And
surely
you
have
seen,
in
the
darkness
of
the
innermost
rooms
of
these
huge
buildings,
to which
sunlight
never
penetrates,
how the
gold
leaf
of
a
sliding
door
or
screen
will
pick
up
a
distant
glimmer
from
the
garden,
then
suddenly
send
forth
an
ethereal
glow
,
a
faint
golden
light
cast
into
the
enveloping
darkness,
like
the
glow
upon
the
horizon
at
sunset.
In
no
other
setting
is
gold
quite
so
exquisitely
beautiful.
You
walk
past,
turning
to
look
again,
and
yet
again;
and
as
you
move
away
the
golden
surface
of
the
paper
glows
ever
more
deeply,
changing
not
in
a
flash,
but
growing
slowly,
steadily
brighter,
like
color
rising
in
the
face
of
a
giant.
Or
again
you
may
find
that
the
gold
dust
of
the
background,
which
until
that
moment
had
only
a
dull,
sleepy
luster,
will,
as
you
move
past,
suddenly
gleam
forth
as
if
had
burst
into
flame.
How,
in
such
a
dark
place
,
gold
draws
so
much
light
to
itself
is
a
mystery
to
me.
But
I
see
why
in
ancient
times
statues
of
the
Buddha
were
gilt
with
gold
and why
gold
leaf
covered
the
homes
of
the
nobility.
Modem
man,
in
his
well-lit
house,
knows
nothing
of
the
beauty
of
gold;
but those
who
lived
in the
dark
houses
of the
past
were not
merely
captivated
by its
beauty,
they
also
knew its
practical
value;
for
gold,
in these
dim
rooms,
must have
served
the
function
of
a
reflector.
Their
use
of
gold
leaf
and
gold
dust
was
not
mere
extravagance.
Its
reflective
properties
were
put
to
use
as
a
source
of
illumination.
Silver
and
other
metals
quickly
lose
their
gloss,
but
gold
retains
its
brilliance
indefinitely
to
light
the
darkness
of
the
room
.
This
is
why
gold
was
held
in
such
incredibly
high
esteem
.