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Zhang Xian Qian, Ex-Olympic Swimmer
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A Study of the Imagery in Edmund Spensers The Fairie Queene, adviser H.
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Bori Gonbutoren, Reindeer Herder
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Sidelight: Probably the best-known allegory in English literature is Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene.
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Keith Tennant, Factory Worker
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Edmund Spenser , born 1552 to a journeyman cloth-maker in London.
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Billie Kirgan, Machinist
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Edmund Spenser referred to a devilish sprite called Pook in Epithalamium.
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Anita Ganesh, Poet
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Edmund Spenser (1552-1599) also wrote a sonnet sequence, Amoretti (1595), in an interlocking rhyme form now known as the Spenserian sonnet.
The beginning lines of one sonnet (106) indicate that he had read Edmund Spenser's poem The Faerie Queene or comparable romantic literature.
In Sonnet 21, de Vere bluntly states his poetic intent and his criticism of Edmund Spenser's verse.
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Paddy McGuinness, Newsagent
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Or that Edmund Spenser wrote his epic poem, The Faerie Queene, honouring England's Queen Elizabeth the First, in Kilcolman Castle in County Cork?
It is fiercely Protestant, echoing Edmund Spenser in lamenting the pusillanimity of successive English governors in compromising with the Irish and refusing to suppress Catholicism with the civil sword.
Adapted by Margaret Hodges from The Faerie Queen by Edmund Spenser.
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Khalid Binalshibh, Taxi Driver
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" in Edmund Spenser's T he Shepeardes Calendar (1579) October eclogue; 186-94); "Cast off these loose vailes and thy armour take.
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Mark Harris, Priest
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English pastorals were written in several forms including the eclogues of Edmund Spenser's The Shepherd's Calendar (1579) and Shakespeare's As You Like It (c.
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