Part II
abstract
“If you have looked with care at the three musicians, or any other of the principal figures, in the great town or landscape views in this principal room, you will be ready now with better patience to trace the order of their subjects, and such character or story as their treatment may develope. I can only help you, however, with Carpaccio’s, for I have not been able to examine, or much think of, Mansueti’s, recognizing nevertheless much that is delightful in them. By Carpaccio, then, in this room, there are in all eleven important pictures, eight from the legend of St. Ursula, and three of distinct subjects.”