Peter (flourish-in-red) Quick (flourish-in-green)
Banta (period-in-blue) is the style whereby he is
known to Our Square.
Summertimes he is a prop and ornament
of Coney, that isle of the blest, whose sands he models
into gracious forms and noble sentiments, in anticipation
of the casual dime or the munificent quarter, wherewith,
if you have low, Philistine tastes or a kind heart,
you have perhaps aforetime rewarded him. In the
off-season the thwarted passion of color possesses
him; and upon the flagstones before Thornsen’s
Élite Restaurant, which constitutes his canvas, he
will limn you a full-rigged ship in two colors, a
portrait of the heavyweight champion in three, or,
if financially encouraged, the Statue of Liberty in
four. These be, however, concessions to popular
taste. His own predilection is for chaste floral
designs of a symbolic character borne out and expounded
by appropriate legends. Peter Quick Banta is
a devotee of his art.
Giving full run to his loftier aspirations,
he was engaged, one April day, upon a carefully represented
lilac with a butterfly about to light on it, when
he became cognizant of a ragged rogue of an urchin
regarding him with a grin. Peter Quick Banta
misinterpreted this sign of interest.
“What d’ye think of that?”
he said triumphantly, as he sketched in a set of side-whiskers
(presumably intended for antennae) upon the butterfly.
“Rotten,” was the prompt response.
“What!” said the
astounded artist, rising from his knees.
“Punk.”
Peter Quick Banta applied the higher
criticism to the urchin’s nearest ear.
It was now that connoisseur’s turn to be affronted.
Picking himself out of the gutter, he placed his thumb
to his nose, and wiggled his finger in active and
reprehensible symbolism, whilst enlarging upon his
original critique, in a series of shrill roars:
“Rotten! Punk! No
good! Swash! Flubdub! Sacré tas de—de—piffle!”
Already his vocabulary was rich and plenteous, though,
in those days, tainted by his French origin.
He then, I regret to say, spat upon
the purple whiskers of the butterfly and took refuge
in flight. The long stride of Peter Quick Banta
soon overtook him. Silently struggling he was
haled back to the profaned temple of Art.
“Now, young feller,” said
Peter Quick Banta. “Maybe you think you
could do it better.” The world-old retort
of the creative artist to his critic!
“Any fool could,” retorted
the boy, which, in various forms, is almost as time-honored
as the challenge.
Suspecting that only tactful intervention
would forestall possible murder, I sauntered over
from my bench. But the decorator of sidewalks
had himself under control.
“Try it,” he said grimly.
The boy avidly seized the crayons extended to him.
“You want me to draw a picture? There?”
“If you don’t, I’ll break every
bone in your body.”
The threat left its object quite unmoved.
He pointed a crayon at Peter
Quick Banta’s creation.
“What is that? A bool-rush?”
“It’s a laylock; that’s what it
is.”
“And the little bird that goes to light—”
“That ain’t a bird and
you know it.” Peter Quick Banta breathed
hard. “That’s a butterfly.”
“I see. But the lie-lawc,
it drop—so!” The gesture was inimitable.
“And the butterfly, she do not come down, plop!
She float—so!” The grimy hands fluttered
and sank.
“They do, do they? Well, you put it down
on the sidewalk.”
From that moment the outside world
ceased to exist for the urchin. He fell to with
concentrated fervor, while Peter Quick Banta and I
diverted the traffic. Only once did he speak:
“Yellow,” he said, reaching, but not looking
up.
Silently the elder artist put the
desired crayon in his hand. When the last touches
were done, the boy looked up at us, not boastfully,
but with supreme confidence.
“There!” said he.
It was crude. It was ill-proportioned.
The colors were raw. The arrangements were false.
But—the lilac bloomed.
And—the butterfly hovered. The
artist had spoken through his ordained medium and
the presentment of life stood forth. I hardly
dared look at Peter Quick Banta. But beneath his
uncouth exterior there lay a great and magnanimous
soul.
“Son,” said he, “you’re
a wonder. Wanta keep them crayons?”
Unable to speak for the moment, the
boy took off his ragged cap in one of the most gracious
gestures I have ever witnessed, raising dog-like eyes
of gratitude to his benefactor. Tactfully, Peter
Quick Banta proceeded to expound for my benefit the
technique of the drawing, giving the youngster time
to recover before the inevitable questioning began.
“Where did you learn that?”
“Nowhere. Had a few drawing lessons at
No. 19.”
“Would you like to work for me?”
“How?”
Peter Quick Banta pointed to the sidewalk.
“That?” The boy laughed happily.
“That ain’t work. That’s fun.”
So the partnership was begun, the
boy, whose name was Julien Tennier (soon simplified
into Tenney for local use), sharing Peter Quick Banta’s
roomy garret. Success, modest but unfailing, attended
it from the first appearance of the junior member
of the firm at Coney Island, where, as the local cognoscenti
still maintain, he revolutionized the art and practice
of the “sand-dabs.” Out of the joint
takings grew a bank account. Eventually Peter
Quick Banta came to me about the boy’s education.
“He’s a swell,”
said Peter Quick Banta. “Look at that face!
I don’t care if he did crawl outa the gutter.
I’m an artist and I reco’nize aristocracy
when I see it. And I want him brung up accordin’.”
So I inducted the youngster into such
modest groves of learning as an old, half-shelved
pedagogue has access to, and when the Bonnie Lassie
came to Our Square to make herself and us famous with
her tiny bronzes (this was before she had captured,
reformed, and married Cyrus the Gaunt), I took him
to her and he fell boyishly and violently in love
with her beauty and her genius alike, all of which
was good for his developing soul. She arranged
for his art training.
“But you know, Dominie,”
she used to say, wagging her head like a profound
and thoughtful bird; “this is all very foolish
and shortsighted on my part. Five years from
now that gutter-godling of yours will be doing work
that will make people forget poor little me and my
poor little figurines.”
To which I replied that even if it
were true, instead of the veriest nonsense, about
Julien Tenney or any one else ever eclipsing her, she
would help him just the same!
But five years from then Julien had
gone over to the Philistines.