Reynolds, Sir Joshua, birth and parent- age, iii, 378; education, ib. art pupil of Hudson, early portraits, ib.; visits Italy, ib.; friendship with Johnson, ib.; his friends, 379; elected first President of the Royal Academy, ib.; his elegant and easy delivery, ib.; annual issue of his Lectures, ib.; first seven reprinted, ib.; death in Leicester Fields, burial in St. Paul's Cathedral, 379; pos- thumous issue of Discourses, extract, 379
Reynolds, Dr., ii, 101 Reynolds, John Hamilton, iv, 135, 141, 192; his Garden of Florence, 148; his skit on Peter Bell, ib; apology for prize fighting, The Fancy, 148 Rhetoric, Art of, T. Wilson, i, 329; Title page, 330
Rhetoric in poetry, revolt against, iv, 31
Rhode Island, 262
Rhododaphne, Peacock, 191
Rhyme v. alliteration, i, 76, 109
Richmond, Yks., iii, 46 Rienzi, Lord Lytton, iv, 186 Rightful Heir, Lord Lytton, iv, 186 Rights of Man, T. Paine, iv, 83 Riley, John, iii, 173 Rime of the Ancient Marinere, Cole- ridge, iv, 36
Rime couée, i, III Rime croisée, i, 108; example, 109 Rime plate, i, 108; example, 108-109 Rime Royal, i, 143, 144, 149 Rimini, L. Hunt's Story of, iv, 135 Ring and the Book, Browning, The, iv. 224, 305
Ripon, John Wilkins, Dean of, iii, 87 Ritchie, Mrs. Richmond, iv, 277 Rival Ladies, Dryden, iv, 104 Rivals, Sheridan's The, iii, 372 River Duddon, Wordsworth Sonnets on, iv, 45
Rivers, Earl, iii, 159
Rivers, Earl, his Philosophers, i, 263, 267
Rispah, Tennyson, iv, 206
Road to Ruin, Holcroft's The, iv, 88
Rhyme, Assonant, i, 118; Norman, i, Rob Roy, Sir W. Scott, iv, 102
126, ii, royal, 54, 125
Rhyme, Tail-, i, III
Rhyme, Wyatt's Terza rima, i, 351 Rhymes on the Road, Moore, iv, 150 Rhyming, burlesque, iii, 142 Riccaltoun, Robert, iii, 273 Rich, Barnabe, ii, 97; his Don Simon- ides, ib.; Apollonius and Silla, 97 Rich, Lord, ii, 39, 42, 75 Rich, Lady, ii, 39
Richard Cœur de Lion, i, 108, 117, 127 Richard II., i, 100, 128, 146, 168, 169, 184
Richard II, Shakespeare, ii, 27, 180, 206, 218
Richard III., i, 273, 321, 322
Richard III. (Historic Doubts), iii, 367
Richard III., Shakespeare's, ii, 188,
Robert de Brunne, i, 91
Robert Elsmere, Mrs. Ward, iv, 338 Robert III. of Scotland, ii, 297 Robert of Gloucester, i, 90, 125, 129 Robertson, William, ii, 327, 348; merits and defects of his style, 352, 354; parentage and birth, 352; edu- cation, ib.; minister of Gladsmuir, ib.; death of parents, ib.; influence in Church of Scotland, 353; History of Scotland, ib.; History of Charles V., ib. ; character, ib. ; dies at Edin- burgh, ib.; portrait, ib.; iv, 77, 175 Robespierre, Coleridge and Southey's Fall of, iv, 50
Robin Hood, A Little Geste of, i, 296, 305-306
Robin and Makyne, Henryson, i, 295 Robinson, Clement, ii, Handefull of pleasant delites, 138 Robinson, Crabb, iv, 173 Robinson Crusoe, De Foe, iii, 253, 255; extract, 256-258 Robinson, Ralph, i, 318, 319 Roche, Lord, ii, 114 Rochester, Burnet's Life and Death of, iii, 173
Superstition, The Pleasures of Memory, 152; succeeds to his father's bank interest, 152; Epistle to a Friend, ib.; leaves Newington for St. James's Place, 152; his friends, ib. ; his Columbus and Poems, ib.; associated with Byron, 152; Jacqueline, ib.; Human Life, 152; Italy, 152, 153; refused Poet Laure ateship, 153; example of style, 153 Rogers, Prof. Thorold, i, 248 Rokeby, Sir W. Scott, iv, 73 Roland and Ferragus, i, 115 Roland, see Chanson de, i, 104 Rolle, Richard, i, 92, 102, 194, 207, 213; De Emendatione Vitae, i, 02; De Incendio Amoris, i, 92; The Pricke of Conscience, i, 92 Rolls Court, iii, 360 Roman Actor, Massinger's The, ii, 354 Roman de Rose, i, 29, 143, 165; see also Romaunt
Roman History, Goldsmith, iii, 345 Roman literature, i, 69 Romance, see Fiction
Romance of the Middle Ages, Miscel laneous, i, 116-118
Romances, medieval, ii, 231; iii, of chivalry, 78; picaresque, 322 Romans, i, 3, 4, 7.
