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Edmund Spenser

Edmund Spenser (/ˈspɛnsər/; 1552/1553 – 13 January 1599) was an English poet best known for The Faerie Queene, an epic poem and fantastical allegory celebrating the Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I. He is recognized as one of the premier craftsmen of nascent Modern English verse and is often considered one of the greatest poets in the English language.

Edmund Spenser
Born1552/1553
London, England
Died13 January 1599(1599-01-13) (aged 46–47)[1][2]
London, England
Resting placeWestminster Abbey
OccupationPoet
LanguageEarly Modern English
Alma materPembroke College, Cambridge
Period1569–1599
Notable worksThe Faerie Queene
SpouseMachabyas Childe (c. 1579–c. 1593, her death)
Elizabeth Boyle (m. 1594–1599, his death)
Children2
Signature

Life

Edmund Spenser was born in East Smithfield, London, around the year 1552; however, there is still some ambiguity as to the exact date of his birth. His parenthood is obscure, but he was probably the son of John Spenser, a journeyman clothmaker. As a young boy, he was educated in London at the Merchant Taylors' School and matriculated as a sizar at Pembroke College, Cambridge.[3][4] While at Cambridge he became a friend of Gabriel Harvey and later consulted him, despite their differing views on poetry. In 1578, he became for a short time secretary to John Young, Bishop of Rochester.[5] In 1579, he published The Shepheardes Calender and around the same time married his first wife, Machabyas Childe.[6] They had two children, Sylvanus (d. 1638) and Katherine.[7]

In July 1580, Spenser went to Ireland in service of the newly appointed Lord Deputy, Arthur Grey, 14th Baron Grey de Wilton. Spenser served under Lord Grey with Walter Raleigh at the Siege of Smerwick massacre.[8] When Lord Grey was recalled to England, Spenser stayed on in Ireland, having acquired other official posts and lands in the Munster Plantation. Raleigh acquired other nearby Munster estates confiscated in the Second Desmond Rebellion. Sometime between 1587 and 1589, Spenser acquired his main estate at Kilcolman, near Doneraile in North Cork.[9] He later bought a second holding to the south, at Rennie, on a rock overlooking the river Blackwater in North Cork. Its ruins are still visible today. A short distance away grew a tree, locally known as "Spenser's Oak" until it was destroyed in a lightning strike in the 1960s. Local legend claims that he penned some of The Faerie Queene under this tree.[10]

In 1590, Spenser brought out the first three books of his most famous work, The Faerie Queene, having travelled to London to publish and promote the work, with the likely assistance of Raleigh. He was successful enough to obtain a life pension of £50 a year from the Queen. He probably hoped to secure a place at court through his poetry, but his next significant publication boldly antagonised the queen's principal secretary, Lord Burghley (William Cecil), through its inclusion of the satirical Mother Hubberd's Tale.[11] He returned to Ireland. He was at the centre of a literary circle whose members included his lifelong friend Lodowick Bryskett and Dr. John Longe, Archbishop of Armagh.

In 1591, Spenser published a translation in verse of Joachim Du Bellay's sonnets, Les Antiquités de Rome, which had been published in 1558. Spenser's version, Ruines of Rome: by Bellay, may also have been influenced by Latin poems on the same subject, written by Jean or Janis Vitalis and published in 1576.[12]

By 1594, Spenser's first wife had died, and in that year he married a much younger Elizabeth Boyle, a relative of Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork. He addressed to her the sonnet sequence Amoretti. The marriage itself was celebrated in Epithalamion.[13] They had a son named Peregrine.[7]

In 1596, Spenser wrote a prose pamphlet titled A View of the Present State of Ireland. This piece, in the form of a dialogue, circulated in manuscript, remaining unpublished until the mid-seventeenth century. It is probable that it was kept out of print during the author's lifetime because of its inflammatory content. The pamphlet argued that Ireland would never be totally "pacified" by the English until its indigenous language and customs had been destroyed, if necessary by violence.[14]

In 1598, during the Nine Years' War, Spenser was driven from his home by the native Irish forces of Aodh Ó Néill. His castle at Kilcolman was burned, and Ben Jonson, who may have had private information, asserted that one of his infant children died in the blaze.[15]

 
Title page, Fowre Hymnes, by Edmund Spenser, published by William Ponsonby, London, 1596

In the year after being driven from his home, 1599, Spenser travelled to London, where he died at the age of forty-six – "for want of bread", according to Ben Jonson; one of Jonson's more doubtful statements, since Spenser had a payment to him authorised by the government and was due his pension.[16] His coffin was carried to his grave in Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey by other poets, who threw many pens and pieces of poetry into his grave with many tears. His second wife survived him and remarried twice. His sister Sarah, who had accompanied him to Ireland, married into the Travers family, and her descendants were prominent landowners in Cork for centuries.

Rhyme and reason

Thomas Fuller, in Worthies of England, included a story where the Queen told her treasurer, William Cecil, to pay Spenser one hundred pounds for his poetry. The treasurer, however, objected that the sum was too much. She said, "Then give him what is reason". Without receiving his payment in due time, Spenser gave the Queen this quatrain on one of her progresses:

I was promis'd on a time,
To have a reason for my rhyme:
From that time unto this season,
I receiv'd nor rhyme nor reason.

She immediately ordered the treasurer to pay Spenser the original £100.

