<div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779109836" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1–2</span>
        arg.1-2 Spenser’s ‘house of Temperance’ as the dwelling-place of the soul finds
            precedents in Langland’s castle of Anima (<span class="commentaryI">Piers P</span> 9.48-52), Gower’s ‘Alme’ and
            her castle (<span class="commentaryI">Mirrour de L’omme</span>, 11281-92, 14713-24), and du Bartas <span class="commentaryI">Div Wks</span>
            1.6; in Paul’s definition of the body as ‘the temple of the holie Gost’ (1 Cor 6:19);
            and in Plato’s account of how the body was constructed to house the soul and the
            passions (<span class="commentaryI">Tim</span> 65-75). For a more extensive listing of precedents, see <span class="commentaryI">Var</span>
            2.285-89. Phineas Fletcher amplifies Spenser’s allegory of the body in <span class="commentaryI">The Purple
                Island</span> (1633); Helkiah Crooke uses the description of Alma’s castle to structure
            his anatomical textbook <span class="commentaryI">Microcosmographia</span> (1615), especially books II-VII
            (although Crooke, unlike Spenser, in books IV-V does include the ‘parts of
            generation’).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779232813" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">sober</span>: The word reappears at 1.4 (cf. i.7.7, ii.14.5).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779283561" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Alma</span>: Ital <span class="commentaryI">alma</span> soul; Heb <span class="commentaryI">Almah</span> maiden; L
                <span class="commentaryI">alma</span> kind, nourishing.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779314782" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">straunger</span>: Because they are new arrivals to the <span class="commentaryI">house of
                Temperance</span>.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779338912" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.1–1.4</span>
        1.1-4 Cf. 1 Cor 12:24, ‘God hathe tempered the bodie together’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779368930" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Of all Gods workes</span>: Cf. ‘all his workes with mercy doth
            embrace’ (viii.1.7).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779387768" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">adorne</span>: In the technical sense of ornament as betokening
            cosmos, <span class="commentaryI">Gods workes</span> decorate the macrocosm by mirroring its structure. (For
            ornament as ‘cosmic image’, see Fletcher 1964: 108-117.)
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779414142" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">gouernment</span>: Cf. ‘governaunce’ (i.29.8 and note). In the
            analogy between the body and the body politic, temperance corresponds to government; see
            48.9, where the counselors in the tripartite brain counsel Alma ‘how to governe well’,
            and 59.9, where Arthur reads about the reduction of Briton ‘to one mans
            governements’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779435788" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">indecent</span>: <span class="commentaryI">FE</span> corrects 1590 <span class="commentaryI">incedent</span>, which
            better fits the meter and might, as ‘incident’, imply an etymological pun on L <span class="commentaryI">in</span>
            + <span class="commentaryI">caedere</span> to fall. The metrical torque on ‘indecent’ suggests a comparable pun on
            ‘in descent’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779472629" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Distempred</span>:<span class="commentaryI"> </span>Having the bodily humors thrown out of
            balance.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779707208" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">his</span>: ‘His’ is both the neuter and the masculine form of the
            possessive pronoun in OE and ME. Spenser is writing on the threshold of the change from
            ‘his’ to ‘its’ (Shakespeare, for example, varies in his usage), so the pronoun does not
            decisively distinguish the natural gender of ‘mans body’ as masculine rather than
            epicene—especially since that body is ‘it’, not ‘he’, in lines 4, 5, and 7.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779731794" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">loose</span>: Carries a strong scriptural sense: ‘To destroy, ruin,
            bring to destruction or perdition’ (<span class="commentaryI">OED</span>). Hamilton 2001 quotes Elyot on the soul
            that ‘loseth hir dignitie, and becommith minister unto the sences’ (1946: 119-20).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779754536" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">this place</span>: ‘A particular part of or location in a book or
            document’ (<span class="commentaryI">OED</span>). The reference to ‘one and other’ is indefinite enough to imply
            that Alma’s castle may be contrasted with any number of incontinent bodies, including
            Maleger and the rascal route, the transmogrified lovers in the Bower of Bliss, and the
            many sunderings of the body politic in the chronicle materials of canto x.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779810310" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">2.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">yfere</span>: Cf. viii.56.7, ‘So goodly purpose they together fond’,
            and note the internal rhyme with ‘in fayre’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348779842386" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">2.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">with gentle court did bord</span>: Addressed in a courteous/courtly
            manner.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348780763685" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">2.7–2.8</span>
        2.7-8 The portrait on Guyon’s shield is mentioned previously at i.28.7-8, v.11.7-8, and
            viii.43.2-6.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348780868237" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">3.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">liuely -head</span>: the living original of ‘that Ladies head’, with a
            punning use of the suffix <span class="commentaryI">-head</span>, corresponding to modern ‘-ness’ (‘liveliness’)
            or ‘-hood’ (‘likelihood’); cf. ‘<span class="commentaryI">Maydenhed</span>’, 6.6.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348780910074" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">3.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">bounty</span>: Cf. 5.4-5.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348780951882" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">3.5–3.9</span>
        3.5-9 Through equivocation, the diction and phrasing here blur the line between spiritual
            qualities and effects of wealth and power, even as they draw the line more firmly
            between these and the visible beauty of ‘mortal hew’. As a result the explicit contrast
            between Gloriana (here and at 5.4-5) and Philotime at vii.44-50 is somewhat hedged.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781003026" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">4.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">retraitt</span>: Coined by Spenser, the word combines ‘portrait’ with
            ‘retreat’: the visible ‘semblaunt’ incised in the ‘substance’<span class="commentaryI"> </span>of the shield
            retreats from view as it passes over into ‘the beauty of her mind’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781094461" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">4.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">liege</span>: Cf. viii.51.7 and note, viii.55.5.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781117761" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">4.6–4.7</span>
        4.6-7 Cf. the language describing Elizabeth at I.pr.4.3-4, Una at I.xii.21.5-9, and the
