Conspiracy of Byron, 'false] fire,
267; in tune, 150 Content a crown, 120 Contention, The, Pt. I., night, 307
Coriolanus, microcosm, 88; nails, 241; rabble, 159, 162, 163; money-muck, 92
Cornelia, ambition, 123; content a crown, 120; doors of death, 95; night, 307; oblivion, 270; rabble, 159
Cotton, Concordance, 35
Cosmetics condemned, 106, 107 Court Academe, 118
Courtly greetings, valedictions, etc., 29, 30
Cure for a Cuckold, thought free, 68
Custom of the Country, Court Academe, 119; death-tipped sword, 265; doors of death, 94; pleurisie, 135; scorpions, 233; women burrs, 286 Cymbeline, 113, hell around us, 80
Cynthia's Revels, beauty of mind, 90; imposthume, 145
Davies, John, sonnet to Bacon, 245, 246 David and Bathsheba, appeal for guidance, 74; eye, 261; gloomy air, 256; heartstrings, 242; in tune, 152; marriage sacred, 85; rack, 271; sea of, 291; sun bridegroomlike, 253
Day, John, Jonson's opinion, 13; music, 318; star me no stars, 280; word-coining, 213; see also Humour Out of Breath, Parlia- ment of Bees
De Augmentis Scientiarum, sense motion, 183; Spanish explodents, 115; spheres, 195
De Profundis, genius isolated, 340
Dean of Ely, theology and politics in Shakespeare, 356 Death dissolves, 240 Death, doors of, 94 Death-tipped sword, 265 Declaration of Demeanour of Sir W. Raleigh, 24
Defense of Poetry, poetry despised in England, 34; Greek philo- sophers appeared as poets, 346 Defoe, "No Popery," 43 Deity, reverent references, 73, 74, 75 Dekker, Thomas, Ben Jonson's opinion, 14; character, 329; echo, 285; fine me no fines, 280; imprisoned, 14; language, 228; on mankind, 84; shoemaker (?) 7; word-coining, 214; see also Bell- man of London, Famous Wars, Gull's Horn Book, Honest Whore, If this be not a good play the devil is in it, King's Entertainment, Lanthorn and Candle Light, Match Me in London, Old Fortu- natus, Roaring Girl, Shoemaker's Holiday, Sun's Darling, Virgin Martyr, Witch of Edmonton, Wonder of a Kingdom
Descriptio globi Int., art nature, 258 Desperate remedies, 148
Devil's Law Case, Barmotho, 116; beauty of mind, 90; burial- locality immaterial, 100; buzz, 268; cosmeties, 107; death- tipped sword, 266; delay, 313; imposthumes, 146
Double Marrriage, corrosive, 194; doors of death, 95; metempsy- chosis, 102
Douse, le Marchant, Northumber- land House MS., 245, 246 Dowden, Dr., little resemblance between Bacon and Shakespeare, 341; Nature's mirror, 359 Downfall of Huntingdon, 114 Drayton, Michael, bemoans his country's shame, 337; dog days, 338; ignorance, 336; men beasts, 335; Muses sad, 335; poetry, 338; see also Edymion and Phabe, Famous Wars, Idea Drayton, Michael, Antony Cooke, 345
Drummond of Hawthornden, on Ben Jonson, 251; Ben Jonson- music, 319; night, 306; state of the age, 78, 335; temperance, 337; unhappy times, 337 Drunkenness, prevalency, dramatists condemn, 110 Duchess of Malfi, ambition, 123; Bermoothes, 116; body a prison, 181; brass breast, 186; cosmetics, 106; desperate remedies, 147; doors of death, 94; fantastic phi- losophy, 48; girdle, 259; heart- strings, 241; in tune, 152; mar- riage holy, 85; moles, 272; spheres, 195; true to self, 240; world a stage, 263; worst mend, 235
Duke of Milan, heartstrings, 241; mind in travail, 292; sad and serious thoughts, 119; scarabs, 287; second self, 187; writ in brass, 185
Dumas, A., Shakespeare a great creator, 339
Dumb Knight, imposthume, 144; sweet odours, 305 Durham, Dean of, his use for his predecessors' coffins, 60; Thomas A Becket, 61
Dutch Courtesan, eye, 262; honori, etc., 283; love, 274; mediocrity, 124; salutation, 29
Dyce, Rev. Alex., on actors and aristocracy, 247
Eastward Ho! women burrs, 287 Echo, 285
Educational purpose of the stage,
Edward I., 114; benediction, 27; courtly greeting, 29; death dis- solves, 240; Deity recognised, 75; grafting, 322; hell within us, 79; thought free, 68
Edward II., 114; cedar shrub, 238; delay, 309; Deity recog- nised, 75; in tune, 151; night, 308; noble mind, 118; rabble, 158
Edward III., 114; abstract, 189; buzz, 267; death dissolves, 240; death a rebirth, 96; delay, 309, 313; eye, 262; falconry, 121; marriage holy, 85; mercy, 77; Orpheus, 175; rack, 271; self- conquest, 89
Edward IV., 114; good-bye, 225 Elder Brother, benediction, 27; chew digest, 268; Court Academe, 118; innocence, 234; king bee, 278; night, 309 Elizabeth, Queen, her manners, 108
