The early afternoon blazed
upon him and passed into the mellower hours of the later day before he
had finished. He hid his shovel and two cylindrical billets of wood,
such as were used to roll great weights, under the edge of his reed
carpet, and his preparations were complete. He wiped his brow,
congratulating himself on the snugness of his retreat and the
auspicious beginning of his transgression.
Weary and happy, he rowed himself back to Memphis and slept soundly on
the eve of a great offense against the laws of Egypt.
But the next day, when the young sculptor faced the moment of actual
creation, he realized that his goddess must take form from an
unembodied idea. The ritual had been his guide before, and his genius,
set free to soar as it would, fluttered wildly without direction. His
visions were troubled with glamours of the old conventional forms; his
idea tantalized him with glimpses of its perfect self too fleeting for
him to grasp. The sensation was not new to him. During his maturer
years he had tried to remember his mother's face with the same yearning
and heart-hurting disappointment. But this time he groped after
attributes which should shape the features--he had spirit, not form, in
mind; and the odds against which his unguided genius must battle were
too heroic for it to succeed without aid.
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