accusation about others; I believed it。 Now; I sadly realized that in some
strange way the four of us miniaturists who’d looked at this book once
twenty…five years ago ingrained its images into our memories; and since then;
we’ve recalled; transformed; altered and painted them into the books of Our
Sultan。 My spirits were dampened not by the mercilessness of overly
suspicious sultans who wouldn’t take such books out of their treasuries and
show them to us; but by the narrowness of our own world of painting。
Whether it be the great masters of Herat or the new masters of Tabriz; Persian
artists had made more extraordinary illustrations; more masterpieces; than we
Ottomans。
Like a lightning flash; it occurred to me how appropriate it’d be if two days
hence all my miniaturists and I were put to torture; using the point of my
penknife I ruthlessly scraped away the eyes beneath my hand in the picture
that lay open before me。 It was the account of the Persian scholar who learned
chess simply by looking at a chess set brought by the ambassador from
Hindustan; before defeating the Hindu master at his own game! A Persian lie!
One by one; I scraped away the eyes of the chess players and of the shah and
his men who were watching them。 Flipping back through the pages; I also
pitilessly gouged out the eyes of the shahs who battled mercilessly; of the
soldiers of imposing armies bedecked in magnificent armor and of severed
heads lying on the ground。 After doing the same to three pages; I slid my
penknife back into my sash。
My hands trembled; but I didn’t feel so bad。 Did I now feel what so many
lunatics felt after mitting this strange act whose results I encountered
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frequently during my fifty…year tenure as a painter? I wanted nothing more
than blood to flow onto the pages of this book from the eyes I had blinded。
3。 This brings me to the torment and consolation awaiting me at the end of
my life。 No part of this excellent book; which Shah Tahmasp had pleted by
spurring Persia’s most masterful artists for ten years; had seen the touch of
the great Bihzad’s pen; and his excellent rendering of hands was nowhere to be
found。 This fact confirmed that Bihzad was blind in the last years of his life;
when he fled from Herat—then a city out of favor—to Tabriz。 So; I once again
decided happily that after he attained the perfection of the old masters by
working his entire life; the great master blinded himself to avoid tainting his
painting with the desires of any other workshop or shah。
Just then; Black and the dwarf opened a thick volume they were carrying
and placed it before me。