A Biography of Edmund Spenser by John W. Hales
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page 16 of 106 (15%)
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_Muiopotmos_; to another, 'the right honorable the
Ladie Strange,' his _Teares of the Muses_. In the latter dedication he speaks of 'your particular bounties, and also some private bands of affinitie, which it hath pleased your Ladiship to acknowledge.' It was for this lady Strange, who became subsequently the wife of Sir Thomas Egerton, that one who came after Spenser--Milton--wrote the _Arcades_. Of these three kinswomen, under the names of Phyllis, Charillis, and sweet Amaryllis, Spenser speaks once more in his _Colin Clouts Come Home Again_; he speaks of them as The honour of the noble familie Of which I meanest boast myself to be. For the particular branch of the Spencer or Spenser family--one branch wrote the name with _s_, another with _c_--to which the poet belonged, it has been well suggested that it was that settled in East Lancashire in the neighbourhood of Pendle Forest. It is known on the authority of his friend Kirke, whom we shall mention again presently, that Spenser retired to the North after leaving Cambridge; traces of a Northern dialect appear in the _Shepheardes Calendar_; the Christian name Edmund is shown by the parish registers to have been a favourite with one part of the Lancashire branch--with that located near Filley Close, three miles north of Hurstwood, near Burnley. Spenser then was born in London, probably in East Smithfield, about a year before those hideous Marian |
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