30-) English Literature
The
Faerie Queene and last years of Edmund Spenser
In
its present form, The Faerie Queene consists of six books and a fragment (known
as the “Mutabilitie Cantos”). According to Spenser’s introductory letter in the
first edition (1590) of his great poem, it was to contain 12 books, each
telling the adventure of one of Gloriana’s knights. Like other poets, Spenser
must have modified his general plan many times, yet this letter, inconsistent
though it is with various plot details in the books that are extant, is
probably a faithful mirror of his thinking at one stage. The stories actually
published were those of Holiness (the Red Cross Knight), Temperance (Sir
Guyon), Chastity (Britomart, a female knight), Friendship (ostensibly
concerning Triamond and Cambello, although these play a small part), Justice
(Artegall), and Courtesy (Calidore). As a setting Spenser invented the land of
Faerie and its queen, Gloriana. To express himself he invented a nine-line
stanza, the first eight of five stresses and the last of six, whose rhyme
pattern is ababbcbcc.
What
is most characteristic of Spenser in The Faerie Queene is his serious view of
the capacity of the romance form to act as a paradigm of human experience: the
moral life as quest, pilgrimage, aspiration; as eternal war with an enemy,
still to be known; and as encounter, crisis, the moment of illumination—in short,
as ethics, with the added dimensions of mystery, terror, love, and victory and
with all the generous virtues exalted. Modern readers’ impatience with the
obscure allusions in the poem, with its political and ecclesiastical
topicalities, is a failure to share the great conflict of Spenser’s time
between Protestant England and Roman Catholic Spain; to Spenser, the war
between good and evil was here and now. In The Faerie Queene Spenser proves
himself a master: picture, music, metre, story—all elements are at one with the
deeper significance of his poem, providing a moral heraldry of colours,
emblems, legends, folklore, and mythical allusion, all prompting deep,
instinctive responses.
The
poem was published with the help of Sir Walter Raleigh, who owned large lands
to the east of Spenser’s estate. He and the poet came together at Kilcolman in
1589 and became well acquainted with one another’s poetry. Spenser implies that
Raleigh persuaded Spenser to accompany him back to England to present the
completed portion of The Faerie Queene to Queen Elizabeth herself. The history
of this episode is charmingly evoked in Colin Clouts Come Home Againe
(completed 1595), which is also one of Spenser’s most effective pastoral
embodiments of a provincial innocent up against the sophistications of a centre
of power, with subsequent reflections on false, superficial love and the true
love that finally animates a concordant universe.
Arriving
thus in London with the support of the queen’s favourite, Spenser was well
received—not least by Elizabeth herself. The first three books of The Faerie
Queene were duly published in 1590, together with a dedication to her and
commendatory sonnets to notables of the court. Spenser saw the book through the
press, made a hurried visit to Ireland, and returned speedily to
London—presumably in the hope of preferment. At this time he supervised the
printing of certain other of his poems in a collection called Complaints
(1591), many of which had probably been written earlier in his career and were now
being published so as to profit from the great success of his new heroic poem.
It is difficult to believe that the many titles of poems that have not survived
but were mentioned earlier in his career were not published in revised form and
under other titles in his known work, for Complaints suggests by its
miscellaneous and uneven character that Spenser was hastily bringing to the
light of day nearly every last shred that he had to offer; early translations,
an elegy, and the delightful mock-heroic poem “Muiopotmos” are contained in it.
Another item, the beast fable Prosopopoia; or, Mother Hubberd’s Tale,
apparently caused the authorities to withdraw unsold copies of the volume
(perhaps in 1592) because it contained a covert attack on Lord Burghley, who was
one of the most powerful figures of the court. Nevertheless, in 1591 Queen
Elizabeth gave Spenser a small pension for life.
Back
in Ireland, Spenser pressed on with his writing, in spite of the burdens of his
estate. In early 1595 he published Amoretti and Epithalamion, a sonnet sequence
and a marriage ode celebrating his marriage to Elizabeth Boyle after what
appears to have been an impassioned courtship in 1594. This group of poems is
unique among Renaissance sonnet sequences in that it celebrates a successful
love affair culminating in marriage. The Epithalamion further idealizes the
marriage by building into its structure the symbolic numbers 24 (the number of
stanzas) and 365 (the total number of long lines), allowing the poem to allude
to the structure of the day and of the year. The marriage is thus connected
with the encompassing harmonies of the universe, and the cyclical processes of
change and renewal are expressed in the procreation of the two mortal lovers.
However, matters are less harmonious in Books IV, V, and VI of The Faerie
Queene, which appeared in 1596 and are strikingly more ambiguous and ironic
than the first three books. Book V includes much direct allegory of some of the
most problematic political events of Queen Elizabeth’s reign, and Book VI’s Sir
Calidore is a far less confident and effective fairy knight than his
predecessors were. In the only surviving fragment of a projected seventh book
(published posthumously in 1609), Spenser represents Elizabeth herself as
subject to Mutability, the inexorable processes of aging and change.
This
burst of publication was the last of his lifetime. His early death may have
been precipitated by the penetration into Munster of the Irish uprising of
1598. The undertakers and other loyalists failed to make headway against this.
Kilcolman was burned, and Spenser, probably in despair despite the Privy
Council’s having just recommended his appointment to the important post of
sheriff of Cork, carried official letters about the desperate state of affairs
from the president to London, where he died. He was buried with ceremony in
Westminster Abbey close by the grave of Geoffrey Chaucer.
Legacy
Spenser
was considered in his day to be the greatest of English poets, who had
glorified England and its language by his long allegorical poem The Faerie
Queene, just as Virgil had glorified Rome and the Latin tongue by his epic poem
the Aeneid. Spenser had a strong influence upon his immediate successors, and
the sensuous features of his poetic style, as well as his nine-line stanza
form, were later admired and imitated by such poets as Lord Byron and Percy
Bysshe Shelley in the Romantic period of the late 18th and early 19th
centuries. He is widely studied today as one of the chief begetters of the
English literary Renaissance and as a master who embodied in poetic myth a view
of the virtuous life in a Christian universe.
A
glimpse of Spenser’s audacious plan to help provide England with a great
national literature appears in an appendix printed in the 1590 edition of the
first three books of The Faerie Queene. In a letter addressed to his neighbor
Sir Walter Ralegh, Spenser sets out to explain the “general intention and
meaning” of his richly elaborated epic. It is “an historicall fiction,” written
to glorify Queen Elizabeth and “to fashion a gentleman or noble person in
vertuous and gentle discipline.” In pursuing this latter aim, the poet explains
that he has followed the example of the greatest epic writers of the ancient
and the modern worlds: Homer and Virgil, Ludovico Ariosto and Torquato Tasso.
Now, to set out to depict the queen herself and to “fashion” members of her
nobility in virtuous and well-bred discipline was certainly a bold undertaking
for the son of a London weaver. For him to compare his work with the most
exalted poetry of Italy, the glittering center of European culture in this
period, must have seemed to many of his readers mere bravado or self-delusion.
The
attempt to write a neoclassical epic in English was without precedent—unless,
perhaps, one includes Sidney ‘s Arcadia (1590), which was begun at about the
same time. Among the heroic poets named in Spenser’s Letter to Ralegh as worthy
practitioners of the form, Virgil was generally regarded as the greatest, and
Spenser, like Dante and Petrarch before him, seems to have taken Virgil as his
personal mentor and guide. From the Proem to Book I of The Faerie Queene, the
reader may infer that Spenser sometimes thought of his entire career as a
recapitulation of that of his illustrious Roman counterpart. He began, as
Virgil had begun in his Eclogues, with pastoral poetry, which Spenser published
in his first major work, The Shepheardes Calender. A decade later, in The
Faerie Queene, he graduated to poetry on martial and political subjects, as
Virgil had done when he wrote his great epic, the Aeneid, for the court of
Caesar Augustus. Spenser’s opening lines, which echo verses prefixed to the
Aeneid, announce his intention to exchange his “Oaten reeds” (or shepherd’s
pipes) for “trumpets sterne.” Although he transformed the traditional epic
introduction to include an invocation to Cupid, god of love, along with the
more traditional address to the Muses and although the poem actually resembles
the quasi-medieval romance epics of Ariosto and Tasso more closely than it does
classical epics, the poet’s claim to follow in the great line established by
Homer and passed down by Virgil was altogether serious.
Conscious
self-fashioning according to the practices of ancient poets, and also of
more-recent ones on the Continent, was an essential part of Spenser’s
project—but only a part. With his eye frequently turned to Chaucer and other
English authors, he set out to create poetry that was distinctively English—in
religion and politics, in history and custom, in setting and language. For
example, he mentions in the Letter to Ralegh that he designed his epic to
depict “twelve private morall vertues, as Aristotle hath devised.” In reality,
however, just three of the six books that he lived to complete revolve around
virtues that Aristotle would have recognized, and even those three—temperance,
friendship, and justice—were greatly altered by Spenser’s Anglo-Protestant form
of Christianity and by other elements in his English background. The other
three—holiness, chastity, and courtesy—have little to do with Aristotle but
much to do with England in the high Middle Ages. In the best sense Spenser’s
art is syncretistic, drawing together elements from many traditions. Its aim,
however, was to enrich the culture of his native land.
The
process by which he realized this aim was neither rapid nor predictable.
Comparing Spenser with Sidney, C.S. Lewis has written that he was “a more
ordinary man, less clever, less easily articulate,” and he succeeded by working
harder. For that very reason, perhaps—along with his understated humor, his
deep understanding of human psychology, and his easy humanity and good
sense—Spenser has been closer than Sidney to the hearts of many of his
countrymen.
Spenser’s
skillful literary borrowings contributed to the volume’s impressive effect.
From the Italian poets Petrarch and Mantuan he adopted a variety of pastoral
that conceals beneath its surface biting political allegories and topical
allusions to prominent figures in the church and the state. From the more
traditional Eclogues of Virgil and from ancient writers such as Theocritus,
Bion, and Moschus, he took other features, such as the curiously static sense
of time characteristic of classical pastoral. His rustics debate and sing, love
and despair, but there is no real narrative progression in the Calender and
very little action. Variety is introduced in the subjects that the shepherds
contemplate and in the poetic forms that they employ, which include amorous
complaints, fables, singing matches and debates, an encomium, a funeral elegy,
and a hymn to the god Pan.”
Spenser
also drew upon the visual arts of his day, particularly works known as “emblem
books.” These typically brought together three disparate elements: a series of
pictures of a figurative or symbolic kind, “mottos” or pithy sayings related to
the pictures but phrased in enigmatic terms, and explanations in prose or verse
that interpret the mottos and pictures and draw a moral. Each of Spenser’s 12
eclogues follows a more complicated version of this pattern. First comes a
woodcut, which typically depicts the shepherd(s) in the eclogue and something
from their songs or their situations, with the sign of the zodiac appropriate
to the month in question represented at the top. Then comes the poem itself,
preceded by a brief “argument” or summary, which may have been added by E.K.
