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$35.12
1. The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia;
$8.50
2. Sir Philip Sidney: The Major Works
$74.57
3. Defence of Poesie, Astrophil and
$12.64
4. Sir Philip Sidney
 
$37.95
5. Sir Philip Sidney: Courtier Poet
$9.99
6. Penshurst Castle - In the Days
7. The Harvard Classics English Essays
$11.45
8. Sir Philip Sidney's Apology for
$10.40
9. The Sidney Psalter: The Psalms
 
10. An Apology for Poetry, or The
11. Sir Philip Sidney: the shepherd
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12. Sidney's The Defence of Poesy'
$18.55
13. The Poems of Sir Philip Sidney
 
14. The Psalms of Sir Philip Sidney
 
$158.11
15. Sir Philip Sidney and Arcadia
$159.20
16. Sir Philip Sidney: An Anthology
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17. Poems, letters, and memories of
 
18. Sir Philip Sidney : An Apology
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19. Sir Fulke Greville's Life of Sir
$39.50
20. Dazzling Images: The Masks of

1. The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia;
by Philip Sidney, Richard Bellings, Ernest Albert Baker
 Paperback: 726 Pages (2010-09-09)
list price: US$50.75 -- used & new: US$35.12
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Asin: 1171854404
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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Basilus, a foolish old Duke, consults an oracle as he imperiously wishes to know the future, but he is less than pleased with what he learns. To escape the oracle's horrific prophecies about his family and kingdom, he withdraws into pastoral retreat with his wife and two daughters. When a pair of wandering princes fall in love with the princesses and adopt disguises to gain access to them, all manner of complications, both comic and serious, ensue. Part-pastoral romance, part-heroic epic, Sidney's long narrative work was hugely popular for centuries after its first publication in 1593, inspiring two sequels and countless imitations, and contributing greatly to the development of the novel. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (4)

4-0 out of 5 stars An art which appeals more to the mind than to the heart
Malory apart, the fifteenthcentury did not see many literary works of any great significance produced in England, and there wasn't a great deal more in the first half (make that the first two thirds) of the sixteenth. Then, suddenly, the last few decades of the century saw a remarkable revival of drama, poetry and prose, including the works of Shakespeare himself, still the reigning heavyweight champion of English literature.

Sir Philip Sidney was one of the key figures in this revival, and his "Arcadia", a proseromance is one of the works by which he is best remembered. It is also known as the "Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia" as he wrote it for his sister, Mary Herbert, the Countess of Pembroke, and may have written it while staying at the Herbert country estate, Wilton in Wiltshire. It exists in two versions, only one of which he actually completed. For many years the only version of the "Arcadia" that was generally known was the so-called "New Arcadia". At some time during the 1580s, Sidney began to revise his original story, reorganising it and adding extra episodes not contained in the first version. In 1586, however, he was killed while fighting in the Netherlands, and the revised version remained unfinished at his death. The version which was eventually published consisted of a hybrid of the two versions. Sidney's original version, today known as the "Old Arcadia", was rediscovered in the early twentieth century, and it is this version of the story which is contained in the Oxford World Classics edition.

Arcadia was originally a rugged, mountainous district of Ancient Greece, known for the honesty of its inhabitants and the simplicity of their way of life. In later centuries, however, the word came to signify an idealised pastoral way of life characterised by ease and comfort. Sidney's was not the first literary work with that title; early in the century the Italian Jacopo Sannazaro had published his own "Arcadia", which served as one of Sidney's sources.

As Adam Nicolson points out in his recent book "Earls of Paradise", Arcadianism in sixteenth century England was not, as it was to become later, a purely decorative style based upon nostalgia for an imagined past but a political ideology, standingfor the country against the city and the court, for conservatism, hierarchy, Protestantism and the traditional feudal way of life, and against individualism, a market economy and the centralisation of power. Sidney's "Arcadia", therefore is ostensibly set in the Ancient Greek province of that name, which serves both as a fairy-tale country, a long tie ago and a long way away, and as a model for contemporary England.

