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DANIEL, SAMUEL, 184, 209, 308.
Dante, 78, 243 n.; Divina Commedia,
196.

Davies, Sir John, 244 n.
Demetrius, 146.

Denmark, dramatic performances in,
297.

Desportes, Philippe, 184.

Devereux, Penelope, 77; married
Lord Rich, 106.

Diana Inamorada, Montemayor's, 98.
Dictionary of National Biography, 1.
Dimoke, Master, 140.

Discovery of Guiana, 116, 139, 140.
Donne, John, 245 n.
Don Quixote, 99.

Dorset, Anne Clifford, Countess of,
194.

Drake, Sir Francis, 123, 129.

Drama, Sidney's attitude to the, 89.
Drayton, Michael, 103, 121, 172, 194.

Dryden, John, 213.

Duessa, 187, 203.

Dudley, Robert. See Leicester.
Dulwich, 274.

Dumas, Alexandre, the elder, 286.
Dyer, Sir Edward, 86.

Eastward Ho!, 122.
Edward VI., 65.

Edwards, Edward, his Life of Ralegh,

116.

Egidius. See sub Giles.

Egypt, 146.

Elissa, 199.

Elizabeth, Queen, 66, 156, 158, 201.
Elizabethan Sonnets, in the English
Garner, 63, 285.
El Dorado, 137.

England, sixteenth century, 1-16 pas-
sim; its transitional aspect, 7; the
ethical paradox of the era, 14; mix-
ture of good and evil, 14; major
paradox of More, Bacon, and
Ralegh, 15; minor paradox of Sid-

ney, Spenser, and Shakespeare, 15;
Shakespeare's eulogies of, 287 (see
also sub Renaissance).
Epaminondas, 146.
Erasmus, Epistolae quoted, 17, 18, 23–
25; his reputation in Europe, 23;
his character, 24; his religious
moderation, 24; friendship with
More, 25; letter from More, 43;
advice to More on theology, 48;
account of More at Chelsea, 59.
Essex, Countess of, married to Earl of
Leicester, 95.

Robert Devereux, 2d Earl of,
77, 142, 187, 192, 222 seq.

Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of,

77, 84.

Étienne or Stephens, Henri, 75.

Euripides, Andromache, 293.

Europe, Western, 8-9 seq.

Evans, Sir Hugh, quotes Latin, 295.
Eve of St. Agnes, 213.

FALSTAFF, 271, 291.

Farmer, Dr., his Essay on Shake-
speare's Learning, 294.

Farnaby, Thomas, his Florilegium
Epigrammaticum Græcorum, 245 n.
Faustus, Marlowe's, 4.
Fayal, 147.

Ferdinand of Spain, 118.

(in Shakespeare's Tempest), 314.
Fisher, John, Bishop of Rochester,
imprisoned, 52; executed, 55.
Flanders, supposed visit of Shake-
speare to, 299.
Flemings, 27.

Fletcher, Phineas, 192; his Purple
Island, 212.
Florida, 128.

Fox-Bourne, Mr. H. R., his Life of
Sidney, 63.

France, Renaissance in, 3; English
actors in, 297.

Frankfort, Sidney at, 72.

Frio, Cape, 30.

Friswell, J. H., his abridged edition of
Arcadia, 63.

Froben of Basle, published Utopia, 33.
Froude, J. A., his summary of Erasmi
Epistolae, 17.

Fuller, Thomas, 127.

Furnivall, F. J., Fresh Allusions to
Shakspere, 256.

GALILEO, 88, 250, 288.
Gama, Vasco da, 10.

Germany, the Renaissance in, 3, 33;
English actors in, 297.
Gerusalemme Liberata, Tasso's, 196.
Gifford, Captain, 140.

Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, 106, 123;
death, 127.

Gilbert, Otho, 123.

Gilbert, William, his researches in
magnetism, 249.

Giles, Peter, or Egidius, 28, 29.
Giovanni, Ser Fiorentino, his Il
Pecorone, 295, 305.
Giulio, Romano, 307.
Goethe, 285.

Golding, Arthur, translator of Ovid,
296.

Goodwin, Hugh, 140.

Gorhambury, near St. Albans, 229.
Gosson, Stephen, his School of Abuse,

91.