This story seems to have attached itself to Spenser from Thomas Churchyard, who apparently had difficulty in getting payment of his pension, the only other pension Elizabeth awarded to a poet. Spenser seems to have had no difficulty in receiving payment when it was due as the pension was being collected for him by his publisher, Ponsonby.[17]

The Shepheardes Calender

 
Title Page of a 1617 Edition of The Shepheardes Calender printed by Matthew Lownes, often bound with the complete works printed in 1611 or 1617.

The Shepheardes Calender is Edmund Spenser's first major work, which appeared in 1579. It emulates Virgil's Eclogues of the first century BCE and the Eclogues of Mantuan by Baptista Mantuanus, a late medieval, early renaissance poet.[18] An eclogue is a short pastoral poem that is in the form of a dialogue or soliloquy. Although all the months together form an entire year, each month stands alone as a separate poem. Editions of the late 16th and early 17th centuries include woodcuts for each month/poem, and thereby have a slight similarity to an emblem book which combines a number of self-contained pictures and texts, usually a short vignette, saying, or allegory with an accompanying illustration.[19]

The Faerie Queene

 
The epic poem The Faerie Queene frontispiece, printed by William Ponsonby in 1590.

Spenser's masterpiece is the epic poem The Faerie Queene. The first three books of The Faerie Queene were published in 1590, and the second set of three books was published in 1596. Spenser originally indicated that he intended the poem to consist of twelve books, so the version of the poem we have today is incomplete. Despite this, it remains one of the longest poems in the English language.[20] It is an allegorical work, and can be read (as Spenser presumably intended) on several levels of allegory, including as praise of Queen Elizabeth I. In a completely allegorical context, the poem follows several knights in an examination of several virtues. In Spenser's "A Letter of the Authors", he states that the entire epic poem is "cloudily enwrapped in allegorical devises", and that the aim behind The Faerie Queene was to "fashion a gentleman or noble person in virtuous and gentle discipline".[21]

Shorter poems

Spenser published numerous relatively short poems in the last decade of the sixteenth century, almost all of which consider love or sorrow. In 1591, he published Complaints, a collection of poems that express complaints in mournful or mocking tones. Four years later, in 1595, Spenser published Amoretti and Epithalamion. This volume contains eighty-eight sonnets commemorating his courtship of Elizabeth Boyle. In Amoretti, Spenser uses subtle humour and parody while praising his beloved, reworking Petrarchism in his treatment of longing for a woman. Epithalamion, similar to Amoretti, deals in part with the unease in the development of a romantic and sexual relationship. It was written for his wedding to his young bride, Elizabeth Boyle. Some have speculated that the attention to disquiet, in general, reflects Spenser's personal anxieties at the time, as he was unable to complete his most significant work, The Faerie Queene. In the following year, Spenser released Prothalamion, a wedding song written for the daughters of a duke, allegedly in hopes to gain favour in the court.[22]

The Spenserian stanza and sonnet

Spenser used a distinctive verse form, called the Spenserian stanza, in several works, including The Faerie Queene. The stanza's main metre is iambic pentameter with a final line in iambic hexameter (having six feet or stresses, known as an Alexandrine), and the rhyme scheme is ababbcbcc.[23] He also used his own rhyme scheme for the sonnet. In a Spenserian sonnet, the last line of every quatrain is linked with the first line of the next one, yielding the rhyme scheme ababbcbccdcdee.[24] "Men Call you Fayre" is a fine Sonnet from Amoretti. The poet presents the concept of true beauty in the poem. He addresses the sonnet to his beloved, Elizabeth Boyle, and presents his courtship. Like all Renaissance men, Edmund Spenser believed that love is an inexhaustible source of beauty and order. In this Sonnet, the poet expresses his idea of true beauty. The physical beauty will finish after a few days; it is not a permanent beauty. He emphasises beauty of mind and beauty of intellect. He considers his beloved is not simply flesh but is also a spiritual being. The poet opines that he is beloved born of heavenly seed and she is derived from fair spirit. The poet states that because of her clean mind, pure heart and sharp intellect, men call her fair and she deserves it. At the end, the poet praises her spiritual beauty and he worships her because of her Divine Soul.

Influences

Though Spenser was well-read in classical literature, scholars have noted that his poetry does not rehash tradition, but rather is distinctly his. This individuality may have resulted, to some extent, from a lack of comprehension of the classics. Spenser strove to emulate such ancient Roman poets as Virgil and Ovid, whom he studied during his schooling, but many of his best-known works are notably divergent from those of his predecessors.[25] The language of his poetry is purposely archaic, reminiscent of earlier works such as The Canterbury Tales of Geoffrey Chaucer and Il Canzoniere of Francesco Petrarca, whom Spenser greatly admired.

