For lucre or for fame: Lockhart's versions of the reception of Marmion.Published in:Review of English Studies, 1993, v. 44, n. 174, p. 187, doi. 10.1093/res/XLIV.174.187By:Millgate, JanePublication type:Article
CHRISTIANITY AND THE STATE OF SLAVERY IN JANE EYRE.Published in:Victorian Literature & Culture, 2007, v. 35, n. 1, p. 57, doi. 10.1017/S1060150307051418By:Sue ThomasPublication type:Article
Romantic Masculinity in Edgeworth's Ennui and Scott's Marmion: In Itself a Border Story.Published in:1999By:BEESEMYER, IRENE A.Publication type:Literary Criticism
SIR WALTER SCOTT.—(II.).Published in:Journal of Education, 1900, v. 51, n. 20, p. 309By:Camp, Austine I.Publication type:Article
MARRIED IN GREEN: A COMMON SOURCE FOR SCOTT AND DICKENS?Published in:Notes & Queries, 1987, v. ns-34, n. 4, p. 492By:Myer, Michael GrosvenorPublication type:Article