Gray, Thomas, poet, 160, 196.
Greece, literature of, 8-9; mythology
and history of, in Shakespeare, 301.
Greene, Robert, 312.

Greenwich Palace, 267.
Grenville, Sir Richard, 129.

Greville, Fulke, Lord Brooke, 67-68,

82, 88; his Life of Sidney, 63.
Grey, Lord Arthur, of Wilton, 174,
204.

Grey, Lady Jane, 65.
Grimald, Nicolas, 245.
Grocyn, William, 22.

Grosart, Dr., his edition of Spenser,

155.
Guiana, 137.
Guicciardini, 97.
Guyon, Sir, 199.

HALES, Prof. J. W., his memoir of
Spenser, 155.

Hall, Elizabeth, Shakespeare's grand-
daughter, 276.

John, 276.

Mrs. Susanna, Shakespeare's
eldest daughter, 276.

William, 276.

Halliwell-Phillipps, J. O., his Outlines
of the Life of Shakespeare, 256.
Hamlet, 315.

Hannah, J., D.C.L., his Poems of
Ralegh, etc., 116.

Harington, Sir John, 74; translation of
Ariosto, 305.

Harrington, Henry, 245 n.

Harvey, Gabriel, his view of Arcadia,
97; cf. 161, 163, 169.

William, discovered circulation
of the blood, 249.

Hazlitt, W. C., joint-editor of Shake-
speare's Library, 285.

Heidelberg, Sidney at, 82.

Heliodorus, 98.

Heming, John, 281.

Henry v., 314.

VII., his victory at Bosworth
Field, 18.

VIII., 18; his attitude to the new
Learning, 38; to the Reformation,
40; his wish for divorce, 40; his
supreme power, 41; his attitude to
Luther and the Pope, 42; his power
over Parliament, 42; opposed by
More, 42; denounced by the Maid of
Kent, 48; Act of Succession, 52;
Supreme Head of the Church, 54;
cf. 65.

- Prince of Wales, 148.

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Markham, Gervase, 102.
Marlowe, Christopher, 4, 135, 258.
Marot, Clement, 161, 168, 184.
Mantuanus, Baptista, 168, 170, 292.
Mary, Queen of England, 66, 158.
Queen of Scots, 187, 204.

Massinger, Philip, 262.
Mathews, Sir Tobie, 237 n.
Meautys, Sir Thomas, 238.
Medina, 199.

Merchant Taylors' School, 159, 258.
'Mermaid' Tavern, the, 136.
Michael Angelo, 288, 307.
Milton, John, 101, 196, 213, 214, 243
n., 280, 289; Paradise Lost and
Paradise Regained, 196.
Minturno, the influence of his 'De
Poeta' on Sidney, 92.
Mommsen, Theodor, 315.

Montaigne, Miguel de, 310, 318, 319,
320.

Montaigne and Shakespeare, by Mr. J.

M. Robertson, 285.
Montemayor, George de, his Diana
Inamorada, 98.

More, Cresacre, his Life of Sir Thomas
More, 17.

Sir John, father of Sir Thomas
More, as judge, 40.

Sir Thomas, his birth, 17; his
contemporaries, 18; his father, 19;
at St. Anthony's School, 20; in the
service of Cardinal Morton, 20; his
wit, 20; enters Canterbury Hall,
Oxford, 20; the influence of Oxford,
21; studies Latin and Greek, 21;
studies law in London, 22; becomes
acquainted with Colet, Linacre,
Grocyn, Lyly, 22; reads works of
Pico della Mirandola and of the
humanists of Italy, 22; first meets
Erasmus, 23-25; enters Parliament
and denounces Henry VII.'s taxa-
tion of the people, 25; marries Jane
Colte, 25; acquires house in Buck-