An Anglican[26] and a devotee of the Protestant Queen Elizabeth, Spenser was particularly offended by the anti-Elizabethan propaganda that some Catholics circulated. Like most Protestants near the time of the Reformation, Spenser saw a Catholic Church full of corruption, and he determined that it was not only the wrong religion but the anti-religion. This sentiment is an important backdrop for the battles of The Faerie Queene.[27]

Spenser was called "the Poet's Poet" by Charles Lamb,[28] and was admired by John Milton, William Blake, William Wordsworth, John Keats, Lord Byron, Alfred Tennyson and others. Among his contemporaries Walter Raleigh wrote a commendatory poem to The Faerie Queene in 1590, in which he claims to admire and value Spenser's work more so than any other in the English language. John Milton in his Areopagitica mentions "our sage and serious poet Spenser, whom I dare be known to think a better teacher than Scotus or Aquinas".[29] In the eighteenth century, Alexander Pope compared Spenser to "a mistress, whose faults we see, but love her with them all".[30]

A View of the Present State of Irelande

In his work A View of the Present State of Irelande (1596), Spenser discussed future plans to establish control over Ireland, the most recent Irish uprising, led by Hugh O'Neill having demonstrated the futility of previous efforts. The work is partly a defence of Lord Arthur Grey de Wilton, who was appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland in 1580, and who greatly influenced Spenser's thinking on Ireland.[citation needed]

The goal of the piece was to show that Ireland was in great need of reform. Spenser believed that "Ireland is a diseased portion of the State, it must first be cured and reformed, before it could be in a position to appreciate the good sound laws and blessings of the nation".[31] In A View of the Present State of Ireland, Spenser categorises the "evils" of the Irish people into three prominent categories: laws, customs and religion. According to Spenser, these three elements worked together in creating the supposedly "disruptive and degraded people" who inhabited the country.[32] One example given in the work is the Irish law system termed "Brehon law", which at the time trumped the established law as dictated by the Crown. The Brehon system had its own court and methods of punishing infractions committed. Spenser viewed this system as a backward custom which contributed to the "degradation" of the Irish people. A particular legal punishment viewed with distaste by Spenser was the Brehon method of dealing with murder, which was to impose an éraic (fine) on the murderer's family.[33] From Spenser's viewpoint, the appropriate punishment for murder was capital punishment. Spenser also warned of the dangers that allowing the education of children in the Irish language would bring: "Soe that the speach being Irish, the hart must needes be Irishe; for out of the aboundance of the hart, the tonge speaketh".[32]

He pressed for a scorched earth policy in Ireland, noting its effectiveness in the Second Desmond Rebellion:

"'Out of everye corner of the woode and glenns they came creepinge forth upon theire handes, for theire legges could not beare them; they looked Anatomies [of] death, they spake like ghostes, crying out of theire graves; they did eate of the carrions, happye wheare they could find them, yea, and one another soone after, in soe much as the verye carcasses they spared not to scrape out of theire graves; and if they found a plott of water-cresses or shamrockes, theyr they flocked as to a feast… in a shorte space there were none almost left, and a most populous and plentyfull countrye suddenly lefte voyde of man or beast: yett sure in all that warr, there perished not manye by the sworde, but all by the extreamytie of famine ... they themselves had wrought.'"[32]

List of works

1569:

  • Jan van der Noodt's A Theatre for Worldlings, including poems translated into English by Spenser from French sources, published by Henry Bynneman in London[34]

1579:

1590:

1591:

1592:

  • Axiochus, a translation of a pseudo-Platonic dialogue from the original Ancient Greek; published by Cuthbert Burbie; attributed to "Edw: Spenser"[34] but the attribution is uncertain[36]
  • Daphnaïda. An Elegy upon the Death of the Noble and Vertuous Douglas Howard, Daughter and Heire of Henry Lord Howard, Viscount Byndon, and Wife of Arthure Gorges Esquier (published in London in January, according to one source;[34] another source gives 1591 as the year[35])

1595:

1596:

Posthumous:

  • 1609: Two Cantos of Mutabilitie published together with a reprint of The Faerie Queene[37]
  • 1611: First folio edition of Spenser's collected works[37]
  • 1633: A Vewe of the Present State of Irelande, a prose treatise on the reformation of Ireland,[38] first published by Sir James Ware (historian) entitled The Historie of Ireland (Spenser's work was entered into the Stationer's Register in 1598 and circulated in manuscript but not published until it was edited by Ware)[37]

Editions

  • Edmund Spenser, Selected Letters and Other Papers. Edited by Christopher Burlinson and Andrew Zurcher (Oxford, OUP, 2009).
  • Edmund Spenser, The Faerie-Queene (Longman-Annotated-English Poets, 2001, 2007) Edited by A. C. Hamilton, Text Edited by Hiroshi Yamashita and Toshiyuki Suzuki 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine.

Digital archive

Washington University in St. Louis professor Joseph Lowenstein, with the assistance of several undergraduate students, has been involved in creating, editing, and annotating a digital archive of the first publication of poet Edmund Spenser's collective works in 100 years. A large grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities has been given to support this ambitious project centralized at Washington University with support from other colleges in the United States.[39][40]

