[Benson, Larry D. (ed.). 1988. The Riverside Chaucer. Oxford: Oxford University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Chaucer, Geoffrey. 1988. The Knight’s tale. In Larry D. Benson (ed.), The Riverside Chaucer, 37-66. Oxford: Oxford University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Chaucer, Geoffrey. 1988. Troilus and Criseyde. In Larry D. Benson (ed.), The Riverside Chaucer, 473-585. Oxford: Oxford University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[De Lorris, Guillaume & Jean de Meun. 1994. The romance of the rose. Trans. Frances Horgan. Oxford: Oxford University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Henryson, Robert. 1999a. Orpheus and Eurydice. In J. A. Tasioulas (ed.), The makars: The poems of Henryson, Dunbar and Douglas, 158-186. Edinburgh: Canongate Books.]Search in Google Scholar
[Henryson, Robert. 1999b. The testament of Cresseid. In J. A. Tasioulas (ed.), The makars: The poems of Henryson, Dunbar and Douglas, 187-214. Edinburgh: Canongate Books.]Search in Google Scholar
[Henryson, Robert. 1999c. The preaching of the swallow. In J. A. Tasioulas (ed.), The makars: The poems of Henryson, Dunbar and Douglas, 87-103. Edinburgh: Canongate Books.]Search in Google Scholar
[Holy Bible, The. 2004. The Holy Bible. King James Version. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers.]Search in Google Scholar
[Person, Henry A. (ed.). 1953. Cambridge Middle English lyrics. Seattle: University of Washington Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Tasioulas, J. A. (ed.). 1999. The makars: The poems of Henryson, Dunbar and Douglas. Edinburgh: Canongate Books.]Search in Google Scholar
[Villon, François. 2013. The testament and other poems. Trans. Anthony Mortimer. Richmond: Alma Classics]Search in Google Scholar
[Ariès, Philippe. 2009. Western attitudes toward death: From the middle ages to the present. London & New York: Marion Boyars.]Search in Google Scholar
[Bloomfield, Morton W. 1962. Piers Plowman as a fourteenth-century apocalypse. New Brunswick & New Jersey: Rutgers University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Bridges, Margaret. 1984. The sense of an ending: The case of the dream-vision. Dutch Quarterly Review of Anglo-American Letters 14. 81-96.]Search in Google Scholar
[Brody, Nathaniel. 1974. The disease of the soul: Leprosy in medieval literature. Ithaca & London: Cornell University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Calin, William. 2013. The lily and the thistle: The French tradition and the older literature of Scotland. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.10.3138/9781442666245]Search in Google Scholar
[Cherniss, Michael D. 1987. Boethian apocalypse: Studies in Middle English vision poetry. Norman, Okla.: Pilgrim Books.]Search in Google Scholar
[Curry, Walter Clyde. 1926. Chaucer and the mediaeval sciences. New York: Oxford University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Dunnigan, Sarah M. 2004. Feminizing the text, feminizing the reader? The mirror of ‘feminitie’ in The testament of Cresseid. Studies in Scottish Literature 33.1. 107-123.]Search in Google Scholar
[Emmerson, Richard Kenneth & Ronald B. Herzman. 1992. The Roman de la Rose: Jean de Meun’s apocalyptic age of hypocrisy. In Richard Kenneth Emmerson & Ronald B. Herzman (eds.), Apocalyptic imagination in medieval literature, 76-103. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Emmerson, Richard Kenneth & Ronald B. Herzman. 1992. The Canterbury Tales: Apocalypticism and Chaucer’s pilgrimage. In Richard Kenneth Emmerson & Ronald B. Herzman (eds.), Apocalyptic imagination in medieval literature, 145-181. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Fitch, Audrey-Beth. 2009. The search for salvation. Lay faith in Scotland, 1480-1560 (Edited by Elizabeth Ewan). Edinburgh: John Donald.]Search in Google Scholar