Romantic school, i, 301, 312 Romantic School of Poets, iii, 375 Romanticism, ii, 310, 312, 321; pioneers, iii, 271; revival, iv, 2, 42, 67, 107, 151, 154 Romany Rye, The, Borrow, iv, 271 Romaunt of the Rose, Chaucer's trans-
lation, The, i, 142-143, 288; see also Roman de Rose
Rome, i, 43, 44, iii, 356, iv, 143, 144, 267, 269
Rome, Du Bellay's Ruins of, ii, 129 Rome, Dyer's The Ruins of, iii, 283 Rome, Gibbon's History of the Decline and Fall of, iii, 354, 355, 356, 357
Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare, ii, 188, 205, 206-207 Romney, George, iv, 78 Ronsard, ii, 263, 276, 297, iii, 97 Rookwood, Ainsworth, iv, 247 Ropemakers' Alley, Moorfields, iii, 256 Roper, William, biography of Sir T.
Richard, Duke of York, Shakespeare's, True Tragedy of, ii, 204 Richard of Cornwall, i, 126 Kichard the Reckless, i, 100 Richardson, Samuel, iii, 78, 192, 194, 234, 269, 283, 322, 327, 328, 343, 348, 380, iv, 86; his conception of the novel, 305; his addition to literature, 306; his gift of conversa- tion, ib.; his parentage, ib.; birth, 307; printers' compositor, ib. ; master printer, ib.; prosperity, ib.; writes Pamela, 307, 312; Clarissa, 307, 308-309; success, ib.; Sir Charles | Rockingham, Charles, Marquis of, iv, | Rosalynde, Lodge, ii, 94, 95 Grandison, ib. ; Master of the
Rochester, Earl of, iii, 23, 105, 110, 156, 159; specimen of his verse, 160
Rochester, Robert Kerr, Viscount, ii, 379
Rochester, Bp. of, iii, 183
More, i, 336; officer of King's Bench, 337 Rosalind and Helen, Shelley, iv, 127 Rosalind of Shakespeare, ii, 221 Rosalynd, Lodge's Description of, ii, 146
Rosamond, verses on, Tickell, iii, 218 Rosamund Gray, Lamb, iv, 154, 155
Roderick Random, Smollett, iii, 322, Rosciad, The, Churchill, iii, 296
Stationers' Company, ib.; suburban Rockingham, Lord, iii, 318 residences, 307, 310; death, 307; twice married, 308; family, ib. ; person, habits, character, ib.; letter to Dr. Macro, 308-9; sensibility, 309 Richelieu, Cardinal, iii, 146 Richelieu, Lord Lytton, iv, 186 Riches, Pope's Use of, iii, 219 Richmond, Duchess of, iii, 70 Richmond, George, iv, 267, 279
Rodogune, Corneille, iii, 7 Roe Head School, iv, 280, 281 Roes family, i, 137, 140 Roger of Wendover, i, 132 Rogers, Archdeacon, i, 230 Rogers, Samuel, iv, 62; birth, parent- age, education, 152; An Ode to
Rose, Burns, A Red, Red, iv, 28 Rose Theatre, ii, 169, 204 Rosemounde, Chaucer's Ballade to, i, 170
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel, i, 162, 287, iv, 39, iv, 344, 345, 346-349, 352, 353,
357: birth, parentage, named Gabriel Charles Dante, 346; educa- tion, 346; studies art in studio of Madox Brown, ib.; e.tablishes pre- Raphaelite Brotherhood, ib.; his pictures, 347; writes for The Germ, "The Blessed Damozel," 66 Hand and Soul," ib.; his lodgings, ib. courtship and marriage, 347; wife's death, ib.; The Early Italian Poets, 347; fate of early Poems, ib.; takes 16, Cheyne Walk, his companions, 347; pursues painting, 347; picture
of Cassandra, ii, 231; insomnia, 347; recalled to poetry, 348; visits Penkill Castle, ib.; recovery of early MS., ib.; Poems, 346, 348; their success, ib. ; melancholia, ib.; eccentric life, ib.; Ballads and Sonnets, ib.; paralysis, dies at Birchington, 348; stature, ib.; character, ib.; style, 345, 346; specimens, 349; portrait, 347; his drawing of his mother and sister, 350
Rossetti, Mrs. D. G., née Elizabeth Siddell, iv, 347, 348
Rossetti, Mrs., née Frances Polidori, iv, 346, 351
Rossetti, Christina Georgina, ii, 210, iv, 346, 349-352, 357; birth, 349; parents, education, early poetry, Verses privately printed by Gaetano Polidori, 349; as model to the pre- Raphaelites, 349-350; ill-health, ib.; contributes to The term as Ellen Alleyn, 250; early merit as a poetess, ib.; Goblin Market, and other Poems, 346, 350; foreign visit, 350; The Prince's Progress, ab.; severe illness, 350-351; Sing Song, 351; Annus Domini, ib. ; A l'ageant, ib.; Time Flies, ib.; The Face of the Deep, ib.; pathetic last years, ib.; her death in Torrington Square, ib.; style, 346; specimen, 351-352; "Dream Land," 351; Echo," 352; portrait, 350
Ross.ter, Philip, lutenist, ii, 278 Rothley Temple, iv, 259
Rotrou, Jean, ii, 357, iii, 97
Roull of Aberdeen, i, 290
Roull of Corstorphin, i, 290 Roull, Master Thomas, i, 290 Round towers, Irish, i, 40 Roundabout Papers, Thackeray, iv,
Rousseau, J. J., ii, 59, iii, 271, 328, 350, 351, 380, iv, 2, 78, 83, 87, 93; Emile, iii, 253, iv, 58 Rowe, Nicholas, ii, 200 Rowlands, Samuel, ii, 325; pamph- leteer akin to Dekker, ii, 381, 382; Hell's Broke Loose, 382; The Melan- choly Knight, ib.
