Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Rembrandt Painting

Rembrandt Painting
Mademoiselle found cheerful and in which she lived in the summer season, appeared to us as sad and funereal now. The soil was black and muddy from the recent rains and the rotting of the fallen leaves; the trunks of the trees were black and the sky above us was now, as if in mourning, charged with great, heavy clouds.
And it was in this sombre and desolate retreat that we saw the white walls of the pavilion as we approached. A queer-looking building without a window visible on the side by which we neared it. A little door alone marked the entrance to it. It might have passed for a tomb, a vast mausoleum in the midst of a thick forest. As we came nearer, we were able to make out its disposition. The building obtained all the light it needed from the south, that is to say, from the open country. The little door closed on the park. Monsieur and Mademoiselle Stangerson must have found it an ideal seclusion for their work and their dreams.
_______________________________________
ditch
____________________________________
enclosing
wall
___ 1 d
bed i
PARK ___________ t
::::: 4 c
::5:: 2 h
oo oo :: ::___ _
oo
oo oo oo
Traces
of
Footsteps 3 ___________ _______
6 ditch
____ _________________________
door enclosing
wall

No comments: