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  1. 29 de may. de 2018 · Sidney, Sir Philip. views 1,318,082 updated May 17 2018. Sidney, Sir Philip (1554–86) English poet, diplomat, and courtier. Sidney's intricate romance Arcadia (1590) is the earliest example of pastoral in English. His love for Penelope Devereux inspired Astrophel and Stella (1591), the first English sonnet sequence.

  2. This article focuses on the first great English poetical treatise, An Apology for Poetry by Sir Philip Sidney, and questions the author’s use of the notion of Ut musica poesis. Seeking to defend the nobleness of poetry thanks to the Aristotelian conception of mimesis, Sidney usually prefers another great analogy, that of Ut pictura poesis.

  3. 28 de mar. de 2008 · This treatment of Sir Philip Sidney's An apology for poetry supports the views that his humanistic defence of literature [poesis] is, in its broadest interpretation, Ciceronian; that his conception of the poetic ‘image’ derives from the scholastic analysis of Christian psychology; and that his most pervasive literary debts are to Aristotle and Horace.

  4. SIDNEY, PHILIP (1554 – 1586), English poet, courtier, and statesman. Born at Penshurst (Kent) to Sir Henry Sidney, viceroy of Ireland , and Lady Mary Dudley, sister of Queen Elizabeth's favorite, the earl of Leicester, Sidney was educated at Shrewsbury and Christ Church, Oxford, and then sent on a three-year tour of the Continent in 1572.

  5. 8 de oct. de 2014 · Sidney was in his eighteenth year in May, 1572, when he left the University to continue his training for the service of the state, by travel on the Continent. Licensed to travel with horses for himself and three servants, Philip Sidney left London in the train of the Earl of Lincoln, who was going out as ambassador to Charles IX., in Paris.

  6. This treatment of Sir Philip Sidney's An apology for poetry supports the views that his humanistic defence of literature [poesis] is, in its broadest interpretation, Ciceronian; that his conception of the poetic ‘image’ derives from the scholastic analysis of Christian psychology; and that his most pervasive literary debts are to Aristotle and Horace.

  7. Sir Philip Sidney’s The Defence of Poesy, published posthumously in 1595 in two different editions, is considered the first treatise on English poetics.We shall attempt to show how Sidney partakes of the literary quarrel at the end of the XVIth century in England without ever fully acknowledging his role in the polemic.