John Lydgate Criticism
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Essays
- Iconography in Lydgate's ‘Dance of Death’
- The Binding Knot: Three Uses of One Image in Lydgate's Poetry
- Medieval History, Moral Purpose, and the Structure of Lydgate's Siege of Thebes
- Attitudes Towards Women in Lydgate's Poetry
- Lydgate's Metaphors
- Lydgate's Early Works; The Chaucer Tradition and Lydgate's First Epics
- Second Thoughts on Style in Lydgate's Life of Our Lady
- Lydgate's Attitudes to Women
- John Lydgate: The Critical Approach
- Lydgate the Hagiographer as Literary Artist
- John Lydgate and the Proverbial Tiger
- Poet and Patron in Early Fifteenth Century England: John Lydgate's Temple of Glas
- Lydgate's Views on Poetry
- Arthur's Stellification in the Fall of Princes
- Lydgate's Canterbury Tale: The Siege of Thebes and Fifteenth Century Chaucerianism
- Lydgate as Innovator
- Deference and Difference Lydgate, Chaucer, and The Siege of Thebes.
- Further Reading