The Faerie Queene: a Companion for Readers |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 84
Page 51
... Book and charges the Knight of Chastity on it , is not the Guyon of Temperance , slow to anger in Book II , and that the tournament of Book IV might never have taken place for all the notice that is given to its upshot in the subsequent ...
... Book and charges the Knight of Chastity on it , is not the Guyon of Temperance , slow to anger in Book II , and that the tournament of Book IV might never have taken place for all the notice that is given to its upshot in the subsequent ...
Page 82
... Book VI was not intended to provide the poem with a conclusion in the way it does . Any critical com- ment one wishes to make tails away in feebleness although the Book itself stands up in its own right . The addition it makes to the ...
... Book VI was not intended to provide the poem with a conclusion in the way it does . Any critical com- ment one wishes to make tails away in feebleness although the Book itself stands up in its own right . The addition it makes to the ...
Page 260
... Book IV ) . Book V rightly restores the earlier form , but its structure is extensively modified to suit its content , and the content is altogether new . Artegall had already appeared in connection with Britomart in Books III and IV ...
... Book IV ) . Book V rightly restores the earlier form , but its structure is extensively modified to suit its content , and the content is altogether new . Artegall had already appeared in connection with Britomart in Books III and IV ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Acrasia action allegory Amoret appearance Archimago Ariosto armour Artegall Artegall's Arthur attack battle beauty becomes begins Belphoebe Blatant Beast Book Bower of Bliss Braggadocchio brings Britomart Busyrane C. S. Lewis Calepine Calidore Cambell Canto carry castle character chastity concept creates creatures Cymochles death described Despair doth Dragon Duessa Elizabethan emblem books embodied episode evil Faerie Queene fight figures Florimell forest friendship Giant gives Grantorto Guyon Hellenore hero House of Pride human idea imagery imaginative interpretation journey Justice kind lady Malbecco Mammon Marinell meaning mind monster moral narrative nature occasion Orgoglio Palmer Paridell personification phrase plot poem poet poetic poetry possesses Pyrochles quest Radigund reader recognised Red Crosse Knight represents rescue rôle Sans-loy scene Scudamour sense Serena Shepheardes Calender shield simile Spenser Spenserian Squire stands stanza story style suggests Talus theme Timias tion Triamond Una's victim virtue whole