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4 Porcupine or pig? Sidney’s role in the Nashe–Harvey quarrel
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Published:October 2024
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Abstract
In 1591 Thomas Nashe published a prefatory epistle, ‘Somewhat to reade for them that list’, to Thomas Newman’s edition of Sir Philip Sidney’s sonnet sequence, Astrophil and Stella. The edition was an unlicensed, pirated copy, and the first authorized edition, by William Ponsonby, did not appear until 1597/8. As others have noted, the publication of Sidney’s poems had a significant impact on the development of English poetry in the 1590s. However, this unauthorized edition may have had another less well-noticed impact—on Thomas Nashe, who appears to have taken against the Sidneys and makes biting comments about Sir Philip and his family throughout his writing career. There are jokes and sly references in Nashe’s later writings, in particular to Sir Philip’s public quarrel with Robert De Vere, earl of Oxford, on a tennis court (1579), and to what Nashe regarded as the botched printing of the Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia in 1593, with the Sidney crest, a porcupine, appearing more like a pig. The connections between the Sidneys and Nashe, and the part they may have played in the Nashe–Harvey quarrel are under-explored, as is Mary Sidney’s role in Harvey’s life. This essay will make visible these important literary connections in the decade after Sir Philip’s death, casting new light on his much analysed literary legacy.
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