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Chapter Six ‘Excellent device and wondrous slight’: Muiopotmos and Complaints’ Poetics

from Part Two: The Major Complaints

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Summary

Such beauty, set beside

so brief a season,

suggests to our stunned reason

this bleak surmise:

the world was made to hold

no end or telos,

and if – as some would tell us –

there is a goal,

it's not ourselves.

No butterfly collector

can trap light or detect where

the darkness dwells.

Joseph Brodsky, ‘The Butterfly’

A poem about tapestries is necessarily ecphrastic. I begin with an ecphrasis – a mode which for Spenser invariably entails reflection on the nature of artifice.

At the climax of The Faerie Queene II, Guyon and the Palmer discover the enchantress Acrasia with her current lover. This voyeuristic moment enables Spenser to present her both as a delusive artist and as a work of art:

Vpon a bed of roses she was layd,

As faint through heat, or dight to pleasant sin,

And was arayd, or rather disarayd,

All in a vele of silke and siluer thin,

That hid no whit her alabaster skin,

But rather shewd more white, if more might bee:

More subtile web Arachne cannot spin,

Nor the fine nets, which oft we wouen see

Of scorched deaw, do not in th'aire more lightly flee.

Acrasia is an erotically provoking self-fashioner. Spenser focuses on her ‘vele’ as a key part of her sexual armoury, which as Bender notes ‘almost becomes a part of [her] body.’ In comparing the ‘vele’ with Arachne's ‘subtile web’, Spenser heightens the reader's sense of the danger underlying Acrasia's attractiveness; like the spider's web, her artifice is designed to entangle and destroy her prey. Yet the web – like the veil – remains ‘subtile’ – an artful construction, ambiguous because of its skilful manufacture. In evoking Arachne at the moment before Acrasia is herself caught in the Palmer's ‘subtile net’, Spenser signals the fundamental ambiguity of artifice. Acrasia's veil is an erotic enchantment which is being used perversely; the Palmer's ‘net’ shares the veil's subtlety, but has a corrective and restraining function:

that same net so cunningly was wound,

That neither guile, nor force might it distraine.

Dundas compares this net with Vulcan's; equally it is an immediate counterpoint to Arachne's web. For Spenser, Arachne embodies a basic tension within human art: it is skilful, yet also amoral.

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'The New Poet'
Novelty and Tradition in Spenser’s Complaints
, pp. 213 - 254
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 1999

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