
Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene: A Prose Rendering, Volume I
A Text-Faithful Prose Rendering of the 1590s Epic Poem
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Narrateur(s):
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Simon Vance
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Auteur(s):
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Rebecca K. Reynolds
À propos de cet audio
Welcome to Edmund Spenser’s 1590s epic poem, The Faerie Queene. This richly illustrated, text-faithful, line-by-line prose rendering transports modern listeners into a vast narrative tapestry. Knights traverse diverse fantastical landscapes including the shadowy depths of an enchanted forest, a treacherous underwater lair, a mysterious subterranean kingdom, and the deadly Bower of Bliss.
Through these realms stride Spenser’s unforgettable knights—brave yet fallible, powerful yet vulnerable—as they confront ferocious monsters, cunning wizards, beguiling enchantresses, and even encounter young Prince Arthur, who wanders Faerie Land consumed by his passion for Gloriana, the elusive Faerie Queene.
Many have attempted to read Spenser’s original masterpiece only to retreat, daunted by language that was deliberately archaic even in Elizabethan times. Classical educator Rebecca K. Reynolds bridges this gap, crafting a prose adaptation that gradually introduces more of Spenser’s distinctive vocabulary and diction. By the final volume, listeners will find themselves prepared to engage directly with Spenser’s original text with confidence and delight.
For four hundred years, Spenser’s realm has captivated powerful creative minds, igniting literary movements and inspiring countless works. So, take a few first steps with us through the mist-shrouded edges of Faerie Land. As C.S. Lewis wisely observed: “The Faerie Queene never loses a reader it has once gained... Once you have become an inhabitant of its world, being tired of it is like being tired of London, or of life.”
VOLUME ONE:
BOOK ONE:
The Red Cross Knight embarks on what first seems a straightforward quest to slay a dragon, rescue a maiden, and save a kingdom. Yet beneath this familiar chivalric framework, Spenser weaves a profound spiritual allegory.
As our noble but naive hero confronts not only external terrors but also the labyrinth of his own flawed heart, he discovers a humbling truth: a hero must be rescued before he can save anyone.
BOOK TWO:
Sir Guyon navigates a world designed to test every facet of self-restraint. Refusing to present temperance as mere moderation, Spenser plunges his knight into the psychological complexities of human desire. As Guyon journeys toward Acrasia’s Bower of Bliss, he confronts increasingly seductive temptations, ultimately destroying the beautiful but corrupting bower. Through Guyon’s trials, Spenser explores the vigilance required to maintain virtue in the face of enticement.
Ce que les critiques en disent
“Reynolds’s new rendering of The Faerie Queene was made for people like me—for those of us who time and again have heard of Spenser’s great poem but were too intimidated to read it. We’re drawn to the feeling of adventure, mystery, danger, and beauty conjured merely by mention of the title, but fear that maybe we aren’t smart enough or wise enough or brave enough to enter in to a old tale so revered by so many.
Enter Rebecca Reynolds’s incredible mind and mastery of language, coupled with hospitality toward the reader; enter also Justin Gerard, a master artist whose gifts are perfectly suited to a vision like Spenser’s. Rather than turned away at the door to elfland, I found myself welcomed in to its wonders by Reynolds’s clear and careful handling of the original text—along with her generous footnotes and Gerard’s stunning illustrations—and was at once surrounded by knights and warhorses, dwarves and dragons, high beauties and heavy skies. This book does a great service not just to Edmund Spenser, but to those of us who will encounter this grand story for the first time.”
Andrew Peterson
Author of The Wingfeather Saga (Andrew Peterson)
Jonathan Rogers
PhD in 17th Century Literature
Author of the Wilderking Trilogy (Jonathan Rogers)