Girl in Hyacinth Blue
Alarm shot out from her eyes. In one instant, obligation shifted. She was incurring a huge debt to him. Tearfully, unable to look at her son gagged and moaning, she nodded agreement. Before she could change her mind, Jan asked a neighbor to fetch Taerling. “And have him bring manacles.”
Jan and Catharina passed the night in mute shock. The next day, she lost the new baby. Jan sat with Catharina every day until she recovered. Feeling helpless, he brought her broth in a cup, and mended her spinning wheel. And every night for a week, he lurched awake at Geertruida’s shrieks, held her hot, damp body, sobbing from her nightmare, until warm milk and his arms around her calmed her enough for her to sleep again.
Too soon the other children resumed their boisterous play and argument. Doors banged. Children outside wanted in. Children inside wanted out. The two youngest boys, Francis and Ignatius, took to imitating what they’d seen, and staged fights knocking heads with wooden mugs, kicking bellies, tying up the vanquished. They squabbled over who would be Papa and who would be Uncle Willem, the mug yanked back and forth between them until the fighting was real. Jan stormed at them to stop.
He agreed to oversee Willem’s confinement in the house of correction. Being his brother’s keeper seemed a spurious way to gain entrance into the Kingdom of Heaven. Couldn’t he paint his way in instead? He felt his life slipping.
Maria Thins lent him three hundred guilders. It wasn’t the same as earning money from his art, but it gave him some time. He paid enough to appease the baker and the grocer, bought the children new shoes, made a payment on the iceboat, and bought bricks of pigment and Venetian turpentine. Then it was gone.
If only he could work faster. Paint, Johannes, paint, he told himself. Yet if he did work faster, how could he produce paintings grounded in deep beds of contemplation, the only way living things could be stilled long enough to understand them? And wasn’t everything he painted—a breadbasket, a pitcher, a jewelry box, a copper pail—wasn’t it all living?
Pulverizing a small brick of ultramarine with a mortar and pestle one day, loving the intensity of blue as rich as powdered lapis lazuli, he heard a commotion in the main room. His second daughter. Magdalena. Far too old for this. As soon as he entered, she stopped shouting. Fear of making a move stilled everyone, even Ignatius. Blessed silence, marred by the scrape of her chair against the tile floor when she backed away from him.
In a moment she lifted her face to his, her cheeks rosy with shame. Regret glazing her eyes softened him. She stood before him as if offered by God. The blue cloth of her smock draped like billowy sky. There was something in this girl he could never grasp, an inner life inscrutable to him. He was in awe of the child’s flights of fancy, her insatiable passion always to be running off somewhere, her active inner life. To still it for a moment, long enough to paint, for eternity, ah.
Was it possible to paint with good conscience what he didn’t understand? What he didn’t even know?
“Sit down.”
Painting was the only way even to attempt to know it.
The chair scraped again when she moved to sit at the corner table by the window.
Her eyes, pale cerulean. How had he never noticed? The face, not beautiful; the expression charged yet under containment—for him, he believed. To render it with honesty rather than pride or even mere love, to go beyond the painting of known sentiments into mystery—that was her challenge to him. His sense of obligation deepened, renewed itself, as Pieter had said. The open window reflected her face, and in one pane, the image of her cheek shone luminous as though blended with the dust of crushed pearls. He opened the window a few centimeters more, then less, settling on an angle. A whiff of breeze stirred the loose hair at her temple.
“If you sit here, I will paint you, Magdalena. But only if you stop that shouting.” Her eyes opened wider and she pursed her lips shut against the smile that might burst into words. He brought the sewing basket, placed it on the table, and thought of its dear, humble history, picked out by Catharina from a dozen at some merchant’s stall. He moved Geertruida’s glass of milk into the slant of light, that glass that someone had washed the day before and the day before that. He set the golden pitcher near it and slightly behind. It shimmered in the stream of sunlight, reflecting blue from Magdalena’s sleeve. No. He took it away. It was beautiful, but there was more truth without it. He placed on Magdalena’s lap her brother’s shirt that needed buttons. He adjusted her shoulders, and felt them tighten, then slowly relax under his hands. He arranged her skirt and her white linen cap Catharina had made. Her hand had fallen palm upward on the shirt, her delicate fingers curled. Perfect. It was not in the act of doing anything. Any intended action was forgotten and therefore it was full of peace.
