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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. Sir Philip Sidney - Poems, Biography, Quotes
Free collection of all Sir philip sidney Poems and Biography. See the best poems and poetry by Sir philip sidney.
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Women Poets ... Meaning of Names Sir Philip Sidney Enlarge Picture View Sir Philip Sidney: Poems Biography Books Sir Philip Sidney was born at Penshurst Place, Kent, eldest son of Sir Henry Sidney. He entered Shrewsbury School in 1564 on the same day as Fulke Greville, his friend and biographer. After attending Christ Church, Oxford (1568-72), he travelled in Europe where for three years he perfected his knowledge of Latin, French and Italian. In 1577, aged twenty-two, he was sent as ambassador to the German Emperor and the Prince of Orange. His strong Protestant sympathies made him advise Elizabeth I in a.. Continue.. Some of Sir Philip Sidney Poems Astrophel and Stella: III My True Love Hath My Heart, And I Have His To The Sad Moon Sleep ... Contact Us The Poems and Quotes on this site are the property of their respective authors. All information has been reproduced here for educational and informational purposes.

42. About Sir Philip Sidney
The Life and Work of Sir philip sidney. sidney messageboard, complete text of sidney s books and short stories, links to other information on sidney.
http://sidney.classicauthors.net/
About Sir Philip Sidney
Works Online Defense Of Poesy
Timeline Sir Philip Sidney was born on November 30, 1554, at Penshurst, Kent He entered Shrewsbury School Furthered his education at Christ Church, Oxford he left Christ Church without taking a degree in order to complete his education by travelling the continent. Approx 1571 During this time the places he visited were Paris, Frankfurt, Venice, and Vienna. Sidney returned to England he was sent as ambassador to the German Emperor and the Prince of Orange. Officialy he was there to condole the princes on the deaths of their fathers. he displeased the queen by opposing her projected marriage to the Duke of Anjou, Roman Catholic heir to the French throne, and was dismissed from court for a time he made a covert attempt to join Drake`s expedition to Cadiz The queen appointed Sidney the Governor Flushing (Vlissingen) Sidney, along with his younger brother Robert, took part in a skirmish against the Spanish at Zutphen, and was wounded of a musket shot that shattered his thigh-bone 22 days after being wounded, sidney died of the unhealed wound at not yet thirty-two years of age

43. Sir Philip Sidney's Apology For Poetry
Young philip sidney came of age at a time when there was a new excitement about books and reading, as well as a growing optimism and wariness about the
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~mlhall/PhilipSidney.html
Sir Philip Sidney's Apology for Poetry
Although it stands at or near the beginning of a tradition in English literature that we hear echoes of in later manifestos, such as Shelley's Defense of Poetry , Sidney's Apology for Poetry is not much read these days, nor often quoted, except perhaps the fairly well-known exclamation that the poet "nothing affirms, and therefore never lies." Such neglect, although understandable, is unfortunate. Sidney was writing at the beginning of a tradition both literary and educational, a tradition whose end we are now witnessing, that represents a more or less coherent understanding of the place of poetry (we would say literature) and the liberal arts in western culture. With our backs against the wall, so to speak, defenders of literature and the other arts in education often fall back on utilitarian arguments. Literature can be a means to improving language skills, theater can improve students understanding of society and hone basic social skills as well. Even so few modern defenders of liberal education would attempt to mount the kind of defense Sidney offers in his Apology . His goals are much more ambitious. Sidney did not think poetry was the only thing; in most important respects he thought it was everything. And that conception of poetry, elaborately presented in the

44. A Defence Of Poesie And Poems / Sidney, Philip, Sir, 1554-1586
A Defence of Poesie and Poems by philip sidney November, 1999 Etext 1962 Project Gutenberg Etext A Defence of Poesie and Poems, by sidney ******This file
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A Defence of Poesie and Poems / Sidney, Philip, Sir, 1554-1586
Author Sidney, Philip, Sir, 1554-1586 Title A Defence of Poesie and Poems Date Contributor(s) Patten, William, 1868-1946 [Editor] Size Identifier Language en Publisher Project Gutenberg Rights GNU General Public License Tag(s) man love poets poetry ... editor Versions original local mirror plain HTML (this file)
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45. The Moon And Philip Sidney - Features, Books - Independent.co.uk
No matter how much reading one has done, at the moment of writing, hopefully Sir philip sidney s not sitting next to you in front of the computer screen.
http://arts.independent.co.uk/books/features/article292425.ece
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    • UK Sunday, 3 October 1999 I had been warned that Anne Michaels, winner of the Orange Prize in 1997 for Fugitive Pieces, does not answer personal questions. Most notoriously, when giving interviews for that novel, she refused to say whether or not she was Jewish, a reasonable enough query one might think, since the book charts the laborious climb out of hell of the boy Jakob, orphaned by the Nazis. Michaels's latest book, Skin Divers, is a collection of poetry, her first to be published in this country though three previous collections have appeared in her native Canada. She is half an hour late for the interview in the Soho boardroom of her publishers, Bloomsbury, and as soon as she arrives it's clear that all is not well. She has just suffered a mauling in a radio interview. Misreading her mood, I assume she feels hurt by the experience. She is not. She is livid.

