The Defence of Poesie, literary criticism by Sir Philip Sidney, written about 1582 and published posthumously in 1595. Another edition of the work, published the same year, is titled An Apologie for Poetrie. Considered the finest work of Elizabethan literary criticism, Sidney’s elegant essay suggests that literature is a better teacher than history or philosophy, and it masterfully refutes Plato’s infamous decision to ban poets from the state in his Republic.
Sidney composed his eloquent defense of imaginative literature against charges of time-wasting, prevarication, and allurement to vice. Writing before England’s great age of poetry and drama—too early to include William Shakespeare, for example, in his criticism—he therefore finds English literature sadly wanting. He does, however, praise such works as Geoffrey Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde, the anthology The Mirror for Magistrates, and Edmund Spenser’s The Shepheardes Calender. While Sidney’s ideas are not considered particularly original, the work did introduce the critical thought of continental Renaissance theorists to England.