1
from
A Bibliography of Literary Theory, Criticism and Philology
http://www.unizar.es/departamentos/filologia_inglesa/garciala/bibliography.html
by José Ángel García Landa
(University of Zaragoza, Spain)
Robert Henryson (c.1425-c.1505)
(Scottish poet, l. Dunfermline)
Works
Henryson, Robert. Moral Fables. Poems.
_____. "The Cock and the Fox." Poem. In The Norton Anthology of English Literature. 7th ed. Vol. 1. Ed. M. H. Abrams, Stephen Greenblatt et al. New York: Norton, 1999. 439-45.*
_____. The Testament of Cresseid. Poem. 1493. Sequel to Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde.
_____. The Testament of Faire Creseide. In Urry’s ed. of Chaucer.
_____. From The Testament of Cresseid. In The Arnold Anthology of British and Irish Literature in English. Ed. Robert Clark and Thomas Healy. London: Hodder Headline-Arnold, 1997. 92-93.*
_____. Morall Fabillis of Esope.
_____. Robine and Makyne. In Bannatyne ms., ed. Lord Hailes.
_____. The Garment of Gude Ladys. In Bannatyne ms., ed. Lord Hailes.
_____. Abbey Walk. Poem.
_____. Tale of Orpheus. (Posth).1508.
_____. Poems in the Bannatyne Manuscript (manuscript collection of Scottish songs and poems). 1568.
_____. The Poems and Fables. Ed. H. Harvey Wood. Oliver & Boyd, 1968.
_____. Henryson. Ed. Hugh MacDiarmid. (Poet to Poet). Harmondsworth: Penguin.
_____. The Poems of Robert Henryson. Ed. Denton Fox. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1981. 1987.
Biography
Hazlitt, William. "Robert Henryson." In The Lives of the British Poets. London: Nathaniel Cooke, 1854. 1.83-84.*
Criticism
Grierson, Herbert (Sir). "Robert Henryson." 1933. In Grierson, Essays and Addresses. London: Chatto, 1940. 105-18.*
Shepherd, Robert. "Criseyde / Cresseid / Cressida: What’s In a Name?" SEDERI IV (1993): 229-36.
Tillotson, Geoffrey. "The ‘Fables’ of Robert Henryson." In Tillotson, Essays in Criticism and Research. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1942. 1-4.*
Twycross, M. "The Representation of the Major Classical Divinities in the Works of Chaucer, Gower, Lydgate and Henryson." B.Litt. diss. Oxford, 1961.
Yamamoto, Dorothy. The Boundaries of the Human in Medieval English Literature. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2000. (Bestiaries, Chaucer, Gower, Gawain-poet, Henryson).