244
GENERAL INDEX.
Shakspeare Criticisms :
Taming of the Shrew, the story of the sleepe
awakened, ii. 361
Tempest, and the Faust legend, iii. 147, 294 Prospero's island, 245 ; anagram from, viii 442, 512 ; ix. 70
Act I. sc. 2, "Abhorred slave," &c., i. 483 "By Providence divine," ib. ; "If the il spirit," &c., 484
Act II. sc. 1, Sebastian's speech, 11. 123-7, i 484 ; " This lord of weak remembrance," ib. "Twenty consciences," iii. 63; iv. 221; v 62; "We all were sea-swallow'd," iii. 423 "And how does your content tender your own good fortune ?" viii. 13 Act II. sc. 2, " Here's neither bush nor shrub
iii. 423
Act III. sc. 1, "I forget: But these sweet thoughts do even refresh my labours," iv. 303 ; v. 62
Act IV. sc. 1, "The cloud-capped towers,'
iv. 188, 275; "Or that for which I live,"
viii. 13
Trolius and Cressida, Act I. sc. 1, "So (Traitor)
then she comes," iii. 423 Act II. sc. 2, " TJnreepective sieve," iv. 304 Act III. sc. 3, " One touch of nature," i. <
149, 335 Twelfth Night, Manningham on, vii. 205
Act II. sc. 1, "Here comes the trout that must
be caught with tickling," xii. 422 Two Gentlemen of Verona, its topography, xi. 208
Act I. sc. 2, " Kiss the rod, iii. 228, 433 Venus and Adonis, licensed by the Archbishop of
Canterbury, xi. 447 Winter's Tale, Dr. Furness's ' New Variorum '
edition, vi. 6
Act I., sc. 2, "Grace to boot," v. 208, 392; " The bygone day proclaimed," 283 ; " The execution did cry out against the n on -per- formance," 283 ; "Thereto clerk-like experi- enced," 283 ; " The gracious queen, part of his theme," 283 ; " Parts of man." 283, 392 ; "What cheer? how is't with you, best brother ? " vi. 4 ; " Communicatest with dreams," vii. 22 ; "I am questioned by my fears," xi. 163; " The imposition clear'd," ib. Act II. sc. 1, "Touch'd conjecture," vii. 23; "Depart," xi. 324 ; "He has discover'd my design," ib.; " 'Tispityshee 's not honest, 325 Act II. sc. 3, "A most unworthy and un- natural lord," v. 283
Act IV. sc. 4, " I think you have as little skill to fear," v. 329 ; " Marry, garlic to mend her kissing with," 330 ; " I was promised them against the feast," ib. " Age and altering rheums ? " ib. ; " Thou a sceptre's heir, that thus affects a sheep-hook," ib. ; "Churl," 330, 393; "Unworthy thee," 330, 393; " Guilty to," 330 ; " New ship," ib. Act V. sc. 1, "The odds for high and low's
alike," v. 330 Shamrock as food, i. 131
Shand (A. Innes), inaccuracies in his 'Wellington and his Lieutenants,' xi. 404
Shand-Harvey (J. W.) on cedar trees, ii. 333.
Funeral customs, ii. 428. Scotch coins, ii. 530 Shands Hall, iv. 477 Shanly (W.) on Col. Joseph Wall, i. 508 Shannon and the Chesapeake, v. 435 Shares in merchant ships, v. 228, 320 ; viii. 368 Sharp (C.) on cockade of George I., ix. 428 Sharp (T.) on hugely, xi. 498. Quare (Daniel),
watchmaker, vi. 157 Sharp (W.) on columbaria, vii. 116. Mediaeval
tithe barns, vii. 93
Sharpe (Lancelot), Sir R. Phillips, and S. T. Cole- ridge, xi. 341, 381, 434, 476
Sharpe (Dr. R. R.) on King's Weigh House, xi. 56 Sharpe family, iii. 188 Shaw (David Taylor), author of The Red, White,
and Blue,' iv. 164, 231, 312, 338, 426, 502 Shaw (E. M.) on author of verses wanted, vi. 507 Shaw (James), of Tynron, his literary remains, iii. 387 Shaw or Shaa (Sir John), his bequests of rings, xi.
308
Shaw (Peter), M.D., his biography, i. 167 Shaw (W. S.) on vicars of Twerton, xii. 208 Shaw family in Essex, x. 387 Shawcross (C. J.) on Richard Wainwright, i. 188 Shedlock (J. S.) on Master of the Musick, viii. 387 Sheen (John), clockmaker, his biography, vi. 129 Sheep, new vaiieties for parks, i. 468 ; ii. 50 Sheep-dog, old English bobtailed, i. 133 Sheep-farming, monastic, x. 47, 176, 239 Sheepfold in church chancel, ii. 289 Sheepshanks epigram, viii. 461 Sheepskins, their names, i. 349, 516 Sheet, marriage in a, v. 323 ; xii. 146, 214, 314 Sheffield, Yorkshire, and Sheffield, Berkshire, ii. 148 Sheffield family, xi. 328
Sheldon (G.) on ' Life,' by Mrs. Barbauld, ix. 67 Sheldon (Mr.), collector of medals, ii. 468 ; iii. 34 Shelfield family, xii. 14 Shell, St. James's, vi. 228, 316 Shell of a coffin, date of its earliest use, xi. 68 Shelley (Percy Bysshe), in Pisa, i. 142; at Oxford,
iv. 7 ; edition of his 'Poetical Works,' by W. M.
Rossetti, v. 67; his mother, 169 ; his cottage at
Lynmouth, viii. 523 ; ix. 74 ; his ancestry, ix. 381,
609 ; x. 50, 229 ; bis house at Bracknell, x. 229 ;
and astronomy, xii. 467 Shelley family, 1550-90, xii. 426 Shells, spiral, figures issuing from, vi. 106, 176 ;
Keemore or Kemo, xi. 189, 316 Shene or Shere, religious foundation at, iii. 448 ; iv.
12
Shephard (A.) on Belfast book-plates, ii. 464 Shephard or Shepherd family, ii. 529 Shepherd (M.) on Gorey or Gourey, v. 209 Shepherd (Sir Samuel), his family, iv. 309 Shepherd's chess, a game, ii. 8, 132 Shepherd's ring, maze, vi. 389, 437 Shepherdess Walk, Hoxton, iv. 306, 424 ; v. 11, 115,
322
Sherborn (Charles), engraver, ii. 11 Sherborn (C. D.) on catalogue of book auction, vi.
156. Godfrey (Sir Edmund Berry), iii. 96. "Old
Frenchman," iii. 352. "Sareon stones," vii, 235,
Sherborn (Charles), ii. 11