The Faery Queen may be The FaerieQueene , 1650 epic poem by Edmund Spenser The Fairy Queen , 1692 music drama by Henry Purcell disambig ... more details
Acrasia may refer to Akrasia , the state of acting against one s better judgement Acrasia horse , a racing horse, 1904 Melbourne Cup winner Acrasia moth Acrasia moth , a geometer moth genus Acrasia protists , a proposed phylum of protist s A character in Edmund Spenser s epic poem The Faerie Queene See also Acrasin disambig Taxonomy disambiguation ... more details
The Fairy Queen was a figure from English folklore who was said to rule the fairies. Fairy Queen may also refer to The Faerie Queene , a poem by Edmund Spenser Fairy Queen locomotive Fairy Queen locomotive , an Indian steam locomotive The Fairy Queen , a semi opera by Purcell The Fairy Queen , a painting by Myrea Pettit to celebrate the 80th birthday of Queen Elizabeth II Faerie Queen , a song by Blackmore s Night from their 2006 album The Village Lanterne The musical artist, Kenny Klein , has a CD called The Fairy Queen , whose title song describes the Fairy Queen and names her as Mab. Faerie Queen song Faerie Queen song , a song by Heather Alexander on her album Wanderlust See also Fairy disambiguation Queen disambiguation disambig de Fairy Queen ... more details
John Upton 1707 1760 was an important early editor of Edmund Spenser , who is best known for the notes in his 1758 edition of Spenser s great romance epic The Faerie Queene , which was first published in 1590 books 1 3 and 1596 books 4 6 . Upton was educated at Oxford University , where he was for a while a college fellow. The notes in his edition of The Faerie Queene attempted to link the poem to events in Spenser s life, and characters in the poem with historical figures. ref David Hill Radcliffe, Edmund Spenser a reception history , Camden House, 1996, p.62 ref Works ed. Epictetus , To tou Epikt tou Encheiridion , 1744 Critical observations on Shakespeare , 1746 Remarks on three plays of Benjamin Jonson Viz. Volpone, or The Fox Epicoene, or The silent woman and The alchemist , 1749 ed. Spenser s Faerie queene , 1758 References reflist John G. Radcliffe s article in the Spenser Encyclopedia , p. 706 External links worldcat id lccn n86 52150 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Upton, John ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1707 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1760 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Upton, John Category 1707 births Category 1760 deaths Category English literary critics editor stub Poetry stub ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 For other uses of the name Chrysaor disambiguation In Edmund Spenser s The Faerie Queene Chrysaor was the golden sword of Sir Artegal, the Knight of Justice. The sword was given to him by Astr a, who had been holding it since the days when Zeus used it to battle the Titan mythology Titans . Because it was Tempred sic with Adamant , it could cleave through anything. DEFAULTSORT Chrysaor Sword Category Fictional swords ... more details
Britomart , the English equivalent of the name Britomartis, may refer to Britomartis , a nymph of Greek mythology and a character from The Faerie Queene HMS Britomart HMS Britomart , seven ships of the Royal Navy Point Britomart , a former headland between former Commercial Bay, and Official Bay, Auckland, New Zealand Britomart Transport Centre , Auckland s CBD public transport hub, located in the area of the former headland Fort Britomart , a fortification of the British Army during early colonial days, located on the headland disambig de Britomart ... more details
Orgoglio is a literary character in Edmund Spenser s famous epic The Faerie Queen . He appears in the seventh canto as a beast and attacks the main character, Redcrosse, who symbolizes the ultimate Christian knight, during a moment of weakness. Orgoglio means pride in Italian. References Reflist cite book title The Cambridge Companion to Spenser author Andrew Hadfield publisher Cambridge University Press date 2001 isbn 0521645700 isbn13 9780521645706 pages 212 cite book chapter The Faerie Queen author Edmund Spenser title The Norton Anthology of English Literature. Volume B. cite web url http www.sparknotes.com poetry fqueen title The Faerie Queen Sparknotes cite web url http en.wiktionary.org wiki orgoglio title Definition of Orgoglio Wiktionary Further reading cite book title Spenser s Supreme Fiction author Jon A. Quitslund publisher University of Toronto Press date 2001 isbn 0802035051 isbn13 9780802035059 cite journal author S.K. Heninger Jr title The Orgoglio Episode in The FaerieQueene journal English Literary History volume 26 issue 2 pages 171&ndash 187 date June 1959 publisher The Johns Hopkins University Press jstor 2872024 cite journal title Spenser s Erotic Drama The Orgoglio Episode author J.W. Schroeder date 1962 journal English Literary History volume 29 pages 140&ndash 159 Category Characters in epic poems Category English giants lit char stub ... more details
