The poem "The Faerie Queene" is a story about a brave knight who fought against monsters after tremendous trials. It is interesting in itself, but there are also many allegorical references to Christianity. Many times Spencer talked about what he said he was actually close to home. For example, the fairy tale he spoke is like Britain, his country. In addition, Faerie Queene itself seems to represent Queen Elizabeth in the UK.
Faerie Queene is written in Spenserian poems created for The Faerie Queene. In this style there are nine slash lines - the first eight are five feet, the ninth hexadecimal - they form "interlocking four columns and the last pair". The rhyming mode is ABABBCBCC. In 1590 he wrote over two thousand poems for Quin of the Sidhe God. Many think that Spencer deliberately deliberately uses Joe himself and Joe and uses it as a conscious way to put himself in the path of establishing the history of UK domestic literature.
The representative work of Spencer is the epic "The Faerie Queene". The first three books of Faerie Queene were published in 1590 and the second three books were published in 1596. Spenser initially stated that he wanted the poem to consist of 12 books, so today the version of this verse is incomplete. . . Still, it is still one of the longest verses in English. This is an allegorical work that you can read in some level of fable, including praise to Queen Elizabeth I. In a completely allegorical context, this verse follows some knights in the investigation of several virtues. In Spencer's "Letters from the author", he says that the entire epic is "wrapped in a fable-like design" and that "the purpose behind Elf Quinn is" to make good and gentle discipline " It is pointed out. Is it a gentleman or a nobleman? "
Faerie Queene is a British epic of Edmund Spenser. The 1st to 3rd books were first published in 1590 and then republished in 4 to 6 volumes in 1596. Faerie Queene is known for that form. It is one of the longest poetry in English, the origin of the form of poetry known as the Spenserian Festival. This poem literally uses multiple knights as a means to try various virtues, but it is primarily a legendary work, but with various levels of fable such as praise to the Queen (or later criticism) You can read. In Spencer's "letter of the author", Elizabeth pointed out that the entire epic "is wrapped in legendary equipment" and that the purpose of publishing "Fairy Quinn" is "ridiculously gentle" Did. Please form gentlemen and nobility in discipline. "