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Reading Focus II. SonnetsKEY IDEA Love can bring great joy—and great sorrow. Poets and songwriters probably lament the heartache of love as much as they extol its pleasures. Anyone who falls in love knows, or soon finds out, that the ride can be bumpy.
Before Reading: Meet Edmund Spenser (1552?–1599)
Move to IrelandIn 1576, Spenser earned a master’s degree from Pembroke College at Cambridge University. Three years later, he published his first important work of poetry, The Shepheardes Calender, which was immediately popular. It consisted of 12 pastoral poems, one for each month of the year. In 1580, Spenser became secretary to the lord deputy of Ireland, who was charged with defending English settlers from native Irish opposed to England’s colonization of Ireland. Spenser wrote the rest of his major poetry in Ireland, and that country’s landscape and people greatly influenced his writing. Spenser held various civil service posts during his years in Ireland. In 1589, he was granted a large estate surrounding Kilcolman Castle, which had been taken from an Irish rebel. Spenser’s friend Sir Walter Raleigh owned a neighboring estate. Second MarriageSpenser’s courtship of his second wife, Elizabeth Boyle, inspired him to write a sonnet sequence (a series of related sonnets) called Amoretti, which means “little love poems.” The details and emotions presented in the sonnets are thought to be partly autobiographical. Sonnet 30 and Sonnet 75 are part of this sonnet sequence. To celebrate his marriage to Boyle in 1594, Spenser wrote the lyric poem Epithalamion.
In honor of his great literary achievements, Spenser was buried near Geoffrey Chaucer—one of his favorite poets and a major influence—in what is now called the Poets’ Corner of Westminster Abbey. An inscription on Spenser’s monument calls him “the Prince of Poets in his time.” While Reading Date: 2016-03-03; view: 1153
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