            damsels bathing in Acrasia’s fountain at II.xii.65.1-2.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781198387" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">5.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">to die at her desire</span>: The movement away from the visible image
            in st. 3-4 is qualified by the erotic charge of this phrasing. See the story of Arthur’s
            dream at I.ix.13-16 and his response to the shield’s image at II.viii.43.1-6.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781274050" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">6.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">knights of Maydenhed</span>: Mentioned previously at I.vii.46.4 and
            II.ii.42.1-5. Faery counterpart to the English Order of the Garter, founded by King
            Edward III in the late 14th century.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781325163" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">6.9</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Arthogall</span>: Arthegall, the patron knight of Justice in Book 5.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781349467" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">6.9</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Sophy</span>: Gk σοφια <span class="commentaryI">sophia</span> wisdom. Hamilton 2001 notes that Drayton mentions a holy
            Welsh king bearing this name (1931-41: 41:4.482).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781377362" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">7.5–7.6</span>
        7.5-6 See i.33.6n and ‘Introduction’ 00 for the symbolic rather than realistic
            time-scheme of the narrative. The seven solar years mentioned in these lines correspond
            to the seven years that Alma’s castle has been under siege (12.8), but not to the ‘three
            years’ Praysdesire says Arthur has sought Gloriana (38.9). <span class="commentaryI">1596</span> revises these
            lines: ‘Seven times . . . Hath walkte’ at 7.5-6 becomes ‘Now hath . . . Walkt round’,
            reducing the number of solar years from seven to one, and ‘three years’ at 38.9 becomes
            ‘twelve moneths’. These revisions bring Arthur’s reckoning into alignment with Guyon’s:
            at the corresponding moment in Book I, Arthur tells Una and Redcrosse he has sought
            Gloriana for nine months (ix.15.9), and at ii.44.1-4 Guyon reports that his quest has
            been underway for three months. For ‘the Sunne with his lamp-burning light’, cf. Virgil,
                <span class="commentaryI">postera Phoebea lustrabat lampade terras </span>(‘The morrow’s dawn was lighting the
            earth with the lamp of Phoebus’; <span class="commentaryI">Aen</span> 4.6).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781406807" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">7.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">I haue sought the sight</span>: Responding to Guyon’s rhetorical
            question at 3.1-4.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781429939" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">8.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Fortune</span>: Iconographic details associated with <span class="commentaryI">Fortuna</span>
            appear in Spenser’s portrait of <span class="commentaryI">Occcasion</span> (see iv.4-5n).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781478014" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">8.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">cheuisaunce</span>: Cf. gloss by E.K. at SC <span class="commentaryI">May</span> 92: ‘sometime
            of Chaucer used for gaine; sometime of other for spoyle, or bootie, or enterprise, and
            sometime for chiefdome’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781529337" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">9.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">subdew</span>: Context suggests ‘achieve’; <span class="commentaryI">OED</span> cites only this
            example.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781557851" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">9.5–9.8</span>
        9.5-8 On the differing versions of this story see i.35.5-36.1, ii.42.6-43.9, and the note
            to each. 
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781633162" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">10.7</span>
        10.7 First mention of Guyon on horseback since the disappearance of his ‘loftie steed’ at
            ii.11.5-7.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781706963" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">10.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">loup</span>: An opening in the wall of a castle.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781744900" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">11.3–11.5</span>
        11.3-5 Cf. Timias’s challenge to Orgoglio at I.viii.3-5.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781801474" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">12.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Seuen yeares</span>: Cf. 7.5 and 22.7. Commentators have seen the
            number as alluding to various learned or proverbial sevens: deadly sins, ages of man,
            ages of the world, days of creation, number of known planets, or the esoteric numerology
            of the Roman philosopher Macrobius in his <span class="commentaryI">Commentary on the Dream of Scipio
            </span>(1.6).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781850960" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">13.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">villeins</span>: Details in the description of these ‘villeins’
            reflect Ariosto’s account of the <span class="commentaryI">strana torma</span> (‘fantastic throng’) that attacks
            Ruggiero on his way to the castle of Logistilla, <span class="commentaryI">OF</span> 6.60-67. They also resemble
            Spenser’s accounts in <span class="commentaryI">A Vewe</span> of the Irish and their warlike forbears: ‘a flyinge
            / Enymie hydinge him self in woodes and bogges’ (the Irish, at 3968-69); attacking with
            ‘atyrrible yell / and Hubbubbe’ (the Scythians and Parthians, at 2175-76); a ‘confused
            kynde of march in heapes’ (the Irish, at 3211); and ‘feirce rvnninge vpon theire /
            Enemies’ (the Irish, at 2313-14).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781885248" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">13.6–13.7</span>
        13.6-7 Echoing Virgil: <span class="commentaryI">Non iam certamine agresti, / stipitibus duris agitur sudibusve
                praeustis </span>( ‘Not now do they contend in rustic quarrel with heavy clubs or
            seared stakes’; <span class="commentaryI">Aen</span> 7.523-4).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348781915523" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">13.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">rusty</span>: <span class="commentaryI">OED</span> 4.a, ‘Lacking polish or refinement’ is
            relevant in context.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842220430" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">15.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">raskall routs</span>: Common term for a mob; Todd cites its use by
            Heywood in <span class="commentaryI">The First Part of King Edward IV</span> to characterize popular rebellions
            (1.2.29) 
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842288646" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">15.8–15.9</span>
        15.8-9 See Virgil’s description of Aeneas trying to combat shades in the
                underworld<span class="commentaryI"> </span>(<span class="commentaryI">Aen</span> 6.290-94).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842313453" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">16.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">the fennes of Allan</span>: a great bog in central Ireland; New
            Abbey, the County Kildare property Spenser leased in 1582, was located near its
            north-eastern border. The simile fuses personal experience with literary allusion:
