OTHELLO, ii. 275-289 Owl, a king's daughter, ii. 258 Oxford, King James's visit, ii. 155 Oxford, Edward Vere, Earl of, pro- cured Cardan's Comforts to be translated, ii. 243
Oxford, Robert Earl of, his opinion of Rowe as an editor of Shakespeare, ii. 233
Packwood, Shakespeares there, i. 13 Palladis Tamia, i. 130 Pamphlets, character of, i. 263 Papists, many actors so, ii. 231 Parker, Henry, imitates the song of Lord Vaux, ii. 262
Pastor Fido, remarks on, i. 263 Paulina, a marked female character, i. 425
Peckham, Edmund, persons possessed in his house, ii. 268
Pembroke, Countess of, her regard for dead poets, i. 96. Her style, ii. 341 Percies, the insurrection of the, against King Henry the Fourth, ii. 36 Percy, Lady, why made so amiable a character, ii. 50, 54
Percy, pronunciation of the name, ii.
Pronunciation of languages, two, both in good usage, ii. 323 Prophecies, effect of, ii. 199 Prospero, his character, i. 180 Puritanism, its prevalence at Stratford, and in the posterity of Shakespeare, i. 105. Attacked by Shakespeare, i.
Quarterly Review, foolish conjecture respecting Love Labours Won, i. 131. Another on the occasion of The Tem- pest being written, i. 148. Con- temptible pretence of acquaintance with Stith's History of Virginia, i. 157. Its inconsistency, i. 164. Its miserable opinion that a certain bal- lad is the origin of The Tempest, i. 167. Strange ignorance or careless- ness of its editor, i. 157
Quineys of Stratford, i. 18, 91-93. Puritans, i. 110. Mercers, ii. 340
Rack, Shakespeare's testimony against the, i. 326. ii. 350
Rainsfords of Clifford, family of, i. 84 Raleigh, Sir Walter, his Discovery of
Guiana alluded to by Shakespeare, i. 139, 205. His Poem " Man's Life," i. 344
Reader, Mr. information respecting Coventry from, ii. 305 Reposes, ii. 138, 150
Reynolds, of Stratford, i. 18, 85 RICHARD THE SECOND, KING, ii. 16 RICHARD THE THIRD, KING, ii. 77— 94
Ring with W. S. found near Stratford, i. 47.
Rings bequeathed by Shakespeare, i. 85 Robbing the Exchequer, ii. 52 Robinson, H. C., communicates a cri-
ticism of Coleridge on Milton, ii. 72 Rodd, Mr. suggests to Mr. Douce that the scene of The Tempest is the island of Lampedusa, ii. 243
ROMEO AND JULIET, i. 119–141. Rosamond, place so called at Wood- stock, ii. 70
Rosemary for remembrance, ii.259,353 Roses worn in shoes, ii. 252
Rosicrusian Philosophy, i. 179
Rowe, his character as an editor, ii. 233
Rowington, Shakespeares there, i. 14—
Rutland, Edmund Earl of, his age at the time of his death, ii. 74 Rutland, Roger Earl of, a great fre- quenter of the theatre, i. 242
Sadler, Hamlet, and Judith his wife, i. 52. A legatee of Shakespeare, i. 85 Sadler, John, leaves Stratford abruptly and goes to London, i. 69. Brother
to the wife of Richard Quiney, i. 91. Puritan, i. 110. Saint Helen, Bishopsgate, Shakespeare residing there, i. 76. Other per- sons its inhabitants, i. 76
Sans, how pronounced in England, ii. 324
Scaliger, Julius Cæsar, his large volume of poetry containing no allusion to the story of Romeo and Juliet, ii. 127 Scamel," i. 155
Scogan, Henry, his verses, ii. 27 Scone, Lord, Sir David Murray's crea- tion, ii. 154
Scots, Mary Queen of, the Mermaid, i. 291. Supposed by some to be alluded to in Hamlet, ii. 204 Sacrificio, Il, Italian play, i. 397 Scots, opinion of the English con- cerning the, ii. 60
Scudamore, Helen wife of Stephen, her will, i. 52
Sea, supposed wealth of the, ii. 282 Sea-shore, persons buried on the, by their own desire, ii. 147
Selden, conjecture that he is the J. M. S. i. 7. His remarks on Da- gon, i. 184
Seven Ages of Man, i. 338 Shakeshaft, a surname in Worcester- shire, i. 3
Shakespeare, surname, when first found, i. 1. ii. 305. Origin of it uncertain, i. 3. Varieties of ortho- graphy, i. 4. Pronunciation, i. 5. Many persons of this surname men- tioned, i. 8-17. ii. 312. Possibly first used at Coventry, i. 8. Earliest will of the name at Worcester, i. 9. Supposed grant to the family by Henry VII. i. 19. Family extinct at Stratford before the visitation of 1619, i. 24. Arms, crest, and motto, i. 25 Shakespeare, John, the Poet's father,
his possible affiliation, i. 11, 119. First settlement at Stratford, i. 18.
