Penshurst Castle
ays that might
nights in pens
ay-to be put
-and pine with
en
Queen had a sorry time of it during P
should not be received with due pomp in London, and sending for Lord Burleigh and the Earl of Leicester a
on her tire-women, boxing their ears if they failed to please her in the erection of her head-gear, or d
ocess of the Queen's toilette on this May morning to i
Greville with him. What keeps them against my
wholly given up to the effort he is making that the coming tourney may be
l, and had best hold your tongue if yo
end he has in view, Madam, and he desir
fool than I thought you. I warrant you think Philip Sidney is in love with you-you are in
the really wise and able monarch, who earnestly desired the good of her people; here her counsellors were often fairly amazed at her far-seeing intelligence and her wide culture. No contrast could be greater than between the middle-aged Maiden Queen pluming her feathers to win the hearts of her courtiers, and listening with satis
as about to summon Sir Francis Walsingham, when one of th
raves an audience w
s welcome, had followed the page into the Queen's presence, and, before Elizabeth ha
a punishment-but, mayhap, this will do as well for the nonce,' and the Queen stroked
ded playfully, 'do not shine in the dark, they need the sun to call fort
ut in train for the due observance of such an event as the coming of t
y said, 'and I pray it may result in
ared to say of disapproval of this marriage three y
ou my sentiments. You were not pleased to hear
the old protest, so have a care. We exercise our royal prerogative in the mat
worthy of your approval and worthy of the occasion. The Fortress of Beauty is erected, and the
are tale-bearers, who have neither clean hearts nor clean tongues. Sure you can pick and choose amongst many ladies
d he bear to have this sore wound touched. He rose from his half-kneelin
eath, but pardon me if I beseech your Highness to refrain from the menti
But I hear the voices of Burleigh and Leicester in the ante-chamber! Your good uncle is like to die of jealousy; if he finds I am closeted with you
ord I would say. It is upo
money, he has spent a goodly sum in Ireland, and yet cries out for more, an
eceives as Lord President of Wales. It is ever a struggle for my mother to maintain the dignity of your representative there. She is wearing o
his Whitsuntide, there is a chamber at her service. Now, I must to business. Stay if it suits you;
, he was secretly conscious that there were heights which he had failed to reach, and that his nephew, Philip Sidney, had won a place in the favour of his sovereign, which even the honest protest he had made against this marriage with the Duke of Anjou had failed to destroy; a high place also in the esteem of the world by
nd went to his own apartments, where he expected to meet some friends, and discuss with them topics
ndar is well known, and there can be no doubt that
st, and a sort of club had been established, of which the members were Gabriel Harvey, Edward Dyer, Fulke Greville and others, intended for the formation of a new school of poetry. Philip Sidney was th
very curious, and the attempt made to force the Engl
verse, and they had to endure some opposition and even raillery from Gabriel Harvey, who was especially annoye
rresponded or met at intervals with Sidney to compare their literary efforts and criticise them freely, Spenser's
in. Sir Henry Sidney would have been willing to return as Deputy with his son under him; but, having been badly supported in the past, h
him Edward Dyer, who had come to discuss a letter fr
, and beseeches me,' Philip said, 'to do my best that he s
'if the rumour is true that your good father is again to
it happened so, I should not accept the post under him. I will write to our friend Spenser and bid him take courage. His friends will
good friend Harvey at last giving him his meed of praise, albeit he was so rash as to say that hexameters in
ille laugh
as bold enow to make; but read on, Philip. I see
in his mind a fair morning, when we walked together at Penshurst, and that the
ome, man, let us have no melancholy remembr
ou never heard, Fulke, of the hope deferred that maketh a sick heart, nor
r what Spenser saith of that time of which you speak. I'll warrant
hilip
y heard a most
ote delight a
ce might not o
aradise, be he
as for wight wh
anner musicke
