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The structure of Philip Sidney's Astrophil and Stella is governed
by a distinctive and complex set of proportions, found also in the
sonnet sequences of Fulke Greville and Robert Sidney written under
its influence. For all these works to be ordered around the same
set of proportions indicates a remarkable degree of careful
planning and precise execution, and in turn affects their meaning.
The tremendous effort of constructing the sequences according to
intricate mathematical patterns suggests that the patterns
themselves held a particular significance, one that requires
investigation for the light it throws on these authors' intentions
in composition. In this study Tom Parker reveals cosmological ideas
implicit in the form of Astrophil and Stella, ideas which not only
undermine much of the romantic and biographically-based criticism
of the sequence, but call into question how we should read the
sonnet sequences that were influenced by Sidney, both within and
beyond his immediate circle. As well as those of Greville and
Robert Sidney, the book looks in detail at the sonnet sequences of
Giordano Bruno, Mary Wroth, Henry Constable, Barnabe Barnes, and
Michael Drayton, to determine the extent to which the sonnet vogue
of the 1590s incorporated Sidney's broader cosmological concerns.
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