‘“O pierlesse Poesye, where is then thy place?”’: Locating Patronage in Spenser’
“O pierlesse Poesye, where is then thy place?”: As Piers’s despairing question indicates, Spenser’s concern with patronage stretches beyond the customary “topoi” of his paratexts to inform the topography of the verse through which he seeks it. As he proceeds from genre to genre, the geographical dis...
Main Author: | McCabe, R |
---|---|
Format: | Journal article |
Published: |
University of Chicago Press
2018
|
Similar Items
-
Patronage, gentility, and “base degree”: Edmund Spenser and Lord Burghley
by: McCabe, R
Published: (2017) -
Spenser at Play
by: Moshenska, J
Published: (2019) -
Edmund Spenser and the spatiality of allegory
by: Cornish, A
Published: (2020) -
Elijah Fenton's copy of Spenser's works (1679)
by: Burrow, C
Published: (2022) -
Spenser's poetics of corporeality and its influence on Milton
by: Rao, N
Published: (2019)