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ID: TjvoTIV8/qst/6256761#6275290
7/16/2025, 2:39:37 AM
>>6274545
Of course.
>>6274624
>>6274674
>>6274945
Thank you for the tie breaker good sir.
====
You decided to simply walk into the palace. You were a simple man who enjoyed architecture and it was indeed, in the light of days, magnificent. Between the silk dais probably imported from the orient, who was far more close to India than to France, and the presence of gold even on the stone. This mix of stone and metal, with many trees and greenery was impressive.
The ribbed arches of Gothic architecture, or the more rounded ones of Romanesque architecture, were not the norm in India. What you had before you was a space of balustrades, white stone, belvederes, and colonnades. The slender, delicate forms of the towers were lit by elongated windows with panes much larger than those you see in France, much less leaded than cathedral stained-glass windows, and single-colored, where each pane was separated by a long band of gold or silver. Most impressive, however, was a slender tower topped with a glass dome. This impressed you greatly, a skylight containing a columned gallery where caryatids rose. Each seemed to represent a Guelph beauty in a fine gown and with a serene appearance. The tower seemed animated, and servants and a few courtiers passed through it.
Of course.
>>6274624
>>6274674
>>6274945
Thank you for the tie breaker good sir.
====
You decided to simply walk into the palace. You were a simple man who enjoyed architecture and it was indeed, in the light of days, magnificent. Between the silk dais probably imported from the orient, who was far more close to India than to France, and the presence of gold even on the stone. This mix of stone and metal, with many trees and greenery was impressive.
The ribbed arches of Gothic architecture, or the more rounded ones of Romanesque architecture, were not the norm in India. What you had before you was a space of balustrades, white stone, belvederes, and colonnades. The slender, delicate forms of the towers were lit by elongated windows with panes much larger than those you see in France, much less leaded than cathedral stained-glass windows, and single-colored, where each pane was separated by a long band of gold or silver. Most impressive, however, was a slender tower topped with a glass dome. This impressed you greatly, a skylight containing a columned gallery where caryatids rose. Each seemed to represent a Guelph beauty in a fine gown and with a serene appearance. The tower seemed animated, and servants and a few courtiers passed through it.
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