SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
Sir Philip Sidney was Born at Penshurst Place, Kent, of an aristocratic family, he was educated at Shrewsbury School and Christ Church, Oxford. He was the eldest son of Sir Henry Sidney and Lady Mary Dudley. His mother was the eldest daughter of John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland, and the sister of Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester. His younger brother, Robert Sidney was a statesman and patron of the arts, and was created Earl of Leicester in 1618. His younger sister, Mary, married Henry Herbert, 2nd Earl of Pembroke and was a writer, translator and literary patron. Sidney dedicated his longest work, the Arcadia, to her. After her brother's death, Mary reworked the Arcadia, which became known as The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia.
Literary activity:
Like the best of the
Elizabethans, Sidney was successful in more than one branch of literature, but
none of his work was published during his lifetime. His finest achievement was
a sequence of 108 love sonnets. These owe much to Petrarch and Pierre
de Ronsard in tone and style, and place
Sidney as the greatest Elizabethan sonneteer after Shakespeare. Written to his mistress, Lady Penelope Rich, though
dedicated to his wife, they reveal true lyric emotion couched in a language
delicately archaic. In form Sidney usually adopts the Petrarchan octave (ABBAABBA), with variations in the sestet that include the English final couplet. His artistic
contacts were more peaceful and significant for his lasting fame. During his
absence from court, he wrote Astrophel and Stella (1591) and the first draft of The Arcadia and The Defence of Poesy. His pastoral romance The Arcadia (1598) is
an intricate love story, embodying the ideals of the medieval chivalry, so
congenial to Sidney's own spirit. The story is diffused and involved, and the
many secondary love stories interwoven with the main one distract attention.
The characters are vague and idealized. The style, in its strength and its
weaknesses, is that of a poet writing prose; melodious, picturesque, rather
artificial and ornamental. The story contains a number of fine lyrics. Somewhat
earlier, he had met Edmund
Spenser, who dedicated The Shepheardes Calender to him. Other literary contacts included membership,
along with his friends and fellow poets Fulke Greville, Edward
Dyer, Edmund Spenser and Gabriel
Harvey, of the (possibly fictitious)
"Areopagus", a humanist endeavour to classicise English verse.
Military activity:
Sidney played a brilliant part
in the military/literary/courtly life common to the young nobles of the time.
Both his family heritage and his personal experience (he was in Walsingham's
house in Paris during the St. Bartholomew's
Day Massacre), confirmed him as a
keenly militant Protestant. In the 1570s, he persuaded John Casimir to consider proposals for a united Protestant effort
against the Catholic Church and Spain. In the early 1580s, he argued
fruitlessly for an assault on Spain itself. Promoted General of Horse in 1583, his
enthusiasm for the Protestant struggle was given free rein when he was
appointed governor of Flushing in the Netherlands in 1585. Whilst in the Netherlands,
he consistently urged boldness on his superior, his uncle the Earl of
Leicester. He carried out a successful raid on Spanish forces near Axel in July 1586. At the age of 31 he was mortally wounded
at Zutphen in the Netherlands, when assisting the Dutch against the Spaniards.
His death:
Later that year, he joined Sir John Norris in the Battle of Zutphen, fighting for the Protestant cause against the Spanish. During the battle, he was shot in the thigh and died of gangrene 26 days later, at the age of 31. One account says this death was avoidable and heroic. Sidney noticed that one of his men was not fully armoured. He put off his thigh armour on the grounds that it would be wrong to be better armored than his men. As he lay dying, Sidney composed a song to be sung by his deathbed. According to the story, while lying wounded he gave his water to another wounded soldier, saying, "Thy necessity is yet greater than mine". This became possibly the most famous story about Sir Philip, intended to illustrate his noble and gallant character. I t also inspired evolutionary biologist John Maynard Smith to formulate a problem in signalling theory which is known as the Sir Philip Sidney game. Sidney's body was returned to London and interred in Old St Paul's Cathedral on 16 February 1587. The grave and monument were destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666. A modern monument in the crypt lists his among the important graves lost.
Already during his own lifetime, but even more after his death, he had become for many English people the very epitome of a Castiglione courtier: learned and politic, but at the same time generous, brave, and impulsive. The funeral procession was one of the most elaborate ever staged, so much so that his father-in-law, Francis Walsingham, almost went bankrupt. As Sidney was a brother of the Worshipful Company of Grocers, the procession included 120 of his company brethren. Never more than a marginal figure in the politics of his time, he was memorialised as the flower of English manhood in Edmund Spenser's Astrophel, one of the greatest English Renaissance elegies.
An early biography of Sidney was written by his friend and schoolfellow, Fulke Greville. While Sidney was traditionally depicted as a staunch and unwavering Protestant, recent biographers such as Katherine Duncan-Jones have suggested that his religious loyalties were more ambiguous. He was known to be friendly and sympathetic towards individual Catholics.
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