FIRST SERIES. 



121 



Sexton, office in one family, ix. 171. 502, 

 Seymour (Colonel Hyde), i. 351 ; vili. 388. 

 Seymour (Eliz.) daughter of Sir Edward, ix. 174. 313. 

 Seymour (Jane), her royal descent, viii. 184. 251. 

 Shadows, what are they ? v. 197. 281. 475. 

 Shaftesbury (1st Earl of), particulars wanted, iii. 186. 

 Shaftesbury (3rd Earl of), letter to Le Clerc respecting 



Locke, iii. 97; his literary labours, i. 382; ii. 33. 97. 

 Shaftesbury (Eai-1 of) his History of Monmouth Close, 



i. 82. 

 Shaking hands, origin of the custom, iii. 1 18. 

 Shakspeare Club Works, x. 325. 

 Shakspeare (John), temp. Edward I., xi. 122. 

 Shakspeare (John), his will, i. 213. 886. 403. 461. 



469. 

 Shnkspeare (Thomas), vii. 405. 545. 



Shakspeare (William) : — 



Biography in " an Historical Dictionary," vi. 221; 

 X. 454; autograph, x. 443; xii. 132; bones, xi. 

 278; contemporaries, xii. 220; deer stealing, i. 

 4; descent from a landed proprietor, ix. 75. 154; 

 479; descendants, xii. 123; family, iii. 493 ; 

 vi. 289. 495; Latin scholar, iii. 497; iv. 26. 

 monument, iv. 307; vii. 475; portraits, viii. 438. 

 538; ix. 571; x. 346; xi. 359; Religion, was 

 he a Roman Catholic ? x. 85 ; seal, v. 539. 589 ; 

 skull, viii. 217; will, i. 213. 386. 403. 461. 

 469; ii. 27. 



Shakspeare's Plays : — 

 Arrangement, vi. 99. 

 First folio editions, 1623—1664, xii. 265. 355; 



folio edition of 1632, its variations, vi. 141. 223. 



469. 559; reprint in 1808 of the first folio, vi. 



579; vii. 47; list of existing folios, vi. 195; vii. 



129. 

 Collier's annotated folio, v. 484. 535. 544; vi. 104. 

 Collier's Monovolume, viii. 35. 73. 338. 

 CoUier's Notes and Emendations, v. 484. 554; vi. 



59. 104. 141; vii. 153. 377. 426. 450. 

 Halliwell's annotated third folio edition, v. 484. 



535. 

 Halliwell's new edition, vi. 46, 47. 162. 

 Historical Plays, x. 68. 

 Singer's new edition, xii. 442. 

 Stratford Shakspeare, ix. 90. 

 Swedish edition, iv. 54. 

 Tieck's Notes on the Plays, i. 45. 



Shakspeare Criticisms : — 



All's Well that Ends Well, Act L sc. 3., " This 

 captioics and intenible sieve," ii. 354 ; iii. 65. 

 153. 229. 430. 474. 497. 



Act IL sc. 1, "Those 'bated that inherit,'' vii. 

 255. 



Act II. sc. 3., " They say, miracles are past," 

 ii. 434; viii. 217. 



Act III. sc. 2., " Violent speed still-peer- 

 ing air" vii. 426. 



Act IV. sc. 2., " To swear by him whom I pro- 

 test to love, iii. 177. 



Act V. sc. 3., " Her irnuit comioe," v. 436. 509. 

 556. 



Shakspeare Criticisms : — 



Antony and Cleopatra, Act I. sc. 1., " The triple 



pillar of the world," iii. 498; iv. 26. 

 Act I. sc. 5., " Mount an arm-girt steed," vii. 



358. 

 Act II. sc. 5., " Cleopatra playing at billiards," 



V. 585. 

 Act III. sc. 1., " For learn this Silius," iii. 139. 



190. 

 Act III. sc. 8., " You ribald nag of Egypt," iii. 



273. 465. 

 Act V. sc. 2., " Never palates more the dung" 



viii. 52. 

 As you Like it. Act I. sc. 3., " No hath not, vii. 



593. 

 Act II. sc. 7., " Till that the weary very means 



do ebb," vi. 584. 

 Act II. sc. 7., " Seven ages of man," Latin para- 

 phrase, viii. 383; xii. 7. 

 Act III. sc. 5., " The cicatrice and capable im- 



pressure," vi. 468. 495. 

 Ibid. " Who might be your motlier, that you 



insult, exvilt, and all at once" v. 554. 587; 



vi. 135. 423. 468. 589. 

 Coriolanus, Act I. sc. 4., " You herd of boils and 



plagues," vi. 105. 

 Act III. sc. 4., " Bosom multiplied," v. 436. 



484; vi. 26. 85. 154. 226; xi. 423. 

 Act V. sc. 5, " Which he did ear all his, vii. 



378. 

 Cymbeline, Act III. sc. 4., " Whose mother was 



her: painting" ii. 135; iii. 190; v. 484. 554; 



xi. 278. 

 Act IV. .sc. 2., " For defect of judgment, as oft 



the cause of fear," xi. 278. 359. 

 Ibid. " And worms will not come to thee^ v. 556. 

 Hamlet, Act. I. sc. 1., "As stars with trains of 



fire," v. 75. 154. 210. 

 Ibid. " High and palmy state of Rome," viii. 



409. 

 Act. I. sc. 2., " Frailty, thy name is woman," 



xii. 220. 

 Act I. sc. 4., " Swaggering up-spring reels, viii. 



195. 

 Ibid. " The dram of »7^," v. 169. 377. 

 Act I. sc. 5., " JJnhouselVd, disappointed, un- 



anel'd," vii. 8. 

 Act I. sc. 7., " While one with modern haste," 



ii. 494; iii. 10. 

 Act III., sc. 1., " Take arms against a sea of 



troubles" vi. 382. 

 Act III. sc. 2., " Miching mallecho," ii. 358 ; 



iii. 3. 213. 

 Act V. sc. 1., " Woo't drink up Eisell" ii. 241. 



286. 315. 329; iii. 66. 119. 210. 225. 397. 



474. 508. 524; iv. 36. 64. 68. 155. 193. 

 Henry IV., Part I., Act V. sc. 2., " For heaven to 



earth," v. 462. 

 Heniy IV., Part IL, Act I. sc. 3., and St. Luke 



xiv. 28—31. viii. 384. 

 Act III. sc. 1., " Clouds" or Shrouds, i. 58. 

 Ibid. " Then happy, low, lie down," vi. 312. 393; 



vii. 44, 178. 



M 



