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         Sidney Philip:     more books (100)
  1. Astrophel And Stella by Philip Sidney, 2010-05-23
  2. A Continuation of Sir Philip Sidney's Arcadia (Women Writers in English 1350-1850) by Anna Weamys, 1994-12-01
  3. The Defense of Poesy; Otherwise Known as an Apology for Poetry by Philip Sidney, 2010-01-02
  4. Philip Sidney: A Double Life by Alan Stewart, 2001-10-05
  5. Sir Philip Sidney's Defense of Poesy (Regents critics series) by Philip, Sir Sidney, 1970-06
  6. Sir Philip Sydney's Defense Of Poetry: And Observations On Poetry And Eloquence Of Ben Jonson (1787) by Philip Sidney, Ben Jonson, 2009-06-13
  7. Philip Sidney and the Poetics of Renaissance Cosmopolitanism by Robert E. Stillman, 2008-07-11
  8. Sir Philip Sidney: The Maker's Mind by Dorothy Connell, 1977-10
  9. The Prose Works of Sir Philip Sidney,Volume 1 by Philip Sidney, 1963
  10. Aphorisms of Sir Philip Sidney; With Remarks by Philip Sidney, 2010-03-25
  11. The Life of Sir Philip Sidney by M.A. Julius Lloyd, 1862
  12. The miscellaneous works of Sir Philip Sidney, knt by Philip Sidney, William Gray, 2010-09-09
  13. Sir Philip Sidney: 1586 and the Creation of a Legend (Publications of the Sir Thomas Browne Institute, New)
  14. The life of Sir Philip Sidney by Julius Lloyd, 2010-08-17

41. Lad Philisides Works By Individual Poets: 16th To 18th Centuries Literature Sir
Lad Philisides Works by individual poets 16th to 18th centuries Literature Sirphilip sidney. Author Sir philip sidney. Nigel J Clarke Bristol Channel
http://www.poem-2buy.co.uk/Sir-Philip-Sidney-Lad-Philisides-090766413X.html
Lad Philisides Works by individual poets: 16th to 18th centuries Literature Sir Philip Sidney
Subject: Works by individual poets: 16th to 18th centuries Literature
Title: Lad Philisides
Author: Sir Philip Sidney
Nigel J Clarke Bristol Channel...
Nigel J Clarke English Channel...

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42. Lad Philisides Literature Sir Philip Sidney
Lad Philisides Literature Sir philip sidney. Subject Literature Title Lad PhilisidesAuthor Sir philip sidney. Nigel J Clarke English Channel
http://www.poem-2buy.co.uk/Sir-Philip-Sidney-Lad-Philisides-0907664148.html
Lad Philisides Literature Sir Philip Sidney
Subject: Literature
Title: Lad Philisides
Author: Sir Philip Sidney
Nigel J Clarke English Channel...
Nigel J Clarke Pirates of Wale...

Robert Simpson Proms and Natur...

Hans Keller Stravinsky Seen an...
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43. Sir Philip Sidney
Sir philip sidney. Sources yet to be consulted The Pedigree of Sir philipsidney, R. Cooke, 1869. philip Sir philip sidney, c.1576. Bitmaps
http://www.compapp.dcu.ie/~humphrys/FamTree/Sidney/sir.philip.html
Sir Philip Sidney

44. Free Love Poems From PassionUp.com
philip sidney (15541586). English poet, philip sidney was born in Penshurst,Kent, and was educated at Christ Church College, Oxford.
http://server5.passionup.com/poetry/sidney.htm
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Philip Sidney
English poet, Philip Sidney was born in Penshurst, Kent, and was educated at Christ Church College, Oxford. He was a courtier and a solider, and was considered an ideal gentleman. His devotion to poetry served to inspire the future of English verse. None of his work was published during his lifetime..
Loving In Truth

A poem about a man's dedication to the woman he loves. Send it to the woman you love and let her know that she's always in your thoughts.
Astrophel and Stella

A poem about the unfairness of love. Send it to someone you want in your life, and you may learn if your love is returned. Song From Arcadia A poem about a couple's true love and happiness. Send this poem to your true love to let them know you appreciate them. Author Unknown Walter S. Landor Thomas Lodge Richard Lovelace ... Let someone know how much you care!

