Edmund Spenser

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    week's lecture is on "The Faerie Queene" by Edmund Spenser. This lecture focuses on Edmund Spenser's life, the sources and influences that created Book I of "The Faerie Queene", themes, devices, and meaning, purpose of Book I, and "The Legend of the Knight of the Red Cross". Edmund Spenser was born in 1552 to a modest family of modest means with a similar background such as Marlowe and Shakespeare. Spenser was a well-educated man much like Marlowe. Spenser spent his first years of education at the

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    Edmund Spenser vs. Virgil and Ariosto Essay

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    Edmund Spenser vs Virgil and Ariosto Some scholars believe Spenser did not have sufficient education to compose a work with as much complexity as The Faerie Queene, while others are still “extolling him as one of the most learned men of his time”. Scholar Douglas Bush agrees, “scholars now speak less certainly that they once did of his familiarity with ancient literature”. In contrast, Meritt Hughes “finds no evidence that Spenser derived any element of his poetry from any Greek Romance”

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    INTRODUCTION EDMUND SPENCER Edmund Spenser was an English writer best known for The Faerie Queene, an epic ballad and fantastical moral story commending the Tudor tradition and Elizabeth I. He is perceived as one of the head experts of Modern English verse in its earliest stages, and one of the best artists in the English dialect. Edmund Spenser was conceived in East Smithfield, London around the year 1552 however there is some vagueness as to the careful date of his introduction to the world.

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    those her golden tresses by Edmund Spenser is a fascinating poem describing the dynamics of desire that surround men and women. There are distinct differences between men and women, especially in how they attract one another and how they make decisions. Through this poem I felt that Spenser is expressing the beauty that women may harness to attract a man to be her mate. Spenser compares women to hunters when he describes the tactic used by women to attract men. Spenser formerly goes on to describe

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    rank, is of equal importance. A better understanding of renaissance humanism can be reached after reviewing the shift in society, religious change, and moral belief of the sixteenth century. Many literary works, including Sir Thomas More’s Utopia and Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene, helped to shape the ideals of renaissance humanism. These

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    Edmund Spenser was born into a relatively poor family in East Smithfield, London, England in 1552 (there remains a degree of ambiguity to the exact date of his birth). This information is acquired from sonnet lx. in the Amoretti where he speaks of having lived 41 years, as of 1595. Although he was related to an affluent and noble Midlands family of Spencer, his own immediate family was not particularly wealthy. There also remains some ambiguity to the specificities of Spenser's childhood, though

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    Prophetic Vision in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene In the First Book of The Faerie Queene, Edmund Spenser reveals his prophetic and apocalyptic vision for the fledgling British Empire, personified in his hero Redcrosse. As the secular instrument of Gloriana, the Faerie Queene, Redcrosse takes on the sacred task of Una (representing religious truth) to free her parents, Adam and Eve, from their bonds of sin. Before he can achieve his task, the Redcrosse knight (representing holiness) must

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    Edmund Spenser Sonnet 67 Edmund Spenser’s Sonnet 67 is one of 85 sonnets from Amoretti which was written about his courtship of Elizabeth Boyle. Spenser and Boyle were married in 1594. Sonnet 67 uses a hunting themed metaphor common in 16th century England comparing the woman to a deer and the man to a huntsman in pursuit. Sonnet 67 appears to have been inspired by an earlier work by Petrarch, Rima 190, but with a different ending. In this paper we will take an in depth look at this work,

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    Dragons in Beowulf and in Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene When one usually thinks of a dragon, one thinks of dragon-slayers, adventure, damsels in distress, and cheap fantasy novels. Dragons in literature have not always been used for such meaningless entertainment. There are many precedents for dragons in medieval literature, two of the most prominent being in the Old English poem Beowulf and in Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene. In both of these epic poems, dragons play

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    important symbolism to portray their Christian beliefs in this era of time. The Faerie Queene was written during the late 15th century when the Reformation Era, a religious revolution that would define today’s beliefs and structures took place. Edmund Spenser wrote The Faerie Queene during this time in history when England had separated itself from the Catholic Church and went on to create its own Protestant church. And this poem is full of religion and politics. This poem is almost exactly like a

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