            Spenser refers in <span class="commentaryI">A</span>
            <span class="commentaryI">Vewe</span> to the attacks of the Irish gnats, ‘whch in the Countrey doe more
            annoye the . . . rebels, whilst they kepe the woodes and doe more sharpelie wound them
            then all theire Enemies swords or speares, whch can seldome come nigh them’
            (2089-83); Homer compares the Greeks drawn up to attack the Trojan forces to ‘the tribes
            of swarming flies that buzz about the herdman’s farmstead in the season of spring’
                (<span class="commentaryI">Il</span> 2.469-73).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842408814" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">17.9</span>
        17.9 ‘Received them graciously, as was fitting’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842428686" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">18.1</span>
        St. 18-19 Spenser’s description of Alma borrows such details as her golden hair and
            garland of roses from medieval allegories both of courtly love (e.g. <span class="commentaryI">Rom Rose</span>)
            and of the soul (e.g.<span class="commentaryI"> Pearl</span>). As mistress of the body-castle, Alma corresponds to
            the ‘rational soul’ as defined by Burton: it ‘includes the powers, and performs the
            duties of the two other [the sensitive and vegetable souls], which are contained in it,
            and all three faculties make one <span class="commentaryI">soul</span>, which is inorganical of itself, although
            it be in all parts, and incorporeal, using their organs, and working by them’
                (<span class="commentaryI">Anatomy</span> 1.1.2.9).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842455888" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">18.9</span>
        18.9 As the soul, Alma may be wooed by many but is reserved as the bride of Christ.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842483041" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">19.1–19.2</span>
        19.1-2 Cf. <span class="commentaryI">Rev</span> 7:9, 13, where the multitude standing before the throne of God are
            ‘araied in long white robes’; Geneva gloss reads, ‘In signe of puritie’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842603513" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">21.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 21-32 The balance of the canto is given over to a description and tour of the human
            body, represented as a medieval castle.</p>
        <p class=""> St. 21 describes the material (flesh) from which the walls are built, st. 22 the
            mystical proportions of the architecture. St. 23 figures the mouth, into which Alma
            leads the knights (st. 26) as they are allegorically swallowed and digested, rising from
            the stomach through the breast to the brain. (‘Not where he eats,’ as Hamlet says of
            Polonius, ‘but where he is eaten’; cf. the recurrent image of feeding the eyes in canto
            vii.) Meanwhile st. 23-26 describe the lips, chin, beard, moustache, nose, tongue, and
            teeth. St. 27-28 describe the dining hall (throat), governed by Diet and Appetite,
            followed in st. 29-31 by the kitchen (stomach), cooled by ‘a great payre of
                bellowes’<span class="commentaryI"> </span>(30.4; the lungs). St. 32.6 mentions a ‘secret’ waste disposal
            system ‘that none might . . . espy’.</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842660235" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">21.4–21.6</span>
        21.4-6 Cf. the building of Babel, Gen 11:3: ‘So thei had brycke for stone, and slyme had
            they in steade of morter’. Also the creation of Adam, Gen. 2.7: ‘The Lord God also made
            the man of the dust of the grounde [Vulgate, <span class="commentaryI">de limo terrae</span>], and breathed in his
            face breath of life, and the man was a living soule’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842685547" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">21.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Ægyptian slime</span>: Cf. I.i.21, III.vi.8.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348842706021" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">21.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">king Nine</span>: Ninus, king of ancient Assyria, identified in T.
            Cooper <span class="commentaryI">Thes Ling</span> as founder of Ninevah; associated at I.v.48.1-4 with Nimrod, who
            is in turn linked with Babel at Gen 10:8-10.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843168979" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">22.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 22 Since the seventeenth century this has been the most commented-upon stanza in the
            poem. William Austin (1637) and Sir Kenelm Digby (1643) have long been identified as the
            earliest glossators in this tradition, but recent work on Ben Jonson’s marginalia
            establish Jonson’s copy as the almost certain source of Digby’s elaborate
                <span class="commentaryI">Observations on the 22. Stanza</span>. Jonson identifies the circle as the human
            soul and the triangle as the body, with the <span class="commentaryI">quadrate</span> fixed between them
            signifying the principal humors (blood, phlegm, yellow bile, black bile). He also
            identifies the numbers seven and nine with the ‘Planetes and the Angells which ar[e]
            distributed into a Hierarch[y] which governe the body’ (Riddell and Stewart 1995, 107,
            175-76.)</p>
        <p class=""> Specific verbal resemblances link this stanza to a discussion of the nature of the soul
            in Bryskett's <span class="commentaryI">A Discourse of Civill Life</span> (1606), a dialogue in which Spenser
            figures as a participant. Mills (1973) establishes the probability that the passage in
            Bryskett is an immediate source for this stanza, and demonstrates the explanatory power
            for understanding this language of the philosophical context toward which Bryskett
            points: the ‘mortalist controversy’ inspired by the dispute between Aquinas and the
            Muslim scholar Ibn Rushd (known in Europe as Averroes) over the relationship among the
            vegetative, sensitive, and rational souls and the <span class="commentaryI">mens</span>, or contemplative
            soul.</p>
        <p class=""> The tradition that assigns occult symbolism to numbers and geometrical forms derives
            from Plato’s <span class="commentaryI">Timaeus</span> and was elaborated in the early 5th century by
            Macrobius, who glosses seven, for example, as ‘the number by which man is conceived,
            developed in the womb, is born, lives and is sustained’ (<span class="commentaryI">The Dream of Scipio
            </span>I.vi.62-82; trans. Stahl 112). For further discussion of the intellectual traditions
            behind this stanza and of the critical tradition it has generated, see Fowler (1964),
            Mills (1973), Hamilton (2001: 238-39) and D. L. Miller (2006: 148-150).</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843198468" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">22.4–22.5</span>
        22.4-5 The gendering of the body as feminine and the soul as masculine is a commonplace
            of Western literature and philosophy, deeply imbedded in Christian and Platonic
            discourse. As the presence of Alma indicates, the soul is also just as traditionally
            represented as feminine.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843247756" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">22.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">goodly diapase</span>: &gt;Complete harmony, alluding to the
            mathematical basis of scales and intervals in music (the octave as the mean between
            seven and nine).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843273007" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">23.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">th’other</span>: The one behind, as opposed to ‘The one before’. Cf.
