e throughout the
entire world。
“A Bihzad imitation made in Tabriz eighty years ago;” Master Osman said
as he replaced the volume and opened another。
This was a picture that showed the forced friendship between the cat and
the mouse from Kelile and Dimne。 Out in the fields; a poor mouse; caught
between the attacks of a marten on the ground and a hawk in the air; finds his
salvation in an unfortunate cat caught in a hunter’s trap。 They e to an
agreement: The cat; pretending to be the mouse’s friend; licks him; thereby
scaring away the marten and the hawk。 In turn; the mouse cautiously frees the
cat from the snare。 Even before I could understand the painter’s sensibility;
the master had stuffed the book back beside the other volumes and had
randomly opened another。
This was a pleasant picture of a mysterious woman and a man: The woman
had elegantly opened one hand while asking a question; holding her knee with
the other over her green cloak; as the man turned to her and listened intently。
I looked at the picture avidly; jealous of the intimacy; love and friendship
between them。
Putting that book down; Master Osman opened to a page from another
book。 The cavalry of Persian and Turanian armies; eternal enemies; had donned
their full panoply of armor; helm