A Biography of Edmund Spenser by John W. Hales
page 84 of 106 (79%)
page 84 of 106 (79%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
That same gentle spirit, from whose pen
Large streames of honnie and sweete nectar flowe, produces nothing, sits idle-handed and silent, rather than pander to the grosser tastes of the day. But this view, attractive as it is, can perhaps hardly be maintained. Though the _Teares of the Muses_ was not published, as we have seen, till 1591, it was probably written some years earlier, and so before the star of Shakspere had arisen. Possibly by Willy is meant Sir Philip Sidney, a favourite haunt of whose was his sister's house at Wilton on the river Wiley or Willey, and who had exhibited some comic power in his masque, _The Lady of May_, acted before the Queen in 1578. Some scholars, however, take 'Willy' to denote John Lily. Thus the passage at present remains dark. If written in 1590, it certainly cannot mean Sidney, who had been dead some years; just possibly, but not probably, it might in that case mean Shakspere. Of the remaining works published in his _Complaints_, the only other one of recent composition is _Muiopotmos_, which, as Prof. Craik suggests, would seem to be an allegorical narrative of some matter recently transpired. It is dated 1590, but nothing is known of any earlier edition than that which appears in the _Complaints_. Of the other pieces by far the most interesting is _Prosopopoia, or Mother Hubbards Tale_, not only because it is in it, as has been said, Spenser most carefully, though far from successfully, imitates his great master Chaucer, but for its intrinsic merit-- |
|