After the eclogue comes one or more verbal “emblems” or mottoes in various
languages, which briefly sum up the nature or situation of the speakers and the
themes of their songs, but which often tease the imagination with alternative
interpretations. And finally there is E.K.’s gloss, serving some of the same
functions as the explanation beneath a conventional emblem.
Spenser
also added important innovations to the traditional elements in the Calender.
One involved poetic technique. In sheer variety of meter and form, his eclogues
are without precedent in earlier pastoral poetry and provided an ample showcase
for the experiments in prosody that so fascinated the poets of the Areopagus.
Another conspicuous innovation is his organization of the poems into a seasonal
progression. By following the cycle of the year, Spenser is able to employ the
outer world of pasture and sheepfold as a way to depict the inner world of the
young shepherd Colin Clout, whose unrequited love of Rosalind provides a thread
of unity through the entire volume. In the first poem, “January,” Colin
despairs, breaking his shepherd’s pipe and, with it, the last source of
pleasure that remains to him. In his eyes the land, the trees, and the flocks
around him have themselves become emblems for the state of his soul. He
complains, “Thou barrein ground, whome winters wrath hath wasted, / Art made a
myrrhour, to behold my plight.” Though not present or even mentioned in several
of the eclogues, Colin provides a melancholy bass line over which all the other
shepherds sing, setting their higher notes of anger and joy, debate and
reflection, in poignant contrast to his listless desolation.
The
emotional counterpoint is never more moving than in “April,” where his good
friend Hobbinoll sings one of Colin’s old songs, written to celebrate the
shepherdess Eliza in the springtime of an earlier and happier year. The inner
world of the song continues to match the outward season in which it is sung, as
all the songs in the Calender do; yet it also heightens the reader’s sense of
the dark winter of the soul in which Colin continues to suffer. At the midpoint
of the cycle, in “June,” he laments that Rosalind has left him for another
shepherd named Menalcas. In the final poem, he sings weary complaints to the
god Pan and feels premonitions of his imminent death, thus returning the
sequence to a point resembling the one at which it began, though even more
desolate.
Besides
the revolving of the seasons, other cycles are involved in the work. As E.K.’s
headnote to “December” reminds us, the passing of the year has traditionally
served as an emblem for the stages of life. From the springtime of childhood to
the summer of desire and love to the winter of loneliness and old age, Colin’s
life becomes an emblem for everyone’s experience in this world. Interpreted in
this way, the Calender returns to the themes of tragic uncertainty and
relentless mutability expressed ten years earlier in Spenser’s contributions to
A Theatre for Worldlings.
These
larger themes are, in turn, related to the political allegory that often lurks
just below the surface of the poems. One of the implications of this allegory
is that states, too, have their cycles of springtime and autumn. The
celebration of “her Majestie” Eliza in “April,” which is a thinly veiled
encomium addressed to Queen Elizabeth, suggests that England is in the full
flower of a new age. “Maye,” “Julye,” and “September,” however, all turn on the
controversy between Protestant reformers and Elizabeth’s more conservative
Catholic subjects, which was the greatest single threat to her ability to rule.
The topical allegory in these eclogues suggests that, in 1579, strains in the
body politic were a matter of particular concern to Spenser. The cause for his
alarm was undoubtedly the marriage negotiations begin carried out between Queen
Elizabeth and a French catholic prince, François, Duke of Alençon. The
staunchly Protestant faction surrounding Leicester and Sidney took every
opportunity to oppose such a marriage as a grave threat to the religious and
political independence of England. If, as some critics suppose, Rosalind is a
figure for Queen Elizabeth, and Colin for Spenser and his Protestant cause, then
Rosalind’s rejection of Colin for Menalcas may have to do with Queen
Elizabeth’s rejection of the Protestant faction in favor of the Catholic
Alençon.
If
this is so, then Colin’s dejection at the end of the Calender may reflect
Spenser’s low political fortunes in late 1579 and early 1580, when the queen
took harsh measures to silence critics of her plan for a French marriage.
Sidney, for instance, was dismissed from court, most likely for addressing a
letter to her on the subject. Spenser, too, seems to have feared the queen’s
displeasure, for he published his Calender under the pseudonym “Immeritô” and
prefaced it with a poem to Sidney in which he speaks to the Calender itself,
saying “when thou art past jeopardee, / Come tell me, what was sayd of mee / And
I will send more after thee.” It may be that the young poet’s representation of
delicate affairs of state had left him with few defenders and fewer prospects
for advancement at court.
In
any case, in July 1580 he accepted a post as a private secretary to Arthur
Grey, the new Lord Deputy of Ireland. There is some evidence that when he set
out for Dublin, he took with him a new wife named Machabyas Chylde, about whom
little is known except that she married one “Edmounde Spenser” on 27 October
1579, that she apparently bore him two children named Sylvanus and Katherine,
and that she died sometime before 1594. Most of the next 20 years of the poet’s
life were spent in Ireland, where he served in various governmental posts, from
clerk of the Privy Council in Dublin in the early years to Queen’s justice and
sheriff-designate for county Cork at the end of his life. His positions allowed
him to acquire a considerable list of landholdings, including most prominently
Kilcolman Castle with 3,000 acres in county Cork, which served as his principal
residence from 1588 until the year before his death in 1599. Such holdings were
important, for they gave him the status of a landed gentleman, and this eased
his way in society, enabling him, for example, to make friends with Sir Walter
Ralegh and to marry his second wife, Elizabeth Boyle, who came from an
important landed family in Herefordshire.
References
to Ireland appear frequently in Spenser’s later poetry, and some of them reveal
a good deal of gentle affection for the land and its people. Most memorable,
perhaps, are the country wedding captured with such rustic beauty in his
Epithalamion (1595) and the great judgment scene on Arlo Hill, a mountain near
Kilcolman Castle, which occupies much of the Mutability Cantos in Book VI of
The Faerie Queene. Most of the poet’s descriptions of Ireland, however, are
colored by sorrow or disgust at the destitute state of its people or by
resolute hostility toward its rebels, who harassed the English occupiers
throughout the period. Spenser portrays the darker side of his experiences in
Ireland, for example, in the attacks on the House of Alma in Book II of The
Faerie Queene and in the savagery of the scurrilous, long-haired rebel Malengin
in Book V.
The
Irish had no reason to be any fonder of Spenser than he of them. In 1580, as a
new official in the colonial administration, he was present when the English
slaughtered papal troops at Smerwick, and he also witnessed the terrible famine
in Munster that darkened the end of Desmond’s rebellion. In fact, he wrote the
official report on the battle of Smerwick and later described it and other
incidents during the turbulent years of his colonial service in his only prose
work. A Vewe of the Present State of Ireland (1633). This was written sometime
before 1598 as a dialogue discussing the brutal measures needed to establish a
stable colonial regime in the country, and parts of it may have been
incorporated into an official report that he presented in London in 1598. In
the late 1580s he had been responsible for settling English immigrants at
Kilcolman on lands confiscated from the rebel Gerald Fitzgerald, 15th Earl of
Desmond, and some of Spenser’s other landholdings had come from the forced
dissolution of Catholic monasteries in Ireland. It is not surprising, then,
that his last years in Cork were ones of conflict, tumult, and loss.
Until
the late 1590s, however, Ireland provided a living, a place to write, and even
literary friends. During his years there, Spenser may have become acquainted
with Barnabe Rich and Barnabe Googe, and he knew Sidney ‘s close friend and
occasional fellow poet Lodowick Bryskett, who turned two posts over to him
before moving on. Most important, however, was Spenser’s friendship with
Ralegh, who was his neighbor on the former Desmond estates and who, in the
summer and fall of 1589, came to see him at Kilcolman and took a personal
interest in his poetry. Spenser later revealed the importance of his
relationship with Ralegh by preserving a poetic account of it in Colin Clouts
Come Home Againe and by writing the “Letter to Ralegh” and a dedicatory sonnet
to him in The Faerie Queene. According to Colin Clout, it was Ralegh who
arranged for Spenser to travel to London in 1590 to publish the first three
books of his epic and to present them in person to Queen Elizabeth, who was
pleased and expressed a desire to hear it read to her “at timely houres.” So
pleased was she, in fact, that she granted the poet a pension of 50 pounds a
year, which was more than the parsimonious queen granted to any other poet of
the period. Spenser expressed his gratitude for Ralegh’s patronage by writing a
sympathetic allegory of the adventurer’s often turbulent and romantically
tinged relationship with the queen, which appears in the story of Timias and
Belphoebe in Books III, IV, and VI of The Faerie Queene.
The
best way to begin an examination of Spenser’s epic is perhaps to come to it as
Ralegh did, with Spenser’s prefatory letter in hand—though, admittedly, some of
its intentions do not match the poem as the author actually wrote it. As the
letter reveals, the six books (and two cantos of a seventh) that were
ultimately published represent but a fraction of the plan, which was to extend
to the traditional 12 books of an epic, one devoted to each of the “private
morall vertues.” Another section of the poem, perhaps of equal length but never
written, was to cover the public or “polliticke” virtues. Each book in this
vast structure was to concentrate on a single habit of character, represented
by one or more exemplary knights such as Britomart, the Knight of Chastity in
Book III, and Sir Artegall, the Knight of Justice in Book V. It may be that, as
time went on and Spenser realized the magnitude of the undertaking, he changed
his mind and began to incorporate political virtues among the moral virtues of
the first section. Certainly Book V, the Legend of Justice, involves a good
deal of political allegory. In any case, the six books that he completed begin
with virtues in a person’s relations with God and self (holiness and temperance) and proceed to
those involving relations with other people (chastity, friendship, justice, and
courtesy). The entire scheme accords with the two great commandments of
Christian tradition: “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and
with all thy soul, and all thy mind” and “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself” (Matt. 22: 36-39).
The
first 12 books were to be united by the presence of two dominant characters:
Prince Arthur, mythical founder of the Round Table, who was to appear as a
wandering knight in each of the books, and Gloriana, the Faerie Queene, who was
to frame the action of the poem by holding an annual feast of 12 days, on which
she assigned her knights 12 quests, each described in one book of the epic. At
the end of the poem, it seems, Prince Arthur was to marry Gloriana, and since
the poet postponed the wedding of other heroes in the individual books, there
were doubtless to be other marriages in Book XII as well. Since Arthur
represents the virtue of Magnificence, which comprehends within itself all the
other active virtues, and since the Faerie Queene represents Glory, which was
for Spenser the end of all earthly action, there is a tidy philosophy behind
the entire structure.
As
the poet concedes, the main difficulty for readers lies not in grasping the
grand organization of the poem, but in knowing how to interpret its allegory.
