An Analysis of Selected Stanzas From Spenser s. Faerie Queene

Similar documents
Spenser and Sin. Spenser s depiction of carnal sin and sensuality seems to lead

Courtly Love: the Literary and Societal Meaning

Valentine by Carol Ann Duffy

Horace as model: vatic poet, to teach and delight! precision, clarity, neatness, smoothness!

Figurative Language in Poetry

Romeo and Juliet Dialectical Journal Act 1. Act 1

Sound Devices. Alliteration: Repetition of similar or identical initial consonant sounds: the giggling girl gave me gum.

Act I scene i. Romeo and Juliet Dialectical Journal Act 1

Suppressed Again Forgotten Days Strange Wings Greed for Love... 09

The Scrutiny. By Richard Lovelace

WHO ARE YOU? Visual Literacy: John Henry s Hand. The Symbolism of Me

somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond e.e.cummings

AP Lit & Comp 11/29 & 11/ Prose essay basics 2. Sonnets 3. For next class

Ode on a Grecian Urn. In relation to. Light in August

Internal Conflict? 1

CHAPTER II REVIEW OF LITERATURE, CONCEPT AND THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK

Professional POSING TECHNIQUES FOR WEDDING AND PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHERS. Amherst Media. Norman Phillips PUBLISHER OF PHOTOGRAPHY BOOKS

U/ID 4023/NRJ. (6 pages) MAY 2012

Ballad, Identity, Love Tragedy

Acrostic. Purpose Acrostic poems describe a particular topic.

Forms of Poetry - Introduction

DIPLOMA IN CREATIVE WRITING IN ENGLISH Term-End Examination June, 2015 SECTION A

Macbeth Act Two Standards Focus: Figurative Language

Romeo & Juliet: Check Your Understanding

Robert Frost Sample answer

The Perverted Photography of Torbjørn Rødland

Analyzing the Text Cite Text Evidence

Romeo and Juliet Test study guide. Read the directions for each section carefully.

Answer the following questions: 1) What reasons can you think of as to why Macbeth is first introduced to us through the witches?

Much Ado About Nothing Notes and Study Guide

Radiance Versus Ordinary Light: Selected Poems by Carl Phillips The Kenyon Review Literary Festival, 2013

The Rise of the Novel. Joseph Andrews: by Henry

Proverbs 31 : Mark 9 : Sermon

Your Grade: Achievement Achievement with Merit Achievement with Excellence

Examination papers and Examiners reports E040. Victorians. Examination paper

On Writing an Original Sonnet

Adam s Curse (1902) By: Hannah, Ashley, Michelle, Visali, and Judy

Biography Boston, Mass. orphan. author, poet, editor. mystery, macabre, gothic, short stories. Romantic era

Amanda Cater - poems -

Shakespeare paper: Romeo and Juliet

Remember is composed in the form known as the Italian or Petrarchan sonnet, rhymed abba abba cdd ece, traditionally associated with love poetry.

Unity & Duality, Mirrors & Shadows: Hitchcock s Psycho

Voc o abu b lary Poetry

David Ethics Bites is a series of interviews on applied ethics, produced in association with The Open University.

Allegory. Convention. Soliloquy. Parody. Tone. A work that functions on a symbolic level

Chapter II. Theoretical Framework

Cambridge University Press The Theory of Moral Sentiments - Adam Smith Excerpt More information

Selection Review #1. Keeping the Night Watch. Pages 1-20

ENG1501. Tutorial letter 201/1/2013 FOUNDATIONS IN ENGLISH LITERARY STUDIES. Department of English Studies ENG1501/201/1/2013

Romeo & Juliet ACT 4. Revision Recap

NTB6. General Certificate of Education June 2007 Advanced Level Examination

PETERS TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT CORE BODY OF KNOWLEDGE ADVANCED PLACEMENT LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION GRADE 12

Directions: Choose the word that is most nearly opposite in meaning to the word in capital letters.

Not Waving but Drowning

Who is the happy Warrior? Who is he That every man in arms should wish to be?

ENGLISH Home Language

ENGLISH COURSE OBJECTIVES AND OUTCOMES KHEMUNDI COLLEGE; DIGAPAHANDI

The Fall of Rome Written by W. H. Auden

Chopin s Artistry in The Story of an Hour. To be in conflict with traditional society s beliefs is difficult for many to do; however, author

Simulated killing. Michael Lacewing

AP Lit & Comp 11/30 15

A theme is a lesson about life or human nature that the writer teaches the reader. A theme must be a broad statement not specific to a single story.

The road not taken robert frost figurative meaning. The road not taken robert frost figurative meaning.zip

POETRY. GRADE 7 Term 4 SURNAME, NAME: CLASS: eng-wb-t4-(Poetry)

Symbols and Cinematic Symbolism

AP* Language: Multiple Choice Living with Music by Ralph Ellison

THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER

THE YELLOW BUTTERFLY. Off flew the butterfly!

