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         Sidney Philip:     more books (73)
  1. Sidney to Milton, 1580-1660 (Transitions) by Marion Wynne-Davis, 2003-02-08
  2. A Sidney Chronology: 1551-1654 (Author Chronologies) by Michael G. Brennan, Noel J. Kinnamon, 2003-12-05
  3. Sidney's Poetics: Imitating Creation by Michael Mack, 2004-12
  4. Sidney and Junius on Poetry and Painting: From the Margins to the Center by Judith Dundas, 2007-10-30
  5. The Imperfect Friend: Emotion and Rhetoric in Sidney, Milton and Their Conexts by Wendy Olmsted, 2008-05-03
  6. The Text of Sidney's Arcadian World by Michael McCanles, 1989-06
  7. The Ridiculous to the Delightful: Comic Characters in Sidney's New Arcadia (The Lebaron Russell Briggs Prize Honors Essays in English, 1973) by Robert Nicholas Reeves, 1974-01-01
  8. Favorite Sons: The Politics and Poetics of the Sidney Family by Elizabeth Mazzola, 2003-10-01
  9. Critical Contexts of Sidney's Astrophil and Stella, and Spenser's Amoretti (E L S Monograph Series) by J. MacArthur, 1989-08
  10. Heroic Love: Studies in Sidney and Spenser by Mark Rose, 1968-06
  11. Sidney's Poetic Justice: The Old Arcadia, Its Eclogues, and Renaissance Pastoral Traditions by Robert, M.D. Stillman, 1986-03
  12. Sidney in Retrospect: Selections from English Literary Renaissance by Arthur F. Kinney, 1988-05
  13. Three Studies in the Renaissance: Sidney, Jonson, Milton (Yale studies in English) by Richard B. Young, 1969-06
  14. Sir Philip Sydney and the English Renaissance by John Buxton, 1987-12

81. Passions In Poetry - Classical Poems By Sir Philip Sidney
Take the Gillette® Venus® quiz. Poems for the People Poems by the People. SirPhilip Sidney 1554 - 1586. English poet, courtier, patron of poets and scholars.
http://www.netpoets.com/classic/058000.htm
Send some poems to a friend - the love thought that counts! Poetry Classical FAQ News ... EZine What's your goddess groove? Take the Gillette® Venus® quiz
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!

82. Passions In Poetry - Classical Poet Biography Sir Philip Sidney
Poems for the People Poems by the People. Sir Philip Sidney 1554 - 1586. Sir PhilipSidney was born at Penshurst Place, Kent, eldest son of Sir Henry Sidney.
http://www.netpoets.com/classic/biographies/058000.htm
Send some poems to a friend - the love thought that counts! Poetry Classical FAQ News ... EZine
Poems for the People - Poems by the People
Sir Philip Sidney
Classic Home Sir Philip Sidney Robert Southey Classical Poet Sir Philip Sidney Poetry Resources Be sure to check out our Resources for additional Articles and Links about this Classic Poet. If have written a paper on this poet, you can also submit it for possible publication with our other Resources. Home Page Classical Poetry Poetry Map
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83. GIGA Quote Author Page For Sir Philip Sidney
GIGA QUOTES BY AUTHOR Sir Philip Sidney Englishsoldier, poet and courtier (1554 1586),
http://www.giga-usa.com/gigaweb1/quotes2/quautsidneyphilipx001.htm
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GIGA QUOTES BY AUTHOR SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
English soldier, poet and courtier (1554 - 1586)
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SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
1 of 2 Pages of this Author:
In ashes of despaire, though burnt, shall make thee live.
Arcadia Fire
Making a perpetual mansion of this poor baiting place.
Arcadia World
Knitting and withal singing, and it seemed that her voice comforted her hands to work. Arcadia (bk. I) [ Songs They are never alone that are accompanied with noble thoughts. The Arcadia (bk. I) [ Thought High erected thoughts seated in a heart of courtesy. The Arcadia (bk. I, par. II) [ Courtesy Many-headed multitude. Arcadia (bk. II) [ Public My dear, my better half. Arcadia (bk. III) [ Wives Shallow brooks murmur moste, deepe silent slide away. The ArcadiaThirsis and Dorus Silence She is her selfe of best things the collection. The ArcadiaThirsis and Dorus Women So when thou saw'st in nature's cabinet Stella thou straight'st look'st babies in her eyes.

