Sir Philip Sidney’s From Astrophil and Stella is filled with misery, confusion, passion and suffering. Astrophil, the narrator in these sonnets, falls madly in love with Stella, a charming, beautiful woman. By reading the sonnets the reader can pick up on Astrophil’s extreme obsession with Stella. Emotions overflow each sonnet, some with more of an uplifting mood than others. For example, in Sonnet 2, the reader immediately can feel the strong emotions that overcome Astrophil. It makes the reader question, what is it about her that he is so infatuated with? Why can’t she love him back? Why doesn’t she love him back? When first reading this sonnet the feelings he was expressing were somewhat overwhelming. Being that this is only the second sonnet, the reader can feel somewhat sorrowful for Astrophil, especially when he ends the sonnet with, “To make myself believe that all is well, while with a feeling skill I paint my hell (lines 13-14).” It is the idea of being happy on the outside but distraught on the inside.
I think it would be insightful if there were a sonnet sequence with Stella’s internal feelings and emotions because throughout From Astrophil and Stella the reader is mainly focused and informed on Astrophil’s desires and longings. It would give a new perspective on the plot that Sidney is portraying. Learning about Stella’s inner thoughts could answer many questions that the reader was having and open up new ones. Just as the book Grendel opened up new point of views, I feel like a sonnet sequence by the character of Stella would do the same.
It is clear that Edmund Spenser’s From Amoretti sonnet sequence is filled with love and passion due to Spenser’s recent courtship and marriage with Elizabeth Boyle. These sonnets distinctly stood out to me because of how the narrator did not have an overwhelming amount of distress or despair due to a woman in which he is in love with, is not loving him back. Although, there are some points throughout the sonnets where he seems discouraged, he has a way to change that emotion and induce romance into situations. For example, in Sonnet 65 Elizabeth obtains doubt, as she does not want her freedom taken away once they are united. Amoretti immediately seems to reverse these negative thoughts with saying, “That fondly feare to loose you liberty, when loosing one, two liberties ye gayne…” (lines 2-4). He moves on to relate her feeling of captivity to a “gentle birde” entrapped in a cage. A bird itself does not feel like a prisoner as she can sing and is taken care of which overall leads to satisfaction- “feeds her fill.” Together they can heal each other’s wounds and therefore when they are indeed married she will not have to fear.
The reason I chose these two authors was because of how Spenser’s From Amoretti’s sonnet sequence seemed to defy the typical sonnet sequence. I used Sir Philip Sidney’s From Astrophil and Stella to show how the sonnets that I have had to read are typically filled with longings for lust, and the idea of wanting something that you cannot have. Spenser’s sonnets were filled with romance, love and the desire to be in lust even after death, which he demonstrated through compliments and descriptive characterization with his word choice. I found it intriguing to read a sonnet sequence in which sadness or discouragement did not take over each sonnet.