References

  1. ^ "National Archive documents".
  2. ^ Hadfield, Andrew (13 January 2013). "The death of Edmund Spenser". OUPblog. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
  3. ^ "Spenser, Edmund (SPNR569E)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. ^ . English.cam.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 2 January 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  5. ^ Hadfield, Andrew. Edmund Spenser: A Life. Oxford University Press. 2012, p110.
  6. ^ Hadfield pp. 128 and 140
  7. ^ a b "Edmund Spenser". Westminster Abbey. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  8. ^ Church, R. W. (1879). Spenser. pp. 56–58, 93.
  9. ^ Hadfield, pp200-01
  10. ^ Hadfield, p362
  11. ^ Hadfield, p165
  12. ^ Zarucchi, Jeanne Morgan (1997). "Du Bellay, Spenser, and Quevedo Search for Rome: A Teacher's Peregrination". The French Review. 17:2: 192–203.
  13. ^ Hadfield, pp296, 301, 323
  14. ^ Hadfield, pp 334–43, 365
  15. ^ Hadfield, p 362
  16. ^ Hadfield pp 391 – 393
  17. ^ Hadfield pp 5 & 236
  18. ^ Merritt Yerkes Hughes, "Virgil and Spenser", in University of California Publications in English, vol. 2, no. 3. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1929).
  19. ^ "The English Emblem Book Project | Penn State University Libraries". libraries.psu.edu. 8 September 2016. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
  20. ^ Loewenstein, David; Mueller, Janel M (2003), The Cambridge history of early modern English Literature, Cambridge University Press, p. 369, ISBN 0-521-63156-4.
  21. ^ Spenser, Edmund (1984), "A Letter of the Authors Expounding His Whole Intention in the Course of the Worke: Which for That It Giueth Great Light to the Reader, for the Better Vnderstanding Is Hereunto Annexed", in Roche, Thomas P., Jr, The Fairy Queene, New York: Penguin, pp. 15–16
  22. ^ Prescott, Anne. "Spenser's shorter poems". The Cambridge Companion to Spenser. Ed. Andrew Hadfield. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. 143–161. Print.
  23. ^ "Spenserian stanza at Poetry Foundation". 2 January 2023.
  24. ^ Spiller, Michael R. G. (2003). The Development of the Sonnet : an Introduction. Taylor and Francis. p. 142. ISBN 978-0-203-40150-7. OCLC 1027500333.
  25. ^ Burrow, Colin. "Spenser and classical traditions". The Cambridge Companion to Spenser. Ed. Andrew Hadfield. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. 217–236. Print.
  26. ^ "Edmund Spenser". Poetry Foundation. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  27. ^ "The Faerie Queene Context". SparkNotes. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  28. ^ Alpers, Paul (1990). "Poet's poet, the". In Henderson, A. C. (ed.). The Spenser Encyclopedia. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 551. ISBN 0-8020-2676-1. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
  29. ^ Milton, John. Areopagitica.
  30. ^ Elliott, John, ed. The Prince of Poets. New York: New York University Press, 1968. 7–13. Print.
  31. ^ Henley 178
  32. ^ a b c Spenser, Edmund (1596). "A View of the present State of Ireland". The Corpus of Electronic Texts. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  33. ^ Charles Staniland Wake (1878). The Evolution of Morality. Trübner & Company. pp. 363–.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Web page titled "Edmund Spenser Home Page/Biography" 2 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine, "Chronology" section (at bottom of Chronology, Web page states: "Source: adapted from Willy Maley, A Spenser Chronology."), at the website of the University of Cambridge Faculty of English website, retrieved 24 September 2009
  35. ^ a b c Cox, Michael, editor, The Concise Oxford Chronology of English Literature, Oxford University Press, 2004, ISBN 0-19-860634-6
  36. ^ Hadfield, Andrew, The Cambridge Companion to Spenser, "Chronology", Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-521-64199-3, p xix, retrieved via Google Books, 24 September 2009
  37. ^ a b c Hadfield, Andrew, The Cambridge Companion to Spenser, "Chronology", Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-521-64199-3, p xx, retrieved via Google Books, 24 September 2009
  38. ^ Web page titled "Edmund Spenser Home Page/Biography" 2 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine, at the website of the University of Cambridge Faculty of English website, retrieved 24 September 2009
  39. ^ "Joe Loewenstein". Arts & Sciences. 31 May 2019. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  40. ^ "Digitizing the works of a 16th-century poet: Spenser Project receives NEH Scholarly Editions Grant". Record. 4 October 2007.

Sources

  • Croft, Ryan J. "Sanctified Tyrannicide: Tyranny And Theology in John Ponet's Shorte Treatise of Politike Power And Edmund "Spenser's The Faerie Queene." Studies in Philosophy, 108.4 (2011): 538–571. MLA International Bibliography. Web. 8 October 2012.
  • Johnson, William. "The struggle between good and evil in the first book of 'The Faerie Queene'." English Studies, Vol. 74,
  • Maley, Willy. "Spenser's Life". The Oxford Dictionary of Edmund Spenser. Ed. Richard A. McCabe. 1st Ed. 2010. Print.
  • Rust, Jennifer. "Spenser's The Faerie Queene." Saint Louis University, St. Louis. 10 October 2007. No. 6. (December 1993) p. 507–519.
  • Wadoski, Andrew. Spenser's Ethics: Empire, Mutability, and Moral Philosophy in Early Modernity. Manchester University Press, June 2022, ISBN 978-1-5261-6543-5.
  • Zarucchi, Jeanne Morgan. "Du Bellay, Spenser, and Quevedo Search for Rome: A Teacher's Peregrination." The French Review, 17:2 (December 1997), pp. 192–203.

