
Oh Lord! We are the covetous. Our neighbours' goods afflict us sore. 
From Frisco to the Bosphorus All sightly stuff, the less the more, We 
want it in our hoard and store. Nor sacrilege doth us appal-- Egyptian 
vault--fane at Cawnpore-- Collector folk are sinners all. 
Our envoys plot in partibus. They've small regard for chancel door, Or 
Buddhist bolts contiguous To lustrous jade or gold galore Adorning 
idol squat or tall-- These be strange gods that we adore-- Collector folk
are sinners all. 
Of Romulus Augustulus The signet ring I proudly wore. Some 
rummaging in ossibus I most repentantly deplore. My taste has changed; 
I now explore The sepulchres of Senegal And seek the pots of 
Singapore-- Collector folk are sinners all. 
Lord! Crave my neighbour's wife! What for? I much prefer his crystal 
ball From far Cathay. Then, Lord, ignore Collector folk who're sinners 
all. 
 
CAMPBELL COROT 
The Academy reception was approaching a perspiring and vociferous 
close when the Antiquary whispered an invitation to the Painter, the 
Patron, and the Critic. A Scotch woodcock at "Dick's" weighs heavily, 
even against the more solid pleasures of the mind, so terminating four 
conferences on as many tendencies in modern art, and abandoning four 
hungry souls, four hungry bodies bore down an avenue toward "Dick's" 
smoky realm, where they found a quiet corner apart from the crowd. It 
is a place where one may talk freely or even foolishly--one of those rare 
oases in which an artist, for example, may venture to read a lesson to an 
avowed patron of art. All the way down the Patron had bored us with 
his new Corot, which he described at tedious length. Now the 
Antiquary barely tolerated anything this side of the eighteenth century, 
the Painter was of Courbet's sturdy following, the Critic had been 
writing for a season that the only hope in    
    
		
	
	
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