This is organized by Literary Period for your convenience. Your actual Works Cited page MUST BE ALPHABETIZED by first primary word of each entry. Those first words are what you would put in ( ) in the body of your paper. Lastname 4 Works Cited “Beowulf.” Trans. Burton Raffel. Glencoe Literature: The Reader's Choice. Eds. Jeffrey D. Wilhelm, et.al. New York, Glencoe McGraw-Hill, 2007. 24-50. Print “The Battle of Maldon.” Trans. E.T. Donaldson. Norton Anthology of English Literature. Middle Ages Archive. W.W. Norton & Co., n.d. Web. 4 December 2016. “The Seafarer.” Trans. R.M. Liuzza. The Exeter Book, 991. Summerlin Academy English Department. n.d. Web. 4 December 2016. “The Wanderer.” Trans. R.M. Liuzza. The Exeter Book, 991. Two Old Elegies from the Exeter Book. University of Tennessee Knoxville. n.d. Web. 4 December 2016. The 13th Warrior. Screenplay by William Wisher, Jr. Director John McTiernan. Touchstone Home Entertainment, 2000. DVD. Chaucer, Geoffrey. “The Canterbury Tales.” Trans. Nevill Coghill. Glencoe Literature: The Reader's Choice. Eds. Jeffrey D. Wilhelm, et.al. New York, Glencoe McGraw-Hill, 2007. 94-138. Print. “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.” Trans. Y. R. Ponsor. Literature and the Language Arts – British Traditions. Ed. Laurie Skiba. St. Paul, EMC/Paradigm Publishing, 2001. 188-196. Print. Malory, Sir Thomas. “Le Morte d’Arthur.” Trans. Nevill Coghill. Literature and the Language Arts – British Traditions. Ed. Laurie Skiba. St. Paul, EMC/Paradigm Publishing, 2001. 200-208. Print. “Sir Orfeo.” Trans. Richard Scott Robinson. Middle English Breton Lai, c. 1330. Eleusinianm.com.uk. n.d. Web. 4 December 2016. Ladyhawke. Screenplay by Tom Mankiewicz. Director Richard Donner. Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment, 1985, www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001OL4TR4/ ref=dv_web_yvl_list_pr_0_ba. Web. The Knight’s Tale. Screenplay and Director Brian Helgeland. Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, 2001. whatever format you watched it in.
© Copyright 2026 Paperzz