Rowlandson, T., iii, 316, 321, 338, 346 Rowley forgeries, iii, 298, 299 Rowley, William, ii, 346, 347; colla- borates with Middleton, 346; actor and playwright, A New Wonder,
347, 348; A Match at Midnight, 346, | Ruthven, iii, 302 347; A Shoemaker a Gentleman, ib.; style, 346
Roxana, Defoe, iii, 255 Roxburghe Ballads, i, 301 Roxburghe Club, i, 249 Royal Academy, iii, 379; iv, 346 Reyal and Noble Authors of England, Walpole, iii, 365
Royal College of Physicians, iii, 53 Royal Institution, The, iv, 340, 341 Royal Slave, W. Cartwright, iii, 9 Royal Society, The, ii, 23, iii, 53, 74, 116, 139, 140, 173; its origin and founders, 98-99
Rutland, Charles, 4th Duke of, iv, II Rutland House in the City, ii, 363; iii, 100
Rutter, Joseph, translates the Cid, iii,
Ryal Mount, iv, 41, 45, 46 Rycant, Sir Paul, ii, 86 Rye, ii, 324
Rymer, T., iii, 176, 178, 182, iv, 369 Ryswick, Treaty of, iii, 209 SABBATH, Grahame's, iv, 77 Sacharissa, iii, 70, 126; see Sidney, Lady Dorothy
Sackville, Thomas, Earl of Dorset, ii, 130-133, his part in The Mirror of Magistrates, 131, 165; and in the first English tragedy, Gorboduc, 46, 131, 132, 164, 165; as a statesman, 132; builds Knole, 132, 165; merit as a poet, 132, 133; specimen of verse, 132-133; portrait, 130 Sackville, Sir Richard, ii, 131 Sacramental Test, Swift, 237 Sad Shepherd, B. Jonson's The, ii, 317, 319 321
Saint's Tragedy, Kingsley's The, iv, 324
Saintsbury, Prof., i, 195, 247, ii, 130 St. Agnes' Eve, Tennyson, ii, 211-212 St. Alban's Abbey, i, 132, 222; Chro-
nicle of, i, 133, 209; Grammar School, ii, 360; St. Michael's Church, ii, 17
St. Albans, Lord, iii, 74 St. Andrew's Cathedral, i, 287 St. Andrew's, Holborn, ii, 334, 336 St. Augustine, i, 55
Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám, E. Fitz- gerald, iv, 343, 344, 345 Rugby School, iv, 171, 308, 310 Ruin, the Anglo-Saxon poem, i, 32 Rule Britannia, J. Thomson, iii, 275 Rule of Reason, T. Wilson, ii, 161 Rules, The," iii, 97 Rural Sports, Gay, iii, 213 Ruskin, John, i, 96, ii, 33, iii, 187, 254; iv, 285, 288-295, 327, 339, 343; parentage, birth, Calvinistic training, 290; at Herne Hill, b; visits the Alps, ib.; at Oxford, gains Newdi- gate Prize with Salsette and Ele- phanta, 290; devotee of Turner, R.A., 290; his Modern Painters, 291, Part II., ib.; Seven Lamps of Architecture, 291, 346; unhappy marriage, 291; The Stones of Venice, ib., Modern Painters, Vols. iii and iv, 291; mother's influence, 291; as a lec- turer, 291; art Notes, 291, 292; Harbours of England, 292; Elements of Drawing, ib.; artistic, social, and industrial views, ib.; The Two Paths, ib.; Unto this last, 292; Sesame and Lilies, ib.; his denunciations, ib; The Ethics of the Dust, 292; The Crown of Wild Olives, 292; Time and Tide, 293; studies Greek myth- ology, 293; The Queen of the Air, 293; exponent of fine art, ib.; Oxford yard, iii, 16 Slade Professor, 293, 294; Fellow of Corpus, 293; mother's death, ib.; buys Brantwood, b.; Sheffield Mu- seum, ib.; founds St. George's Guild, ib.; love affair, ib.; Fors Clavigera, 293; ill-health, 293; Bible of Amiens, 294; Arrows of the Chase,294; retires to Brantwood, 294; Præterita, 294;¦ 232 exhausts parental fortune, 294; death, buried at Coniston, 294; portraits, 289, 291, 347; his water-colour and pencil drawings, 294; character, 294; person, 294; style, 288-290; speci- mens, 294-295; portraits, 289, 291 Ruskin, John James, critic's father, iv,
Russell, Thomas, iv, 33; his sonnet, Philoctetes in Lemnos, 34, 35; his career, 34; posthumous Sonnets, iv, 34
Russian literature, iv, 112 Rust, George, iii, 37 Ruth, Mrs. Gaskell, iv, 286 Ruthwell Cross, i, 22, 25
St. Bartholomew the Less, ii, 93 St. Bartholomew's Day, Massacre on, ii, 38
