| mock-heroic poetry and, 279-280;
|
| the moral essays of, 275-277, 290, 293-294;
|
| as own poetic subject, 290-291, 295-299, 302, 314;
|
| pastoral tradition and, 294;
|
| poetic forms used by, 276;
|
| and printing, 143-144, 146, 315;
|
| rhyme and, 276, 305;
|
| satiric targets of, 291-292, 304, 308, 317;
|
| as satirist, 293-299;
|
| sensibility of, 275-277;
|
| on John Skelton, 181;
|
| style of, 293;
|
| themes of, 275-276, 290;
|
|