This article demonstrates that the satirical poet nicknamed 'Fuscus' in Everard Guilpin's Skialethia (1598) can be firmly identified as Sir John Davies, and that the epigram could not have been written earlier than February 2 in the year of publication
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Notes and Qu...
Explores the evidence for a personal friendship between Christopher Marlowe and Gervase Markham
The printing of the poems of the early Tudor poet Stephen Hawes (c.1474–before 1529) by the London p...
This paper explores historical precedents for the characters of Bardolph and Poins in Shakespeare's ...
This article argues that the Gray's Inn Revels of 1594-5, and their young Christmas Prince, Mr. Henr...
Although John Fletcher is recognized as one of the most influential dramatists of the early modern p...
John Donne has been a consistency misplaced poet, too often simplified or traduced. Recent scholarsh...
This article identifies Ricardus Franciscus as the scribe of Kew, The National Archives, C 49/30/19,...
This article investigates the claim found in London, British Library, Burney 357, fol. 12rv, that a ...
Since Piers Plowman occupies a central place in the study of medieval English literature, much atten...
This is the author's expanded version of the article published in Academia Letters. The DOI and cit...
The article investigates whether Shakespeare used Warwickshire, Cotswold or Midlands dialect, focusi...
In a note published in this journal in 2019, Sebastian Sobecki drew attention to a new life-record f...
This article tracks the reputation of Guillaume de Saluste Du Bartas's Semaines (1578, 1584 et seq.)...
For certain scholars, it is Edmond Malone’s edition of Shakespeare’s Sonnets and the modern editoria...
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Notes and Qu...
Explores the evidence for a personal friendship between Christopher Marlowe and Gervase Markham
The printing of the poems of the early Tudor poet Stephen Hawes (c.1474–before 1529) by the London p...
This paper explores historical precedents for the characters of Bardolph and Poins in Shakespeare's ...
This article argues that the Gray's Inn Revels of 1594-5, and their young Christmas Prince, Mr. Henr...
Although John Fletcher is recognized as one of the most influential dramatists of the early modern p...
John Donne has been a consistency misplaced poet, too often simplified or traduced. Recent scholarsh...
This article identifies Ricardus Franciscus as the scribe of Kew, The National Archives, C 49/30/19,...
This article investigates the claim found in London, British Library, Burney 357, fol. 12rv, that a ...
Since Piers Plowman occupies a central place in the study of medieval English literature, much atten...
This is the author's expanded version of the article published in Academia Letters. The DOI and cit...
The article investigates whether Shakespeare used Warwickshire, Cotswold or Midlands dialect, focusi...
In a note published in this journal in 2019, Sebastian Sobecki drew attention to a new life-record f...
This article tracks the reputation of Guillaume de Saluste Du Bartas's Semaines (1578, 1584 et seq.)...
For certain scholars, it is Edmond Malone’s edition of Shakespeare’s Sonnets and the modern editoria...
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Notes and Qu...
Explores the evidence for a personal friendship between Christopher Marlowe and Gervase Markham
The printing of the poems of the early Tudor poet Stephen Hawes (c.1474–before 1529) by the London p...