Spenser, E. : The Faerie Queene (Abridged)
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This remarkable poem, dedicated to Queen Elizabeth I, was Spenser's finest achievement: the first epic poem in modern English, The Faerie Queene combines...
This remarkable poem, dedicated to Queen Elizabeth I, was Spenser's finest achievement: the first epic poem in modern English, The Faerie Queene combines dramatic narratives of chivalrous adventure with exquisite and picturesque episodes of pageantry. At the same time, Spenser is expounding a deeply-felt allegory of the eternal struggle between Truth and Error...
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The Faerie Queene - Dedication - 4:04
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The First Book: Canto I Verse I - The Red Cross Knight - 8:02
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Verse XIV – ‘But full of fire and greedy hardiment’ - 7:26
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Verse XXVIII – ‘Then mounted he upon his Steede againe’ - 10:47
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Verse XLVII – ‘Thus, well instructed, to their worke they haste;’ - 5:15
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Canto III Verse I - The Lady Fidessa - 6:38
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Verse XII – ‘But he, the knight whose semblaunt he did beare’ - 4:15
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Verse XX – ‘The Lady, when she saw her champion fall’ - 5:33
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Verse XXX – ‘Faire seemely pleasaunce each to other makes’ - 9:16
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Canto III Verse I – The Abduction of Una - 5:47
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Verse X – ‘Long she thus traveiled through deserts wyde’ - 8:24
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Verse XXVI – ‘Ere long he came where Una traveiled slow’ - 4:06
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Verse XXXIII - ‘They had not ridden far, when they might see…’ - 6:37
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Canto IX Verse XXXIII – The Cave of Despair - 5:41
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Verse XLII ‘Is not his deed, whetever thing is donne’ - 7:27
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Canto XI Verse I – The fight with the dragon and its sequel - 7:58
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Verse XV - ‘So dreadfully he towards him did pass’ - 9:22
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Verse XXXIII - ‘The morrow next gan earely to appear’ - 9:02
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Verse L – ‘When gentle Una saw the second call’ - 3:27
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Canto XII Verse II – ‘Scarsely had Phoebus in the glooming East’ - 6:10
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Verse XXI – ‘Then forth he called that his daughter fayre’ - 4:05
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The Second Book: Canto VII Verse XXI – The Cave of Mammon - 5:54
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Verse XXXI – ‘They forward passe; ne Guyon yet spoke word’ - 1:32
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Canto IX Verse XLVII – The Powers of the Mind - 6:16
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Canto XII Verse LXIX – The Bower of Bliss - 6:09
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Verse LXXIX – The young man, sleeping by her, seemed to be’ - 5:05
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The Third Book Canto VII Verse XXX – ‘The Garden of Adonis’ - 5:16
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Verse XXXIX – ‘Great enimy to it, and to all the rest’ - 5:23
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Canto XII Verse I – The Masque of Cupid - 5:05
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Verse X – ‘Next after him went Doubt, who was yclad’ - 4:59
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Verse XIX – ‘After all these there marcht a most faire Dame’ - 4:45
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The Fourth Book: Canto VI Verse I - Scudamour, Arthegall and Britomart - 6:17
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Verse XI – ‘But Arthegall, beholding his mischaunce’ - 6:58
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Verse XXIV – ‘Which when Scudamour, who now abrayd’ - 10:08
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The Fifth Book Canto II Verse XXX – Arthegall and the Giant - 7:49
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Verse XLIV – ‘Therewith the Giant much abashed sayd’ - 5:49
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The Seventh Book: Canto VII – The Masque of the Seasons and Months - 9:30
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Canto VIII – Nature’s reply to Mutability - 2:21