St. Bartholomew's Eve, iv, 266 St. Benedict of Nursia, i, 57 St. Brardan, i, 107
St. Bride's Church, iii, 27; Church-
St. Cecilia's Day, iii, 106 St. Cecilia's Day, Dryden's Song for, iii, 151-152
St. Chrysostom, iii, 121 St. Clair, General, iii, 350 St. Clement Danes, iii, 114 St. Clement's Eve, Sir H. Taylor, iv,
St. Colun.ba, i, 3 St. Cuthbert, i, 35 St. Dominie, i, 87 St. Dunstan's in the West, London, ii, 376
St. Francis de Sales, ii, 364, 369 St. Francis of Assisi, i, 87 "St. George's Guild," Ruskin, iv, 293
St. George's, Hanover Sq., iii, 321 St. Gilbert of Sempringham, i, 248,
St. Giles', Cripplegate, iii, 18, 254 St. Giles-in-the-Fields, ii, 361 St. Gregory of Nazianzus, i, 220 St. Guthlac, Life, i, 28
St. James' Street, iii, 357 St. John of Bridlington, i, 128 St. John, Henry, Viscount Boling- broke, iii, 242, 258; his style, ib.; parentage, education, ib.; politics, 258-259; his Dissertation on Parties, Letter to Sir William Wyndham, and Idea of a Patriot King, 259 St. Katharine, i, 221, 222 St. Katherine, Capgrave, i, 249 St. Lawrence Jewry, iii, 119 St. Leon, Godwin's, iv, 84
St. Luke, portrait, i, 31; Gospel (Lindisfarne), 34
St. Martin-in-the-Fields, i, 314 St. Mary Overies, Southwark, i, 176 St. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol, iii, 298 St. Mary Woolchurch, London, ii, 360
St. Michel Elizabeth, afterwards Pepys, iii, 138
St. Neot, Life, i, 47
St. Nicholas Olave, London, ii, 292 St. Olave's Church, London, ii, 288 St. Omer, iii, 22
St. Patrick, i, 3, 14, 107
St. Patrick's Day, Sheridan, iii, 372 St. Peter, i, 3
St. Paul and Protestantism, M. Arnold, iv, 310
St. Paul's Cathedral, ii, 90, 93, 295, 375, iii, 361, 379
St. Paul's, children of, ii, 186 St. Paul's, Covent Garden, iii, 145 St. Paul's Cross, ii, 30
St. Paul's School, i, 322, ii, 76, iii, 15, 138
St. Saviour's, Southwark, i, 177, ii, 324, 354
St. Teresa, Crashaw's Hymn to, iii, 63
St. Victor, P. de, iv, 357 Sainte-Beuve, C. A., iii, iv, 357 Saint-Pierre, Bernardin, iii, 253
Saints, metrical Lives of the, Barbour, i, 279, 282
Salámán and Absál of Jámi, Fitzgerald,
Salisbury, ii, 352, iv, 34 Salisbury, Bp, see Burnet Gilbert Salisbury, Chancellor of, iii, 4 Salisbury Court, iii, 305, 307 Salisbury, Hester Lynch (Mr. Thrale), iii, 334, 340
Sa lus, ii, 65, Jugurthine War, i, 346 Salmacis and Hermaphroditus, Beau- mont, ii, 323
Salsette and Elephanta, Ruskin, iv, 290 Salt, Dr., iv, 341
Salt upon Salt, G. Wither, ii, 287 Saltash, iii, 35
Samoa, A Footnote to History, Steven- son, iv, 363
Sampson, Thomas, ii, 100 Samsell, near Harlington, 135 Samson Agonistes, Milton, ii, 157; iii, 18, 80, 83
Sancho Panza, i, 62 Sancroft, Archbp., iii, 19 Sandby, Paul, ii, 165 Sandemanian sect, iv, 84
Sanderson, Robert, Bishop of Lincoln, ii, 370; Life of Robert, by I. Walton, iii, 44
Sanderson, Mrs., iii, 100 Sandford and Merton, Day, iv, 93 Sandown Castle, iii, 89 Sandwich, ii, 368
Sandys, Edward, Archbp. of York, i, 230; iii, 67
Sandys, George, his French ideas of the stopped couplet, iii, 66; portrait 66; son of Archbp. Sandys, 67; birth and education, 67; his travels, Kelation of a Journey, 66, ii, 384; his translation of Ovid's Metamor- phoses, iii, 67; paraphrased, in verse, part of Holy Scripture, his Para phrases upon the Divine Poems, 67; title page, 67
San Francisco, iv, 362 Sannazaro, i, 347 Sapphics, Cowper, iv, 4
Savoy Chapel, ii, 90, iii, 49 Saxon and Norman amalgamation, i, 87,313
Saxon Chronicle, i, 59, 61, 62, 64; re-written, i, 74; continuation, i, 75 Saxon, Semi, i, 74; Saxon, South, i, 77; speech, i, 103; speech of Chaucer's day, i, 147 Saxondom, i, 135 Saxon influence, i, 2, 4 Scaliger, J., ii, 307, 378, iii, 97, 170 Scandinavia, i, 6
Scandinavian influence, i, 41, 46; in- roads, i, 39 Scarborough, iv, 282 Scarron, P., iii, 142 Scenes of Clerical Life, George Eliot, iv, 313, 316
