FOOTNOTES:

[6] Richard Burbage (1567?-1619) was a noted English actor. He made his fame at the Blackfriars and the Globe, of which he was a proprietor. He excelled in tragedy, and is said to have been the original Hamlet, Lear, and Othello. He was a painter as well as an actor. When this fire occurred at the Globe Theatre, he narrowly escaped with his life.


[INDEX]

A-B-C book, [101].
abracadabra, [88].
absey, [102].
Adam Bell, [203], [241].
Adonai, [245].
a-good, [236].
ale-tasters, [40].
Alveston, [28], [31].
Ambrose, Earl of Warwick, [75], [171].
amulets, [87].
amusements, indoor, [67].
Anne, Lady, [8].
apricocks, [208], [244].
archery, [142].
Arden, Forest of, [222].
Arden, Richard, [53].
articles (in grammar), [226].
Ascham, Roger, [96], [115], [143], [224].
ash-tree (in charms), [89].
Aubrey, John, [184], [236].
Avon, the, [24].
backgammon, [70].
bait (in hawking), [157].
ball-games, [123].
Bancroft, the, [45].
Barclay, Alexander, [126], [230].
barley-break, [124].
base-ball, [123].
bat-fowling, [153].
bay-leaf (as charm), [90].
Baynes, Professor, [145], [231].
Bear (of Warwick), [4].
bear-baiting, [132].
bearing-cloth, [82].
Beauchamp, Richard, [7], [9].
Beauchamp, Thomas, [7].
beer, [58].
bells (of hawk), [157].
beshrew, [223].
Bevis, [203], [241].
bewrayeth, [228].
bid a base, [125].
bird-bolt, [145].
blind-man's-buff, [122].
Bolingbroke, Henry, [15].
bone-fires, [187].
Book of Riddles, [67], [71].
Books of Nurture, [60].
books, popular, [71].
bordarii, [28].
bottom (of thread), [73].
boundary elm, [174].
brach, [231].
bread, [58].
bride-ale, [184].
Brinsley, John, [66], [109], [229].
broken coxcomb, [203], [242].
Browne, Sir Thomas, [173], [235].
Browne, William, [183], [235].
Bullein, William, [56], [219].
Burbage, Richard, [234].
Bursall, Thomas, [33].
Burton, Robert, [57], [90], [127], [219], [224].
Butler, Bishop, [127], [230].
butts, [41], [217].
caddises, [202], [240].
Cage, the, [172], [234].
caitch, [230].
calendars, [223].
cankers (=canker-worms), [79], [222].
cantabanqui, [203], [241].
cappers, [16], [215].
caps, statute, [41], [203], [242].
caraways, [62], [83], [219], [223].
card-playing, [69].
caret, [227].
Carew, Richard, [185], [236].
chambers (cannon), [170], [234].
changelings, [84].
chantry, [32], [216].
Chapel Lane, [45].
Charlecote Hall, [19].
charms, [87].
chess, [71], [221].
chiding, [231].
children, training of, [60].
chimneys, [51].
chrisom, [81].
Christ Cross row, [101].
christenings, [80].
christening shirts, [82].
Christmas, [190].
clap in the clout, [144].
Clopton House, [192].
Clopton, Hugh, [33], [192].
Clopton, William, [193], [238].
closely (=secretly), [161].
Clymme of the Clough, [203], [241].
cock-fighting, [136].
cock-throwing, [138].
Colbrand, [10], [11].
coldest fault, [231].
Colet, Dean, [136], [231].
compass of a pale, [209], [244].
conceit (=intellect), [229].
confound (=ruin), [209], [244].
Corporation, Stratford, [39].
correctors for the print, [228].
Coryat, Thomas, [55], [219].
Cotgrave, Randle, [156], [232].
Cotsall, [147].
cottagers (feudal), [28].
counters, [239].
countervail, [229].
coursing, [147].
Coventry, [4], [14].
Coventry churches, [215].
coxcomb (=head), [203], [242].
craft-guilds, [34].
craven, [137].
cried upon it, [232].
cross-row, [101].
curtsy, [61], [219].
dagswain, [54].
deer-stealing, [21].
detest (=detested), [220].
dill (in magic), [222].
discovered (=uncovered), [162].
Drayton, Michael, [3], [123], [213].
drink-hael, [192].
drinks, [58].
ducking-stool, [40].
Dudley, Ambrose, [75], [171], [234].
Dudley, Robert, [7], [12].
Dugdale, William, [4], [16], [213].
dun cow, the, [10], [214].
Dun in the mire, [127].
dwelling-houses, [49].
Dyer, John, [193], [238].
Easter, [172].
elder-tree (in charms), [89].
Ellacombe, H. N., [209], [244].
Elohim, [245].
embossed, [231].
enfranchisement, [228].
English, neglect of, [106].
entend, [228].
enter children, to, [220].
E. R., [21], [244].
erring, [222].
Eton, May-day at, [178].
Eton, whipping at, [114].
evil eye, the, [85].
extravagant, [222].
eyas, [154].
fairing, [204].
fairs, [30], [198], [201].
fairy rings, [222].
falconet, [156].
featliest, [235].
fern-seed, [188].