He offers a clue, however, by calling the work a “continued” allegory or “darke
conceit.” In his day, the term conceit could have carried at least two senses
in this context, both of them helpful. First, it could have meant simply a
thought or, in certain philosophical contexts, a form or Idea in something very
like the Platonic sense. Second, the term could have denoted an extended
metaphor, that is, an implied comparison between the primary subject of the
author’s thought and something more easily visualized or grasped, which acts as
a “figure” for that subject.
In
interpreting Book I as such an extended metaphor, one might concentrate on the
heroine, Una, the daughter of the “King of Eden,” who sets out from her home to
save her parents from a great dragon. To this end she travels to the court of
the Faerie Queene and gains the help of the Red Crosse Knight, who, after various
trials and wanderings, returns with her to her parents’ city. There he defeats
the dragon, is honored as a victor, and offers to marry Una once he has served
his queen for six more years. Taking a clue from the Book of Revelation, which
identifies Satan as a dragon that has enslaved human beings (the fallen
descendants of Adam and Eve) and is the great enemy of the Church, the reader
might take Una as a “conceit” for the universal body of believers as it has
acted through history. This, then, would be the metaphor “continued” through
the whole of Book I. On this assumption, the reader might conclude that the
meaning of the allegory is something like this: the Church, which is descended
from sinful human beings, sets out to redeem them by releasing them from
bondage to Satan. In this it requires the help of the individual Christian, who
may lose his way for a time but, through the aid of the Church, will ultimately
find the straight and narrow way again and will go on to defeat the forces of
evil around him. Once he lives out his “six days” of life on earth, he will be
united with the Church forever on the seventh, at rest on God’s Sabbath day in
heaven (see VII.viii.2).
Such
a reading, based on the assumption that the poem is a kind of code to be
deciphered character by character, has something to be said for it. It reveals
a point that is probably central to Spenser’s attempt to “fashion a gentleman
or noble person in vertuous and gentle discipline,” namely that Christians tend
to respond to the call of the church enthusiastically enough in the beginning,
but often lose their zeal or fall away. Each stage in the wanderings of the Red
Crosse Knight—his initial acceptance of lies about Una, his departure from her
and his affair with another woman named Duessa, his drifting into the broad
path of worldly fame and pleasure represented by the House of Pride, and
finally his removal of his Christian armor, his defeat, and his overwhelming
sense of failure at the Castle of Orgoglio and the Cave of Despair—represents a
stage in the process by which an immature believer might fall away. A period of
humility, instruction, and hard discipline (represented in the House of
Holiness) is required before a young man like this can be of much use in
helping others.
There
are, however, problems with attempts to “decode” the poem in such a simplistic
fashion. The most invidious, perhaps, is that once one has worked the puzzle,
it loses its interest. In an 1831 issue of the Edinburgh Review, Thomas
Macaulay, who must have read the poem in something like this way, complains
that “even Spencer himself … could not succeed in the attempt to make allegory
interesting. … One unpardonable fault, the fault of tediousness, pervades the
whole of the Fairy Queen. We become sick of Cardinal Virtues and Deadly Sins,
and long for the society of plain men and women.” One wonders whether an
attempt to decipher characters merely as clever signs for abstractions may not
have been behind the tendency, notable throughout the 19th century, to discount
Spenser’s allegory and to concentrate instead on the beauties of his verse and
imagery.
The
fault here lies more with Spenser’s readers, however, than with the poet
himself. There is nothing simple or boring about the allegory, which frequently
manages to juggle several different meanings simultaneously. Along with “darke
conceits” of a moral, political, and religious kind, Spenser also undertakes at
least three other varieties. There are psychological allegories, which probe
the faculties of the mind and their working in both normal and abnormal states;
there are also topical allegories, which glorify or satirize the actions of
rulers and other prominent figures of Spenser’s day, and there are historical
allegories involving their personal or national pasts. Only by resolutely
ignoring crucial details can one read the poem as a “continued” metaphor with a
single pat “meaning.”
Una,
for instance, is not only the one true Church but also (as her name suggests)
“oneness” itself. Spenser calls her simply “truth” and seems to have in mind
the sense of oneness expounded by Renaissance Neoplatonic philosophers, who saw
the world as a sometimes discordant multiplicity that emanates from the perfect
unity and simplicity of the divine mind. To depart from Una is to lose sight of
the truth apprehended by contemplating the eternal Ideas that inform everything
in the material world. To take up with Duessa (duality, duplicity) is to depart
from truth and break one’s union with the one source of all that is good.
“Una”
is also a name applied in this period to Queen Elizabeth, the one supreme
governor of the Church of England, and Spenser’s maiden lady is clearly one of
many figures for her in the poem. Elizabeth lived under constant threat of
military attack or assassination by the great Catholic princes on the
Continent, who wanted to reverse the Protestant Reformation in England and to
return the nation to the Catholic fold. In the historical allegory of the poem
Duessa represents Mary, Queen of Scots, who had legal claims to the English
crown and who vied with Elizabeth for the allegiance of the English people. In
polemics of the day, Mary was sometimes pictured as the “whore of Babylon”
mentioned in the Book of Revelation, who rides on a beast with seven heads and
is associated with Rome. In Canto viii Spenser employs this imagery when Duessa
rides out on a “manyheaded beast” to attack the heroic representative of
England, Prince Arthur, who defeats her and forces her to cast away her “golden
cup” and “crowned mitre,” which are symbols associated with the wealth and
privilege. Even the three quite different interpretations of Una discussed here
may not exhaust the allegorical possibilities. Spenser was a master of
compression and deep implication who recognized the multiplicity of meanings
inherent in certain primal concepts and images, such as oneness and duality,
and it is that multiplicity that lies at the heart of the fascination that The
Faerie Queene has exerted over many of its readers. Rather than interpret the
poet’s “darke conceit” simply as an extended metaphor, one does better,
particularly in analyzing the plots of the poem, to take it more broadly as a
governing thought or form. Spenser’s literary friend Sidney wrote in The
Defence of Poetry (1595) that the poet begins with an “Idea, or fore-conceit,”
which he embodies in the matter of the poem—its stories, characters, and
images. The reader then uses that matter as an “imagination ground-plot of a
profitable invention,” comprehending the author’s “conceit” by an act of mental
re-creation. The richer the author’s initial idea and the clearer the matter of
his creation, the richer and more profitable the reader’s own act of
“invention” will be. So long as one remains true to the details of the matter,
the possibilities for meaning are limited only to the extent that the primal
forms or ideas are limited in their inherent implications.
In
relation to Una, the Red Crosse Knight becomes an extraordinarily rich
creation. As one learns in Canto x, he is Saint George, the patron saint of
England. In many ways he is also the Everyman of medieval Christian tradition,
who, after a fall into sin and a recovery in the House of Holiness, imitates
the life of Christ by fighting the dragon, falling in the battle, and being
resurrected in victory on the morning of the third day. He also represents the
English people at the time of the Protestant Reformation, defending the “one
true church” against the late-medieval corruptions of Roman Catholicism. More
particularly, he may represent Christian writers and intellectuals in
16th-century England who were prone to error and were in need of firmer
doctrinal foundations. The knight begins his quest in Canto i with a battle
against a lesser dragon named “Errour,” which is associated with religious
books and pamphlets, and only after he has been rescued form doctrinal error
himself, represented in the false philosophy of Despair, can he fulfill his
quest. After a period with the hermit Contemplation and other teachers in the
House of Holiness, he fights a second and greater dragon, and this time, with
God’s grace, he prevails.
Even
in the passages of Book I devoted to philosophical abstractions, such as the
virtues and vices that bored Thomas Macaulay, Spenser invites more from his
readers than a dry process of “decoding.” His stories and pictorial
descriptions are not simply means to convey philosophical insights. They are
themselves the ends of the poet’s labors, figures capable of transforming
barren philosophy into what Sidney’s friend Fulke Greville, first Lord Brooke,
once called “pregnant images of life.” It is one thing to know the definition
of a particular vice, but quite another to know how people afflicted with it
might talk or act and to see how their sinful dispositions might harm them over
a period of time. It is these latter points that most interested Spenser. In
Canto iv of Book I, for example, Queen Lucifera and her “six wisards old” are
readily identified as the Seven Deadly Sins of medieval Christian tradition.
Yet it is the extraordinary detail with which the poet depicts them that
matters, not simply what they represent. In a series of exquisitely painted
miniatures, Spenser depicts each of the six counselors on one of the beasts
that draw Lucifera’s coach: Idleness on an ass, Gluttony on a pig, Lechery on a
goat, Avarice on a camel, Envy on a wolf, and Wrath on a lion. Each detail in
the imagery of coach and team—from the animals themselves to the clothing and
behavior of their riders and the things that they bear in their hands—serves to
characterize the six vices and Pride, their queen. Even the order of the riders
is significant, for Spenser has dramatically altered the traditional Catholic
sequence in order to place Idleness first as the “nourse of sin.” Since
Idleness is dressed “Like to an holy Monck,” the change in order doubtless has
to with what is now call the Protestant “work ethic” and with common complaints
in the Renaissance that the Catholic monasteries were bastions of laziness and
corruption.
It
would, of course, be a mistake to suppose that every passage in the poem is as
rich in meaning as the description of the House of Pride and its inhabitants,
or that readers need understand everything that is lurking under the surface of
the poem in order to enjoy it. Much of its appeal lies in plain sight, in its
strange and marvelous stories and its colorful pageantry. In probing its deeper
implications, however, it helps to begin with what are sometimes called the
allegorical “cores” or “shrines” of the poem. In the great temples, palaces,
noble houses, gardens and caves that dominate the landscape, Spenser provides
the main distinctions needed to comprehend the philosophical concepts that he
is exploring, often revealing key points in the names of the characters and in
the details of their appearance or their surroundings. Along with the Palace of
Pride and the House of Holiness in Book I, major cores include the House of
Alma, the Bower of Bliss, and the cave that contains the House of Mammon in
Book II; the Garden of Adonis and the House of Busirane in Book III; the Temple
of Venus in Book IV; the Temple of Isis and the Palace of Mercilla in Book V;
Mount Acidale in Book VI; and Arlo Hill in the fragment of Book VII that
Spenser left unpublished at his death. In the narratives that lead the main
characters to and from such places of instruction, the poet often provides less
concentrated allegories in their actions, as in Una’s wanderings after she is
separated from the Red Crosse Knight. And finally, in the subsidiary stories
and episodes constantly woven into the main lines of plot in each book, Spenser
provides moral examples that further illustrate his main themes. An instance of
such a tale in Book I is the story of Fraelissa and Fradubio, two lovers who
are parted by Duessa in much the same way that the Red Crosse Knight is parted
from Una.