Belphoebe i. e. Beautiful Diana or Belphebe is a huntress in The FaerieQueene , based on Elizabeth I of England Queen Elizabeth , conceived of, however, as a pure, high spirited maiden, rather than a queen. It is suggested that she is a member of Poseidon s family, and it is known that she is a virgin huntress, possibly resembling the Goddess Artemis. Belphoebe can certainly fight, as a potential rapist found out. She is the stronger, militant sister of Amoret. Nuttall Category Characters in epic poems Category Fictional fairies and sprites Category Mythological fairy royalty lit char stub ... more details
Caelia or Celia is a Fairy Queen in Richard Johnson 16th century Richard Johnson s Romance heroic literature romance Tom a Lincoln . Caelia is the ruler of an island called Fairy Land, populated by women who have slain their warmongering men. She begs Tom and his companions to stay on the island so that it might be re peopled. She eventually bears Tom s son, the Faerie Knight , but later commits suicide by drowning herself when she thinks herself abandoned by Tom. She further appears in Edmund Spenser s The Faerie Queene as the ruler of the House of Holiness where with the help of her three daughters she helps the Redcrosse Knight the epic s protagonist regain his strength and holiness to complete his quest. Caelia is described in s The Faerie Queene Book I Canto X Canto X of Book I . Her name refers to the Heavenly Spirit. She resides in the House of Holiness, which serves as the direct opposite of the House of Pride that appears earlier in the book. She is the image of how a good mother should appear. Her joys come from helping lost souls, and doing good deeds all day long. She is the mother of Faith, Hope, and Charity, otherwise known as Fidelia, Speranza, and Charissa. Perhaps coincidentally, a fairy named Celia also appears in Gilbert and Sullivan s 1882 comic opera Iolanthe as an attendant of another Fairy Queen. She too takes a mortal lover at the opera s conclusion. See also List of Arthurian Characters Category Fictional fairies and sprites Category Arthurian characters fr Caelia ... more details
For the group of paintings known by this title, see The Allegory of Love Veronese . The Allegory of Love A Study in Medieval Tradition 1936 in literature 1936 , by C. S. Lewis ISBN 0192812203 , is an influential exploration of the Allegory allegorical treatment of love in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance . In the first chapter, Lewis traces the development of the idea of courtly love from the Proven al Troubadour troubadours to its full development in the works of Chr tien de Troyes . It is here that he sets forth a famous characterization of the peculiar form which it courtly love first took the four marks of Humility, Courtesy, Adultery, and the Religion of Love the last two of which marks have, in particular, been the subject of a good deal of controversy among later scholars. In the second chapter, Lewis discusses the medieval evolution of the allegorical tradition in such writers as Bernard Silvestris and Alain de Lille . The remaining chapters, drawing on the points made in the first two, examine the use of allegory in the depiction of love in a selection of poetic works, beginning with the Roman de la Rose . The focus, however, is on English works the poems of Geoffrey Chaucer Chaucer , John Gower Gower s Confessio Amantis and Thomas Usk Usk s Testament of Love , the works of Chaucer s epigones, and Edmund Spenser Spenser s The Faerie Queene Faerie Queene . The book is ornamented with quotations from poems in many languages, including Classical Latin Classical and Medieval Latin , Middle English , and Old French . The piquant English language English translations of many of these are Lewis s own work. C. S. Lewis hist book stub Category Books by C. S. Lewis Category Books about literary theory DEFAULTSORT Allegory of Love ru ... more details