NMSI English Mock Exam Lesson Poetry Analysis 2013

CURRICULUM CATALOG ENGLISH II (01002) NY

What Are We? These may seem very basic facts, but it is necessary to start somewhere, so the start has been made...


CASAS Content Standards for Reading by Instructional Level

Deconstruction is a way of understanding how something was created and breaking something down into smaller parts.

Kern 1. John Donne: Master of Women: Believe it or not. English 331

Section I. Quotations

Higher Still. Notes.

Seventeenth-Century. Literature

Examiners Report/ Principal Examiner Feedback. June International GCSE English Literature (4ET0) Paper 02

Poetry is rich in imagery, rhythm, and emotion.

IN MODERN LANGUAGE COMPOSED UPON WESTMINSTER BRIDGE

The Middle Ages and The Canterbury Tales

literary devices characters setting symbols point of view

Unseen Poetry Analysis

anecdotal Based on personal observation, as opposed to scientific evidence.

Imagery Group Assignment. I Think I Can, I Think I Can / Small Group Practice Activity

Welcome. 4 things to bring on the day

Commentary on candidate evidence

GCSE English Anthology Love & Relationships. GCSE English Anthology Love & Relationships. GCSE English Anthology Love & Relationships

14. The extended metaphor of stanzas 1 4 compares love to A. an unwilling dieter B. an illness C. an unruly child D. a prisoner in jail E.

SAMPLE. Introduction - Drills for Skills series - Unseen Poetry Wendy J Hall

The Male Gaze: Addressing the Angel/Monster Dichotomy in Jean Rhys Wide Sargasso Sea

Your Grade: Achievement Achievement with Merit Achievement with Excellence. Produce a selection of crafted. Produce a selection of crafted

English Poetry. Page 1 of 7

This Moment. Eavan Boland H1 Notes 1

This the following criteria which must be met in order to achieve a solid grade for your poem. Your poem must contain the following:

OF GOD INTO A LIE ROMANS 1:24-28, 32

English 9 Romeo and Juliet Act IV -V Quiz. Part 1 Multiple Choice (2 pts. each)

Appendix 1: Some of my songs. A portrayal of how music can accompany difficult text. (With YouTube links where possible)

XSEED Summative Assessment Test 2. English, Test 2. XSEED Education English Grade 8 1

Transcription:

Keith Waddington 1992 Keith Waddington M. Brian Eng. 316 11/30/92 An Analysis of Selected Stanzas From Spenser s Faerie Queene I Upon a bed of Roses she was layd, As faint through heat, or dight to pleasant sin, And was arayd, or rather disarayd, All in a vele of silke and silver thin, That hid no whit her alablaster skin, But rather shewd more white, if more might be: More subtle web Arachne can not spin, Nor the fine nets, which oft we woven see Of scorched deaw, do not in th aire more lightly flee. In the Epithalamion, we saw our Petrarchan female 1 reclined in lilies and violets, symbolising purity and humility respectively. It is not surprising then that 1 Actually she has all along been only a quasi-petrarchan female, qualified if for no other reason than that she accepted her suitor.

K. Waddington 2 Acrasia, the antithesis of the Petrarchan female, is composed, instead, lounging in a bed of roses. There is, in this image, an idea of nature perverted or perhaps possessed, a nature whose thorny pricks offer comfort rather than pain; whose rosy colours bring to mind rosy blood rather than rosy cheeks. Acrasia s comfort is surely equalled only by our own discomfort. And of course, bearing in mind the allegorical nature of The Faerie Queene, we must surely be cognisant of the tacit connection between rosary rose bed and rosery the Roman Catholic beads used as a guide to prayer. We might thereby conclude that Acrasia slumbers in a bed that has been forged 2 by Catholic prayer. As we turn to that pleasant sin, we turn to a more problematical conception. Earlier, ambling through the Bower of Bliss, we observed things that seemed, things as if. In effect, the character of the province was gradually revealed: the descriptions of the surface of things undermined by a growing realisation that all was not as it seemed. It could be argued, in this light, that the pleasant is likewise not as it seems, but a pleasant laced with irony. By careful examination though, taking note of implicit statements like Fraile harts in the third stanza of our selection, it seems somewhat obtuse to read this as nothing more than an instance of irony. Evidence does seem to suggest a certain acknowledgement, on 2 Unusual diction deliberate.