45. Sir Philip Sidney. 1554-1586. John Bartlett, Comp. 1919. Familiar Quotations, 10
Sir philip sidney. 15541586. John Bartlett, comp. 1919. Familiar Quotations, 10thed. Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. 1919. Sir philip sidney. (1554–1586). 1.
http://www.bartleby.com/100/128.html
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46. English Essays: Sidney To Macaulay. 1909–14. Vol. 27. The Harvard Classics
he. —On the Realities of Imagination. Leigh Hunt. Harvard Classics,Vol. 27. English Essays. From Sir philip sidney to Macaulay. Four
http://www.bartleby.com/27/
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Nonfiction Harvard Classics On the Realities of Imagination Leigh Hunt Harvard Classics, Vol. 27 English Essays From Sir Philip Sidney to Macaulay Four centuries of the development of English prose are illustrated by 24 works from 17 authors, ranging from those best known for the essay, like Addison and Hazlitt, to those, like Jonson and Coleridge, whose poetic spirit infuses all their writings.

47. Luminarium Book Store: Sir Philip Sidney
To buy a book from Amazon.co.uk (UK) use link under description. Cover, PhilipSidney A Double Life by Alan Stewart Hardcover 400 pages St.
http://www.luminarium.com/renlit/sidneybook.htm
To buy a book from Amazon.com (US) just click on the title.
To buy a book from Amazon.co.uk (UK) use link under description.
Philip Sidney : A Double Life

by Alan Stewart
Hardcover - 400 pages
St. Martin's Press; October 2001
"This man, known as the "epitome of Elizabethan chivalry"
and "quintessential Englishman," appears here as disap-
pointingly less than his reputation. The subtitular "double
life" alludes to the fact that the handsome, talented, well-
born Sir Philip was belittled and neglected in England by status-sensitive, conspiracy-minded Queen Elizabeth, while on the continent his poetry and his statesmanship earned him acclaim.... Stewart furnishes a litany of Sidney's frustrations (his connections to noble families under royal suspicion injured his prospects), and examines his literary projects, which, but for the convoluted pastoral epic Arcadia the lofty Defense of Poesie and the sonnet sequence Astrophil and Stella , remained unfinished. In Stewart's demythologized

48. Plagiarist.com Poetry » A Place For The Genuine.
Text size A A A A Poets (View All) A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T UV W X Y Z Select a poem by Sir philip sidney Poems by Sir philip sidney
http://plagiarist.com/poetry/?aid=408

49. Sir Philip Sidney: The Shepherd Knight
A tribute to Sir philip sidney and selections of his poetry not commonlyfound on the web. Index. Selected Works Farewell O Sun, Astrophil
http://www.oldarcadia.com/sidney_a.html
Index
Selected Works
Farewell O Sun,
Tenth Song,
Voices At The Window
Leave Me,O Love,
Ring Out Your Bells,
Defense of Poesy:Conclusion
The Sidney Letters
Note from the Editor
Sir Philip Sidney is reputed as a kind and charitable courtier who was revered by his peers as an example of English chivalry. He conducted himself with honor and followed his convictions even though it cost him her Majesty's favor on occasion. Philip's most notable characteristic is that he aspired to be an honorable man and it was that aspiration that made him such an admirable person. He faced many circumstances that would have hardened or utterly corrupted the heart of any other, but he endured them with a noble heart, the heart of a poet.
The Exemplary Sidney and the Elizabethan Sonneteer
The Sound of Virtue: Philip Sidney's Arcadia and Elizabethan Politics
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50. Sir Philip Sidney
Sir philip sidney(15541586). -Courtier, soldier, poet, friend andpatron -rage at the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's day; sidney's
http://www.ks.ac.kr/~ycsuh/courses/engsurvey/engsurveyindex/author/16century/16s