84. Philip Sidney - Wikipedia
Philip Sidney. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Sir Philip Sidney (November30, 1554 1586) became one of the Elizabethan Age's most prominent figures.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Sidney

85. Sir Philip Sidney - Acapedia - Free Knowledge, For All
Philip Sidney. (Redirected from Sir Philip Sidney). Sir Philip Sidney (November30, 1554 1586) became one of the Elizabethan Age's most prominent figures.
http://acapedia.org/aca/Sir_Philip_Sidney
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86. Philip Sidney
Translate this page Sir Philip Sidney. 1554 -1586. Vero amore. Il mio vero amore ha il miocuore ed io ho il suo. in giusto scambio l’uno per l’altro dato.
http://digilander.libero.it/xlisabeth/valentinosidney.htm
Sir Philip Sidney Vero amore Il mio vero amore ha il mio cuore ed io ho il suo in giusto scambio l’uno per l’altro dato. Io tengo caro il suo, e il mio lui non può perdere, non ci fu mai un patto meglio riuscito. Il mio vero amore ha il mio cuore ed io ho il suo. Il suo cuore in me ci tiene uniti, il mio cuore in lui guida pensieri e sensi. Lui ama il mio cuore, che era suo una volta, io adoro il suo, perché in me ora ascolta. Il mio vero amore ha il mio cuore ed io ho il suo. Sir Philip Sidney nacque nel Kent nel 1554 e morì nei Paesi Bassi nel 1586. La sua fama è legata ad Astrofel e Stella , un canzoniere, e al romanzo Arcadia

87. Poet: Sir Philip Sidney - All Poems Of Sir Philip Sidney
Subscribe. Unsubscribe. Sir Philip Sidney (1554 1586) Sir Philip Sidneywas born at Penshurst Place, Kent, eldest son of Sir Henry Sidney.
http://www.poemhunter.com/p/t/poet.asp?poet=6659

88. Bibliotheca Augustana
Philip Sidney 1554 1586, The Author Sir Philip Sidney, «sublimely mild, a spiritwithout spot» (Shelley), courtier, poet, author of prose romance and critic
http://www.fh-augsburg.de/~harsch/anglica/Chronology/16thC/Sidney/sid_intr.html
B I B L I O T H E C A A U G U S T A N A
Philip Sidney
The Author
The Work
Discourse on Irish Affairs (1577)
The Lady of May

The Defence of Poesie

Certain Sonnets (1581)
The Countesse of Pembroke's Arcadia
(Old Arcadia 1581)
Astrophel and Stella

The Countesse of Pembroke's Arcadia (New Arcadia 1584) Letters
Appendix
Richard Bear's Sidney sites (University of Oregon) The Sidney site at the University of Toronto Sources/Colophon

89. ¯« ¸g ø¦ ø¦ - ­^ ¤å ¸Ö - Sir Philip Sidney - ¤Q¥|¦æ¸Ö - Loving
( 1? 15 ?) (16 Kbps, Mono). Loving in truth sonnet1 from astrophel and stella by Sir Philip Sidney - (1554 - 1586).
http://neuro.ohbi.net/english_poem/sonnet_sidney_astrophel_and_stella_1.htm
¯« ¸g ø¦ ø¦ Loving in truth sonnet 1 from "astrophel and stella"
(16 Kbps, Mono) Loving in truth
sonnet 1 from "astrophel and stella
- by Sir Philip Sidney -
  • Loving in truth, and fain in verse my love to show,
  • That she, dear she, might take some pleasure of my pain,
  • Pleasure might cause her read, reading might make her know,
  • Knowledge might pity win, and pity grace obtain,
  • I sought fit words to paint the blackest face of woe;
  • Studying inventions fine her wits to entertain,
  • Oft turning others' leaves, to see if thence would flow
  • Some fresh and fruitful showers upon my sunburn'd brain.
  • But words came halting forth, wanting invention's stay;
  • Invention, Nature's child, fled step-dame Study's blows;
  • And others' feet still seem'd but strangers in my way.
  • Thus great with child to speak and helpless in my throes,
  • Biting my truant pen, beating myself for spite,
  • "Fool," said my Muse to me, "look in thy heart, and write." vocabulary
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  • 90. SIDNEY, SIR PHILIP
    Sidney, Sir Philip (1554—1586), English poet, statesman and soldier, eldest sonof Sir Henry Sidney and his wife Mary Dudley, was born at Penshurst on the
    http://21.1911encyclopedia.org/S/SI/SIDNEY_SIR_PHILIP.htm
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    SIDNEY, SIR PHILIP
    the morning of the 7th of December 1683. His remains were buried at Penshurst. (0. A.) redoubtable chieftain tifi Sussex reluctantly returned to his duties in August 1559. About the same time Sidney resigned his office of vice-treasurer of Ireland on. being appointed president of the Welsh Marches, and for the next few years he resided chiefly at Ludlow Castle, with frequent visits to the court in London. Sir Henry Sidney was the ablest statesman charged with the government of Ireland in the 16th century; and the meagre recognition which his unrewarded services received was a conspicuous example of the ingratitude of Elizabeth. Sidney married in 1551 Mary, eldest daughter of John Dudley, duke of Northumberland, by whom he had three sons and four daughters. His eldest son was Sir Philip Sidney (q.v.), and his second was Robert Sidney, 1st earl of Leicester (q.v.); his daughter Mary married Henry Herbert, 2nd earl of Pembroke, and by reason of her association with her brother Philip was one of the most celebrated women of her time (see PEMBROKE, EARLS OF). See Calendar of State Papers relating to Ireland, Henry VIII.-

