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Symmetry and Sense - The Poetry of Sir Philip Sidney (Paperback)
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Symmetry and Sense - The Poetry of Sir Philip Sidney (Paperback)
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Few Elizabethans left the image of their personalities cut so
deeply into the Renaissance imagination as did Sir Philip Sidney.
Widely admired in his own time, Sidney must seem to the modern
reader almost universally accomplished. His talents as courtier,
diplomat, soldier, scholar, novelist, and poet are history. Almost
immediately after Sidney's death in battle against the Spaniards in
the Low Countries, the process of legend began, and the legend has
survived, sometimes obscuring the facts. The versatile "Renaissance
man" has become, in the eyes of some critics, the romantic lover
whose frustrations and despair found release in the "confessional"
form of the sonnet sequence, Astrophel and Stella, and in other
poems. To show these poems to be consciously constructed works of
art, not simply passionate outbursts of romantic emotion, is one
aim of this study. The author examines Sidney as poet and critic,
concentrating his study on rhetorical technique and poetic rhythm
and form. He shows Sidney experimenting with the symmetrical
possibilities of rhythm and phrase; practicing the ornateness
current and acceptable in his day. He examines Sidney's comment on
such a style in The Defense of Poesy and the ways in which the
poet's own work agreed with or departed from his expressed
opinions. He also balances Sidney's poetry against the powerful
tradition of Petrarchan love literature and the equally powerful
Renaissance impulse to subject passion to the rule of reason.
Finally, in an extended analysis of Astrophel and Stella, he shows
Sidney as the master of a plainer, wittier, more subtly fashioned
style and a complex, more dramatically immediate form. What emerges
from the study is not the personality of the poet, but the
principles of his art and the value of his achievement in the
mainstream of English Renaissance verse.
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