[Fradenburg, Louise Olga. 1998. The Scottish Chaucer. In Daniel J. Pinti (ed.), Writing after Chaucer: Essential readings in Chaucer and the fifteenth century, 167-176. New York & London: Garland Publishing.]Search in Google Scholar
[Gillespie, Vincent. 2005. Moral and penitential lyrics. In Thomas G. Duncan (ed.), A companion to Middle English lyric, 68-95. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer.10.1017/9781846153891.006]Search in Google Scholar
[Gray, Douglas. 1981. ‘Th’ende is every tales strengthe’: Henryson’s fables. In R. J. Lyall & Felicity Riddy (eds.), Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Scottish language and literature: Medieval and Renaissance, 225-250. Stirling, Glasgow: William Culross & Son.]Search in Google Scholar
[Green, Martin. 1975. Man, time and apocalypse in The wanderer, The seafarer, and Beowulf. Journal of English and Germanic Philology 74. 502-518.]Search in Google Scholar
[Grigsby, Bryon Lee. 2003. Pestilence in medieval and early modern English literature. New York: Routledge.10.4324/9780203508855]Search in Google Scholar
[Herrnstein Smith, Barbara. 1968. Poetic closure. A study of how poems end. Chicago & London: The University of Chicago Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Higl, Andrew. 2010. Henryson’s textual and narrative prosthesis onto Chaucer’s corpus: Cresseid’s leprosy and Her Schort Conclusioun. In Joshua Eyler (ed.), Disability in the Middle Ages: Reconsiderations and reverberations, 167-181. London: Ashgate.]Search in Google Scholar
[Jentoft, C.W. 1972. Henryson as authentic ‘Chaucerian’: Narrator, character, and courtly love in The testament of Cresseid. Studies in Scottish Literature 10.2. 94-102.]Search in Google Scholar
[Kermode, Frank. 2000. The sense of an ending. Studies in the theory of fiction with a new epilogue. Oxford: Oxford University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Mann, Jill. 1990. The planetary gods in Chaucer and Henryson. In Ruth Morse & Barry Windeatt (eds.), Chaucer traditions: Studies in honour of Derek Brewer, 91-106. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511552984.009]Search in Google Scholar
[McGerr, Rosemarie P. 1998. Chaucer’s open books: Resistance to closure in medieval discourse. Gainesville: University of Florida Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[McNamara, John. 1973. Divine justice in Henryson’s Testament of Cresseid. Studies in Scottish Literature 11.1. 99-107.]Search in Google Scholar
[Noll, Dolores L. 1971. The testament of Cresseid: Are Christian interpretations valid? Studies in Scottish Literature 9.1. 16-25.]Search in Google Scholar
[Parkinson, David J. 1991. Henryson’s Scottish tragedy. The Chaucer Review 25.4. 355-362.]Search in Google Scholar
[Patterson, Lee. 1973. Christian and pagan in The testament of Cresseid. Philological Quarterly 52. 696-714.]Search in Google Scholar
[Rawcliffe, Carole. 2009. Leprosy in medieval England. Woodbridge: Boydell Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Smoller, Laura A. 2000. Of earthquakes, hail, frogs, and geography: Plague and the investigation of the apocalypse in the later Middle Ages. In Caroline Bynum & Paul Freedman (eds.), Last things: Death and apocalypse in the Middle Ages, 156-187. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.10.9783/9780812208450.156]Search in Google Scholar
[Storm, Melvin. 1993. The intertextual Cressida: Chaucer’s Henryson or Henryson’s Chaucer? Studies in Scottish Literature 28.1. 105-122.]Search in Google Scholar
[Straw, Carole. 2000. Settling scores. Eschatology in the Church of the Martyrs. In Caroline Bynum & Paul Freedman (eds.), Last things: Death and apocalypse in the Middle Ages, 21-40. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.10.9783/9780812208450.21]Search in Google Scholar
[Strohm, Paul. 1989. Social Chaucer. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Tambling, Jeremy. 2004. Allegory and the work of melancholy: The late medieval and Shakespeare. Amsterdam & New York: Rodopi.10.1163/9789004490796]Search in Google Scholar