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Sir Philip Sidney
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Sir Philip Sidney (1554–86) was an English poet and courtier who is now seen as one of the most influential English writers of the sixteenth century. Born into a politically active family, Sidney is best known for his works Astrophel and Stella, a story in sonnet form which popularised this literary genre in England, and Arcadia, a romance which was the first English vernacular work to be published on the continent. This volume, published in the first series of English Men of Letters in 1886 by literary scholar John Addington Symonds (1840–93), provides a concise biography of a fascinating character. Describing Sidney's childhood, European travels and time spent as a courtier, and his heroic death, this biography draws together previous scholarship on Sidney to provide a valuable account of his life and of contemporary English and continental influences on his work.
Title: Sir Philip Sidney
Description:
Sir Philip Sidney (1554–86) was an English poet and courtier who is now seen as one of the most influential English writers of the sixteenth century.
Born into a politically active family, Sidney is best known for his works Astrophel and Stella, a story in sonnet form which popularised this literary genre in England, and Arcadia, a romance which was the first English vernacular work to be published on the continent.
This volume, published in the first series of English Men of Letters in 1886 by literary scholar John Addington Symonds (1840–93), provides a concise biography of a fascinating character.
Describing Sidney's childhood, European travels and time spent as a courtier, and his heroic death, this biography draws together previous scholarship on Sidney to provide a valuable account of his life and of contemporary English and continental influences on his work.
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Transatlantic Lifelines: Anne Bradstreet’s “Elegie upon That Honorable and Renowned Knight, Sir Philip Sidney”
Transatlantic Lifelines: Anne Bradstreet’s “Elegie upon That Honorable and Renowned Knight, Sir Philip Sidney”
The legacy of Sir Philip Sidney, the distinguished Elizabethan courtier-poet, was the subject of numerous claims to memorialization. On 17 October 1586 Sidney died in battle at Arn...
Philip Sidney’s Stella: The Lady, the Countess, and the Queen
Philip Sidney’s Stella: The Lady, the Countess, and the Queen
In his poetic sequence, Astrophil and Stella (1591), Philip Sidney dramatizes his speaker’s romantic ambitions of climbing the Ladder of Love. While many academics interp...
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Sidney’s interest in visual representation—a central episteme throughout his writings—is attested by Nicholas Hilliard’s anecdote about Sidney’s fascination...
Sidney and Music
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This essay reviews a set of interlocking subjects concerning Philip Sidney and music. First, it assesses the practical question of what direct musical exper...
Sidney and Philosophy
Sidney and Philosophy
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In the Defence, Sidney satirises contemporary moral philosophy but shows great esteem for ancient philosophers, Plato and Aristotle in particular. Sidney ar...
Sir Philip Sidney : contrasting views on the value and morality of rhetoric and poetry
Sir Philip Sidney : contrasting views on the value and morality of rhetoric and poetry
Sidney's attitude toward rhetoric passes through three rather distinct stages. At first, he is quite positive toward it, treats it with respect, and, what is perhaps even more impo...
Early Publication
Early Publication
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This chapter traces the early printing history of Philip Sidney’s works, 1586–99, arguing that conflicts within the Stationers’ Company influenced the Sidne...
Sidney and Maps
Sidney and Maps
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Sidney’s writing career unfolded amid a sixteenth-century sea change in England’s relationship to cartography. The arrival in Britain of what historians of ...

