Cogan, M. 1981. “Rhetoric and Action in Francis Bacon”, in Philosophy and Rhetoric. Vol.14, no.4 (Fall, 1981), Penn State University Press, pp.212-233.
Craig, H. 1998. ‘Jonson, the Antimasque and the Rules of Flattery’ in The Politics of the Stuart Court Masque, D. Bevington and P. Holbrook (Eds.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Cunningham, K. 2002. Imaginary Betrayals: Subjectivity and the Discourses of Treason in Early Modern England. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Enterline, L. 1997. ‘“You Speak a Language that I Understand Not”: The Rhetoric of Animation in The Winter’s Tale’, in Shakespeare Quarterly, Vol. 48. No. 1 (Spring 1997), Folger Shakespeare Library, pp. 17-44.
James VI (King of Scotland), I (King of England). - A Speach to the Lords and Commons of the parliament at White-hall (1609) - A True Law of Free Monarchs, or the Reciprocke and Mutual Dutie Betwixt a King and His Natural Subjects’ (1598). - Basilikon Doron (1599) in The Political Works of James I, C.H. McIlwain, (Ed). 1918 (1916). Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Kurland, S. 1991. ‘“We Need No More of Your Advice”: Political Realism in The Winter’s Tale’, in Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900, Vol. 31, no. 2, Spring 1991: 365-386.
Machiavelli, N. 1944 (1532). Machiavelli’s The Prince, An Elizabethan Translation, ed. H. Craig (ed.). Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press.
Prince, F.T. (ed). 1982 (1960) The Rape of Lucrece, The Arden Edition of the Works of William Shakespeare, The Poems, London and New York: Methuen and Co, Ltd.