51. TPCN - Great Quotations (Quotes) By Sir Philip Sidney To Inspire And Motivate Yo
Sir philip sidney. Q U O T E S T O I N S P I R E Y O U, Great quotesto inspire, empower and motivate you to live the life of your
http://www.cyber-nation.com/victory/quotations/authors/quotes_sidney_sirphilip.h
Sir Philip Sidney Q
U
O
T
E
S
T
O
I
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S P I R E Y O U Great quotes to inspire, empower and motivate you to live the life of your dreams and become the person you've always wanted to be!
Ambition
T o be ambitious of true honor, of the true glory and perfection of our natures, is the very principle and incentive of virtue.
Credulity
T he only disadvantage of an honest heart is credulity.
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T he ingredients of health and long life, are great temperance, open air, easy labor, and little care. List By Author : A B C D ... Z Display By Subject : A B C D ... Press here or the BACK BUTTON on your browser to return to the previous page... or choose from the following options: Are You Looking For More Great Quotes? Check Out The Ultimate Success Quotations Library Over 43,000 Quotes. Download Your FREE Evaluation Program... And Learn How You Can Make Your Writing And Speeches More Powerful! Go Here To Download Your FREE Ultimate Quotations Screen Saver! You Can Use Tony Robbins' Personal Power Program To Achieve Your Dreams! How To Double Your Internet Business Within The Next 97 Days... Guaranteed! ... Return To Victory City Directory And Check Out Other Fabulous Places! If you have any technical questions about this site, please send your email to webmaster@cybernation.com

52. Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586)
Sir philip sidney. 15541586. Profile. He went on of course to become Sir philipsidney; friend of Spenser and one of the most influential of Elizabethan poets.
http://www3.shropshire-cc.gov.uk/sidney.htm
[Content] www.literaryheritage.org.uk Home People Places Themes ... Site map
Sir Philip Sidney
Profile
Poet; son of Sir Henry Sidney who was Lord President of the Council of the Marches and whose seat, in this capacity, was Ludlow Castle. Sir Henry was Lord President from 1560 to 1586 but was not in attendance at Ludlow throughout that period. Philip though, would certainly have visited Ludlow as a child and he was sent to Shrewsbury School where he quickly made friends with Fulke Greville . He went on of course to become Sir Philip Sidney; friend of Spenser and one of the most influential of Elizabethan poets. Sidney's life was all too brief but he left literary gems such as Arcadia Astrophel and Stella (1591) and the Apologie for poetrie (1591). A statue of Sidney was erected outside the new Shrewsbury School buildings as a memorial to the dead of the first World War.
From An Illustrated Literary Guide to Shropshire
Works
E-texts
A selection of poetry by the author can be found in Representative poetry on-line , part of the University of Toronto site. Also at Project Gutenburg Page created 9 February 2001 and last updated 28 October 2002
Send your literary enquiries and comments to enquiries@literaryheritage.org.uk

53. Passions In Poetry - Classical Poems By Sir Philip Sidney
Poems for the People Poems by the People. Sir philip sidney 1554 - 1586. Englishpoet, courtier, patron of poets and scholars. Classical Poet, Sir philip sidney.
http://www.netpoets.com/classic/058000.htm
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Poems for the People - Poems by the People
Sir Philip Sidney
English poet, courtier, patron of poets and scholars. One of the great literary figures of Elizabethan England, his heroic prose romance, the Arcadia (1580, revised 1584) was the most important work of prose fiction in sixteenth-century England. He wrote the first great Elizabethan sonnet cycles, Astrophil and Stella (1582), a sequence of one hundred and eight sonnets and eleven songs which explore the mind of the lover. His Defense of Poesie (1589) was the finest work of Elizabethan literary criticism. His successful experiments and technique influenced many other Renaissance poets like Spenser, Campion, Drayton and Jonson.
Classic Home
Sir Philip Sidney Robert Southey Classical Poet Sir Philip Sidney Biography Resources Available Poems Size Come Sleep, O Sleep! The Certain Knot of Peace Leave Me, O Love Which Reachest But to Dust Loving in Truth, and Fain in Verse My Love to Show My True Love Hath My Heart, and I Have His ... To the Sad Moon Astrophel and Stella First Song Eleventh Song Sonnet XXXI Sonnet LIV ... Submit a NEW Classic Poem!

