painted from memory。 At the age of 119; this legendary master who’d never
married and had never even made love; met the flesh…and…blood ideal of the
beautiful slant…eyed; sharp…chinned; moon…faced boy he’d depicted for a
century: a part…Chinese part…Croatian sixteen…year…old apprentice in Shah
Tahmasp’s miniaturists’ workshop; with whom quite abruptly and
understandably; he fell in love。 In order to seduce this boy…apprentice of
unimaginable beauty; as a true lover would do; he schemed and joined in
power struggles between miniaturists; he gave himself over to lying; deception
and trickery。 At first; the master miniaturist of Khorasan was invigorated by
his attempts to catch up to the artistic fashions he’d successfully avoided for
one hundred years; but this effort also divorced him from the eternal
legendary days of old。 Late one afternoon; staring dreamily at the beautiful
apprentice before an open window; he caught cold in the icy Tabriz wind。 The
following day; during a fit of sneezing; he went pletely blind。 Two days
later; he fell down the lofty stone workshop stairs and died。
“I’ve heard the name of Tall Mehmet of Khorasan; but I’ve never heard this
legend;” Black said。
He delicately offered this ment to show he knew the story was finished
and his mind was occupied with what I’d related。 I fell silent for a time so he
could stare at me to his heart’s content。 Since it bothers me when my hands
are not occupied; just after beginning the second story; I started to paint
again; picking up where I’d left off when Black knocked on the door。 My
ely apprentice Mahmut; who always sat at my knee and mixed my paints;
sharpened my reed pens and sometimes erased my errors; silently sat beside
me; listening and staring; from within the house the sounds of my wife’s
movements could be heard。
“Aahaa;” said Black; “the Sultan has arisen。”
He stared at the painting with awe; and I pretended the reason for his awe
was insignificant; but let me tell you candidly: Our Exalted Sultan appears
seated in all two hundred of our circumcision ceremony pictures in the Book of
Festivities; watching for fifty…two days the passing of the merchants; guilds;
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spectators; soldiers and prisoners from the window of the royal enclosure
erected for the occasion。 Only in one picture of mine is He shown on foot;
tossing money from florin…filled pouches to the cro
was to capture the surprise and excitement of the crowds punching; kicking
and strangling one another as they scrambled to grab coins off the ground;