In
the sequence of allegorical cores within each book, Spenser tends to move from
the simple to the complex, arriving only late in the action at a full picture
of the virtue required of the hero. In Book II, the first core leaves the
impression that temperance is a “natural” virtue, that is, one that can be
grasped without the divinely revealed truths of Scripture. Spenser offers
portraits of three sisters: Elissa (“excess”), Perissa (“deficiency”), and
Medina (the “golden mean”), and the Latin roots of their names call to mind the
philosophy of Aristotle. One who is temperate, in Aristotle’s view, has formed
the habit of taking the mean between extremes, such as squandering and miserliness,
foolhardiness and cowardice. The suitors courting Elissa and Perissa illustrate
this point in a colorful way. Huddibras represents a “forward” nature that
tends to draw back from others in arrogance or anger, and Sansloy represents a
“forward” nature that draws toward others in uncontrolled desire. A temperate
person would restrain impulses toward either of these extremes.
The
House of Medina suggests that in Book II the reader has come into a new region
of Spenser’s fairyland, one different from the quasi-medieval religious
landscape of Book I and more like the plain humanist schoolrooms of the
Merchant Taylors’ School that Spenser attended as a boy. To take its classical
philosophy as his final word on temperance, however, would be a mistake. Guyon’s
attempt to put into practice the rational ideal embodied in Medina is
successful, but only for a time. To be sure, he avoids the corruption inherent
in characters such as Pyrochles and Cymochles, who allow themselves to be
governed by excesses of the bodily fluids (or “humours”) of choler and phlegm.
The brothers provide emblems of the two great temptations of the book:
irascibility, which is seen in the hotheaded characters of the early cantos,
and concupiscence, which appears in lazy and self-indulgent figures later in
the book. Guyon avoids both. Yet, as early as Canto iii, he makes a crucial
blunder, allowing a buffoon named Braggadocchio to steal his horse and so
becoming the only pedestrian hero in the poem. At the midpoint of the book, in
Canto vi, he makes a second mistake in parting from his Christian counselor and
friend, the Palmer. By accepting a boat ride from a languid and sensuous lady
named Phaedria at Idle Lake and allowing the Palmer to go on by foot, Guyon
needlessly subjects himself to temptation. He does so again in the next episode
by voluntarily undertaking a traditional epic descent into the underworld,
where he is tempted with every imaginable form of worldly excess. These are
represented in three subterranean chambers: the treasure house of Mammon, god
of money and possessions; the temple of Philotime, the goddess of honor and
ambition; and the garden of Proserpina, the goddess of worldly pleasure and
rest. The very sense of his own self-sufficiency that prompts the hero’s
needless descent into hell is a sign of danger, for, in Spenser’s view, no one
can long resist the sinful tendencies inherent in fallen human nature without
the grace of God.
This
point comes home in Canto vii, where, having emerged from Mammon’s cave, Sir
Guyon faints from exhaustion, falling prey to several of the enemies that he
had earlier avoided, including Pyrochles and Cymochles. An angel is required to
save him, and does so by fetching the Palmer, who stays with Guyon until Prince
Arthur arrives to beat back the figures of intemperance attempting to despoil
the hero of his armor. A stay in the House of Alma, which is the second
important locus of instruction in the book, educates Guyon in the limits of his
strength, presenting in the very structure of the house an emblem of the human
body and the human psyche for his instruction. It is a place besieged by
assaults on the senses, which are represented in the attacks of lawless rebels
outside the castle. Their leader, Maleger (who represents appetite and passion),
has the ability to regain his strength simply by touching his mother, the
earth. As Prince Arthur later discovers, Maleger can be defeated only when he
is cast into the water.
This
last point reveals the very Christian conception of temperance that underlies
the entire book. The water in which Maleger drowns is an emblem of baptism, and
his defeat is related to the episode that first set Guyon forth on his quest.
In Cantos i-ii he and the Palmer had come upon the body of a knight, Sir
Mortdant, who had been lured to his destruction by a false enchantress named
Acrasia (whose name means both “badly mixed,” referring perhaps to the bodily
humours, and “incontinent,” implying an inability to contain her desires). The
knight’s wife, Amavia, had stabbed herself in grief at his loss, and their
baby, Ruddyman, had stained his hands in her blood. When Guyon had attempted to
wash the child’s hand in an enchanted spring—one associated with pagan
mythology and the goddess Nature—the stain would not wash away. It had remained
as an emblem of Original Sin, which can be cleansed only by the Christian
sacrament of Holy Baptism. At the time, Guyon had not understood the meaning of
this incident, but in the battle against Maleger the point comes home.
With
his temperance now “fast setteled / On firme foundation,” the hero departs on
the last stage of his quest to avenge the death of Ruddymane’s parents upon
Acrasia. After a sea voyage on which he encounters fresh allegorical
representations of the Seven Deadly Sins, he ruthlessly destroys Acrasia’s
Bower of Bliss, releasing the many men whom she has transformed to beasts and
binding the witch herself.
From
the analysis of inward psychological states in Book II, Spenser next turns to
outward social relations in Book III. At the outset he pauses, as he often
does, to show the relation between the central virtues of adjoining books by
having their heroes meet briefly in conversation and in feats of strength.
Here, the superiority of the social virtue of chastity, represented by the
heroine Britomart, over the personal virtue of temperance appears clearly in
Britomart’s defeat of Guyon in a joust. Other episodes suggest further
contrasts between the books. In comparison with Acrasia’s Bower of Bliss in
Book II, Spenser portrays another garden in Book III that is also concerned
with the fulfillment of bodily desires, but in healthier ways. Whereas the
Bower had been a false Paradise, apparently natural but actually created by
self-indulgent art (see II.xii.58-59), the Garden of Adonis is a true Eden,
where “All things, as they created were, doe grow” and obey God’s first command
“to increase and multiply” (III.vi.34). The two passages are linked by the
classical myth of Adonis, presented first in a bad form in Acrasia’s Bower and
then in a good form in the Garden of Adonis. Though the healthy garden embodies
a philosophy of divine generation that is as rich and enigmatic as any other
conceptual scheme in the poem, the place of the passage in the unfolding
narrative is fairly straightforward. The chaotic inner forces of the psyche
explored in Book II are here presented in ordered and temperate manifestations,
with particular stress on healthy sexual desire. Whereas Acrasia is governed by
an insatiable appetite for young men, the characters Amoret and Belphoebe, who
were born and reared in the Garden of Adonis, seek higher goods. Amoret takes
as her goals marriage and family, whereas Belphoebe chooses lifelong virginity
and an active life outsiTX The classical myths woven into these and other
episodes in Book III do much to illuminate the characters. The myth of Cupid
and Psyche, which is retold in the episode at the Garden of Adonis, shows the
human mind brought into proper and fruitful union with the divine power.
Britomart, the heroine of the book, best fulfills this ideal. She is not like
the delicately beautiful Florimell, who is timid and inclined to flee from men.
She is not like Belphoebe, who seems contemptuous of affairs of the heart. Nor
is she like Amoret, who lives for such experiences. Britomart combines the best
qualities of all three women, drawing them toward a golden mean. She shares,
for example, Florimell’s determination to leave the comforts of courtly life
and search through the world for the man whom she is destined to marry. She
matches Belphoebe in mental prowess, courage, and skill in manly pursuits such
as hunting and jousting. Yet she also shares Amoret’s capacity for warmth and
nurturing.
It
is tempting to take Britomart as a figure for Queen Elizabeth, but it seems
likely that she is something far more complex. The “Letter to Raleigh,” which
identifies major figures for the queen in the poem, makes no mention of
Britomart in this regard. As the wise magician Merlin reveals in Canto iii, she
is actually an ancestor of the English queen, though one who displays a close
family resemblance. Britomart is, in fact, a far more glorious figure than
either of the other main embodiments of Elizabeth: the noble but somewhat icy
Belphoebe, who represents the queen in her private life, and the magnificent
but absent Gloriana, who represents Elizabeth in her public role as a ruler but
who appears only in the dreams of Prince Arthur (I.vii) and in brief references
in the proems and elsewhere, but never in the action itself. Some scholars see
Britomart’s quest for her future husband, Artegall—which begins with a vision
of him in a crystal ball and is destined to end in marriage, joint rule over
England, and a long line of glorious offspring—as a reference to Elizabeth’s
often-stated desire to marry no suitor but England itself. This way of reading
the poem makes a good deal of sense of later passages in Book V, where the
character Radigund represents Mary, Queen of Scots; Britomart resembles
Elizabeth; and Artegall suggests some of Elizabeth’s most powerful noblemen at
court, who were torn in their allegiances between the two queens. When
Britomart rescues Artegall from captivity in Radigund’s city of Amazons, there
is reason to believe that the incident represents Elizabeth’s salvation of
England from the threat of Catholic domination under Mary. Yet the potentially
fruitful Britomart stands in notable contrast to the virginal and childless
Belphoebe, and it may be that one of Spenser’s points in the poem was to
criticize Elizabeth for not marrying and providing England with a proper heir.
In
any case, Britomart stands in glorious contrast to two degraded types of
womanhood in Book III, both defined once again with the help of classical
mythology. The first is Malecasta in Canto i, who represents the tradition of
Courtly Love. She leads men on by the gradual stages of courtship represented
in the six knights who fight on her behalf: Gardante (“brief glances”),
Parlante (“enticing words”), Iocante (“courtly play”), Basciante (“kissing”), Bacchante
(“wine drinking”), and Noctante (“spending the night”). Once Malecasta has
conquered a man, she makes him a slave to her whims and desires. She represents
woman as predator. The tapestries depicting Venus and Adonis that hang in her
castle link her with the more classical figure of Acrasia in Book II. The
second example of unchastity in Book III is Hellenore, who represents the
tradition of Ovidian love. Like Helen of Troy, she yields to the seductions of
a guest (named, appropriately, Paridell) and allows herself to be carried away
from her aged and jealous husband Malbecco, only to be discarded by her new
lover and left to satisfy the lusts of forest satyrs. She represents woman as
prey.
Both
she and Malecasta are medieval embodiments of ancient types, and their presence
helps to extend the moral allegory of the poem to include glimpses of the
history of Western culture. For Spenser, lines of dynastic descent are
important, as they had been for earlier epic poets such as those mentioned in
his “Letter to Raleigh.” Here, he glorified Britain through the ancestry of its
representative Britomart. Like Paridell (and Virgil’s Aeneas), she traces her
ancestry back to the old stock of Troy. Unlike Paridell, however, she descends
from the worthy hero Brutus, the founder of Troynovant (or London), not from
the lustful and irresponsible Paris (III.ix.32-46). Through passages such as
this—along with depictions of legendary English heroes throughout the poem and
accounts of early English history, such as those that Arthur reads at Alma’s
castle and Britomart hears in Merlin’s cave—Spenser establishes himself as a
writer of “an historicall fiction” on which England may establish a sense of
its national heritage.”
