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Spenser Expands His Text
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
Extract
- They bene ybrought into a comely bowre,
- And seru'd of all things that mote needfull bee
- Yet secretly their hoste did on them lowre,
- And welcomde more for feare, then charitce;
- But they dissembled, what they did not see,
- And welcomed themselves. Supper was dight;
- Then they Malbecco prayd of curtesy,
- That of his Lady they might have the sight,
- And company at meat, to do them more delight.
Any reader of Renaissance News will immediately identify this stanza as one of the thousands that make up The Faerie Queene; in fact, given the name Malbecco and the situation described, he cannot fail to spot it as occurring in the ninth canto of Book Three. In a sense, however, he will be in error. It is actually a spurious composite of two of Spenser's stanzas in that canto: the nineteenth, which supplies everything before the period in line 6, and the twenty-fifth, from which the remainder is taken.
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- Copyright © Renaissance Society of America 1963