Although the work is a prose romance, it has the five-act structure of a drama, the acts being divided from one another by sets of eclogues, poems mostly on the theme of love, actually composed by Sidney himself but in the context of the story supposedly written by Arcadian shepherds. (For some reason it was the shepherds of Arcadia rather than, say, cowherds or swineherds who were seen as living a particularly idealised life, in this case one which left them enough spare time to master the arts of poetry, including highly complex metres and rhyme schemes). Further poems supposedly written by various characters crop up in the main ext itself.

The plot is a complicated and far-fetched one, reminiscent of some of Shakespeare's comedies. ("Twelfth Night", "As You Like It" and "The Winter's Tale" all came to mind). It combines pastoral elements with adventure and courtly romance. Basilius, Duke of Arcadia, has withdrawn with his family from the Court to the countryside in an attempt to avoid the terms of a prophecy (which, as in all good Greek myths, such as the story of Oedipus, eventually comes true despite all attempts to thwart it). Two young men, Musidorus, Prince of Thessaly, and Pyrocles, Prince of Macedon, fall in love with Basilius' daughters Pamela and Philoclea, after being shipwrecked in the country. In order to gain access to the two princesses, both disguise themselves, Musidorus as a shepherd and Pyrocles as a woman, naming himself Cleophila. (The name is an inversion of that of his beloved, Philoclea; both derive from the Greek for "lover of glory").

This scenario gives rise to all sorts of complications, not the least of which is that both Basilius and his wife Gynecia fall in love with the supposed "Cleophila". (Basilius wrongly believes her to be a woman, Gynecia correctly suspects her to be a man, and Philoclea seems neither to know nor care whether her admirer is male or female- a sexually ambiguous storyline going beyond anything in Shakespeare).

Sidney's literary style is typical of late sixteenth century prose, a style which has become known as "Euphuism", and is characterised by a grand rhetorical manner, a complex sentence structure and much use of abstract nouns. This may be the cause of a strange contradiction in the way he has been regarded in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Sidney the man, the gallant poet-soldier giving his life on the battlefield for the liberty of a small nation, just as Byron was to do more than two centuries later, is a quintessentially Romantic figure. Sidney the mannered, stylised writer is far from Romantic.His highly artificial style does not conform to the idea, current since the late eighteenth century, that all great literature should represent the laying bare of the inmost secrets of the writer's soul.

Sidney himself described the "Arcadia" as "a trifle, and that triflingly handled". Yet there is much in the work to enjoy. Sidney's prose, although ornate and mannered, is also elegant and often witty. His poetry is often technically brilliant. He pays much more attention to characterisation than many earlier writers of prose fiction, such as Malory, and in this he can be seen as foreshadowing the modern novel. His is, however, an art which appeals more to the mind than it does to the heart, which perhaps explains why he, like some of his contemporaries, is today an author who is widely talked about but not so widely read.

5-0 out of 5 stars This is the one you want
RESOLVED: The "New" Arcadia is better than the old--much better. And this is the edition of it you ought to read.

5-0 out of 5 stars Ian Myles Slater on: Multiple Identities and Versions
"The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia" is a book that has been in and out of fashion for about four centuries. It is a story of disguised princes, an impersonated princess, infatuated shepherds, and gender and identity confusions on a rather large scale, all set in a strikingly English version of ancient Greece. It was written in a mixture of prose and verse by the Elizabethan courtier, Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586), beginning in 1579, supposedly to amuse his sister, Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke. (Hence the book's title; the Sidney family itself was recent upper-gentry rather than old nobility, but the received title may have been as much a selling point for the original publisher as personal snobbery.) It seems in fact to have been part of an ambitious project for elevating English, a second- or third-rate language in a Europe dominated by literature in Latin, French, Italian, and Spanish.

It was a key text for English society in the seventeenth century, and received a variety of political and cultural readings -- a long story in itself, involving King Charles I and John Milton, among others. Although Sidney had offered himself as a champion of Elizabeth's officially Calvinist Church, some Puritans tended to find both poetry and fiction at best a distraction, at worst a threat, and the "Arcadia" combined them; not to mention the erotic element. The resulting debate over the "Arcadia," transferred from theological-moral to aesthetic frames of reference, continues; for some critics, liking this book is itself a Bad Thing. Of course, there are those who simply don't like it; nothing appeals to every taste.