ii. 312. His marriage, i. 19. His grant of arms, i. 19. His business, i. 27. A member of the corpora- tion, i 28. His property, i. 29. Supposed decay of his circum- stances, i. 29. His Chancery suit, i. 30. Retires from the corporation, i. 31. Probably living at Clifford, i. 31. His burial, i. 31. His issue, i. 44. Shakespeare, William, his descent, i. 12, &c. His original prejudices of birth, i. 27. Education, i. 27. His marriage, i. 48. Issue, i. 52. His relations to Sir Thomas Lucy, i. 54. His early employment unknown, i. 64. Removes to London, i. 65. Publishes Venus and Adonis, i. 66. Inquiry into the genuineness of the documents respecting him at Bridge- water House, i. 67. Lives in the parish of St. Helen, Bishopsgate, i. 76. Returns to Stratford, i. 80. His will but imperfectly edited, i. 85. His death, i. 86. Marriages of his daughters, i. 83, 92. His monument at Stratford, i. 96. Disappearance of his manuscripts, i. 105, 114. His religious position, i. 115. Value of his autograph, i. 143. Possibly studies under Florio, i. 146. His dread of doing mischief, i. 219. ii. 288. His connection with Lord Herbert, i. 236. His sonnets, i. 236. Under-plots generally his own, i. 259, 396. His grand attack upon the Puritans, i. 281. Not a Papist, ii. 14. Averse from com- position, ii. 105. Probably at Ox- ford at the time of King James's visit, ii. 156. His intimate acquaint- ance with Scripture, ii. 200. "Swan of Avon," ii. 305. Slight probabi- lity that there was an intention of burying him in Westminster Abbey, ii. 309. His monument there, ii. 309. The question of his learning largely discussed, ii. 313. Dies on his birth-day, ii. 339. Probate copy of his will, ii. 339. Date of it, ii. 341 Shallow, Justice, character of, i. 59 'Shepherd's note" explained, i. 418 Shottery, residence of Hathaways, i. 49
Sidney, Sir Philip, enters as a pupil at Shrewsbury school, i. 152. His tutor Nathaniel Baxter, i. 354. In- structions left him by his father, ii. 219. Practice in composing, ii. 225 Sidney, Sir Robert, his scheme for marrying his nephew Lord Herbert, i. 230
Sitting on the ground, a favourite position in the tragedies, ii. 92 Skipwith, Sir William, author of verses attributed to Shakespeare, i. 75. ii. 336
Slender, his true character, i. 206 Slingsby, Sir William, a friend of Mrs. Amy Smith, ii. 338
Smith of Stratford, family of, i. 47 Smith, Henry, his testimony against spectral appearances, ii. 211
Smith, Mrs. Amy, her will and monu- ment
Smyth, Captain, his voyage in the Mediterranean, i. 159 Snow, pink, i. 142
Sobriety, an ancient characteristic of the English, ii. 221
Soldiers' affected speech, ii. 54 Sonnets of Shakespeare, to whom ad- dressed, i. 236. Discovery of the truth by several distinct inquirers, ii. 346
"Sound on 99 not "Sound one," ii. 9 Southampton, Earl of, his letter to
Lord Ellesmere, its genuineness in- quired into, i. 72. A great frequen- ter of the theatre, i. 242 Spencer, N. an actor, becomes a Ca- tholic, ii. 231
Spenser, the "learned" poet, i. 6. Expresses his desire to rest in peace, as Shakespeare has also done, i. 97 Stands, what, i. 269
Stanley, bad effect of substituting it for Derby, ii. 82
Starchy, Nicholas, case of supposed possession in his family, i 384 Steadman, Dr. had a book with Mil-
