Page:The collected works of Henrik Ibsen (Heinemann Volume 4).djvu/303



I understand He has been himself both by night and by day, And that, after all, is the principal point.

Himself? Then do such folks belong to your parish?

That depends; the door, at least, stands ajar for them. Remember, in two ways a man can be Himself—there's a right and wrong side to the jacket. You know they have lately discovered in Paris A way to take portraits by help of the sun. One can either produce a straightforward picture Or else what is known as a negative one. In the latter the lights and the shades are reversed, And they're apt to seem ugly to commonplace eyes; But for all that the likeness is latent in them, And all you require is to bring it out. If, then, a soul shall have pictured itself In the course of its life by the negative method, The plate is not therefore entirely cashiered,— But without more ado they consign it to me. For ulterior treatment I take it in hand, And by suitable methods effect its development. I steam it, I dip it, I burn it, I scour it, With sulphur and other ingredients like that, Till the image appears which the plate was designed for,— That, namely, which people call positive.