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         Spenser Edmund:     more books (100)
  1. Edmund Spenser's Poetry (Norton Critical Editions) by Edmund Spenser, 1992-12-17
  2. Spenser's The Faerie Queene, Book I by Edmund Spenser, 2010-07-12
  3. Fierce Wars and Faithful Loves: Book I of Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser, 1999-01-01
  4. The Faerie Queene, Book 1 by Edmund Spenser, 2010-04-02
  5. The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser, Volume 5 by Edmund Spenser, 2010-07-06
  6. The Works of Edmund Spenser (Wordsworth Poetry Library) by Edmund Spenser, 1999-12
  7. The Shorter Poems (Penguin Classics) by Edmund Spenser, 2000-05-01
  8. The faerie queene, cantos I.-II and the Prothalamion ... with prefatory and explanatory notes by Edmund Spenser, 2010-06-14
  9. Edmund Spenser: A Critical Anthology (Penguin critical anthologies)
  10. The Cambridge Companion to Spenser (Cambridge Companions to Literature)
  11. A Biography of Edmund Spenser by John W. Hales, 2010-05-23
  12. The Faerie Queene: Complete in Five Volumes by Edmund Spenser, 2008-01-30
  13. The Elfin Knight by Edmund Spenser, Toby J. Sumpter, 2010-09-28
  14. The Yale Edition of the Shorter Poems of Edmund Spenser by Edmund Spenser, 1989-09-10

1. WIEM: Spenser Edmund
spenser edmund (1552?1599), angielski pisarz i humanista. Dworzanin lorda Leicestera, przebywa wraz z nim na dworze Elbiety I, 1580 zosta
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Spenser Edmund (1552?-1599), angielski pisarz i humanista. Dworzanin lorda Leicestera, przebywa³ wraz z nim na dworze El¿biety I , 1580 zosta³ sekretarzem zarz±dcy Irlandii. Jeden z najwybitniejszych reprezentantów angielskiego renesansu i epoki el¿bietañskiej. Autor g³o¶nych utworów, jak poemat pasterski The Shepheard Calender (1579) oraz ceniony panegiryczny poemat na cze¶æ El¿biety I w 6 ksiêgach The Faerie Queene (1590-1596), nawi±zuj±cy do fantastycznych opowie¶ci rycerskich, w±tków antycznych i ¶redniowiecznych utworów alegorycznych, a tak¿e do poematu L. Ariosta Orland szalony (czê¶ciowe wydanie polskie we wcze¶niejszym przek³adzie P. Kochanowskiego 1799, pe³ne 1905). Spenser zastosowa³ w nim nowatorskie formy w dziedzinie rytmiki i wersyfikacji (tzw. strofa spenserowska). Tak¿e zbiór sonetów Amoretti (1595), utworów okoliczno¶ciowych, jak Epithalamion (1595) napisany na w³asne wesele. Polskie przek³ady w antologii Poeci jêzyka angielskiego (tom 1, 1969).

2. WIEM: Spenser Edmund
(encyklopedia.pl)Category World Polska Leksykon Encyklopedia encyklopedia.pl S......spenser edmund (1552?1599), angielski pisarz i humanista. Dworzanin SpenserEdmund (1552?-1599), angielski pisarz i humanista. Dworzanin
http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/010f48.html
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Spenser Edmund widok strony
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poka¿ powi±zane
Spenser Edmund (1552?-1599), angielski pisarz i humanista. Dworzanin lorda Leicestera, przebywa³ wraz z nim na dworze El¿biety I , 1580 zosta³ sekretarzem zarz±dcy Irlandii. Jeden z najwybitniejszych reprezentantów angielskiego renesansu i epoki el¿bietañskiej. Autor g³o¶nych utworów, jak poemat pasterski The Shepheard Calender (1579) oraz ceniony panegiryczny poemat na cze¶æ El¿biety I w 6 ksiêgach The Faerie Queene (1590-1596), nawi±zuj±cy do fantastycznych opowie¶ci rycerskich, w±tków antycznych i ¶redniowiecznych utworów alegorycznych, a tak¿e do poematu L. Ariosta Orland szalony (czê¶ciowe wydanie polskie we wcze¶niejszym przek³adzie P. Kochanowskiego 1799, pe³ne 1905). Spenser zastosowa³ w nim nowatorskie formy w dziedzinie rytmiki i wersyfikacji (tzw. strofa spenserowska). Tak¿e zbiór sonetów Amoretti (1595), utworów okoliczno¶ciowych, jak Epithalamion (1595) napisany na w³asne wesele. Polskie przek³ady w antologii Poeci jêzyka angielskiego (tom 1, 1969).

