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In 1581, the Italian poet Tarquinato Tasso published Gerusaleme Liberata (Jerusalem Liberated), an instantly popular epic poem based on one of the crusades by Christians to retake the Holy Land. It was written as a romantic fantasy, recounting Satan's efforts to create obstacles for the heroic Christian knights, particularly the noble Rinaldo. The beautiful sorceress Armida enticed Rinaldo to enter the lush garden of her castle. There she keeps him besotted with sensual pleasures. He holds her "crystal mirror" up to her face but declares that her worth and beauty are more perfectly "painted in my heart."The episode is treated by Soens as a tender moment, but in the poem it is clear that Rinaldo, "drunk with ease," has lost his moral compass. His comrades burst in and show him a "pure and precious" polished shield in which he sees his "wanton habits." Ashamed, he abandons Armida to return to the battle.Soens worked in Antwerp and Rome before becoming court painter to the Farnese grand dukes in Parma, where Tasso's poem was published.
Page data
- Page
- 1
- Source index
- 0
- Type
- photo
- Media ID
- 0b1ecfa148dd4e39
- Size
- unknown
Document data
- ID
- 15439
- Core
- obj
- Type
- drawing
DTO data
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"title": "Rinaldo and Armida in the Enchanted Garden",
"description": "In 1581, the Italian poet Tarquinato Tasso published Gerusaleme Liberata (Jerusalem Liberated), an instantly popular epic poem based on one of the crusades by Christians to retake the Holy Land. It was written as a romantic fantasy, recounting Satan's efforts to create obstacles for the heroic Christian knights, particularly the noble Rinaldo. The beautiful sorceress Armida enticed Rinaldo to enter the lush garden of her castle. There she keeps him besotted with sensual pleasures. He holds her \"crystal mirror\" up to her face but declares that her worth and beauty are more perfectly \"painted in my heart.\"The episode is treated by Soens as a tender moment, but in the poem it is clear that Rinaldo, \"drunk with ease,\" has lost his moral compass. His comrades burst in and show him a \"pure and precious\" polished shield in which he sees his \"wanton habits.\" Ashamed, he abandons Armida to return to the battle.Soens worked in Antwerp and Rome before becoming court painter to the Farnese grand dukes in Parma, where Tasso's poem was published.",
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Context sent to Scholar
Document identity
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Document source metadata
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"description": "In 1581, the Italian poet Tarquinato Tasso published Gerusaleme Liberata (Jerusalem Liberated), an instantly popular epic poem based on one of the crusades by Christians to retake the Holy Land. It was written as a romantic fantasy, recounting Satan's efforts to create obstacles for the heroic Christian knights, particularly the noble Rinaldo. The beautiful sorceress Armida enticed Rinaldo to enter the lush garden of her castle. There she keeps him besotted with sensual pleasures. He holds her \"crystal mirror\" up to her face but declares that her worth and beauty are more perfectly \"painted in my heart.\"The episode is treated by Soens as a tender moment, but in the poem it is clear that Rinaldo, \"drunk with ease,\" has lost his moral compass. His comrades burst in and show him a \"pure and precious\" polished shield in which he sees his \"wanton habits.\" Ashamed, he abandons Armida to return to the battle.Soens worked in Antwerp and Rome before becoming court painter to the Farnese grand dukes in Parma, where Tasso's poem was published.",
"provenance": "Don Marcello Massarenti Collection, Rome; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1902, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.",
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Document source extras
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