    91. Sir Philip Sidney: Supplementary Texts
    Sir Philip Sidney (1554 1586) Arcadia / Double Sestina / Defence / Astropheland Stella (extracts) / One of the Certain Sonnets / From the New Arcadia
    http://www.sogang.ac.kr/~anthony/Sidney.htm
    Sir Philip Sidney
      Arcadia Double Sestina Defence Astrophel and Stella (extracts) / One of the Certain Sonnet s / From the New Arcadia
      A detailed summary of The Old Arcadia
      Book I
      Duke Basilius, ruler of Arcadia, his wife Gynecia and their young daughters Pamela and Philoclea go to live in a remote rural village in an attempt to avoid a fearful oracle that Basilius has received at Delphi, announcing that his elder daughter will be stolen from him, the younger "embrace an uncouth love," while he will commit adultery with his wife and a foreigner will sit on his throne.
      Two noble cousins, Pyrocles and Musidorus, are travelling through Arcadia when Pyrocles sees a painting of Philoclea and falls in love with her. He decides that the best way of approaching her is for him to disguise himself as a girl, Cleophila. As he comes to the village, disguised, he meets the rough shepherd Dametas who is guarding the family, then the Duke who falls in love with "her" and urges her to stay. Musidorus, watching events from the woods, sees Pamela and falls in love with her, so he dresses as a shepherd, Dorus, in the hope of being able to stay near her.
      A lion and bear suddenly appear. Cleophila saves Philoclea, killing the lion; Gynecia realizes that this must be a man, and falls in love with him. Dorus saves Pamela by killing the bear. By the end of the book, everyone is in love, including Philoclea, who is most perplexed by her feelings towards Cleophila.

    92. Sir Philip Sidney Quotes - The Quotations Page
    Quotations by Author. Sir Philip Sidney (1554 1586) English poet, politician, soldier more author details. Showing quotations 1 to 2 of 2 total,
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    No sword bites so fiercly as an evil tongue.
    Sir Philip Sidney
    They are never alone that are accompanied with noble thoughts.
    Sir Philip Sidney
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    93. Sir Philip Sidney. Astrophil And Stella. Structure, Theme And Convention. Englis
    An essay on techniques in Sir Philip Sidney's sonnet sequence.Category Arts Literature British 16th Century Sidney, Sir Philip...... Sir Philip Sidney 1554 1586. The names Astrophil and Stella meanStar-lover and Star, suggesting the impossibility of their union
    http://www.english-literature.org/essays/astrophil_and_stella.html
    Sir Philip Sidney
    Astrophil and Stella
    Structure, theme and convention in Sir Philip Sidney's sonnet sequence, Astrophil and Stella
    By Donna
    English Literature Home Page Course Summary English Literature Resources English Literature Essays ... Contact Us
    Sir Philip Sidney 1554 - 1586 The names Astrophil and Stella mean Star-lover and Star, suggesting the impossibility of their union because of the distance between them
    The sixteenth century was a time of scientific, historical, archaeological, religious and artistic exploration. More attention was being allotted to probing into the depths of the human psyche and it was up to the artists and poets rather than the priests and scholars to examine and mirror these internal landscapes. The 'little world of man' [1] was reflected through various artistic forms, one of which was the sonnet, which was conventionally used for dedications, moral epigrams and the like. Traditionally most sonnets dealt with the theme of romantic love and in general the sonneteer dealt with the over-riding concern of the self and the other, the latter of which normally referred to a mistress, friend, or a familial relation. One of the first important artistic creations witnessed by the Elizabethans was Sidney's sonnet sequence called

    94. Portraits Of All Poets
    earl of Surrey, 1517 1547 George Gascoigne, 1534 - 1577 Qween Elizabeth I, 1534- 1603 Edmund Spenser, 1552-1599 Philip Sidney, 1554 - 1586 Sir Walter Raleigh
    http://members.tripod.com/poetry_pearls/PortAllPoets.htm
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    95. Letters And Memorials Of State In The Reigns Of Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth, Kin
    Written and collected by Sir Henry Sydney, the famous Sir Philip Sydney, and hisbrother, Sir Robert Sydney, Robert, the second earl of Leicester, Philip, lord
    http://js-catalog.cpl.org:60100/MARION/ACC-7226
    Letters and memorials of state in the reigns of Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth, King James, King Charles the First, part of the reign of King Charles the Second, and Oliver's usurpation.
    Title:
    Author:
    Published:
    • London, Printed for T. Osborne, 1746.
    Subject:

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