In this brief article, Professor Daalder discusses a number of instances where the punctuation of Muir and Thomson's 'Collected Poems of Sir Thomas Wyatt', which the modern reader is meant to find comprehensible and helpful, does not seem to do justice to Wyatt's syntax
Sir Thomas Wyatt's poetry has most often been analysed with reference to his biography, his sources ...
"The Changeling" was written by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley in 1622. No manuscript of the pl...
There is a reasonable scholarly consensus that the long (“heroic”) line of Sir Thomas Wyatt is an ia...
The author discusses the sense of Wyatt's verse, particularly in its syntax, and how it sometimes of...
In this article, Daalder discusses how many editors have wrongly tampered with the text of "I lead a...
There are some features about the Egerton Manuscript 2711, containing Thomas Wyatt's verse amongst t...
This article provides an examination of the 'Collected Poems of Sir Thomas Wyatt', edited by Kenneth...
As in other early language traditions, premodern English poetry was written out with very light punc...
The contention of the essay which follows is that the presumption that Wyatt's rhythm can be judged ...
When the poetry of Sir Thomas Wyatt has attracted critical attention at all, it has been both praise...
In this article, Daalder's intention is to consider the question whether the poems in Egerton MS 271...
In recent years, historical pragmatics has extended its range to engage not only with lexical and gr...
In this article, Daalder addresses some difficulties present in Rebholz's edition of Wyatt's poem, "...
Traditionally, the study of mediaeval punctuation systems has been skipped by scholars in view of th...
This thesis has two objectives. The first is to create an edition of the letters of Lettice Kinnersl...
Sir Thomas Wyatt's poetry has most often been analysed with reference to his biography, his sources ...
"The Changeling" was written by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley in 1622. No manuscript of the pl...
There is a reasonable scholarly consensus that the long (“heroic”) line of Sir Thomas Wyatt is an ia...
The author discusses the sense of Wyatt's verse, particularly in its syntax, and how it sometimes of...
In this article, Daalder discusses how many editors have wrongly tampered with the text of "I lead a...
There are some features about the Egerton Manuscript 2711, containing Thomas Wyatt's verse amongst t...
This article provides an examination of the 'Collected Poems of Sir Thomas Wyatt', edited by Kenneth...
As in other early language traditions, premodern English poetry was written out with very light punc...
The contention of the essay which follows is that the presumption that Wyatt's rhythm can be judged ...
When the poetry of Sir Thomas Wyatt has attracted critical attention at all, it has been both praise...
In this article, Daalder's intention is to consider the question whether the poems in Egerton MS 271...
In recent years, historical pragmatics has extended its range to engage not only with lexical and gr...
In this article, Daalder addresses some difficulties present in Rebholz's edition of Wyatt's poem, "...
Traditionally, the study of mediaeval punctuation systems has been skipped by scholars in view of th...
This thesis has two objectives. The first is to create an edition of the letters of Lettice Kinnersl...
Sir Thomas Wyatt's poetry has most often been analysed with reference to his biography, his sources ...
"The Changeling" was written by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley in 1622. No manuscript of the pl...
There is a reasonable scholarly consensus that the long (“heroic”) line of Sir Thomas Wyatt is an ia...