Schaw, Quintin, i, 290 Schiller, Carlyle's Life and Writings of, iv, 154, 197, 252 Schiller's Wallenstein, iv, 40
Sappho and Phaon, Lyly, ii, 138, 186, Schipper on English metre, i, 17
Sardanapalus, Byron, iv, 116
Sark, ii, 54
Sarrazin, ii, 248
Schism, Great, i, 211, 240 Schlegels, iv, 40
Schoolmaster, Roger Ascham, i, 331, title page, 331
Sartor Resartus, T. Carlyle, iv, 198, Schoolmistress, Shenstone, iii, 301 248, 250, 252, 253
Satire, re-introduced, iii, 147 Satire, see Skelton, Barclay Satires, Comic, ii, 310, 314
School for Scandal, Sheridan, iii, 372,
School of Compliment (Love Tricks), Shirley, ii, 360, 361
Satires imitated from Roman Models, Schools introduced, i, 34-35
Satires, Donne, ii, 2.2
Satires, Dryden's Didactic, iii, 105 Satires of Pope, iii, 190 Satirist, Dryden as, iii, 142
Scilla's Metamorphosis, Lodge, ii, 94,
Scornful Lady, Beaumont and Fletcher, ii, 325
Satiromastix, Dekker and Marston, ii, Scotch Lowland, i, 94 315, 382
Saturday Review, iv, 333 Satyr, The, B. Jonson, ii, 315
Satyre of the Three Estates, Sir D. Lyndsay's Pleasant, i, 364
"Saturn," i, 62
Saurin, J., iii, 264
Scotch prose in middle of sixteenth century, i, 365
Scotland, The Complaint of, Boece, i,
Savage, Johnson's Life of Richard, iii, Scott, Alexander, iv, 30
Scott, Lockhart's Life of Sir Walter, iv, 180
Scott, Lady, née Miss Charlotte Char- pentier. iv, 71, 74
Scott, Michael (13th cent.), i, 275 Scott, Reginald, ii, 88; his treatise on
Hops, ib.; his valuable Discovery of Witchcraft, 88
Scott, Sophia, later Mrs. Lockhart, iv,
Scott, Rev. Thomas, Commentary on the Bible, iv, 266
Scott, Sir Walter, i, 8, 37, 75, 107,
147, 293, 302, 306, ii, 5, 90, 11C, iii, 325, 375, iv, 12, 25, 44, 45, 64, 69-76, 107, 108, 110, 114, 178, 179, 202, 264, 289; birth, parentage, lameness, its cause, thrilling vicissi- tudes of childhood, 69; instructed in literature by his aunt, Mrs. Janet Scott, 69; love of chivalrous tales, 67, 69; education at Edinburgh, 69; at Kelso, 70; his studies, 70; meets Burns, 70; reads for the
Law, ib.; breaks a blood-vessel, | Scrope, Lord, iii, 46 70; return of muscular health, Sculpture, Lytton's poem, iv, 185 70; personal appearance, 70-71; Scurlock, Miss Mary, iii, 231 first love, 71; studies Border Seafarer, The, i, 32, 33 romance, 71; translates Lenore, 71; Seal of Edward the Confessor, i, 67 marriage, 71; settles in Edinburgh, Seals introduced, i, 67 71; studies German poetry, 67, 71; Seasons of Thomson, iii, 271, 274 friendship of "Monk" Lewis and Secker, Archbp., iii, 279, 360, 361, James Ballantyne, 71; contributes 375 to Edinburgh Review, 72; collects Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, 68, 72; Lay of the Last Minstrel, 68, 72; quits law for literature, 72;; partnership with Ballantyne, 72, 73, 74; begins Waverley, 72; lives at Ashestiel, 72, 73; edits Dryden, writes Marmion, 72; Clerk of Ses- sion, 72; edits Swift, 72; Lady of the Lake, 68, 73; his income, 73; buys | Abbotsford, 73; position as a poet, 68, 73, 105; rivalry of Byron, 73; Rokeby, Bridal of Triermain, 73; be- comes a novelist, 73, 101-100; issues Waverley, 73, 101, 102, 103; de- clines Laureateship, 73; Rob Roy, Ivanhoe, Peveril of the Peak, 102; Antiquary, 103; meets Byron, 114; his The Lord of the Isles, 73; his novels, Guy Mannering, | 73, 103; Tales of my Landior 73; ill-health, 73; created a Baronet, 73; founds the Ballantyne Club, 73; bankruptcy, 74; his noble effort to redeem his debts, 74; last romance Anne of Geierstein, 74; paralytic sei- zure, 74; in search of health, 74; death at Abbotsford, 74, 80; buried in Dryburgh Abbey, 72, 74; speci- mens of his verse, 74-76; his pro- sody, 68; portraits, 67, 68, 74, 102; visits Edgeworthstown, 94; influence! of his style, 105; specimen of his prose, 105-106 Scottish Antiquary, The, i, 290 Scottish ballad poetry, i, 304 ii, 296 Scottish Chivalry, iv, 102, 103 Scottish History and Art, Mr. G. Neil son, i, 290
