 Let's start with this one just by looking at the right-hand side. Yeah, try and just block out pretend the other half's not there. Okay, nice and peaceful. How else would you describe it? Old school. Because you see the boats with the sails and the hand fishing on the rowboat. It's kind of the way they've always done it. Okay, so the way they've always done it. And what is being done? What's going on on these boats? The front one, the fishing. Okay. And how are they powered? We are still on the right side. Yeah, still on the right side. So war, so manpower. Okay, natural. Alright, switching to the left-hand side. What do you see over there? Pollution. Yeah, it's funny, when we look at it with our eyes, you see smog, pollution, you know, this horrible environmental travesty. How might they have seen it in 1866? Power, progress. So you have to kind of consider the transition that how our modern eyes see things versus how they might have been perceived back then. Alright, so different kinds of power. Maybe steam power, progress, industry. Look at the landscape on both sides. How is it different? This over here is clear. You can see it right there. So which do you think the artists liked better? The old school or the new school? Which did he support in this painting? And how can you tell? There's no, I mean, I don't know the answer to this. So it's a matter of just... Me, it was an old school, because he paints that front logo, so very, very clear. He's sitting from back here, you can see just about everything's open in the gentleman's. It used to be made a larger. It's much more powerful, you know. It's closer to you. So he wants you to look at this. We talked about sort of light and dark and how artists use that. Which side has sort of the sunlight? They both do. You know, you're focusing here, here and then you're focusing there. It's almost like you're doing this. When you look at the sky, this one is lighter but when you look down, this one is lighter. He's presenting both sides of the issue. I want to come back to what you were saying though because look, there is sort of this blue sky up here and here it's the man-made smoke that's covering that up but here we have the natural storm. So again, he's almost sort of setting up that equivalent. Well, when you just said the word storm, you know, the storm brings in this change.