In
the climactic episode of Book III, when Britomart rescues Amoret from the evil
enchanter Busirane, Spenser briefly sketches the history of relations between
the sexes in Western culture, tying his account to the current difficulties
that Amoret has suffered in marrying the aggressive young knight Scudamour. As
the reader subsequently learns in Canto i of Book IV, she was kidnapped by
Busirane during a ribald entertainment or “masque” performed on the night of
her wedding, and clues in various rooms of the enchanter’s house suggest that
he represents the power of poetry and the visual arts to shape the attitudes of
one gender toward the other. At least one of Amoret’s problems on that night
was a clash of cultural expectations.
In
the first room, rich tapestries illustrate the dominance of men over women that
characterized the myths of ancient Greece and Rome. In the second room, golden
ornaments suggest the dominance of women over men found in the tradition of
Courtly Love in the late Middle Ages. In the third room, where Amoret herself
appears, the reader find what seems to be a Renaissance confusion of masculine
and feminine dominance, fostered by an attempt to combine classical and
medieval erotic ideals. As we learn in Book IV, Amoret’s husband Scudamour sees
himself as a domineering male of the classical sort, who bears the sign of
triumphant Cupid on his shield (see III.xi.7 and IV.x). Amoret, however sees
herself as a “recluse virgin,” whose education at the Temple of Venus has
elevated her to a station much like that enjoyed by women in the medieval
tradition of Courtly Love (see IV.x). If we may assume that Amoret’s mental
state following the night of her marriage is represented in the nightmarish
procession known as the Masque of Cupid that appears in Busirane’s third room,
then the lady is not only suffering from a virgin’s fears of the bridal night
but also from confusion over her proper role as a wife. The allegorical figures
surrounding her in the masque represent the course of her relationship with
Scudamour. It begins happily enough with Ease, Fancy, and Desire, but
eventually graduated to more-turbulent emotions such as Fear and Hope, Grief
and Fury, and ends with feelings of Cruelty and Despight. Following these
personifications comes the cause of her distress, depicted as Cupid riding on a
lion. This figure reminds us of Scudamour’s shield and probably represents his
aggressive desire to dominate. Although Scudamour has attempted to release his
bride from Busirane, only a third party such as Britomart, who understands the
problem from a woman’s point of view, can subdue the enchanter and dispel
Amoret’s fears.
In
the second edition of the poem, which was printed in 1596, the problem of
Scudamour and Amoret is never satisfactorily resolved. In Book IV she transfers
her affections to her new friend Britomart, is captured by a lustful giant and
rescued by Timias, and passes through a series of painful adventures ending in
the Castle of Corflambo (or “burning heart”), from which she can be saved only
by the intervention of Prince Arthur himself. Meanwhile, Scudamour mistakes the
armed Britomart for a man and, after she goes off with Amoret, suffers a fit of
jealousy in the Cave of Care. Not until Canto vi, in which he attacks
Britomart, does he discover her gender and his own folly. After these incidents,
we hear little more of him or of Amoret. In the first edition of the poem
published in 1590, however, Spenser fully resolved the tensions between the
newlyweds. Upon Amoret’s release from captivity to Busirane, she and Scudamour
embrace and fuse with one another in a single hermaphroditic form, which seems
to symbolize not only sexual union but also a golden mean between masculine and
feminine forms of dominance and the consummation of an ideal Christian
marriage.
By
now it should be obvious that, as Spenser moves from the inward virtues of
holiness and temperance in Books I and II to the more outward ones of chastity
and friendship in Books III and IV, he adopts a far more complicated method of
plotting. The first two books follow a fairly straightforward and
self-contained pattern: the hero sets forth on his quest, suffers a disastrous
fall, is rescued by Arthur in Canto viii, joins forces with the prince for a
time, undergoes a process of reeducation, and finally completes his quest with
a victory in Canto xii. In Books III and IV, however, events are far more
chaotic. This may be the case because the god Cupid has come into the picture.
Among the epic invocations at the beginning of the poem, Spenser adds something
not found in Virgil or Homer, a prayer to the “most dreaded impe of highest
Jove, / Faire Venus sonne,” and Cupid’s enormous power over earthly events is
manifested in the social disorder of Books III and IV.
In
the opening canto of Book III, for example, Spenser demonstrates love’s power by
drawing together all the major heroes of the poem so far, only to have Cupid
divide and scatter them. Arthur appears with his squire Timias, Guyon with the
Palmer, Britomart with her nurse Glauce—and, not far away from them, the women
also encounter the Red Crosse Knight. Almost as soon as the heroes meet,
however, Florimell rides by, fleeing a forester who intends to rape her, and
the men in the party ride off in hot pursuit. Guyon and Arthur pursue the lady
more, it seems, for her beauty than for her safety, and they soon become
separated and lost. Timias nobly rides off to subdue the forester, but
afterward falls in love with Belphoebe, forgetting about Arthur and eventually
becoming entangled in a romantic scandal involving Belphoebe and Amoret that drives
him to despair and turns him into a hermit. Even the Red Crosse Knight loses
his head in Book III, requiring assistance from Britomart in turning back
Malecasta’s six knights. Thereafter, hardly a male in the poem can guide his
own affairs sensibly until a semblance of order has been restored in Book V.
The point seems to be that, in matters of love and friendship, women do better
than men, and no one does very well. The beauty of a woman such as Florimell is
like a comet, an astrological sign that “importunes death and dolefull
drerihed” (III.i.16).
One
of the governing aims of Books III and IV is to harmonize love with friendship.
In the Renaissance many took from antiquity the view that bonds between two men
were nobler than those between a man and a woman or between two women. Spenser
undercuts this view by exalting marriage over friendship and also by idealizing
amicable relationships between women and between members of the opposite sexes.
In the first episode of Book IV, Britomart and Amoret arrive at a castle where
no knight may enter without a lady. Britomart’s solution is to exploit her
disguise as a knight in order to enter as Amoret’s champion, thus raising
interesting issues of homoerotic attraction between the two ladies but also
exalting the importance of their friendship. Later, Prince Arthur saves Amoret
at the Castle of Corflambo, acting magnanimously as her male friend rather than
as a potential lover.
Spenser’s
emblem of the social ideal is a foursome of two men and two women, all bound in
complex interrelationships of erotic attraction and friendship. This pattern is
seen most clearly in the main heroes of the book, Campbell and Triamond, and in
the ladies whom they love. Before Campbell will allow anyone to marry his
sister Canacee, he requires that they first defeat him in battle. Triamond’s
two brothers, Priamond and Diamond, try and fail. Because, however, their
mother, Agape (or “love”), has made a pact with the Destinies that Triamond
should inherit the spirits and the strengths of his brothers, he is able to
succeed where they failed. Later, Campbell marries Triamond’s sister Cambina,
and the four become fast friends.
A
second foursome, that of Paridell and Blandamour and their ladies Duessa and
Ate, acts as a false parody of the first. Since the men are altogether
faithless to one another and to their ladies, they quarrel over a third woman,
a demonic copy of Florimell created by a witch in Book III. Once they have gone
after this new “comet” of beauty in Canto ii, discord erupts among all four
members of the group.
The
primary destructive force in Book IV is represented in the hag Ate, the “mother
of debate / And all dissention which doth dayly grow / Amongst fraile men”
(IV.i.19). Her power can be seen most dramatically in the central incident of
the book, the Tournament of Satyrane. There, ladies compete for the “glorie
vaine” of owning a magic girdle of “chast love / and wivehood true” that once
belonged to Florimell. This prize is to be given to the most beautiful among
them, and the knights are to do battle for the hand of the winner. Ironically,
at the end of the violent turmoil and strife represented in the tournament, the
girdle is awarded to the false Florimell, who represents the beautiful but
cruel mistress idealized in Petrarchan love sonnets of the period. Victory on
the field is awarded to Satyrane, one of the Knights of Maidenhead (who, in the
historical allegory of the episode, are associated with the virgin queen
Elizabeth). The false Florimell, however, insists on choosing a mate to her own
liking and selects one as shallow as she is, namely the impostor Braggadocchio.
The folly of Petrarchan love conventions, which Spenser will take up again in
the episode of Serena among the cannibals in Book VI and in his sonnet sequence
Amoretti, is amusingly satirized in this outcome.
Yet
even amid the discord and delusions of Book IV, the “fatall purpose of divine
foresight” is nonetheless at work, guiding lovers to mates destined to them by
higher powers from the foundation of the world (see III.iii.1-2). At Satyrane’s
tournament, Britomart encounters and defeats her long-sought future husband,
Artegall, though without recognizing him in his disguise as the Salvage Knight.
In Canto vi he attempts to avenge this dishonor on her, but when her helmet
falls off in battle, he falls in love with her instead. After a brief period of
courtship, he plights his troth to marry her. Similarly, the true Florimell,
who had been taken captive by the sea-god Proteus in Book III, finds her Marinell
in the closing cantos of Book IV and is subsequently betrothed to him, as
prophecies had foretold. Though confusion still reigns late in the book—as the
brawl in Canto ix involving Britomart and Scudamour, Blandamour and Paridell,
Prince Arthur and others reveals—images of harmony begin to appear, like
sunlight after a storm. Most notable is the image of Concord celebrated in the
Temple of Venus. Spenser say of her, “Of litle much, of foes she maketh
frends,/And to afflicted minds sweet rest and quiet sends” (IV.x.34).
Many
of the discords of Book IV are resolved in Book V, which recounts the Legend of
Justice. Florimell marries Marinell at another great tournament, and in this
contest the outcome is more just. Braggadocchio is revealed as a coward and a fraud;
the false Florimell is revealed as a demonic illusion; and Guyon, who had long
ago lost his horse to Braggadocchio, reclaims it again. Yet both the proem and
the opening canto of the book remind us of the deeply fallen state of the
world, where even the stars and planets no longer follow their ancient courses,
and the goddess of justice, Astraea, has departed from the earth. Spenser here
invokes Ovid’s myth of the Four Ages of Mankind, which began with the Golden
Age of Saturn and has since declined from the Age of Silver toward those of
Brass and Stone.
The
allegory of Book V focuses on the last period in this decline, stressing the
corruption and injustice of England’s enemies in Spenser’s own day. Nearly
everything in the main plot is related to Queen Elizabeth’s struggle to
preserve the independence of the English church and state against the Catholic
forces arrayed against her in Scotland and Ireland, France and Spain. The main
quest of the book is Artegall’s attempt to rescue Irena from the tyrant
Grantorto, which represents the English attempt to free Ireland from Catholic
domination in the 1580s and 1590s. The incident in which Artegall encounters
the Amazons and Queen Radigund is an account of the actions of Mary, Queen of
Scots, beginning in 1558 and ending in 1571, when Elizabeth imprisoned her in
England. Her execution in 1587 is later portrayed in the death of Duessa in
Canto ix. The incident in which Prince Arthur and Artegall defeat the Souldan
in Canto viii represents England’s repulse of the sea invasion mounted by the
Spanish Armada in 1588, and Arthur’s rescue of Belgae from Geryoneo in Cantos
x-xi represents England’s intervention to free the Netherlands from Spanish
forces in the 1580s, in which Sidney died and Leicester came to grief.