As originally published in 1590, it was a fragment, in two and a half books, breaking off in mid-story (Book III, Chapter 29), where the author left his revisions when he went to the Netherlands, and his death fighting the Spanish, in a self-assumed role as the Protestant Knight-Errant. (There is an on-line version of this text, in the original spelling, transcribed by Richard Bear, at Renascence Editions.) Its publication came near the beginning of several decades of staggering importance in English literature, which included Christopher Marlowe's major works, and those of Shakespeare, Spenser, Ben Jonson, and John Donne, among others.

The 1593 edition, in five books, was more complete, with a conclusion presented as being drawn from an earlier draft, edited to conform to Sidney's alterations. This was undoubtedly true, for, even if no other evidence had survived, the handling of these texts gave rise to a dispute between the Countess and one of her fellow editors, and the additions did not quite join with the previously printed section, leaving plot-lines dangling. (This version, likewise in Elizabethan spelling, is available as an e-book from Kessinger; in that edition, the gap is on page 453.) Later printings included one or another (or both) of two more-or-less authorized bridge passages, linking up the unfinished original part of Sidney's revised and expanded narrative to the old conclusion. (There was a 1983 facsimile edition of the 1598 printing, from Scholars' Facsimiles and Reprints, apparently still available.) The original "old" version was later assumed to be lost, with Sidney's manuscripts.

This 1593 version of the work has been edited twice in recent years. First, by Maurice Evans, as "The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia," now in the Penguin Classics series (included 1987; originally for the Penguin English Library, 1977), for the general reader, complete with the longer of the two "bridge" sections, and useful, but limited, notes. Second, by Victor Skretkowicz, as "The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia (The New Arcadia)," a critical edition from Oxford University Press (1987), more useful for scholars and students, but probably less attractive to others. The Penguin version is probably the more widely read of the two, and, having read and referred to it for over twenty-five years, I think that it will serve the interested reader well for most purposes. (Beyond the great advantage of being in print....)

Besides the semi-offical bridge passages, other hands offered supplements and sequels to the 1593 version, some of which have recently come in for new attention. The series "Women Writers in English 1350-1850" includes "A Continuation of Sir Philip Sidney's *Arcadia*" by Anna Weamys, edited by Patrick Colborn Cullen (1994); this represents a mid-seventeenth-century Royalist reading. An interesting critical approach is offered by Elizabeth A. Spiller in "Speaking for the Dead: King Charles, Anna Weamys, and the Commemorations of Sir Philip Sidney's Arcadia," available on-line.

The book's popularity faded in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, particularly with the rise of the modern novel as a preferred type of narrative fiction. Although it still had some readers and admirers, the romantic essayist and critic William Hazlitt called it "one of the great monuments of the abuse of intellectual power." Hazlitt's antipathy was in part a legitimate reaction to types of prose and verse he found overblown, in part a sign of a chronological cultural gap; the temporal equivalent of despising foreign literatures as being, well, so foreign.

Sidney was one of the key figures of the "English Renaissance" -- the (by European standards) delayed flowering of literature in England in the 1580s and 1590s (and several decades thereafter), most of which he didn't live to see, but which he promoted by propaganda and example. An aspect of the "new learning" of the Renaissance which doesn't get a lot of emphasis in standard textbooks was the popularity of the late (Hellenistic and Roman) romance in classical Greek; novels of love and adventure, often involving shepherds, disguised nobles, and lost princesses (or at least missing heiresses). The most widely read example of this genre in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries was the brief "Daphnis and Chloe" of Longus, but in earlier times there were equal or greater favorites; for example, the long and complex adventure story, "Aethiopica" by Heliodorus (first English translation by Thomas Underdowne, 1587). Their Renaissance vogue produced a series of imitations across Europe, most notably Jacopo Sannazaro's "Arcadia" (1502) and Jorge de Montemayor's "La Diana" (1558?). These were themselves international sensations; Sidney was trying to bring English literature into the (for him) modern age, just as, say, Coleridge, was trying to do in his day -- or Hazlitt, for that matter.

Maybe Sidney's example had nothing to do with the appearance of Spenser or Shakespeare as major poets; but Spenser certainly didn't think so, and some of Shakespeare's plays show every sign of being aimed at an audience that had enjoyed and absorbed the "Arcadia" and its various lesser imitators.