In a sudden movement his wife rushed over to take away Geertruida’s glass of milk.
“No, leave it, Catharina. Right there in the light. It makes the whole corner sacred with the tenderness of just living.”
In the arranging of these things he felt a pleasure his selfishness surely didn’t deserve. He stepped back and breathed more slowly, and what he saw, lit by warming washes of honey and gold, was a respite in stillness from the unacknowledged acts of women to hallow home. That stillness today, he thought, might be all he would ever know of the Kingdom of Heaven.
Magdalena Looking
Late one afternoon when Magdalena finished the clothes washing and her mother let her go out, she ran from their house by the Nieuwe Kerk across the market square, past Van Buyten’s bakery, over two cobbled bridges across the canals, past the blacksmith’s all the way to Kethelstraat and the town wall where she climbed up and up the ochre stone steps, each one as high as her knee, to her favorite spot in all of Delft, the round sentry post. From that great height, oh, what she could see. If only she could paint it. In one direction Schiedam Gate and beyond it the twin towers of Rotterdam Gate, and ships with odd-shaped sails the color of brown eggshells coming up the great Schie River from the sea, and in another direction strips of potato fields with wooden plows casting shadows over the soil like long fingers, and orchards, rows of rounded green as ordered as Mother wished their eleven young lives to be, and the smoke of the potteries and brickeries, and beyond that, she didn’t know. She didn’t know.
She stood there looking, looking, and behind her she heard the creak and thrum of the south windmill turning like her heart in the sea wind, and she breathed the brine that had washed here from other shores. Below her the Schie lay like a pale yellow ribbon along the town wall. The longer she looked, the more it seemed to borrow its color from the sky. In the wind, the boats along the Schie docks with their fasteners clanking and their hollow bellies nudging one another made a kind of low rattling music she loved. It wasn’t just today. She loved the sentry post in every kind of weather. To see rain pocking the gray sea and shimmering the stone bridge, to feel its cold strings of water on her face and hands, filled her to bursting.
She moved to a notch in the wall and just then a gust of wind lifted her skirts. The men on the bridge waiting with their bundles to go to sea shouted something in words she did not understand. She’d never tell Mother. Mother did not want her going there. The sentry post was full of guards smoking tobacco, Mother had said. There was some dark thing in her voice, as though she thought Magdalena should be afraid, but Magdalena did not know how to feel that then, or there.
Up there, high up above the town, she had longings no one in the family knew. No one would ever know them, she thought, unless perhaps a soul would read her face or she herself would have soul enough to speak of them. Wishes had the power to knock the breath out of her. Some were large and throbbing and persistent, some mere pinpricks of golden light, short-lived as fireflies but keenly felt. She wished for her chores to be done so she’d have time to race to the town wall every day before supper, or to the Oude Kerk to lift the fallen leaves from her brother’s grave. She wished her baby sisters wouldn’t cry so, and the boys wouldn’t quarrel and wrestle underfoot or r
un shouting through the house. Father wished that too, she knew. She wished there were not so many bowls to wash, thirteen each meal. She wished her hair shone flaxen in the sunlight of the market square like little Geertruida’s. She wished she could travel in a carriage across borders to all the lands drawn on her father’s map.
She wished the grocer wouldn’t treat her so gruffly when he saw her hand open out to offer four guilders, all that her mother gave her to pay the grocery bill that was mounting into the hundreds, as far as she could tell. She wished he wouldn’t shout; it sent his garlic breath straight into her nostrils. The baker, Henrick van Buyten, was kinder. Two times so far he let Father pay with a painting, so they could start over. Sometimes he gave her a still-warm bun to eat while walking home. And sometimes he put a curl of honey on it. She wished the grocer was like him.
