Biography of Edmund Spenser (1553-1599)
Edmund Spenser was born in 1552 or 1553.
No documentation exists to establish his exact date of birth, but the year is
known in part due to Spenser's own poetry. InAmoretti Sonnet 60, Spenser writes that he is
forty-one years old. We know this poem was published in 1594 (and written only
shortly prior to its publication), so the year of his birth can be closely
guessed.
Spenser matriculated at the University of
Cambridge on May 20, 1569. Ten years later he published his first
publicly-released poetic work, The
Sheapheards' Calendar, to positive reviews. He then began work on his
magnum opus, The Faerie Queene,
publishing the first three of the projected twelve books in 1590.
Spenser was an English subject during the
reign of Queen Elizabeth I, to whose court he aspired. He offered Elizabeth The Faerie Queene in an attempt to gain her favor.
Unfortunately, Spenser held to political views and associated with individuals
that did not meet the approval of Elizabeth's principal secretary, Lord
Burghley. Through Burghley's influence, Spenser was given only a small pension
in recognition for his grand poetic work.
Sent to Ireland to hold English property
on the oft-rebellious island, Spenser there met and wooed Elizabeth Boyle, a
young woman from an important English family, who was probably half his age.
His year-long suit to win her hand in marriage is recorded (with a deal of
poetic license) in Spenser's Amoretti.
Spenser also dedicated a marriage song,Epithalamion, to his young bride.
As was the custom, both seemingly personal works of poetry were published for
mass consumption in 1594 and helped Spenser's literary career to improve. In
the meantime, Spenser completed the fourth through sixth books of The Faerie Queene and published them, along with revised
versions of the first three books, in 1596.
Spenser is best known for his immense epic
poem The Faerie Queene.
Dedicated to Queen Elizabeth (herself represented by the title character) the
work was envisioned by Spenser as encompassing twelve books, each one detailing
a quest by some knight of King Arthur's court on behalf of Gloriana, the Faerie
Queene. Spenser was only able to finish the first six books (and begin a draft
of the seventh) before his death in 1599.
from The
Faerie Queene: Book I, Canto I
BY EDMUND SPENSER
xiv
But full of fire and
greedy hardiment,
The youthfull knight
could not for ought be staide,
But forth unto the
darksome hole he went,
And looked in: his
glistring armor made
A litle glooming
light, much like a shade,
By which he saw the
ugly monster plaine,
Halfe like a serpent
horribly displaide,
But th'other halfe did
womans shape retaine,
Most lothsom, filthie,
foule, and full of vile disdaine.
xv
And as she lay upon
the durtie ground,
Her huge long taile
her den all overspred,
Yet was in knots and
many boughtes upwound,
Pointed with mortall
sting. Of her there bred
A thousand yong ones,
which she dayly fed,
Sucking upon her
poisonous dugs, eachone
Of sundry shapes, yet
all ill favored:
Soone as that uncouth
light upon them shone,
Into her mouth they
crept, and suddain all were gone.
xvi
Their dam upstart, out
of her den effraide,
And rushed forth,
hurling her hideous taile
About her cursed head,
whose folds displaid
Were stretcht now
forth at length without entraile.
She lookt about, and
seeing one in mayle
Armed to point, sought
backe to turne againe;
For light she hated as
the deadly bale,
Ay wont in desert
darknesse to remaine,
Where plaine none
might her see, nor she see any plaine.
xvii
Which when the valiant
Elfe perceiv'd, he lept
As Lyon fierce upon
the flying pray,
And with his trenchand
blade her boldly kept
From turning backe,
and forced her to stay:
Therewith enrag'd she
loudly gan to bray,
And turning fierce,
her speckled taile advaunst,
Threatning her angry
sting, him to dismay:
Who nought aghast, his
mightie hand enhaunst:
The stroke down from
her head unto her shoulder glaunst.
xviii
Much daunted with that
dint, her sence was dazd,
Yet kindling rage, her
selfe she gathered round,
And all attonce her
beastly body raizd
With doubled forces
high above the ground:
Tho wrapping up her
wrethed sterne arownd,
Lept fierce upon his
shield, and her huge traine
All suddenly about his
body wound,
That hand or foot to
stirre he strove in vaine:
God helpe the man so
wrapt in Errours endlesse traine.
xix
His Lady sad to see
his sore constraint,
Cride out, Now now Sir
knight, shew what ye bee,
Add faith unto your
force, and be not faint:
Strangle her, else she
sure will strangle thee.
