Abstract

The legacy of Sir Philip Sidney, the distinguished Elizabethan courtier-poet, was the subject of numerous claims to memorialization. On 17 October 1586 Sidney died in battle at Arnhem in the United Netherlands. Less than a week later, his corpse was transported to Flushing, of which Sidney had been Governor, and in the following year Sidney’s body was “interr’d in stately Pauls”, as recorded by Anne Dudley Bradstreet—the first known poet of the British North American colonies. While Bradstreet is omitted from most early modern and contemporary literary accounts of Sidney’s legacy, this article demonstrates that Bradstreet’s commemoration of Sidney from across the Atlantic presents new insights into his afterlife and the female poet’s formulations of early modern nationhood. Bradstreet’s first formal poem, “An Elegie upon that Honorable and renowned Knight, Sir Philip Sidney” (comp. 1637–8), was a tribute to Sidney as well as to her own Anglo-American literary heritage and England’s rolls. Bradstreet exhibits her complex relationship to Sidney along the same lines that she reconceives her English identity. A comparison of the two published seventeenth-century editions of Bradstreet’s elegiac poem (1650, 1678) shows how she translates descent and lineage from kinship (and kingship) into poetic creation. In the process, Bradstreet takes her place not only as a “semi-Sidney”, as Josuah Sylvester characterized Sidney’s descendants, but also as a Sidneian Muse—in America.

Highlights

  • Sidney”, was a tribute to Sidney as well as to her own Anglo-American literary heritage and England’s rolls. Bradstreet exhibits her complex relationship to Sidney along the same lines that she reconceives her English identity

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

  • On 17 October 1586 Sidney died in battle at Arnhem in the United Netherlands

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. While Bradstreet is omitted from most early modern and contemporary historical and literary accounts of Sidney’s legacy, this essay demonstrates that Bradstreet’s commemoration of Sidney from across the Atlantic offers new insights into the formulation of early modern Englishness. Her first formal poem, “An Elegie upon that Honorable and renowned Knight, Sir Philip. 1637–8), was a tribute to Sidney and, by extension, to her artistry, her Anglo-American heritage, and England’s rolls.7 Bradstreet exhibits her complex relationship to Sidney’s afterlife along the same lines that she reconceives her English identity. In Bradstreet’s poem, which is both a formulaic and unique contribution to Sidney’s afterlife, the Elizabethan poet-courtier is reanimated by the Nine Muses and ennobled by the tenth muse

Lifelines and New Strains
Grave Markers
Sidney’s Muses

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