Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 11 of
11
with 100 triples per page.
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 authorlink "Roland Frye".
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 first "Roland Mushat".
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 isCitedBy Human_disguise.
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 isbn "0-691-06349-4".
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 last "Frye".
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 location "Princeton, New Jersey".
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 page "343".
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 publisher "Princeton University Press".
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 quote "Between the fifteenth century and the seventeenth, the Tempter in the Wilderness [Satan] appeared in several standard forms. Most frequently, he was shown as the falsus frater, as an old Franciscan friar, or as a hermit, often with a rosary, as Botticelli represented him in his Sistine Chapel frescoes. This is the only disguise which Milton entirely ignores in Paradise Regained [...] Each of the other Renaissance guises he does incorporate into his treatment. [...] Other well-known guises for the Tempter in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century art cast him as an old peasant or shepherd, as Milton does in the first temptation, or as a richly dressed man of the world, as he does in the second. In the final temptation, the devil is usually shown as unmistakably demonic in physical appearance [...] Aside from the final temptation, there was no fixed order of the disguises employed, and each artist was apparently fee to choose at will among the possibilities.".
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 title "Milton's imagery and the visual arts".
- books?vid=ISBN0-691-06349-4 year "1978".