Sir Thomas Wyatt Criticism
- Introduction
- Principal Works
- The 'Thing' in Wyatt's Mind
- An Essay on Wyatt's Poems
- Wyatt's Poetry
- Love and Power in the Poetry of Sir Thomas Wyatt
- Wyatt and ‘Liberty’
- Collected Poems of Sir Thomas Wyatt
- Power, Sexuality, and Inwardness in Wyatt's Poetry
- Wyatt's Multi-faceted Presentation of Love
- Wyatt and Chaucer: They Fle From Me Revisited
- The Meter of Some Poems of Wyatt
- The Speaker in Wyatt's Lyric Poetry
- The Printer to the Reader
- Wyatt and ‘Liberty’: A Postscript
- Wyatt's 'Owen Thing'
- Sir Thomas Wyatt's Satires and the Humanist Debate Over Court Service
- Wyatt's David
- Thomas Wyatt's Poetry: The Politics of Love
- ‘Love, Fortune and my mind’: the Stoicism of Wyatt
- Time, Indentity, and Context in Wyatt's Verse
- The Empire's New Clothes: Refashioning the Renaissance
- Wyatt's Use of Repetitions and Refrains
- ‘Freedom through Bondage’: Wyatt's Appropriation of the Penitential Psalms of David
- Wyatt, Petrarch, and the Uses of Mistranslation
- Wyatt, the Heart's Forest, and the Ancient Savings
- Listening to Wyatt
- Country Mouse and Towny Mouse: Truth in Wyatt
- Sir Thomas Wyatt and the Court of Henry VIII: The Courtier's Ambivalence
- ‘An owl in a sack troubles no man’: proverbs, plainness, and Wyatt
- ‘Wrastling for this world’: Wyatt and the Tudor Canonization of Chaucer
- Breaking the Vacuum: Ricardian and Henrician Ovidianism
- Further Reading