External links

Preceded by:
John Skelton
English Poet Laureate
c. 1590–1599
Succeeded by:
Samuel Daniel
Political offices
Preceded by Chief Secretary for Ireland
1580–1582
Succeeded by
Philip Williams

edmund, spenser, 1552, 1553, january, 1599, english, poet, best, known, faerie, queene, epic, poem, fantastical, allegory, celebrating, tudor, dynasty, elizabeth, recognized, premier, craftsmen, nascent, modern, english, verse, often, considered, greatest, poe. Edmund Spenser ˈ s p ɛ n s er 1552 1553 13 January 1599 was an English poet best known for The Faerie Queene an epic poem and fantastical allegory celebrating the Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I He is recognized as one of the premier craftsmen of nascent Modern English verse and is often considered one of the greatest poets in the English language Edmund SpenserBorn1552 1553London EnglandDied13 January 1599 1599 01 13 aged 46 47 1 2 London EnglandResting placeWestminster AbbeyOccupationPoetLanguageEarly Modern EnglishAlma materPembroke College CambridgePeriod1569 1599Notable worksThe Faerie QueeneSpouseMachabyas Childe c 1579 c 1593 her death Elizabeth Boyle m 1594 1599 his death Children2Signature Contents 1 Life 2 Rhyme and reason 3 The Shepheardes Calender 4 The Faerie Queene 5 Shorter poems 6 The Spenserian stanza and sonnet 7 Influences 8 A View of the Present State of Irelande 9 List of works 10 Editions 11 Digital archive 12 References 13 Sources 14 External linksLife EditEdmund Spenser was born in East Smithfield London around the year 1552 however there is still some ambiguity as to the exact date of his birth His parenthood is obscure but he was probably the son of John Spenser a journeyman clothmaker As a young boy he was educated in London at the Merchant Taylors School and matriculated as a sizar at Pembroke College Cambridge 3 4 While at Cambridge he became a friend of Gabriel Harvey and later consulted him despite their differing views on poetry In 1578 he became for a short time secretary to John Young Bishop of Rochester 5 In 1579 he published The Shepheardes Calender and around the same time married his first wife Machabyas Childe 6 They had two children Sylvanus d 1638 and Katherine 7 In July 1580 Spenser went to Ireland in service of the newly appointed Lord Deputy Arthur Grey 14th Baron Grey de Wilton Spenser served under Lord Grey with Walter Raleigh at the Siege of Smerwick massacre 8 When Lord Grey was recalled to England Spenser stayed on in Ireland having acquired other official posts and lands in the Munster Plantation Raleigh acquired other nearby Munster estates confiscated in the Second Desmond Rebellion Sometime between 1587 and 1589 Spenser acquired his main estate at Kilcolman near Doneraile in North Cork 9 He later bought a second holding to the south at Rennie on a rock overlooking the river Blackwater in North Cork Its ruins are still visible today A short distance away grew a tree locally known as Spenser s Oak until it was destroyed in a lightning strike in the 1960s Local legend claims that he penned some of The Faerie Queene under this tree 10 In 1590 Spenser brought out the first three books of his most famous work The Faerie Queene having travelled to London to publish and promote the work with the likely assistance of Raleigh He was successful enough to obtain a life pension of 50 a year from the Queen He probably hoped to secure a place at court through his poetry but his next significant publication boldly antagonised the queen s principal secretary Lord Burghley William Cecil through its inclusion of the satirical Mother Hubberd s Tale 11 He returned to Ireland He was at the centre of a literary circle whose members included his lifelong friend Lodowick Bryskett and Dr John Longe Archbishop of Armagh In 1591 Spenser published a translation in verse of Joachim Du Bellay s sonnets Les Antiquites de Rome which had been published in 1558 Spenser s version Ruines of Rome by Bellay may also have been influenced by Latin poems on the same subject written by Jean or Janis Vitalis and published in 1576 12 By 1594 Spenser s first wife had died and in that year he married a much younger Elizabeth Boyle a relative of Richard Boyle 1st Earl of Cork He addressed to her the sonnet sequence Amoretti The marriage itself was celebrated in Epithalamion 13 They had a son named Peregrine 7 In 1596 Spenser wrote a prose pamphlet titled A View of the Present State of Ireland This piece in the form of a dialogue circulated in manuscript remaining unpublished until the mid seventeenth century It is probable that it was kept out of print during the author s lifetime because of its inflammatory content The pamphlet argued that Ireland would never be totally pacified by the English until its indigenous language and customs had been destroyed if necessary by violence 14 In 1598 during the Nine Years War Spenser was driven from his home by the native Irish forces of Aodh o Neill His castle at Kilcolman was burned and Ben Jonson who may have had private information asserted that one of his infant children died in the blaze 15 Title page Fowre Hymnes by Edmund Spenser published by William Ponsonby London 1596 In the year after being driven from his home 1599 Spenser travelled to London where he died at the age of forty six for want of bread according to Ben Jonson one of Jonson s more doubtful statements since Spenser had a payment to him authorised by the government and was due his pension 16 His coffin was carried to his grave in Poets Corner in Westminster Abbey by other poets who threw many pens and pieces of poetry into his grave with many tears His second wife survived him and remarried twice His sister Sarah who had accompanied him to Ireland married into the Travers family and her descendants were prominent landowners in Cork for centuries Rhyme and reason EditThomas Fuller in Worthies of England included a story where the Queen told her treasurer William Cecil to pay Spenser one hundred pounds for his poetry The treasurer however objected that the sum was too much She said Then give him what is reason Without receiving his payment in due