K. Waddington 3 Spencer s part, that sin does indeed possess a pleasantness that cannot be denied, and so it would appear that to live according to absolute virtue is impossible. It could even be argued that Spencer s depiction of intemperance is wrought with the same fervour as the characters practice of intemperance. Moving to address the description of dress, we are again struck by the dissimilitude of Acrasia and the Petrarchan female of Epithalamion. Where one is hidden beneath layers of odourd sheetes, and Arras coverlets and displays only proud humility, the other wears only a veil designed to accentuate rather than to moderate; a cover so painfully transparent as to reveal metaphorically more shewd more white, if more might be than the very nakedness it covers. Notice also Acrasia s skin: no Lilly white here, but cold stony white, itself semi-transparent. We see here as well the beginning of a description of Acrasia which incorporates a mixture of cold and hot images, certainly a further hint that she is a kind of perversion of the natural order. We should also take note that the veil is a kind of perversion of the wedding veil. Not only is its effect contrary to that customary token of humility, as we have already noted, but it is worn by Acrasia out of context: in bed. And where we see the groom of the Epithalamion beckon to night: Spread thy broad wing over my love and me,

K. Waddington 4 that no man may us see and thus his bride slips under covers of darkness, Acrasia, on the other hand, covets of daylight, 3 that any man might see. It is certainly not for mere effect that the veil which also could be seen as a perversion of a nun s veil, and so as another depiction of the Catholic church as villain is further likened, in this almost epic simile, to the web of a spider. The intention, clearly, is an association between the Acrasia and the Arachne. The web she weaves is the web of enticement and temptation, into which the Fraile harts of men fall. Such enticements and temptations are found everywhere in the spider lady s boudoir for such is the Bower of Bliss from the artificial beauty of art that endeavours to replace nature, to the rendition of ease antithetical to the Protestant work ethic, and represented in book I canto IV as: Idleness the nourse of sin beauty and sexual satisfaction. We also might remember the ceremonial nuptials of certain members of the Arachne family conclude with in a cannibalistic feast in which the male is entirely consumed. This is an obvious metaphor that need not be further explained. 3 Here, as elsewhere, poetic licence is requested. The doubtful grammar was necessary in order to produce the parallel phrasing of covers of darkness and covets of daylight. And why not, indeed?

K. Waddington 5 Strewn about, like coins in the fountain of the Bower of Bliss, the word silver used in this stanza in reference to the thinness of the veil donating here the attempt to improve on natural beauty by artifice, which is in truth a degradation of that beauty for it comes from man and not from God hidden beneath the veil of conceit; and donating elsewhere a hunger for riches that can certainly be fed in this realm, though, we doubt, is hardly likely to be satisfactorily satiated. II Her snowy brest was bare to readie spoyle Of hungry eies, which n ote therewith be filled, And yet through languour of her late sweet toyle, Few drops, more cleare then Nectar, forth distild, That like pure Orient perles adowne it trild, And her faire eyes sweet smyling in delight, Moystened their fierie beames, with which she thrild Fraile harts, yet quenched not; like starry light Which sparckling on the silent waves, does seem more bright. As with the alabaster white, we have here another instance where the usual purity associated with white, as

K. Waddington 6 in the Epithalamion and Amoretti, is spoiled, rendered cold, voided of humanness. As is typical in the Petrarchan tradition, we next encounter war imagery, though here with an ironic twist appropriate to the subject. Since Acrasia is in effect everything that the Petrarchan female is not, it is fitting that we should see a certain amount of reversal: It is the pain felt by the suitor, a consequence of the female s disdain, which usually fosters those images of conflict; but here, where encouragement supplants disdain, the spoyle of war is not the suitor s heart, but Acrasia s bare breasts; and here, the spoils of war are not taken by the winner from the loser, but given by the winner to the loser. And yet, since we are now in a material rather than spiritual region, the more physical meaning of "spoil" immediately leaps to mind, namely: to go bad. The eyes, gazing upon those lewd breasts, that are turned bad. From this point of view, we might entertain yet another meaning of spoil, namely, to take by force, for we can easily imagine the power of Acrasia s looks capturing perhaps by enchantment the animal predilections of the male. There is, finally, in this small word Spoyle a sense of active corruption and this would certainly suit Spenser s agenda, which, as already hinted, includes the notion that all this intemperance is only in small part the male s fault, for he does indeed have that Fraile heart, and the

K. Waddington 7 merchandise offered is so very enticing and we see so well Acrasia s power to turn good into bad. To conclude this brief examination of war imagery, clearly Spenser makes use of this, and other aspects of the Petrarchan convention, not strictly in a manner conforming to the original, but instead in a manner, as already suggested, most fitting to the purpose at hand. Further proof of this can be seen in the Epithalamion, where we find: bring home the triumph of our victory. (My italics). Here we see something quite different from a Petrarchan triumph, where the female relentlessly shuns her would-be suitor, but a mutual triumph. In yet another instance of ironic rendition, Acrasia is shown crying tears more clear still than the Homeric drink of the gods, giver of life and beauty. No doubt, in her own eyes, this spider woman, this enchanting witch, is indeed a goddess, and so why should she not spill tears of refined nectar? In a rather appropriate simile, those tear drops soon become small treasures of Orient perles, further blurring the boundary between nature and artifice and reiterating the theme of greed for worldly goods: and as nature s nectar attracts insects, what better than small treasures to attract those greedy, buzzing, unrestrained men. If we know the purpose of those tears, we have yet to discover their cause. Simply, they come through languour

