Indian sculpture and painting, illustrated by typical masterpieces, with an explanation of their motives and ideals . ombined with con-summate taste and judgment. For every touchis put in with a masterly appreciation of its justvalue, so that amidst the extraordinary wealth ofdetail artistic unity is always preserved. The painting of a turkey-cock, Plate LXIL, ispossibly another work by Mansur. It also bearsJahangirs seal, and its history is given byJahangir himself in the diary of the seventh year ofhis reign, as recorded in the Khan, who had been sent on a mission


Indian sculpture and painting, illustrated by typical masterpieces, with an explanation of their motives and ideals . ombined with con-summate taste and judgment. For every touchis put in with a masterly appreciation of its justvalue, so that amidst the extraordinary wealth ofdetail artistic unity is always preserved. The painting of a turkey-cock, Plate LXIL, ispossibly another work by Mansur. It also bearsJahangirs seal, and its history is given byJahangir himself in the diary of the seventh year ofhis reign, as recorded in the Khan, who had been sent on a missionto Goa, brought back several rarities he had pur-chased for the Emperor. Among them, says Jahangir, were a fewanimals which excited my curiosity and whichI had never seen before. No one evenknew their names. The Emperor Babar hasin his memoirs given an able description andpictured representation of several animals, butit is most probable that he never ordered thepainters to draw them from the life. But as theanimals now before me were of such exquisite PLATE LXit A TURKE¥-COCK By one of Jahangirs Court painters. A TURKEY-COCK 215 rarity, I wrote a description of them and orderedthat their pictures should be drawn in the Ja-hangiri-nama with the view that their actual like-nesses might afford a greater surprise to the readerthan the mere description of them. One of the birds resembled a peahen, but wasa little larger in size, though less than a he was desirous of pairing he used tospread his tail and feathers and danced about likea peacock. His beak and feet resembled those ofa barn-door fowl. His head, neck, and throatchanged their colour every minute, but whenanxious to pair he became a perfect red and seemedto be 9. beautiful piece of coral. After some timehe was as white as cotton, and sometimes he gotas blue as a turquoise, and, in short, turned allcolours, like a chameleon. The piece of fleshvwhich is attached to his head looks like the combof a cock. But the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury, bookdecade1900, bookidcu31924016181798, bookyear1908