Legends of the Madonna eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 431 pages of information about Legends of the Madonna.

Legends of the Madonna eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 431 pages of information about Legends of the Madonna.

[Footnote 1:  v.  Legends of the Monastic Orders, “The Carmelites".]

8.  The Virgin, as patroness of the Order of Mercy, also distributes tablets, but they bear the badge of the Order, and this distinguishes “Our Lady of Mercy,” so popular in Spanish, art, from “Our Lady of Mount Carmel.” (v.  Monastic Orders.)

A large class of these Madonna pictures are votive offerings for public or private mercies.  They present some most interesting varieties of character and arrangement.

A votive Mater Misericordiae, with the Child, in her arms, is often standing with her wide ample robe extended, and held up on each side by angels.  Kneeling at her feet are the votaries who have consecrated the picture, generally some community or brotherhood instituted for charitable purposes, who, as they kneel, present the objects of their charity—­widows, orphans, prisoners, or the sick and infirm.  The Child, in her arms, bends forward, with the hand raised in benediction.  I have already spoken of the Mater Misericordiae without the Child.  The sentiment is yet more beautiful and complete where the Mother of Mercy holds the infant Redeemer, the representative and pledge of God’s infinite mercy, in her arms.

There is a “Virgin of Mercy,” by Salvator Rosa, which is singular and rather poetical in the conception.  She is seated in heavenly glory; the infant Christ, on her knee, bends benignly forward.  Tutelary angels are represented as pleading for mercy, with eager outstretched arms; other angels, lower down, are liberating the souls of repentant sinners from torment.  The expression in some of the heads, the contrast between the angelic pitying spirits and the anxious haggard features of the “Anime del Purgatorio” are very fine and animated.  Here the Virgin is the “Refuge of Sinners,” Refugium Peccatorum.  Such pictures are commonly met with in chapels dedicated to services for the dead.

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Another class of votive pictures are especial acts of thanksgiving:—­1st.  For victory, as La Madonna della Vittoria, Notre Dame des Victoires. The Virgin, on her throne, is then attended by one or more of the warrior saints, together with the patron or patroness of the victors.  She is then our Lady of Victory.  A very perfect example of these victorious Madonnas exists in a celebrated picture by Andrea Mantegna.  The Virgin is seated on a lofty throne, embowered by garlands of fruit, leaves, and flowers, and branches of coral, fancifully disposed as a sort of canopy over her head.  The Child stands on her knee, and raises his hand in the act of benediction.  On the right of the Virgin appear the warlike saints, St. Michael and St. Maurice; they recommend to her protection the Marquis of Mantua, Giovan Francesco Gonzaga, who kneels in complete armour.[1] On the left stand St. Andrew and St. Longinus, the guardian saints of Mantua; on the step of the throne,

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Legends of the Madonna from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.