otheruses File Johann Heinrich F ssli 058.jpg thumb right 220px Prince Arthur and the Fairy Queen by Johann Heinrich F ssli , c. 1788. The Fairy Queen or Queen of the Fairies was a figure from English folklore who was believed to rule the fairy fairies . Based on Shakespeare s influence, she is often named as Titania Fairy Queen Titania or Queen Mab Mab . In Irish folklore , the last High Queen of the Daoine Sidhe and wife of the High King Finvarra was named Oona or Oonagh, or Una, or Uonaidh etc . In the ballad tradition of Northern England and Lowland Scotland , she was called the Queen of Elphame . The character is also associated with the name Morgan as with the Arthurian character of Morgan Le Fey , or Morgan of the Fairies , Meave, and L annawnshee literally, Underworld Fairy . In the Child Ballads Tam Lin Child 39 and Thomas the Rhymer Child 37 , she is represented as both beautiful and seductive, and also as terrible and deadly. The Fairy Queen is said to pay a tithe to Hell every seven years, and her mortal lovers often provide this sacrifice. In Tam Lin , the title character tells his mortal lover At the end of seven years br She pays a tithe to Hell br I so fair and full of flesh br br I fear it be myself Both Edmund Spenser and William Shakespeare used folklore concerning the Fairy Queen to create characters and poetry, Edmund Spenser Spenser in The Faerie Queene and Shakespeare most notably in A Midsummer Night s Dream . In the Faerie Queene, Spencer s fairy queen is named Tanaquill, and is revealed to be the descendant of Shakespeare s Titania. In one of the earliest of the Peter Pan novels, The Little White Bird , author J.M. Barrie also identifies Queen Mab as the name of the fairy queen, although the character is entirely benign and helpful. In Disney s Tinker Bell film series series of films based on Tinker Bell , a fairy character originating in Barrie s novels, the fairies are shown to be ruled by a Queen Clarion voiced throughout the series by A ... more details
Cecily is a given name, one of the English forms of Latin Cecilia , and may refer to Cecily Adams , the daughter of sitcom actor Don Adams and singer Adelaide Efanti Cecily Bonville, 7th Baroness Harington , English peeress Cecily Brown , British painter Cecily Carlisle , Queen of the Elves in Spenser s The Faerie Queene Cecily Lefort , heroine of World War II Cecily Neville, Duchess of York , Duchess of York and mother of two English kings Cecily Norden , a South African author, horse judge, rider and breeder Cecily O Neill , American theatre educator Cecily Polson , Australian actress Cecily Tynan , Philadelphia broadcast personality Cecily of York , sister of Edward V of England Cecily von Ziegesar , American author of novels written for teenagers See also Cicely disambiguation given name Cecily It does not help to add disambig or hndis tags where the page only contains people who share a given name ... more details
Cambell may refer to Cambell Baronets in Essex Sir John Cambell of Woodford, Bt. died 1662 Cambell of Clay Hall floruit fl. 1664 1699 Sir Thomas Cambell, 1st Bt. c. 1620 1665 Sir Thomas Cambell, 2nd Bt. c. 1662 1668 Sir Henry Cambell, 3rd Bt. 1663 1699 Other real people Sir Thomas Cambell , iron monger, Lord Mayor of London 1609 1610 Iain Cambell fl. 1980s , British breaststroke swimmer, Great Britain at the 1984 Summer Olympics Fictional characters Cambell, family name in cartoon feature Mee Shee The Water Giant Cambell, character in epic poem The Faerie Queene , and example of allegory in Renaissance literature Randy Cambell, stuntman character in The Devil Dared Me To Cambell Chasen, character in TV series Significant Others 1998 Significant Others 1998 See also Campbell disambiguation disambig Category Surnames ... more details
Gloriana may refer to Gloriana, the protagonist in Edmund Spenser s epic poem The FaerieQueene One of Elizabeth I of England s sobriquets after Spenser s allegorical poem Gloriana , a 1953 opera by Benjamin Britten Lady Florence Dixie Politics and feminism Gloriana, or the Revolution of 1900 , an 1890 utopian novel by Lady Florence Dixie Lady Florence Dixie . Gloriana novel Gloriana novel , a 1976 novel by Michael Moorcock Gloriana band , a country music band Gloriana album Gloriana album , its self titled debut album Gloriana moth , a genus of moths of the Noctuidae family Gloriana ship Gloriana ship , a royal barge built for Queen Elizabeth II s Diamond Jubilee Glorianna, a fictional world in Quest for Glory Dab de Gloriana it Gloriana ja sv Gloriana ... more details
The Spenserian stanza is a fixed verse form invented by Edmund Spenser for his Epic poetry epic poem The Faerie Queene . Each stanza contains nine lines in total eight lines in iambic pentameter followed by a single Alexandrine line in iambic hexameter . The rhyme scheme of these lines is ababbcbcc. Example Stanza This example is the first stanza from Spenser s Faerie Queene . The formatting, wherein all lines but the first and last are indented, is the same as in printed editions of the Faerie Queene . blockquote Lo I the man, whose Muse whilome did maske, br       As time her taught, in lowly Shepheards weeds, br       Am now enforst a far unfitter taske, br       For trumpets sterne to chaunge mine Oaten reeds, br       And sing of Knights and Ladies gentle deeds br       Whose prayses hauing slept in silence long, br       Me, all too meane, the sacred Muse areeds br       To blazon