Elizabethan England, 4
Ellis, R. L., Bacon's theory of life, 137
Elton, Prof., see Michael Drayton Emerson, R. W., on borrowed
thoughts, 252; language, 210; great men, 344; on Shakespeare, 30, 31, 32, 116, 313, 325, 340, 360, 363
Emperor of the East, Court Aca- deme, 119; Proteus, 203; rabble, 160; true religion, 72 Endymion, body a prison, 181; chameleon, 290; delay, 312; love, 272, 273; microcosm, 87; plodders, 48; spirits, refined, 139 Endymion and Phabe, Hesperida, 279 England of Shakespeare, love of noise, 167; grammar, 204; dese- cration, 58; universities, 39, 40 English Grammar, aposteam (im- posthume), 144
English Traveller, delay, 312; rabble, 161 Englishmen all mad, 282 Entretiens d'Ariste et d'Eugène, 197 Errors, identical, 278
Essays (Bacon), abstract, 189; ambition, 122, 123; another self, 187; buzz, 267 ; chafed perfumes, 19; chew digest, 268; cor ne edite, 193; counsel, 149; death, 95, 97; give sorrow words, 149; horticulture, 323; imposthuma- tions, 143; in tune, 150; late early, 281; love, 273; mercy, 76; mirror, 237; money-muck, 90; music and flowers, 320; pattern, 189; riches-trash, 93; sedition, 143; seeléd dove, 19; soul, 86; soul sickness, 148; superfluous circumstance, 310, 311; sweet odours, 305; travel, 225; true to self, 239; world a stage, 262 Essex, Earl of, correspondence respecting scrivenery, 243; digest me no digestions, 281 Euphues, imposthumes, 144, 145, 146
Evans, Sir John, on Browne's language, 221
Evelyn, John, on Bacon, 69 Every Man in his Humour, brevity,
311; hammering revenge, 288 Every Man out of his Humour, money-muck, 90; rabble, 161; "spit private in Pauls," 58; stage a mirror, 104-5 Ex nihilo, 259
Example, The, unbefriended poesy, 35
Excrement, hair, 133-4 Expelling nails, 241
Exposition of Ten Commandments, Cleaver on stage plays, 66 Eye of the world, 260
Fair Maid of West, brass breast, 187; peruse paper, 264 Fair Quarrel, surgeons' cant, 135; true to self, 240; world a stage, 263
Faerie Queene, abstract, 188; ambi- tion, 123; art nature, 258; beauty of mind, 89; body a prison, 181; cause effect, 148; cedar shrub, 237; corrosive, 194; counsel, 149; courtly greeting, 29; death-tipped sword, 265; Deity recognised, 75; doors of death, 94; eye, 261; give sorrow words, 149; gloomy air, 256; grafting, 321; heartstrings, 242; hell within us, 80; love, 276; mediocrity, 124; mind in travail, 292; money-muck, 91; music, 319; night, 3c6, 307, 308; oblivion, 269; Phoebus, 255; Proteus, 202; Providence, 74; rabble, 158, 160, 162, 163; sea of, 290, 291; Selinis, 254; sun bridegroomlike, 253; ulcer, 142; vital spirits, 140 Faithful Shepherdess, art and nature, 259; ocean, 185; rack, 271; pearl, 234; ulcer, 142; vital spirits, 140 Falkland, Viscount, see Marriage Night False fire, 266
False One, death-tipped sword, 265; self-conquest, 89; soaring mind, 121; vital spirits, 140 Famous Wars, 114
Fancies, brevity, 311; content a crown, 120; Court Academe, 119; hair-excrement, 133; love, 274; women burrs, 287 Farewell to Folly, anonymity, 347; content a crown, 120
Fatal Dowry, love, 273 Faustus, Aristotle, 190; buzz, 268; gloomy air, 256; Helen, 270; hell around us, 80; metem- psychosis, 192; riches trash, 92; walk invisible, 265
Fawn, chew digest, 269; fantastic philosophy, 49; know thyself, 239; oblivion, 269; walk invi- sible, 265
Field, Nathaniel, in gaol, 13; see also Amends for Ladies, Fatal Dowry, Woman a Weathercock 1594, remarkable unanimity during, 302
Filum Labyrinthi, lack of magna. nimity, 117
First Folio, dedication from Pliny, 180
Florio, J., on base-mindedness of actors, 126
Foolish, ignorant Indian, 269 Ford, John, dramatised Henry VII., 345; front me no fronts, 280; word-coining, 214; see also Broken Heart, Fancies, Ladies' Trial, Lover's Melancholy, Love's Sacrifice, Perkin Warbeck, Sun's Darling, 'Tis Pity She's a Whore, Witch of Edmonton Four Plays in One, death, 96; money-muck, 91 Freedom of thought, its origin, 69 Frere, W. H., 69
Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay,
114, breeding, 207; cause effect, 148; Deity, 74; horticulture, 322; metempsychosis, 192; self- conquest, 89; vital spirits, 140 Future state, 78, 81, 98
