- Shea and his lady love
Belphebe of
Faerie have
married and
settled happily into a
mundane earthly existence. But
after Belphebe disappears at a picnic...
-
Belphoebe (or
Belphebe, Belphœbe) is a
character in
Edmund Spenser's poem The
Faerie Queene (1590), a
representation of
Queen Elizabeth I (conceived of...
-
Eskimo Nell", and so he
repeats it,
despite the
presence of a
young woman,
Belphebe (Spencer's Belphoebe). The
Blatant Beast departs,
appalled at
being given...
- of
their travels,
other characters are
added to the main cast,
notably Belphebe and Florimel, who
become the
wives of Shea and Chalmers, respectively,...
- the aftermath, Shea and
Belphebe are
blasted back to the
mundane world by the
attack of a
surviving magician,
whereupon Belphebe finally accepts Shea's...
-
conspiracy to the
knights and ****ist in its overthrow. In the process,
Belphebe and
Florimel of
Faerie become respectively the
wives of Shea and Chalmers...
- of
their travels other characters are
added to the main cast,
including Belphebe and Florimel, who
become the
wives of Shea and Chalmers, and Pete Brodsky...
- the
Finnish mythological epic poem the Kalevala. When
Harold Shea's wife
Belphebe,
originally from the
world of Spenser's The
Faerie Queene, was accidentally...
- in
which he
agrees to
guide the world-hopping
Harold Shea and his wife
Belphebe on
their quest to
recover their kidnapped daughter Voglinda. As payment...
-
travel to
several such worlds,
joined in the
course of
their adventures by
Belphebe and
Florimel of Faerie, who
become the
wives of Shea and Chalmers, and...