A portrait shows a leper, he stoops like a hunchback. his fingerless hand, draped in rags, extend forward, pleading. a tattered wrap hides all of his face except two painful eyes. the crowd around the leper is chaotic, a father is grabbing a curious child, a woman trips over her own feet as she scrambles to get away, a man glaring over his shoulder as he runs. the leper pleas, 'if you will, you can make me clean.' the second portray shows the same leper but the scene changed dramatically the title only has two words, 'i am willing' and in this sketch the leper is standing tall, the veil was gone from his face and he is smiling. there is no one around; only one other person standing beside the leper.
the next portray, the artist brush has captured a woman in midair, jumping from one side of a canyon to another. her clothes are ragged, her body is frail and her skin is pale as she looks anemic, her eyes were desperate as she reaches for the canyon wall with both hands. on the ledge stood a Man. all that was visible were His legs, sandals and the hem of His robe. beneath the painting are the woman's' words, 'if only' the next painting portrays the woman standing the ground beneath her bare feet is solid. her face flushes with life, her cautious eyes look up at the half moon of people that surrounds her standing beside her is the One she sought to touch. trembling and fearing were seen in her eyes His words, 'take heart, my daugther'
in another portray a scantily clothed female cowers before an angry mob of men who threaten her with stones! a victim in the name of religion. in the next painting, the stones laid harmlessly on the ground. littering the courtyard by a surprised woman a smiling Man who was left alone and the woman standing in the midst 'neither do I condem you'