broad emongst her learned throng br Fierce warres and faithfull loues shall moralize my song. blockquote Possible Influences Spenser s invention may have been influenced by the Italian form ottava rima , which consists of eight lines of iambic pentameter with the rhyme scheme abababcc. This form was used by Spenser s Italian role models Ludovico Ariosto and Torquato Tasso . Another possible influence is rhyme royal , a traditional medi val form used by Geoffrey Chaucer and others, which has seven lines of iambic pentameter that rhyme ababbcc. More likely, however, is the eight line ballad stanza with the rhyme scheme ababbcbc, which Chaucer used in his Monk s Tale. Spenser would have been familiar with this rhyme scheme and simply added a line to the stanza, forming ababbcbcc. ref A Spenser Handbook , by H.S.V. Jones. Published by Appleton Century Crofts, INC , New York 1958. Page 142. ref Use by Others Spenser s verse form fell into disuse in the period immediately following his death. However, it wa ... more details
unreferenced date September 2009 Betty Foy is a character appearing in William Wordsworth s poem The Idiot Boy and is the mother of the title character. In the poem, Betty is caring for a sick neighbor in desperation, she sends her mentally handicapped son Johnny on horseback to fetch a doctor from the nearby town. When he has not returned after several hours, she grows frantic and sets out to find him. Eventually, she discovers him near a waterfall, his pony feeding. She leads him home and on the way they are met by the sick neighbor, who has, as it were, worried herself back to wellness and found the strength to help look for the boy. Betty Foy is one of a number of female figures in the 1798 Lyrical Ballads she is, perhaps, a foil to the grieving and guilty mother of The Thorn. And, certainly, she is one of the figures in the volume who best exemplifies the romantic qualities of Wordsworth s first mature lyrics. Her simple and strong emotions, strong sense of duty and especially of responsibility to the people in her life, are clear instances of traditional country life as Wordsworth imagined it. The last name, Foy, may be a reference to faith this is an old romance name, as for example Edmund Spenser s pagan knight Sansfoy in The Faerie Queene . In popular culture Rivendell Bicycle Works has a bicycle model, Betty Foy, named for the mother in the poem. The bicycle is a mixte with a headbadge that feature s Betty Foy s portrait. Category Characters in poems Foy, Betty ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 image TheRover.JPG thumb First edition cover br publisher T. Fisher Unwin The Rover is the last complete novel by Joseph Conrad , written between 1921 and 1922. It was first published in 1923. Plot summary The story takes place in the south of France , against the backdrop of the French Revolution , Napoleon s rise to power, and the French English rivalry in the Mediterranean . Peyrol a master gunner in the French republican navy, pirate, and for nearly fifty years rover of the outer seas attempts to find refuge in an isolated farmhouse Escampobar on the Giens Peninsula near Hy res . The story is about Peyrol s attempt at withdrawal from an action and blood filled life his involvement with the pariahs of Escampobar the struggle for his identity and allegiance, which is resolved in his last voyage. Trivia Conrad placed on the title page an Epigraph literature epigraph taken from Edmund Spenser s The Faerie Queene Sleep after toyle, port after stormie seas, Ease after warre, death after life, does greatly please This also became Conrad s epitaph . Conrad DEFAULTSORT Rover, The Category 1923 novels Category Novels by Joseph Conrad Category Historical novels Category Novels set in France 1920s novel stub ... more details
Infobox Book name Saint George and the Dragon image Image CM st george.jpg 200px Saint George and the Dragon image caption author Margaret Hodges illustrator Trina Schart Hyman cover artist country American literature United States genre Picture book Children s picture book publisher Little, Brown release date 1984 in literature 1984 media type pages isbn 978 0316367899 dewey 398.2 19 congress PZ8.1.H69 Sai 1984 oclc 10046624 Saint George and the Dragon is a book written by Margaret Hodges and illustrated by Trina Schart Hyman . Released by Little, Brown , it was the recipient of the Caldecott Medal for illustration in 1985. ref name ALA American Library Association http www.ala.org ala mgrps divs alsc awardsgrants bookmedia caldecottmedal caldecottwinners caldecottmedal.cfm Caldecott Medal Winners, 1938 Present . URL accessed 27 May 2009. ref The text is adapted from Edmund Spenser s epic poem The Faerie Queene . References div class references small references div start box s ach aw succession box title Caldecott Medal Caldecott Medal recipient before The Glorious Flight Across the Channel with Louis Bleriot after The Polar Express years 1985 in literature 1985 end box child picture book stub Category Children s picture books Category Caldecott Medal winning works Category 1984 books Category Children s fiction books Category Little, Brown and Company books ... more details
