ELEVENTH SERIES.
273
his signatures, 490 ; on the pain of death, vi.
28, 'OS ; his signatures, 72, 153, 255, 338, 437 ;
allusions to, 426 ; Sonnets, the text of, 446 ;
proverb quoted by, 507 ; earliest references to
First Folio, vii. 8, 56, 94, 137, 217 ; text of the
Sonnets, 32, 76, 153, 236; "a part of the
Bible," 146, 494 ; his use of the word " castle,"
165, 253, 394 ; his bust, 166 ; Milton's epitaph
on, 227, 456 ; Mr. W. H. of his Sonnets,
241, 262 ; mythical pall-bearer, 245 ; -his monu-
ment in Westminster Abbey, 349 ; Second
Folio, 456 ; Milton's epitaph on, in Second
Folio, viii. 11, 141, 196, 232, 294, 317, 320 ; his
-cousin Thomas Greene, 70 ; allusions to, 46, 86,
155 ; Mr. W. H. of his Sonnets, 169 ; Droeshout
engraving of, 189 ; Milton's epitaph on, in
Second Folio, ix. 11, 73, 114, 172, 217, 237, 257,
- 294, 353 ; original story of ' Romeo and
Juliet," 83, 233 ; Lady Capulet in ' Romeo and Juliet,' 141 ; his use of Warwickshire dialect, 288, 337, 37<3, 394 ; his monument, and Garrett Johnson, 445 ; a " new " allusion to, 447, 495 ; Robert Baron's allusions to, 467 ; his use of Warwickshire dialect, x. 156, 196 ; excavation for manuscripts, 509 ; xi. 36, 55 ; allusions to, 184, 449; Robert Inglis's edition, 1864, 188 ; the Ludgate or Grafton picture of, 321, 442 ; his French, 470 ; the Ludgate or Grafton picture of, xii. 15 ; and Blackfriars Theatre, 47, 108 ; the colour of his eyes, 117 ; and Meredith, 138 ; his son-in-law's patients, 157, 391 ; publishers of his Henry V.,' 181 ; 'Passionate Pilgrim,' original edition, 1599, 259, 487 ; his 'Pericles,' . and George Wilkins, 377 ; Othello in the original Italian, 460
Shakespeare (William) of Mansfield, 1561, v. 450
Shakespeare (William), of Waltham-in- the- Wold, 1553, v. 429
Shakespeares in Coventry parish registers, 1583- 1664, v. 24, 105, 406 ; 'in the 18th century, iv. 146, 252
^Shakespeare's Head, tavern sign, Covent Garden, xiL 201, 247
-Shakespearian parallels, ii. 246, 345
- Shalcespeariana :
All's Well that Ends Well, Act I. sc. i., " Virtue's steely bones look bleak," ii. 422 ; "cold," iii. 304
Act IV. sc. ii., "I see that men make rope's in such a scarre," x. 125, 197 ; sc. iii., " Has led the drum before the English tragedians," xi. 30, 76 As You Like it, notes on, vi. 421, 441
Act II. sc. vii., " wearie verie meanes," x.
385. 4.72
Act IV. sc. i., "pathetical," iv. 425
Coriolanus, Act. IV. sc. v., " Sho\ild from
yond cloud speake divine things," i. 323
Act V. sc. iii., "Come let us go," viii. 510
Cymbeline, Act I. sc. i., " You do not meet a
man but frowns," i. 324 Act V. c. v., "Had ever scarre for," x. 125 .Hamlet, Act I. sc. ii., " Then saw you not his face ? " vii. 306 ; " Funeral bak'd meats " in 1628, v. 307 Act II. sc. ii., " The mobled queen," i. 165,
504; "pious chansons," x. 467 Act III. sc. i., " take arms against a sea of troubles," iv. 84
Two razes of ginger," xii.
sc. ii., robbery on Gadshill, vii.
Shakespeariana:
Act IV. sc. vii., " Stood challenger on
mount of all the age," iii. 304 Henry IV. Part I. Act I. sc. i. vii. 5, 6;
"Entrance," 66; sc. iii., "I'll have a
starling shall be taught to speak nothing
but 'Mortimer,' " xi. 68, 114, 154, 218,
270, 388 Act II. sc. i.,
6, 76 ;
305 Act IV. sc. i., "All plum'd like estridges,
that with the wind," i. 504 Henry IV. Part II. Act I. sc. ii., "Through
with them in honest taking-up," i. 323,
504 ; " And if a man is through with
them," ii. 163 ; " hallooing," x. 427 ; xi.
13 Act II. sc. ii., "Ephesians," x. 450, 497 ;
xi. 32 : sc. iv. " Ulysses and L T tis," iv. 83,
243, 425: "Hiren," ix. 247 Act III. sc. ii., "Food for powder," ii. 525 Act IV. sc. i., " And bless'd, and graced, and
did," ii. 164, 422
Henry V., " Montjoy et St. Dennis." i. 447 Act II. sc. iii., FalstafTs nose, x. 87 Act IV., chorus, "and through their paly
flames," iv. 84 Henry VIII., Act III. sc. ii., " that am, have,
and will be," xii. 117 Julius Caesar, its verse, viii. 162
Act II. sc. ii., " Danger knows full well," i.
69 King Lear, rearrangements of the text, ix.
381 Act I. sc. i, " division of the kingdom," iv.
425 Act II. sc. ii., " Approach, thou beacon to
this under globe," iii. 303 ; and his
family, 481 ; " from this enormous
state," ix. 245
Act III. sc. vi., the Court, iv. 243 Act IV. sc. iii., "Clamour moisten'd," ix.
165 Love's Labour's Lost, Act I. sc. i., " And when
I was wont to think no harm all night,"
ii. 422 Act IV. sc. i., " Put up this, it will be thine
another day," i. 164 ; vii. 7 Act V. sc. ii"., ' The extreme parts of
time," x. 66
Lucrece, new readings in, iii. 183 ; " Reveal- ing day through every cranny spies," iv
243 Macbeth, Act IV. sc. i, " Black spirits and
white," v. 180; " blood-boltered," ix.
369, 417 ; x. 95 Measure for Measure, Act I. sc. ii., " Words of
Heaven," x. 367 ; "The King of Hun- gary's peace," xii. 98 Act III. sc. i., " Dar'st thou die ? " vi.
28, 93 Act V. sc. i., " Let the devil be sometime
honoured for his burning throne," xi. 27 Merry Wives of Windsor, Act I. sc. iii., " O
bace gongarian wight, wilt thou the
spicket wield ? " i. 164 Act II. sc. i., " An-heires," i. 323 ; ii. 163 Act III. sc. i., " Marry sir, the pittieward,"
ii. 28, 77