She wished Father would take the iceboat to the Schie more often. He’d bought a fine one with a tall ivory sail. “Eighty guilders,” Mother grumbled. “Better a winter’s worth of bread and meat.” On winter Sundays if the weather was clear, and if he was between paintings, it whisked them skimming across the white glass of the canal. She’d never known such speed. The sharp cold air blew life and hope and excitement into her ears and open mouth.
She remembered wishing, one particular morning when Father mixed lead white with the smallest dot of lead-tin yellow for the goose quill in a painting of Mother writing a letter, that she might someday have someone to write to, that she could write at the end of a letter full of love and news, “As ever, your loving Magdalena Elisabeth.”
He painted Mother often, and Maria he painted once, draped her head in a golden mantle and her shoulders in a white satin shawl. She was older, fifteen, though only by eleven months. It might be fun to dress up like Maria did, and wear pearl earrings and have Father position her just so, but the only part she really wished for was that he would look and look and pay attention.
More than all those wishes, she had one pulsing wish that outshone all the others. She wished to paint. Yes, me, she thought, leaning out over the stone wall. I want to paint. This and everything. The world from that vantage point stretched so grandly. Up there, beauty was more than color and shapes, but openness, light, the air itself, and because of that, it seemed untouchable. If only the act of wishing would make her able. Father only smiled queerly when she told him she wanted to paint, just as if she’d said she wanted to sail the seas, which, of course, she also wished, in order to paint what she would see. When she said so, that she wished to paint, Mother thrust into her hands the basket of mending to do.
Often from the edge of the room, she’d watch him work. Because he was always asking for quiet, with the little ones running through the room laughing or shouting, she didn’t ask him many questions. He rarely answered anyway. Still, she studied how much linseed oil he used to thin the ultramarine, and watched him apply it over a glassy layer of reddish brown. By magic, it made the dress he painted warmer than the blue on the palette. He would not let her go with him to the attic where he ground lead-tin yellow to powder, but he did send her to the apothecary for the small bricks of it, and for linseed oil. Always there was money for that, but she didn’t know what to answer when the apothecary demanded the guilders for her brother’s potions still owed after he died.
If only she could have colors of her own, and brushes. She wouldn’t just paint pictures of women inside cramped little rooms. She’d paint them out in marketplaces, bending in the potato fields, talking in doorways in the sunlight, in boats on the Schie, or praying in the Oude Kerk. Or she’d paint people skating, fathers teaching their children on the frozen Schie.
Fathers teaching their children. The thought stopped her.
Looking from the sentry tower at a cloud darkening the river, she knew, just as she knew she’d always have washing and mending to do, that it would not be so. She’d worn herself out with wishing, and turned to go. She had to be home to help with supper.
On a spring day that began in no special way, except that she had climbed the town wall the afternoon before and all over Delft, lime trees lining the canals had burst into chartreuse leaves, and light shone through them and made them yellower except where one leaf crossed over another and so was darker—on that spring-certain day, out of some unknown, unborn place came that scream. “I hate to mend,” she shouted to the walls, to Mother, to anyone. “It’s not making anything.”
Father stepped into the room, looked at Mother and then scowled at Magdalena. It had been her job to keep her little brothers quiet for him, or shoo them out of doors, and here she was, the noisy one. No one moved. Even the boys were still. At first she looked only at Father’s hand smeared with ultramarine powder, not in his eyes, too surprised by the echo of her voice to fling out any additional defiance. She loved him, loved what he did with that hand, and even, she suspected, loved what he loved, though they had not spoken of it. When that thought lifted her face to his, she saw his cheeks grow softer, as if he noticed her in his house for the first time. He drew her over to the table by the window, brought the sewing basket, placed on her lap her brother’s shirt that needed buttons, adjusted the chair, opened the window, a little more, then less, and discovered that at a certain angle, it reflected her face. “If you sit here mending, I will paint you, Magdalena. But only if you stop that shouting.” He positioned her shoulders, and his hands resting a moment were warm through the muslin of her smock and seemed to settle her.
