“UNDOUBTEDLY ONE OF THE GREATEST LITERARY PRODUCTIONS OF PRE-SHAKESPEARIAN ENGLAND”: SIDNEY’S ARCADIA, ONE OF ONLY 300 COPIES REPRODUCING THE NEARLY UNOBTAINABLE 1590 FIRST EDITION
SIDNEY, Philip. The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner and Co., 1891. Thick octavo, contemporary full brown morocco, raised bands, top edge gilt, uncut and unopened.
Limited photographic facsimile edition of the 1590 first edition of Sidney’s Arcadia, number 5 of only 300 copies produced—an attractively bound, uncut copy.
"Sir Philip Sidney is a great and original creative talent, one of remarkable intellectual and imaginative power. Shakespeare read him and learned from him" (Rees, Sir Philip Sidney, 9). Sidney's Arcadia was "undoubtedly one of the greatest literary productions of pre-Shakespearian England" (Rosenbach 27:436). It is here that "Sidney's gifts reached their fullest maturity. It is an immensely entertaining and immensely complex work…. resting on a belief in a benevolent providence, tested rigorously but affirmed in the end" (Rees, 17, 9). Sidney himself did not consider publishing his work, nor was he likely to have done so had he lived past his sudden death in 1586. Not long after that tragic event, however, news of a pirated edition of the Arcadia reached Sidney's father-in-law Sir Francis Walsingham, and he authorized Fulke Greville in 1590 to publish the manuscript that Sidney had entrusted to him. That virtually unobtainable 1590 edition is "a great rarity" (Pforzheimer 938). This facsimile photographically reproduces that original edition.
Fine condition, an excellent uncut copy.