Beginning in 1909, the situation was complicated by the rediscovery (by Bertram Dobell) of manuscript copies of what came to be known to scholars as the "Old Arcadia" -- the complete first version, very differently arranged, with some different characterizations of the protagonists. It was not actually "lost," just ignored. This shorter, simpler, "unpublished" work, although not printed, turns out to have had a fair circulation among the Elizabethan elite, in a sort of ruling-class *samizdat*. First printed in 1926, as part of a multi-volume edition of Sidney's works, it was acclaimed by some critics -- including its editor, Albert Feuillerat -- as the true, preferred, version. Sidney's extensive revisions were dismissed as an abandoned experiment in unfortunate elaboration, and the 1593 edition as a sad botch, a pieced-together work without artistic merit.

Others -- notably C.S. Lewis -- championed the 1593 "New" Arcadia as that closest to the author's considered intent, and a work of actual historical importance. In this view, Sidney's most radical change -- opening in the middle of the action, and using his original first part as an inset story, or "flashback" -- was a serious attempt at classicism, modeled on Homer, Virgil, and Heliodorus, not a product of muddled thinking. Editors of anthologies and volumes of "selected works" have often resorted to providing selections from both redactions.

The "Old Arcadia" was critically re-edited by Jean Robertson for Oxford University Press in 1973 as "The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia (The Old Arcadia)," and, again, in a popular edition, edited by Katherine Duncan-Jones for the World's Classics (Oxford University Press, 1985; with new bibliography, 1994); for some reason, this out-of-print edition currently appears on Amazon with an image of a volume of Jonathan Swift(!).

The Duncan-Jones text was reprinted in 1999 in the re-designed Oxford World's Classics series, and this version is in print (for now). The cover title of this edition is simply "The Old Arcadia," but Amazon, following the publisher's own web site, lists it as "The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia: The Old Arcadia" (and variations). Both are, of course, legitimate, but this is a little confusing.

The [Oxford] World's Classics "Old Arcadia" is a good companion to the Penguin "New Arcadia" -- and I am not going to take sides on which of Sidney's versions is "better."

4-0 out of 5 stars A monument of dullness?
T.S. Eliot labelled Sidney's Arcadia as a "monument ofdullness," and about 100 pages into the book, I felt inclined to agreewith his assessment.Sidney was a poet first and foremost, and even headmitted to his sister, the Countess of Pembroke, that this particular workwas but "a trifle."

Yet, surprisingly, I found myselfgetting captivated by the plot of two princes disguised as shepherds to winthe girls of their dreams (in the process, of course, they also win girls-- and guys -- of their nightmares).The somewhat stilted (even byRenaissance standards) language makes it difficult to plod through attimes, but the plot is interesting and keeps your attention -- and that'sultimately what counts.

Re: this edition, it is one of the few goodeditions of the original "Old" Arcadia around.Sidney revisedthe work during his lifetime and his friend and biographer, Fulke Greville,later published a bizarre composite of the old and revised versions thatfor centuries stood as the definitive "Arcadia". K. Duncan-Jonesprovides a clean text with useful scholarly apparatus.One caveat: in myedition, pp. 297-306 were *missing*, mistakenly replaced by adouble-printed pp. 307-316.This is an annoyance for someone who isreading the book as a scholar, which I believe represents the majorityreadership of the book, as I can't imagine casual readers picking it up forbedstand reading!
All in all, a fun work and better than the first actleads one to believe! ... Read more


