After this the press settled down to an average production of from eight to a dozen books a year, including a fair number of classical texts and translations, with now and then a volume of verse which brings it into connection with the stream of elizabethan literature.
"Fine Books"
Alfred W. Pollard
With the world's new geography and new commercial conditions in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, its methods and its monopoly of the seas were gradually superseded by the great seamen of the elizabethan era.
"Holbein"
Beatrice Fortescue
The elizabethan writer was almost as slow as his medieval predecessor to make distinctions between different kinds of literature.
"Early Theories of Translation"
Flora Ross Amos