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第57章

my name is red-我的名字叫红-第57章

小说: my name is red-我的名字叫红 字数: 每页3500字

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Khorasan; Bukhara and Herat; we in Istanbul couldn’t make these paintings at 
all。  As  we  talked;  the  consistency  of  time;  like  that  of  the  paint;  seemed  to 
change; to flow ever more quickly。 In a corner of my mind I was wondering 
why no one had yet returned home。 If only he’d put down that weighty object。 
With  our  customary  workaday  ease;  he  asked  me;  “When  your  book  is 
finished; will those who see my work appreciate my skill?” 
“If we can; God willing; finish this book without interference; Our Sultan 
will look it over; of course; checking first to see whether we used enough gold 
leaf in the appropriate places。 Then; as if reading a description of Himself; as 
any sultan would; He’ll stare at his own portrait; struck by His own likeness 
rather than by our magnificent illustrations; thereafter; if He takes the time to 
examine  the  spectacle  we’ve  painstakingly  and  devotedly  created  at  the 
expense of the light of our eyes; so much the better。 You know; as well as I; that 
barring a miracle; He’ll lock the book away in His treasury without even asking 
who  made  the  frame  or  the  gilded  illuminations;  who  painted  this  man  or 
that horse—and like all skillful artisans; we’ll go back to painting; ever hopeful 
that one day a miracle of acknowledgment will find us。” 
186 
 
We were silent for a while; as if patiently waiting for something。 
“When will that miracle happen?” he asked。 “When will all those paintings 
we’ve worked on until we could no longer see straight truly be appreciated? 
When will they give me; give us; the respect we deserve?” 
“Never!” 
“How so?” 
“They’ll never give you what you want;” I said。 “In the future; you’ll be even 
less appreciated。” 
“Books last for centuries;” he said proudly but without confidence。 
“Believe me; none of the Veian masters have your poetic sensibility; your 
conviction; your sensitivity; the purity and brightness of your colors; yet their 
paintings  are  more  pelling  because  they  more  closely  resemble  life  itself。 
They  don’t  paint  the  world  as  seen  from  the  balcony  of  a  minaret;  ignoring 
what they call perspective; they depict what’s seen at street level; or from the 
inside of a prince’s room; taking in his bed; quilt; desk; mirror; his tiger; his 
daughter and his coins。 They include it all; as you know。 I’m not persuaded by 
everything they do。 Attempting to imitate the world directly through painting 
seems dishonorable to me。 I resent it。 But there’s an undeniable allure to the 
paintings they make by those new methods。 They depict what the eye sees just 
as the eye sees it。 Indeed; they paint what they see; whereas we paint what we 
look at。 Beholding their work; one es to realize that the only way to have 
one’s  face  immortalized  is  through  the  Frankish  style。  And  it’s  not  only  the 
inhabitants  of  Venice  who  are  captured  by  this  notion;  but  all  the  tailors; 
butchers; soldiers; priests and grocers in all the Frankish lands…They all have 
their  portraits  made  this  way。  Just  a  glance  at  those  paintings  and  you  too 
would  want  to  see  yourself  this  way;  you’d  want  to  believe  that  you’re 
different  from  all  others;  a  unique;  special  and  particuliar  human  being。 
Painting people; not as they are perceived by the mind; but as they are actually 
seen by the naked eye; painting in the new method; allows for this possibility。 
One  day  everyone  will  paint  as  they  do。  When  ”painting‘  is  mentioned;  the 
world  will  think  of  their  work!  Even  a  poor  foolish  tailor  who  understands 
nothing  of  illustrating  will  want  such  a  portrait  so  he  might  be  convinced; 
upon seeing the unique curve of his nose; that he’s not an ordinary simpleton; 
but an extraordinary man。“ 
“So? We can make that portrait; as well;” quipped the witty assassin。 
187 
 