Great Duke of Florence, cedar shrub, 237; I cannot flatter,' 24; delay, 312; false fire, 267; king's unforced explanations, 24; lilies, roses, 255; mediocrity, 125; moles, 272; no true star," 35; poverty of spirit, 257; prince a rising sun, 24; self- conquest, 89
Great Englishmen of the Sixteenth Century, 341
Great Instauration, born for mankind, 327; fame unsought, 298; life's aim, 299; navigation metaphor, 295; reconstruction science, 293
Greatest Birth of Time, 292, 293 Greek at the universities, 41; in the theatres, 42; word-coining from, 338
Green, Mrs. Everett, 204 Green, J. R., Bacon's unceremoni- ousness, 310; Casaubon, 338; disreputableness of actor drama- tists, 127; Robert Greene, 68 Greene, Robert, amusements, 8; Cambridge University, 39; character, 84; death, 109; Harvey's opinion, 8; typical dramatist, 67; see also Alcida, Farewell to Folly, Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay, Groatsworth of Wit, James IV., Looking Glass for London and England, Orlando Furioso, Penelope's Web, Perimedes, Philomela, Maiden's Dream, Mamillia, Menaphon, Morando, Never too Late Grey-eyed morn, 256
Grindal, Archbishop, instructions to churchwardens, 60
Groatsworth of Wit, drunkenness condemned, III; fly lust, 85; taper, 236
Grosart, Dr. A., on parallelisms, 250 Grotius, Hugo, precocious genius, 356; theology, 337
Guardian, know thyself, 239; stubborn silence, 303
Gull's Horn Book, hair-excrement, 134; mind in travail, 292; navi- gation metaphor, 296; perils of stage, 167
Habingdon, W., see Queen of Arragon
Hail of pearl, 233 Hair-excrement, 133, 134 Hall, Dr., his prescriptions, 130 Hallam, H., Bacon's temple, 343; Massinger's genius, 328 Hamlet, actors, 7; cosmetics, 107; death dissolves, 240; desperate remedies, 147; dirt-land, 93; Englishmen mad, 282; false fire, 266; lapwing, 288; man, 189; moles, 271; Phoebus, 255; pleurisie, 134; sea of, 290; sense motion, 183; tragi-comi-history, 281; true to self, 239 Hardicanute, 114 Harleian Collection, 242 Harrington, Sir J., drunkenness, 109
Harrison, W., Chronology, theatres,
Harvey, Gabriel, Cambridge, 44; Greene, 8; Lyly, 14; on the- atres, 4
Heaven and hell, marriage in heaven, 98 Heartstrings, 241
Heir, Helen, 270; mercy, 77 Helen of Troy, 270 Hell, 78-81
Heminge and Condell, 180 Henry IV., 114; doors of death,
95; ignis fatuus, 279; in tune, 151; mediocrity, 126; walk in- visible, 265
Henry V., 114; chew digest, 269;
garlic, 304; hammering revenge, 287; king bees, 278; night, 307 Henry VI., 114; ambition, 122-
123; brevity, 311; buzz, 267; content a crown, 120; corrosive, 194; cedar shrub, 238; death "waft," 97; Deity, 75; delay, 309; good-bye, 225; grafting, 321; innocence, 234; kingly thoughts, 118; Proteus, 202; rabble, 158, 159, 161; sullen earth, 256; taper, 236; wedlock, 85
Henry VII., grafting, 321; ifs
and ands, 266; moles, 272; rabble, 158, 161-162; sad and serious thoughts, 119; vital spirits, 141
Henry VIII., 114; ambition, 123; content a crown, 121; know thyself, 239; navigation meta- phor, 296; sad and serious thoughts, 119; writ in brass, 185 Henslowe's Diary, 13, 14, 15, 168; Titus and Ondronicus, 170 Hesperides, 279
Heywood, Thomas, characteristics, 329; echo, 285; English lan- guage, 228; private me no privates, 280; word-coining, 214; see also Apology for Actors, Brazen Age, Challenge for Beauty, Edward IV., English Traveller, Fair Maid of the West, Golden Age, If you know not me you know nobody, London's Jus Honorarium, Rape of Lucrece, Silver Age, Woman Killed with Kindness, Wise Woman of Hogsdon
History, taught at playhouses, 113 History of Cambridge University,
civil law, 314; corruption, 37; classes neglected, 39; Greek and Hebrew, 41; plebeian students, 38; theology, 100
History of Civilisation in England, state of knowledge, 331-333 History of Hampton Court, drunkenness in England, 109 History of Life and Death, vital spirits, 139, 141-142 History of Winds, girdle, 259 History of the World, contem- porary ignorance, 35
Hobbes, Thomas, one of Bacon's "good pens," 244
Hocus-pocus, origin of the term, 60 Hog hath lost his pearl, ignorant audiences, 168
Honest Man's Fortune, man his
own master, 73; thought free, 68 Honest Whore, cedar shrub, 238; content a crown, 120; cosmetics, money-muck, 91; sea of, 291; taper, 236; vital spirits, 139 Horace, 160, 186
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