pleasing is t
nsorted in o
struments, windes,
es, shrouded in
to the voyce a
l soft trembl
ents divine re
unding instru
murmure of the
ll with differ
loud, unto the
ling wind low a
Second Book of the Faerie Queene have seldom been read to a more appreciative a
flow like the stream rippling adown from the mountain s
ight say there should not be two words of the same spelling and soun
necessity poetry, nor poetry rhyme. There be many true poets w
on the further side of this sheet. I will
d Philip Sidney read, with a depth of patho
faire thing do
flowre the im
irgin rose, h
e foorth with b
mes, the lesse
after how more
ome she doth
ter how she fade
in the pass
the leafe, the
flourish afte
ought to deck b
die, and man
e, the rose, whi
ge that will her
e of love, whi
u mayst loved be
in silence. There was no remar
lip's dearest friends, except his sister Mary, the Countess of Pembroke, who ever approached the subject of his love for Stella-that rose which Philip had not
h had made Philip unusually thoughtful. The very words the Queen had used
riends when they met, read some verses he had
called upon to contri
rivalled the sweet flow of Edmund Spenser's verse, he had the gift of making his verses vividly express w
ty-four and the boy of eighteen, who had gone abroad for thoughtful travel and diligent study, a strong-even a romantic-friendship had sprung up, and the letters wh
had been less frequent, and the last he had received during the present year, had
ifelong gratitude he felt for him. They are clothed, as was the two frequent custom of the time, in pastoral images; but Fulke Greville and Edward Dyer
ng, old Langue
epherd, best sw
ead, and hatin
t, clean hands, a
skill my skille
ling taste of
ven, far more
sic best those
rd between ou
notes to godli
nk, not down
ales he wont mi
id of yore, how
ck, or while 'twix
a sharp censor, indeed, who could find fault with them. We must do our best to bring good o
end in whose praise the verses w
ny months. As soon as this tourney is over I must get leave to
re in higher favour than ever, methinks; nor do I grudge
ject, and, gathering together their papers, the three frie
how the graceful courtier, who that evening after the banquet at Whitehall led the Queen, as a mark of especial favour, through the mazes of the dance, could ever have so completely thrown off the melancholy mood for one of gaiety and apparent joyousness. How many looked at hi
h, who gorgeously attired, her hoop and stiff brocade making a wide circle
e left cheek, while Philip, bending on his knee, performed the same ceremony with the lady who had been the partner of the gentleman before whom the Queen had stopped. By th
iers, exciting, as she believed, the jealousy of the ladies, who could not h
ke Greville and several other gentlemen, and curtseyed and tripp
iers who were burning with ill-concealed anger as they saw Leicester
sed dais at the end of the withdrawing-room where the dancing took place, and then, at her comma
g, but he escaped now and then to circulate amongst the ladies
indows Philip found his sister, the Countess of Pembroke, wh
ewomen will occupy at the tourney. I have several eager to see the show, more eager, methinks,
who control such matters. But, my sweet
you have freed yourself from the bonds which I know in your better moments you feel irkso
ister. 'Let me have respite till this tournament is over at least.' And as he spoke, his eyes were following Lady Rich as she moved t
t in yonder dance,' Philip said. 'I refrained from claim
nlawful? See, now, I am struck with the change in her since I beheld her last. The modesty which charmed me in Penelope Devereux seems vanished. Even now I hear her laugh, hollow and unreal
he affairs of his father, and to beg Lady Pembroke to advise his mother to be wary in what she urged when the Queen gave her an interview, it was evident to his sister t
its effect, and long after the sounds of revelry had died away, and the qu
tted to him at Whitehall, and this sonnet, one of the most beautiful which he ever wrote
ove! which reach
ind, aspire to
hat, which nev
, but fading p
ams, and humbl
oke, where last
clouds, and ope
shine and give
old! let that l
rse which birth d
evil becomet
en, and comes of
world, thy u
maintain thy
light shine upon the way in that 'sm
ow lament that they were so few, know how his aspirations were abundantly fulfill