That when he heard, in
great perplexitie,
His gall did grate for
griefe and high disdaine,
And knitting all his
force got one hand free,
Wherewith he grypt her
gorge with so great paine,
That soone to loose
her wicked bands did her constraine.
xx
Therewith she spewd
out of her filthy maw
A floud of poyson
horrible and blacke,
Full of great lumpes
of flesh and gobbets raw,
Which stunck so
vildly, that it forst him slacke
His grasping hold, and
from her turne him backe:
Her vomit full of
bookes and papers was,
With loathly frogs and
toades, which eyes did lacke,
And creeping sought
way in the weedy gras:
Her filthy parbreake
all the place defiled has.
xxi
As when old father
Nilus gins to swell
With timely pride
above the Aegyptian vale,
His fattie waves do
fertile slime outwell,
And overflow each
plaine and lowly dale:
But when his later
spring gins to avale,
Huge heapes of mudd he
leaves, wherein there breed
Ten thousand kindes of
creatures, partly male
And partly female of
his fruitfull seed;
Such ugly monstrous
shapes elsewhere may no man reed.
xxii
The same so sore
annoyed has the knight,
That welnigh choked
with the deadly stinke,
His forces faile, ne
can no longer fight.
Whose corage when the
feend perceiv'd to shrinke,
She poured forth out
of her hellish sinke
Her fruitfull cursed
spawne of serpents small,
Deformed monsters,
fowle, and blacke as inke,
Which swarming all
about his legs did crall,
And him encombred
sore, but could not hurt at all.
xxiii
As gentle Shepheard in
sweete even-tide,
When ruddy Phoebus
gins to welke in west,
High on an hill, his
flocke to vewen wide,
Markes which do byte
their hasty supper best;
A cloud of combrous
gnattes do him molest,
All striving to infixe
their feeble stings,
That from their
noyance he no where can rest,
But with his clownish
hands their tender wings
He brusheth oft, and
oft doth mar their murmurings.
xxiv
Thus ill bestedd, and
fearefull more of shame,
Then of the certaine
perill he stood in,
Halfe furious unto his
foe he came,
Resolv'd in minde all
suddenly to win,
Or soone to lose,
before he once would lin;
And strooke at her
with more then manly force,
That from her body
full of filthie sin
He raft her hatefull
head without remorse;
A streame of cole
black bloud forth gushed from her corse.
xxv
Her scattred brood,
soone as their Parent deare
They saw so rudely
falling to the ground,
Groning full deadly,
all with troublous feare,
Gathred themselves
about her body round,
Weening their wonted
entrance to have found
At her wide mouth: but
being there withstood
They flocked all about
her bleeding wound,
And sucked up their
dying mothers blood,
Making her death their
life, and eke her hurt their good.
xxvi
That detestable sight
him much amazde,
To see th'unkindly
Impes of heaven accurst,
Devoure their dam; on
whom while so he gazd,
Having all satisfide
their bloudy thurst,
Their bellies swolne
he saw with fulnesse burst,
And bowels gushing
forth: well worthy end
Of such as drunke her
life, the which them nurst;
Now needeth him no
lenger labour spend,
His foes have slaine
themselves, with whom he should contend.