54. Daily Celebrations ~ Philip Sidney, Find A Way ~ November 30 ~ Ideas To Motivate
Find a Way! A celebration of the life of courtier, soldier, and poet SirPhilip sidney (15541586). Celebration colors!
http://www.dailycelebrations.com/113000.htm
November 30 ~  Find A Way Sidney: Defense of Poetry Either I will f i n d a way, or I will m a k e one." ~ Philip Sidney Courtier, soldier, and poet Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586), born on this day in Penshurst, Kent, wrote the first English essay of literary criticism, Defence of Poesie "Each excellent thing, once learned, serves for a measure of all other knowledge," Sidney observed. A celebration of originality, Sidney observed that literature inspired the highest form of learning because the writer united the historian and philosopher . This "perfect picture" moved a reader toward wisdom and toward what he called "the most excellent determination of goodness." Sidney's fine work Astrophil and Stella (1580's) included 108 sonnets and 11 songs. Written with lyrical magic, the classic included the wonderful line, "Fool! said my muse to me, look in thy heart and write A legend in his Elizabethan time and to nostalgic Victorians, Sir Philip was the model of the chivalric knight and gentleman warrior. "There is nothing so great that I fear to do it for my friend ," he said. "Nothing so small that I will disdain to do it for him."

55. Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586)
BEULAH . SIR philip sidney. Sir philip sidney (1554-1586) was perhaps thesingle most important writer of the golden age of English Literature.
http://www.eavb.co.uk/lp/sidney.html
SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
Sidney's fictions are full of music. As we shall see, Stella sings, and the Arcadia is punctuated by moments where love-lorn characters sing to the lute or viol, fitting their words to popular tunes as Sidney had done. Penelope's voice seems to have been a fine one. Sidney writes about it, and in 1597 the French lutenist Charles Tessier attempted to win the patronage of her brother by writing his volume of Airs de Cour for her. When her second husband died, the composer Coprario published a volume of mourning songs, Funeral Tears (1606), explicitly for her to sing. If Sidney did love Penelope Rich, and if that love was returned, then it is in song that we should expect it to be commemorated. "O that most rare breast" is an unrhymed sonnet which Byrd sets in four sections as if it were rhymed on the English pattern, lines 1-4, 5-8, 9-12, and 13-14. Although this song exists in a manuscript form, probably prior to its printing, as a solo song with consort accompaniment, it seems clearly envisaged as a full part song. To a lesser extent this is true also of "Come to me grief for ever", which is given a simpler treatment befitting its plainer lyric. A repeated musical rhythm for each phrase in the top part, a formally quantitative treatment of the Aristophanic metre of the words, enables six stanzas (the last repeating the first) to be set to the same music. This approach is likely to represent the sort of musical setting Sidney would have favoured. The metre is one used by Sidney in "Certain Sonnets" 25, and an overt tribute to his poetry seems to be intended.

56. OUP USA: Sir Philip Sidney: The Major Works
Sir philip sidney The Major Works Edited by KATHERINE DUNCANJONES, Somerville College,Oxford This authoritative edition brings together a unique combination
http://www.oup-usa.org/isbn/0192840800.html
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Sir Philip Sidney: The Major Works
Edited by KATHERINE DUNCAN-JONES, Somerville College, Oxford

This authoritative edition brings together a unique combination of Sidney's poetry and proseall the major writing, complemented by letters and elegiesthat 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.
New and recent titles of related interest: Literature Oxford World's Classics 448 pp.; 2 b/w halftones; 5 x 7 3/4; 0-19-284080-0

57. Name Philip Sidney Category Authors And Poets Burial Location
Name philip sidney. Category Authors and Poets. Burial LocationSt. Paul's Cathedral, London, England. Mike's Notes none.
http://www.mike-reed.com/Graves/sidney-philip.htm
Name: Philip Sidney Category: Authors and Poets Burial Location: St. Paul's Cathedral, London, England. Mike's Notes: none.

