Jameson, Anna. Shakespeare’s Heroines—Characteristics of Women: Moral, Poetical and Historical. London.
Kreyssig, Friedrich. Vorlesungen über Shakespeare, seine Zeit und seine Werke. Dritte Auflage. 2 vols. Berlin, Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung, 1877.
Lee, Sidney. A Life of William Shakespeare. New York, Macmillan & Co., 1889.
The French Renaissance in England. An Account of the Literary Relations of England and France in the Sixteenth Century. New York, Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1910.
Foreign Influences on Shakespeare—in Great Englishmen of the 16th Century. London, 1904.
Lydgate, John. A treatise, excellent and compendious, showing and declaring in manner of Tragedy, the falls of sundry most notable Princes and Princesses.... First compyled in Latin by the excellent Clerke Bocatius an Italian borne, and sence that tyme translated into our English and Vulgare tong by Dan John Lidgate, Monke of Butye. And more newly imprynted, corrected and augmented out of diverse and sundry olde writen copies in parchment. In aedibus Richard Tottelli cum privelegio. No date, but apparently the edition printed by John Wayland, 1558.
Lucan. Pharsalia. Rowe’s Translation. In Works of English Poets by Alexander Chalmers. Vol. XX.
Pharsalia. Edited with English notes by C. E. Haskins, with an introduction by W. E. Heitland. London, George Bell and Sons, 1887.
MacCallum, M. W. Shakespeare’s Roman Plays and their Background. London, Macmillan & Co., 1910.
Marlowe, Christopher. Works of Christopher Marlowe. Edited by Alexander Dyce. London, William Pickering, 1850.