2. Sir Philip Sidney: The Major Works (Oxford World's Classics)
by Sir Philip Sidney
Paperback: 448 Pages (2002-11-28)
list price: US$18.95 -- used & new: US$8.50
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Asin: 0192840800
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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This authoritative edition brings together a unique combination of Sidney's poetry and prose--all the major writing, complemented by letters and elegies--that reveals the essence of his work and thinking. Born in 1554, Sir Philip Sidney was hailed as the perfect Renaissance patron, soldier, lover, and courtier, but it was only after his untimely death at the age of thirty-one that his literary accomplishments were truly recognized. This collection ranges more widely through Sidney's works than any previous volume and includes substantial parts of both versions of the Arcadia, The Defence of Poesy and the whole of the sonnet sequence Astrophil and Stella. Supplementary texts, such as his letters and the numerous elegies which appeared after his death, help to illustrate the whole spectrum of his achievements, and the admiration he inspired in his contemporaries. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars "As what my heart still sees, thou canst not spy?"
This review relates to the volume: -Sir Philip Sidney: Major
Works-.Edited with an Introduction and Notes by Katherine
Duncan-Jones. Oxford World's Classics. 2002.416 pp.
This volume contains the works: A dialogue between two
shepherds...Wilton/ Two Songs for an Accession Day Tilt/
Philisides, the shepherd good and true/ Sing, neighbours,
sing/ The Lady of the May/ Certain Sonnets (32 sonnets)/
The lad Philisides/ The Old Arcadia (Complete)--Four
Eclogues, as well as, "What tongue can her perfections tell",
and "Since nature's works be good"/Lamon's Tale/Astrophil
and Stella (Complete, a sequence of 108 sonnets with
11 numbered songs interspersed!)/ The Defense of Poesy/
4 poems from -The New Arcadia-/ Sidney's poetic versions
of Psalms 6, 13, 23, 29, 38/ Letters (15)/ and 4 Appendices
(Henry Goldwell, "Shows Performed, 1581"/ Edmund Molyneux,
"A historical remembrance of the Sidneys"/Anon., "The
manner of Sir Philip Sidney's Death"/ Three elegies on
Sidney from -The Phoenix Nest-, 1593/ Extract from Fulke
Greville, 16 October 1586)/ and excellent Notes to the
works from pp. 332 - 408.
Sir Philip Sidney was born on 30 November 1554 and died on
17 October 1586, from complications of a battle wound, at the
age of 31.
Perhaps the two best insights into Sidney are supplied by
Katherine Duncan-Jones in her "Introduction" -- the first
is a quote by the modern critic, Theodore Spencer, who
said: "Once the poet has set himself the task of writing
an amorous complaint, that deep melancholy which lay
beneath the surface of glamour of Elizabethan existence,
and which was so characteristic of Sidney himself, begins
to fill the conventional form with more than a conventional
weight.It surges through the magical adagio of the lines;
they have the depth of reverberation, like the sound of
gongs beaten under water, which is sometimes characteristic
of Sidney as of no other Elizabethan, not even Shakespeare."
["Introduction," p. xi].The other quote follows some
critical introduction by the editor herself: "Tellingly,
Sidney's own persona, Philisides, is described on his first
appearance as diabled by unhappiness: "Another young shepherd
named Philisides...had all this time lain upon the ground
at the foot of a cypress tree, leaning upon his elbow, with
so deep a melancholy that his senses carried to his mind no
delight from any of their objects."
But these poems rarely dwell in melancholy.The slight
hindrance, sometimes, is Sidney's versification itself.
The reader may find it slightly stilted and a bit too
poetically "artificial" to meet the rhythm or the rhyme.
However, the glories far outweigh the slights.A further
help to understanding Sidney might come from applying
deeper SYMBOLISM and interpretation to his works, in
names and themes. There is this left to end:
Love makes the earth water to drink,
Love to earth makes water sink;
And if dumb things [without speech] be so witty
Shall a heavenly grace want pity?
[from: -Astrophil and Stella-.]
-- Robert Kilgore. ... Read more


3. Defence of Poesie, Astrophil and Stella, and Other Writings
by Philip Sidney Sir
Paperback: 208 Pages (1997-06-15)
list price: US$8.95 -- used & new: US$74.57
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Asin: 0460876597
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Sir Philip Sidney (1554-86) was a patron, brilliant courtier, diplomat, scholar, soldier and lover, as well as being the first and one of the most important writers of the English Renaissance; his writings, serious or light-hearted and always experimental, vindicate this high esteem. The sonnet sequence Astrophil and Stella is distinguished in the English language as a masterpiece of lyric splendor and a classic of the courtly tradition. ... Read more


4. Sir Philip Sidney
by Philip Sidney
Paperback: 124 Pages (2010-03-09)
list price: US$19.75 -- used & new: US$12.64
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1147115419
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters, introduced typographical errors, and jumbled words.This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book. ... Read more


