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1092. Ghostly man = priest. From A. S. gast, spirit; the h has been inserted.

1114. Chariot-bier = = hearse; a vehicle on which dead bodies are borne. 1129. Dole grief, sorrow.

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1131. With bent brows with heads bowed in sorrow.

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1134. Full-summer with light and beauty of mid-summer.

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1176. Armlet = an ornament for the arm.

1254. From the half face, etc. = from a side view to look the king full in

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INDEX.

Addison, referred to, 349; sketch of,
352; character of writings, 352; early
life, 353; politics, 353; travels, 354;
"The Campaign," 355; in Parliament,
356; Tatler and Spectator, 356, 357;
"Cato," 358; attacked by Dennis, 358;
marriage, 360; secretary of state, 360 ;
death, 360; Thackeray's estimate, 360;
quarrel with Pope, 384.

Age of Johnson, 421; poetry of, 421;
predominance of prose, 424.
Akenside, Johnson's sketch of, 490;
notes to, 495.
Alcuin on study, 7.

Alfred the Great, 12.
Angles, Saxons, and Jutes, 3.

Augustan Age in France, 312; in Eng-
land, 347.

Augustine in England, 5.
Augustus, 347.

Austen, Miss, referred to, 516.

Bacon, referred to, 2; sketch of, 137;
philosophy, 137; purpose of knowledge,
137; early life, 138; as lawyer, 140;
political career, 141; as orator, 141;
befriended by Essex, 141; "Essays,"
142, 150; mode of living, 143; trial,
144;

"Instauratio Magna," 144; esti-
mate of, 148; notes to "Essays," 164.
Beaumont, quoted, 175.

Bede, father of English prose, 10; quoted,
5,9.

Bentley, quoted, 383.
Beowulf, 8.

Bertha, wife of Ethelbert, 5.

Bible, influence on literature, 79.
Blackstone, referred to, 462.

Boccaccio, 23.
Boileau, 312, 353.
Bolingbroke, Lord, referred to, 315,
387; quoted, 389.

Book of Common Prayer, 80.
Boswell, quoted, 454.

Boyle, referred to, 313.
Buckingham, Duke of, 274, 313;
satirized, 320.

Buffon, referred to, 348.

Butler, Joseph, referred to, 315.
Burke, referred to, 424; anecdote of,
489.

Burns, sketch of, 426; rank, 426; early
life, 427; "Mary Morison," 428; ef-
fort to reform, 429; "Cotter's Saturday
Night," 430; first volume of poems,
430; in Edinburgh, 431; marriage,
431; sympathy with nature, 434;
"Tam o' Shanter," 435; as exciseman,
435; "Bruce's Address," 436; death,
437; glorifies the commonplace, 438;
religious feeling, 438.

Byron, sketch of, 526; characterized,

526; place in literature, 526; ancestry,
527; early life, 527; "Hours of Idle-
ness," 528; "English Bards and Scotch
Reviewers," 528; "Childe Harold's
Pilgrimage," 529; life in London, 529;
marriage, 530: voluntary exile, 531;
"Prisoner of Chillon," 532, 534;
"Don Juan," 532; in Greece, 532;
death, 533; quoted, 551.

Caedmon, 9; extract from, 10.
Canterbury Tales, plan of, 30.
Carew, quoted, 278.

Carlyle, quoted, 426, 436, 526.

Cato, Addison's, 358.

Cavaliers, 276; Cavalier poets, 277,
278.

Caxton, 76.

Celt and Teuton contrasted, 1.

Celts in British Isles, 3.

Charles I., 273.

Charles II., 312.

Chatham, referred to, 424.
Chesterfield and Johnson, 483.
Chaucer, sketch of, 24; pre-eminence of,
24; biographical facts, 25; personal ap-
pearance, 25; character and culture, 26,
27; love of nature, 27; keen observer,
27; treatment of woman, 28; courage
in misfortune, 29; literary career, 29;
"Canterbury Tales," 30; language and
versification, 55.

Christianity, effects on Anglo-Saxon
character, 6.

Church and education, 7.

Civil War Period, 273.

Clubs of London, 351.

Collier, Jeremy, referred to, 318.
Compass, Mariner's, 77.

Congreve, quoted, 325.

Corneille, referred to, 312; imitated by
Dryden, 318.

Cotter's Saturday Night, 430, 440;
notes to, 450.

Creative Period, 75.
Cromwell, 276.

Crusades, 22.

Cudworth, Ralph, referred to, 314,
315.

Danes, incursions of, 13.
Dante, 23, 30.

Decameron, 30.

Declaration of Independence, 422.
Deism, 314.

Dennis, referred to, 358, 381.

Deserted Village, 463, 465; notes to,
476.

Drama, discussion of, 252; in France,
312.

Dryden, quoted, 280, 289, 312; referred
to, 313, 349, 383; sketch of, 316; his
rank and aims, 316, 324; biographical
details, 317; "Heroic Stanzas," 317;
as dramatist, 318; as satirist, 319;
"Religio Laici," 320, 327; turns Cath-

olic, 322; "Hind and Panther," 322;
"Mac Flecknoe," 323; as translator,
323; "Alexander's Feast," 324; as
prose writer, 324; Congreve's estimate,
325.

Education in nineteenth century, 501.
Edwin, King of Northumbria, 5.
Elaine, Tennyson's, 582, 586; notes to,
623.