Field, Henry, [53].
fill-horse, [240].
filliping the toad, [139].
fishing, [132].
flawns, [239].
flewed, [231].
flight (arrow), [145].
fond (=foolish), [117].
food, [57].
fool (a dish), [239].
fool (in pity), [231].
foot-ball, [125].
forehand shaft, [144].
forked heads (of arrows), [231].
forks, [55], [66].
Forman, Simon, [22], [215].
Four Sons of Aymon, The, [67], [71].
fowling, [151].
Friar Tuck, [179], [180], [221].
frumenty, [239].
furmenty, [239].
furniture, household, [52].
Furnivall, F. J., [66], [194].
games and sports, [121].
garden-craft in Shakespeare, [208].
gardens, Stratford, [51].
Gastrell, Rev. Francis, [51], [218].
George, Duke of Clarence, [9], [38].
Gesta Romanorum, [77], [221].
Gifford, William, [127], [230].
Giletta of Narbonne, [76], [221].
glisters, [232].
Godiva, [19].
gospel-trees, [174].
gossips' feast, [82].
Grammar School, Stratford, [38], [95].
Greene, Robert, [90], [224].
Guild chapel, [37], [96], [102], [202].
Guild, the Stratford, [34].
Guy of Warwick, [5], [9], [67], [71], [203].
Guy's Cliff, [9].
haggard (noun), [154].
handkerchiefs, [65].
handy-dandy, [129].
hang-hog, [226].
hare-hunting, [150].
Harrison, William, [52], [54], [58], [199], [218].
harry-racket, [122].
Harsnet, Samuel, [224].
harvest-home, [195].
hawking, [153].
Hell-mouth, [17].
Hentzner, Paul, [196], [239].
Herod (in old plays), [17], [215].
Heron, Robert, [86], [223].
Herrick, Robert, [196], [206], [240].
herse, [214].
Heywood, John, [190], [236].
hide-and-seek, [122].
hock-cart, [197].
hooded (hawk), [156].
hoodman-blind, [122], [230].
hook (=shepherd's crook), [235].
Hooker, Richard, [174], [235].
hopharlots, [54].
horn-book, [96].
horse, description of, [147].
horse (plural), [160], [232].
housen, [237].
Hundred Merry Tales, The, [67], [71].
Hunt, Thomas, [96], [115].
hunting, [145].
imp (=child), [7], [214].
incurious, [243].
Ingon, [192], [237].
inhooped, [137].
inkles, [240].
irks, [231].
ivy-bush (vintner's sign), [241].
James I. (his Demonology), [91].
jauncing, [232].
jesses, [157].
John of Stratford, [31], [32].
Johnson, Richard, [234].
joint-stools, [53].
Jones, Dr. John, [75], [221].
Jonson, Ben, [81], [118], [127], [188].
juggler (with ape), [241].
junkets, [243].
Kemp, William, [233].
Kenilworth, [4], [12], [132], [230].
Knight, Charles, [172], [181], [194], [202], [221].
knots (in garden), [207], [244].
lamb-ale, [184].
Laneham, Robert, [13], [215].
Latin (at school), [103].
Latin (in exorcisms), [98], [225].
latten, [81].
laund, [222].
leet-ale, [184].
leets, [40], [43], [184].
let down the wind, [157].
likes (=suits), [228].
lill-lill, [124].
Lilly, William, [105], [227].
Lodge, Thomas, [89], [224].
loggats, [122], [230].
Lord of Misrule, [192], [237].
Lucy, Sir Thomas, [20], [215].
Lupton, Thomas, [86], [223].
Lyttleton, Sir Thomas, [38].
Mab, [73], [74].
Macbeth, [79].
Maid Marian, [179], [181].
malkin, [240].
Mamillius, [74].
man (=tame), [154].
manor, [217].
marchpane, [83], [223].
market cross (Stratford), [44], [92].
markets, [198].
Markham, Gervase, [153].
marmalet, [83], [223].
Mantuan, the, [105].
mawkin, [240].
May-day, [176].
meals, [58], [61].
means (=tenors), [239].
Melton, John, [88].
merest loss, [232].
mews, [158].
micher, [112].
Midsummer Eve, [186].
moralities, [161].
More, Sir Thomas, [138], [231].
Morisco, [235].
morris-board, [130].
morris-dance, [179], [184], [233].
Mowbray, Thomas, [15].
Mulcaster, Richard, [106], [130], [227], [230].
musits, [232].
muss, [128].
napery, [240].
napkin, [65].
Neville, Richard, [8].
New Place, [33], [217].
nine-holes, [123].
nine men's morris, [129].
Nine Worthies, the, [18].
nuntions, [58].
O!—vocativo, O! [227].
'od's nouns, [226].
o'erlooked (=bewitched), [87].
offices, [237].
Old and New Style, [233].
orpine, [189].
pageants, [236].
painted cloths, [53].
Painter, William, [75], [221].
pale (=enclosure), [207], [244].
palle-malle, [230].
palmer, [236].
pardoner, [236].
Paris Garden, [135], [230].
passioning, [236].
