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Title: Elizabethan Sonnet Cycles 
Phillis - Licia 
Author: Thomas Lodge and Giles Fletcher 
Editor: Martha Foote Crow 
Release Date: July 16, 2006 [EBook #18841] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
0. START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
ELIZABETHAN SONNET CYCLES *** 
Produced by David Starner, Taavi Kalju and the Online
Distributed 
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
ELIZABETHAN SONNET-CYCLES 
EDITED BY 
MARTHA FOOTE CROW 
PHILLIS 
BY THOMAS LODGE
LICIA 
BY GILES FLETCHER 
KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER AND CO.
PATERNOSTER HOUSE LONDON W.C. 
1896 
INTRODUCTION 
The last decade of the sixteenth century was marked by an outburst of 
sonneteering. To devotees of the sonnet, who find in that poetic form 
the moat perfect vehicle that has ever been devised for the expression 
of a single importunate emotion, it will not seem strange that at the 
threshold of a literary period whose characteristic note is the most 
intense personality, the instinct of poets should have directed them to 
the form most perfectly fitted for the expression of this inner motive. 
The sonnet, a distinguished guest from Italy, was ushered to by those 
two "courtly makers," Wyatt and Surrey, in the days of Henry VIII. But 
when, forty years later, the foreigner was to be acclimatised in England, 
her robe had to be altered to suit an English fashion. Thus the sonnet, 
which had been an octave of enclosed or alternate rhymes, followed by 
a sestette of interlaced tercets, was now changed to a series of three 
quatrains with differing sets of alternate rhymes in each, at the close of 
which the insidious couplet succeeded in establishing itself. But these 
changes were not made without a great deal of experiment; and during 
the tentative period the name "sonnet" was given, to a wide variety of 
forms, in the moulding of which but one rule seemed to be uniformly 
obeyed--that the poem should be the expression of a single, simple 
emotion. This law cut the poem, to a relative shortness and defined its 
dignity and clearness. Beyond this almost every combination of rhymes 
might be found, verses were occasionally lengthened or shortened, and 
the number of lines in the poem, though generally fourteen, showed 
considerable variation. 
The sonnet-sequence was also a suggestion from Italy, a literary
fashion introduced by Sir Philip Sidney, in his _Astrophel and Stella_, 
written soon after 1580, but not published till 1591. In a sonnet-cycle 
Sidney recorded his love and sorrow, and Spenser took up the strain 
with his story of love and joy. Grouped about these, and following in 
their wake, a number of poets, before the decade was over, turned this 
Elizabethan "toy" to their purpose in their various self-revealings, 
producing a group of sonnet-cycles more or less Italianate in form or 
thought, more or less experimental, more or less poetical, more or less 
the expression of a real passion. For while the form of the sonnet was 
modified by metrical traditions and habits, the content also was 
strongly influenced, not to say restricted, by certain conventions of 
thought considered at the time appropriate to the poetic attitude. The 
passion for classic colour in the poetic world, which had inspired and 
disciplined English genius in the sixties and seventies, was rather 
nourished than repressed when in the eighties Spenser's _Shepherd's 
Calendar_ and Sidney's _Arcadia_ made the pastoral imagery a 
necessity. Cupid and Diana were made very much at home in the 
golden world of the renaissance Arcadia, and the sonneteer singing the 
praises of his mistress's eyebrow was not far removed from the lovelorn 
shepherd of the plains. 
It may reasonably be expected that in any sonnet-cycle there will be 
found many sonnets in praise of the loved one's beauty, many 
lamenting her hardness of heart; all the wonders of heaven and earth 
will be catalogued to find comparisons for her loveliness; the river by 
which she dwells will be more pleasant than all other rivers in the 
world, a list of them being appended in proof; the thoughts of 
night-time, when the lover bemoans himself and his rejected state, or 
dreams of happy love, will be dwelt upon; oblivious sleep and the 
wan-faced moon will be invoked, and death will be called upon for 
respite. Love and the praises of the loved one was the theme. On this 
old but ever new refrain the sonneteer devised his descant, trilling 
joyously on oaten pipe in praise of Delia or Phyllis, Coelia, Cælica, 
Aurora, or    
    
		
	
	
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