The Sound of Virtue: Philip Sidney's Arcadia and Elizabethan PoliticsWritten around 1580, Philip Sidney's Arcadia is a romance, a love story, a work of wit and enchantment set in an ancient and mythical land. But, as Blair Worden now startlingly reveals, it is also a grave and urgent commentary on Elizabethan politics. Under the protective guise of pastoral fiction, Sidney produced a searching reflection on the misgovernment of Elizabeth I and on the failings of monarchy as a system of government. Blair Worden reconstructs the dramatic events amidst which the Arcadia was composed and shows for the first time how profound is their presence in it. The Queen's failure to resist the Catholic advance at home and abroad, and her apparent resolve to marry the Catholic heir to the French throne, seemed likely to bring tyranny and persecution to England. Her policies provoked a radical political dissent which historians and literary critics have missed, and of which the Arcadia is the most penetrating and eloquent expression. The Sound of Virtue combines, in a manner and on a scale never before attempted, the close analysis of a literary text with the scholarly reconstruction of its historical context. It transforms our understanding of Sidney's masterpiece and offers a new approach to the relationship between the history and literature of the Renaissance. |
Contents
Teaching and Delight | 3 |
Virtue and Religion | 23 |
Sidneys Loyalties | 41 |
An Unelected Vocation | 58 |
A Losing Cause | 71 |
Three Crises of Counsel | 127 |
The Death of Basilius | 184 |
Forms of Government | 227 |
Falling in Love | 297 |
Public and Private Respects | 320 |
Causeless Yieldings | 341 |
Greville Sidney and the Two Arcadias | 355 |
Sir John Hayward and the Old Arcadia | 370 |
Other editions - View all
The Sound of Virtue: Philip Sidney's 'Arcadia' and Elizabethan Politics Blair Worden No preview available - 1996 |
Common terms and phrases
Amphialus Anjou crisis Anjou match Basilius beasts Book Buchanan Bullough Burghley Catholic Chapter councillors court CSPF Dametas death Defence Demosthenes Dorsten duke Duke of Anjou duke's Duncan-Jones Duplessis-Mornay Dutch Eclogues enemies England English Euarchus explains fable fear Feuillerat foreign fortune forward Protestants France Fulke Fulke Greville Gorboduc Greville Greville's Harleian Hatf Hatton Henry HMC Cecil Hubert Languet Huguenot Ibid judgement kings Languet Leicester Leicester's London lovers Low Countries Macedon marriage Mildmay mind monarchy Mornay Musidorus and Pyrocles Netherlands Nicolas nobility Norton Old Arcadia Osborn Pamela passion Pears Philanax Philisides Philoclea poetry political princes Protestantism Pyrocles Queen Elizabeth Read reign religion Renaissance Ringler rule shepherds Sidney's fiction Sidney's Letter Sidney's party Sir Philip Sidney sonnet Spain strength Stubbs Stubbs's subjects Tacitus theme Thomas Norton Thomas Wilson thought Tudor tyranny tyrants Vindiciae virtue virtuous Walsingham warned Wilkes writing Young Philip Sidney