Elizabeth, reign of, 75, 80, 84; learn-
ing, 77; character, 80.

England, in fourteenth century, 21, 22;
under Elizabeth, 81, 82; at time of Civil
War, 273; at Restoration, 311; under
Queen Anne, 347; Age of Johnson,
421; in nineteenth century, 499.
English language formed, 19.

English literature defined, 2; extent of,
3.

Enoch Arden, 584.

Environment, influence of, 1.

Epoch, influence of, 1.

Erasmus, referred to, 77.

Essay on Criticism, Pope's, 379, 392;

notes to, 412.

Essay on Man, Pope's, 387.
Essex, Lord, 141.

Ethelbert, speech of, 5.

Excursion, Wordsworth's, 557.

Faery Queene, 83; plan of, 91; defects
of, 92; criticised, 95; First Booke of,
96; notes to, 125.

Feudalism in England, 21.
Fiction in nineteenth century, 505.
Formative Period, 19.

Garrick, quoted, 454, 485.
George III., referred to, 422.
Goldsmith, sketch of, 454; awkwardness
in conversation, 454; early life, 455;
effect of money, 456; anecdote, 457;
fondness for dress, 457; failures, 457;
studies medicine, 458; in London, 459;
literary work, 459; extravagance, 460;
"Vicar of Wakefield," 460; "Travel-
ler," 461; anecdote, 461; "Good-
Natured Man," 462; compilations,
462; "Deserted Village," 462; "She
Stoops to Conquer," 463; death, 463;
quoted, 480.

Greene, quoted, 174.

Hallam, quoted, 148.

Halley, referred to, 313.
Harvey, Gabriel, 85.

Henry VIII. and the Reformation, 79.
Herbert, Lord, of Cherbury, 314.
Herrick, quoted, 279.

Hilda, abbess at Whitby, 9.
Hind and Panther, 322.

History, 1; advance in style, 505.
Hobbes, referred to, 315.

Hooker," Ecclesiastical Polity," 83.
Hutton, quoted, 516.

Idyls of the King, 582.
Independents, 275.

Instauratio Magna, 144.
Inventions, modern, 499.
Jarrow, monastery of, 11.
Jeffrey, quoted, 557.

Johnson, Samuel, quoted, 278, 322,
353, 360, 378, 383; age of Johnson,
421; sketch of, 479; character, 479;
peculiarities, 479; in conversation, 480;
early life, 480; anecdote, 481; mar-
riage, 481; in London, 482; as reporter,
482; "Life of Savage," 483; diction-
ary, 483; relations with Chesterfield,
483; "Vanity of Human Wishes,"
484; as dramatist, 485; Rambler, 485;
style, 485; "Rasselas," 486; journey
to the Hebrides, 487; "Lives of the
Poets," 488; death, 489; sketch of
Akenside, 490.

Jonson, Ben, quoted, 175.

Lady of the Lake, 511.
L'Allegro, 291; notes to, 300.
Latimer, referred to, 79.
Laud, Archbishop, 274.
Lay of the Last Minstrel, 511.
Literature, defined, 1; three leading fac-
tors, 1; in relation to causes, 2; Eng-
lish literature defined, 2; substantial
element, 22; influence of French, 22;
in nineteenth century, 504.
Lives of the Poets, Johnson's, 488.
Locke, John, referred to, 315, 348, 356
Lockhart, quoted, 433.

Louis XIV., 312, 348.
Lowell, James Russell, quoted, 29,
325, 391.

Luther, referred to, 2, 78.

Macaulay, quoted, 483.
Macpherson, referred to, 487.
Magna Charta, 21.

Marlborough, referred to, 355.
Marmion, Scott's, 511.
Mary, misrule of, 80.

Mary, Queen of Scots, 80.
Maud, Tennyson's, 582.

Merchant of Venice, 177, 183; notes

to, 252.

Methodism, rise of, 350.

Milton, John, referred to, 277; sketch
of, 280; early life, 280; educational
reformer, 281; at Horton, 282; "L'Al-
legro" and "Penseroso," 282; Continen-
tal tour, 283; return to England, 283;
as teacher, 284; prose writings, 284,
285, 287; marriage, 285; definition of
education, 286; course of study, 287;
Latin secretary, 287; blindness, 288;
"Paradise Lost," 289; “Samson Ago-
nistes," 290; character, 290.
Molière, referred to, 312.
Montague, Earl of Halifax, 353, 354.
Montesquieu, referred to, 348; quoted,
350.

More, Henry, referred to, 314.
More, Sir Thomas, 76.
Myers, quoted, 555.

Newton, Sir Isaac, referred to, 313.
Nineteenth Century, some features of,
499.

Norman Conquest, 19, 20.
Normans, 20.

Ode on Immortality, Wordsworth's,
556, 564; notes to, 571.
Ossian, referred to, 487.

Penseroso, 295; notes to, 304.

Pepys, quoted, 317.

Petrarch, referred to, 23.
Pitt, quoted, 425.

Poetry, the first literature, 8; Anglo-Sax-
on, 8; in nineteenth century, 506.
Pope, referred to, 347; quoted, 349;
sketch of, 377; rank, 377; early life,
377; precocity, 378; influence of Trum-
bull, 378; advice of Walsh, 379; rela-
tions with Wycherly, 379; "Essay on
Criticism," 379, 392; attack on Dennis,
381; sensitive to criticism, 382; “Rape

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