1. Milton and the Revolutionary Reader
2. Skinner , Quentin . 1996 .Reason and Rhetoric in the Philosophy of Hobbes6 Cambridge Part I, especially p.; Peter Mack,Elizabethan Rhetoric: Theory and Practice(Cambridge, 2002), Chapters1–3.
3. 2000 .Free-born John: the biography of John Lilburne49 – 50 . London Lilburne went to grammar school and retained at least some knowledge of Latin: Pauline Gregg, pp. 25,31–2. Overton may have matriculated at Cambridge in 1631; his Latin seems competent: H. N. Brailsford,The Levellers and the English Revolution(London, 1961), pp. Margot Heinemann, ‘Popular drama and Leveller style—Richard Overton and John Harris’, in Maurice Cornforth (ed.),Rebels and their Causes(London, 1978), pp. 71–2; David Adams, ‘Religion and Reason in the thought of Richard Overton, the Leveller’ (unpublished PhD dissertation, University of Cambridge, 2002), pp. 85–93; Nicholas McDowell,The English Radical Imagination: Culture, Religion and Revolution1630–1660(Oxford, 2003). Walwyn was essentially self-taught: Jack R. McMichael and Barbara Taft (eds),The Writings of William Walwyn(Athens, Ga., and London, 1989) (hereafter McMichael & Taft), pp. 1–5
4. Aristotle . 1926 .Rhetoric216 – 21 . 1.1.12–13; 3.1.5, translated by J. H. Freese, Loeb Classical Library (London and Cambridge, Mass.). Vickers, ‘Bacon and rhetoric’, pp. 212, 217 on Roman and early modern ideas of the orator's virtue; pp.—on Bacon's account of rhetoric as an aid to truth and virtue.
5. 1966 .Style, Rhetoric, and Rhythm: Essays by Moms W. Croll58 – 61 . Princeton J. Max Patrick and Robert O. Evans (eds), pp.