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illustrations that I’d seen over the years。 Not to mention the copies that the
chief of the dwarfs; Jafer; in the treasury would make of the best trees;
dragons; birds; hunters and warriors from the pages of volumes locked away;
that is; if you gave him ten gold pieces; the rogue。 My notebook is excellent;
not for those who want to see the actual world in which they live through
pictures and decoration; but for those who want to recall the fables of old。
Flipping through the pages while showing the images to the pageboy; I
selected the best of the horses。 I briskly poked holes over the lines of that
picture with a needle。 Next; I placed a clean sheet of paper under the stencil。 I
gradually sprinkled a liberal amount of coal dust on top; then shook it so the
dust would pass through the holes。 I lifted the stencil。 The coal dust; dot by
dot; had transferred the beautiful horse’s entire shape to the sheet below。 It
was a pleasure to behold。
I grabbed my pen。 With an inspiration that suddenly welled up within me; I
elegantly connected the dots with quick and decisive strokes; such that as I was
drawing the horse’s belly; graceful neck; nose and rump; I lovingly felt the
horse within me。 “There it is;” I said。 “The world’s most beautiful horse。 Not
one of those fools could draw this。”
So the boy from the palace would believe this as well; and so he wouldn’t
explain to Our Sultan how I’d been inspired to draw this picture; I gave him
three more counterfeit coins。 I implied that I would give him even more if I
ended up winning the gold。 Furthermore; he also imagined; I believe; that he
might soon be able to catch sight of my wife once again; whom he’d leered at
open…mouthed。 There are many who believe you can tell a good miniaturist by
the horse he draws; however; to be the best miniaturist; it’s not enough to
make the best horse; you must also convince Our Sultan and His circle of
sycophants that you are indeed the best miniaturist。
When I draw a magnificent horse; I am who I am; nothing more。
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I WILL BE CALLED A MURDERER
Were you able to determine who I am from the way I sketched a horse?
As soon as I heard I was invited to make a horse; I knew this was no
petition: They wanted to catch me through my illustration。 I’m perfectly
aware that the horse sketches I’d drawn on rough paper were found on poor
Elegant Effendi’s body。 But I have no fault or style by which they might
discover me through the horses I’ve made。 Though I was as certain of this as I
could be; I was in a panic while rendering the horse。 Had I done something
incriminating when I made the horse for Enishte? I had to depict a new horse
this time。 I thought of pletely different things。 I “restrained” myself and
became another。
But who am I? Am I an artist who would suppress the masterpieces I was
capable of in order to fit the style of the workshop or an artist who would one
day triumphantly depict the horse deep within himself?
Suddenly and with terror; I felt the existence of that triumphant miniaturist
within me。 It was as if I were being watched by another soul; and; in short; I
was ashamed。
I quickly knew that I wouldn’t be able to remain at home; and bolting
outside; I walked briskly down the darkened streets。 As Sheikh Osman Baba
wrote in his Lives of the Saints; in order for a genuine wandering dervish to
escape the devil within; he must roam his entire life without remaining
anywhere too long。 After roaming from city to city for sixty…seven years; he
tired of running and surrendered to the Devil。 This is the age when master
miniaturists attain blindness; or the darkness of Allah; the age when they
involuntarily achieve a style; while freeing themselves of all intimations of
style。
I wandered through the Chicken…Sellers Market in Bayazid; through the
empty square of the slave market; amid the pleasant aromas of soup and
pudding shops; as if searching。 I passed the closed doors of barbershops;
clothes pressers; an old bread baker who was counting his money and looking
at me in surprise; I passed a grocer’s shop smelling of pickles and salted fish;
and since my eyes were taken only by colors; I walked into a herbs and notions
shop where something was being weighed; and in the light of a lamp; stared
passionately; the way one looks at one’s beloved; at the sacks of coffee; ginger;
saffron and cinnamon; the colorful cans of gum mastic; the aniseed whose
scent wafted from the counter; and at mounds of brown and black cumin。
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Sometimes I want to put everything into my mouth; sometimes I want to fill a
page with a picture of all creation。
I walked into the place where I’d filled my stomach twice before in the last
week; which I’d personally named the “soup kitchen of the downtrodden”—
actually; of the “miserable” would’ve been more appropriate。 It was open until
midnight to those who knew about it。 Inside were a few unfortunates dressed
like horse thieves or like men who’d escaped the gallows; a couple of pathetic
characters whose sorrow and hopelessness caused their sights to slip from this
world to distant paradises; as happens with opium addicts; two beggars who
were at pains to follow even basic guild etiquette; and a young gentleman
who’d seated himself in a corner at a distance from this crowd。 I gave the
Aleppan cook a graceful greeting。 Heaping the meat…filled cabbage dolma into
my bowl; I covered it with yogurt and topped it off with handfuls of hot red
pepper flakes before taking a seat beside the young gentleman。
Every night a sorrow overwhelms me; a misery descends upon me。 Oh; my
brothers; my dear brothers; we’re being poisoned; we’re rotting; dying; we’re
exhausting ourselves as we live; we’ve sunk up to our necks in misery…Some
nights; I dream that he emerges from the well and es after me; but I know
we’ve buried him deeply beneath plenty of earth。 He couldn’t possibly rise
from the grave。
The gentleman; who I thought had buried his nose in his soup and
forgotten the whole world; opened the door to a conversation。 Was this a sign
from Allah? “Yes;” I answered; “they’ve ground the meat to the right
consistency; my stuffed cabbage is quite to my liking。” I asked about him: He’d
recently graduated from a miserable twenty…coin college and been taken into
Arifi Pasha’s patronage as a clerk。 I didn’t ask him why; at this hour of the
night; he wasn’t at the Pasha’s estate; at the mosque or at home in the arms of
his beloved wife; but chose instead to be at this street kitchen teeming with
unmarried thugs。 He asked me where I’d e from and who I was。 I thought
for a moment。
“My name is Bihzad。 I’ve e from Herat and Tabriz。 I’ve painted the
most magnificent pictures; the most incredible masterpieces。 In Persia and
Arabia; in every Muslim book arts workshop where illustrations are made;
they’ve said this about me for hundreds of years: It looks real; just like the
work of Bihzad。”
Of course; this isn’t the issue。 My paintings reveal what the mind; not the
eye; sees。 But painting; as you know quite well; is a feast for the eyes。 If you
305
bine these two thoughts; my world will emerge。 That is:
ALIF:
Painting brings to life what the mind sees; as a feast for the eyes。
LAM: What the eye sees in the world enters the painting to the degree
that it serves the mind。
MIM:
Consequently; beauty is the eye discovering in our world what
the mind already knows。
Did the graduate of the miserable college understand this logic; which I’d
extracted with lightning inspiration from the depths of my soul? No