            st. 32; in keeping with the decorum of the Porter and his ‘larumbell’ at 25.7-8, the
            stanza describing the mouth maintains a dignified reticence concerning ‘th’other’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843298787" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">23.7–23.9</span>
        23.7-9 Cf. Ps 141:3, ‘set a watche, O Lord, before my mouth, and kepe the dore of my
            lippes’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843350551" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">from Ireland</span>: Todd 1805 reports that marble was quarried near
            Spenser’s residence at Kilcolman.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843378724" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.4–24.5</span>
        24.4-5 Alma’s beard remains an awkward detail for interpreters who justify the absence of
            genitals in the castle architecture by arguing that ‘as ‘the temple of the holie Gost’
            (1 Cor 6:19), the human body is epicene, containing only what both sexes have in common’
            (Hamilton 2001). Like the supposedly ‘impersonal’ use of the masculine pronoun, the
            ‘epicene’ body, deriving from the perfect sphere of Plato’s <span class="commentaryI">Timaeus</span>, privileges
            an implicitly masculine definition of ‘the human’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843447308" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Portcullis</span>: ‘A strong barrier in the form of a grating of
            wooden or iron bars, usually suspended by chains above the gateway of a fortress, a
            fortified town, etc., and able to secure the entrance quickly by being released to slide
            down vertical grooves in the sides of the gateway’ (<span class="commentaryI">OED</span>).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843526405" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">compacture strong</span>: The first use recorded by <span class="commentaryI">OED</span>.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843575561" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">25.5</span>
        25.5 Spenser’s official position as ‘secretary’ defined him as a keeper of secrets.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843599401" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">25.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">blazers of cryme</span>: Presumably those who utter slander, sedition
            or the like.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843648609" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">25.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">neuer out of time</span>: appropriate timing is integral to
            temperance; see II.iv.4-5n on the iconography of <span class="commentaryI">Occasion</span>.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843676200" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">25.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">at euening and at prime</span>: Respectively the sixth and first
            ‘canonical hours’ of the Western Church, and hence appropriate ‘timing’ for prayer.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843706833" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">26.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">porch</span>: Cf. Chaucer’s translation of Boethius, <span class="commentaryI">Cons Phil</span>
            5.metrum.4.1: ‘The porche (that is to seyn, a gate of the toun of Athenis there as
            philosophris hadden hir congregacioun to desputen)’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348843756252" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">26.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">warders</span>: Jonson cites Plutarch on the ‘Wall, or Parapet of
            teeth set in our mouth, to restraine the petulancy of our words’ (1925-52.8.573).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844093570" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">27.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Steward</span>: Spenser’s duties as a sizar, or scholarship student,
            at Cambridge would have included waiting at table, and his ancestral name (Fr <span class="commentaryI">De
                Spencier</span>; cf. <span class="commentaryI">Proth</span> 130-31n) is synonymous with <span class="commentaryI">Steward</span>; hence the
            pun in <span class="commentaryI">CV H.B.</span>, addressed to the Muses and referring to the poet as ‘this rare
            dispenser of your graces’ (line 3). This pun is echoed by Richard Carew’s reference to
            Spenser in 1598 as the ‘Muses despencier’ (Cummings 1971: 95). For Spenser’s own play
            with the etymology of his name see 29.1, xii.42.8, V.i.7.5, and notes.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844105918" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">28.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Marshall of the same</span>: Member of a noble household responsible
            for seating guests on formal occasions.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844144266" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">28.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">nicenesse</span>: Alma does not out of delicacy omit to show them the
            kitchen.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844168233" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">29.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">dispence</span>: See 27.8n.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844194258" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">29.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">raunges</span>: See vii.35.4 for the corresponding moment in the tour
            of Mammon’s cave, and cf. vii.5.3-4n with st. 21-32n above for the suggestion that as
            the knights are allegorically ‘digested’ in the castle, Guyon is correspondingly
            ‘purified’ in his tour of Mammon’s realm.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844207208" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">29.5–29.7</span>
        29.5-7 Galen of Pergamum, a second-century Greek medical writer recognized as
            authoritative in the Renaissance, characterizes digestion as similar to boiling in a
            passage that mentions the volcanic Mount <span class="commentaryI">Aetna</span>, also known as <span class="commentaryI">Mongiball</span>
                (<span class="commentaryI">Nat Fac</span> 3.7).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844266429" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">30.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">accoyld</span>: <span class="commentaryI">OED</span> cites only this instance.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844278289" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">31.1</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Concoction</span>: In Renaissance physiology, the first stage of digestion, from L <span class="commentaryI">con</span>
            together + <span class="commentaryI">cocquere</span> to boil.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844287991" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">31.3</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Digestion</span>: The second stage of digestion, from L <span class="commentaryI">digerere</span> to distribute.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844305865" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">31.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Achates</span>: Provisions, from Anglo-Norman and Middle French
                <span class="commentaryI">achat</span> purchase.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844319911" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">32.1</span>
        St. 32 Describing the third stage of digestion, elimination.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844365633" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">32.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">nought</span>: May represent ‘naught’ (as in ‘naughty’) or ‘nought’,
            from <span class="commentaryI">ne</span> not + <span class="commentaryI">aught</span> anything.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844377806" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">32.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">secret wayes</span>: Cf. 25.5, ‘Utterers of secrets he from thence
