made grand, even glamorous, by their erotic suffering. Yeats (who edited an anthology of Spenser's poetry and wrote a fine essay to introduce it) certainly remembered the description of Leda and the Swan:
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| | O wondrous skill, and sweet wit of the man, That her in daffadillies sleeping made, From scorching heat her daintie limbes to shade: Whiles the proud Bird ruffing his fethers wyde, And brushing his faire brest, did her inuade. (III.xi.32)
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Here the god retains his power, but other scenes are compelling, even when the god is humiliated. A powerful description of Neptune and his sea chariot, riding the sparkling waves, his horses snorting the briny waters, leads not to the god exerting his power over nature, but rather suffering an all-too-human experience, whose own power is thereby intimated:
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| | The God himselfe did pensiue seeme and sad, And hong adowne his head, as he did dreame: For priuy loue his brest empierced had. (III.xi.41)
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Even dehumanizing metamorphoses retain their fascination and thus suggest the attractive powers of love. Neptune, in another scene, feeds on fodder as a steer, but then "like a winged horse he tooke his flight" and begets "faire Pegasus , that flitteth in the ayre" (III.xi.42). All these representations are grounded in imaginings of humiliation and dominance. At the climax of the Busyrane cantos, the tyrant Cupid, riding on a lion, undoes his own blindfold in order to view, with sadistic pleasure, the torment devised for Amoretopening her breast and displaying her heart, "quite through transfixed with a deadly dart" (III.xii.21). This torture is nothing less than the traditional emblem of being in love. This moment, one of those in which The Faerie Queene most deeply engages the problematics of its culture, reveals a fearsome possibility in being one of those whose hearts, as the poet says at the beginning of Britomart's adventures, are "buxom" and "prone'' to "imperious Love." This is to say that the "bitter smarts" of love are the signs and perils of being human, and they must be confronted and endured as Britomart does in undoing Busyrane's evil charm.
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