Secular and spiritual power, i, 57 Sedgefield, Dr., i, 52 Sedition, The Hurt of, Sir J. Cheke, i, 329
Sedley, Sir Charles, iii, 23, 102, 156, 157; birth and connections, educa- tion, marriage to Catherine, daughter of Earl Rivers, 159; retired to Ayles- ford, ib.; favourite with Charles II., ib.; his scandalous living, ib.; enters Parliament, ib.; his The Mulberry Garden, ib.; supports William III., death, his songs, 159; example, ib. Seeley, Sir John, iv, 335; City of | London boy, Cambridge education, ib.; Professor of Modern History, ib.; his Ecce Homo, ib.; Expansion of England, ib.; portrait, 335 Segrave, iii, 2
Sejanus, B. Jonson, ii, 312, 315 Selborne, White's Natural History of, iii, 375, 376
Selden, John, ii, 281, 387-389; iii, 143; birthplace and education, ii, 388; law-student in London, ib.; annotated Drayton's Polyolbion, ib.; Tithes of Honour, 387, 388; History of Tithes,387, 388; reforming activity, 388; incurs the King's displeasure, ib.; imprisoned, ib.; retires to Wrest Park, ib.; supposed marriage to widowed Countess of Kent, ib.; per- sonal appearance, ib.; erudition, 387, 388; death, 388; portrait, ib.; style, 387; specimen, 388-9 Self-Control, Brunton, iv, 178, 179 Selkirk, Alexander, iii, 255 Sellwood, Emily, iv, 204 Sempill, Robert, ii, 149 Sempills of Beltrees, ii, 266 Seneca, ii, 307, 331 Seneca, Lodge's translation, ii, 95 Sense and Sensibility, Jane Austen, iv, 94, 303
Sentimental Journey, L. Sterne's A, iii, 316, 319, 322 Seraphim, The, Mrs. Browning, iv,
Sesame and Lilies, Ruskin, iv, 292 Sessions of the Poets, Suckling, iii, 25 Sestine, ii, 42
Settle, Elkanah, iii, 102; birth and career, 110; his Cambyses, his Em- press of Morocco, ib.; appointed City Poet, ib.; at Bartholomew Fair, III; admitted to Charterhouse, ib.; per- sonal appearance, ib. Settle, Josias, iii, 110
Seven Deadly Sins of London, Thomas Dekker, ii, 382
Seven Lamps of Architecture, Ruskin, iv, 288, 291, 346 Severn, Joseph, iv, 142, 143 Sevigne, Madame, iii, 264 Seward, Anna, iv, 33 Shadow of Night, Chapman's The, ii, 328 Shadwell, Thomas, iii, 105, 109-110, 149, iv, 358; birth and education, 109; his play, The Sullen Lovers, ib.; poet laureate, his figure, ib.; his drama Virtuoso, 110; bust, ib. ; his talent, 110
Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, 3rd Earl of, iii, 105, 147, 176, 177, 184-189, 190, 238, 239, 250, 251, 259, 347, iv, 370; influence, 184, 190; a great force, 186; affected by Continental thought, ib.; works admired abroad, ib.; style, 187; his æstheticism, ib.; his descent, ib.; education, foreign travels, and study, ih.; literary studies, ib.; enters Parliament, ib. ; character as defined by opponents, 188; retires to Hol- land, ib.; confirmed invalid, his love affairs, ib.; marriage, 189; Inquiry after Virtue, 188; Letter concerning Enthusiasm, 189; The Moralists, ib.; Advice to an Author, ib.; Characteristics of Men, Man- ners, Opinions, Times, ib.; visits Italy for health, ib.; The Judgment of Hercules, and On Design, 189; his death at Naples, character, 189; optimism, 329, 346
Shakespeare, Hamnet, poet's son, ii, 213
Shakespeare, John, poet's father, ii,
192-193, 194, 212, 213, 239 Shakespeare, Miss Judith, later Mrs. Quincy, ii, 254
Shakespeare, Mary, poet's mother, ii, 192, 239
