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Sidney at Bartholomew Fair
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
Extract
The revised Arcadia has long been recognized as a great treasure-house of sixteenth-century references. Scholars have unearthed from incidental and episodical passages many significant bits of political and social background. Like a mosaic, these pieces are gradually fitted together to complete the work; so that each fragment, no matter how small, fits into its place. Among the scholars eminent in this field are Friedrich Brie, who recognized the importance of knowledge of Elizabethan life generally to an understanding of the Arcadia; Emma Denkinger, who has investigated the impresa and emblems of Sidney's in connection with sixteenth-century literature and practice; and Edwin Greenlaw, who has revealed much political and autobiographical significance. Indeed, so great is the contemporaneity of the Arcadia that it is this aspect of the book which has a special interest, and Sidney himself may have derived greater pleasure in writing the so-called extraneous matter than in untangling his romance or in depicting characters.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright
- Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1938
References
1 Friedrich Brie, “Sidney's Arcadia: Eine Studie zur Englischen Renaissance,” Quellen und Forschungen, cxxiv (1918), chap. xii.
2 Emma Denkinger, “The Impresa Portrait of Sidney,” PMLA, xlvii (1932), 17–45.
3 Edwin Greenlaw, “The Captivity Episode in Sidney's Arcadia,” Manly Anniversary Papers (1923), pp. 59–60.
4 See A. V. Judges, The Elizabethan Underworld, introduction, pp. xv–xvi.
5 Sir Philip Sidney, Arcadia, book iii, Feuillerat ed., i, 488.
6 Reginald Scot, Discoverie of Witchcraft, pp. 349–350 of the 1584 ed., in the reprint of 1886 by Brinsley Nicholson, pp. 286–287, with illustration on p. 293.
7 James Holly Hanford and Sara Ruth Watson, “Personal Allegory in the Arcadia: Philisides and Lelius,” in MP, xxxii, 1934, 6.
8 A. V. Judges, The Elizabethan Underworld, pp. 502–503—For information concerning the fair, see Ben Jonson's Bartholomew Fair; Stow's Survey, p. 337 in the Everyman ed.; and Henry Morley's Memoirs of Bartholomew Fair.