            debard’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844402913" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">32.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">close</span>: With a likely glance at ‘close-stool’, a toilet.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844414513" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">32.8</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Port Esquiline</span>: The gate in ancient Rome that led to the sewer and city dump.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844480117" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">33.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">their mindes did fill</span>: In contrast to the action of excreting
            at 32.9, the knights are allegorically feeding on the spectacle of human digestion. One
            of several places where Spenser plays on the <span class="commentaryI">mise en abyme</span> of a human body
            populated by allegorical homunculi who posses bodies of their own; see 33.8-9n, 38.4n,
            43.9n. For the corresponding moment in Mammon's cave, see vii.24.4.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844495512" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">33.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">so straunge a sight</span>: Emphasizing the miracle of that which is
            most familiar, since the ‘sight’ the knights behold is their own anatomy.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844514425" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">33.5</span>
        33.5 The knights turn ‘backe againe’, reversing their descent toward the body’s
            midsection, to ascend into the heart. Appropriately, this turn occurs in the fifth line
            of the stanza. For analogous moments of discreet turning-away, see 39.6, 44.2-3,
            44.6.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844531382" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">33.5–34.5</span>
        33.5-44.5 The function of coupling from which the knights turn aside in 33.5 is
            represented differently: ‘digested’ into the ‘goodly Parlour’ of the heart (33.6), where
            the allegory is likewise refined from the corporeal-architectural basis of its first
            phase to the comedy of manners that ensues as each knight encounters a female
            personification embodying the form of his desire, and experiences a resulting moment of
            painful self-consciousness (st. 39, 44). On the shifting of representational modes in
            this canto see Davis 1981: 124-25.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844558397" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">33.8–33.9</span>
        33.8-9 Alma’s <span class="commentaryI">royall arras</span> contrasts strikingly with the elaborate tapestries at
            the House of Busirane (III.xi.28-46) and the Castle Joyeous (III.i.34-38). The chiasmus
            in Spenser’s phrasing suggests a mirroring in which nothing is reflected back to
            nothing, and hence an undoing of figuration as such, located appropriately at the
            (literal) ‘heart’ of his allegorical figuration of the body. On this reading the
            tapestry is, paradoxically, a figure for the <span class="commentaryI">mise en abyme</span> of representation
            referred to above (33.3n). Alternatively, Mills suggests that the unwrought tapestry
            contains ‘the simplest of perceived sensory forms awaiting conceptualization’ (1970:
            569), reading <span class="commentaryI">but</span> as ‘except’ to suggest that the tapestry is not entirely
            empty.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844593455" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">34.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">amate</span>: The earliest instance of this sense cited by
            <span class="commentaryI">OED</span>.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844620394" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">34.8–34.9</span>
        34.8-9 At 18.2 we are told that Alma ‘had not yet felt <span class="commentaryI">Cupides</span> wanton rage’; for
            Cupid’s gesture in laying his bow aside, a recurrent motif in <span class="commentaryI">FQ</span>, see viii.6n.
            Cupid’s ‘fierce wars’ are detailed in Busyrane’s tapestries; see III.xi.29.5, ‘And eke
            all <span class="commentaryI">Cupids</span> warres they did repeat’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844633761" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">35.1</span>
        St. 35 The affections personified in this stanza divide between ‘some’<span class="commentaryI">—</span>the
            forward, or concupiscible passions (associated in canto ii with Perissa and in canto v
            with Cymochles)—and ‘other some’—the froward, or irascible passions (associated with
            Elissa and Pyrochles).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844680129" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">35.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">gnaw a rush</span>: Possibly related to ‘rush’ as a figure of speech
            for something unimportant, as in ‘not worth a rush’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844708357" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">36.5–36.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">chose . . . by chaunce</span>: See the similar coincidence of chance
            with choice when the knights select books to read at 59.5 and 60.1. Spenser’s
            characteristic play with chance and providence suspends the action of the poem between
            romance errancy and epic destiny, e.g. at I.ix.6-7 and III.iii.24.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844734565" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">37.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Poplar braunch</span>: Sacred to Hercules, hence an emblem of heroic
            labor; Servius reports in his commentary on Virgil’s <span class="commentaryI">Eclogues</span> that Hercules made
            himself a crown of poplar upon his return from Hades (<span class="commentaryI">Comm in Verg Buc </span>7.61). The
            story of his choosing virtue over pleasure, attributed to Socrates by Xenophon (who
            relates it in his <span class="commentaryI">Memorabilia</span>, 2.1.21-34), established Hercules as a popular
            Renaissance symbol of temperance.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844797967" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">38.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">aduise</span>: From L <span class="commentaryI">ad</span> to + <span class="commentaryI">visere</span> to look at
            carefully.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844810706" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">38.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Him ill beseemes</span>: mirroring the phrase ‘beseemes you ill’ at
            37.9.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844829975" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">38.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">three years</span>: 1596 ‘twelve moneths’; see 7.5n.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844845808" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">38.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">sought one</span>: Gloriana
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844963708" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">39.5</span>
        39.6 See 33.5, 44.2-3 for corresponding moments of turning-aside, which link the
            self-consciousness of the blushing knights to the <span class="commentaryI">pudor</span> (modesty, or
                <span class="commentaryI">Shamefastnes</span> [43.9]) of the allegory at the body’s midsection. See
            33.5-44.5n.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348844974114" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">39.8</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Praysdesire</span>: See vii.49.1n; Arthur’s anima contrasts with the match made in Hell that
            Mammon offers Guyon. On the importance of the pair shamefastness and desire of praise as
