Cambridge History of English Literature 3: Renascence and ReformationA. W. Ward, A. R. Waller |
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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
appeared attempt became beginning bishop called Cambridge century character church classical close College common contemporary continued court criticism death earlier edition effect Elizabethan England English epigram example expression fact followed French give Greek hand Henry idea important influence interest Italian Italy John kind king known language later Latin learning less letters lines literary literature lived London manner Martin matter means method mind nature never original Oxford period play poems poet poetic poetry popular practice present printed probably produced prose published puritan queen reformation regard religious represented result rime satire says scholars Scotland seems shows sixteenth sonnets Spenser spirit story style suggested taken things Thomas thought tract translation verse whole writings written wrote