Sidney - Defence of Poesy
Sidney - Defence of Poesy
Sidney - Defence of Poesy
KAVITA PATEL
After Longinus in the Christian era until Sir Philip Sidney in the English
Renaissance, literary criticism, in the strictest sense of the term, was not
practised. What are available during this vast span are some rhetorical treatises
valuable for historical research. With Sidney this period of critical inactivity
comes to a grinding halt.
Sir Philip Sidney is the first critic – and a critic of lasting significance –
representing all that is superlative in Renaissance criticism. Sidney’s services to
England are most memorable. Besides being a public servant, he was also a man of
letters of great reputation. Spenser dedicated his The Shepherd’s Calendar to
him, and honoured him his Astrophel.
Sidney was the very model of excellence for many of his contemporaries.
Historically speaking, Sidney’s work appeared at the time when such treatise was
a felt necessity. Elizabethan literature was still in its infancy. No great work had
come out of England. In less than three decades after Sidney’s work England
nearly became the cultural capital of Europe. It was from Italians that Sidney
borrowed the concept of the dramatic unities, the poet as second creator, and
tragedy as evoking and winning our admiration. He drew from Horace the idea of
the poet being the seer, and the notion of the twin function of poetry. He must
have used the Latin translations of Aristotle and Plato rendered by the Italians.
He must also have been touched by the spirit of nationalism and dominated French
thinking.
Sidney’s Apologie was probably written in 1583, though it was published in 1595,
posthumously. The treatise bears two titles. His work was published in two
separate editions, The Defence of Poesie by William Ponsonby and An Apology
for Poetrie by Henry Olney.
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Sidney was multi-lingual and widely-read and travelled; he knew the poems and
poets of France and Italy, and his patriotism required that England too should
produce a vernacular literature. His Apology is a glorification of poetry intended
to inspire poets to write in English since ‘for the uttering sweetly and properly
the concepts of the mind, which is the end of speech that it hath equally with any
other tongue in the world.’
The Apology is written with absolute sureness of touch, serious but never solemn,
witty but never solemn, witty but never facetious, and full of memorably vivid
phrases – Alexander and Darius strove ‘who should be cock of this world’s dung-
hill’ – ‘How many headaches a passionate life bringeth us to’ –- ‘I never heard the
old song of Percy and Douglas that I found not my heart moved more than with a
trumpet.’
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1. Exordium
2. Narration, describing the antiquity of poetry.
3. Proposition, the poetry is imitation
4. Division- Religious, Philosophic, Imitative
5. Proof
6. Refutation, and
7. Peroration
The treatise opens with a prologue about the need for vindicating poetry. If some
horsemanship needs to be defended, why not the art of poetry? If poetry is
subject to condemnation, it would mean that a nation’s culture and its heritage
are the real target. The high points of interest in Apologie are:
Sidney offers a definition of poetry—a poet is the maker, and poetry is the art
of representation. ‘Poesy therefore is an art of imitation, for so Aristotle termed
it in his word ‘memesis’, that is to say, a representing, counterfeiting or figuring
forth—to speak metaphorically, a speaking picture; with this end to teach and
delight’. He classifies different categories of poetry, and adds that metre is not
necessary for poetry. Poetry is proved to be superior to history and philosophy.
He discusses different generic divisions of poetry: pastoral, elegiac, iambic,
satiric, comic, tragic, lyric, and heroic. He defends poetry against the charges
levelled against these. Poetry is not immoral as it is charged; only its abuse is
immoral. Poetry cannot be effeminate, since all men of action in warfare have felt
inspired by poetry. The fault does not rest with poetry, but with the practitioners
of the art. As a practical critic he applies the Horatian norms to English poetry;
find faults with lack of unity in English plays and protests against the mixture of
tragedy and comedy.
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other critics Sidney also holds the view that poetry was the first among all
branches of learning. From that point, poets are “fathers of learning”. Even
history and philosophy first appeared in the grab of poetry. Moreover poetry
flourished in all ages and countries. Even the uncivilized Turks and Tartars were
lovers of poetry. In fact, it softened the hearts of the barbarians.
