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Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor
GDXJ 93.43-4.5%Nov 20 4:00 PM EST

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To: maceng2 who wrote (97122)1/24/2004 8:38:19 AM
From: Richnorth  Read Replies (1) of 116764
 
Here's something of interest to everyone........

The Last Supper was painted by

Leonardo Da Vinci, a noted Italian artist;

and the time engaged for its completion

was seven years. The figures

representing the twelve Apostles and

Christ himself were painted from

living persons. The life-model for

the painting of the figure of Jesus

was chosen first.

When it was decided that Da Vinci

would paint this great picture,

hundreds and hundreds of young men were

carefully viewed, in an endeavor to find a

face and personality exhibiting innocence and beauty,

free from the scars

and signs of dissipation caused by sin.

Finally, after weeks of laborious searching,

a young man nineteen years of

age, was selected as a model for the

portrayal of Christ. For six months,

Da Vinci worked on the reproduction

of this leading character in his

famous painting. During the next six years,

Da Vinci continued his labors on

this sublimework of art. One by one,

fitting persons were chosen to represent

each of the eleven Apostles; space being

left for the painting of the figure

representing Judas Iscariot, as the final

task of this masterpiece. This was the

Apostle, you remember, who betrayed his Lord

for thirty pieces of silver, worth

$16.96 in our present day currency.

For weeks, Da Vinci searched for a

man with a hard callous face, with a

countenance marked by scars of avarice,

deceit, hypocrisy, and crime;

a face that would delineate a character,

who would betray his best friend.

After many discouraging experiences,

in searching for the type of person

required to represent Judas, word

came to Da Vinci that a man, whose

appearance fully met his requirements,

had been found in a dungeon in

Rome, sentenced to die for a life of crime and murder.

Da Vinci made the trip to Rome at once,

and this man was brought out from

his imprisonment in the dungeon

and led out into the light of the sun.

There Da Vinci saw before him a dark,

swarthy man; his long, shaggy and unkempt

hair sprawled over his face,

which betrayed a character of viciousness

and complete ruin. At last, the famous

painter had found the person he

wanted to represent the character

of Judas in his painting.

By special permission from the king,

this prisoner was carried to Milan

where the picture was being painted;

and for months he sat before Da Vinci at

appointed hours each day, as the

gifted artist diligently continued his

task of transmitting to his painting

this base character in the picture

representing the traitor and betrayer of our savior.

As he finished his last stroke, he

turned to the guards and said,

"I have finished. You may take the prisoner away."

As the guards were leading their prisoner away,

he suddenly broke loose

from their control and rushed up to Da Vinci,

crying as he did so, "Oh, Da

Vinci, look at me! Do you not know who I am?"

Da Vinci, with the trained eyes of a great

character student, carefully

scrutinized the man, upon whose

face he had constantly gazed for six

months and replied, "No, I had never

seen you in my life, until you were

brought before me out of the dungeon in Rome."

Then, lifting his eyes toward heaven,

the prisoner said, "Oh, God, have I

fallen so low?" Then turning toward

the painter he cried, "Leonardo Da

Vinci! Look at me again, for I am the same man

you painted just seven years ago.

Many lessons can be learned from this

true story of the painting of

The Last Supper. This is a story of how we

often perceive others - how

easily we overlook the Christ within

the people we meet, and judge by

outward appearances. This also strongly

teaches the lesson of the

effects of right or wrong thinking, on the life of

an individual. Here was a young man whose

character was so pure and

unspoiled by the sins of the world, that he

presented a countenance of

innocence and beauty fit to be used for

the painting of a representation

of Christ. But within seven years,

following the thoughts of sin and a

life of crime, he was changed into a

perfect picture of the most traitorous

character ever known in the history of the world.

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