Obrázky stránek
PDF
ePub

ABRUPTION, 145.
Absolute, 145.
Absurd, 145.

Abuse, 145.

INDEX

Acroamatic method of delivering
knowledge, 124.
Acture, 146.
Admittance, 146.

[ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small]

Gray's Inn, 18; sense and motion,
20; tritonus, 21, 22; successive
residences in London, Gorhambury,
France, and Gray's Inn, 22, 23,
26; member of Parliament, 22;
alarmed at democratic spirit in
Parliament, 24; care of his mother,
who was insane, 25; dark period
in life, 27-29; nature and art,
30; secret history of Joan of Arc,
31-35; judicial torture, 35, 36;
his generosity to dependants, 37;
bribery, 37; correspondence with
his brother Anthony at Court of
Navarre, 39; visits Orleans, 40;
acquainted with the Spaniard Pe-
rez, 41; on 'Asceticism,' 42, 43;
enters Cambridge University at
time of the Caius excitement, 44,
45; investigates tides in the Medi-
terranean Sea, 46; prodigality,
47, 48; history of Henry VIII.,'
49; character of Queen Catharine,
50, 51; friendship of the Earl of
Manchester, 51; significancy of
the title of his philosophical sys-
tem, 52, 61; early life, 99-101;
poetic gifts, 100, 217-223; dis-
position of his manuscripts at
death by will, 102; division of his
system of philosophy into esoteric
and exoteric, 123-126; dislikes
contention, 138; reasons for with-
holding his name from the plays,
138; mythology, 207; referred to
in Jonson's masque, Time Vindi-
cated,' 215, 216.
Banks' dancing horse, 65, n.
Bankside Shakespeare, date of 'King
John,' 76.

[ocr errors]
[blocks in formation]
[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

authorship of 'Richard II.,' 206;
attempt to account for successive
alterations in 2 King Henry VI.,'
116.

GALILEO, proofs of the Copernican
theory, 17.

Garrick, David, characterization of
people of Stratford-upon-Avon in
eighteenth century, 95.
Gaudy, 160.

Gervinus, Georg G., date of 'Titus
Andronicus,' 73, 74; book-learning
in early plays of Shake-speare, 98,
99; science of human nature in the
plays, 134; Latin words in the
plays, 144.

Goat, the, sacred to the drama, 142,
143.

Golding, Arthur, translation of Ovid's

'Metamorphoses,' 196.

Gray's Inn, connected with the Inner
Temple, 26.

Greene, Robert, refers to King Henry

VI.,' in 'Groatsworth of Wit,' 63;
date of the Taming of the Shrew,'
66; pamphlet war against Shak-
spere, reputed author of the plays,
83-86; not a collaborator with
Shake-speare, 89.

Gregory, St., Shakespearean parallel
in Friendship,' 187.

Gruter, Isaac, custodian of Bacon's
posthumous papers, 120; publisher
of same, 121; finds a secret in
them, 130; begs to make same
public, 121, 122; frontispiece to
his edition of the 'De Augmentis,'
142, 143.

HALLAM, HENRY, on Shake-speare's
Latinity, 144.
Hallowell-Phillipps, J. O., on origi-
nal title of Hamlet,' 69; date of
'Pericles,' 75; on collaboration,
91; poverty and imprisonment of
John Shakspere, 92; illiteracy of
the people of Stratford-upon-Avon
in Shakspere's time, 95.

Hamlet, his letter to Ophelia, 15, 16.
'Hamlet,' the early, history of, 108.
Hanmer, Thomas, on Shake-speare's
use of the word 'exsufilicate,' 158.
Harriot, Thomas, the sun spots, 17.
Harvey, Gabriel, refers to the early
'Hamlet,' 68.
Having, 160.

Hensloe, Philip, refers to the early
'Hamlet,' 68.

Herodotus, Shakespearean parallel in
his History, 187.

Homer, Shakespearean parallel in the
Odyssey,' 188.

