The greater sin, the greater punishment.

All those great battles which thou boasts to win,

Through strife, and bloodshed, and avengement,

Now praysed, hereafter deare thou shalt repent—

For life must life, and blood must blood repay.

Is not enough thy evill life forespent?

For he that once hath missèd the right way,

The further he doth goe, the further he doth stray.'"

The language of Spenser must not be held to be the language of the time; he purposely used an antiquated diction to give a quaint and piquant tone to his romance. A modern critic has denied that the language is thus treated by the poet; but it must be allowed that Sir Philip Sidney, living at the moment, was a competent judge of this fact, and in his "Defence of Poesie" he complains of this very circumstance in the "Faerie Queene."