5. Sir Philip Sidney: Courtier Poet
by Katherine Duncan-Jones
 Hardcover: 350 Pages (1991-10)
list price: US$40.00 -- used & new: US$37.95
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Asin: 0300050992
Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars Splendid
What a great book! This is biography at its best. Katherine Duncan-Jones succeeds in that most difficult of tasks - writing a biographical work that is at the same time scholarly and amusing. She paints a convincing portrait of this gifted, generous and tormented individual,who was also remarkably tolerant and warm-hearted for the times in which he lived. Sidney emerges from this book as a sophisticated and highly intelligent man who felt bitter and frustrated because of the unfair treatment he received at the hands of a capricious Queen, in whose service he nevertheless lost his very life. Altogether, I found Sidney very different from the typical Elizabethan - his dislike of hunting as a cruel, bloody sport, and his enlightened views on women are some of the traits in which we recognize a modern mind. And, nevertheless, after his absurd death he became a sort of hero or role-model for his contemporaries - many of whom hadn't recognized his worth while he lived. Duncan-Jones writes elegantly and in an entertaining style, quoting extensively from Sidney's writings as well as from those of his relatives and friends. I completely disagree with another reviewer, who criticized the "extraneous material" and the quantity of facts and persons in the book. No material is extraneous here: everything is relevant, either to Sidney's life or to the social and political context in which it must be viewed. As to the amount of characters - well, think about your own life: if someone were to write your biography, how many characters would there be? Four of five? I wouldn't trust a biography that didn't have many characters (even counting only the significant ones). After all, every person's life is complex - and full of other persons. All in all, this book is highly recommended - you'll gain a great awareness of an exceptional man.

1-0 out of 5 stars Disjointed, difficult to follow.
Out of print? Good! This book is so filled with bits of extraneous material that it is almost impossible to follow. Despite considerable interest in the subject matter, and despite returning to the book four orfive times, I could not distinguish which facts pertained to Sir PhilipSidney and which to the hundreds of people with whom he came into contactwithout almost graphing out the characters. It was worse than any Russiannovel. ... Read more


6. Penshurst Castle - In the Days of Sir Philip Sidney
by Emma Marshall
Paperback: 180 Pages (2010-07-06)
list price: US$9.99 -- used & new: US$9.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B003YMN9BI
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Product Description
Penshurst Castle - In the Days of Sir Philip Sidney is presented here in a high quality paperback edition. This popular classic work by Emma Marshall is in the English language. If you enjoy the works of Emma Marshall then we highly recommend this publication for your book collection. ... Read more


7. The Harvard Classics English Essays From Sir Philip Sidney to Macaulay
Hardcover: Pages (1969)

Asin: B003D0VHRO
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8. Sir Philip Sidney's Apology for Poetry and Astrophil and Stella: Texts and Contexts
by Peter C. Herman
Paperback: 285 Pages (2001-02)
list price: US$18.95 -- used & new: US$11.45
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0967912113
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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This edition presents together Sir Philip Sidney's response to the many attacks on poetry current in early modern England, An Apology for Poetry, and his path-breaking sonnet sequence, Astrophil and Stella.The introduction provides biographical and historical contexts for reading Sidney's works, and to help students explore how the Apology arises from and intervenes in the "Quarrel over Poetry," this volume provides substantial excerpts from such texts as Plato's Republic, Scaliger's Poetics, Gosson's The School of Abuse, and Richard Wiles's A Disputation Concerning Poetry (the first extended discussion of poetry in Englad).This edition also includes excerpts from Sidney's letters to his brother, Robert, and his friend, Sir Edward Denny.All the texts are newly edited, annotated, and modernized. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars An Apology that Needs No Apology
When Stephen Gosson attacked poetry in his book The School of Abuse, Sir Philip Sidney correctly saw it as a Puritan assault on imaginative literature.Making matters worse for poets was that Gosson was far from the only voice denouncing the poetic arts.Further, from the classical writers of ancient Greece and Rome right up to Sidney's day there was a tendency to view poetry primarily in terms of what it could offer on a teaching and persuasive level.The ability of poetry to delight was secondary to the latter two.Finally, Gosson's comments were typical of those who still remembered Plato's strictures against poetry from The Republic.It was to confront all these anti-poetic dialectics that Sidney wrote A Defense of Poetry.