Mother rushed over to take away Geertruida’s glass of milk.
“No, leave it, Catharina. Right there in the light.”
For days she sat there, still as she could for Father, and yet sewing a few stitches every so often to satisfy Mother. In that mood of stillness, all the things within her line of vision touched her deeply. The tapestry laid across the table, the sewing basket, the same glass repoured each day to the same level, the amber-toned map of the world on the wall—it plucked a lute string in her heart that these things she’d touched, grown as familiar to her as her own skin, would be looked at, marveled at, maybe even loved by viewers of his painting.
On sunny days the panes of window glass glistened before her. Like jewels melted into flat squares, she thought. Each one was slightly different in its pale transparent color—ivory, parchment, the lightest of wines and the palest of tulips. She wondered how glass was made, but she didn’t ask. It would disturb him.
Outside the window the market chattered with the selling of apples and lard and brooms and wooden buckets. She liked the cheese porters in their flat-brimmed red hats and stark white clothes. Their curved yellow carrying platforms stacked neatly with cheese rounds were suspended on ropes between pairs of them, casting brown shadows on the paving stones. Two platforms diagonally placed in the midground between their carriers would make a nice composition with the repeated shapes of those bulging cheese rounds. She’d put a delivery boy wheeling his cart of silver cod in the background against the guild hall, and maybe in the foreground a couple of lavender gray pigeons pecking crumbs. The carillon from Nieuwe Kerk ringing out the hour sounded something profound in her chest. All of it is ordinary to everyone but me, she thought.
All that month she did not speak, the occasion too momentous to dislodge it with words. He said he’d paint her as long as she didn’t shout, and so she did not speak a word. Her chest ached like a dull wound when she realized that her silence did not cause him a moment’s reflection or curiosity. When she looked out the corner of her eye at him, she could not tell what she meant to him. Slowly, she came to understand that he looked at her with the same interest he gave to the glass of milk.
Maybe it was because she wasn’t pretty like Maria. She knew her jaws protruded and her watery, pale eyes were too widely set. She had a mole on her forehead that she always tried to hide by tugging at her cap. What if no one would want the painting? What then? It might be her fault, because she wasn’t pretty. She wished he’d say something about her, but all he said, not to her d
irectly, more to himself, was how the sunlight whitened her cap at the forehead, how the shadow at the nape of her neck reflected blue from her collar, or how the sienna of her skirt deepened to Venetian red in the folds. It was never her, she cried to herself, only something surrounding her that she did not make or even contribute to knowingly. Another wish that never would come true, she saw then, even if she lived forever, was that he, that someone, would look at her not as an artistic study, but with love. If two people love the same thing, she reasoned, then they must love each other, at least a little, even if they never say it. Nevertheless, because he painted with such studied concentration, and because she held him in awe, she practiced looking calm for him as she looked out the window, but when she saw the canvas, what she intended as calm looked more like wistfulness.
The painting was not bought by the brewer, Pieter Claesz van Ruijven, who bought most of her father’s work. He saw it, but passed over it for another. Disgrace seared her so that she could not speak that night. The painting hung without a frame in the outer kitchen where the younger children slept. Eventually the family had to give up their lodgings at Mechelen on the square, and take smaller rooms with Grandmother Maria on the Oude Langendijck. Her father stopped taking the iceboat out to the Schie, sold it, in fact. He rarely painted, the rooms were so cramped and dark, the younger children boisterous, and a few years later, he died.
When she washed him in his bed that last time, his fingers already cold, she had a thought, the shame of which prevented her from uttering: It would make a fine painting, a memorial, the daughter with towel and blue-figured washing bowl at bedside, her hand covering his, the wife exhausted on the Spanish chair clutching a crucifix, the father-husband, eyes glazed, looking to another landscape. While he painted everyone else, no one was there to paint him, to make him remembered. She yearned to do it, but the task was too fearsome. She lacked the skill, and the one to teach her had never offered.