INTRODUCTION
Philip Sidney was born at Penshurst, in Kent, on the 29th of
November, 1554. His father, Sir Henry Sidney, had married Mary, eldest
daughter of John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland, and Philip was the
eldest of their family of three sons and four daughters. Edmund Spenser
and Walter Raleigh were of like age with Philip Sidney, differing only by
about a year, and when Elizabeth became queen, on the 17th of November,
1558, they were children of four or five years old.
In the year 1560 Sir Henry Sidney was made Lord President of Wales,
representing the Queen in Wales and the four adjacent western counties, as
a Lord Deputy represented her in Ireland. The official residence of the
Lord President was at Ludlow Castle, to which Philip Sidney went with
his family when a child of six. In the same year his father was installed
as a Knight of the Garter. When in his tenth year Philip Sidney was sent
from Ludlow to Shrewsbury Grammar School, where he studied for three
or four years, and had among his schoolfellows Fulke Greville, afterwards
Lord Brooke, who remained until the end of Sidney\'s life one of his
closest friends. When he himself was dying he directed that he should be
described upon his tomb as "Fulke Greville, servant to Queen Elizabeth,
counsellor to King James, and friend to Sir Philip Sidney." Even Dr.
Thomas Thornton, Canon of Christ Church, Oxford, under whom Sidney
was placed when he was entered to Christ Church in his fourteenth year, at
Midsummer, in 1568, had it afterwards recorded on his tomb that he was
"the tutor of Sir Philip Sidney."
Philip Sidney was born at Penshurst, in Kent, on the 29th of
November, 1554. His father, Sir Henry Sidney, had married Mary, eldest
daughter of John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland, and Philip was the
eldest of their family of three sons and four daughters. Edmund Spenser
and Walter Raleigh were of like age with Philip Sidney, differing only by
about a year, and when Elizabeth became queen, on the 17th of November,
1558, they were children of four or five years old.
In the year 1560 Sir Henry Sidney was made Lord President of Wales,
representing the Queen in Wales and the four adjacent western counties, as
a Lord Deputy represented her in Ireland. The official residence of the
Lord President was at Ludlow Castle, to which Philip Sidney went with
his family when a child of six. In the same year his father was installed
as a Knight of the Garter. When in his tenth year Philip Sidney was sent
from Ludlow to Shrewsbury Grammar School, where he studied for three
or four years, and had among his schoolfellows Fulke Greville, afterwards
Lord Brooke, who remained until the end of Sidney\'s life one of his
closest friends. When he himself was dying he directed that he should be
described upon his tomb as "Fulke Greville, servant to Queen Elizabeth,
counsellor to King James, and friend to Sir Philip Sidney." Even Dr.
Thomas Thornton, Canon of Christ Church, Oxford, under whom Sidney
was placed when he was entered to Christ Church in his fourteenth year, at
Midsummer, in 1568, had it afterwards recorded on his tomb that he was
"the tutor of Sir Philip Sidney."