58. Sir Philip Sidney; Shelby County Ohio Historical Society
Traveling Through Time With the Shelby County Historical Society FeatureArticle on Sir philip sidney. SIR philip sidney, A RENAISSANCE MAN.
http://www.shelbycountyhistory.org/schs/archives/people/sirpsidnypeoa.htm
Traveling Through Time With the Shelby County Historical Society
Feature Article on Sir Philip Sidney. Topic: PEOPLE
Written by David Lodge in July, 1997 SIR PHILIP SIDNEY, A RENAISSANCE MAN ...our forefathers had a dream and a vision for this crook in the Great Miami River which was fulfilled with the establishment of a settlement. A town and place where men, women and children could come together, to join in the birth of the new Ohio; proclaiming the planting of new family roots. "What shall we call this place? " was the preeminent question of the day. "Shall we name it in honor of Sir Philip Sidney, valiant knight?" Although the debate took place less than 180 years ago, the record and the arguments of the participants eludes even the most experienced historians. The lone surviving element of that noble endeavor is our city and its name. Did one of our founders wax eloquent support for Sidney, " A name of magnificence, linked to this place of significance, shall forever proclaim the importance of this small plot of land in the county of Shelby." Was this thought planted by a Sir Philip Sidney supporter in the minds of the men and women who chartered our fair community less than two decades after this territory became a state, or was it simply borrowed from the middle name of one of those early pioneers

59. Sir Philip Sidney (Pg 2); Shelby County Ohio Historical Society
Traveling Through Time With the Shelby County Historical Society Feature Articleon Sir philip sidney. SIR philip sidney, A RENAISSANCE MAN Pg 2.
http://www.shelbycountyhistory.org/schs/archives/people/sirpsidnypeop2a.htm
Traveling Through Time With the Shelby County Historical Society
Feature Article on Sir Philip Sidney. Topic: PEOPLE
Written by David Lodge in July, 1997 SIR PHILIP SIDNEY, A RENAISSANCE MAN...Pg 2 I shall not bore you with the details of my own life, since I am not the subject of this text; but suffice it to say that my close association with Philip Sidney as a childhood friend and compatriot, throughout his short span of adult years, adequately prepares me for the task of relating his story. Not knowing where to start leaves me with only one option, and that is to start at the beginning. This I shall do. My friendship with Philip began when he was just a young boy. At the time our lives intertwined he needed the companionship of another lad, since at home he was bound to interaction with three younger sisters, of whom he expressed much affection. He would later enjoy the addition of three more siblings to the family; another sister and two brothers. I should interject at this point, that the influence of these sisters on Philip, and more particularly on his writings, established him in his own time as a man who expressed a unique grasp of the personal and emotional traits of women, treating them as equals. The writers of the times displayed an appalling lack of understanding of females and their issues. Not so with Philip. In "Pyrocles to Musidorus," he writes, "I am not yet come to that degree of wisdom to think light of the sex of whom I have my life: since if I be anything...I was come to it born of a woman and nursed of a woman...And truly, we men and praisers of men should remember, that if we have such excellencies, it is reason to think them excellent creatures of whom we are....

60. Jelle Otten. Sir Philip Sidney References
JulyAugust, 2002. Sir philip sidney references. Sir philip sidney (1554-1586) wasa statesman, poet and soldier. He was one of Queen Elisabeth's favourites.
http://wodehouse.ru/sidney.htm
July-August, 2002
Sir Philip Sidney references
Jelle Otten Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586) was a statesman, poet and soldier. He was one of Queen Elisabeth's favourites.
For a while he lived at Sudeleigh Castle, one of the castles that Wodehouse inspired to Blandings Castle.
When living in temporary retirement he composed his famous 'Arcadia'.
In 1586 he was given a command in The Netherlands to support the Dutch rebels in their War of Independence against Spain.
He was wounded in action at Zutphen resulted in death.
According a legend Sir Philip refused to take some water when he was wounden, saying: "Their (= the other soldiers') need is greater than mine". P.G. Wodehouse liked Sir Philip Sidney and he used him as a personage in some of his books. First of all Bertie Wooster.
His Code of the Woosters: 'one must always help out a friend in need no matter the circumstances', repeatedly remembers us of Sir Philip. Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, Chapter 12:
[Aunt Dahlia is in problems because she had pawned her pearl necklace that Uncle Tom Travers, her husband, has given her. The problem is what happens when Uncle Tom finds out? And Uncle Tom has asked Roderick Spode, Lord Sidcup to take a look at the necklace.
Therefore Aunt Dahlia is sending SOSs for Jeeves.]

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