46. Philip Gourevitch, Sidney Harman Writer-in-Residence Fall 2002, Baruch College
philip Gourevitch, a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1997, is the Fall 2002 sidney Harman Writerin Residence at Baruch College.
http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/wsas/harman/gourevitch.html
Philip Gourevitch
[Photo: Jacqueline Gourevitch]
Philip Gourevitch
Sidney Harman Writer-in-Residence
Fall 2002 Journalism and the Literary Imagination more information Philip Gourevitch, a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1997, is the Fall 2002 Sidney Harman Writer-in Residence at Baruch College. His first book, We Wish To Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families: stories from Rwanda Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the George K. Polk Award for Foreign Reporting, the PEN/Martha Algrand Award for First Nonfiction, the New York Public Library's Helen Bernstein Award, and, in England, the Guardian First Book Award. It has been published in six foreign languages. His second book, A Cold Case In addition to his work for The New Yorker Granta Harper's , and The New York Review of Books . His short fiction has been published in various journals, including Story Southwest Review , and Zoetrope Gourevitch is the Chair of the International Committee of PEN American Center, and a Senior Fellow at the World Policy Institute. Before joining The New Yorker , he worked at the Forward newspaper, first as New York Bureau Chief, then as Cultural Editor. He was educated at Cornell University (B.A, 1986), and Columbia University's School of the Arts (M.F.A., 1992). He is forty years old, and lives in Millerton, NY, and New York City.

47. JSTOR Sir Philip Sidney S Dilemma On The Ethical Function Of
Thus Sir philip sidney called dramatic poetry the food for the tenderest stomachs thereby meaning to praise it.7 Yet the underlying humanist assumptions
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0021-8529(199623)54:4<327:SPSDOT>2.0.CO;2-1

48. Sir Philip Sidney, "Astrophil And Stella"
Characters The lover, characterized as the star lover astrophil with a pun on sidney s first name and the beloved, Stella or star, often are the
http://faculty.goucher.edu/eng211/sir_philip_sidney_.htm
Sir Phillip Sidney, "Astrophil and Stella" Genre: This is often called a "sonnet cycle" because it tracks in linked sonnets the progressive rise and fall of a love relationship. However, typically for Sidney who was an avid experimenter in poetic forms, the 108 sonnets are interrupted by 11 songs of varying forms, usually using shorter lines than the sonnet's pentameters (mostly tetrameters [four feet per line]). The Norton editors include the fourth and eleventh songs as examples, and also because they record crucial turning points in the affair celebrated in the sonnets. They also are where you can hear "Stella"'s voice, ventriloquized by the speaker, as he describes her response to his pleas. For one of Sidney's greatest neoclassical achievements, see "Ye Goatherd Gods," a double sestina and one of seventy-eight poems that punctuate the plot of his great prose romance, The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia (Norton ed. 911-16). This work, and the songs it contains, are one of the great expressions of the "pastoral" mode in English. Think of Astrophil and Stella as a kind of "inverse" of the

49. Philip Sidney | Find Articles At BNET.com
Sir philip sidney The English poet, courtier, diplomat, and soldier Sir philip sidney (15541586) realized more dramatically than any other figure.
http://findarticles.com/p/search?qt=Philip Sidney&qf=free

50. Author:Philip Sidney - Wikisource
Author Index S, philip sidney (1554–1586). See also biography, media. One of the Elizabethan Age s most philip sidney. philip sidney. edit Works
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Author:Philip_Sidney
Author:Philip Sidney
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Jump to: navigation search Author Index: S Philip Sidney
See also biography media One of the Elizabethan Age's most prominent figures who was famous in his day in England as a poet, courtier and soldier. Philip Sidney
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Retrieved from " http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Author:Philip_Sidney Categories Authors-S 1554 births ... Soldiers Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox

51. Philip Sidney Criticism
By the middle of the twentieth century, sidney s reputation enjoyed an upswing. Theodore Spencer s influential 1944 essay, “The Poetry of Sir philip sidney
http://www.enotes.com/poetry-criticism/sidney-philip
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Philip Sidney Criticism and Essays
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  • Philip Sidney 1554–-1586
    English courtier, statesman, soldier, playwright, essayist, poet, and prose writer.
    INTRODUCTION
    Known for his chivalry, statesmanship, extensive knowledge, and literary gifts, Sidney has earned the reputation as the quintessential Renaissance man. The estimation of Sidney as an ideal knight overshadowed his merits as a literary artist until early in the twentieth century, but since then he has been admired for his innovative and elegantly ornate poetic style, careful craftsmanship, and the force of emotion in his seemingly simple lines of poetry. The overriding concern in Sidney's verse is love, a theme that is given its most witty and rhetorically sophisticated expression in Astrophel and Stella . This sonnet sequence, the first of its kind in the English language, is generally regarded as Sidney's masterpiece and one of his great contributions to English literature; with it he overturned the conventions of the Petrachan sonnet and revolutionized the form. His other great literary contributions were the first statement of English poetics, A Defence of Poetry and the most recognized work of English prose fiction in the sixteenth century

    52. Sir Philip Sidney Sestina: "Ye Goat-herd Gods"
    Sir philip sidney. Ye Goatherd Gods. Strephon. Ye Goatherd gods, that love the grassy mountains, Ye nymphs which haunt the springs in pleasant valleys,
    http://homepages.wmich.edu/~cooneys/poems/Sidney.sestina.html
    Sir Philip Sidney
    Ye Goat-herd Gods
    Strephon
    Ye Goatherd gods, that love the grassy mountains,
    Ye nymphs which haunt the springs in pleasant valleys,
    Ye satyrs joyed with free and quiet forests,
    Vouchsafe your silent ears to plaining music,
    Which to my woes gives still an early morning,
    And draws the dolor on till weary evening.
    Klaius
    O Mercury, foregoer to the evening,
    O heavenly huntress of the savage mountains,
    O lovely star, entitled of the morning
    While that my voice doth fill these woeful valleys, Vouchsafe your silent ears to plaining music, Which oft hath Echo tired in secret forests.
    Strephon I that was once free burgess of the forests, Where shade from Sun, and sport I sought in evening, I, that was once esteemed for pleasant music, Am banished now among the monstrous mountains Of huge despair, and foul affliction's valleys, Am grown a screech-owl to myself each morning.
    Klaius I that was once delighted every morning Hunting the wild inhabiters of forests, I, that was once the music of these valleys So darkened am, that all my day is evening

    53. SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
    Sir philip sidney and the Interpretation of Renaissance Culture. Hamilton, A. C. Sir philip sidney a Study of his Life and Works. Helgerson, Richard.
    http://www.phillwebb.net/History/Modern/Sidney/Sidney.htm
    CONTENTS HISTORY ANCIENT (CLASSICAL)
    Epicureanism

    Neoplatonism
    ...
    Architecture

    Arts (Performing)
    Arts (Visual and Plastic)

    Film

    Literature

    Audience
    ...
    SPORTS

    GENERAL ASSOCIATIONS CAREERS CONFERENCES JOURNALS ... WWW GATEWAYS ALTERNATIVE STANDPOINTS Feminist Theory Aesthetics/ Critical Theory Post-colonial Theory Aesthetics / Critical Theory SIR PHILIP SIDNEY (1554 - 1586) SOURCES: PRIMARY Off-Line:
    • Anthologies: Selected Individual Works:
      • An Apology for Poetry . 1583. Published 1595.
      On-Line:
      • Selected Individual Works: SOURCES: SECONDARY Off-Line:
        • Anthologies:
          • Waller, Gary, and Michael Moore, eds. Sir Philip Sidney and the Interpretation of Renaissance Culture
          Selected Individual Works:
          • Duncan-Jones, Katherine. Sir Philip Sidney, Courtier Poet Hamilton, A. C. Sir Philip Sidney: a Study of his Life and Works Helgerson, Richard. "Sidney." Elizabethan Prodigals McCoy, Richard. Sir Philip Sidney: Rebellion in Arcadia Myrick, K. O. Sir Philip Sidney as a Literary Craftsman Robinson, Forrest.