Book I tells the story of the knight of Holiness, the Redcrosse
Knight. This hero gets his name from the blood-red cross emblazoned on his
shield. He has been given a task by Gloriana, "that greatest Glorious
Queen of Faerie lond," to fight a terrible dragon (I.i.3). He is traveling
with a beautiful, innocent young lady and a dwarf as servant. Just as we join
the three travelers, a storm breaks upon them and they rush to find cover in a
nearby forest. When the skies clear, they find that they are lost, and they end
up near a cave, which the lady recognizes as the den of Error. Ignoring her
warnings, Redcrosse enters and is attacked by the terrible beast, Error, and
her young. She wraps him up in her tail, but he eventually manages to strangle
her and chops off her head. Error's young then drink her blood until they burst
and die. Victorious, the knight and his companions set out again, looking for
the right path. As night falls, they meet an old hermit who offers them lodging
in his inn. As the travelers sleep, the hermit assumes his real identity--he is
Archimago, the black sorcerer, and he conjures up two spirits to trouble
Redcrosse. One of the sprites obtains a false dream from Morpheus, the god of
sleep; the other takes the shape of Una, the lady accompanying Redcrosse. These
sprites go to the knight; one gives him the dream of love and lust. When
Redcrosse wakes up in a passion, the other sprite (appearing to be Una) is
lying beside him, offering a kiss. The knight, however, resists her temptations
and returns to sleep. Archimago then tries a new deception; he puts the sprite
disguised as Una in a bed and turns the other sprite into a young man, who lies
with the false Una. Archimago then wakes Redcrosse and shows him the two lovers
in bed. Redcrosse is furious that "Una" would spoil her virtue with
another man, and so in the morning he leaves without her. When the real Una
wakes, she sees her knight is gone, and in sorrow rides off to look for him.
Archimago, enjoying the fruits of his scheme, now disguises himself as
Redcrosse and follows after Una. As Redcrosse wanders on, he approaches another
knight--Sansfoy, who is traveling with his lady. He charges Redcrosse, and they
fight fiercely, but the shield with the blood-red cross protects our hero;
eventually, he kills Sansfoy. He takes the woman into his care--she calls
herself Fidessa, saying that she is the daughter of the Emperor of the West.
Redcrosse swears to protect her, attracted to her beauty. They continue
together, but soon the sun becomes so hot that they must rest under the shade
of some trees. Redcrosse breaks a branch off of one tree and is shocked when
blood drips forth from it, and a voice cries out in pain. The tree speaks and
tells its story. It was once a man, named Fradubio, who had a beautiful lady
named Fraelissa--now the tree next to him. One day, Fradubio happened to defeat
a knight and win his lady (just as Redcrosse did)--and that lady turned out to
be Duessa, an evil witch. Duessa turned Fraelissa into a tree, so that she
could have Fradubio for herself. But Fradubio saw the witch in her true, ugly
form while she was bathing, and when he tried to run away, she turned him into
a tree, as well. When Fradubio finishes his story, Fidessa faints--because she
is, in fact, Duessa, and she fears that she will be found out. She recovers
though, and Redcrosse does not make the connection, so they continue on their
way.
Commentary
Redcrosse is the hero of Book I, and in the beginning of Canto
i, he is called the knight of Holinesse. He will go through great trials and
fight fierce monsters throughout the Book, and this in itself is entertaining,
as a story of a heroic "knight errant." However, the more important
purpose of the Faerie Queene is its allegory, the meaning behind
its characters and events. The story's setting, a fanciful "faerie
land," only emphasizes how its allegory is meant for a land very close to
home: Spenser's England. The title character, the Faerie Queene herself, is
meant to represent Queen Elizabeth. Redcrosse represents the individual
Christian, on the search for Holiness, who is armed with faith in Christ, the
shield with the bloody cross. He is traveling with Una, whose name means
"truth." For a Christian to be holy, he must have true faith, and so
the plot of Book I mostly concerns the attempts of evildoers to separate
Redcrosse from Una. Most of these villains are meant by Spenser to represent
one thing in common: the Roman Catholic Church. The poet felt that, in the
English Reformation, the people had defeated "false religion"
(Catholicism) and embraced "true religion"
(Protestantism/Anglicanism). Thus, Redcrosse must defeat villains who mimic the
falsehood of the Roman Church.
The first of these is Error. When Redcrosse chokes the beast,
Spenser writes, "Her vomit full of bookes and papers was (I.i.20)."
