Lost Leader," "How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix," "Evelyn Hope," "Old Pictures in Florence." Beside these the student should read "Andrea del Sarto," "An Incident of the French Camp," "Hervé Riel," "My Last Duchess,” “In a Gondola," "The Last Ride Together," "The Pied Piper of Hamelin: a Child's Story." Dramas: "In a Balcony," "Pippa Passes."
For more detailed bibliographies, tables, references, and suggestions, see Pancoast's Study Lists, Tables and Maps (Holt).
(Numerals in Italics indicate the chief reference to author or
Abbotsford, 335.
Absalom and Achitophel, 228. Abt Vogler, 449.
Actors, companies of, in Eliza- bethan times, 157 n. Adam Bede, 423; 424. Addison, Joseph, 248; 250; 254;
255; 256-262 [life, 256; peri- odical essays, 258; Cato, 260; last years, 260; character and works, 261]; 265; 273; 371; 381; 383; 400.
Advancement of Learning, The, 168.
Ae Fond Kiss and then We Sever, 310.
Elfric, a master of Old English prose, 34.
Æthelwold, Archbishop of Can- terbury, 34.
Age of Chaucer, 54-82; Chiv- alry, 55; Chaucer's England, 55; the new order, 57; the rise of the people, 57; the Black Death, 58; the new democracy, 59; religion, 60; the new learning and the new art, 60. See also CHAUCER. Age of Elizabeth, prelude to,
109-118; Elizabethan drama, 137; 174; later Elizabethan literature, 179; and the Res- toration, 222; 399. See also ENGLISH RENAISSANCE. Age of Pope, 233-278 [literature of the town, 235; Pope, 237- 246; authorship in the, 246; growth of the reading public, 248; coffee-houses, 249; rise of the new prose, 250; Richard Steele, 251-256; Joseph Addi- son, 256-262; the novel, 262; Defoe, 263; Swift, 265-273; novel of domestic life, 273- 278]. Alastor, 356.
Alchemist, The, 182.
Alcuin, the great scholar of the North, 25.
Aldhelm, 17; first great Eng- lish scholar, 18; removes to Malmesbury, 18; poems of the people, 18; becomes Abbot of Malmesbury and Bishop of Sherborne, 18.
Alfred the Great, 28-32; saves England from the Danes, 28, 29; encourages learning and
literature, 29–30; his transla- tions, 30; the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 31.
Alton Locke, 411.
American Notes, 414.
Ancient Mariner, The, 325; 327; 329-330.
Andrea del Sarto, 449. Angles, The, 1; 2; 8. Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, The, 31; 34; comes to an end, 42. Anne, Queen, 109; age of, see AGE OF POPE.
Annus Mirabilis, 228. Antiquary, The, 334. Arbuthnot, Dr. John, 273. Arcadia, The, 166. Areopagitica, 199. Armadale, 430.
Arnold, Matthew, 322; 376; 401; 402-409 [life, 402; poet and critic, 405; prose, 408]; 436; 440; 446; 451.
Arnold, Dr. Thomas, 402. Art and learning, introduction of, among the English, 11; advance of during age of Chaucer, 60.
Arthur, King, 45, 48, 55. As You Like It, 153; 159. Ascham, Roger, 114; The School- master, 114.
Astræa Redux, 227. Astrophel and Stella, 165. Atalanta in Calydon, 443. Augustine, St., introduces Chris- tianity among the English, 10; founds the school at Canter- bury, 17.
Austen, Jane, 411.
Aylmer's Field, 373; 456.
Bacon, Francis, 124; 165; 167–
Ball, John, "the mad Priest of Kent," 59.
Ballads, English, 92-97; 294. Barrett, Elizabeth, see ELIZA-
BETH BARRETT BROWNING. Bartholomew Fair, 181. Battle of Brunanburh, 34. Battle of Cheviot, 378. Battle of Ivry, 379, 382. Battle of Maldon, 5; 34. Battle of the Books, 267; 268. Beaumont, Francis, 179; 182. Bede, 22; his life at Jarrow, 23;
as writer, 24; Ecclesiastical History of the English People, 24 as teacher, 25; character. 25-26.
Bells and Pomegranates, 447. Beowulf, 4; 7; 13-17. Berkeley, Bishop, 273.
Bible, the, translation by Wy- clif, 64; new version of, 177. "Bickerstaff, Isaac," pen-name used by Steele, 253. Biographia Literaria, 328. Bishop Orders his Tomb, The, 450. Blackfriars Theatre, the, 147; 183.
Blackwood's Magazine, 345; 362; 424.
Blake, William, 313.
Blank-verse, introduced by Sur rey, 112; 293. Bleak House, 416. Blessed Damozel, The, 440. Bolingbroke, Lord, 273. Book of Snobs, The, 418; 419. Boswell, James, 286. Bride of Abydos, The, 353.
Brontë, Charlotte, Emily, and Anne, 429.