In order for Sidney to persuade an audience that he saw as much like himself, he had to couch his response in a manner that would resonate with educated Renaissance courtiers.His structure of dividing his essay into the classic divisions of a judicial argument was a brilliant success.His frequent use of classical allusions reinforce his overarching thesis that poetry has a right to exist because it is the only literary medium that can combine the sister arts of history and philosophy into a means that can teach, persuade, and delight.The modern reader must remember that in Sidney's day such familiarity with history, philosophy, Latin, Greek, and rhetoric was a given.

Once Sidney exposes the shortcomings of history and philosophy, he can assert that far from poetry representing a tissue of lies and a false reality, poetry rather is seen as creating an alternate reality, one that emerges from the poet's own imagination, creating that which did not previously exist.Since poetry reveals a fiction of life, it cannot then lie in any meaningful way.It is essential, he notes, that this alternate reality must do more than teach, delight, or persuade.For virtue to be inculcated in the reader, poetry must motivate that reader to actualize the virtue within the poem and incorporate that virtue into his own daily life.It is this claim that poetry must function as an architectonic or science of sciences that renders Sidney as relevant today as in his day.

Sidney does not shy away from the positions of poetry's opponents.Indeed, he even agrees with some of their claims that some poetry is offensive, but he is quick to note that when a poem offends a reader's sensibilities, that offense is a function of the inept poet and not the poem itself. His evidence is cumulative in effect.He directly addresses and disposes of the charges of Gosson and others of his ilk that poetry is inherently insignificant, emasculating, untrue, and salacious.

Sidney does more than merely defend the right of poetry to exist; he also lashes out at other literary mediums that he himself felt offended by. For example, he was a strong believer in the classical unities of action, time, and space, and literature that violated these precepts such as tragic-comedy, he opposed.He further outlined his distaste for comedy whose purpose was only to provoke laughter based on what he saw as the crudities of farce that were then so popular.Comedy, he urged, ought to be based on a gentler and lighter view of the human condition.Sidney also roundly criticized sonneteers that were overly fond of poetic excesses like Euphuisms, annoying alliteration, and incongruous tropes.It becomes clear that Sidney is a product of a culture that dictates that nature and decorum are the ultimate arbiters of what passes for suitable literature and what does not. In A Defense of Poetry, Sidney was one of the first writers to suggest that poetry is a noble human invention precisely because a well-written poem can make the reader a better person for the reading of it.In one of history's strange ironies, Sidney rescued Stephen Gosson from a well-deserved place in the dustbin of history by defending what was to Gosson as quite indefensible.

5-0 out of 5 stars A well-priced and reliable classroom text
Has Astrophil and Stella as well as the Apology for Poetry, and contextualizes the Apology well with selections from other classical and renaissance writing about the value of poetry.A good, clean text.Recommended for classes. ... Read more


9. The Sidney Psalter: The Psalms of Sir Philip and Mary Sidney (Oxford World's Classics)
by Sir Philip Sidney, Mary Sidney
Paperback: 384 Pages (2009-10-11)
list price: US$18.95 -- used & new: US$10.40
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Asin: 0199217939
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Among the most accomplished lyrics of the English Renaissance, The Sidney Psalter influenced poets from Donne and Herbert to Milton and beyond. It turned the well-known biblical psalms into sophisticated verse, selecting or inventing a different stanza form for each one. This variety of forms matches the appeal of their content--making them suitable for every occasion, for public worship and private devotion--and their lyrical virtuosity appeals to any poetry lover. The first complete edition of the Sidney Psalter for over forty years, this new volume makes these beautiful poems available in an authoritative modernized text drawn from the definitive Oxford editions of the two poets. Hannibal Hamlin's excellent Introduction considers the poems' astonishing mastery of verse forms and describes the literary and social contexts from which they came. On-page glosses explain unfamiliar words or usages, and fuller explanatory notes summarize each psalm and provide further background information. The book also includes an up-to-date bibliography and chronology. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars Sibling Singers
It is hard to imagine a more poignant publication than this fine edition of a sister, Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke, who finished a translation of the Psalter, begun by her brother, dead in 1586 fighting to help the Dutch stay free. Her poetry is often as powerful as that of more famous poets, not least George Herbert, and it is wonderful to have her and her brother's translations in an edition most of us can afford. The editors are meticulous scholars, well-known in the academic world, and we all owe them--and the Sidneys--applause and gratitude. ... Read more


