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The Birth of Venus
Sandro Botticelli (1444-1510)

"This charming Virgin [...] was the ancient pagan Sea-goddess Marian [...] A familiar disguise of this same Marian is the merry-maid, as 'mermaid' was once written. The conventional figure of the mermaid--a beautiful woman with a round mirror, a golden comb and a fish-tail--expresses 'The Love-goddess rises from the Sea'. Botticelli's Birth of Venus is an exact icon of her cult. Tall, golden-haired, blue-eyed, pale-faced, the Love-goddess arrives in her scallop-shell at the myrtle-grove, and Earth, in a flowery robe, hastens to wrap her in a scarlet gold-fringed mantle."

- Robert Graves, from The White Goddess, pp.394-95

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current10:38, 6 May 2007Thumbnail for version as of 10:38, 6 May 2007500 × 311 (48 KB)WikiAdmin (Talk | contribs)'''''The Birth of Venus'''''<br /> Sandro Botticelli (1444-1510) :"This charming Virgin [...] was the ancient pagan Sea-goddess Marian [...] A familiar disguise of this same Marian is the merry-maid, as 'mermaid' was once written. The conventional figure
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