And then, when we have caught our breath, let us wander into any one of the
patios along the Golden Horn, and feast our eyes on columns of verd-antique,
supporting arches light as rainbows, framing the patio of the Pigeon
Mosque, the loveliest of all the patios I know, and let us run our eyes around
that Moorish square. The sun blazes down on glistening marbles; gnarled old
cedars twist themselves upward against the sky; flocks of pigeons whirl and
swoop and fall in showers on cornice, roof, and dome; tall minarets like shafts
of light shoot up into the blue.Scattered over the uneven pavement, patched
with strips and squares of shadows, lounge groups of priests in bewildering
robes of mauve, corn-yellow, white, and sea-green; while back beneath the cool
arches bunches of natives listlessly pursue their several avocations. decorative painting
It is a sight that brings the blood with a rush to one's cheek. That swarthy
Mussulman at his little square table mending seals; that fellow next him selling
herbs, sprawled out on the marble floor, too lazy to crawl away from the slant
of sunshine slipping through the ragged awning; that young Turk in frayed and soiled
embroidered jacket, holding up strings of beads to the priests passing in and
out—is not this the East, the land of our dreams? And the old public scribe with
the gray beard and white turban, writing letters, the motionless veiled figures
squatting around him—is he not Baba Mustapha? and the soft-eyed girl whispering
into his ear none other than Morgiana, fair as the meridian sun? oil paintings online
So, too, in my beloved Venice, where many years ago I camped out by the side
of a canal—the Rio Giuseppe—all of it, from the red wall, where the sailors
land, to the lagoon, where the tower of Castello is ready to topple into the
sea. buy oil paintings online
Not much of a canal—not much of a painting ground, really, to the masters who
have gone before and are still at work, but a truly lovable, lovely, and most
enchanting possession to me their humble disciple. Once you get into it you
never want to get out, and once out you are miserable until you get back again. On
one bank stretches a row of rookeries—a maze of hanging clothes, fish-nets,
balconies hooded by awnings and topped by nondescript chimneys of all sizes and
patterns, with here and there a dab of vermilion and light red, the whole
brilliant against a china-blue sky. On the other is the long brick wall of the
garden—soggy, begrimed, streaked with moss and lichen in bands of black-green
and yellow ochre, over which mass and sway the great sycamores that Ziem loved,
their lower branches interwoven with cinnobar cedars gleaming in spots where the
prying sun drips gold. modern abstract art oil painting
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