Discussing authors as diverse in time and type as Sir Fulke
Greville, Christopher Hill, Charles Lamb, Edmund Waller, and Thomas
Warton the elder, Richard Hillyer analyzes Sir Philip Sidney's
reputation from his own day to the present. More important than how
Sidney's works have fared over many centuries' worth of critical
fashion, Hillyer argues, is how Sidney's versatility as a
"Renaissance man" has elicited varying degrees of wonder,
incomprehension, and skepticism. Even when least appreciated as an
author, he has remained a cultural icon, a prominent figure on the
landscapes of English culture and literature, and an influence that
later authors and commentators have continued to address.
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