FIRST SERIES. 



123 



Shakspeare Criticisms : — 



Two Gentlemen of Verona, Act II. sc. 2., " Should 

 censure thus a loving gentleman," vii. 377. 

 Act IV. sc. 1., " The company of awful men," 

 viii. 52. 

 Winter's Tale, an old Ballad upon it, iii. 1. 

 Act IV. sc. 2., " Prigging tooth," vii. 257. 

 Act IV. sc. 3., " To see you attir'd, sworn," vii. 



378. 

 Ibid. " The gods themselves," &c. iii. 101. 

 Ibid. " Clamour your tongues," vi. 312. 393; 



vii. 44. 567. 615; viii. 169. 241. 254. 361. 

 Collier's emendations, viii. 95. 



Shakspeare Correspondenco ;— 



Apoplexy described by Shakspeare, xi. 278. 

 Bacon (Lord) and Shakspeare, viii. 438; x. 106. 

 Ballad on Shakspeare, v. 466. 524. 

 Bardolph and Poins, origin of their names, i. 385. 



418; ii. 152. 

 Bolingbroke's entry into London, vi. 407. 

 Bonaparte (Lucian) and Shakspeare, vi. 598. 

 Calvinism in the Plays, vi. 410. 539. 

 Cambridge disputations illustrative of the Plays, 



vi. 217. 

 Canons of Criticism for their editorship, vi. 2. 

 Coleridge's Lectures on the Plays, x. 1. 21. 57. 



373. 

 Cowley on their interpolation, xi. 48. 89 

 Digest of various readings, viii. 74. 170. 362. 466; 



ix. 540. 

 Drawings by Hollar and Capt. John Eyre, vii. 545. 

 Dryden's Prologue to Julius Casar, ix. 95. 

 Fletcher (John) and Shakspeare, iii. 318. 

 Flowers mentioned in the Plays, x. 98. 225. 374. 

 Gascoigne as Chief- Justice, ii. 161. 

 Hamlet's ghost composed in Westminster Abbey, 

 . i. 23. 



Hamlet's history, xii. 199; madness, 238. 

 Hilgers's (Professor) Treatise, viii. 52. 

 Jackson's Emendations, viii. 193. 265. 

 Jonson's (Ben) criticisms, viii. 263. 313. 

 Judge alluded to in Hamlet, vii. 550; viii. 123. 

 Maginn's (Dr.) dissertations on the Plays, i. 470. 

 Malone's blunder respecting Shakspeare's will, i. 



213. 386. 403. 461. 469; ii. 27 ; his Shak- 



speare collections, vi. 221. 289. 

 Manuscripts of Shakspeare, i. 53; vi. 339. 422. 

 Memoria Technica for the Plays, v. 464. 

 Monosyllabical style, i. 228. 

 Nautical phrases, iii. 300; iv. 379. 

 Othello annotated by Deverell, ix. 375. 577; x. 



236. 

 Parallel passages, vii. 403; viii. 240. 

 Passionate Pilgrim, ix. 27; x. 367. 

 Pedlar's song attributed to Shakspeare, i. 23; ii. 



392. 

 Phillips's (Edward) critical remarks, i. 439. 

 Pistol, origin of the name, ii. 1 52. 

 Poetical foresight of Shakspeare, vi. 407. 

 Puck's address to a sleeping boy, viii. 124. 

 Random notes on the Plays, xii. 220. 

 Remonstrances respecting the Shakspearian Corre- 

 spondence, viii. 261. 



Shakspeare Correspondence : — 



Rime which Shakspeare made at the Mytre, ix. 



439. 

 Schlegel's opinion of Heniy VIII., xii. 220. 

 Shylock, origin of the name, i. 184. 221, 

 Songs and Rimes, vii. 426. 523. 

 Venus and Adonis, iii. 260. 

 Winds, North and South, viii. 338. 

 Theobald's notes on Shakspeare, iv. 28; viii. 263. 



Shakspeare and Cervantes, date of their deaths, xii. 399. 



438. 

 Shakspeare, Tennyson, and Claudia, v. 492. 618 ; vi. 65. 

 Shakspeare: ballads, "Bedside, or the Doctors Enume- 

 rated," vii. 104; " Shakspeare in the Shades," 230. 

 Sham epitaphs and quotations, vii. 190. 

 Shan-dra-dram, its etymology, vi. 74. 257. 

 Shapp, or Hepp Abbey, chartulaiy, iii. 7. 227. 

 Sharers at theatres, ix. 199. 

 Sharp practice, xi. 114. 

 Shaston, where? vi. 151. 229. 

 Shaw (Dorothy), " Tombstone, or the Saint's Remains," 



viii. 222. 

 Shaw (Rev. Stebbing), Staffordshire MSS., vii. 13. 

 Shawls introduced into England, iv. 7. 77. 

 Shearman family, vii. 107. 381. 

 Shee (Martin Archer), letter to Hoppner, vii. 255. 

 Sheep, black, how accounted for, vi. 509. 

 Sheep, diseases cured by means of, iii. 320. 367. 

 Sheer ale explained, viii. 168. 438. 

 Sheer hulk explained, viii. 126. 280. 304. 

 Sheets, a Kentish word, vi. 338. 497. 

 Sheffield (.John), 3rd Earl of Mulgrave, letter on his 



exclusion from the cabinet; ix. 373. 

 Sheldon (Col. Dominick), ix. 401. 544 

 Sheldon (Fred.), " Minstrelsy of the Enghsh Border," 



iii. 49. 

 Sheldon (General), ix. 544; x. 90. 

 Sheldron's (Fred.), Minstrelsy of the English Border, iii. 



49. 208. 

 Shelley (Percy Bysshe), children, iv. 40; poem, viii. 71. 



183; " Prometheus Unbound," ix. 351. 481; x. 37; 



" Queen Mab," xii. 165. 

 Shelley (Sir Richard), Maltese knight, viii. 192 ;xi. 179. 

 Shelton oak, near Shrewsbury, iv. 402; v. 43; vii. 194. 



297. 

 Shenstone (Wm.), epitaph on C. E. Jorre, x. 375; lines 



on an Inn at Henley, vi. 414. 464. 

 Shepherd (Mary), accused of witchcraft, vii. 326. 

 Shepherd (Sir Samuel), xii. 127. 

 Shepherd's grave, on the Chiltern Hills, vi. 448. 

 Shepherd's Kalendar quoted, viii. 50; ix. 308. 

 Sherard (William and James), botanists, xii. 47. 154. 

 Sherborne school, chronogram over the door, v. 225. 

 Sheridan (Richard Brinsley), his Drama an imitation of 



Sir Philip Sidney's " Arcadia," iv. 291 ; charade attri- 

 buted to him, vii. 379. 463; patrimony, ix. 447; 



translation of a song in his " Duenna," viii. 563; ix. 



59; "' Trip to Scarborough," iv. 24. 74; where did he 



die? i. 484; ii. 31. 

 Sheridan (Mrs.), mother of Richard Brinsley, x. 305. 

 Sheridan (Thomas), lines on Dr. Parr, v. 333. 379. 

 Sheriff, his precedency over the lord-lieutenant, v. 394. 



494; presented with water buckets, iii. 118. 



