man and no coiling Chinese clouds。 Just the ground; the sky; myself and the
horizon。 But my story is much more plicated。
2。 As a tree; I need not be part of a book。 As the picture of a tree; however;
I’m disturbed that I’m not a page within some manuscript。 Since I’m not
representing something in a book; what es to mind is that my picture will
be nailed to a wall and the likes of pagans and infidels will prostrate
themselves before me in worship。 May the followers of Erzurumi Hoja not
hear that I secretly take pride in this thought—but then I’m overe with
the utmost fear and embarrassment。
3。 The essential reason for my loneliness is that I don’t even know where I
belong。 I was supposed to be part of a story; but I fell from there like a leaf in
autumn。 Let me tell you about it:
Falling from My Story Like a Leaf Falls in Fall
Forty years ago; the Persian Shah Tahmasp; who was the archenemy of the
Ottomans as well as the world’s greatest patron…king of the art of painting;
began to grow senile and lost his enthusiasm for wine; music; poetry and
painting; furthermore; he quit drinking coffee; and naturally; his brain
stopped working。 Full of the suspicions of a long…faced; dark…spirited old
geezer; he transferred his capital from Tabriz; which was then Persian territory;
to Kazvin so it would be farther from the Ottoman armies。 One day when he
had grown even older; he was possessed by a jinn; had a nervous fit; and
begging God’s forgiveness; pletely swore off wine; handsome young boys
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and painting; which is proof enough that after this great shah lost his taste for
coffee; he also lost his mind。
This was why the divinely inspired bookbinders; calligraphers; gilders and
miniaturists; who created the greatest masterpieces in the world over a
twenty…year period in Tabriz; scattered like a covey of partridges to other cities。
Shah Tahmasp’s nephew and son…in…law; Sultan Ibrahim Mirza; invited the
most gifted among them to Mashhad; where he served as provincial governor;
and settled them in his miniaturists’ workshop to copy out a marvelous
illuminated and illustrated manuscript of all seven fables of the Seven Thrones
of Jami—the greatest poet in Herat during the reign of Tamerlane。 Shah
Tahmasp; who both admired and envied his intelligent and handsome nephew;
and regretted having given his daughter to him; was consumed by jealousy
when he heard about this magnificent book and angrily ousted his nephew
from the post of Governor of Mashhad; banishing him to the city of Kain;
before sending him off to the smaller town of Sebzivar in a renewed fit of