"Scrupulously researched, carefully written, argued, and developed, this is one of those books for which it is hard to imagine a mortal author." (Patrick Cheney, Studies in English Literature) "This is a major work. Shuger deals with the rules of appropriate language use in early modern Europe, making an argument about censorship in sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century England that is original, surprising, and, in her thorough presentation, entirely plausible." (Katharine Eisaman Maus, University of Virginia) "This magisterial work should be considered a basic text of analysts for Tudor-Stuart linguists, historians, and legal scholars." (History: Review of New Books) "An extremely impressive book, brimming with ideas and erudition, and putting forward an innovative and challenging interpretation which should be of great interest to lawyers as well as literary and social historians." (Journal of Law and Society)