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An Apology for Poetry (or The Defence of Poesy) is a work of literary criticism by Elizabethan poet Philip Sidney. It was written in approximately 1580 and first published in 1595, after his death. It was written in approximately 1580 and first published in 1595, after his death.
Writing After Sidney: the literary response to Sir Philip Sidney 1586–1640. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006. Allen, M. J. B. et al. Sir Philip Sidney's Achievements. New York: AMS Press, 1990. Craig, D. H. "A Hybrid Growth: Sidney's Theory of Poetry in An Apology for Poetry." Essential Articles for the Study of Sir Philip Sidney. Ed.
An 1897 edition of The Poems of Henry Constable in Art Deco binding. In 1592 Diana, a sequence of twenty-three sonnets by Constable, was published in London by Richard Smith, one of the first sonnets sequences in English. [28] A second edition, containing five new sonnets by Constable with additions by Sir Philip Sidney and other poets followed ...
Philip Sidney’s crititical work in An Apology for Poetry (1595) was a key precedent for Scott's treatise, The Model of Poesy (1599).. The treatise of The Model of Poesy (1599) is in three sections; [5] in the first section, Scott defines poetry and makes clear his debts to earlier theorists:
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Sir Philip Sidney (posthumous, written 1580–83) – An Apology for Poetry [4] Vincentio Saviolo – His practise, in two bookes. (first manual of fencing in English) [5] Fausto Veranzio – Dictionarium quinque nobilissimarum Europæ linguarum, Latinæ, Italicæ, Germanicæ, Dalmatiæ, & Vngaricæ published in Latin in Venice [6]
Sir Philip Sidney (posthumous) – An Apology for Poetry (written c. 1579) 1596 Sir Walter Raleigh – The Discoverie of the Large, Rich and Beautiful Empyre of Guiana; 1597 Francis Bacon – Essays; 1598 John Bodenham – Politeuphuia (Wits' Commonwealth) King James VI of Scotland – The Trew Law of Free Monarchies