Horace, Shakespearean parallel in
his Odes,' 188.

Humphrey, Duke, practice of tor-
ture, 35, 36.
Hymenæus, 160.

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small]

'King Henry VI.,' Second Part, date
of, 63; attributed to Marlowe, 90;
history of, 109-116.

'King Henry VI.,' Third Part, date
of, 63; publications of, 116.
'King John,' history of, 105.
'King Lear,' watchmen in, 77-80;
history of, 108.

'King Richard III.,' publications of,
117.

Knight, Charles, date of Titus An-

dronicus,' 72; date of Pericles,'
75; on collaboration with Shake-
speare, 91; date of Troilus and
Cressida,' 140, n.

LEGERITY, 163.

L'envoy, in 'Love's Labor's Lost, 40.
Lloyd, W. W., 'King Leir and his
Three Daughters,' 78.

Lodge, Thomas, refers to early 'Ham-
let,' 68; not a collaborator with
Shake-speare, 89.

'Love's Labor's Lost,' exposition of,
38-43; date of, 65,

Lowell, James Russell, on Shake-
spearean parallel in the 'Electra' of
Sophocles, 206.

Lucian, Shakespearean parallels in
his Dialogues, 190-192.
Lucretius, Shakespearean parallel in,

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

Meres, Francis, attributes the 'Two
Gentlemen of Verona' to Shake-
speare, 71; his list of the Shake-
speare plays, made in 1598, 81.
'Merry Wives of Windsor,' history
of, 107, 108.

Minimus, 163.

Mirabeau, saying of, 119.

Modern, 163.

Modesty, 164.

Monstrelet, Chronicles of, 39.
Montmayor, George de, 'Diana in
Love,' 70-72.

Morris, Richard, early fame of
Shake-speare, 89.

Motion and Sense, 20.

Multipotent, Latin origin and mean-
ing, 164.

Murray, J. A. H., dictionary, 150,
162.

Music, devil in, 21, 22.
Mythology, 207-213.

NASH, THOMAS, refers in Greene's
'Menaphon' to the Taming of the
Shrew,' 66; to the early 'Hamlet,'
67; to the soliloquy, 'To be or not
to be,' in 1591, 67, 69; attacks
Shake-speare in Greene's Mena-
phon,' 86-88; not a collaborator
with Shake-speare, 89.

Naso, 164.

.

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]

Peasantry, encroaching on nobility,
23, 24.

Percy, Bishop, testimony of, regard.
ing early date of Hamlet,' 68.
Pericles,' date of, 74, 75; when ad-
mitted into the Shakespearean
canon, 102.

Permission, 165.

Persius, Shakespearean parallels in
his 'Satires,' 197.
Pert, 165.
Plant, 165.

Plato, Shakespearean parallels in his
Dialogues, 198, 199; his Dia-
logues, tabulæ, 132.

Play, 166.

Pliny, Shakespearean parallels in,
199, 200.

Plumptre, E. H., translator of 'Pro-
metheus,' 175.

Plutarch, Shakespearean parallel in
his 'Life of Antonius,' 200-202.
Procurator, 166.

Proditor, 166.

Producted, 166.

Propugnation, Latin origin and mean-
ing, 164, 165.

Ptolemy, cycles and epicycles, 17.

REMOTION, 166.

Repugnancy, 164.
Respect, 166.

'Richard II.,' publications of, 106.
Rotherham, town of, 94.

Rowe, Nicholas, on the early life of
William Shakspere, 92, 95, 96.

SANCTUARIZE, 167.

Say, Judge, speech in 'King Henry
VI.,' 36-38.

Secure, 167.

Sense and motion, 20.
Shake-speare, early authorship of, 62-
101; late authorship of, 102–119;
use of Latin words, 144-168;
knowledge of Greek and Latin
literature, 168-207; knowledge of
Greek and Roman mythology, 207-
213.

« PředchozíPokračovat »