Against
these forces, the hero of the book proves—like the Red Crosse Knight and Guyon
before him—an inexperienced and sometimes inadequate hero. When Artegall first
appears in the Tournament Satyrane in Book IV, he is armed as the Salvage
Knight, and some of his untamed roughness carries over into Book V. Although he
is successful in the early episodes, overthrowing Munera (or “bribery”) and
settling property disputes between the likes of Amidas and Bracidas, he seems
incapable of conceiving of justice in any but harsh, inflexible, legalistic
terms. His limitations appear most clearly in the brutality of his servant
Talus and in his own submission to the Amazonian tyrant Radigund, who manages
to lure him into agreeing to a foolish contract with her concerning their
private combat in Canto v. What Artegall requires is a sounder philosophy of
justice that will allow him to avoid such errors and to moderate his severity.
Spenser provides him with one in the figure of his future wife, Britomart, who
rescues him from Radigund.
Britomart
represents a form of justice known as “equity,” which allows a judge or public
official to mitigate the severity of punishments or to adjust the application
of the law whenever the case involves unusual circumstances that could not have
been foreseen when the written legal code was drafted. In following normal
procedures of equity, the judge returns to the philosophical principles on
which the code was originally based and infers the proper way to handle the
case at hand. Such moderating procedures are allegorized at the Temple of Isis
in Canto vii, where Britomart learns to temper Artegall’s sternness with
clemency and his rigid adherence to the legal code with wisdom. After she has
rescued him from Radigund, he serves an apprenticeship under Prince Arthur and
receives his final education in the Palace of Mercilla.
The
queen of that house represents the Christian virtue of mercy, which is
different from the equitable justice allegorized in Britomart. Whereas equity
returns to philosophical principles in order to ensure that the defendant
receives his proper due, mercy offers freely to redeem offenders who sincerely
repent their crimes. Artegall’s education thus leads him from legal justice
through classical equity to Christian mercy, symbolized respectively in the
iron man Talus, the mostly silver idol of Isis, and the gold-bedecked queen
Mercilla. By this progression the poet seems to point the way to reclaim Ovid’s
lost Age of Gold, and indeed, with Artegall’s liberation of Belgae in Canto
xii, nearly all the disorders of Books III-V have been resolved.
As
often happens in The Faerie Queene, however, moments of victory and harmony
prove short-lived. At the end of Book V, Artegall encounters a new threat, the
Blatant Beast, whose name means both “prattling” or “babbling” and “hurtful.”
The monster, which Spenser describes as a “hellish Dog,” represents slander,
backbiting, and other forms of verbal abuse that tend to disrupt in private the
social harmony that Artegall has been working so hard to establish in public.
The monster may seem a minor threat in comparison with the more imposing
enemies of justice in Book V—such as the giant with Scales in Canto ii, who
advocates the overthrow of the aristocracy in favor of an egalitarian form of
government, or Grantorto in Canto xii, who represents political and religious
tyranny. Yet because of the widespread and covert nature of its abuses, the
Blatant Beast is more difficult to subdue. Throughout Book VI it appears
unexpectedly, attacking with poisoned teeth and “thousand tongues” and then
disappearing again before anyone can bring it to bay. It is first set on by
Envy and Detraction (V.xii.35-37) and is later employed by Despetto (“malice”),
Decetto (“deceit”), and Defetto (“detraction”), who succeed in provoking the
Beast to wound Timias, a figure identified by his name with “honor” (VI.v). The
two major strands of plot in Book VI—those involving Calidore’s quest to bind
the Beast and Calepine’s search for Serena—both include episodes illustrating
the power of the tongue.
The
line of plot in which Serena (or “tranquillity”) is ravaged by the Blatant
Beast suggests the loss of reputation and the subsequent shunning and abuse
that aristocratic women of Spenser’s day sometimes suffered because of rumors
that they had been unchaste. In Serena’s case, the Beast attacks soon after she
is discovered in a secluded forest glade with her lover, Calepine, who has
violated the social conventions of aristocratic courtship by removing his armor
“To solace with his lady in delight” (VI.iii.20). The inward torments that she
suffers in consequence of this tryst appear in her gradual decline into
illness, which is brought on by the festering bites of the Beast (Cantos v-vi).
The social degradations to which she is subjected are allegorized in her
subsequent capture by the “Salvage Nation,” a band of cannibals who are
prevented from sacrificing her naked body on a forest altar only the timely
arrival of Calepine (canto viii). The threat of similarly violent social
repercussions hangs over Priscilla and her less nobly born lover Aladine in
Canto ii, where they are also found dallying in the woods and are immediately
attacked by a lustful knight.
The
story of Serena among the cannibals involves more, however, than issues of
reputation and the abuse of young lovers who overstep the bounds of custom. The
language of the episode suggests the Petrarchan love poetry of Spenser’s day,
in which the woman is depicted as alluringly beautiful but cold and
unattainable, and her lover is expected to vacillate endlessly between abject
adoration and frustrated erotic desire. That such poetry should degrade an
entire “Nation” to the level of savages, worshiping feminine beauty in a
leering and cannibalistic religion of love, raises serious questions about the
proper role of literature in shaping the social order. The more refined and
pragmatic lover Calepine, whose name means “gracious speech,” offers a
contrasting ideal, in which love is mutual and courtship progresses naturally toward
“solace” and “delight.”
The
chivalric code of the Middle Ages—in which men have a duty to honor and protect
women, and women have an obligation to provide patterns of morality and images
of “grace” to temper masculine aggressiveness—lies behind much of Spenser’s
thought about love and courtesy in Book VI. The opening episode, for example,
involves an inversion of this ideal. In it the proud knight Crudor entices the
lady Briana to serve him by forcing knights and ladies who pass her castle to
shave their beards or their hair. By this means she hopes to win Crudor’s love
by lining a mantle with hair, as he has demanded. The chivalric ideal is at
least partially reasserted when Calidor intervenes on behalf of Briana, forcing
her cruel knight to marry her. Crudor must also promise to behave better toward
errant knights and to assist ladies “in every stead and stound” (VI.i.42). The
Knight of Courtesy later confronts ethical dilemmas posed by this chivalric
ideal. In Canto iii, for example, he violates his knightly duty to tell the
truth in order to conceal Priscilla’s secret meetings with Aladine from her
father. In Cantos ix-xi, Calidore is tempted to discard his armor and to
abandon his quest altogether in order to court the shepherdess Pastorella.
This
last incident reveals a conflict between personal fulfillment and social
responsibility that is an underlying theme of Book VI. Spenser identifies the
virtue responsible for maintaining a proper balance between the two as
courtesy, which he sees broadly as “the ground, / And roote of civill
conversation” (VI.i.1). In its original sense, courtesy was simply the pattern
of conduct acceptable at a prince’s court. By Spenser’s day, however, it had
come to imply a rather lengthy list of personal traits and abilities: noble
birth and elegant manners, comely appearance and cultivated speech, athletic
skill and martial prowess. All these traits were combined in a man such as Sir
Philip Sidney, who is sometimes regarded as the Elizabethan knight on whom Sir
Calidore was modeled. In the initial description of the Knight of Courtesy,
Spenser depicts him as a marvel of courtly refinement. He is one
In
whom it seemes, that gentlenesse of spright
And
manners mylde were planted naturall;
To
which he adding comely guize withall,
And
gracious speach, did steale mens hearts away.
Nathlesse
thereto he was full stout and tall,
And
well approv’d in batteilous affray. (VI.i.2)
Only
certain parts of this description, however, actually involve things that
Calidore has “added” at court. The first qualities mentioned are the “naturall”
elements of courtesy: “gentlenesse of spright” and “manners mylde,” and these
subsequently receive special attention.
Perhaps
because Spenser was distressed by the extravagant artificialities and
corruptions common in the royal courts of his day, he laid his greatest stress
on the natural roots of courtesy. His most idealized depictions of the virtue
are set in the partly civilized yet predominantly natural settings of the
pastoral countryside. The sheepfolds of Pastorella and her foster father
Meliboe in Cantos ix-xi provide a refuge both from the savagery of uncivilized
nature (represented by the brigands who live in nearby forests and caves) and
from the follies and extravagances of aristocratic life (depicted at the
castles of Briana and Aldus). The fruitful interplay between the natural and
the cultivated, the wild and the civilized is depicted emblematically in
Calepine’s rescue of an infant from a wild bear in Canto iv. Afterward, he
gives the orphan to the barren Lady Matilde and her husband Sir Bruin so that
their aristocratic house may have a suitable heir.
In
the central episode involving Turpine (or “baseness”) and his wife Blandina (or
“flattery”) in Cantos vi-vii, Spenser explores the two extremes represented in
the symbolic forests and castles of the book. Both characters have the
trappings, but not the substance, of true civility. When Calepine attempts to
find shelter for the wounded Serena in Turpine’s castle, he is repulsed and
forced to spend the night with his lady in the forest, where he is gravely
wounded by Turpine on the next day. From the forest, however, comes a wild and
apparently “Salvage” man, who is actually more courteous than Turpine and his
wife. That the wild man risks his life to rescue Calepine and his lady and
carefully tends the knight’s wounds suggests something of the inherent goodness
of human nature. That he succeeds in curing only Calepine’s injuries and not
those of Serena, however, suggests the limitations of that nature when it is
not cultivated by civil custom and informed by religion. A pious hermit who had
once been a great knight is the only one who can save Serena.
In
Calidor’s quest to subdue the Blatant Beast, Spenser presents a further
exploration of the relationship between the civil and the natural. The knight
first finds the Beast in Gloriana’s city of Cleopolis, which in one of its
allegorical senses stands for Elizabethan London. The knight then pursues the
monster from smaller towns past outlying castles to the sheepfolds of
Pastorella and Meliboe, which are associated with Spenser’s own rural home in
Ireland. So much more courteous are the simple shepherd and his daughter than
those whom Calidore has left behind in “civil” society that he abandons his life
as a knight and takes up that of a shepherd, hoping to win the heart of
Pastorella. His most exalted moment comes in Canto x, when he is immersed in
the beauties of nature, far from the court of his queen. Walking on Mount
Acidale, he comes upon the shepherd Colin Clout, whose name associates him with
Spenser and The Shepheardes Calender . Colin is playing his pipes, and all
before him are “An hundred naked maidens lilly white,” dancing in a ring about
the three Graces of classical mythology. The Graces, in turn, are dancing about
Colin’s beloved, who represents Spenser’s second wife, Elizabeth Boyle. Though
the poet might have placed Queen Elizabeth in the midst of the rings,
portraying her as the central emblem of grace and courtesy in Book VI, he
pointedly avoids doing so, beseeching his monarch to give him leave to place
his own Elizabeth there instead. His own natural bonds with his wife take
precedence over his civil bonds with his queen.