Shakespeare, Richard, poet's grand- father, ii, 192 Shakespeare, Miss Susanna, afterwards Hall, ii, 239, 252; grave, 252, 255 Shakespeare's wife, ii, 196, 239, 254 Shakespeare, William, i, 141, 142, 205, 232, 235, 237, 350, 353, ii, 4. 5, 6, 23, 24, 26, 44, 58, 65, 66, 08, 78, 88, 89, 90, 94, 95, 96, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 121, 128, 129, 141, 144, 154, 164, 170, 179, 180, 181, 188, 189, 275, iii, 1, 7, 8, 10, 70, 84, 99, 101, 103, 157, 176, 297, 308, 309, 310, 312, 316, 321, 322,
323, 325, 333, 341, 350, 356, 359, 364, iv, 138, 140, 33, 305, 367, 369, ii, 191-256; his genius, 191, 308; surname, 191-192; parents and birth, 192; family misfortune, 193, 196; at Stratford Grammar School, 193; course of study, 193; B.blical knowledge, 194 ; a butcher, 194; school assistant, 195, 196; source of legal terms, 195; cali- graphy, ib.; marries Anne Hathaway, 196; their children, 196; quits Stratford, its cause, 196-197, 212; Lucy incident, 197; disappearance, how occupied, 197-198, 202; pos- sible aid from Richard Field, 199; conjectured visit to Low Coun- tries, 199-200; Continental know- ledge, 200; Baconian theory, 200- 201, 238; Poems and Sonnets, 201, 206, 213-220, 223, 230, 238, 245, 276; two printed in 1599, 230; when composed and to whom dedicated, 216, 217-219, 223; their merit, 219; first title page with his name, 202; his Venus and Adonis, 202; date of! connection with stage, 202; Greene's testimony, 198, 202, 204-205; chronology of plays, 202; Love's Labour Lost, 195, 195, 197, 202, 203, 204, 234; Titus Andronicus, 172, 202, 207-208, 209; The Comedy of Errors, 202, 203; Two Gentle- men of Verona, 167, 196, 197, 202, 203, 221, 222; Taming of the Shrew, 203, 211, 212, 233; folio of 1623, 204, 227, 246, 250, 253, 316; Love's Labour Won, 204. 211, 212, 233; All's Well that Ends Well, 204, 211, 212, 233; joint author of Henry V., 204, 205; The Conten- tion of the Houses of York and Lancaster, 204; The True Tragedy of Richard, Duke of York, 204; as "Johanne's factotum," Chettle's testimony, 205, 209; Richard II., 206, 209, 218; Richard III., 188, 200, 206; theatres closed through plague, 206, 207, 233; writes poetry, 206, 207; his Tarquin and Lucreie, 206; Venus and Adonis, 206, 207, 217; dedication to Earl of Southampton, 206; Romeo and Juliet, 188, 205, 206- 207, 209, 211; first success in comic character, 209; Rape of Lucrece, 207, 217, 342; A Midsummer Night's Dream, ii, 209-210; creation of un- human beings, 210; The Tempes', ii, 210, 228, 237, 242, 244, 245, 250-253, iii, 139; his shortest play, ii, 240; King John, i, 210-211, 220; haste of composition shown, 211; was he a Roman Catholic? 211; Merchant of Venice, 212; Venetian Comedy, 212; summoned to act before the Queen, ii, 212; his income, 212; father's fear of process for debt, 212; application for a loan by fellow townsman, 212; father's embarrassments end, 213;
revisits Stratford, 213; death of his son Hamnet, 213; acts in Every Man in his Humour, 314; buys New Place, 213, 220; Henry IV., 220; character of Falstaff, 220; Merry Wives of Windsor, 220, 232; its humour, 221; Henry V., 220; its date, ib., .and time, 220, 221; his masterpieces, Much Ado about Nothing, 221, 245; As You Like It, 221, 249; his most de- lightful play, 221, 245; its poetry, ib.; Twelfth Night, 221-222; his share in Globe Theatre, 222, 242; income as playwright and actor, 222, 239; downfall of friends and patrons, 223; Julius Cæsar, 224, 225, 226, 243, 244, 312; resort to Plutarch's Lives, 224, 225, 226, 240, 244, 248. Hamlet, 224, 225, 229, 238, 250; its stage history, 226, 227; first and second editions, 226, 227; idea taken from earlier Hamlet, 227; his most wonderful play, 228; Hamlet's speaking, 228, and mind, 228-229; treatment of human life, 229; Troilus and Cressida, 229, 240, 245; its date, 230; its literary history, 230; exhibits the " 'seamy side," 230-231; as a satire, 231; restoration of friends and patrons, 231; effect of