time Spenser gave the Queen this quatrain on one of her progresses I was promis d on a time To have a reason for my rhyme From that time unto this season I receiv d nor rhyme nor reason She immediately ordered the treasurer to pay Spenser the original 100 This story seems to have attached itself to Spenser from Thomas Churchyard who apparently had difficulty in getting payment of his pension the only other pension Elizabeth awarded to a poet Spenser seems to have had no difficulty in receiving payment when it was due as the pension was being collected for him by his publisher Ponsonby 17 The Shepheardes Calender EditMain article The Shepheardes Calender Title Page of a 1617 Edition of The Shepheardes Calender printed by Matthew Lownes often bound with the complete works printed in 1611 or 1617 The Shepheardes Calender is Edmund Spenser s first major work which appeared in 1579 It emulates Virgil s Eclogues of the first century BCE and the Eclogues of Mantuan by Baptista Mantuanus a late medieval early renaissance poet 18 An eclogue is a short pastoral poem that is in the form of a dialogue or soliloquy Although all the months together form an entire year each month stands alone as a separate poem Editions of the late 16th and early 17th centuries include woodcuts for each month poem and thereby have a slight similarity to an emblem book which combines a number of self contained pictures and texts usually a short vignette saying or allegory with an accompanying illustration 19 The Faerie Queene EditMain article The Faerie Queene The epic poem The Faerie Queene frontispiece printed by William Ponsonby in 1590 Spenser s masterpiece is the epic poem The Faerie Queene The first three books of The Faerie Queene were published in 1590 and the second set of three books was published in 1596 Spenser originally indicated that he intended the poem to consist of twelve books so the version of the poem we have today is incomplete Despite this it remains one of the longest poems in the English language 20 It is an allegorical work and can be read as Spenser presumably intended on several levels of allegory including as praise of Queen Elizabeth I In a completely allegorical context the poem follows several knights in an examination of several virtues In Spenser s A Letter of the Authors he states that the entire epic poem is cloudily enwrapped in allegorical devises and that the aim behind The Faerie Queene was to fashion a gentleman or noble person in virtuous and gentle discipline 21 Shorter poems EditSpenser published numerous relatively short poems in the last decade of the sixteenth century almost all of which consider love or sorrow In 1591 he published Complaints a collection of poems that express complaints in mournful or mocking tones Four years later in 1595 Spenser published Amoretti and Epithalamion This volume contains eighty eight sonnets commemorating his courtship of Elizabeth Boyle In Amoretti Spenser uses subtle humour and parody while praising his beloved reworking Petrarchism in his treatment of longing for a woman Epithalamion similar to Amoretti deals in part with the unease in the development of a romantic and sexual relationship It was written for his wedding to his young bride Elizabeth Boyle Some have speculated that the attention to disquiet in general reflects Spenser s personal anxieties at the time as he was unable to complete his most significant work The Faerie Queene In the following year Spenser released Prothalamion a wedding song written for the daughters of a duke allegedly in hopes to gain favour in the court 22 The Spenserian stanza and sonnet EditSpenser used a distinctive verse form called the Spenserian stanza in several works including The Faerie Queene The stanza s main metre is iambic pentameter with a final line in iambic hexameter having six feet or stresses known as an Alexandrine and the rhyme scheme is ababbcbcc 23 He also used his own rhyme scheme for the sonnet In a Spenserian sonnet the last line of every quatrain is linked with the first line of the next one yielding the rhyme scheme ababbcbccdcdee 24 Men Call you Fayre is a fine Sonnet from Amoretti The poet presents the concept of true beauty in the poem He addresses the sonnet to his beloved Elizabeth Boyle and presents his courtship Like all Renaissance men Edmund Spenser believed that love is an inexhaustible source of beauty and order In this Sonnet the poet expresses his idea of true beauty The physical beauty will finish after a few days it is not a permanent beauty He emphasises beauty of mind and beauty of intellect He considers his beloved is not simply flesh but is also a spiritual being The poet opines that he is beloved born of heavenly seed and she is derived from fair spirit The poet states that because of her clean mind pure heart and sharp intellect men call her fair and she deserves it At the end the poet praises her spiritual beauty and he worships her because of her Divine Soul Influences EditThough Spenser was well read in classical literature scholars have noted that his poetry does not rehash tradition but rather is distinctly his This individuality may have resulted to some extent from a lack of comprehension of the classics Spenser strove to emulate such ancient Roman poets as Virgil and Ovid whom he studied during his schooling but many of his best known works are notably divergent from those of his predecessors 25 The language of his poetry is purposely archaic reminiscent of earlier works such as The Canterbury Tales of Geoffrey Chaucer and Il Canzoniere of Francesco Petrarca whom Spenser greatly admired An Anglican 26 and a devotee of the Protestant Queen Elizabeth Spenser was particularly offended by the anti Elizabethan propaganda that some Catholics circulated Like most Protestants near the time of the Reformation Spenser saw a Catholic Church full of corruption and he determined that it was not only the wrong religion but the anti religion This sentiment is an important backdrop for the battles of The Faerie Queene 27 Spenser was called the Poet s Poet by Charles Lamb 28 and was admired by John Milton William Blake