            ‘the most necessarye things to be observed by a maister in his disciples or scholers’,
            see Elyot 1580: 23.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845010297" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">40.7–40.9</span>
        40.7-9 Neither ‘the bird’ nor a source for the story of her sexual violation by Pan has
            been identified. Upton 1758 notes that Pan had by Echo a daughter named Jynx, who was
            turned into a bird, and suggests that it may be the cuckoo, which accompanies the figure
            of Jealousy in Chaucer (<span class="commentaryI">CT </span>Knight 1930). Others have suggested the owl, the
            nightingale, or the turtle-dove, identified by Valeriano as an emblem of
                <span class="commentaryI">Pudicitia</span> (<span class="commentaryI">Hieroglyphica</span> 1602: 223-24). Since the bird in question
            ‘shonneth vew’ out of shame, perhaps we are not meant to know its name; cf. 25.5.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845034165" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">41.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">commoned</span>: In ME, also to have sexual intercourse; cf. 42.4,
            43.3-4 and notes.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845051638" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">41.3–41.7</span>
        41.2-7 For the literary genealogy of this simile, see Homer, <span class="commentaryI">Il</span> 4.141; Claudian,
                <span class="commentaryI">R Pros</span> 1.271-4; Statius, <span class="commentaryI">Achill</span> 1.304-8; Ovid, <span class="commentaryI">Amor</span> 2.5.34-40,
                <span class="commentaryI">Met </span>330-32; and Ariosto, <span class="commentaryI">OF</span> 10.98-99.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845084145" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">41.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Castory</span>: If the damsel knows that castoreum is a greasy,
            strong-smelling, evil-tasting reddish-brown substance extracted from glands in loins of
            the beaver, it is no wonder that she blushes.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845102333" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">42.4</span>
        42.4 See 39.6n. The echoes of st. 32 (‘secret’, ‘close’) are extended in 43.1 (‘nought’)
            and 44.1 (‘privitee’). For ‘the secret of your heart’ as Biblical language, see e.g. Ps
            44:21, ‘Shal not God searche this out? for he knoweth the secrets of the heart’; Ps
            51:6, ‘Beholde, thou lovest trueth in the inwarde affections: therefore hast thou taught
            me wisdome in the secret of mine heart’; 1 Cor 14:25, ‘And so are the secrets of his
            heart made manifest’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845140393" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">42.8–42.9</span>
        42.8-9 Since revealing the source of her discomfort is exactly what will please the
            damsel least, Guyon's offer ‘To ease you of that ill’ has the opposite effect.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845163080" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">42.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">discure</span>: A ‘reduced form’ resulting from vocalization of the
                <span class="commentaryI">v</span>; cf. ‘courd’ at viii.9.8 and note. With a possible pun on ‘dis-cure’, since
            as the comedy of the scene makes clear, to ‘discover’ shamefastness only intensifies its
            discomfort. 
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845176005" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">43.3–43.4</span>
        43.3-4. Cf. 39.3-5. In the present situation, Alma’s choice of diction (‘that, which ye
            so much embrace’) seems likely to set off another furious round of blushing, especially
            as it follows the series of echoes mentioned in 42.4n.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845212088" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">43.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">modestee</span>: According to Thomas Wilson’s <span class="commentaryI">Art of Rhetoric</span>,
            ‘An honest shamefastness’ (76); shame or discomfiture in Lily, <span class="commentaryI">Mother Bombie</span>: ‘I
            can neither without danger smother the fire, nor without modestie disclose my furie’
            (3.1.5-6).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845225600" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">43.9</span>
        43.9 Another instance of chiasmus as the trope of mirroring; see 33.8-9n, 38.4n. For
                ‘<span class="commentaryI">Shamefastnes</span> it selfe’, see the pseudo-Chaucerian <span class="commentaryI">Court of
                Love</span>,<span class="commentaryI"> </span>‘Eke Shamefastenesse was there as I toke hede, / That blushed red,
            and darst not been aknowe / She lover was . . .’ (1198-1200).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845238947" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">44.1</span>
        44.1-2 Blushing by its nature is not able to be contained ‘in privitee’; this is why
            Guyon turns his face away.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845356173" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">44.4–44.5</span>
        44.4-5 Apparently the narrator follows Alma’s example in deciding not to notice the
            knights’ discomfiture, despite having just described it; see 39.6n.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845374955" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">44.5</span>
        44.5-58 At 44.6-9 Alma leads the knights up an alabaster stairway (the ten vertebrae of
            the neck) to view her castle’s circular <span class="commentaryI">Turret</span> (44.8, the head), and the allegory
            once again modulates, this time from the comedy of self-consciousness to an explicitly
            historical and typological mode, as references to Thebes and Troy (45.6-9) prepare for a
            comparison with ‘that heavenly towre, / That God hath built for his owne blessed bowre’
            (47.4-5). St. 47-58 describe the three principal chambers of the turret, occupied by
            ‘three honorable sages; (47.8): <span class="commentaryI">Phantastes</span> (st. 49-52) or the fantasy; an unnamed
            ‘man of ripe and perfect age’ (54.2) who exercises the faculty of judgment (st. 53-54);
            and the aged <span class="commentaryI">Eumnestes</span> with his boy <span class="commentaryI">Anamnestes</span>, representing memory and
            recollection (st. 55-58). In the chamber of Eumnestes the knights come upon the
            chronicles they will read in canto 10.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845390895" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">44.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">thence away them sought</span>: ‘Invited them to come away’, echoing
            33.5, ‘Thence backe againe faire <span class="commentaryI">Alma</span> led them right’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845403643" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">44.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Alablaster</span>: Early modern spelling of ‘alabaster’, a pure white
            translucent stone.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845447567" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">45.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">suruewd</span>: Contrasting with its etymological partner ‘oversee’
            at 44.3.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845461244" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">45.5–45.6</span>
        45.6-7 Cadmea, the acropolis at Thebes, built by Cadmus (<span class="commentaryI">Met</span> 3.1-130) and
            destroyed by Alexander the Great in 335 B.C.E.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845481158" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">45.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">richly guilt</span>: Cf. Virgil:<span class="commentaryI"> auratasque trabes, veterum decora
                alta parentum</span> (‘gilded rafters, the splendours of their fathers of old’;
