[1]
Bacon, F. and Kiernan, M. 1985. The essayes or counsels, civill and morall. Clarendon Press.
[2]
Beal, P. 2008. A dictionary of English manuscript terminology, 1450-2000. Oxford University Press.
[3]
Behn 2009. ‘A Pindaric Poem to the Reverend Doctor Burnett, On The Honour He Did Me of Enquiring After Me and My Muse’. Oroonoko, and other writings. Oxford University Press. 265–268.
[4]
Bradford, W. et al. 2007. The Mayflower papers: selected writings of colonial New England. Penguin Books.
[5]
Browne, T. et al. 1972. Religio medici; Hydriotaphia: and, The garden of Cyrus. Clarendon Press.
[6]
Butler, M. et al. 2012. The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Ben Jonson 7 Volume Set. Cambridge University Press.
[7]
Dryden, J. et al. 1958. The poems of John Dryden. Clarendon Press.
[8]
Dryden, J. et al. 1956. The works of John Dryden. University of California Press.
[9]
Dryden, J. et al. 1956. The works of John Dryden. University of California Press.
[10]
Erasmus, D. et al. 1974. An extract from De Copia (Vol. XXIV). Collected works of Erasmus. R.J. Schoeck and B. Corrigan, eds. University of Toronto Press. 635–639.
[11]
Greene, T.M. 1982. Chapter 13, ‘Accommodations of Mobility in the Poetry of Ben Jonson’. The light in Troy: imitation and discovery in Renaissance poetry. Yale University Press.
[12]
Havens, E. and Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library 2001. ‘Introduction’. Commonplace books: a history of manuscripts and printed books from antiquity to the twentieth century. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
[13]
Hutchinson, L. and Norbrook, D. 2001. ‘Book 1’. Order and Disorder. John Wiley and Sons Ltd. 6–19.
[14]
Marvell, A. et al. 1974. The complete English poems. Allen Lane.
[15]
Marvell, A. et al. 1974. The complete English poems. Allen Lane.
[16]
Millman, J.S. and Wright, G. 2005. Early modern women’s manuscript poetry. Manchester University Press.
[17]
Milton, J. and Elledge, S. 1975. Paradise lost: an authoritative text, backgrounds and sources, criticism. Norton.
[18]
Norbrook, D. 1990. ‘Marvell’s “Horatian Ode” and the Politics of Genre’. Literature and the English civil war. Cambridge University Press. 147–169.
[19]
Parker, K. and Parker, K. 1999. Extracts from William Biddulph. Early modern tales of Orient: a critical anthology. Routledge. 83–91.
[20]
Philips, K. et al. 1990. ‘For my highly honour’d Mrs Temple att her lodging’. The collected works of Katherine Philips, the matchless Orinda. Stump Cross Books. 137–142.
[21]
Philips, K. et al. 1990. ‘To (the truly competent Judge of Honour) Lucasia, upon a scandalous libell made by J. Jones’ and ‘To Antenor, on a paper of mine wch J. Jones threatens to publish to his prejudice’ (Vol. 1, pp. 114-117 and 346-348. The collected works of Katherine Philips, the matchless Orinda. Stump Cross Books. 114–117 and 346–348.
[22]
Salzman, P. 2008. Early Modern Women’s Writing: An Anthology 1560-1700. Oxford University Press.
[23]
Seneca, L.A. et al. 1917. ‘Epistle LXXXIV: On Gathering Ideas’, Vol. II. Ad Lucilium epistulae morales. Heinemann. 277–285.
[24]
Shackleton Bailey, D.R. et al. 1993. ‘Book V, Epigram 78’ (Vol. 1). Epigrams. Harvard University Press. 419–421.
[25]
Shackleton Bailey, D.R. et al. 1993. ‘Book X, Epigram 48’ (Vol. 2). Epigrams. Harvard University Press. 369–371.
[26]
Shackleton Bailey, D.R. et al. 1993. ‘Book XI, Epigram 52’ (Vol. 3). Epigrams. Harvard University Press.
[27]
Winslow, E. 2014. ‘Good news from New England’. University of Massachusetts Press.
[28]
Worden, B. 1984. The Politics of Marvell’s Horatian Ode. The Historical Journal. 27, 03 (1984). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X00017969.