3. Spenser Edmund - Amoretti LXVII: Like As A Huntsman Excerpt Provided By ALS Inte
spenser edmund amoretti LXVII like as a huntsman excerpt provided by ALS International. 1,1, Amoretti LXVII Like As A Huntsman by Edmund Spenser (1552-1599).
http://www.alsintl.com/poetry/likeasahuntsman.htm
spencer, edmund amoretti LXVII: like as a huntsman
Amoretti LXVII: Like As A Huntsman
by Edmund Spenser (1552-1599)
Like as a huntsman after weary chase,
Seeing the game from him escap'd away,
Sits down to rest him in some shady place,
With panting hounds beguiled of their prey:
So after long pursuit and vain assay,
When I all weary had the chase forsook,
The gentle deer return'd the self-same way,
Thinking to quench her thirst at the next brook.
There she beholding me with milder look,
Sought not to fly, but fearless still did bide: Till I in hand her yet half trembling took, And with her own goodwill her firmly tied. Strange thing, me seem'd, to see a beast so wild, So goodly won, with her own will beguil'd. Our Services Translation Transcription Interpreting Conference Services ... Litigation Support Search Our Site-

4. Basic Search
prose 15401674, English literature - History and criticism ; SURREY, HENRY HOWARD; Wyatt, Thomas (Sir) ; Sidney, Philip, Sir ; Spenser, Edmund ; Donne, John
http://intra.trinity.wa.edu.au/webopac/default.asp?n=s&c=SPENSER EDMUND

5. 166 Edmund Spenser Links: Spenser Edmund English Faerie Queene Book Books John P
166 Edmund Spenser links. spenser edmund english faerie queene book books john poetryliterature. Edmund Spenser spenser edmund books epithalamion purl vtdocs.
http://fp3.antelecom.net/scheper/Edmund_Spenser.htm
166 Edmund Spenser links
spenser edmund english faerie queene book books john poetry literature
Find-A-Grave By Country: England
england london cemetery highgate location interment specific church saint british death king cathedral abbey john william westminster Early Modern Literary Studies: A Journal of Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century English Literature
emls university cambridge issue shakespeare special renaissance modern oxford english toronto york college john british england English Literature
john poems english poetry etexts homepage literature society web thomas university resources internet british lawrence milton american Author Webliography
information bibliography includes university web biography poems biographical including poetry collection internet william project Edmund Spenser (c.1552-1599) : Library of Congress Citations
spenser edmund published poetry faerie control description subjects queene dewey literature york english series history references Teaching Staff Home Page
literature english auckland email interests research published zealand poetry articles century convenes drama books women fiction Edmund Spenser. 1552?-1599. John Bartlett, comp. 1919. Familiar Quotations, 10th ed.

6. Edmund Spenser
Edmund Spenser (c.15521599). Edmund Spenser by Benjamin Wilson (detail) (PembrokeCollege, Cambridge). Visit Anniina Jokinen's Edmund Spenser page.
http://www.sonnets.org/spenser.htm
Edmund Spenser (c.1552-1599)
Edmund Spenser by Benjamin Wilson (detail) (Pembroke College, Cambridge) From Amoretti See the complete Amoretti (1595) and Sonnets by Spenser from Various Sources at the University of Oregon's helpful Edmund Spenser Home Page Visit Anniina Jokinen's Edmund Spenser page.
"Happy ye leaves! whenas those lily hands"
Happy ye leaves! whenas those lily hands,
Which hold my life in their dead doing might,
Shall handle you, and hold in love's soft bands,
Like captives trembling at the victor's sight.
And happy lines! on which, with starry light,
Those lamping eyes will deign sometimes to look

