Lecture 4 Literature of the 16th century. The Renaissance
Edmund Spenser (1552 - 1599)
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Lecture 4
Edmund Spenser (1552 - 1599)
Known as the "prince of poets" in his time, Edmund Spenser is generally regarded as the greatest non-dramatic poet of the Elizabethan age. He was born in London to a poor family and was educated at Cambridge on a scholarship. He studied philosophy, rhetoric, Italian, French, Latin, and Greek. Spenser is sometimes called "the poet's poet" because many later English poets learned the art of versification from his works. He created a sonnet form of his own, the Spenserian sonnet. He is the author of the poems "Shepherd's Calendar" (1579). "The Faerie Queene" (The Fairy Queen, 1595)), the sonnet cycle "Amoretti" (1594) and beautiful marriage hymns "Epithalamion" (1594), "Prothalamion"(1595). Spenser's "Shepherd's Calendar" was dedicated to Sir Philip Sidney. In the work the author comments on contemporary affairs, some lines of it are didactic or satirical. This work consists of 12 eclogues, or dialogues, between shepherds (one for each month of the year). The most important of these is "October" which deals with the problem of poetry in contemporary life and the responsibility of the poet. The poet's huge poem "The Faerie Queene" (only six books out of the planned twelve were completed) describes nature, or picturesque allegorical scenes. The stanza of the work was constructed by Spenser and is called the Spenserian stanza after him. Many other poets, e.g. Bums, Byron, Shelley, used Spenserian stanzas in some of their poems. Spenser, like all great artists, felt the form and pressure of his time conditioning his writing. He was aware of a desire to make English a fine language, full of magnificent words, with its roots in the older and popular traditions of the native tongue. He had the ambition to write (in English) poems, which would be great and revered as the classical epics had been. His mind looked out beyond the Court to the people, to their superstitions and faiths. In him the medieval and Renaissance meet, the modern and the classical, the courtly and popular. The title of his sonnet cycle "Amoretti" means "little love stories". The cycle is dedicated to Elizabeth Boyle. At that time Spenser was in love with her and his sonnets tell the story of their romance. His sonnets are melodious and expressive. One of the sonnets from "Amoretti" is given below: Download 389.78 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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