The literary fate of Sir Philip Sidney's Astrophil and Sir Stella Phillips Sidney is a good example of the comparison between the Elizabethan dynasty and the literature of originality in the 20th century. At the end of the 16th century the Sonnet sequence called Astrophil and Stella by Sydney caught the immediate praise of British readers who valued his "tact and sensitivity, wisdom and temperament" (Lever 53) Especially prefer poetry "directness and spontaneity" (53).
Due to Astrophil and Stella's copyright infringement of Sir Philip Sidney in 1591, records of 108 to 88 ginseng and 11 songs Astrophil and Stella are usually made up of sarcastic details. Yes, love and desire for Astro Phil's unrequited stellar. Sydney's sequence is often referred to as a series of Sonnets 'hot', a number of sequences were printed since 1591, including the unique Shakespeare sequence of 1609. Many of these sequences are depictions after men poet enthusiasts can not get it or explain it. Women, and focus on their own pain and subjectivity, but the poet also overthrows these customs. Many of Shakespeare's sonnets are not for ladies, but Edmond Spencer's sonnet sequence Amoretti (1595) for young men states that the poet is not ideal or impossible. Woman, but his future wife, Elizabeth Boyle
"The line of sonnets of the Elizabethan era" is a series of British sonnets written by various famous practitioners of Elizabethan era such as William · Shakespeare, Sir · Philip · Sydney, Edmund · Spence etc. Plug Shakespeare 's Sonnet sequence contains 154 sonnets. The main sonnet series of Spenser is a series called Amoretti, Sidney's most famous sonnet series are Astrophil and Stella. The sonnet arrangement in the UK became a phenomenon around 1580 and continued to receive major literary and cultural influences until around 1610. Many people think Sydney's Astro Phil and Stella are the first real sequence. In 1619, Drayton completed his final revision of the famous sequence concept. And it showed the end of this phenomenon. During this period, the influence of the unevenly distributed sequence of Sonnets and Sonnets. Authors like John Donne argue that only fools can write sonnets. Queen Elizabeth is also known as Sonnet in her foreign policy?