ton's autograph, i. 337 Steevens, his assertion of the penury of our information respecting Shakes- peare, i. 65. Possible connection with the Ellesmere papers, i. 73 Stephens, Henry, visit to England, i. 322
Stith's History of Virginia, said by the Quarterly Review to be read by Shakespeare, i. 157
Stourton, Lord, appearance of his ghost, ii. 209
Strachy, suggested reason for the in- troduction of this strange word, i. 389
Strachey, William, his account of the loss of the Sea-Adventure, i. 150 Stratford-on-Avon, first settlement of the Shakespeares there, i. 9. Have a house in Henley Street, i. 18. Families there who appear at the Visitation of 1619, i. 24. Many Welsh families living there, i. 60. Sketch of it as it was in the time of
Shakespeare, i. 81. The Plague there, i. 82. The College, i. 89. Puritanism preached there, i. 106. Fires, i. 109. Monument of Mrs. Smith, there, ii. 337
Stubbs, John, directs that he shall be buried on the sea-shore, ii. 147 Styles, royal and others, i. 265 Surnames, points of inquiry when con- sidering them, i. 3
Surrey, Earl of, his Songs and Sonnets, ii. 129
"Swan of Avon," applied to Shakes- peare and Daniel, ii. 305 Swearing by the sword, ii. 226
Table-book, use of, ii. 225 TAMING OF THE SHREW, i. 351–358 Tarlton, i. 355. ii. 246
Tarquin, haunting the mind of Shakes- peare, ii. 182
TEMPEST, The, i. 123-189. Passage in illustrated, ii. 121 Tergaster, who, i. 354
Thelgon in the Piscatory Eclogues, Dr. Giles Fletcher, ii. 78 Tieck, i. 261
TIMON OF ATHENS, ii. 142-148 Titania, i. 285
TITUS ANDRONICUS, ii. 119
"Toad, ugly and venomous," iü. 195 Toby, Sir, perhaps originally Falstaff, i. 383
Tom O'Bedlams, ii. 271
Torrell, William, cast the statue of Queen Eleanor, family of the name, ii. 352
Totness, Countess of, i. 84 Tower of London, ii. 20 Towley, the actor, i. 68
Translation of proper names on an er- roneous principle, i. 166
Trappe, clergyman at Stratford, i. 107
Travelling of actors, ii. 230 Trinarchodia, Poem so called, ii. 41, 307
TROILUS AND CRESSIDA, ii. 113-116 TWELFTH-NIGHT, i. 365-411 Two GENTLEMEN OF VERONA, i. 190 -197
Tyler, Richard, an intended legatee of Shakespeare, i. 85
Tymme, his Silver Watch-bell, i. 154
Vaughan, prediction respecting, ii. 170 Vaux, Lord, his Song, ii. 262
Venice, how regarded in England, i. 299 Vernon, the Fair, how related to the Lucys, i. 60
Verona, feeling with which English- men visit it, ii. 124. Search should
be made in its archives for traces of the Montague and Capulet families, ii. 126
Underplots, generally Shakespeare's own, i. 259, 396
"Undertaker," how explained, i. 376 "Vocation," ii. 48
Usurers, how regarded, i. 306.
Waiting-maids of ladies of rank, how esteemed, i. 309. ii. 338 Walker, Elizabeth, wife of Anthony, D.D. by birth a Sadler, i. 69 Walsingham, Sir Francis, and his daughter, i. 61
Walton, Izaak, probably acquainted with the Quaternio, ii. 342 Warburton, Bishop, i. 260
Ward, Vicar of Stratford, his infor- mation respecting Shakespeare, i. 80-84
Warwick, Shakespeares there, i. 4—13 Warwick, Ambrose Earl of, Shake- speares occurring in his inquisition, ii. 330
Watson, Bishop of Winchester, i. 47 Welsh people living at Stratford, i. 60.
ii. 58. Excluded from Caius Col- lege, i. 210 Whateley of Banbury, the Puritan divine, i. 108
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