7. Edmund Spenser
Edmund Spenser. (1552?1599). Virtuous knights, evil giants, beautifulladies, and loathsome ogres walk through the fairyland of Edmund
http://www.oldarcadia.com/spenser_a.html
Index
Biography
Selected Works

Astrophel
Edmund Spenser
Virtuous knights, evil giants, beautiful ladies, and loathsome ogres walk through the fairyland of Edmund Spenser's great epic, 'The Faerie Queene'. The poem is a long allegory of the struggle between Good and Evil. Spenser originally planned the work in 12 books, each to depict a particular moral virtue in a knight, but he completed only six. The story has three levels of plot or meaning that run along together. On the surface the narrative is a courtly romance. But in order to understand Spenser's purpose it is necessary for the reader to unravel the meaning behind the characters and their actions, as given in the other two levels.
On the second level one character represents an ideal Christian, another Truth, still others the Seven Deadly Sins of the medieval Roman Catholic church, and so on. Here the plan of the story is something like John Bunyan's 'The Pilgrim's Progress'.
On the third level the characters stand for real persons of Spenser's day and earlier. This level is the most difficult for modern readers to follow, for few of these historical characters are familiar to most people today. In his poem Spenser shifts back and forth from one of these levels to another. At one time, for instance, the evil Duessa represents Falsehood, and at another she represents Mary, Queen of Scots.

8. Edmund Spenser - Kalliope
Kalliope Digtere Edmund Spenser. Edmund Spenser (1552 ca.99). Top-10over mest læste Edmund Spenser digte i Kalliope.
http://www.kalliope.org/ffront.cgi?fhandle=spenser

9. Edmund Spenser - Wikipedia
Edmund Spenser. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Edmund Spenser (15521599)was an English poet, and a contemporary of William Shakespeare.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Spenser
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Edmund Spenser
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Edmund Spenser ) was an English poet , and a contemporary of William Shakespeare The Faerie Queene is his major contribution to English poetry; it is mostly a poem pandering (successfully!) for the favours of Queen Elizabeth I . The poem is a long allegory of Christian belief, tied into England's mythology of King Arthur . In form, the poem is an epic, in the style of Beowulf Virgil , and Homer The language is purposely antique. As such, it is supposed to immediately bear comparison to such earlier works as those mentioned above, as well as the Canterbury Tales of Geoffrey Chaucer , whom Spenser greatly admired.

10. Edmund Spenser
Edmund Spenser. 3/16/99. Click here to start. Table of Contents. Edmund Spenser.FQ Cultural/Historical Contexts. FQ Nuts and Bolts. FQ Genre(s).
http://clcgi.cl.msu.edu/~tavrmina/eng310a/PPT/spenser/
Edmund Spenser
Click here to start
Table of Contents
Edmund Spenser FQ: Cultural/Historical Contexts FQ: Nuts and Bolts FQ: Genre(s) ... FQ, Bk. 1: Major Episodes, cont’d. Author: M. Teresa Tavormina Email: tavrmina@pilot.msu.edu Home Page: http://www.msu.edu/~tavrmina/

11. The Edmund Spenser Home Page
Welcome Biography Critical Bibliography Online Texts Links, Sidneyspenser DiscussionList spenser Society spenser Review spenser Studies. What's New, Search.
http://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenser/main.htm

Welcome
Biography Critical Bibliography Spenser Studies ... Links This page was last updated on

12. Edmund Spenser (1552-1599)
Link to excerpts from such works as "The Shepherd's Calendar" and "The Faerie Queen" or peruse critical essays. Includes a bio and quotes. edmund spenser (15521599)
http://www.luminarium.org/renlit/spenser.htm
Edmund Spenser (1552-1599)
Quotes
The Life of Edmund Spenser The Works of Edmund Spenser Essays and Articles ... Spenser at the Bookstore
to Renaissance English Literature
Anniina Jokinen

Created by Anniina Jokinen on June 2, 1996. Last updated on September 11, 2002.
Music: "Io son fenice" VECCHI, Orazio (1550-1605) Italian ; sequenced by Faren Raborn

