Edmund Spenser's sonnet sequence, the Amoretti , was published in one volume along with his Epithalamion , a long poem celebrating his marriage to Elizabeth Boyle in 1595. There is no necessary connection between the largely conventional Petrarchan mistress praised in the sonnets for her sovereign beauty (3) and reproached for her cruel tyranny (10) and the bride of the marriage song. Nevertheless, the song's happy anticipation of wedded bliss and the consummation of the couple's marriage casts its glow over the earlier lyrics. Unlike most other sequences, Spenser's Amoretti describes a love that is not inevitably unrequited or guilt-ridden. Despite the note of "pining anguish" in the collection's final line, sonnets 72 and 78, among many others, happily settle for contemplative contentment. Lustful desires are firmly exorcised, and the speaker commands himself to "Onely behold her rare perfection, / And bless your fortunes fayre election" (sonnet 84).
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Maurice Evans notes the sharp contrast between Wyatt's and Spenser's treatment of Petrarch's vision of his beloved as a white doe: in Wyatt the hind flees from the hunter and proves too wild for any man, whereas in Spenser (sonnet 68 of Amoretti ) the gentle deer submits to the speaker's touch as he "with her owne goodwill hir fyrmely tyde," and in sonnet 78 Spenser pursues the hind not as a hunter but a young fawn. A reconciliation of opposites is anticipated in the conceit of the spider and bee (sonnet 71), and the lovers achieve a deeply gratifying reciprocity (sonnet 82). In Spenser's love lyrics conflict is muted, transcendence is attained, and affections are returned, at least at some points in the sequence. The relative harmony of Spenser's love poetry sets it apart from most contemporary lyrics.
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Spenser's ability to reconcile conflicts proves especially effective in his tributes to Queen Elizabeth. In sonnet 74 of Amoretti , Spenser compliments the three most important ladies in his lifeall named Elizabethhis mother, the queen, and his bride, "of all alive most worthy to be praysed." The poem is a delicate but precarious balancing act, gracefully harmonizing any conflict of emotional loyalties, even as it pays the highest compliment to his bride. Spenser, of course, wrote his great epic, The Faerie Queene , to honor Queen Elizabeth, making her the inspiration and end point for all its deeds of heroism, but even there, he preserves a separate space for his own, more personal attachments.
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Near the end of the poem's final adventure (VI.x.2528), the poet makes an appearance, speaking through his surrogate, Colin Clout,
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