Toward the end of the Defence of Poesy (composed c.1579–1581, published 1595), Sidney makes a reference that has never been satisfactorily explained. Writing in the digressio—the penultimate part of the oration, in which he laments the sorry state of poetry in contemporary England—Sidney complains that bad poets are so rushing to print and flooding the market that better ones are loth to do the same lest they be accounted ‘knights of the same order’.1 The context of the passage is the social disparity between the outstanding poets of other times and places—who included ‘kings, emperors, senators, great captains’ (108.29–30)—and the ‘base men with servile wits’ (109.11) of the present moment: ‘bastard poets’ (109.17) who bring the Muses into...
This article demonstrates that the satirical poet nicknamed 'Fuscus' in Everard Guilpin's Skialethia...
Chronicles of the principal events in the life ... of Sidney", and bibliography prefixed.Another edi...
Though a culture which produced such literary genius as Sidney, Shakespeare, and Milton should alone...
Toward the end of the Defence of Poesy (composed c.1579–1581, published 1595), Sidney makes a refere...
Sir Philip Sidney’s The Defence of Poesy, published posthumously in 1595 in two different editions, ...
The Defence of Poesy, which is considered the most outstanding piece of English criticism in the six...
Sidney’s Defence of Poesy was written at a time when poetry was looked down upon by critics in the ...
The essay approaches the lyric sequence written by Sir Robert Sidney (1563-1626) in the Elizabethan ...
The study deals with the main tenets of Philip Sidney’s poetics on the basis of his The Defence of P...
Sidney's Defence of Poesy--the foundational text of English poetics--is generally taken to present a...
In his Defence of Poetry (c. 1580), Philip Sidney argues that poetry—a category in which he includes...
Another edition of same year had title "The Defence of Poesie" and that title is perhaps better-know...
Dealing with ancient manuscript or old printed texts often constitutes a difficult task, especially ...
In the Astrophil and Stella, Sidney stresses the concrete dimension of poetic composition and often ...
In the Defence of Poesy, Philip Sidney refers puzzlingly to Thomas More and Utopia. He praises the “...
This article demonstrates that the satirical poet nicknamed 'Fuscus' in Everard Guilpin's Skialethia...
Chronicles of the principal events in the life ... of Sidney", and bibliography prefixed.Another edi...
Though a culture which produced such literary genius as Sidney, Shakespeare, and Milton should alone...
Toward the end of the Defence of Poesy (composed c.1579–1581, published 1595), Sidney makes a refere...
Sir Philip Sidney’s The Defence of Poesy, published posthumously in 1595 in two different editions, ...
The Defence of Poesy, which is considered the most outstanding piece of English criticism in the six...
Sidney’s Defence of Poesy was written at a time when poetry was looked down upon by critics in the ...
The essay approaches the lyric sequence written by Sir Robert Sidney (1563-1626) in the Elizabethan ...
The study deals with the main tenets of Philip Sidney’s poetics on the basis of his The Defence of P...
Sidney's Defence of Poesy--the foundational text of English poetics--is generally taken to present a...
In his Defence of Poetry (c. 1580), Philip Sidney argues that poetry—a category in which he includes...
Another edition of same year had title "The Defence of Poesie" and that title is perhaps better-know...
Dealing with ancient manuscript or old printed texts often constitutes a difficult task, especially ...
In the Astrophil and Stella, Sidney stresses the concrete dimension of poetic composition and often ...
In the Defence of Poesy, Philip Sidney refers puzzlingly to Thomas More and Utopia. He praises the “...
This article demonstrates that the satirical poet nicknamed 'Fuscus' in Everard Guilpin's Skialethia...
Chronicles of the principal events in the life ... of Sidney", and bibliography prefixed.Another edi...
Though a culture which produced such literary genius as Sidney, Shakespeare, and Milton should alone...