“We  won’t!”  I  replied。  “Haven’t  you  learned  from  your  victim;  the  late 
Elegant  Effendi;  how  afraid  we  are  of  being  labeled  imitators  of  the  Franks? 
Even if we venture bravely to paint like them; it’ll amount to the same thing。 
In  the  end;  our  methods  will  die  out;  our  colors  will  fade。  No  one  will  care 
about our books and our paintings; and those who do express interest will ask 
with a sneer; with no understanding whatsoever; why there’s no perspective—
or else they won’t be able to find the manuscripts at all。 Indifference; time and 
disaster  will  destroy  our  art。  The  Arabian  glue  used  in  the  bindings  contains 
fish; honey and bone; and the pages are sized and polished with a finish made 
from  egg  white  and  starch。  Greedy;  shameless  mice  will  nibble  these  pages 
away;  termites;  worms  and  a  thousand  varieties  of  insect  will  gnaw  our 
manuscripts out of existence。 Bindings will fall apart and pages will drop out。 
Women  lighting  their  stoves;  thieves;  indifferent  servants  and  children  will 
thoughtlessly tear out the pages and pictures。 Child princes will scrawl over the 
illustrations  with  toy  pens。  They’ll  blacken  people’s  eyes;  wipe  their  runny 
noses  on  the  pages;  doodle  in  the  margins  with  black  ink。  And  religious 
censors will blacken out whatever is left。 They’ll tear and cut up our paintings; 
perhaps   use   them   to   make   other   pictures   or   for   games   and   such 
entertainment。 While mothers destroy the illustrations they consider obscene; 
fathers  and  older  brothers  will  jack  off  onto  the  pictures  of  women  and  the 
pages  will  stick  together;  not  only  because  of  this;  but  also  due  to  being 
smeared  with  mud;  water;  bad  glue;  spit  and  all  manner  of  filth  and  food。 
Stains of mold and dirt will blossom like flowers where the pages have stuck 
together。  Rain;  leaky  roofs;  floods  and  dirt  will  ruin  our  books。  Of  course; 
together   with   the   tattered;   faded   and   unreadable   pages;   which   water; 
humidity; bugs and neglect will have reduced to pulp; the one last volume to 
emerge  intact;  like  a  miracle;  from  the  bottom  of  a  bone…dry  chest  will  also 
one  day  disappear;  swallowed  up  in  the  flames  of  a  merciless  fire。  Is  there  a 
neighborhood in Istanbul that hasn’t been burned to the ground at least once 
every twenty years that we might expect such a book to survive? In this city; 
where  every  three  years  more  books  and  libraries  disappear  than  those  the 
Mongols  burned  and  plundered  in  Baghdad;  what  painter  could  possibly 
imagine that his masterpiece might last more than a century; or that one day 
his pictures might be seen; and he revered like Bihzad? Not only our own art; 
but every single work made in this world over the years will vanish in fires; be 
destroyed by worms or be lost out of neglect: Shirin proudly watching Hüsrev 
from  a  window;  Hüsrev  delightfully  spying  on  Shirin  as  she  bathes  by 
moonlight;  lovers  gazing  at  each  other  with  grace  and  subtlety;  Rüstem’s 
wrestling a white demon to death at the bottom of a well; the anguished state 
188 
 
of  a  lovelorn  Mejnun  befriending  a  white  tiger  and  a  mountain  goat  in  the 
desert;  the  capture  and  hanging  of  a  deceitful  shepherd  dog  who  presents  a 
sheep  from  his  flock  to  the  she…wolf  he  mates  with  each  night;  the  flower; 
angel; leafy twig; bird and teardrop border illuminations; the lute players that 
embellish Hafiz’s enigmatic poems; the wall ornamentations that have ruined 
the  eyes  of  thousands;  nay  tens  of  thousands  of  miniaturist  apprentices;  the 
small  plaques  hung  above  doors  and  on  walls;  the  couplets  secretly  written 
between the embedded borders of illustrations; the humble signatures hidden 
at the bases of walls; in corners; in facade embellishments; under the soles of 
feet; beneath shrubbery and between rocks; the flower…covered quilts covering 
lovers;   the   severed   infidel   heads   patiently   awaiting   Our   Sultan’s   late 
grandfathe

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