William Wordsworth John Keats Lord Byron Alfred Tennyson and others Among his contemporaries Walter Raleigh wrote a commendatory poem to The Faerie Queene in 1590 in which he claims to admire and value Spenser s work more so than any other in the English language John Milton in his Areopagitica mentions our sage and serious poet Spenser whom I dare be known to think a better teacher than Scotus or Aquinas 29 In the eighteenth century Alexander Pope compared Spenser to a mistress whose faults we see but love her with them all 30 A View of the Present State of Irelande EditIn his work A View of the Present State of Irelande 1596 Spenser discussed future plans to establish control over Ireland the most recent Irish uprising led by Hugh O Neill having demonstrated the futility of previous efforts The work is partly a defence of Lord Arthur Grey de Wilton who was appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland in 1580 and who greatly influenced Spenser s thinking on Ireland citation needed The goal of the piece was to show that Ireland was in great need of reform Spenser believed that Ireland is a diseased portion of the State it must first be cured and reformed before it could be in a position to appreciate the good sound laws and blessings of the nation 31 In A View of the Present State of Ireland Spenser categorises the evils of the Irish people into three prominent categories laws customs and religion According to Spenser these three elements worked together in creating the supposedly disruptive and degraded people who inhabited the country 32 One example given in the work is the Irish law system termed Brehon law which at the time trumped the established law as dictated by the Crown The Brehon system had its own court and methods of punishing infractions committed Spenser viewed this system as a backward custom which contributed to the degradation of the Irish people A particular legal punishment viewed with distaste by Spenser was the Brehon method of dealing with murder which was to impose an eraic fine on the murderer s family 33 From Spenser s viewpoint the appropriate punishment for murder was capital punishment Spenser also warned of the dangers that allowing the education of children in the Irish language would bring Soe that the speach being Irish the hart must needes be Irishe for out of the aboundance of the hart the tonge speaketh 32 He pressed for a scorched earth policy in Ireland noting its effectiveness in the Second Desmond Rebellion Out of everye corner of the woode and glenns they came creepinge forth upon theire handes for theire legges could not beare them they looked Anatomies of death they spake like ghostes crying out of theire graves they did eate of the carrions happye wheare they could find them yea and one another soone after in soe much as the verye carcasses they spared not to scrape out of theire graves and if they found a plott of water cresses or shamrockes theyr they flocked as to a feast in a shorte space there were none almost left and a most populous and plentyfull countrye suddenly lefte voyde of man or beast yett sure in all that warr there perished not manye by the sworde but all by the extreamytie of famine they themselves had wrought 32 List of works Edit1569 Jan van der Noodt s A Theatre for Worldlings including poems translated into English by Spenser from French sources published by Henry Bynneman in London 34 1579 The Shepheardes Calender published under the pseudonym Immerito 35 entered into the Stationers Register in December 34 Iambicum Trimetrum1590 The Faerie Queene Books 1 31591 Complaints Containing Sundrie Small Poemes of the Worlds Vanitie entered into the Stationer s Register in 1590 34 includes The Ruines of Time The Teares of the Muses Virgil s Gnat Prosopopoia or Mother Hubberds Tale Ruines of Rome by Bellay Muiopotmos or the Fate of the Butterflie Visions of the Worlds Vanitie The Visions of Bellay The Visions of Petrarch 1592 Axiochus a translation of a pseudo Platonic dialogue from the original Ancient Greek published by Cuthbert Burbie attributed to Edw Spenser 34 but the attribution is uncertain 36 Daphnaida An Elegy upon the Death of the Noble and Vertuous Douglas Howard Daughter and Heire of Henry Lord Howard Viscount Byndon and Wife of Arthure Gorges Esquier published in London in January according to one source 34 another source gives 1591 as the year 35 1595 Amoretti and Epithalamion containing Amoretti 34 Epithalamion 34 Astrophel A Pastorall Elegie vpon the Death of the Most Noble and Valorous Knight Sir Philip Sidney Colin Clouts Come Home Againe1596 Fowre Hymnes dedicated from the court at Greenwich 34 published with the second edition of Daphnaida 35 Prothalamion 34 The Faerie Queene Books 4 6 34 Babel Empress of the East a dedicatory poem prefaced to Lewes Lewkenor s The Commonwealth of Venice 1599 Posthumous 1609 Two Cantos of Mutabilitie published together with a reprint of The Faerie Queene 37 1611 First folio edition of Spenser s collected works 37 1633 A Vewe of the Present State of Irelande a prose treatise on the reformation of Ireland 38 first published by Sir James Ware historian entitled The Historie of Ireland Spenser s work was entered into the Stationer s Register in 1598 and circulated in manuscript but not published until it was edited by Ware 37 Editions EditEdmund Spenser Selected Letters and Other Papers Edited by Christopher Burlinson and Andrew Zurcher Oxford OUP 2009 Edmund Spenser The Faerie Queene Longman Annotated English Poets 2001 2007 Edited by A C Hamilton Text Edited by Hiroshi Yamashita and Toshiyuki Suzuki Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Digital archive EditWashington University in St Louis professor Joseph Lowenstein with the assistance of several undergraduate students has been involved in creating editing and annotating a digital archive of the first publication of poet Edmund Spenser s collective works in 100 years A large grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities has been given to support this ambitious project centralized at Washington University with support from other colleges