The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) eBook

Theodore Watts-Dunton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 363 pages of information about The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753).

The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) eBook

Theodore Watts-Dunton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 363 pages of information about The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753).

  Around his tomb did art and genius weep,
  Beauty, wit, piety, and bravery, were undissembled
  mourners.

He left behind him one child named Elizabeth, (married to the earl of Rutland) whom he had by Sir Francis Walsingham’s daughter, and who unfortunately died without issue to perpetuate the living virtues of her illustrious family.  She is said to have been excessively beautiful; that she married the earl of Rutland by authority, but that her affections were dedicated to the earl of Essex, and as Queen Elizabeth was in love with that nobleman, she became very jealous of this charming countess.  It has been commonly reported[6] that Sir Philip, some hours before his death, enjoyned a near friend to consign his works to the flames.  What promise his friend returned is uncertain, but if he broke his word to befriend the public, posterity has thank’d him, and every future age will with gratitude acknowledge the favour.

Of all his works his Arcadia is the most celebrated; it is dedicated to his sister the countess of Pembroke, who was a Lady of as fine a character, and as equally finished in every female accomplishment, as her brother in the manly.  She lived to a good old age, and died in 1621.  Ben Johnson has wrote an epitaph upon her, so inimitably excellent, that I cannot resist the temptation of inserting it here.  She was buried in the Cathedral Church of Salisbury, among the graves of the family of the Pembrokes.

Epitaph.

  Underneath this marble hearse,
  Lyes the subject of all verse,
  Sidney’s sister, Pembroke’s mother,
  Death e’re thou hast killed another,
  Learned and fair, and good as she,
  Time shall throw his dart at thee.

The Arcadia was printed first in 1613 in 4to; it has been translated into almost every language.  As the ancient AEgyptians presented secrets under their mystical hyeroglyphics, so that an easy figure was exhibited to the eye, and a higher notion couched under it to the judgment, so all the Arcadia is a continual grove of morality, shadowing moral and political truths under the plain and striking emblems of lovers, so that the reader may be deceived, but not hurt, and happily surprized to more knowledge than he expected.

Besides the celebrated Arcadia, Sir Philip wrote,

A dissuasive letter addressed to Queen Elizabeth; against her marriage with the duke of Anjou, printed in a book called Serinia Ceciliana, 4to. 1663.

Astrophel & Stella, written at the desire of Lady Rich, whom he perfectly loved, and is thought to be celebrated in the Arcadia by the name of Philoclea.

--------------- Ourania, a poem, 1606.

An Essay on Valour:  Some impute this to Sir Thomas Overbury.

Almanzor and Almanzaida, a novel printed in 1678, which is likewise disputed; and Wood says that he believes Sir Philip’s name was only prefixed to it by the bookseller, to secure a demand for it.

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The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.