Peacham, Henry, [96], [113], [114], [224].
penny-prick, [69].
penthouse, [50].
perambulation of parish, [74].
Percy, Thomas, [168], [234].
pigeon-holes (game), [70].
pinfold, [45], [217].
pitching the bar, [123].
plucking geese, [139].
poaching, [21].
pomander, [240].
pomegranate-flowers (as charm), [90].
pose (=cold in head), [52].
posies (in rings), [53], [199], [240].
prabbles, [227].
prank them up, [240].
preeches, [227], [229].
present (=immediate), [229].
prisoners' base, [124].
proceed in learning, [229].
properties, [243].
Puck, [74].
pummets, [70].
quack (=hoarseness), [52].
quails (for fighting), [137].
race (=root), [239].
raisins o' the sun, [239].
Ralph of Stratford, [31], [33].
rear-suppers, [58].
reredos, [52].
Rhodes, Hugh, [60], [219].
riffeling, [185].
ringlets (=fairy rings), [222].
rip up, [228].
Robert of Stratford, [31], [37], [244].
Robin Goodfellow, [74], [221].
Rother Market, [30], [50].
rushes (for floors), [54], [56], [218].
Sackerson, [135].
Saint George's Day, [167].
Saint John's wort, [189].
Saint Mary's Church, Warwick, [6].
sanctuary, [230].
sanded, [231].
school discipline, [113].
school life, [109].
school morals, [112].
Schoole of Vertue, The, [60].
Scot, Reginald, [90], [189], [224].
Seager, Francis, [60], [219].
sequestered, [231].
Shakespeare Birthplace, [49], [217].
Shakespeare mulberry-tree, [51], [218].
Shakespeare, Henry, [207].
Shakespeare, John, [26], [40], [53].
Shakespeare, Mary, [84].
sheep-shearing, [193].
Sheffield whittles, [240].
Shenstone, William, [101], [226].
Ship of Fools, The, [67], [200].
Shottery, [4].
shove-groat, [67].
shovel-board, [68].
shrewd (=evil), [112], [245].
Siddons, Mrs., [12].
Sir (title of priests), [226].
Skelton, John, [232].
slide-thrift, [67].
slip-groat, [67].
slipping a hawk, [156].
Smithe, Ralph, [142].
spoons, apostle, [80].
spoons, Latin, [81].
sprag, [227].
statute-caps, [41], [203], [242].
Steevens, George, [190], [236].
Stevenson, Matthew, [196], [239].
stool-ball, [122].
story-telling, [73].
Stow, John, [82], [222].
Stratford College, [33], [37].
Stratford corporation, [39].
Stratford early history, [27].
Stratford grammar school, [95].
Stratford Guild, [34], [37].
Stratford-on-Avon, [21].
Stratford topography, [43].
strikes (of planet), [231].
Strutt, Joseph, [67], [220].
Stubbes, Philip, [176], [178], [185], [206], [236].
Suckling, John, [235].
sun dancing at Easter, [173].
sweet hearts, [204], [246].
sweet-suckers, [83], [223].
swimming, [130].
table-linen, [55].
takes (of fairies), [231].
tassel-gentle, [156].
Taylor the Water Poet, [69], [220].
tender well, [231].
than (=then), [219].
theatres, movable, [14], [215].
theatrical entertainments, [160], [185].
then (=than), [220].
thorow, [65], [220].
three-man beetle, [139].
three-man songmen, [239].
tick (=tag), [125].
tick-tack, [70].
tod, [239].
told (=counted), [232].
took on him as a conjurer, [225].
toothache, charms for, [88].
toothpicks, [65].
Topas, Tale of Sir, [203], [241].
towels, [56].
tract (=track), [217].
training of children, [60].
tray-trip, [90].
treatably, [219].
treen, [55].
troll-my-dames, [70].
trumpet (=trumpeter), [222].
Tusser, Thomas, [114], [195], [229].
Udall, Nicholas, [114].
vaward, [231].
vervain, [80], [189], [222].
villeins, [28].
voiders, [62].
waes-hael, [192], [237].
wakes, [30], [205].
Wall, A. H., [168], [234].
Waller, Edmund, [126], [230].
Walton, Izaak, [235].
warden-pies, [239].
warlocks, [223].
Warner, William, [235].
Warwick, [4].
Warwickshire, [3].
wash-basins, [56].
Wat, [232].
watchet-colored, [235].
Webster, John, [90], [224].
which (=who), [228].
whifflers, [144].
whistled off (in hawking), [157].
white meats, [57].
Whitsuntide, [184].
whittles (noun), [240].
who (=which), [231].
wick-yarn, [240].
Wierus, [224].
Wife of Bath, [203], [242].
Willis, R., [112], [229].
Wilmcote, [4], [213].
wine, [58].
Wise, J. R., [26], [151].
witches, [79], [84].
Wolsey, Cardinal, [56].
woman's part (on stage), [236].
Woncot, [213].
Worthies, the Nine, [18].
wote, [223].
wrestling, [142].
yearned (=grieved), [232].

ARMS OF JOHN SHAKESPEARE