SpenserJ.M. Dent and Sons Limited, 1926 - 140 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 11
... ideal d by Castiglione ! The Court was a place wh pered better than virtue . The man of hon by a noble desire of fame , made for acti had no chance there . Surely Spenser had a many a distasteful reflection when he left Leicester's ...
... ideal d by Castiglione ! The Court was a place wh pered better than virtue . The man of hon by a noble desire of fame , made for acti had no chance there . Surely Spenser had a many a distasteful reflection when he left Leicester's ...
Page 17
... ideal . He equally reproves knight Sansloi and the sour puritan Sir H We have seen how sharp a satirist h vehemently he railed at the society of hi he takes care to see that his satire is ha own author . As a courtier , though he blames ...
... ideal . He equally reproves knight Sansloi and the sour puritan Sir H We have seen how sharp a satirist h vehemently he railed at the society of hi he takes care to see that his satire is ha own author . As a courtier , though he blames ...
Page 19
... ideal woman . She is the c whom his stanzas will bow down in humb It is impossible to imagine a single attribut virtue or power that is wanting to the pict youth blooms on her face . Though she is 1 forty - six when he first portrays ...
... ideal woman . She is the c whom his stanzas will bow down in humb It is impossible to imagine a single attribut virtue or power that is wanting to the pict youth blooms on her face . Though she is 1 forty - six when he first portrays ...
Page 22
... ideal England , an ideal feminity . That the poets ' poet was in many respects a practical man , by no means unable to cope with crabbed and even ugly problems of his day , we have a different— and less controvertible - proof in his ...
... ideal England , an ideal feminity . That the poets ' poet was in many respects a practical man , by no means unable to cope with crabbed and even ugly problems of his day , we have a different— and less controvertible - proof in his ...
Page 25
... ideal of the good a found deeper satisfaction . That he was a religious and moral - mind obvious from his poems . He never wrote a did not aim at edification . In his Shepher religion fills nearly as much space as love . Hi are full of ...
... ideal of the good a found deeper satisfaction . That he was a religious and moral - mind obvious from his poems . He never wrote a did not aim at edification . In his Shepher religion fills nearly as much space as love . Hi are full of ...
Common terms and phrases
admiration allegory Amoretti archaisms Ariosto Arthurian artistic beauty Bellay Belphœbe bower bride canto charm Chastity Chaucer's Christian Christopher Beeston Colin colours courtier delight doth dumb-show earthly Eclogue Edmund Spenser Elizabeth English Epithalamion euphuism eyes fair Fairy Queen famous feelings flowers French Gabriel Harvey genius George Gascoigne goodly hair Harvey heart heavenly Hymns ideal imagination Ireland John Aubrey Kirke knight lady Leicester less LITERARY TENETS lived Lord lover MORAL AND RELIGIOUS Muse Mutability mythological natural never nymphs pageant painted painter Palinode pass passion pastoral Philip Sidney PICTORIAL ELEMENTS Platonic Platonic love poem poet poet's poetic poetry portrait praise Renaissance romance scene seem'd seems Shakespeare Shepherd's Calendar Shepherds Sidney Sidney's sing Sir Guyon sonnets soul Spenser stanzas surely sweet tableaux vivants Temperance things thoughts true turn unto verse virtue visions wherein whole woman woods
Popular passages
Page 41 - Where no misgiving is, rely Upon the genial sense of youth; Glad hearts, without reproach or blot, Who do thy work and know it not: Oh!
Page 80 - Unless she do him by the forelock take ; Bid her therefore herself soon ready make, To wait on Love amongst his lovely crew ; Where every one, that misseth then her make, Shall be by him amerced with penance due.
Page 82 - One day I wrote her name upon the strand; But came the waves, and washed it away: Again, I wrote it with a second hand; But came the tide, and made my pains his prey. Vain man, said she, that dost in vain assay A mortal thing so to immortalize; For I myself shall like to this decay, And eke my name be wiped out likewise.
Page 39 - So every spirit, as it is most pure, And hath in it the more of heavenly light, So it the fairer body doth procure To habit in, and it more fairly dight With cheerful grace and amiable sight; For of the soul the body form doth take; For soul is form, and doth the body make.
Page 116 - A little lowly hermitage it was, Down in a dale, hard by a forest's side, Far from resort of people, that did pass In travel to and fro : a little wide There was...
Page 87 - gin to shrill aloud Their merry music that resounds from far, The pipe, the tabor, and the trembling croud, That well agree withouten breach or jar. But most of all, the...
Page 91 - Doe burne, that to us wretched earthly clods In dreadful darknesse lend desired light: And all ye powers which in the same remayne, More then we men can fayne!
Page 68 - In which I have followed all the antique poets historical : first Homer, who in the persons of Agamemnon and Ulysses hath ensampled a good governor and a virtuous man, the one in his Ilias, the other in his Odysseis...
Page 88 - Tell me, ye merchants' daughters, did ye see So fair a creature in your town before...
Page 88 - Almighty's view. Of her, ye virgins,. learn obedience, When so ye come into those holy places, To humble your proud faces. Bring her up to th...