What a wonder! Made with a dozen lines -- but on everlasting foundations. You lucky chap, where did you get it?" He answered slowly: "Mrs. Stroud gave it to me." "Ah -- I didn't know you even knew the Strouds. He was such an inflexible hermit." "I didn't -- till after. . . . She sent for me to paint him when he was dead." "When he was dead? You?" I must have let a little too much amazement escape through my surprise, for he answered with a deprecating laugh: "Yes -- she's an awful simpleton, you know, Mrs. Stroud. Her only idea was to have him done by a fashionable painter -- ah, poor Stroud! She thought it the surest way of proclaiming his greatness -- of forcing it on a purblind public. And at the moment I was the fashionable painter." "Ah, poor Stroud -- as you say. Was that his history?" "That was his history. She believed in him, gloried in him -- or thought she did. But she couldn't bear not to have all the drawing-rooms with her. She couldn't bear the fact that, on varnishing days, one could always get near enough to see his pictures. Poor woman! She's just a fragment groping for other fragments. Stroud is the only whole I ever knew." "You ever knew? But you just said --" Gisburn had a curious smile in his eyes. "Oh, I knew him, and he knew me -- only it happened after he was dead." I dropped my voice instinctively. "When she sent for you?" "Yes -- quite insensible to the irony. She wanted him vindicated-and by me!" He laughed again, and threw back his head to look up at the sketch of the donkey. "There were days when I couldn't look at that thing -- couldn't face it. But I forced myself to put it here; and now it's cured me -- cured me. That's the reason why I don't dabble any more, my dear Rickham; or rather Stroud himself is the reason." For the first time my idle curiosity about my companion turned into a serious desire to understand him better. "I wish you'd tell me how it happened," I said. He stood looking up at the sketch, and twirling between his fingers a cigarette he had forgotten to light. Suddenly he turned toward me. "I'd rather like to tell you -- because I've always suspected you of loathing my work." I made a deprecating gesture, which he negatived with a goodhumoured shrug. "Oh, I didn't care a straw when I believed in myself -- and now it's an added tie between us!" He laughed slightly, without bitterness, and pushed one of the deep arm-chairs forward. "There: make yourself comfortable -- and here are the cigars you like." He placed them at my elbow and continued to wander up and down the room, stopping now and then beneath the picture. "How it happened? I can tell you in five minutes -- and it didn't take much longer to happen. . . . I can remember now how surprised and pleased I was when I got Mrs. Stroud's note. Of course, deep down, I had always felt there was no one like him-only I had gone with the stream, echoed the usual platitudes about him, till I half got to think he was a failure, one of the kind that are left behind. By Jove, and he was left behind-because he had come to stay! The rest of us had to let ourselves be swept along or go under, but he was high above the current -- on everlasting foundations, as you say.