K. Waddington 8 of her late sweet toyle. 4 The important thing to note here though is that languor signifies not only a dreamy inertia, but an affliction. Do we therefore detect a certain understanding, on the part of Spenser, that just as the men might make claim to weakness as an excuse for their intemperance, Acrasia might likewise be tormented by an inclination which is stronger than any powers she could muster in opposition 5? There is certainly more than a modicum of ambiguity in this stanza, and we should be thankful that Elizabethan spelling allowed Spenser the possibility of differentiating between the eyes of the male onlookers and those of Acrasia by lettering the former eies and the latter eyes. 6 This being said, we now observe that her tears are not only unable to quench her fiery beames, as tears might, in a natural place, wash away sin, but they in fact intensify those beames, for just as stars appear brighter in the blackness of the reflecting sea, so those tears act as a 4 Notice the almost oxmoronic sweet toyle. 5 None of this is to suggest that Spenser accepts such forces should win, but only that he recognises that every strength has its contumacious weakness, and it is for this reason that forgiveness, with repentance, can be granted. 6 At least I am thankful. If this is not an argument for free spelling, it is at least one for confined syntax.

K. Waddington 9 foil, making those beames more beautiful, more enchanting, more able to captivate the men they fall upon. III The young man sleeping by her, seemed to be Some goodly swayne of honorable place, That certes it great pittie was to see Him his nobilitie so foul deface; And sweet regard, and amiable grace, Mixed with manly sternness did appeare Yet sleeping, in his well proportiond face, And on his tender lips the downy heare Did now but freshly spring, and silken blossomes beare. Last of all we turn to a stanza whose simplicity conveys the character of the young man it depicts. We see him sleeping, and thus, by association, less guilty than he might otherwise appear. 7 As evidence of this, note the diction, for though he has committed carnal acts with Acrasia, we yet read such as: goodly, honorable, amiable in his description. And yet, as we have already said, every strength has its opposite weakness, and this applies not only in the outside world of people, but in the inner world of person, where 7 This is a convention made famous or perhaps infamous, for it does smack of deceit by Samuel Richardson, who maintains the virtue of his Petrarchan Clarissa, despite the rape she suffers, by having her unconscious during the act.

K. Waddington 10 conflicts usually mirror those of the outer, and where, in fact, the winner and loser is actually decided. To speak plainly, we see the external conflict between Acrasia and the men she must seduce, but also the inner conflict between intemperance and temperance. From this angle we might view Acrasia as a personification of man s propensity towards immorality and sexual passion, doing battle with good conscience and religious purity; and it is in this inner realm, in this inner conflict, that the worldly battles of temptation are actually won and lost. Accordingly, this slumbering swayne lover clearly in the ironic sense must himself be held at least partly responsible, for all the web weaving of Acrasia. And this is indeed the case, for we see Him his nobilitie so foule deface and not her his nobilitie so foul deface. It must be admitted though that Spenser, being of the much whiskered sex, is want to place as much blame as possible in the eyes of Acrasia, or, in the terms of our psychological interpretation, on the shoulders of temptation. The Faerie Queene is a long walk from a Petrarchan love sonnet, and much of the footing is uphill; nevertheless, it has been made clear, amongst other diverse analysis, that Petrarchan traditions are indeed alive and well in this work. More importantly, we have seen that Petrarchan traditions are not so much a set of rules to Spenser as a

K. Waddington 11 set of images, which might be shown reflected in reverse or twisted in perversion, as easily as shown in their unadulterated originality. 8 8 A note on originality: The goal of this necessarily selective paper has been both to point out the patently obvious, as well as to offer an individual analysis untinted by those murky filters of research. Perhaps this has entailed a good deal of fumbling and tumbling in the dark, but it is perhaps preferable to find the light ourselves and see with horror the bruises than have the room described by some faceless fellow in a text book, who might very well be blind and be simply retelling what he was told by another blind fellow, and so on. This is by no means a condemnation of scholarship, but more a sad reflection that the more we know from other people, the less we know of ourselves. Then again, perhaps this is even more fumbling in the dark, and someone should really just open the shutters and let in some sunlight if such a thing exists. Please note: this is a final footnote, and my final footnotes never count.