Another proof of its greatness is the veneration of poetry and poets among the
ancients. Both the Greeks and the Romans honoured poets. They considered the
poet to be a seer or prophet. In Greek the word poet means maker or creator.
The poet is a creator in the real sense. All other arts are tied to nature while
poetry is liberating. The poet through his imaginative powers or “divine frenzy”
can form things better than in nature. He can fashion heroes, demigods, Cyclops,
chimeras, furies and the like. What more the poet can fashion heroes, demigods,
cyclops, chimeras, furies and the like. What more the poet can fashion a perfect
lover, a perfect friend and a perfectly valiant man, even though they are not
found in nature; “ Nature’s world is brazen but the poet’s is golden”. The poet is
not only a maker but also seer or prophet. Sidney gives the examples of the oracle
of Delphos, the prophecies of Sybylls and the psalms of the Bible.
After establishing the place of poetry among all other arts and branches of
learning, Sidney divides it into three broad types. They are religious poetry,
philosophical poetry and true poetry. According to him the third is the true and
real poetry. Religious poetry sings the praises of God and as such it cannot lead
anyone astray. Philosophical poetry imparts knowledge. This kind of poetry too is
harmless since it is “the sweet good of sweetly uttered knowledge”. The third
kind of poetry is further subdivided into heroic, lyric, tragic, comic, satiric and
pastoral. Among all these Sidney considers epic poetry as “the best and most
accomplished kind of poetry”. In it heroic and moral goodness is most effectively
portrayed. It presents “pictures of heroic men and heroic deeds which in turn
inspires men to heroic action”.
Sidney proves that basically none of the poetic form misleads or misdirects men
as the moralists of 16th century England claim. Similarly poets are not sub-humans
or caterpillars of the society. The conclusion is that it is not poetry that abuses
man but man who abuses poetry.
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The basic principles of virtue, vice and morality without the beauty of style do
not necessarily lead men to virtue. Similarly the data or chronicle of the past
events does not motivate people. The poet alone accomplishes the dual task. He
seems only to promise delight but at the same time moves men to virtue without
they realising it. So in Plutarch’s phrase, he becomes “the right popular
philosopher” and poetry the highest and the noblest form of human wisdom.
‘Defence of Poesy’ or ‘An Apology for Poetry’ also shows Sidney’s likes and
dislikes with regard to Elizabethan poetry and drama. He mentions Spenser’s ‘The
Shepherd’s Calendar’ with respect. He frankly acknowledges the emotional sway
of the old ballad of ‘Chevy Chase’ and his veneration for Chaucer’s poetry. In his
criticism of English dramas, Sidney is not so generous. He was under the influence
of Aristotle’s theory of tragedy and Seneca’s practice of revenge tragedy.
Naturally he protests against the lack of unity in academic tragedies. The only
exception is “Gorboduc”. He also objects to the absurdities of the English stage
where on one side Africa and on the other Asia may be represented and where in
an hour a youth may grow from childhood to old age.
Sidney is particularly harsh on the mixture of the comic and tragic elements in
tragi-comedy. “Never did the ancients” ‘like the English’, “match hornpipes with
funerals”. He scoffs at the idea of the clatter of wooden swords at the end of
tragedies and the mixing of clowns with Kings.
In summary one can say that Sidney was quite disappointed with the state of the
English tragedy and comedy of his days. Sidney’s thesis is that the poet is truly
a ‘maker’, a creator, not merely imitating nature but creating an ideal universe
which can both teach and delight his readers, teaching by delighting them. The
historian, laden with old mouse-eaten records, is ‘captivated to the truth of a
foolish world’ where wicked men flourish; but in the poet’s world the good can
invariably triumph and the wicked perish. The philosopher can utter precepts, but
this is useless unless men are ‘moved’ to ‘learn’; only a poet so moves them, ‘for he
cometh to you with words sent in delightful proportion, either accompanied with
or prepared for the well enchanting skill of music; and with a tale forsooth he
cometh unto you; with a tale which holdeth children from play, and old men from
chimney corner.’
Sidney declares that ‘poetry is the companion of the camps’ and the even an
imperfect poem can move men’s hearts to the exercise of courtesy, liberality and
especially courage.’
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