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Racism In Society

Submitted by rffyrdx on March 23, 2008

Category: English
Words: 1325 | Pages: 6
Views: 83
Popularity Rank: 96,568
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

The overall meaning of the painting will remain a mystery if one is unfamiliar with certain underlying texts. No naive understanding is possible; no innocent eye would be able to contribute significantly to a full identification of the individuals portrayed here without having first read certain literary sources.

[The figure on the far left is] Mercury, the messenger of the gods …[who] was reputed to drive away the winter winds and was regarded as the harbinger of spring. More detailed information on his activities and on his snake-entwined rod may be found in Virgil's Aeneid, where he is described as a god dividing the winds and the clouds with his wand.
"Then he took his wand; the wand with which he calls the pale souls forth from the Nether World and sends others down to grim Tartarus, gives sleep, and takes sleep away, and unseals eyes at death. So shepherding the winds before him with his wand, he swam through the murk of the clouds."

The flying [boy] . . . is Amor, easily recognizable by his bow, arrows, and quiver as well as by his blindfold. Amor (known to the Greeks as Eros), the "winged son" of Mars and Venus, was the god of passionate love, described by Apuleius in the story of Amor and Psyche:
"rash enough and hardy, who by his evil manners, condemning all public justice and law, armed with fire and arrows, running up and down in the nights from house to house, and corrupting the lawful marriages of every person, does nothing (and yet he is not punished) but that which is evil."

The young woman placed directly below Amor is his mother, Venus, the goddess of love and beauty. The group of young women dancing to her right are identifiable above all because they are three in number. These are the Three Graces, who frequently appear in the company of Venus and their guide Mercury. Precisely the same configuration of Venus and Amor, the Three Graces, and Mercury is found in a well-known ode...

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