Bibliography

Books, Articles, and Websites with References to Pulter

Archer, Jayne Elisabeth. “A ‘Perfect Circle’? Alchemy in the Poetry of Hester Pulter.” Literature Compass 2 (2005), DOI: 10.1111/j.17414113.2005.00160x.

Brady, Andrea. “Dying with Honour: Literary Propaganda and the Second English Civil War.” The Journal of Military History 70, no. 1 (2006): 9–30.

Clarke, Elizabeth. “Women in Church and in Devotional Spaces.” In The Cambridge Companion to Early Modern Women’s Writing, edited by Laura Lunger Knoppers, 110–23. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.

Coussens, Catherine. “‘Virtue’s Commonwealth’: Gendering the Royalist Cultural Rebellion in the English Interregnum (1649-1660).” Çankaya Üniversitesi Fen-Edebiyat Fakültesi, Journal of Arts and Sciences Say›: 6 / Aral›k (2006): 19–31.

Davidson, Peter. “Green Thoughts: Marvell’s Gardens; Clues to Two Curious Puzzles.” Times Literary Supplement 5044 (1999): 14–15.

Eardley, Alice. “An Edition of Lady Hester Pulter’s Book of ‘Emblemes.’” PhD diss., Warwick University, 2008.

Eardley, Alice. “Editing Hester Pulter.” http://www.english.heacademy.ac.uk/explore/publications/casestudies/renaissance/hesterpulter.php

———. “Hester Pulter’s Date of Birth.” Notes and Queries 57, no. 4 (2010): 498–501.

———. “Hester Pulter’s ‘indivisibles’ and the Challenges of Annotating Early Modern Women’s Poetry.” Studies in English Literature 52, no. 1 (2012): 117–41.

———. “‘Saturn (whose aspects soe sads my soule)’: Lady Hester Pulter’s Feminine Melancholic Genius.” In New Ways of Looking at Old Texts, IV: Papers of the Renaissance English Text Society, 2002–2006, edited by Michael Denbo, 239–54. Tempe, AZ: ACMRS, 2009.

Eardley, Alice, and Demmy Verbeke. “Remembering Mary Ley (d. 1613): The Bilingual Commemorative Verses in the Harington Papers.” Lias 35 (2008): 177–86.

Ezell, Margaret J. M. “The Laughing Tortoise: Speculations on Manuscript Sources and Women’s Book History.” English Literary Renaissance 38, no. 2 (2008): 331–55.

Herman, Peter. “Lady Hester Pulter’s The Unfortunate Florinda: Race, Religion, and the Politics of Rape.” Renaissance Quarterly 64, no. 4 (2010): 1208–46.

Hine, Reginal L. Relics of an Uncommon Attorney. London: J.M. Dent, 1951.

Hutton, Sarah. “Hester Pulter (c. 1596–1678). A Woman Poet and the New Astronomy.” Etudes Epistémè 14 (2008): 77–87.

Nevitt, Marcus. “The Insults of Defeat: Royalist Responses to Sir William Davenants’s Gondibert (1651).” The Seventeenth Century 24, no. 2 (2009): 287–304.

Robson, Mark. “Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter.” In English Manuscript Studies, 1100–1700. Vol. 9, Writings by Women, edited by Peter Beal and Margaret J. M. Ezell, 238–56. London: The British Library, 2000.

Ross, Sarah. “Tears, Bezoars, and Blazing Comets: Gender and Politics in Hester Pulter’s Civil War Lyrics.” Literature Compass 2 (2005). DOI: 10.1111/j.1741-4113.2005.00161x.

———. “Women and Religious Verse in English Manuscript Culture, c. 1600–1668: Lady Anne Southwell, Lady Hester Pulter, and Katherine Austen.” DPhil diss., University of Oxford, 2000.

Smith, Nigel. “Lyric and the English Revolution.” In The Lyric Poem, edited by Marion Thain, 71-91. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013.