In the portrait-forms the limits were less severely drawn. There were
a dozen permissible attitudes, and, the characteristic features might
be represented with all fidelity; but there were boundaries that might
not be overstepped. The result was an artistic perversion that
well-nigh perpetrated a grotesque slander on the personal appearance of
the race.
After the manner of Egyptians it was understood that Kenkenes was to
follow his father's calling, and ahead of him were years of labor laid
in narrow lines. If he rebelled, he incurred infinite difficulty and
opposition, and yet he could not wholly submit. He had been an apt and
able pupil during the long process of his instruction, but when the
moment of actual practice of his art arrived, he had rebelled. His
first work had been his last and, in the estimation of his father, had
entailed a grievous loss. Thereafter he had been limited to copying
the great sculptor's plans, the work of scribes and underlings.
Thus, he had passed three years that chafed him because of their
comparative idleness and their implied rebuke. The pressure finally
became too great, and he began to weigh the matter of compromise. If
he could secretly satisfy his own sense of the beautiful he might
follow the ritual with grace.
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