logo

Amoretti: Sonnet XXXV

Edmund Spenser

Amoretti XXXV: "My hungry eyes, through greedy covetize"

Edmund Spenser

Amoretti: Sonnet XXXV Symbols & Motifs

Eyes

Eyes, in medieval and renaissance literature, were deeply connected to love. The act of seeing, and being seen, was considered extremely powerful. For instance, in the Arthurian legends by Chretien de Troyes, Lancelot regains strength in a sword fight by turning to look upon Gwenevere, who is high above him in a tower. Spenser’s friend Philip Sidney wrote a prose piece called Arcadia, which features the character Pyrocles falling in love with Philoclea after simply viewing a painting of her. Sonnet XXXV is inspired by how these works symbolically connect eyes to beauty and love.

The word “eyes” is repeated three times in Spenser’s poem: twice to refer to the speaker’s eyes (Lines 1 and 9), and once to refer to Narcissus’s eyes (Line 8). Most of the repeated pronouns in the poem—they/their—also refer to the speaker’s eyes. This makes the eyes the central subject of the poem. Symbolically, the eyes illustrate the speaker’s feelings of obsessive love, and to establish that his love was born from “sight” (Line 10).

Sustenance

Sustenance—food or the lack thereof—is a prominent motif in this poem. Food symbolizes seeing the beloved, while hunger symbolizes the desire to look at the beloved.

blurred text

Unlock this
Study Guide!

Join SuperSummary to gain instant access to all 17 pages of this Study Guide and thousands of other learning resources.
Get Started
blurred text