This
curious detail is sometimes interpreted as a sign that Spenser, like his hero
Calidore, had turned away from Gloriana’s court, abandoning in disillusionment
his great project of glorifying Queen Elizabeth in The Faerie Queene.
Apparently he composed very little more of the poem after he finished the
pastoral cantos of Book VI, which were the last episodes published in his own
lifetime. Yet the poet’s gesture toward his wife need not be taken as a slight
to the queen. After all, he had only recently remarried and therefore had
special reason to request leave of his monarch “To make one [brief passage] of
thy poore handmayd, / And underneath thy feete to place her prayse” (VI.x.28).
It seems clear, moreover, that he did not entirely endorse Calidore’s “truancy”
among the shepherds. By adopting their life of pleasure and contemplation, the
knight has acted irresponsibly, as subsequent events reveal. Not only has he
left the Blatant Beast free to do further harm, which is described in Canto
xii, but he has also let Pastorella and her father undefended from other evils
in the surrounding forest. A band of brigands soon sweeps down on them, killing
Meliboe and several other shepherds and binding Pastorella in a cave in hopes
of selling her into slavery. To rescue her, Calidore is forced to rearm
himself, and after he has scattered the brigands, he is compelled to seek
shelter for his beloved at a nearby castle. In a fallen world, the natural life
divorced from the civil is no more sustainable than the civil divorced from the
natural.
Even
Calidore’s idealization of the shepherds has been based partly on a
mistake,
for as he discovers in Canto xii, Pastorella is actually a child of the
aristocracy, born to Sir Bellamour and Lady Claribell in a secret love affair
like those examined elsewhere in Book VI. She was abandoned among the shepherds
to conceal her parents’ shame. At the climax of the book, this noble child
reared by common shepherds returns in joy to her parents as an emblem of the
ideal union of the natural with the civilized. Whatever Spenser’s personal
attitudes toward Elizabeth and her court may have been when he wrote this part
of the poem, the passage hardly endorses a radical reappraisal of the
prevailing social order or a renunciation of the poet’s lifelong project. At
the end of Book VI, Calidore resumes his quest, captures the Blatant Beast, and
leads it captive through Faerie Land.
When
Books I-III of The Faerie Queene were first published in 1590, Queen Elizabeth
was not the only one to admire them, and by 1596, when Books IV-VI appeared,
her grant of a royal pension was not the only reward that its author had
received. The poem won immediate recognition as the finest poetic achievement
of its generation, and further works by the poet were evidently in demand. In
1591 he returned to London to print two other works, Daphnaïda and the
Complaints. Just four years later, three more of his works were published;
Colin Clouts Come Home Againe, and the sonnet sequence titled Amoretti with his
widely admired Epithalamion. These were followed in 1596 by the last of works published
during his lifetime, Fowre Hymnes and the Prothalamion.
Daphnaïda
is a dreary and somewhat overly expansive pastoral lament written soon after
the death of the wife of Spenser’s friend Arthur Gorges, a minor poet and
translator. Based on Chaucer’s Book of the Duchess (circa 1370), it is partly
an experiment in patterning poetry according to symbolic numbers (here
multiples of seven, the number associated with divine judgment and rest from
sorrows), and it may have helped to prepare the way for the wonderfully
detailed and suggestive number symbolism of the Epithalamion.
More
successful were the Complaints, nine lengthy poems on the general themes of
mutability and the vanity of earthly desires. The volume looks back to
Spenser’s earliest work, reprinting revised versions of his two dream visions
from the 1569 volume A Theatre for Worldings and adding a similar poem titled
Visions of the Worlds Vanitie. These three show a side of Spenser that would
later appeal to writers of the Romantic period, namely his sense of the poet as
a prophet, speaking inspired truths against the follies of his age. The volume
also includes an imitation of the French poet Joachim du Bellay’s Antiquitez de
Rome (1558), which is a meditation on the tragic impermanence of even the
greatest works of human ambition, epitomized in the ancient city of Rome.
The
Complaints continue the experiments in poetic technique characteristic of The
Shepheardes Calender, and they also explore some of the same literary forms and
themes. Like “October,” for example, The Teares of the Muses laments the
current low esteem of poets in England. Like “Maye” and “September,” Mother
Hubberds Tale employs a beast fable for satiric purposes, presenting four
stories about a fox and an ape that warn of abuses among the three traditional
estates of English society: commoners, clergy, and nobility. The dedication
preceding the poem calls it “the raw conceipt” of the poet’s youth, and since
topical allusions tie it to political affairs in the years 1579-1580, it is
probably work of the same period as the Calender.
Mingled
with early materials such as these, however, are poems that have more to do
with the major works of Spenser’s maturity. Muiopotmos, for example, resembles
“February” in its use of a beast fable to expound a moral point. Its primary
affiliation, however, is with The Faerie Queene. It is a mock epic about a vain
butterfly caught by an envious spider, and may have been written as a light
interlude in the serious business of composing the longer poem. In Clarion, the
butterfly, it depicts a diminutive hero who, like the human characters in
Spenser’s epic, was born under the biblical injunction “to be Lord of all the
workes of Nature” yet is also bound by the will of “the heavens in their secret
doome” (lines 211, 225). In the rhetorical questions of the three central
stanzas of the poem, just before the butterfly becomes ensnared in the webs of
its tragic antagonist, Arachne, Spenser echoes one of the great themes of The
Faerie Queene, the contrast between human folly and shortsightedness and “The
fatall purpose of divine foresight” (III.iii.2).
As
a counter to the dominant theme of the Complaints, which is the transience of
earthly things, Spenser turns to poetry as one of the few means that human beings
have to resist the depredations of time. The volume begins with The Ruines of
Time, a poem that contrasts a depiction of the great but forgotten city of
Verulame with an elegy for Sidney, who had died of wounds suffered in battle in
the Netherlands in 1586. By means of this contrast Spenser celebrates the power
of poetry to confer on Sidney a kind of glory that will outlast empires. The
pastoral poem Astrophel and the six elegies and epitaphs for Sidney by other
authors that Spenser gathered four years later at the end of Colin Clouts Come
Home Againe reiterate this theme and offer a belated though impressive tribute
to the dead poet-hero who had served as Spenser’s early mentor.
Sidney
‘s impact on Spenser did not end with the tributes printed in the Complaints
and Colin Clouts. Along with the mingling of pastoral and epic in Book VI of
The Faerie Queene, which resembles the same blending in Sidney’s Arcadia (1590,
1593), the dead poet’s influence also appears in the Amoretti, a series of
sonnets published with the Epithalamion in 1595. Spenser’s volume reads as if
it were designed as a reply to Sidney ‘s dazzling sonnet sequence, Astrophil
and Stella, which was printed in London in 1591 by Spenser’s own publisher,
William Ponsonby, and which began a vogue for English sonnets that lasted more
than a decade.
The
contrasts between the two sequences are illuminating. Whereas Sidney ‘s poems
follow Continental models in depicting the love of a distant and unattainable
woman, Spenser’s sonnets go against this widespread Petrarchan convention by
celebrating a successful courtship, which culminates in the joyous wedding
ceremony depicted in the Epithalamion. Both sequences seem to have been, at
least in part, autobiographical, with Sidney ‘s reflecting his love of Lady
Penelope Rich and Spenser’s his courtship of his second wife, Elizabeth Boyle,
who later bore him a son named Peregrine. Yet, whereas Sidney depicts love with
another man’s wife and describes a gradual process by which passion conquers
reason and religious principle, Spenser moves from such passion early in his
sequence toward an eventual restoration of Christian piety and self-control.
His address to the Amoretti themselves in Sonnet 1 sets a tone for the entire
sequence that is lighter and less turbulent than that of Astrophil and Stella:
“Happy ye leaves when as those lilly hands, … shall handle you.” Though the
poems that follow show the influence of various earlier sonneteers—including
Petrarch and Philippe Desportes, Tasso and du Bellay—Spenser never departs from
his own vision of healthy courtship, which progresses from the follies and
excesses of infatuation toward the stability and fruitfulness of Christian
marriage.
The
organizing principle of the Amoretti and the Epithalamion is, as in The Shepheardes
Calender, the passage of time. The poet’s wooing of Elizabeth Boyle initially
seems an endless endeavor. Like Petrarch’s love of Laura, it drives the poet to
exclaim in Sonnet 25, “How long shall this lyke dying lyfe endure … [?]” Yet,
even as he says this, an important phase in the courtship has already begun
that will eventually lead to the resolution that he desires. As Alexander
Dunlop and other scholars have pointed out, in Sonnet 22 he mentions the
beginning of Lent, “The holy season fit to fast and pray.” If one sonnet is
counted for each day between Ash Wednesday and Easter, then the celebration of
Christ’s Resurrection would be expected in Sonnet 68, and that is where it
appears. Sonnet 67 announces the end of the lover’s “hunt” for his “gentle
deare,” in which the lady has been “fyrmely tyde” and “goodly wonne.” In Sonnet
68 the poet prays to Christ: “This joyous day, deare Lord, with joy begin, /
and grant that we for whom thou diddest dye / being with thy deare blood clene
washt from sin, / may live for ever in felicity.” Before the Lenten section
there are twenty-one sonnets of preparation, and after the Easter sonnet there
are again twenty-one in the denouement. These eighty-nine, plus the four short
mythological poems known as anacreontics that come between the Amoretti and the
Epithalamion, make a total of ninety-three, which is the number of days in the
season of spring. That the central sonnets of the sequence are meant to be read
as a depiction of springtime courtship is suggested in Sonnets 19 and 70, which
fall just before and after the Lenten sonnets.
The
Epithalamion continues this elaborately patterned sequence of symbolic seasons
and times. Spenser’s wedding took place on Saint Barnabas’s Day, June 11, 1594,
which was, by Elizabethan reckoning, the longest day of the year. As A. Kent
Hieatt has shown, the 24 stanzas of the poem represent the hours of that
particular day, beginning with the groom’s preparations before dawn and ending
at the same hushed hour on the following morning. So precise is the temporal
sequence that the coming of night is announced in the fourth line of stanza 17,
just as Irish almanacs of the period set the hour of sunset at 26 and a
fraction hours after sunrise. All the stanzas leading up to this long-awaited
moment contain a refrain that rejoices in the happy sounds of the day, from the
singing of the birds at the bride’s awakening to the joyous ringing of the
church bells after the ceremony is over. All the stanzas after nightfall,
however, call for silence: “Ne let the woods us answere, not our Eccho ring.”
