The Book HubThe Book Hub

Home

Search

Genres

Languages

Your Library

"Old" Arcadia

Audiobook

"Old" Arcadia

Sir Philip Sidney

Sir Philip Sidney wrote two romances which he called Arcadia. The revised version he never finished because of his untimely death on the battlefield. The less complicated but finished earlier version, here recorded, was written while the author resided with his sister, the Countess of Pembroke. To a greater degree than other romances having pastoral settings, like Lodge's Rosalynde, the main characters, the chief secondary ones, and even some minor ones are not shepherds but great persons sojourning in the countryside of Arcadia, an idealized pagan Greek duchy, the heroes disguised in order to court the daughters of the duke, who is vacationing in his own realm. They themselves have already made a reputation for themselves, which they conceal to conform to the Duke’s rusticating mood. They are not yet old enough to shave, giving one of them the opportunity to pose as an Amazon. These disguises serve more complicated ends as the plot develops. The style is ornamental, the syntax tangled, and at times the author himself gets lost in his own Chinese boxes, which become yet more difficult to parse in the eclogues. To readers accustomed to today’s fragmented style, Sidney’s balanced antitheses will seem alien, as will the highly sophisticated poetry that springs extempore from the lips of shepherds and disguised courtiers alike, and the prose bejeweled with platitudes. These aspects of style, however, befit the idealized landscape that resembles the scenes on fine painted china. Moreover, the author’s penchant for balancing one concept with another (e.g., "what for many was made should not for one be broken") is reflected in the plot, from the very beginning, where the great world outside begins to invade the pastoral retreat. The occasional hints of irony, as in a battle scene which starkly contrasts with the rural setting, is described in language rivaling Ovid’s high camp. Yet, in spite of the mild self-mockery, the writer’s admiration for his two pairs of lovers registers as sincere, and as the fist of Justice comes slamming down upon the pastoral retreat, one’s hope that the maxim "Et in Arcadia Ego" is a myth becomes tenuous. (comment by Thomas A. Copeland)

Year of Publication: 1926Genres: Literary Fiction , Culture & Heritage Fiction , Romance , Action & Adventure Fiction
Running Time: 17 hours 20 minutes 22 seconds
#Chapter Name
1
The Nights
Prefatory Note
Thomas A. Copeland
8:48
2
The Nights
Book 1 Begun
Thomas A. Copeland
55:15
3
The Nights
Book 1 Continued
Thomas A. Copeland
49:45
4
The Nights
Book 1 Concluded
Thomas A. Copeland
30:58
5
The Nights
First Eclogues
Thomas A. Copeland
59:37
6
The Nights
First Eclogues Concluded
Thomas A. Copeland
16:24
7
The Nights
Book 2 Begun
Thomas A. Copeland
45:46
8
The Nights
Book 2 Continued
Thomas A. Copeland
36:45
9
The Nights
Book 2 Concluded
Thomas A. Copeland
32:49
10
The Nights
Second Eclogues Begun
Thomas A. Copeland
39:55
11
The Nights
Second Eclogues Concluded
Thomas A. Copeland
36:24
12
The Nights
Book 3 Begun
Thomas A. Copeland
44:10
13
The Nights
Book 3 Continued
Thomas A. Copeland
44:19
14
The Nights
Book 3 Continued
Thomas A. Copeland
1:02:20
15
The Nights
Book 3 Concluded
Thomas A. Copeland
37:49
16
The Nights
Third Eclogues
Thomas A. Copeland
40:30
17
The Nights
Book 4 Begun
Thomas A. Copeland
55:13
18
The Nights
Book 4 Continued
Thomas A. Copeland
56:15
19
The Nights
Book 4 Concluded
Thomas A. Copeland
55:40
20
The Nights
Fourth Eclogues
Thomas A. Copeland
54:58
21
The Nights
Book 5 Begun
Thomas A. Copeland
41:46
22
The Nights
Book 5 Continued
Thomas A. Copeland
43:34
23
The Nights
Book 5 Continued
Thomas A. Copeland
30:29
24
The Nights
Book 5 Concluded
Thomas A. Copeland
1:00:53

Ratings & reviews

Rate this audiobook

Be the first to review this audiobook.

More like this

Moby Dick, or the Whale

Moby Dick, or the Whale

Herman Melville

Pride and Prejudice

Pride and Prejudice

Jane Austen

Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (version 3)

Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (version 3)

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Count of Monte Cristo

Count of Monte Cristo

Alexandre Dumas

Pride and Prejudice (version 3)

Pride and Prejudice (version 3)

Jane Austen

Pride and Prejudice (version 2)

Pride and Prejudice (version 2)

Jane Austen

Odyssey

Odyssey

Homer

1891 Collection

1891 Collection

Various

Pride and Prejudice (version 4)

Pride and Prejudice (version 4)

Jane Austen

Emma

Emma

Jane Austen

Jane Eyre (version 2)

Jane Eyre (version 2)

Charlotte Brontë

Swiss Family Robinson

Swiss Family Robinson

Johann David Wyss

Great Expectations

Great Expectations

Charles Dickens

Robinson Crusoe

Robinson Crusoe

Daniel Defoe