|

|
A Hotel
I was walking
without any particular aim down a city street when I happened to
pass a hotel whose display windows gave directly and incongruously onto the
street. They had no adornment whatsoever. Their only function was to make
visible the lobby area. The hotel management had made no attempt to decorate
the window or to do anything but show the interior for what it was. A narrow
ledge ran across the bottom of the window on which was placed a small piece
of neo-Parian ware, the bust of a woman as it turned out, but so small in
proportion to the dimensions of the window that it seemed most likely to
have been placed there, absent-mindedly as it were, by an employee who
didn’t know what else to do with it. The bust was of a middle-aged woman,
robust or rather bright and plump with a cheerful, self-confident air. Her
hair and headdress were of Augustan simplicity, which, combined with the
white plaster, gave the miniature piece its Parian quality. The bust was
turned at a slight angle to the window so I saw the figure in a sort of
three-quarter profile. I looked up and saw, seated in the lobby and
surrounded by luggage, a female traveler. I was surprised to note that this
middle-aged woman closely resembled the bust in the window. She was dressed
in modern clothing, of course, and had nothing on her head. But the
plumpness was the same and the resemblance was accentuated by the fact that
from my standpoint her face was pointing in exactly the same angle as the
bust. The resemblance was not exact. Her features were sharper and her
expression was rather neutral. It certainly didn’t exhibit the
self-satisfied cheerfulness of the plaster cast. Could this woman be a
descendant of the original model, if there was one, much abstracted by
generations of copying? Or did my imagination project the first image I saw
onto the living figure inside and so create a parentage where none existed
before?
|