A pan national epic is a lengthy work of poetry or prose that is widely taken to be representative of the pan national character of a large cultural grouping that exceeds the bounds of a single nation state or even a specific language or language group . Pan national epics can be subdivided into supranational epics, which are epics held dear to several national groups speaking more than one language, and language epics, which are more narrowly restricted to nations sharing the same language. A nation can have its own distinct national epic in addition to a supranational and or a language epic. Examples of pan national epics follow Supranational Epics Indic Civilization the Mahabharata and Ramayana Mesoamerican Civilization the Popol Vuh Sinic Civilization The Romance of the Three Kingdoms Western Civilization the Iliad and Odyssey of Homer and the Aeneid of Vergil Language Epics English language English Poetry Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained , Beowulf , The Canterbury Tales , The Faerie Queene Prose The Lord of the Rings , The King James Bible Persian language Persian the Shahnameh French language French Poetry the Chanson de Roland Prose Historia Francorum German language German the Nibelungenlied Portuguese language Portuguese The Lusiads Spanish language Spanish the Cantar de Mio Cid and Don Quixote Category Literature ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 The Black Knight is the title given to several characters in Western literature . In Arthurian legend he is a knight who tied his wife to a tree after hearing she had exchanged rings with Percival Perceval . Perceval defeated the black knight and explained that it was an innocent exchange. A black knight is also the son of Tom a Lincoln and Anglitora the daughter of Prester John in Richard Johnson 16th century Richard Johnson s Arthurian Romance heroic literature romance , Tom a Lincoln . Through Tom, he is thus a grandson of King Arthur , though his proper name is never given. He killed his mother after hearing from his father s ghost that she had murdered him. He later joined the Faerie Knight , his half brother, in adventures. A black knight is also mentioned as being killed by Gareth when he was traveling to rescue Lynette and Lyonesse Lyonesse . In the novel Ivanhoe , one of the characters is an unknown black knight who fights alongside Ivanhoe in a tournament and helps assault Front de Boeuf s castle. He is later revealed to be King Richard I . The Arthurian black knight has survived past its appearance in the medieval Arthurian romances. A giant knight, clad in black, named Orgoglio Pride appears in The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser , whom Prince Arthur kills after first severing his arms and legs. Consequently, this black knight is part of a genre trope lampooned by the scene with the Black Knight Monty Python black knight in Monty Python and the Holy Grail . In Conquests of Camelot the Black Knight of Glastonbury was a spirit that held Sir Gawain captive. See also List of Arthurian characters Arthurian Legend DEFAULTSORT Black Knight Arthurian Legend Category Arthurian characters Category Fictional knights fr Chevalier Noir cycle arthurien ... more details
Una and UNA may refer to In geography Una River disambiguation , numerous rivers Una District , in Himachal Pradesh, India Una, Himachal Pradesh , a town in India Una, Gujarat , a town in India Una, California , an unincorporated community in the United States Una, Mississippi , an unincorporated community in the United States Una, neighborhood of Spartanburg, South Carolina Una, Bahia , a town in Brazil In literature Una, a love novel by Momo Kapor 1981 Una, a character in The Faerie Queene Una, one codename of the DC Comics superheroine Luornu Durgo Una Stardust , a character in Stardust by Neil Gaiman In music Una Healy born 1981 , Irish singer The Saturdays UNA US band Una song Una song a song by Sponge Cola In biology Una genus , a genus of butterflies Una virus , an arbovirus widely distributed in South America In chemistry Unlocked Nucleic Acid UNA , a flexible nucleic acid analogue often used for modified siRNA also termed usiRNA. In other fields na, wife of Finnbheara , king of the fairies in Irish Mythology 160 Una , an asteroid named after the Faerie Queene character Una prefix , a purported SI prefix Una doll , a Japanese doll Saint Hunna Una One feminine form, masculine