By Nicholas Canny
This is often the 1st finished research of plantations in eire in the course of the years 1580-1650. It examines the arguments complicated through successive political figures for a plantation coverage, and the responses that this coverage elicited from diverse segments of the inhabitants in Ireland.
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This is brought home immediately in Spenser’s description of the stripping of Duessa:44 To do her dye (quoth Una) were despight, And shame t’avenge so weake an enimy; But spoile her of her scarlot robe, and let her fly. So as she bad, that witch they disaraid, And robd of royall robes, and purple pall, And ornaments that richly were displaid; quotation, p. ; and Sidney, Defence, ; more generally Richard A. ), Spenser and Ireland: An Interdisciplinary Perspective (Cork, ), –, and McCabe, ‘Edmund Spenser, Poet of Exile’, Proceedings of the British Academy, (), –.
Canto x, stanza , p. ; Calendar, and . There are a few instances in Spenser’s writings where reference is made to bagpipes without these negative connotations but these are in his earlier poems and before he went to Ireland, see for example Calendar, . 81 FQ, book VI, canto xii, stanza , p. . 82 FQ, book VI, canto xii, stanza , p. . 1111 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1011 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 20111 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 30111 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 40111 1 2 3111 Spenser Sets the Agenda There is no suggestion here that the escape reflected adversely upon Calidore, and Spenser suggested rather that the power of calumny had become so great that it could not be83 mastered any more: Albe that long time after Calidore, The good Sir Pelleas him took in hand, And after him Sir Lamerack of yore, And all his brethern born in Britaine land; Yet none of them could ever bring him into band.
Spenser and Ireland: An Interdisciplinary Perspective (Cork, ), –, and McCabe, ‘Edmund Spenser, Poet of Exile’, Proceedings of the British Academy, (), –. 42 This was the position of C. S. Lewis, but his opinion, and the history of the interpretation of book V, are treated in Spenser Encyclopedia, . 43 FQ, proem to book I, and to the poem as a whole, stanza , p. . 44 McCabe, ‘Edmund Spenser, Poet of Exile’, ; FQ, book i, canto , stanzas –, p. ; on stripping in Irish revolt see below pp.