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Philip Sidney: Difference between revisions

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Sidney wrote the prose [[romance]] ''Arcadia'', which his contemporaries loved and which authors such as [[William Shakespeare]] borrowed heavily from. Nowadays, people are not so sure about ''Arcadia'', some find it as dull as watching your nosehair grow, others see in it one of the greatest [[Renaissance]] texts. If you want to find out for yourselves: the full text of ''Arcadia'' can be found under [http://www.luminarium.org/renlit/sidbib.htm].  
Sidney wrote the prose [[romance]] ''Arcadia'', which his contemporaries loved and which authors such as [[William Shakespeare]] borrowed heavily from. Nowadays, people are not so sure about ''Arcadia'', some find it as dull as watching your nosehair grow, others see in it one of the greatest [[Renaissance]] texts. If you want to find out for yourselves: the full text of ''Arcadia'' can be found under [http://www.luminarium.org/renlit/sidbib.htm].  


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Latest revision as of 12:59, 27 January 2018

Courtier of Elizabeth I. Poet.

Sidney wrote the prose romance Arcadia, which his contemporaries loved and which authors such as William Shakespeare borrowed heavily from. Nowadays, people are not so sure about Arcadia, some find it as dull as watching your nosehair grow, others see in it one of the greatest Renaissance texts. If you want to find out for yourselves: the full text of Arcadia can be found under [1].