in the United States 39 40 References Edit National Archive documents Hadfield Andrew 13 January 2013 The death of Edmund Spenser OUPblog Retrieved 20 December 2020 Spenser Edmund SPNR569E A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge The Edmund Spenser Home Page Biography English cam ac uk Archived from the original on 2 January 2012 Retrieved 10 December 2011 Hadfield Andrew Edmund Spenser A Life Oxford University Press 2012 p110 Hadfield pp 128 and 140 a b Edmund Spenser Westminster Abbey Retrieved 30 May 2020 Church R W 1879 Spenser pp 56 58 93 Hadfield pp200 01 Hadfield p362 Hadfield p165 Zarucchi Jeanne Morgan 1997 Du Bellay Spenser and Quevedo Search for Rome A Teacher s Peregrination The French Review 17 2 192 203 Hadfield pp296 301 323 Hadfield pp 334 43 365 Hadfield p 362 Hadfield pp 391 393 Hadfield pp 5 amp 236 Merritt Yerkes Hughes Virgil and Spenser in University of California Publications in English vol 2 no 3 Berkeley University of California Press 1929 The English Emblem Book Project Penn State University Libraries libraries psu edu 8 September 2016 Retrieved 21 January 2018 Loewenstein David Mueller Janel M 2003 The Cambridge history of early modern English Literature Cambridge University Press p 369 ISBN 0 521 63156 4 Spenser Edmund 1984 A Letter of the Authors Expounding His Whole Intention in the Course of the Worke Which for That It Giueth Great Light to the Reader for the Better Vnderstanding Is Hereunto Annexed in Roche Thomas P Jr The Fairy Queene New York Penguin pp 15 16 Prescott Anne Spenser s shorter poems The Cambridge Companion to Spenser Ed Andrew Hadfield Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2001 143 161 Print Spenserian stanza at Poetry Foundation 2 January 2023 Spiller Michael R G 2003 The Development of the Sonnet an Introduction Taylor and Francis p 142 ISBN 978 0 203 40150 7 OCLC 1027500333 Burrow Colin Spenser and classical traditions The Cambridge Companion to Spenser Ed Andrew Hadfield Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2001 217 236 Print Edmund Spenser Poetry Foundation Retrieved 30 May 2020 The Faerie Queene Context SparkNotes Retrieved 30 May 2020 Alpers Paul 1990 Poet s poet the In Henderson A C ed The Spenser Encyclopedia Toronto University of Toronto Press p 551 ISBN 0 8020 2676 1 Retrieved 23 October 2017 Milton John Areopagitica Elliott John ed The Prince of Poets New York New York University Press 1968 7 13 Print Henley 178 a b c Spenser Edmund 1596 A View of the present State of Ireland The Corpus of Electronic Texts Retrieved 30 May 2020 Charles Staniland Wake 1878 The Evolution of Morality Trubner amp Company pp 363 a b c d e f g h i j Web page titled Edmund Spenser Home Page Biography Archived 2 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Chronology section at bottom of Chronology Web page states Source adapted from Willy Maley A Spenser Chronology at the website of the University of Cambridge Faculty of English website retrieved 24 September 2009 a b c Cox Michael editor The Concise Oxford Chronology of English Literature Oxford University Press 2004 ISBN 0 19 860634 6 Hadfield Andrew The Cambridge Companion to Spenser Chronology Cambridge University Press 2001 ISBN 0 521 64199 3 p xix retrieved via Google Books 24 September 2009 a b c Hadfield Andrew The Cambridge Companion to Spenser Chronology Cambridge University Press 2001 ISBN 0 521 64199 3 p xx retrieved via Google Books 24 September 2009 Web page titled Edmund Spenser Home Page Biography Archived 2 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine at the website of the University of Cambridge Faculty of English website retrieved 24 September 2009 Joe Loewenstein Arts amp Sciences 31 May 2019 Retrieved 19 August 2019 Digitizing the works of a 16th century poet Spenser Project receives NEH Scholarly Editions Grant Record 4 October 2007 Sources EditCroft Ryan J Sanctified Tyrannicide Tyranny And Theology in John Ponet s Shorte Treatise of Politike Power And Edmund Spenser s The Faerie Queene Studies in Philosophy 108 4 2011 538 571 MLA International Bibliography Web 8 October 2012 Johnson William The struggle between good and evil in the first book of The Faerie Queene English Studies Vol 74 Maley Willy Spenser s Life The Oxford Dictionary of Edmund Spenser Ed Richard A McCabe 1st Ed 2010 Print Rust Jennifer Spenser s The Faerie Queene Saint Louis University St Louis 10 October 2007 No 6 December 1993 p 507 519 Wadoski Andrew Spenser s Ethics Empire Mutability and Moral Philosophy in Early Modernity Manchester University Press June 2022 ISBN 978 1 5261 6543 5 Zarucchi Jeanne Morgan Du Bellay Spenser and Quevedo Search for Rome A Teacher s Peregrination The French Review 17 2 December 1997 pp 192 203 External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Edmund Spenser Wikiquote has quotations related to Edmund Spenser Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edmund Spenser Works by Edmund Spenser in eBook form at Standard EbooksThe Edmund Spenser Home Page at the Cambridge University Complete works in Verse and Prose at Internet Archive The works of Edmund Spenser in a single volume at Internet Archive Works by Edmund Spenser at Project Gutenberg Project Gutenberg edition of Biography of Edmund Spenser by John W Hales Works by or about Edmund Spenser at Internet Archive Works by Edmund Spenser at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Profile and works at the Poetry Foundation The Spenser Encyclopedia by A C Hamilton in Google Books Preview Archival material relating to Edmund Spenser UK National Archives Portraits of Edmund Spenser at the National Portrait Gallery London Hiroshi Yamashita Bibliographical and Textual Studies of Edmund Spenser and Natsume SosekiPreceded by John Skelton English Poet Laureate c 1590 1599 Succeeded by Samuel DanielPolitical officesPreceded byEdmund Molyneux Chief Secretary for Ireland1580 1582 Succeeded byPhilip Williams Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edmund Spenser amp oldid 1132061408, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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