                <span class="commentaryI">Aen</span> 2.448).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845497440" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">45.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">young Hector</span>: Astyanax, son of Hector, was cast over the
            battlements of Troy (<span class="commentaryI">Met</span> 13.415-17).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845550168" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">46.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">liuing fire</span>: Belphoebe’s eyes are described as ‘living lamps’
            that dart fire (II.iii.23.1-3); the eyes of the dragon in Eden are compared to flaming
            beacons (I.xi.15.1-4). In <span class="commentaryI">Am</span> Spenser apostrophizes the lady’s eyes as ‘full of
            the living fire / Kindled above unto the maker neere’ (8.1-2), and says they ‘kindle
            living fire within my brest’ (7.12). Contrast III.viii.7.1-2 on the witch’s construction
            of the False Florimell: ‘In stead of eyes two burning lampes she set / In silver
            sockets, shyning like the skyes’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845593679" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">47.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">that heauenly towre</span>: Cf. the vision shown to Redcrosse by
            Contemplation at I.x.55-57.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845611076" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">47.4–47.5</span>
        47.4-5 The description of the human head—framed by comparisons to heaven (see 45.2),
            between which are contained the negative similes (45.6-9, ‘Not that . . . Nor that’)
            referring to great edifices of pagan antiquity—marks another shift in the symbolic mode
            of the allegory, from the comedy of courtly manners that prevails in the parlor of the
            heart to a typological mode appropriate to the head as the seat of the immortal soul and
            of the intellectual faculties of foresight and memory.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845625191" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">47.6–47.9</span>
        47.6-9 Medical tradition descending from Galen identified four ventricles in the human
            brain, to which were assigned the faculties of fantasy or foresight, judgment, and
            memory, with fantasy occupying the first two. Chaucer neatly sums up this tradition in
                <span class="commentaryI">CT</span> when he lists the medical authorities studied by the doctor of physic:
            ‘Olde Ypocras, Haly and Galyen, / Serapion, Rasiz and Avycen’ (Gen Pro 431-32). E. D.
            Harvey 2003 offers a well-informed summary of the medieval medical and philosophical
            traditions that lie behind Spenser’s conception of the animating forces within the
            body.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845639946" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">48.1</span>
        St. 48 The negative similes in this stanza parallel those in st. 45.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845652759" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">48.1–48.2</span>
        48.1-2 The Delphic Oracle reportedly declared Socrates the wisest man alive (Plato,
                <span class="commentaryI">Apology</span> 21A).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845695521" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">48.4–48.7</span>
        48.4-7 Cf. Homer, ηδυεπης ανορουσε λιγυς Πυλιων αγορητης, / του και απο γλωσσης μελιτος
            γλυκιων ρεεν αυδη: / τω δ᾽ ηδη δυο μεν γενεαι μεροπων ανθρωπων / εφθιαθ᾽, οἵ οι προσθεν
            αμα τραφεν ηδ᾽ εγενοντο / εν Πυλῳ ηγαθεῃ, μετα δε τριτατοισιν ανασσεν (<span class="commentaryI">ēdnepēs
                anorouse ligys Pyli</span><span class="commentaryI">ō</span><span class="commentaryI">n agorētēs, / tou kai apo glōssēs melitos glykiōn
                rheen audm: / tō d’ ēdē dyo men geneai meropōn anthrōpōn / ephthiath’ , oϊ oi
                prosthen ama traphen md’ egenonto / en Pylō mgathem, meta de tritatoisin
            anassen</span>; ‘Nestor, sweet of speech, the clear-voiced orator of the men of Pylos . . .
            . Two generations of mortal men he had already seen pass away . . . and he was king
            among the third’; <span class="commentaryI">Il</span> I.248-52).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845739602" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">48.9</span>
        48.9 Cf. ‘government’ at 1.4 and note.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845752693" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">49.1–49.3</span>
        49.1-3 Identified in both medical and philosophical tradition as <span class="commentaryI">phantasia</span>
            (fantasy), <span class="commentaryI">cogitatio</span> (judgment), and <span class="commentaryI">memoria</span> (memory).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845766187" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">49.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">could one of these comprize</span>: ‘one of these three could
            comprehend and contain it’
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845817909" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">50.4–50.5</span>
        50.4-5 Cf. Sidney, <span class="commentaryI">Defense</span>, arguing that only poets can invent ‘forms such as
            never were in nature’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845836065" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">50.8–50.9</span>
        50.8-9 An unstructured series that may (by the reader’s <span class="commentaryI">cogitatio</span>) be analyzed
            into three groups of four—although <span class="commentaryI">Hippodames</span> remains a joker in this deck, since
            as a mythological creature it would be classed with the first three terms, but as an
            exotic natural creature, classed with the second four (see 50.8n).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845859090" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">50.8</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Hippodames</span>: Literally, horse-trainers; possibly an error for either ‘hippocampus’, a
            mythological sea-horse ‘having two fore-feet, and the body ending in a dolphin’s or
            fish’s tail, represented as drawing the car of Neptune and other sea-deities’
                (<span class="commentaryI">OED</span>), or ‘hippotame’, the 16th-c spelling of ‘hippopotamus’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845876562" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">51.1–51.5</span>
        51.1-5 See the similes at I.i.23, describing the attack of Errour’s monstrous brood upon
            the Redcrosse knight, and st. 16 above, describing the attack of Maleger’s troops upon
            Arthur and Guyon. To have ‘a bee in your bonnet’ is a proverbial expression equivalent
            to having a screw loose; cf. Nicholas Udall 1553, ‘Who so hath suche bees as your
            maister in hys head’ (<span class="commentaryI">Roister D.</span> [Arb.] 29).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845891354" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">51.6–51.9</span>
        51.6-9 See 50.8-9 for a parallel group of twelve.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845939370" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">52.2</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Phantastes</span>: Gk φανταστηζ <span class="commentaryI">phantastes</span> visionary or dreamer.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845953126" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">52.4–52.6</span>
        52.4-6 For these details as signs of melancholy humor, see Burton <span class="commentaryI">Anat</span> 1.3.1.1;
            ‘sharpe staring eyes’ suggest foresight.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845969542" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">52.8–52.9</span>
        52.8-9 For Saturn’s traditional association with melancholy, see Klibansky, Panofsky, and
            Saxl 1964. In astrology Saturn is the planet of baleful adversity (the ‘great Malefic’),
            ‘oblique’ when it stands at an adverse angle to one or more of the other natal planets.
