Cambridge History of English Literature 3: Renascence and ReformationA. W. Ward, A. R. Waller |
Contents
Englishmen and the Classical Renascence page | 1 |
Reformation Literature in England | 25 |
The Dissolution of the Religious Houses | 48 |
Barclay and Skelton Early German | 56 |
The Progress of Social Literature in Tudor | 83 |
Sir David Lyndsay and the Later Scottish | 115 |
Reformation and Renascence in Scotland | 138 |
The New English Poetry | 166 |
The Poetry of Spenser | 211 |
Prosody from Chaucer to Spenser | 273 |
Elizabethan Criticism | 289 |
Chroniclers and Antiquaries | 313 |
Elizabethan Prose Fiction | 339 |
The Marprelate Controversy | 374 |
Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity | 399 |
English Universities Schools and Scholar | 418 |
Common terms and phrases
allegory appeared Ascham ballads Barclay became bishop Buchanan Cambridge character Chaucer church classical renascence Colet College contemporary controversy court courtier criticism death dialogue ecclesiastical eclogue edition Elizabeth Elizabethan Elizabethan sonnet England English poetry Erasmus Euphues Euphuism expression Faerie Queene followed French Gabriel Harvey Gascoigne Greek Henry VIII Hooker humanist humour imitation influence interest Italian John king language later Latin learning less lines literary literature London lord Lyly Lyndsay Lyndsay's lyric Marprelate Marprelate tracts Martin matter medieval metre Miscellany moral original Oxford pamphlet pastoral Petrarch Petrarchian poems poet poetic popular printed probably prose prosody protestant published puritan quatorzains reformation reign religious Richard rime romance satire scholars Scotland Shepheards Calender shepherds shows Sidney Sidney's sixteenth century Skelton sonnets Spenser spirit stanza style Surrey theological Thomas thought Tottel's Miscellany tract translation treatise verse words writings written wrote Wyatt