The Exemplary Sidney and the Elizabethan SonneteerThis book gives the reader a new perspective on the significance of Sir Philip Sidney to the English Renaissance by focusing on his conflicted exemplarity as it is fashioned by his contemporaries and poetic successors. It explores how Sidney's fellow poets constructed and contested his legendary image. These poets initially drew on his example to define and authorize themselves, but their sonnets and other writings ultimately criticize and variously refashion Sidney's heroic image and his literary practice. The sonnet sequence, often neglected in serious study of these writers, is here seen as a forum for the reformation of Petrarchism and an important locus of literary change. |
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Page 49
... hand in hand with nature , not enclosed within the narrow warrant of her gifts , but freely ranging only within the zodiac of his own wit . Nature never set forth the earth in so rich tapestry as divers poets have done ; neither with so ...
... hand in hand with nature , not enclosed within the narrow warrant of her gifts , but freely ranging only within the zodiac of his own wit . Nature never set forth the earth in so rich tapestry as divers poets have done ; neither with so ...
Page 196
... hands to write and wits to conceive . " Sidney's phrasing implicitly opposes mortal beauty ( Stella ) to immortal ... hand , establish progress in the relationship as well as movement towards spiritual redemption . Spenser's lovers ...
... hands to write and wits to conceive . " Sidney's phrasing implicitly opposes mortal beauty ( Stella ) to immortal ... hand , establish progress in the relationship as well as movement towards spiritual redemption . Spenser's lovers ...
Page 220
... hand , and makes me write " ( AS 90 : 13-14 ; emphasis added ) . " Love ( II ) , " a stichomythic response to " Love I , " picks up on its last line , invoking " Immortal Heat , O let thy greater flame / Attract the lesser to it " ( 11 ...
... hand , and makes me write " ( AS 90 : 13-14 ; emphasis added ) . " Love ( II ) , " a stichomythic response to " Love I , " picks up on its last line , invoking " Immortal Heat , O let thy greater flame / Attract the lesser to it " ( 11 ...
Contents
Acknowledgments | 9 |
The Divided Aims | 39 |
Astrophil and Stella and the Failure of the Right Poet | 69 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
action Amoretti association Astrophil and Stella authority beauty Caelica calls Cambridge claims conventional countess courtier critics cultural Daniel David death dedicated Defence Delia desire discussion divine doth edited elegy Elizabeth Elizabethan England English English Studies example expresses eyes fashion female figure final finds force grace Greville Greville's heroic History honor human humanist husband ideal imagines imitate John King lady language learning letter Literary Literature live London Lord lover marriage Mary Mary Sidney means mind mistress moral move Muses nature never Oxford Petrarch Petrarchan poem poet poet's poetic poetry political praise present pride Princeton Protestant queen reader refer Renaissance Rhetoric role Samuel sequence sexual Sidney's Sir Philip Sidney social sonnet speaker Spenser Studies suggests Thomas thoughts tradition true turn University Press verse virtue virtuous wife writing York