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  • ...ory, yet does identify the boss as a fountain and provide the title of the Lydgate ballad, "The marriage of London Stone and the fair pusell the bosse of Byll The "treatyse" referred to is undoubtedly that by John Lydgate, popularly called "The Marriage of London Stone and the Boss of Billingsgat
    10 KB (1,531 words) - 13:21, 6 August 2022
  • ...often mentioned in early modern texts. For example, a 1554 reprint of John Lydgate's translation of Boccaccio contains a chapter, "Hovve the Emperoure Maurici
    7 KB (1,088 words) - 20:14, 2 June 2015
  • ...mnon was most readily accessible in the comprehensive Trojan narratives by Lydgate and Caxton, which had earlier served as the basis for John Pickering's ''Ho ...'' (36). (The Furies do not appear in the versions of the story by Seneca, Lydgate, or Caxton.) Schleiner's larger argument is that the Admiral's diptych may
    8 KB (1,121 words) - 11:27, 4 August 2022
  • ...slowe's records]] [[category:history]] [[category:Leicester's]] [[category:Lydgate]] [[category:pope]] [[category:pregnancy out of wedlock]] [[category:religi
    4 KB (493 words) - 10:28, 15 September 2022
  • ...ites "Bewar therefore; the blind et many a fly"), he mentioned a ballad by Lydgate which has a refrain "'warning men to beware of deceitful women’."
    5 KB (729 words) - 07:45, 16 March 2018
  • ...conclusion; / In his boke of transformacion”). It is perhaps possible that Lydgate’s version might have influenced Chettle’s play. <div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Lydgate, John. ''The Auncient Historie and Onely Trewe and Syncere Cronicle of the
    17 KB (2,731 words) - 12:11, 4 August 2022
  • ...on of Chaucer also appeared in 1598), Henryson's ''Testament of Cressid'', Lydgate's ''Troy-Book'', Caxton's ''Recuyell of the Historyes of Troye'', and early ...ra at the end can only be to lament their fatal decision" (pp. 698-99). In Lydgate's version of this scene, Bullough notes, the Greek embassy rudely demands r
    28 KB (4,231 words) - 11:49, 4 August 2022
  • ...nightly challenges, courtly love, and tragic romance. It is in Chaucer and Lydgate (both reprinted throughout the 16th century) that Theseus becomes 'Duke' of
    15 KB (2,315 words) - 22:50, 15 April 2018