'This illuminating book...will be of fundamental interest to students and scholars both of renaissance and early modern literature and of their classical interactions. It mixes well-known texts and authors with less-known but equally revealing examples, laudably looks to Italian and French as well as English, has a keen eye for political significance, and indubitably demonstrates that important literary effects can be derived from considering the intertextual conversations of poets through extended chains of reception stretching from the ancient world to the Romantics.'Stephen Harrison. International Journal of the Classical Tradition'These critics take that time and have that patience; editor, contributors, and press are all to be commended for some impressive resistance to the academic logic of the Minimum Publishable Unit ... The guest at this intellectual feast leaves nourished by a strong sense of where the most exciting parts of the critical conversation between Classical and Renaissance Studies are heading.'David Currell, Translation and Literature'The classical tradition as discussed in this volume is a highly productive series of conversations that continues to this day as we talk back to the past, and listen to the many overlapping conversations already had. The essays in this volume, taken as a whole, suggest that in some ways this tradition is self-reflexive and concerned with its own existence, constantly arguing for the power of words to create immortality via this ever-evolving literary tradition ... The book will surely invigorate scholars of the ancient world and of Renaissance English literature ... The contributors have each been given the space and freedom to explore their topics in great depth, and the overall effect must surely come close to capturing the enlivening twenty-first century conversations from which the book derives.'Katie Reid, Bryn Mawr Classical Review'This illuminating book... will be of fundamental interest to students and scholars both of renaissance and early modern literature and of their classical interactions. It mixes well-known texts and authors with less-known but equally revealing examples, laudably looks to Italian and French as well as English, has a keen eye for political significance, and indubitably demonstrates that important literary effects can be derived from considering the intertextual conversations of poets through extended chains of reception stretching from the ancient world to the Romantics.'International Journal of the Classical Tradition