of wikt un un in the Spanish language UNA may refer to Universidad Nacional de Asunci n National University of Asunci n , Paraguay s oldest and biggest university United Nations Association United Nurses Association North American Union Union of North America Ukrainian People s Army , the military of a short lived Ukrainian Republic, often called UNA Ukrainian National Army , a formation in the Wehrmacht Ukrainian National Association University Neighbourhood Association University of North Alabama University of the Netherlands Antilles Untergruppe Nachrichtendienst und Abwehr Unique name assumption U.N.A., a techno dance project 1992 single Emotion and 1993 single Can U Hear Me? UNA software UNA , a real time collaborative development environment for software engineers UNA Military Int ... more details
Frank Howard 1805? 1866 was the son of Henry Howard artist Henry Howard , an artist. ref name dnb DNB Cite wstitle Howard, Frank ref Biography Howard was born in about 1805, the son of Henry Howard Royal Academy R.A. . He was born in Poland Street in London. He was trained in art by his father and as a student of the Royal Academy. He became an assistant of Thomas Lawrence Sir Thomas Lawrence and exhibited at the British Institution from 1824 to 1843 and at the Royal Academy in 1825, when he sent Othello and Desdemona and three portraits, and he continued to exhibit portraits and Shakespearean and poetical subjects until 1833. ref name dnb In 1827 he commenced the publication of a series of clever outline plates, entitled The Spirit of the Plays of Shakespeare, which was completed in 1833. ref http catalogue.nla.gov.au Record 1020140?lookfor cadell&offset 239&max 6608 The Spirit of the Plays of Shakespeare , Frank Howard, nla.gov.au ref After the death of Lawrence he exhibited again at the Academy in 1842. He sent The Adoration of the Magi , Suffer little Children to come unto Me, and The Rescue of Cymbeline. He contributed in the same year to the British Institution Spenser s Faerie Queene, containing Portraits of Queen Elizabeth and her Court. In 1843 he sent three cartoons to Westminster Hall in competition for the prizes offered in connection with the rebuilding of the Houses of Parliament , and for one, Una coming to seek the assistance of Gloriana, an allegory of the reformed religion seeking the aid of England, suggested by Spenser s Faerie Queene, he was awarded one of the extra prizes of 100 pounds. ref name dnb In 1847 he moved to Liverpool , where he earned a livelihood by painting and teaching drawing, lecturing on art and writing articles for a local newspaper. Howard died on 29 June 1866 in Liverpool. ref name dnb Works include The Sketcher s Manual, 1837 Colour as a Means of Art, 1838, The Science of Drawing, 1839 40 Imitative Art, 1840. References re ... more details
BLP sources date March 2011 David Lee Miller born 1951 is a noted scholar of English Renaissance Literature, currently Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of South Carolina ref cite news url http pqasb.pqarchiver.com latimes access 1419547601.html?dids 1419547601 1419547601&FMT ABS&FMTS ABS FT&type current&date Jan 27, 2008&author David L. Ulin Kristina Lindgren Nick Owchar&pub Los Angeles Times&desc JACKET COPY Building a Spenser collection for the ages&pqatl google title JACKET COPY Building a Spenser collection for the ages quote along with colleagues Patrick Cheney at Pennsylvania State University and David Lee Miller at the University of South Carolina. last Ulin first David L. coauthors Kristina Lindgren Nick Owchar date 27 January 2008 work Los Angeles Times page F7 accessdate 8 March 2011 ref at Columbia. His works include The Poem s Two Bodies The Poetics of the 1590 Faerie Queen , ref name Quitslund2001 cite book last Quitslund first Jon A. title Spenser s supreme fiction Platonic natural philosophy and The faerie queene url http books.google.com books?id E v396a9kpcC&pg PA71 accessdate 8 March 2011 date 2001 12 29 publisher University of Toronto Press isbn 9780802035059 pages 71 ref Princeton UP, 1988 Dreams of the Burning Child Sacrificial Sons and the Father s Witness Cornell UP, 2003 three edited books and about two dozen refereed articles that have appeared in scholarly journals such as Modern Language Quarterly , English Literary History , and Publications of the Modern Language Association . He is one of four general editors of The Collected Works of Edmund Spenser , a new scholarly edition under contract to Oxford University Press . Miller s scholarly work has been especially devoted to the canon of Edmund Spenser , a contemporary of Shakespeare s whose Faerie Queene is considered one of the two or three greatest epic poems in the language. Spenser was the subject of The Poem s Two Bodies in 1988, and Mil ... more details