This pencil and watercolour drawing by the British architect James William Wild (1814–1892) shows three stucco and glass windows and the cropped outline of a window on the right side of the drawing.
The two windows on the left feature delicate floral tendrils, and the colours blue, red, and yellow predominate here. The window on the right, which has only been drawn and coloured in part, shows a stylized vase with different kinds of flowers (a lily in the middle, carnations, tulips, and roses) placed on a table and flanked by two hyacinths. Below, there is a rectangular section that incorporates the motif of a cypress tree in the centre; the cypress tree is flanked on both sides by a vase with a pink carnation with a blue-violet tulip to either side. The motif of the vase of flowers can also be found in the cartouches of the surrounding frame, as can two hyacinths in the pointed arch. Wild has added several pencil notes to this drawing. The inscriptions below the windows are barely legible.
25G4(PEONY) · plantes et herbes : pivoine
25G41(CARNATION) · fleurs : oeillet
25G41(HYACINTH) · fleurs : jacinthe
25G41(LILY) · fleurs : lis
25G41(TULIP) · fleurs : tulipe
41A6711 · fleurs dans un vase
48A98312 · vrilles ~ ornement
opposite to the fountain / opposite the door (?) (text in English, below the windows)
Window. Bayt. Sheikh Mahdee / mandarah (in the lower left corner of the drawing)