Faërie Queene

Faërie Queene, the name of an allegorical poem by Edmund Spenser, in which 12 knights were, in twelve books, to represent as many virtues, described as issuing forth from the castle of Gloriana, queen of England, against certain impersonations of the vices and errors of the world. Such was the plan of the poem, but only six of the books were finished, and these contain the adventures of only six of the knights, representing severally Holiness, Temperance, Chastity, Friendship, Justice, and Courtesy.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Facial Angle * Faed, John
[wait for the fun]
Fabius, The American
Fable of the Bees
Fabliaux
Fabre, Jean
Fabre d'Eglantine
Fabricius, Caius
Fabricius
Fabroni, Angelo
Facciolati, Jacopo
Facial Angle
Faërie Queene
Faed, John
Faed, Thomas
Faenza
Fagel, Gaspar
Fagot vote
Fahrenheit, Gabriel Daniel
Faineant, Le Noir
Faineants
Fair City
Fair Maid of Kent