[English Literature: Modern by G. H. Mair]@TWC D-Link bookEnglish Literature: Modern CHAPTER V 23/36
Spenser, though his predecessors were counted barbaric and his followers tortured and obscure, never fell out of admiration; indeed in every age of English poetry after him the greatest poet in it is always to be found copying him or expressing their love for him--Milton declaring to Dryden that Spenser was his "original," Pope reading and praising him, Keats writing his earliest work in close imitation.
His characteristic style and stanza were recognised by the classic school as a distinct "kind" of poetry which might be used where the theme fitted instead of the heroic manner, and Spenserian imitations abound.
Sometimes they are serious; sometimes, like Shenstone's _Schoolmistress_, they are mocking and another illustration of the dangerous ease with which a conscious and sustained effort to write in a fixed and acquired style runs to seed in burlesque. Milton's fame never passed through the period of obscurity that sometimes has been imagined for him.
He had the discerning admiration of Dryden and others before his death.
But to Addison belongs the credit of introducing him to the writers of this time; his papers in the _Spectator_ on _Paradise Lost_, with their eulogy of its author's sublimity, spurred the interest of the poets among his readers.
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