These papers represent Roman Catholic propaganda that was put out in Spenser's
time, against Queen Elizabeth and Anglicanism. The Christian (Redcrosse) may be
able to defeat these obvious and disgusting errors, but before he is united to
the truth he is still lost and can be easily deceived. This deceit is arranged
by Archimago, whose name means "arch-image"--the Protestants accused
the Catholics of idolatry because of their extensive use of images. The
sorcerer is able, through deception and lust, to separate Redcrosse from
Una--that is, to separate Holiness from Truth. Once separated, Holiness is
susceptible to the opposite of truth, or falsehood. Redcrosse may able to
defeat the strength of Sansfoy (literally "without faith" or
"faithlessness") through his own native virtue, but he falls prey to
the wiles of Falsehood herself--Duessa. Duessa also represents the Roman
Church, both because she is "false faith," and because of her rich,
purple and gold clothing, which, for Spenser, displays the greedy wealth and arrogant
pomp of Rome. Much of the poet's imagery comes from a passage in the Book of
Revelation, which describes the "whore of Babylon"--many Protestant
readers took this Biblical passage to indicate the Catholic Church.
The Faerie
Queene, however, also has
many sources outside of the Bible. Spenser considers himself an epic poet in
the classical tradition and so he borrows heavily from the great epics of
antiquity: Homer's Iliad and Odyssey and Virgil's Aeneid. This is most evident at the opening of
Book I, in which Spenser calls on one of the Muses to guide his poetry--Homer
and Virgil established this form as the "proper" opening to an epic
poem. The scene with the "human tree," in which a broken branch drips
blood, likewise recalls a similar episode in theAeneid. However, while these ancient poets
mainly wrote to tell a story, we have already seen that Spenser has another
purpose in mind. In the letter that introduces the Faerie Queene, he says that he followed Homer and
Virgil and the Italian poets Ariosto and Tasso because they all have
"ensampled a good governour and a vertuous man." Spenser intends to
expand on this example by defining the characteristics of a good, virtuous, Christian man.
Characters
Arthur -
The central hero of the poem, although he does not play the most significant
role in its action. Arthur is in search of the Faerie Queene, whom he saw in a
vision. The "real" Arthur was a king of the Britons in the 5th or 6th
century A.D., but the little historical information we have about him is
overwhelmed by his legend.
Faerie
Queene (also known as Gloriana) - Though
she never appears in the poem, the Faerie Queene is the focus of the poem; her
castle is the ultimate goal or destination of many of the poem’s characters.
She represents Queen Elizabeth, among others, as discussed in the Commentary.
Redcrosse -
The Redcrosse Knight is the hero of Book I; he stands for the virtue of
Holiness. His real name is discovered to be George, and he ends up becoming St.
George, the patron saint of England. On another level, though, he is the
individual Christian fighting against evil--or the Protestant fighting the
Catholic Church.
Una -
Redcrosse's future wife, and the other major protagonist in Book I. She is
meek, humble, and beautiful, but strong when it is necessary; she represents
Truth, which Redcrosse must find in order to be a true Christian.
Duessa -
The opposite of Una, she represents falsehood and nearly succeeds in getting
Redcrosse to leave Una for good. She appears beautiful, but it is only
skin-deep.
Archimago -
Next to Duessa, a major antagonist in Book I. Archimago is a sorcerer capable
of changing his own appearance or that of others; in the end, his magic is
proven weak and ineffective.
Britomart -
The hero of Book III, the female warrior virgin, who represents Chastity. She
is a skilled fighter and strong of heart, with an amazing capacity for calm
thought in troublesome circumstances. Of course, she is chaste, but she also
desires true Christian love. She searches for her future husband, Arthegall,
whom she saw in a vision through a magic mirror.
Florimell -
Another significant female character in Book III, Florimell represents Beauty.
She is also chaste but constantly hounded by men who go mad with lust for her.
She does love one knight, who seems to be the only character that doesnot love
her.
Satyrane -
Satyrane is the son of a human and a satyr (a half-human, half-goat creature).
He is "nature's knight," the best a man can be through his own
natural abilities without the enlightenment of Christianity and God's grace. He
is significant in both Book I and Book III, generally as an aide to the
protagonists.
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