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Describe the psychological tension of a scene painted in spring birch colors of gold, blue, and white. A rider and a horseman ride side by side through a field in the middle ground. In the foreground, a girl watches this idyllic scene with jealousy. It is summer, and the 17th century.
A detailed oil painting in the style of Edward Atkinson Hornel, depicting a young girl with brown hair tied in a ponytail, wearing a modest olive green dress with a white collar and white lace cuffs, and a gray-blue skirt, standing in a sunlit meadow of tall grass and wildflowers on the left side of the frame. Her hands are clasped in front of her, and she looks with a slightly concerned or curious expression towards two figures on horseback in the midground. The figures, a woman and a man, are riding brown horses toward the right. The woman, on the left horse, wears a light-colored blouse, a brown hat, and a blue apron over a light skirt. The man, on the right horse, wears an olive green jacket with red and gold trim, a white cravat, and a light-colored hat. Both riders have a somewhat formal and composed appearance. In the background, there is a cluster of birch trees with distinctive white bark and golden autumn leaves on the right. The sky is a pale blue with soft, white clouds, and the overall lighting suggests a gentle, late afternoon sun. The landscape extends into the distance with rolling hills and scattered trees, rendered in soft, muted tones.