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The Faerie Queene (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature)

The Faerie Queene (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature)
By Edmund Spenser

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Product Description

Brooding on the corruption,intrigue and brilliance of the Elizabethan court, Spencer produced the first fantasy epic.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #487720 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-12
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 896 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
This tale opens with the knight, Redcrosse, undertaking a quest in aid of his beloved, Una. In order to succeed, and be united with Una, Redcrosse must overcome his own human failings as well as the evil tricks of the magician Archimago.


Customer Reviews

A Masterpiece5
The literature of Spenser, unlike that of Shakespeare or other contemporaries, is almost always printed with the exact spelling found at at time. I guess this could throw a lot of people off course, but it really is just one of the many amazing elements of this book. As well as the fantastic and fabulous content, the reader becomes aware and synchronised with the linguistic element of such poetic beauty as well.

As an English student, I'm probably slightly biased about the accessibility of the book, but I'd only read a handful of plays from the late 1500s and early 1600s before launching into it. Although being vaguely familar with the syntax of the period, it was unlike anything I'd looked at previously.

But whether you intend to read the whole book from front to cover, or just dip into a few pages to experience the sheer poetic genius and brilliance, you'll experience great pleasure in doing so. It's also great to see this as a paperback version - although it's relatively large, it is portable (if that makes sense).

Words cannot express...3
...the unutterable tedium that this poem filled me with.
Passages are certainly great, its scope is - indeed - enormous and it is a "one off". But unless you are studying it as a student of English Literature (and if that's what you are, then you HAVE to read it) or you have nothing but time on your hands and have read pretty much everything else, I can't say that I can begin to recommend this. And comparisons with Shakespeare and Dante are surely misplaced: all I can say is be thankful that he didn't finish the accursed thing.

Amazing. Worth the effort.5
The Faerie Queene is, to my mind, the finest single work of literature in English. It's a huge, encyclopaedia poem that draws in and represents the whole psychological landcape of a highly-educated early modern individual with an extraordinarily fertile imagination. Its allegory tries to incorporate everything - from major cultural structures like the seven deadly sins and the myth of British descent from the Trojans to contemporary political intrigues and theories on the workings of the human mind and body. The poem goes from the heights of religious exultation to brutal representations of colonial power and imperial violence.

No review here is going to do it justice; I've read it several times and written about it a fair bit, but still can't imagine really feeling on top of it. Not everyone will like its dreamlike atmosphere and its frequently slow pace. Even the biggest fan will probably admit that long stretches of it are pretty tedious, particularly in the later stages. But the neglect it's fallen into is unforgiveable. Far too many undergraduates never get made to study the thing, and probably many who don't study literature at university won't ever try it. They should. There's nothing else like it and on its own ground nothing else can come close. In terms of density and richness of meaning, and of sheer proliferation of stories, it's an amazing work of genius that puts Spenser up there with Dante, Shakespeare and the rest of the world's very best writers. It's long and you need to put in a fair bit of effort, but it's worth it.