10. An Apology for Poetry, or The Defence of Poesy
by Sir Philip Sidney
 Kindle Edition: Pages (2010-09-07)
list price: US$0.99
Asin: B0042ANYSY
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An Apology for Poetry, or The Defence of Poesy was written by Sir Philip Sidney around 1579 and published posthumously in 1595. ... Read more


11. Sir Philip Sidney: the shepherd knight
by Roger Howell
Hardcover: 308 Pages (1968)

Isbn: 0090861906
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12. Sidney's The Defence of Poesy' and Selected Renaissance Literary Criticism (Penguin Classics)
by Various
Paperback: 544 Pages (2004-06-29)
list price: US$16.00 -- used & new: US$9.22
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Asin: 0141439386
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Out of the intellectual ferment of the English Renaissance came a number of outstanding critical works that sought to define and defend the role of literature in society and to comment on the craft of writing. Foremost among these is Sir Philip Sidney’s "The Defence of Poesy," an eloquent argument for fiction as a means of inspiring its readers to virtuous action. George Puttenham’s "The Art of English Poesy" is an entertaining examination of poetry, verse form, and rhetoric, while Samuel Daniel’s "A Defence of Rhyme" considers the practice of versification and praises the English literary tradition. Along with pieces by such writers as Sir John Harrington, Francis Bacon, and Ben Jonson, these works reveal the emergence of key critical ideas and approaches, and celebrate the possibilities of the English language. ... Read more


13. The Poems of Sir Philip Sidney
by Philip Sidney, John Drinkwater
Paperback: 336 Pages (2010-01-12)
list price: US$31.75 -- used & new: US$18.55
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Asin: 1142592901
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This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923.This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process.We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide.We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book. ... Read more


14. The Psalms of Sir Philip Sidney and the Countess of Pembroke
by J C A Rathmell
 Hardcover: 362 Pages (1963-01-01)
list price: US$20.00
Isbn: 0814703860
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15. Sir Philip Sidney and Arcadia
by Joan Rees
 Hardcover: 158 Pages (1991-06)
list price: US$32.50 -- used & new: US$158.11
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Asin: 0838634060
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16. Sir Philip Sidney: An Anthology of Modern Criticism
Hardcover: 352 Pages (1988-02-11)
list price: US$199.00 -- used & new: US$159.20
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Asin: 0198112041
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In this collection, Dennis Kay brings together some of the more representative and stimulating studies of recent years, written by an international group of Sidney scholars. The essays have been selected both for their individual qualities and for their attention to the wide range of Sidney's art, including both the Old and New Arcadia, A Defence of Poetry, and Astrophil and Stella. ... Read more


17. Poems, letters, and memories of Philip Sidney Nairn
by Philip Sidney Nairn, Eric Rücker Eddison
Paperback: 208 Pages (2010-08-20)
list price: US$24.75 -- used & new: US$18.17
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Asin: 1177565749
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Originally published in 1916.This volume from the Cornell University Library's print collections was scanned on an APT BookScan and converted to JPG 2000 format by Kirtas Technologies.All titles scanned cover to cover and pages may include marks notations and other marginalia present in the original volume. ... Read more


18. Sir Philip Sidney : An Apology For Poetry
 Paperback: Pages (1979)

Asin: B000I9RW04
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19. Sir Fulke Greville's Life of Sir Philip Sidney: Etc., First Published 1652
by Fulke Greville, Nowell Charles Smith
Paperback: 322 Pages (2010-03-31)
list price: US$30.75 -- used & new: US$18.06
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1148206515
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters, introduced typographical errors, and jumbled words.This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book. ... Read more


20. Dazzling Images: The Masks of Sir Philip Sidney
by Alan Hager
Hardcover: 222 Pages (1991-04)
list price: US$39.50 -- used & new: US$39.50
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Asin: 0874133904
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