Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Edmund Spenser, Vol. 4 of 8: Daphnaida, an Elegy Upon the Death of the Noble and Vertuous Douglas Howard, Etc., 1591; Colin Clouts Come Home Again, 1595; Amoretti and Epithalamion, 1595; Fowre Hymnes, 1596; Prothalamion, or a Spousal Verse, Etc., 1596; Astrophel, Etc., And Sonnets
Spenser's greatness, and his permanent place in Poetry, are to be sought mainly in the Faerie seene, which is criticized elsewhere in this edition. But for the development and the varied resources of his genius, and for many of the new poetical forms by which he has in?uenced English literature from his age to our own, we must look to those other poems, which the editor has committed to my diffident and reluctant hands. In the separate Prefaces it is intended to note the growth of Spenser's genius, and the quality of each production, with such attention to chronology as their Often-conjectural dates of writing may allow. What I here wish to bring out, with all the clearness (imperfect as it must be in matter of this nature) that I can com mand, is the novelty of the models, whether in subject or in style, which he presented from I 580 onwards to Show how far he was a Maker, (to use the fine Elizabethan phrase, ) in the literature of the day, by comparison with those who wrote during the preceding half-century.
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