13. SPENSER, EDMUND
spenser, edmund (c
http://88.1911encyclopedia.org/S/SP/SPENSER_EDMUND.htm
document.write("");
SPENSER, EDMUND
SPENSER, EDMUND (c. 1552—1599), English poet, author of the Faery Queen, was born in London about the year 1552. The received date of his birth rests on a passage in sonnet lx. of the A moretti. He speaks there of having lived forty-one years; the Atnoretti was published in 1595, and described on the titlepage as “written not long since “; this would make the ye~r of his birth 1552 or 1553. We know from the Prot/zalamion that London was his birthplace. This at least seems the most natural interpretation of the words— “‘Merry London, my most kindly nurse, That to me gave this life’s first native source.” In the same poem he speaks of himself as taking his name from ‘ an house of ancient fame.” Several of his pieces are addressed to the daughters of Sir John Spencer, head of the Althorp family; and in Cohn Clout’s Come Home Again he describes three of the ladies as— “The honour of the noble family Of which I meanest boast myself to be.” It is natural that a poet so steeped in poetry as Spens,er ‘,should show his faculty at a very early age; and there is strong reason to believe that verses from his pen were published just as he left school at the age of sixteen or seventeen. Certain pieces, translations from Du Bellay and Petrarch, afterwards included in a volume of poems by Spenser published in 1591, are found in a miscellany, Theatre for Woridings, issued by a Flemish Protestant refugee, John van der Noodt, on the 25th of’ May 1569. The translations from Dii Bellay appear in blank verse in the miscellapy, and are rhymed in sonnet form in the later publication, but the diction is substantially the same; the translations from Petrarch are republished with slight variations. Poets were so careless of their rights in those days and publishers took such liberties that we cannot draw for certain the conclusion that would be inevitable if the facts were of more

14. The Edmund Spenser Home Page: Biography
Orn in or near 1552 to a family of modest means, edmund spenser was possibly theson of John spenser, a free journeyman clothmaker resident in East Smithfield
http://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenser/biography.htm
The Shepheardes Calender (December, 37-42) that it was his 'shepherd peres' at the Merchant Taylors' school and Mulcaster (probably the 'good olde shephearde, Wrenock ') who first encouraged him to write verse. I n May 1569, Spenser left school and matriculated as a sizar at Pembroke Hall (now Pembroke College), Cambridge, receiving a further ten shillings from the Nowell bequest to support him. Although he had to work for his meals and accommodation, and may often have been ill during his studies, this appears to have been an important and productive time for the young poet. At Pembroke, Spenser came to know the master John Young, later Bishop of Rochester, and probably met Lancelot Andrewes, the future Bishop of London and privy councillor, who had also been at the Merchant Taylors' school. The most important influence on Spenser during this period, though, was undoubtedly his intimate friendship with Gabriel Harvey, himself admitted as a Fellow of Pembroke Hall in 1570. While Spenser's relationship with Harvey was later satirized by fellow students in a play titled Pedantius , Harvey appears to have introduced Spenser to a number of important connections and potential patrons, including Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester. After taking his B.A. (1573) and M.A. (1576), Spenser left Cambridge for Kent, where he acted as secretary for John Young, recently created Bishop of Rochester. It was there that the poet probably composed

15. The Faerie Queene
This HTML etext of The Faerie Queene was prepared from The Complete Works in Verseand Prose of edmund spenser Grosart, London, 1882 in 199396 by Richard
http://www.uoregon.edu/~rbear/fqintro.html
Return to
Renascence Editions
THE FAERIE
QVEENE.
Disposed into twelue bookes, Fashioning XII. Morall vertues LONDON
Printed for William Ponsonbie.
A Note on the Renascence Editions text: This HTML etext of The Faerie Queene was prepared from The Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Edmund Spenser [Grosart, London, 1882] in 1993-96 by Richard Bear at the University of Oregon rbear@oregon.uoregon.edu TO
THE MOST HIGH,
MIGHTIE
and
MAGNIFICENT
EMPRESSE RENOVV-
MED FOR PIETIE, VER-
TVE, AND ALL GRATIOVS GOVERNMENT ELIZABETH BY THE GRACE OF GOD QVEENE OF ENGLAND FRAVNCE AND IRELAND AND OF VIRGI- NIA, DEFENDOVR OF THE HVMBLE SERVANT EDMVND SPENSER DOTH IN ALL HV- MILITIE DEDI- CATE, PRE- SENT AND CONSECRATE THESE HIS LABOVRS TO LIVE VVITH THE ETERNI- TIE OF HER FAME. Book I. Canto I. Canto II. Canto III. ... Renascence Editions

