Summary
1. It appeared from Tiare’s
story that it was she who found Strickland his wife, a 17-year-old native
orphan Ata, with whom the man settled in a remote hut and had two children. 2.
The girl was a perfect partner for the artist, for she never bothered him and
didn’t prevent him from painting – that’s what the narrator learned from Mrs.
Johnson. 3. Later he met Captain Brunot, a Frenchman who happened to know Strickland
and some facts from the artist’s family life with Ata. 4. The seaman also had
an impression from the girl as a quiet and dutiful wife; besides, what the
Captain had in common with Strickland was great admiration of beauty, so that
the man could appreciate the pittoresque of the place the painter had chosen
for living at its true value. 5. Having established friendly relations with the
writer, Monsieur Brunot introduced him to Dr. Coutras who could tell the men
about Strickland’s last years of life. 6. It turned out that the artist was fatally
ill with leprosy, but refused any help and went on painting, at first on canvas
and later on the walls of the house. 7. Only Ata with her children stayed with
him to his dying day and then set fire on their hut, following her husband’s
will, though the painted house was a work of art. 8. Finally the time for the
narrator to spend on Tahiti was over, and the writer went back to London to see
Mrs. Strickland and to inform her of some facts he’d learned. 9. The woman was
engaged in meeting arts critics and behaved in all ways like a famous artist’s
wife.
GOOD!
ReplyDeleteMIND THE SEQUENCE OF TENSES!
SLIPS:
It appeared from Tiare’s story that it was she who HAD found Strickland his wife ...
The girl HAD BEEN a perfect partner for the artist, for she HAD never bothered him and HADN'T preventED him from painting – that’s what the narrator learned from Mrs. Johnson.