The Spenser EncyclopediaA.C. Hamilton 'This masterly work ought to be The Elizabethan Encyclopedia, and no less.' - Cahiers Elizabethains |
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... Faerie Queene. For example, Northrop Frye connects Redcrosse's red and white (silver) shield 'not only with the risen body of Christ and the sacramental symbolism which accompanies it, but with the union of the red and white roses in ...
... Faerie Queene. For example, Northrop Frye connects Redcrosse's red and white (silver) shield 'not only with the risen body of Christ and the sacramental symbolism which accompanies it, but with the union of the red and white roses in ...
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... Faerie Queene' RenQ 27:533–48; Michael Lieb 1970 The Dialectics of Creation: Patterns of Birth and Regeneration in 'Paradise Lost' (Amherst); Mulryan 1972; Robert J.Rockwood 1972 'Alchemical Forms of Thought in Book I of Spenser's Faerie ...
... Faerie Queene' RenQ 27:533–48; Michael Lieb 1970 The Dialectics of Creation: Patterns of Birth and Regeneration in 'Paradise Lost' (Amherst); Mulryan 1972; Robert J.Rockwood 1972 'Alchemical Forms of Thought in Book I of Spenser's Faerie ...
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... Faerie Queene to use at his Temple School in Boston. About this time began the practice of publishing prose redactions of The Faerie Queene designed for children. The first and best of these was a retelling of Book I, Holiness, or The ...
... Faerie Queene to use at his Temple School in Boston. About this time began the practice of publishing prose redactions of The Faerie Queene designed for children. The first and best of these was a retelling of Book I, Holiness, or The ...
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... Faerie Queene which is not assimilative of something, whether it is ancient or whether it can be located somewhere else in Spenser's enormous cultural heritage. The basic process of the poem is parodic, if the implication of ridicule is ...
... Faerie Queene which is not assimilative of something, whether it is ancient or whether it can be located somewhere else in Spenser's enormous cultural heritage. The basic process of the poem is parodic, if the implication of ridicule is ...
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... Faerie Queene, correlated several episodes with passages in the Book of Revelation. In his annotations to the 1590 edition, he presents Elizabeth as the great protagonist of history, and FQ I as an allegory of the Reformation, in this ...
... Faerie Queene, correlated several episodes with passages in the Book of Revelation. In his annotations to the 1590 edition, he presents Elizabeth as the great protagonist of history, and FQ I as an allegory of the Reformation, in this ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acrasia Aeneid allegory allusions Amoret Amoretti appears Archimago Ariosto Artegall Arthur Arthurian Beast beauty Bellay Belphoebe Bible Book Bower of Bliss Britomart Busirane Calidore canto castle century characters chastity Chaucer Christian classical Colin Clout commentary Complaints contemporary court courtesy Cupid divine dragon Duessa eclogue edition Elizabeth Elizabethan emblem England epic episode Epithalamion Faerie Queene figure Florimell Garden of Adonis grace Guyon heavenly hero holiness human ideal imitation interpretation John knight lady Latin Letter to Raleigh literary London lover marriage meaning medieval moral Mother Hubberd Muses Mutabilitie myth narrative nature Neoplatonic Orlando furioso Ovid pastoral Petrarch poem poet poet's poetic poetry praise Prayer proem prose quest reader Redcrosse Redcrosse's reference Reformation Renaissance romance Rome Scudamour Shepheardes Calender Sidney sonnet Spenser Spenserian stanza story suggests symbolic Tale Timias tradition translation University Venus verse viii virgin virtue vision