            It is especially adverse when passing through the twelfth house of the zodiac (‘th’house
            of agonyes’).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348845983438" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">53.1</span>
        St. 53 Cf. Aristotle, <span class="commentaryI">Nic </span><span class="commentaryI">Eth</span> 6.5-8: ‘Practical wisdom [<span class="commentaryI">ϕρονησις</span>
            <span class="commentaryI">phronesis</span>] is a rational faculty exercised for the attainment of truth in things
            that are humanly good and bad . . . . In the popular mind prudence is more associated
            with the self and the individual—a usurpation of the title of prudence, which actually
            belongs to all forms and kinds, including those designated as domestic economy,
            constitution-building, the art of the lawgiver, and political science which again is
            subdivided into deliberative and judicial science’. Such wisdom differs from pure
            reason, which ‘apprehends the truth of definitions which cannot be proved by argument,
            while prudence involves knowledge of the ultimate particular thing’ (6.6, 182).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846017970" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">53.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">picturals</span>: <span class="commentaryI">OED </span>cites only this instance. Note that this
            noun governs the rest of the list, so that the chamber is described as containing not
            laws, judgments, and the like, but images of these things.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846055380" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">53.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">science</span>: From L <span class="commentaryI">scientia</span>.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846080650" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">54.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">ripe and perfect age</span>: See 27.8-9 and 27.8n. The verbal echo
            associates this unnamed figure with Diet (and hence with the poet) as the mind’s
            steward, governing its digestion of the materials taken in through the senses (‘who them
            did meditate’).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846149641" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">55.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">they declind</span>: Sloped downward, following the shape of the
            skull.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846162419" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">55.5–55.9</span>
        55.5-9 Cf. the description of Contemplation’s weak eyes and strong ‘spright’ at
            I.x.47.1-6
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846185108" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">55.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">scorse</span>: The only instance of the noun cited by <span class="commentaryI">OED</span>.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846204528" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">56.1–56.3</span>
        56.1-3 Another instance of this canto’s recurrent interest in the <span class="commentaryI">mise en abyme</span>
            (see 33.3 and 33.8-9 notes). An ‘infinite’ record of all things, made on the spot ‘as
            they did pas’, would be caught in an endless loop, deprived of any temporal or spatial
            perspective in which to order and contain events (cf. ‘withouten end’, 58.2; ‘endlesse
            exercise’, 59.2).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846218088" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">56.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">immortall scrine</span>: See the ‘everlasting scryne’ of the Muses at
            1.pr.2.3. In both instances the transferred epithet applies properly to the contents
            rather than to the container. A ‘scrine’ is a wooden chest in which records or valuables
            were kept; see Anderson (2008: 82) for the association of ‘scrine’ with shrine and hence
            with the body as a temple, as in Nicholas Udall’s translation from Erasmus: ‘The mynde
            or solle of manne is covered, and . . . housed or hidden within the tabernacle or skryne
            of the bodye . . . .’ (1542: 145v).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846233294" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">56.5–56.6</span>
        56.6-7 Contrast ‘immortall’ and ‘incorrupted’ with the description of <span class="commentaryI">Emnestes</span> and
            his dwelling as ‘decrepit’, ‘ruinous and old’ (55.6, 1).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846244796" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">56.8–56.9</span>
        56.8-9 The ‘warres’ mentioned in these lines are older than the Trojan war: King Ninus
            founded Ninevah (see 21.6n), Assaracus was an ancestor of Aeneas, and Inachus was a
            river god, founder of Argos and father of Io.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846260554" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">57.1–57.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">The yeares of Nestor . . . Mathusalem</span>: Nestor live three
            hundred years, according to T. Cooper 1565; Methushélah, according to Genesis 5:27,
            ‘nine hundred sixty and nine’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846275963" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">57.6–57.9</span>
        57.6-9 Unlike the first two chambers, where imagery predominates, this chamber contains
            written records.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846307187" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">58.8</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Anamnestes</span>: Gk αναμνησς <span class="commentaryI">anamnesis</span> remembrance.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846327318" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">58.9</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Eumnestes</span>: Gk ευμνηστος <span class="commentaryI">eumnestos</span> well-remembering.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846355196" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">59.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">auise</span>: From L <span class="commentaryI">videre</span> to see.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846405120" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">59.6</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">moniments</span>: From L <span class="commentaryI">monere</span> to remind
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846418519" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">59.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">gouernements</span>: Echoing ‘government’ at 1.4. The macrocosmic
            analogy between the temperate body and the well-governed body politic is realized when
            the chronicle history of British rule is found in <span class="commentaryI">Eumnestes</span>’ chamber, although
            this proves in canto x to be a history largely of misgovernance. In this sense the
                <span class="commentaryI">moniments</span> may be understood as admonitory.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk2_1348846431891" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">60.2</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Antiquitee</span>: Associated in Spenser with an ideal era, and hence contrasted to the warning
            function of <span class="commentaryI">moniments</span>.
    </div>