James I. accession, 231; possible visit of Shakespeare's company to Scotland, 232; ̊ plays acted at Court, ib., 235, 247, 250; temporarily retires to Stratford, 233, 235; Measure for Measure, 234- 235, 236; Othello, 235; its date, ib., 236, 241, 245; King Lear, 236, 242, 245; culminating period of his power, ib.; Macbeth, 236 238, 241; the sleep-walking scene, its merit, 237; reasons for curtailment of play, 237; delay in public representation, 241, 247; his re-establishment in Stratford, 238, 239, 240; his know- ledge of the actor's art, 238; dis- taste for theatrical calling, 238; father's death, 239; support of his mother, ib.; quits acting, ib.; marriage of eldest daughter, 239; effect of country life on tone of later dramas, 240; tradition that he sup- plied two plays a year to London from Stratford, 240, 241, 242; later dramatic work, 240; The Winter's Tale, 240, 242, 247, 248; Corio- lanus, 240, 246, 248; Antony and Cleopatra, 235, 240, 241, 243, 246, 247; its transcendent merit, 241; Pericles, 240, 246, 250; and Timon, 240, 243, 250; Cymbeline, 235, 240, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249; Henry VIII, collaborated with Fletcher, i, 368, ii, 240, 242, 249, 254, 325; his labour-saving tendency, 240; chronology of plays, 242; ceases to write regularly for stage, 242; Timon of Athens, 242; period of gloom, 242; partial composition of Timon, 242-243; knowledge of,
Italian, 243 restoration to cheerful- ness, 243; his Cleopatra, 243, 244; Pericles, in part Shakespearian, 244; Othello his masterpiece, 245, 246; double endings, 235, 246; Two Noble Kinsmen, perhaps in co- operation with Fletcher, 249, 325; most facile writer of his day, 254; buys and leases a house in Black- friars, 254; marriage of daughter Judith, 254; his wife, 254; his will, ib.; death, ib. ; interred in Stratford Church, 255; his tomb, ib.; his literary gift, 309; inscription on grave, 249; signature to his will, 247; portrait, 246; bust, 253 grandson, 256; study of, 308; and Ben Jonson, 310–311, 315; song, Roses," &c., 325
Shakespeare, affected by Daniel's Delia, ii, 263 Shakespeare, mentioned in Parnassus, ii, 275 Shakespeare's 251 Shakespeare's Plays, Hazlitt's Chara- ters of, iv, 166 "Shakespeare," M. Arnold, iv, 312 Shakespeare, Coleridge, S. T., Lectures on, iv, 51, 57 Shakespeare, Johnson, iii, 334 Shakespeare, Landor's Citation and Examination of, iv, 173 Shakespearean wom n, ii, 209 Sheafe, Joan, mother of G. and Ph. Fletcher, ii, 282 Sheen, iii, 124 Sheffield, iv, 293 Sheffield, Lord, iii, 357 Sheldon, Archbishop, ii, 29 Shelley, Percy Bysshe, i, 78, 262, ii, 27, 47, 64, 86, 130, 196, 280, iii, 80, 220, iv, 84, 97, 111, 115, 116, 117, 125, 137, 190, 201, 202, 222, 223, 289, 305; his desc nt, 125; birth at Field Place, Horsham, education, ib.; begins to write, 126; The Wandering Jew, ib.; prose romance of Zastrozzi, ib.; Original Poetry by Victor and Cazire, ib.; Posthumous Fragments of Margaret Nicholson, ib.; at University College, Oxford, ib.; meets T. J. Hogg, ib; assidu- ous study, ib.; his pamphlet The Necessity of Atheism, ib.; expelled with Hogg from their College, 122, 126; forbidden his parent, ib. ; lives in Poland Street, London, ib. ; marries Harriet Westbrook at Edin- burgh, ib.; their wanderings, ib. ; his Address to the Irish People, ib. ; birth of his child Ianthe, ib.; publishes Queen Mab, ib. ; elopes with Mary Godwin, ib. ; suicide of Mrs. Shelley, 127, 182; his father allows him £1,000 a year, 127; his Alastor, ib. ; meets Byron, 123, 127; marries Mary Godwin, 127, 182; his Laon and Cythna, 127; quits England for Italy, ib. ; ill health, ib.; his Rosa- lind and Helen, ib., and The Cenci,
Books, Anders, ii,
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