We have changed our privacy policy. In addition, we use cookies on our website for various purposes. By continuing on our website, you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn about our practices by reading our privacy policy.

The Faerie Queene Justice and Judgment Quotes

How we cite our quotes: Book, canto, stanza

Quote #7

For during Saturnes ancient raigne it's sayd,/ That all the world with goodnesse did abound… Iustice sate high ador'd with solemne feasts/ And to all people did diuide her dred beheasts./ Most sacred vertue she of all the rest. (V.proem.9-10)

Telling a familiar tale of "everything-was-better-back-in-the-day," our narrator describes a golden age primarily defined by the presence of true justice that is truly respected.

Quote #8

But if ye please, that I your cause decide,/ Perhaps I may all further quarrell end,/ So ye will sweare my iudgement to abide./ Thereto they both did franckly condescend/ And to his doome with listfull eares did both attend. (V.i.25)

In one of Arthegall's first interventions in a quarrel between two squires in Book V, Arthegall explicitly offers himself as a judge and a bringer of justice.

Quote #9

[Mercilla] was about affaires of common wele,/ Dealing of Iustice with indifferent grace,/ And hearing pleas of people meane and base. (V.ix.36)

In this snapshot of Mercilla's court, right before the harrowing trial of Duessa, we see how a queen has to be the ultimate dispenser of justice, assisting even those from lower classes who are "meane and base." Hey, that's a mean (and base) thing to say.