Context
Edmund Spenser was born around 1552 in
London, England. We know very little about his family, but he
received a quality education and graduated with a Masters from
Cambridge in 1576. He began writing poetry for publication at this
time and was employed as a secretary, first to the Bishop of Kent and
then to nobles in Queen Elizabeth's court. His first major work, The Shepheardes Calender, was published in 1579 and met with critical success; within a year he was at work on his greatest and longest work, The Faerie Queene. This poem occupied him for most of his life, though he published other poems in the interim.
The first three books of The Faerie Queen
were published in 1590 and then republished with Books IV through VI
in 1596. By this time, Spenser was already in his second marriage,
which took place in Ireland, where he often traveled. Still at work
on his voluminous poem, Spenser died on January 13, 1599, at
Westminster.
Spenser only completed half of The Faerie Queene
he planned. In a letter to Sir John Walter Raleigh, he explained
the purpose and structure of the poem. It is an allegory, a story
whose characters and events nearly all have a specific symbolic
meaning. The poem's setting is a mythical "Faerie land," ruled by
the Faerie Queene. Spenser sets forth in the letter that this
"Queene" represents his own monarch, Queen Elizabeth.
Spenser intended to write 12 books of the Faerie Queene,
all in the classical epic style; Spenser notes that his structure
follows those of Homer and Virgil. Each Book concerns the story of a
knight, representing a particular Christian virtue, as he or she would
convey at the court of the Faerie Queene. Because only half of the
poem was ever finished, the unifying scene at the Queene's court never
occurs; instead, we are left with six books telling an incomplete
story. Of these, the first and the third books are most often read and
critically acclaimed.
Though it takes place in a mythical land, The Faerie Queen
was intended to relate to Spenser's England, most importantly in the
area of religion. Spenser lived in post-Reformation England, which
had recently replaced Roman Catholicism with Protestantism
(specifically, Anglicanism) as the national religion. There were still
many Catholics living in England, and, thus, religious protest was a
part of Spenser's life. A devout Protestant and a devotee of the
Protestant Queen Elizabeth, Spenser was particularly offended by the
anti-Elizabethan propaganda that some Catholics circulated. Like most
Protestants near the time of the Reformation, Spenser saw a Catholic
Church full of corruption, and he determined that it was not only the
wrong religion but the anti-religion. This sentiment is an important
backdrop for the battles of The Faerie Queene, which often represent the "battles" between London and Rome.
Characters
Arthur -
The central hero of the poem, although he does not play
the most significant role in its action. Arthur is in search of the
Faerie Queene, whom he saw in a vision. The "real" Arthur was a king
of the Britons in the 5th or 6th century A.D., but the little
historical information we have about him is overwhelmed by his legend.
Faerie Queene (also known as Gloriana) - Though
she never appears in the poem, the Faerie Queene is the focus of the
poem; her castle is the ultimate goal or destination of many of the
poem’s characters. She represents Queen Elizabeth, among others, as
discussed in the Commentary.
Redcrosse -
The Redcrosse Knight is the hero of Book I; he stands
for the virtue of Holiness. His real name is discovered to be George,
and he ends up becoming St. George, the patron saint of England. On
another level, though, he is the individual Christian fighting against
evil--or the Protestant fighting the Catholic Church.
Una -
Redcrosse's future wife, and the other major
protagonist in Book I. She is meek, humble, and beautiful, but strong
when it is necessary; she represents Truth, which Redcrosse must find
in order to be a true Christian.
Duessa -
The opposite of Una, she represents falsehood and
nearly succeeds in getting Redcrosse to leave Una for good. She
appears beautiful, but it is only skin-deep.
Archimago -
Next to Duessa, a major antagonist in Book I.
Archimago is a sorcerer capable of changing his own appearance or that
of others; in the end, his magic is proven weak and ineffective.
Britomart - The
hero of Book III, the female warrior virgin, who represents Chastity.
She is a skilled fighter and strong of heart, with an amazing
capacity for calm thought in troublesome circumstances. Of course,
she is chaste, but she also desires true Christian love. She searches
for her future husband, Arthegall, whom she saw in a vision through a
magic mirror.
Florimell -
Another significant female character in Book III,
Florimell represents Beauty. She is also chaste but constantly hounded
by men who go mad with lust for her. She does love one knight, who
seems to be the only character that does not love her.
Satyrane - Satyrane
is the son of a human and a satyr (a half-human, half-goat creature).
He is "nature's knight," the best a man can be through his own
natural abilities without the enlightenment of Christianity and God's
grace. He is significant in both Book I and Book III, generally as
an aide to the protagonists.
Summary
In The Faerie Queene, Spenser
creates an allegory: The characters of his far-off, fanciful "Faerie
Land" are meant to have a symbolic meaning in the real world. In
Books I and III, the poet follows the journeys of two knights,
Redcrosse and Britomart, and in doing so he examines the two virtues he
considers most important to Christian life--Holiness and Chastity.
Redcrosse, the knight of Holiness, is much like the Apostle Peter: In
his eagerness to serve his Lord, he gets himself into unforeseen
trouble that he is not yet virtuous enough to handle. His quest is to
be united with Una, who signifies Truth--Holiness cannot be attained
without knowledge of Christian truth. In his immature state, he
mistakes falsehood for truth by following the deceitful witch Duessa.
He pays for this mistake with suffering, but in the end, this
suffering makes way for his recovery in the House of Holiness, aided
by Faith, Hope, and Charity. With newfound strength and the grace of
God, he is able to conquer the dragon that represents all the evil in
the world.
In a different manner, Britomart also
progresses in her virtue of chastity. She already has the strength to
resist lust, but she is not ready to accept love, the love she feels
when she sees a vision of her future husband in a magic mirror. She
learns to incorporate chaste resistance with active love, which is what
Spenser sees as true Christian love: moderation. Whereas Redcrosse
made his own mistakes (to show to us the consequences of an unholy
life), it is not Britomart but the other characters in Book III who
show the destructive power of an unchaste life. Spenser says in his
Preface to the poem that his goal is to show how a virtuous man should
live. The themes of Book I and Book III come together in the idea
that our native virtue must be augmented or transformed if it is to
become true Christian virtue. Spenser has a high regard for the
natural qualities of creatures; he shows that the satyrs, the lion,
and many human characters have an inborn inclination toward the good.
And yet, he consistently shows their failure when faced with the
worst evils. These evils can only be defeated by the Christian good.
High on Spenser's list of evils is the
Catholic Church, and this enmity lends a political overtone to the
poem, since the religious conflicts of the time were inextricably tied
to politics. The poet is unashamed in his promotion of his beloved
monarch, Queen Elizabeth; he takes considerable historical license in
connecting her line with King Arthur. Spenser took a great pride in
his country and in his Protestant faith. He took aim at very real
corruption within the Catholic Church; such attacks were by no means
unusual in his day, but his use of them in an epic poem raised his
criticism above the level of the propagandists.
As a purely poetic work, The Faerie Queene
was neither original nor always remarkable; Spenser depends heavily
on his Italian romantic sources (Ariosto & Tasso), as well as
medieval and classical works like The Romance of the Rose and The Aeneid
. It is Spenser's blending of such diverse sources
with a high-minded allegory that makes the poem unique and remarkable.
He is able to take images from superficial romances, courtly love
stories, and tragic epics alike, and give them real importance in the
context of the poem. No image is let fall from Spenser's pen that does
not have grave significance, and this gives The Faerie Queene the richness that has kept it high among the ranks of the greatest poetry in the English language.
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