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Faerie Queene

“The Faerie Queene” As A Moral and Spiritual Allegory

“The Faerie Queene” As A Moral and Spiritual Allegory

... The Faerie Queene but Lowell went further, and found himself disliking the moral purpose: ‘whenever… you come suddenly o the moral, it gives you a shock of unpleasant surprise, a kind of girt, as when one’s ...

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Between courtesy and constancy : The Faerie Queene, books 6 and 7

Between courtesy and constancy : The Faerie Queene, books 6 and 7

... Constancy, for Spenser, is about where you stand. It always has the potential to emerge in a territorial register. “First estate” permits the poem to imagine incessant change as part of a trajectory that maps a return to ...

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A Time and Place for Premarital Desire: Positive Uses of Lust in Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene

A Time and Place for Premarital Desire: Positive Uses of Lust in Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene

... The Faerie Queene, scholars have overlooked many details of the story or accounted for them in an unsatisfactory ...The Faerie Queene as an inherently negative feeling that previously ...

10

Bodies, Blood, and Manure: The Rhetoric of Nutrient Cycling in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene and A View of the State of Ireland

Bodies, Blood, and Manure: The Rhetoric of Nutrient Cycling in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene and A View of the State of Ireland

... Malengin, however, is not the only corpse-like villain in Spenser’s works. As Schwyzer points out, this type of depiction also occurs in Book II of The Faerie Queene when the knights Arthur and Guyon are ...

19

The Old Woman in the Cave of Lust: Edmund Spenser's Silenced Feminine Voices in The Faerie Queene

The Old Woman in the Cave of Lust: Edmund Spenser's Silenced Feminine Voices in The Faerie Queene

... This is Spenser’s very issue in integrating “Bluebeard” tales into the Faerie Queene. Spenser will use such fairy tales as source, but since he does have tablet and pen, he is able to silence the original ...

14

Re-Presenting "The Legende of Holinesse": An Explication of The Faerie Queene I.12

Re-Presenting "The Legende of Holinesse": An Explication of The Faerie Queene I.12

... Book I, Canto XII of the Faerie Queene may be read as a microcosm of Redcrosse knight’s entire journey. Spenser’s idea that mankind is too weak to do good, ready to err, and will only escape the grasps of ...

46

Fairy in The Faerie Queene: Making Elizabeth Irish

Fairy in The Faerie Queene: Making Elizabeth Irish

... While some scholars have considered this conflict, very few have examined Queen Elizabeth in the context of her most blatant title: that of the “Faerie Queene.” By choosing such a title, Spenser explicitly ...

17

"'Let others sing of knights and paladins': Teaching the Sonnet alongside The Faerie Queene with Samuel Daniel’s Delia 46

"'Let others sing of knights and paladins': Teaching the Sonnet alongside The Faerie Queene with Samuel Daniel’s Delia 46

... 32 / TRM, December 2013 a wide variety of critical questions, some that I have gestured at already: How do the structural feature of a poem affect the meanings that it expresses? How does genre play a part in the process ...

11

A Giant Problem in Book Five of The Faerie Queene

A Giant Problem in Book Five of The Faerie Queene

... Kilcolman estate in Ireland, where Spenser wrote, “came into the hands of the New English settlers, and eventually into Spenser’s possession, as a result of the seizure and division of the lands of the rebel Earl of ...

18

“The Protestant Refashioning of Saint George in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie   Queene"

“The Protestant Refashioning of Saint George in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene"

... happy Queene of Faeries, that hast found / Mongst many, one that with his prowess may / Defend thine honor, and thy foes confound: / True loves are often sown, but seldom grow on ground” ...

23

The Revitalization of the Community based Management of Acute Malnutrition Program in Haiti

The Revitalization of the Community based Management of Acute Malnutrition Program in Haiti

... virtue of courtesy, the language fits. Alma has Arthur remove his armor (symbolic of his shallow chivalry) and ministers to Arthur with hospitality—an important element of courtesy. Through Alma’s hospitality, both ...

198

"Teaching  Lyly's Endymion in Undergraduate  Survey Courses"

"Teaching Lyly's Endymion in Undergraduate Survey Courses"

... signifying nature of Elizabethan allegory, making Endymion a helpful introduction to.. the more complex allegory found in texts like the Faerie Queene.[r] ...

8

Stapleton_unc_0153D_15792.pdf

Stapleton_unc_0153D_15792.pdf

... In The History of the Church of Englande (1565), religious controversy about the image of the cross also makes its mark on Thomas Stapleton’s presentation of the legend of the Saxon king Oswald. In Stapleton’s narrative, ...

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