16. The Works Of Edmund Spenser
The Works of edmund spenser All Works by Richard Bear at he University of Oregon. Back,to edmund spenser. Site copyright ©19962002 Anniina Jokinen.
http://www.luminarium.org/renlit/spensbib.htm
The Works of Edmund Spenser
Complete
- UOregon
The Ruines of Time

The Teares of the Muses

Virgils Gnat

Prosopopoia: or Mother Hubberds Tale
...
Excerpt
- Norton Topics Online
Spenser
Links Essays Books ... Renaissance Lit
to Edmund Spenser
Anniina Jokinen

Created by Anniina Jokinen on June 2, 1996. Last updated on September 11, 2002.

17. Prothalamion
edmund spenser's Prothalamion. A Note on the edmund spenser Home Page edition
http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~rbear/pro.html
Edmund Spenser's Prothalamion
A Note on the Edmund Spenser Home Page edition: This HTML etext of the Prothalamion is based upon that found in The Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Edmund Spenser [Grosart, London, 1882] by Richard Bear at the University of Oregon rbear@oregon.uoregon.edu Prothalamion Or A Spousal Verse made by Edm. Spenser. IN HONOVR OF THE DOV-
Ladies, the Ladie Elizabeth and the Ladie Katherine
Somerset, Daughters to the Right Honourable the
Earle of Worcester and espoused to the two worthie
Gentlemen M. Henry Gilford, and
M. William Peter Esquyers.
AT LONDON.
Printed for VVilliam Ponsonby.
Alme was the day, and through the trembling ayre,
Sweete breathing Zephyrus did softly play
A gentle spirit, that lightly did delay Hot Titans beames, which then did glyster fayre: When I whom sullein care, Through discontent of my long fruitlesse stay In Princes Court, and expectation vayne Of idle hopes, which still doe fly away, Like empty shaddowes, did aflict my brayne, Walkt forth to ease my payne Along the shoare of siluer streaming Themmes

18. Spenser, Edmund
encyclopediaEncyclopedia spenser, edmund. spenser, edmund, 1552?–1599,English poet, b. London. He was the friend of men eminent
http://www.infoplease.com/cgi-bin/id/A0846246

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You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Encyclopedia Spenser, Edmund Spenser, Edmund, , English poet, b. London. He was the friend of men eminent in literature and at court, including Gabriel Harvey, Sir Philip Sidney, Sir Walter Raleigh, and Robert Sidney, earl of Leicester. After serving as secretary to the Bishop of Rochester, Spenser was appointed in 1580 secretary to Lord Grey, lord deputy of Ireland. Afterward Spenser lived in Ireland, holding minor civil offices and receiving the lands and castle of Kilcolman, Co. Cork. In 1589, under Raleigh's sponsorship, Spenser went to London, where he apparently sought court preferment and publication of the first three books of The Faerie Queene. After the Tyrone rebellion of 1598, in which Kilcolman Castle was burned, he returned to London, where he died in 1599. He is buried in Westminster Abbey. Recognized by his contemporaries as the foremost poet of his time, Spenser was not only a master of meter and language but a profound moral poet as well. Patterning his literary career after that of Vergil, Spenser first published 12 pastoral eclogues of The Shepheardes Calender (1579), which treat the shepherd as rustic priest and poet. His

19. Prosopopoia: Or Mother Hubberds Tale
Prosopopoia Or Mother Hubberds Tale. spenser, edmund, 1552?1599. Creation of machine-readable version Judy Boss
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/browse-mixed-new?id=SpePros&tag=public&imag

20. Spenser, Edmund
peopleBiography—People—S spenser, edmund poet Birthplace London Born 1552?Died 1599 Previous Spengler, Oswald, Top of section S, Next Spewack, Bella.
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0158930.html

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You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Biography People S Spenser, Edmund poet Birthplace: London Born: Died: Spengler, Oswald S Spewack, Bella Search Infoplease Info search tips Search Biographies Bio search tips About Us Contact Us Link to Infoplease ... Privacy

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