Brittains Ida or Venus and Anchises

Edmund Spenser (1552 - 1599) and Phineas Fletcher (1582 - 1650)

While hunting, the boy Anchises stumbles upon Venus's forest retreat and is so kindly entertained by the goddess that he becomes the proud father of Aeneas, the hero of Vergil's Aeneid. The poem is an epyllion like Marlowe's "Hero and Leander" and Shakespeare's "Venus and Adonis," a short erotic poem with a mythological subject. The style is Spenserian, the stanzas rhyming ababbccc.

When Brittain's Ida was published in 1628, the publisher ascribed it to Edmund Spenser. However, in 1926 Ethel Seaton discovered and published Fletcher's original manuscript, whose opening stanzas make clear that this is the work of Fletcher, who entitled it "Venus and Anchises." - Summary by T. A. Copeland

Genre(s): Culture & Heritage Fiction, Erotica, Humorous Fiction

Language: English

Section Chapter Reader Time
Play 01 Brittain's Ida Thomas A. Copeland
00:32:26