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Philip Sidney.
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Biography EssayGrandson of the duke of Northumberland and heir presumptive to the earls of Leicester and Warwick, Sir Philip Sidney was not himself a nobleman. Today he is closely associated in the po...
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The English poet, courtier, diplomat, and soldier Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586) realized more dramatically than any other figure of the English Renaissance the ideal of the perfect courtier and the un...
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The grandson of the Duke of Northumberland and heir presumptive to the earls of Leicester and Warwick, Sir Philip Sidney was not himself a nobleman. Today he is closely associated in the popular imagi...
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In the following review of John Drinkwater's edition of The Poems of Sir Philip Sidney, originally published in the Times Literary Supplement in 1910, Bailey contends that Sidney marks an impor...
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In the following essay, Sinfield asserts that viewing Astrophel as the elegant but naïve courtier is misleading, since sexual double entendres are an important feature of Sidney's verbal...
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In the following essay, Waller argues that the Sidney Psalter not only contains poetry that may be compared with that of the Metaphysical poets, but also is a reflection of important aspects in the li...
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In the following essay, Regan maintains that Astrophel sometimes assumes the role of the conventional “foolish poet” of earlier love lyrics in order to convince readers he is a true love...
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In the following essay, Turner discusses the “rooted moisture” mentioned in elegy 75 in the Old Arcadia, and says the concept, which is derived from the Greek philosopher Aristotle, desc...
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In the following essay, Litt asserts that Sidney uses imagery, syntax, diction, grammar, and metaphor to differentiate the characters and experience of the two shepherds in the Old Arcadia poem, ...
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In the following essay, Traister offers a close analysis of two sonnets, and concludes Sidney forces readers to reconsider experiences and approach the sonnets with the knowledge of their new implicat...
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In the following essay, Evans contends that the Revised Arcadia is Sidney's attempt to put his theory of poetry into practice, but that his aims often are at odds as his mimetic genius clashes ...
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In the following essay, originally published in Anniversary Papers by Colleagues and Pupils of George Lyman Kittredge in 1913, Greenlaw argues that by Elizabethan standards Arcadia is a heroic poem; S...
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In the following essay, Appelgate corrects Theodore Spencer's error in identifying the form of the poem “When to my deadlie pleasure.”
The pseudo-quantitative English verses which...
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In the following essay, Robertson presents an overview of Sidney's poetry in relation to his life and his intentions.
Nothing that happened later in his life meant so much to Fulke Greville as ...
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In the following excerpt, Montgomery examines “symmetry” in the poetry of The Lady of May, the Psalms, and the Arcadia, and says that they reflect a strong experimental spirit that is no...
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In the following essay, Orgel finds that Sidney's mixed-mode court masque about the contemplative life, The Lady of May, provides us with a “brief and excellent example of the way his mi...
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In the following essay, Kalstone examines the poetry of the Arcadia, and asserts that Sidney's work is more complex than the Arcadia of the Italian poet Sanazzaro.
Sidney's “galla...
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In the following essay, Hamilton seeks to show that the 108 sonnets in Astrophel and Stella may be read as a single, long poem on the theme “loving in truth.”
I
My purpose in this articl...
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In the following excerpt from an essay written in 1960, Muir discusses contemporary and modern opinions of the Arcadia and Sidney's purpose in writing and rewriting the work.
The Countess of Pe...
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In the following excerpt, McCoy examines the courtly politics of The Four Foster Children of Desire, an "entertainment" staged by Sidney for Queen Elizabeth.
Sir Philip Sidney was the so...
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In the following excerpt, Kinney discusses Sidney's political statements, both masked and explicit, and his bids for authority in Queen Elizabeth's court.
One of the few encounters betwe...
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In the following excerpt, Hager considers Sidney's choice of words in his famous letter to the Queen, and contends that the advice may not have met with her disapproval.
… Advice to the ...
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In the following excerpt, Minogue discusses what Sidney's Sonnets 9 and 83 reveal about the complex relationship between the poet and Queen Elizabeth.
When Sidney, in 1581, presented to his Que...
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In the following excerpt, Herman reconsiders the Apology for Poetry and its stance regarding poetry's superiority to history in the light of two of Sidney's letters.
… "Do ...
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In the following essay, Levy discusses why Sidney believed poetry superior to history as a teacher of morality.
Sometime around the end of the sixteenth century a change took place in the reasons men ...
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In the following excerpt, Lanham explores the complex, shifting, and sometimes ambiguous narration of the Old Arcadia.
An age that cherishes the memory of Henry James can hardly be expected to allow S...
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In the following excerpt, Hamilton discusses Sidney's noble background, frustrated political career, and legendary reputation.
'Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have...
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In the following excerpt, Roche contends that Sidney meant Astrophil to represent a negative example, someone who "must end in despair because he never learns from his experience."
Sidne...
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In the following excerpt, Norbrook discusses Sidney's pastoral writings, emphasizing that Sidney imbued them with his political thought.
Spenser dedicated The Shepheardes Calender to Sir Philip...
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In the following excerpt, Levao examines some of the difficulties and paradoxes in Sidney's An Apology for Poetry.
Any attempt to discuss Sidney's theory of poetic fictions proves to be ...
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In the following excerpt, Quilligan explores Sidney's ambitions, career, and concern with his image, in the context of the Elizabethan court.
… In pursuit of chivalric bravado, if not vi...
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