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</ref> In the poem, Colin Clouts gives a description of the London visit; the poem is Spenser's most [[autobiographical]] and identifies a number of anonymous poets, the real life identities of whom have been the grist of speculation over time.<ref>
</ref> In the poem, Colin Clout gives a description of the London visit; the poem is Spenser's most [[autobiographical]] and identifies a number of anonymous poets, the real life identities of whom have been the grist of speculation over time.<ref>
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|url=http://wiz2.cath.vt.edu/spenser/TextRecord.php?action=GET&textsid=32830

Revision as of 15:34, 7 November 2013

Colin Clouts Come Home Againe (also known as Colin Clouts Come Home Again) is a pastoral poem by the English poet Edmund Spenser and published in 1595. It has been the focus of little critical attention in comparison with the poet's other works such as The Faerie Queene, yet it has been called the "greatest pastoral eclogue in the English language".[1] In a tradition going back to Petrarch, the pastoral eclogue contains a dialogue between shepherds with a narrative or song as an inset, and which also can conceal allegories of a political or ecclesiastical nature.[1]

Colin Clouts Come Home Againe is an allegorical pastoral based on the subject of Spenser's visit to London in 1591 and is written as a lightly veiled account of the trip. He wrote it after his return home to Ireland later that year. He dedicated the poem to Sir Walter Ralegh in partial payment for the "infinite debt" Spenser felt he owed him.[2] (Sir Walter Ralegh had visited him prior to his London trip, convincing him to go.) Spenser also sent Ralegh several versions of the poem between 1591 and 1595 when the poem was published.[2] In the poem, Colin Clout gives a description of the London visit; the poem is Spenser's most autobiographical and identifies a number of anonymous poets, the real life identities of whom have been the grist of speculation over time.[3]

Although Colin Clouts Come Home Againe is a pure pastoral poem, the poet, through the use of "inset within inset narrations, is able to mock the limitations of the pastoral mode through poking fun at the use of ordinary words. While he intersperses "grim realities" into the pastoral text, he does so in a georgic (didactic) tone, achieving a rustic effect that is more realistic than the strictly pastoral mode; and then the poem rises to "an exalted vision of cosmic love" in a way that gives the poem a cultivated complexity that was unique to English literature at that time and which became a model for many later poets.[1]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Fowler, Alastair (1991). A History of English Literature (2nd ed.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 58–60. ISBN 0-674-39664-2.
  2. ^ a b Burchmore, David W. "The Image of the Centre in Colin Clouts Come Home Againe -- Burchmore XXVIII (112): 393 -- The Review of English Studies". Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2009-12-13.
  3. ^ Spencer, Ed. "Edmund Spenser: Colin Clouts Come Home Againe". wiz2.cath.vt.edu. Retrieved 2009-12-12. [dead link]