lersbury, 26; marries again, 26;
settles at Chelsea, 26; Under-
Sheriff of London, 27; represents
London's commercial interests with
the Flemings, 27; first visits the Con-
tinent, 27; visits Bruges, Brussels,
and Antwerp, 27; meets Peter Giles
(Egidius) at Antwerp, whence he
derives inspiration for his Utopia,
28; Utopia published (1516), 28;
contrast between More's theory and
practice, 34; his attitude to Lutheran
and Papal principles, 35, 36; be-
comes a Master of Requests or Ex-
aminer of Petitions, 36; resides at
Court, 36; his attitude to politics,
37; his loyalty, 38; his popularity
with the King, 38; knighted 1521,
39; sub-Treasurer of the King's
household, 39; Speaker of the
House of Commons, 39; Chancellor
of the Duchy of Lancaster 1525, 39;
his humility, 39; Lord Chancellor
1529, 39; More and his father as
judges, 40; his opposition to the
King's divorce, 41; resigned the
Chancellorship 1532, 43; writes to
Erasmus on the subject, 43; his
economy, 44; his Chelsea tomb, 45;
his work as Chancellor, 45; his im-
partiality, 45; accessibility, 46; his
judicial conduct censured, 46; his
religious bias, 46; in retirement, 47;
attacks Tyndale, 47; More and the
Maid of Kent, 48, 49; refuses to sub-
scribe to the oath, 51; abjuring the
Pope, 51; committed to the Tower,
52; his resignation to his fate, 53;
his correspondence, 54; refuses to
accept the King's supremacy of the
Church, 54; his trial 1535, 55; sen-
tenced to death, 55; his farewell to
his daughter, 55; executed on Tower
Hill, 56; his grim jest, 56; burial,
57; his character and mode of life,

58; his love of art, 59; his friend-
ship with Holbein, 59; his Latin
writing, 59; his English poetry, 59;
his English prose, 60; his literary
repute abroad, 61; the inconsistency
of his theory and practice, 62; see
also 3, 6, 12, 15, 63, 64, 119, 158,
159, 216.

More, Sir Thomas, Works:

Utopia, 28 seq.; contents of, 28 seq.;
the first book and the ideal of the
New World, 29; the second book,
31; care of the mind, 31; contempt
for precious metals, 31; Utopian
philosophy, 32; religion, 32; writ-
ten in Latin, 33; a dream of fancy
in contrast to More's practice, 33,
34; English translation of, 59; cf.
3, 15, 83, 120, 252.

History of Richard III., 60; his Life

of Pico, 60; his controversial theol-
ogy, 60; devotional treatises, 61.
Mornay, Philippe de, 89.
Morton, John, Cardinal, Archbishop

of Canterbury, takes More into his
service, 20; probable author of His-
tory of Richard III., 60.
Mulcaster, Richard, 159.
Munster, 126, 127.

NAPIER, JOHN, inventor of logarithms,
249.

Nestor, Shakespeare likened to, 277,

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Othello, 316.
Ovid, 173, 292; his Metamorphoses,
295; quoted by Shakespeare, 302.
Oxford, More at, 20, 21; Sidney at,
68; and the Renaissance, 21.

Edward de Vere, Earl of, 70;
his quarrel with Sidney, 95.

PACIFIC SEA, 252.
Palmer, Master, 140.
Pamela, 100; Richardson's, 114.
Panama, 123.

Paris, 33; Sidney in, 71.
Pater, Walter, The Renaissance, 1.
Pecorone, Il, 305.

Pembroke, Countess of, 96, 101.
Penshurst, Sidney's birthplace, 65.
Perissa, 199.
Persia, 146.
Peru, 205, 252.

Petrarch, 73, 78, 161, 184, 196, 306.
Philip II. of Spain, 66.

Phillipps, Augustine, actor, 274 n.
Sir William, 274 n.

Pico della Mirandola, 22-23; More's
Life of, 60.

Pierces Supererogation, etc., 97 n.,
114 n.

Pilgrimage to Parnassus, 193.
Pilgrim's Progress, 202.
Pindar, 92.

Plato, 22, 29, 92, 159, 198, 243 n., 247.
Plautus, 292, 296, 303.

Pléiade, La, 86, 308.

Plinius, Caius, the elder, 237 n.

Plutarch, 315; North's translation of
Lives, 272, 291, 312.

Poland, Sidney candidate for the

throne of, 75.

Pollard, A. W., editor of Astrophel and
Stella, 63.

Ponsonby, William, 178, 182.
Pope, Thomas, actor, 274 n.
Posidippus, 245.
Prague, Sidney at, 82.

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