As
in The Shepheardes Calender, where the passing of the months becomes a metaphor
for the entire span of Colin’s life, so here the hours are connected with the
larger cycles of the year and of life itself. Perhaps to magnify the
significance of the wedding day, it is represented as if it had lasted a year,
as the reader can see from the fact that the poem contains 365 long lines
(while the 68 shorter lines total the number of weeks, month, and seasons). At
the end, as Spenser and his bride lie in bed in the darkness before the dawn,
he thinks of the whole course of their coming life together, looking forward to
their final rest and that of their children in “heavenly tabernacles.” Along
with this God-given way to escape from time, the wedding poem itself provides
another, becoming, as the last line suggests, “for short time an endlesse
moniment.”
Throughout
the Epithalamion Spenser maintains a delicate balance between the heavenly and
the earthly, the classical and the Christian. The poem begins with invocations
to the Muses and to the forest, river, and sea nymphs of antiquity, who, along
with Hymen and the Graces and the greater gods Bacchus and Venus, Cynthia and
Juno, rule over mundane affairs in the poem. The poet, acting as a genial
(though sometimes fretful) master of ceremonies, seems to invite the entire
creation to join in celebrating his wedding day. He begins by depicting the sun
as its rises, proceeds through the fish in the river and the beasts and birds
in the forest, and continues up the Great Chain of Being to village children
and the musicians hired to play for the wedding. This progression leads finally
to his bride, who comes forth like a goddess among less comely “merchants
daughters.” At the beginning of stanza 12 and 13, which lie at the formal and
conceptual center of the poem, the poet sings, “Open the temple gates unto my
love,” and this turns the reader’s attention from the world outside the church
to the Christian ceremony of Holy Matrimony that is to be celebrated within.
The musicians then raise a great crescendo to heaven, and the priest unites the
couple before the altar, invoking the authority of a God who stands far above
the pagan deities in the natural world of the poem. At the metrical center of
the central line, Spenser places the words endlesse matrimony. After the
ceremony comes feasting with bells and carols and wine poured out “by the belly
full.” The wedding party gradually disperses, leaving the poet alone with his bride,
and the final image that lingers at the end is of Spenser lying awake beside
her in the silence just before dawn, thinking of children to come and the joys
of heaven. This image is perhaps his most telling response to the fruitless
idolatry and the frustrated earthly desire that are the subjects of Sidney’s
Astrophil and Stella.
A
similar, though more puzzling, blend of the classical with the Christian
appears in Spenser’s next volume, the Fowre Hymnes. The first two hymns, which
are meditations on earthly love and beauty, invoke the pagan gods Cupid and
Venus as their reigning deities. The second two, which deal with heavenly love
and heavenly beauty, are addressed to Christ and Sapience (or Christian
wisdom). Though hymns modeled on the work of Pindar and other pagan poets of
antiquity had recently been revived on the Continent, Spenser’s book is unusual
in setting such poems side by side with more traditional Christian material. To
be sure, the pagan hymns follow a Platonic “ladder of love” in which the
speaker progresses from love of the body to love of the soul, but there is no
way to reconcile their essentially worldly and self-centered philosophy with
that depicted in the second pair of poems. Whereas the pagan hymns celebrate an
altogether human form of love that aims to conquer and possess the beloved for
its own self-fulfillment, the Christian hymns celebrate a divine love that aims
to free others from bondage to sin by undertaking selfless acts of personal
sacrifice.
The
difficulty in resolving such contradictions has led some critics to accept at
face value comments in the poet’s letter of dedication to the volume, which
suggest that the first pair was written “in the greener times of my youth” and
the second was offered by way of a retraction. Other scholars have noted,
however, internal evidence suggesting that the pagan hymns were written—or at
least revised—in the same period as the Christian ones and therefore that they
are not likely to represent the mere errors of Spenser’s youth. Perhaps the
most likely explanation is that the poet was simply repeating a pedagogical
device employed frequently in The Faerie Queene. First, he presents a widely
respected view from antiquity, and then he offers a far richer Christian view
of the same subject, leaving his readers to puzzle out the differences and
choose for themselves.
The
Prothalamion, which was the last of Spenser’s poems to be published during his
lifetime, also involves unresolved tensions, though of a darker sort than those
found in the Fowre Hymnes. The poem was written to celebrate a double betrothal
ceremony for the two daughters of Edward Somerset, Earl of Worcester. It took
place during Spenser’s journey to London in the latter half of 1596, which he
apparently undertook in order to seek a government position in England. Like
The Shepheardes Calender, the poem begins with notes of weariness and despair.
As the poet wanders along the bank of the river Thames, thinking about his own
“lone fruitlesse stay / In Princes Court” and seeking to ease his “payne,” he
sees two lovely swans floating on the water, with river nymphs gathering about
them. These, of course, represent the prospective brides and their attendants.
The counterpoint between the poet’s sadness and the rising tones of joy in the
betrothal ceremony is caught most movingly in a song of blessing sung to the
swans by one of the nymphs. Only two years earlier, Spenser had sung a wedding
song of his own, but sorrows have since crowded in upon him. In coming from a
turbulent world beyond the security of London, he cannot see the peaceful scene
before him without thinking of faraway wars, glimpsed briefly at the end of the
poem in a stanza glorifying the recent English burning of the Spanish fleet at
Cadiz under the direction of Elizabeth’s young favorite, Robert Devereux,
second Earl of Essex. The refrain in the poem, which invokes the river to
“runne softly, till I end my Song,” suggests that the river may not always run
softly, and the lingering impression of the poem is one of fragile beauty and
transient joy.
The
tone of dejection in Spenser’s Prothalamion appears in other of his works
published in 1596. It may reflect the worsening situation in Ireland, where
Tyrone’s Rebellion would soon uproot the English colonists and, with them,
Spenser’s family. It may also have arisen from Spenser’s belief that he was
being slandered at the English court and that old enemies were preventing him
from gaining a better and safer position there. Both concerns stand out
prominently in the last three cantos of Book VI of The Faerie Queene. There,
shepherds associated with Spenser’s literary persona, Colin Clout, are attacked
by lawless brigands, and the poet’s final words are a complaint that the
Blatant Beast has escaped and “raungeth through the world againe … Ne spareth
he the gentle Poets rime, / But rends without regard of person or of time.”
This passage probably refers to William Cecil, Baron Burghley, Elizabeth’s
powerful counselor, who had censured Spenser’s epic for dealing too much with
themes of erotic love (see The Faerie Queene, IV. Proem).
The
poet’s last work, the Mutabilitie Cantos, published posthumously in 1609,
reflects once again on the old themes of time and the sorrows and uncertainties
of life. The cantos were apparently written as the main allegorical “core” for
an otherwise unfinished book of The Faerie Queene, which a headnote by the
printer identifies as “the legend of Constancie.” Appropriately set amid the
turbulence of the Irish countryside, the cantos place the local and the
immediate problems threatening Spenser and his family within a universal
context, reflecting on the role of mutability in God’s creation. Once again
using classical myth to explore issues that deeply touched his Christian view
of the world, Spenser tells the story of the goddess Mutability, a daughter of
the Titans who long ago rebelled against Jove. Longing to be admired like her
sisters Hecate and Bellona, Mutability sets out in the world’s first innocence
to ravage “all which nature had establisht first” and all the laws of civil
society, thereby bringing death into the world. She then mounts up to the
circle of the moon, attempting to drag from her throne the goddess Cynthia
(who, in one of her allegorical references, stands for Queen Elizabeth). Ascending
higher, Mutability then challenges Jove himself, putting forth her case that
she is the rightful ruler of the universe. In order to resolve her dispute with
Jove, she appeals to the highest judge of all, Dame Nature, who assembles all
the gods on Arlo Hill to hear her judgment.
Within
this larger framework Spenser tells the story of Faunus, who bribes the Irish
river nymph Molanna to place him near Diana’s favored haunts on Arlo Hill,
where he may see the goddess bathing. When the satyr betrays himself by
laughing, he is captured by Diana’s nymphs, covered with a deer skin, and set
upon by hounds. He manages to escape, but Diana thereafter abandons Arlo Hill,
cursing it as a haunt for wolves and thieves. Through the Irish setting of the
story and its depiction of a humiliation offered to the moon goddess Diana, the
poet links the account of Faunus to mutability’s attack on Cynthia and her
subsequent trial by Dame Nature. The inner story raises, however, an important
issue not so clearly presented in the outer story, namely the role of erotic
desire in bringing discord into the world.
The
Mutability Cantos represent the perfection of Spenser’s art, combining almost
effortlessly the strains of moral, psychological, and historical allegory that
run through the entire poem. The poet’s description of the great trial on Arlo
Hill brings forth all his poetic powers, providing opportunities for dramatic
word paintings of Mutability’s effects upon the heavens and the earth, but also
for more delicate passages, such as the colorful miniatures of the season,
months, and hours that parade before Dame Nature as evidence of endless change.
Many of the dominant themes and images of Spenser’s other works, from the
earliest vision poems and The Shepheardes Calender to the Complaints and the
Prothalamion, come together here.
The
closing stanzas of the Mutability Cantos offer Spenser’s last word on the
problem that had preoccupied him throughout his life, and, like the mottoes in
the Calender, that word is enigmatic. Addressing Mutability, Dame Nature says
only,
I
well consider all that ye have sayd,
And
find that all things stedfastnes doe hate
And
changed be: yet being rightly wayd
They
are not changed from their first estate;
But
by their change their being doe dilate:
And
turning to themselves at length againe,
Doe work their owne perfection so by fate:
Then
over them Change doth not rule and raigne;
But
they raigne over change, and doe their states maintaine.
(VII.vii.58)
Characteristically,
Spenser leaves his readers to bring light to this “darke conceit,” offering
afterward only another equally mysterious solution to the problem of
mutability, a Christian one that lies beyond the earthly wisdom of Dame Nature:
... all that moveth, doth in Change delight:
But
thence-forth all shall rest eternally
With
Him that is the God of Sabbaoth hight:
o
that great Sabbaoth God, graunt me that Sabaoths sight.
(VII.viii.2)
It may be that this prayer for rest in another
world was the last line of poetry that Spenser ever wrote, for after it the
fragmentary third canto of Mutabilite breaks off. Certainly, the last two years
of his life allowed him little leisure to write. In 1598 rebels attacked and
burned Kilcolman Castle, forcing Spenser and his family to flee to Cork. In
December he returned to England, where he delivered a report on the Irish
crisis at Whitehall on Christmas Eve. Three weeks later, on 13 January 1599, he
died, perhaps of illness brought on by exhaustion. He was buried soon after in
the south transept of Westminster Abbey in the Poets’ Corner.
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