Browne, Sir Thomas, 209-210. Browning, Elizabeth Barrett, 377; 447; 448.
Browning, Robert, 377; 392; 399; 425; 445-450; 455; 456; 461.
Bunyan, John, 179; 212-218 [child of the Reformation, 212; life, 213-215; Pilgrim's Prog- ress, 215; its universal theme, 215; its realism, 216; B's style, 217]; 222; 404.
Burke, Edmund, 288; 303-305; 314; 400.
Burns, essay by Carlyle, 388; 409.
Burns, Robert, 293; 295; 306-
312 [life, 307; his sincerity, 309; poet of Scotland, Nature, and Man, 310; poet of democ- racy, 311]; 331; 385; 404; 407;
Byron, Lord, 326; 334; 337; 347– 353 [his heritage, 348; youth and manhood, 348; work, 351; egotism, 352; conception of liberty, 352]; 358; 359; 376; 377; 379; 407; 444; 446; 459.
Cædmon, 17; his home in Northumbria, 19; his religious poems, 20; 461. Cain, 350.
Campaign, The, 258. Campbell, Thomas, 347. Canterbury, school of, 12; 17; shrine of à Becket, 57; 74. Canterbury Tales, The, 72; 74- 77; 133.
Carlyle, Thomas, 136; 193; 265; 310; 314; 326; 327; 328; 337; 377; 381; 384-394 [life, 385; entrance into literature, 387; works and character, 389; his- tories and biographies, 391; place in his age, 392; 399; 400; 401; 404; 408; 409; 419; 427; 453; 454; 459; 460.
Castle of Perseverance, The, 140. Cato, 260.
Cavalier Poets, the, 185; 190-
printing into England, 98; the Historie of Troye, 100; Mal- ory's Morte d'Arthur, 101. Celtic influence on English liter- ature, 44; 48; 50. Cenci, The, 358.
Chapman, George, 361.
Charge of the Light Brigade, The, 456.
Charles II, and the Restoration, 200; 219-222.
Chatham, essay by Macaulay, 382.
Chaucer, Geoffrey, 52; 61; 66- 81 [page to Countess of Ulster, 67; knowledge of the Court, 68; the student, 68; in the French war, 69; early poems, 70; first visit to Italy, 71; return to England, 72; Troilus and Cressida, 72; becomes poor, 73; The Canterbury Tales, 74-77; last years, 77; the flower of two civilizations, 78; Chaucer and the Renaissance, 79; his genius, 79; music of his verse, 80; narrative skill,
80; poet of the Court, 81]; 258; 376.
Cheshire Cheese Inn, the, 289. Childe Harold, 334; 349; 350. Christabel, 326; 329. Christian Hero, The, 252. Christianity, introduction of, among the English, 9; its influence on the English char- acter, 11; on the English mind, 11; on English litera- ture, 12, 17.
Christ's Hospital, 323, 340. Clarissa Harlowe, 275; 276. Clarke, Charles Cowden, 360. Clive, essay by Macaulay, 382. Cloister and the Hearth, The, 430. Clothes, the philosophy of, 390. Coffee-houses, in Pope's time, 249.
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 152; 162; 297; 314; 323-331 [early life, 323; poetry, opium, and metaphysics, 325; influence on his time, 327; as poet, 328; the Ancient Mariner, 329; poet of Nature and Man, 330]; 340; 341; 342; 344; 346; 347; 377; 441.
Colet, John, 104; 105; 106; 109. Colin Clout's Come Home Again, 132.
Collier, Jeremy, 252. Collins, William, 297; 306. Collins, William Wilkie, 430. Columbus, Christopher, 86; 106; 121.
Comedy of Errors, The, 158. Common Sense, the reign of, 222-225.
Complete Angler, The, 211.
Comus, 197.
Conceits, 187.
Confessions of an English Opium Eater, The, 344.
Congreve, William, 231. Cotter's Saturday Night, The, 310. Court of Charles II, 221. Cowper, William, 293; 301-302; 306; 312; 313; 333.
Crabbe, George, 302-303; 333; 377.
Creation, The, by Cadmon, 461. Criticism, literary, of Coleridge, 328; of Lamb, 342; of Arnold, 408-409. Cromwell, 392.
Cuckoo Song, The, 52. Culture and Anarchy, 409. Curtain, The (theatre), 148. Cymbeline, 156; 455. Cynewulf, 22.
Dance of the Seven Deadly Sins, The, 92. Danes, the, 5; their coming to England, 26; they sack and burn monasteries, 27; checked by King Alfred, 28, 29. Dante, 61; 79; 81; 110; 112; 329; 440.
Darwin, Charles, 401. David Copperfield, 417. Day's Work, The, 437.
Death of Blanche the Duchess, The, 70.
De Coverley Papers, The, 260; 262-263.
Defense of Guinevere, The, 442. Defense of Poesie, 166; 170. Defoe, Daniel, 250; 263-264; 273; 274; 371.
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