Edmund Spenser, Selected Letters and Other Papers provides the first published text of the diplomatic and personal papers written, copied, and handled by Spenser during his years of secretarial service and colonial planting in Ireland, 1580-1589. These manuscript letters and papers represent a rich resource for the study of Spenser's poetry and prose - particularly his allegorical epic The Faerie Queene (1590, 1596) and his study of Irish
culture and government, A view of the present state of Ireland (1596) - giving unparalleled insight into the day-to-day administration of the New English government in Ireland, in both Dublin and Munster, during a time of
constant war, diplomacy, social engineering, espionage, and plantation. In a generous introduction, Burlinson and Zurcher situate Spenser's Irish secretarial experience in its political and military contexts, survey the conditions and constraints of early modern secretaryship, and draw out the importance of the letters to the studies of Spenser's verse and prose. The selection (constituting about half of Spenser's known surviving papers) is fully annotated throughout with both textual and
interpretative notes, which explain the dense and complex historical reference of the documents, and point readers toward further reading in both manuscript and printed sources. The volume also includes
illustrations from several of Spenser's manuscripts, as well as an extensive set of appendices including biographical essays on Spenser's associates, a chronology, maps, and other materials.
Edmund Spenser, Selected Letters and Other Papers provides the first published text of the diplomatic and personal papers written, copied, and handled by Spenser during his years of secretarial service and colonial planting in Ireland, 1580-1589. These manuscript letters and papers represent a rich resource for the study of Spenser's poetry and prose - particularly his allegorical epic The Faerie Queene (1590, 1596) and his study of Irish
culture and government, A view of the present state of Ireland (1596) - giving unparalleled insight into the day-to-day administration of the New English government in Ireland, in both Dublin and Munster, during a time of
constant war, diplomacy, social engineering, espionage, and plantation. In a generous introduction, Burlinson and Zurcher situate Spenser's Irish secretarial experience in its political and military contexts, survey the conditions and constraints of early modern secretaryship, and draw out the importance of the letters to the studies of Spenser's verse and prose. The selection (constituting about half of Spenser's known surviving papers) is fully annotated throughout with both textual and
interpretative notes, which explain the dense and complex historical reference of the documents, and point readers toward further reading in both manuscript and printed sources. The volume also includes
illustrations from several of Spenser's manuscripts, as well as an extensive set of appendices including biographical essays on Spenser's associates, a chronology, maps, and other materials.
List of plates
List of abbreviations
Introduction
Note on the texts
Letters and Papers
Appendix 1: Spenser and Ireland: A Summary Chronology
Appndix 2: Spenser's Ireland: Short Biographies
Appendix 3: Grey's Walsingham Cipher
Appendix 4: Maps of Ireland
Appendix 5: Glossary of Irish and Unusual Terms
Andrew Zurcher is a Fellow and Newton Trust Lecturer in English at
Queens' College, Cambridge. He is the author of Spenser's Legal
Language: Law and Poetry in Early Modern England (Boydell and
Brewer, 2007), and is an editor of the forthcoming Oxford
University Press Collected Works of Edmund Spenser. Christopher
Burlinson is a Fellow and College Lecturer in English at Jesus
College, Cambridge. He previously held a Research Fellowship at
Emmanuel
College, Cambridge.
[an] immaculate edition of the letters ... This volume will be
required reading not only for Spenser scholars but for anyone
interested in early modern Ireland and the politics of Elizabethan
England.
*S. Brigden, English Historical Review*
This is an exemplary work of scholarship
*David Coleman, Cahiers Elisabethains*
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