only the next to last is an apparent exception. On its moral and allegorical side, Spenser's epic can seem quite removed from matters of royal authority and political control. What his great modern apologist, C. S. Lewis, called the poem's "allegorical cores" concern, in Books IIII, the experience of religious despair and recovery from it (I.ixx); the temptations to the temperate soul of idleness (II.vi), avarice (II.vii), and sensuality (II.xii); the nature of sexuality as a power of nature (III.vi) and as a cause of emotional enslavement (III.xixii). In the second installment of the poem (Books IVVI, published in 1596), the treatment is less allegoricalthat is, it less seeks to represent the fundamental character of the human soul or psyche and the relation of that soul or psyche to the fundamental character of the cosmos itself. (One should add, even in the midst of these necessary simplifications, that The Faerie Queene , as opposed to The Divine Comedy , does not give a single view of these matters. Rather, Books I, II, and III consciously play out three different "fundamental" views: the Christian account of the errant soul and its salvation, the classical view of reason maintaining the balance among psychological forces, and the partly Neoplatonic, partly Petrarchan, and partly Christian sense of eros as the force that drives human affairs.)
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In the last three books of the poem the dominant mode is romance, rather than allegory. In Book IV, which concerns the social virtue of friendship, there is sometimes a quite novelistic feeling, as characters multiply and are often rather mixed in their motives and behavior, less clearly identified than in Books IIII as "good" and "bad." Dwelling within their secular fictional worlds, these latter books come to engage more immediately the real world of their author and audience. Book VI, most explicitly in its famous pastoral episode (cantos ix and x), seems to recoil from the difficult actualities of the court and public affairs, as they emerge at the end of Book V. By the end of The Faerie Queene , the ideal of the courtierthat the cultivated individual is also the best public servantis deeply troubled. The poem's final installment, "Two Cantos of Mutabilitie" (a fragment of an apparent seventh book, published posthumously in 1609), takes place in a spot withdrawn from human action and concerns not the world of human affairs but the structure of the cosmos itself.
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The differing accounts of The Faerie Queene in the preceding paragraphs reflect Renaissance writers' double idea of the epicpolitical and nationalistic, on the one hand, and moral and allegorical, on the
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