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Spenser's Faerie Queene, Vol. 2 (of 2) cover

Spenser's Faerie Queene, Vol. 2 (of 2)

Chapter 27: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

This second part continues an allegorical epic through linked legends that examine particular virtues—friendship, justice, courtesy—and the instability of fortune. Episodic chivalric quests, enchantments, and courtly encounters put characters through moral tests and political dilemmas, alternating martial exploits with romantic trials. Rich archaic imagery and formal stanzaic patterns present allegorical figures and moral exempla, while recurring motifs of honor, temptation, and transformation structure the narratives. The sequence closes with two brief cantos that dwell on mutability and the fleeting nature of worldly states, leaving moral questions unresolved rather than offering simple resolutions.

FOOTNOTES:

[362] xiii 9 through 1609

[363] xiv 9 doole 1609

[364] xvi 2 sight; 1596

[365] xviii 7 vile 1609 passim

[366] xxi 1 yearne 1609

[367] xxiv 7 And] An 1609

[368] xxix 6 stonn’d 1609

[369] xxxv 1, 6 Belge] Belgæ 1596, 1609

[370] xxxix 5 vnrigteous 1596

[371] xl 5 reare 1596

[372] 6 She death shall sure aby 1611

[373] xli 2 too blame 1596, 1609: corr. 1679

[374] 6 know] knew 1596, 1609: corr. Upton

[375] xlii 2 prouide: 1596, 1609

[376] xliv 2 dangerous 1609

[377] xlviii 6 enquere 1609

[378] li 1 this] his 1609

[379] lv 8 disaduentrous 1609

[380] lvii 9 withall 1596

[381] lx 2 had] haue 1609

[382] lxi 7 meed] hyre conj. Church. But cf. II ii 7, &c.

[383] 8 forward 1596

[384] lxii 1 what 1596

[385] lxiii 5 defaced. 1596

[386] 9 hold; 1596