em imitated from French romance of, 39
Charles I., 84; 250, 252; 366, 382
Charles II., 381
Charles IX., 220
Chartley, 223
Chateaubriand, 231, 283
Chateaumorand, Diane de, 276
Chatterton, 26
Chaucer, Caxton's engraving of his pilgrims, 12, 45;
a story-teller, but with small influence on the Elizabethan novel,
43, 44;
homage of Pope and Dryden to, 44;
faculty of observation in, 49;
and mediaeval story-tellers, 89;
"Cooke's Tale," 204;
read by Nash, 296
Chesterfield, Lord, 414
Chettle's edition of "Groats-worth of Wit," 165 _note_, 321;
"Piers Plain," 328, 330, 331
"Chrononotontologos," 412
Cibber, Theophilus, 381
"Civile Conversation," Guazzo's, 72, 73, 76
"Clarissa Harlowe," 25, 26, 31
"Clelie," 361, 364, 370; frontispiece of "La Fausse," 20, 375
"Cleopatra," 412; Queen, as represented on the English stage, 14, 97;
"Cleopatre," 364, 369;
frontispiece of, 20, 371
Clovis, 354
Colet, Dean of St. Paul's, 87
Comte, Auguste, 416
Conde, 352, 357
"Contes Moralises," Bozon's, 111
Cooper, Fenimore, 415
Copland, 12
Corneille, 278, 282, 343, 355, 363, 373
Coryat, 302 _note_
Cotterel, Sir Charles, translator of "Cassandre," 373
"Cour Bergere," play derived by Mareschal from Sidney's "Arcadia," 282
"Court Secret," 413
Cowper, on Sidney's "Arcadia," 271
Coxon (or Cockson), Thomas, engraver, portraits by, 13
Crebillon _fils_, 414
Cromwell, 84, 363, 381
Crowne's "Pandion and Amphigenia," 19, 389-391; 392, 395
D.
Davenport, 173
Davies, John, drawing from his translation of Sorel's "Berger
extravagant," 21
Day, John, "Ile of Guls," 263;
collaborator of Dekker, 331
"Debat de folie et d'amour," 173
Dedekind, 339
Defoe, 25, 26;
protest against the abbreviation of "Robinson Crusoe," 123, 124; 199,
260, 270, 294, 313, 320, 335, 345, 348, 390, 404, 417
Dekker, portrait of, 333;
on _Arcadianism_ and _Euphuism_, 261;
on Nash in the Elysian fields, 327;
plays and pamphlets by, 330-346;
love of literature, 332;
gaiety, 333;
Lamb on, 332;
Nash and, 334;
"Wonderfull Yeare," 335-338;
advice on behaviour at a play-house, 340-343
Desperriers, Bonaventure, 86
Devereux, Penelope, afterwards Lady Rich, Sidney's "Stella," 223, 224,
225, 227, 228
Dickens, Charles, 124
Dickenson, imitator of Lyly, 145, 146, 161 _note_
Disguises, fondness for, in Elizabethan times, 237-239
"Don
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