    54. Review Of English Studies -- Sign In Page
    Writing After sidney The Literary Response to Sir philip sidney 1586–1640. Pp. xliv+380 . Oxford Oxford University Press. £65.
    http://res.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/hgm099v1
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    GAVIN ALEXANDER. Writing After Sidney: The Literary Response to Sir Philip Sidney...
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    55. Sir Philip Sydney
    Click here to view larger Sir philip sidney document My Weire, come come, I am in great peril of my life and I want thee. Neither living nor dead will I be
    http://www.sgwilkinson.freeserve.co.uk/spsydney.htm
    Sir Philip Sidney's Last Letter
    This epic hero, poet, statesman, soldier, and a favourite of Queen Elizabeth, was endowed to the highest degree with the human virtues.
    Given command of a force in the Netherlands by the Queen, he was shot in the thigh by a musket ball on September 22, 1586, while trying to intercept a convoy of provisions for the enemy during the Battle of Zutphen.
    Though a prey to burning thirst, he refused, in favour of a dying soldier, a cup of water that was brought to him, saying: "Thy need is greater than mine".
    He was only thirty-two, and clung to life. Though in the throes of death, he still had the strength to write to Jean Wyer (surgeon to the Duke of Cleves) the accompanying note, which we translate, the original being in Latin:
    My Weire, come come, I am in great peril of my life and I want thee. Neither living nor dead will I be ungrateful. I can do no more than earnestly pray that thou mayest hasten. Farewell. At Arnem. Thine.
    PH. Sidney.
    Unfortunately the letter arrived too late to be of use, for the gallant soldier died on the following day.
    (Public Records Office) [Sidney, Sir Philip (1554-1586), was an author, courtier, and soldier during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England. He became famous for his literary criticism, prose fiction, and poetry.]

    56. A Defence Of Poesie And Poems By Sir Philip Sidney - Project Gutenberg
    Download the free eBook A Defence of Poesie and Poems by Sir philip sidney.
    http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1962
    Online Book Catalog Quick Search Author: Title Word(s): EText-No.: Advanced Search Recent Books Top 100 Offline Catalogs ... Main Page Project Gutenberg needs your donation! More Info Did you know that you can help us produce ebooks by proof-reading just one page a day? Go to: Distributed Proofreaders
    A Defence of Poesie and Poems by Sir Philip Sidney
    Help Read online Bibliographic Record Creator Sidney, Philip, Sir, 1554-1586 Title A Defence of Poesie and Poems Language English LoC Class PN: Language and Literatures: Literature: General, Criticism, Collections Subject Poetry Early works to 1800 EText-No. Release Date
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    57. Philip Sidney Van Cise — Www.greenwood.com
    All Greenwood Products. Home » Catalog » Author » V » Van Cise, philip sidney. philip sidney Van Cise Books by this author. Fighting the Underworld.
    http://www.greenwood.com/catalog/author/V/Philip_Sidney_Van+Cise.aspx

    58. OUP: UK General Catalogue
    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
    http://www.oup.co.uk/isbn/0-19-284080-0
    NEVER MISS AN OXFORD SALE (SIGN UP HERE) VIEW BASKET Quick Links About OUP Career Opportunities Contacts Need help? News oup.com Search the Catalogue Site Index American National Biography Booksellers' Information Service Children's Fiction and Poetry Children's Reference Dictionaries Dictionary of National Biography Digital Reference English Language Teaching Higher Education Textbooks Humanities International Education Unit Journals Law Medicine Music Online Products Oxford English Dictionary Reference Rights and Permissions Science School Books Social Sciences Very Short Introductions World's Classics Advanced Search UK and Europe Book Catalogue Help with online ordering How to order Postage Returns policy ... Description
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    Sir Philip Sidney
    The Major Works
    Philip Sidney
    Edited by Katherine Duncan-Jones

    ISBN-13: 978-0-19-284080-6
    Publication date: 12 September 2002
    448 pages, 2 halftones, 196x129 mm
    Series: Oxford World's Classics
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    59. Structure, Theme And Convention In Sir Philip Sidney's Sonnet Sequence, Astrophi
    Essay exploring Sir philip sidney s sonnet sequence, Astrophil and Stella in terms of structure, theme and convention.
    http://www.literature-study-online.com/essays/astrophil_and_stella.html
    Structure, theme and convention in Sir Philip Sidney's sonnet sequence Astrophil and Stella
    By Donna Bookshop English Literature Sir Philip Sidney Renaissance poetry ... GCSE Books 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 Astrophil and Stella , a variation on Petrarch's Canzoniere . Sidney who was indeed acclaimed the 'English Petrarch', nevertheless wrote with his Elizabethan readers in mind as his characters spoke in English accents, voiced English concerns and evoked the spirit of the time.

    60. IngentaConnect Imitatio And Identity: Thomas Rogers, Philip Sidney, And The Prot
    Imitatio and Identity Thomas Rogers, philip sidney, and the Protestant Self. Author perry, nandra1. Source English Literary Renaissance, Volume 35,
    http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/bpl/enlr/2005/00000035/00000003/art00001
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