- ‘Damon and Pythias’ (Chettle), ii. [171].
- Damon and Pythias (Edwardes), ii. [34]; iii. [32], [310]; iv. [81], [143], [193].
- ‘Damon and Pythias’ (puppet-play), iii. [373].
- ‘Danish Tragedy’, ii. [179]; iii. [264].
- Darius (Alexander), iii. [209].
- Darius, King (Anon.), iii. [23]; iv. [8].
- David and Bethsabe, iii. [48], [461].
- Dead Man’s Fortune (plot), ii. [136]; iv. [9].
- ‘Death of the Duke of Guise’ (Anon.), i. [323].
- Death of the Duke of Guise (Marlowe). See [Massacre at Paris].
- Death of Robert Earl of Huntingdon. See [Robin Hood].
- ‘Delight’, ii. [89], [394]; iv. [97], [158].
- ‘Delphrigus’, iv. [236], [241].
- Denmark Entertainment, iii. [392]; iv. [70].
- Descensus Astraeae (show), i. [137]; iii. [463].
- ‘Destruction of Jerusalem’ (Legge), iii. [408]; iv. [246].
- ‘Destruction of Jerusalem’ (Smythe), iii. [409].
- ‘Destruction of Thebes’, i. [129]; iv. [85].
- ‘Devil and Dives’, iii. [411].
- Devil and his Dame. See [Grim the Collier of Croydon].
- ‘Devil of Dowgate’, iii. [232].
- Devil’s Charter, iii. [112], [214]; iv. [122].
- ‘Dialogue of Dives’, iv. [241].
- Dido (Gager), i. [129]; iii. [318].
- ‘Dido’ (Halliwell), i. [127].
- ‘Dido’ (Ritwise), ii. [11].
- ‘Dido and Aeneas’, ii. [132], [166]; iii. [374], [427].
- Dido Queen of Carthage (Marlowe), iii. [35], [426].
- ‘Diocletian’, ii. [143]; iii. [298].
- ‘Disguises’, ii. [144]; iii. [256].
- Disobedient Child, iii. [25], [351].
- Distracted Emperor. See [Charlemagne].
- Dixie Pageant, iii. [463].
- Doctor Faustus, ii. [281], [286]; iii. [329], [422]; iv. [44], [48].
- ‘Don Horatio’, ii. [122]; iv. [23].
- Double Falsehood, iii. [490].
- Downfall of Robert Earl of Huntingdon. See [Robin Hood].
- Dream of a Dry Year. See [Arabia Sitiens].
- Duchess of Malfi, iii. [510].
- ‘Duke Humphrey’, iii. [489].
- Duke of Guise, iii. [26].
- ‘Duke of Milan and Marquis of Mantua’, ii. [93]; iv. [97], [156].
- Dumb Knight, ii. [289]; iii. [418]; iv. [11].
- Dutch Courtesan, iii. [148], [430]; iv. [127], [128], [180], [182].
E
- ‘1, 2 Earl Godwin and his Three Sons’, ii. [166].
- ‘Earl of Hertford’, ii. [180].
- Eastward Ho! i. [326]; ii. [51]; iii. [149], [254], [257], [286], [367], [433]; iv. [36], [42], [129], [182].
- Edward I, iii. [460].
- Edward II, iii. [425]; iv. [9], [42], [44].
- Edward III, iv. [9].
- Edward IV, ii. [281]; iv. [10].
- Ehrebrecherin, ii. [275–6].
- Elstrild. See [Locrine].
- Elvetham Entertainment, iv. [66].
- Endymion, i. [327]; ii. [18–19]; iii. [33], [415]; iv. [103].
- England’s Joy (show), iii. [287], [500].
- ‘English Arcadia’, iv. [400].
- ‘English Fugitives’, ii. [173].
- English Traveller, iii. [339].
- Englishmen for my Money, iii. [334]; iv. [16].
- Enough is as Good as a Feast, iii. [504].
- Epicoene, i. [327]; ii. [59]; iii. [222], [230], [369]; iv. [371].
- Epidicus, iii. [5].
- Epithalamion on the Marquis of Huntly’s Marriage (show), iii. [351].
- ‘Erlösung aus der Löwengrube’, ii. [283–4].
- ‘Error’, ii. [15]; iv. [93], [151].
- Esther und Haman, ii. [285–6].
- Eugène, iii. [13].
- Eunuchus, iii. [5], [7].
- Eunuchus (tr. Bernard), iii. [236].
- ‘Eunuchus’ (tr. Kyffin?), iii. [398].
- Euribates Pseudomagus, iv. [374].
- Every Man In his Humour, iii. [359]; iv. [119], [171], [247].
- Every Man Out of his Humour, i. [381]; iii. [122], [128], [292], [360]; iv. [19], [119], [171].
- Every Woman in her Humour, iii. [418]; iv. [11].
- Exchange Ware at Second Hand. See [Ruff, Cuff and Band].
- ‘Ezechias’, i. [127].
F
- ‘Fabii’. See [‘Four Sons of Fabius’].
- Faery Pastoral, iii. [137], [464].
- ‘1, 2 Fair Constance of Rome’, ii. [161], [171], [173].
- Fair Em, iii. [325], [329]; iv. [11], [30], [36].
- Fair Maid of Bristow, iii. [431]; iv. [12].
- ‘Fair Maid of Italy’, ii. [95–6], [114].
- ‘Fair Maid of London’, i. [320].
- Fair Maid of the Exchange, iv. [13].
- ‘Fairy Knight’, iii. [304].
- Faithful Friends, iii. [232].
- Faithful Shepherdess, iii. [151], [221], [313]; iv. [41].
- Fall of Mortimer (fr.), iii. [374].
- Family of Love, iii. [440]; iv. [11], [29].
- Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth, ii. [202]; iii. [472]; iv. [17], [239].
- ‘Famous Wars of Henry I and the Prince of Wales’. See [‘Welshman’s Prize’].
- ‘Far Fetched and Dear Bought is Good for Ladies’, iv. [400].
- Fatal Dowry, iii. [314].
- ‘Fatal Love’, iii. [259]; iv. [5].
- Father’s Own Son. See [Monsieur Thomas].
- Fatum Vortigerni, iv. [374].
- Favola d’Orfeo, iii. [6].
- Fawn, or, Parasitaster, ii. [22], [284], [286]; iii. [140], [432]; iv. [42].
- Fedele, iii. [316].
- Fedele and Fortunio, iii. [28], [316]; iv. [13].
- ‘Felix and Philiomena’, ii. [106]; iv. [101], [160].
- ‘Felmelanco’, ii. [180]; iii. [471].
- ‘Ferrar’, ii. [93]; iv. [99], [159].
- Ferrex and Porrex. See [Gorboduc].
- ‘Ferrex and Porrex’ (Haughton), ii. [164], [171].
- Filli di Sciro, iii. [238].
- ‘Finding of Truth’, ii. [79].
- ‘First Introduction of the Civil Wars of France’, ii. [164], [169].
- ‘Five Plays in One’ (1585), ii. [106]; iii. [497]; iv. [101], [160].
- ‘Five Plays in One’ (1597), ii. [144]; iii. [347].
- Fleir, iii. [151], [490].
- Flora, iii. [13].
- Flowers (mask), i. [174]; iv. [59], [129].
- ‘Forces of Hercules’ (activities), ii. [90], [272].
- Forest of Elves. See [Faery Pastoral].
- Fortress of Perfect Beauty (tilt), i. [144]; iv. [63].
- Fortunato, ii. [285–6].
- ‘Fortune’, iv. [88], [146].
- ‘Fortune’ (lottery), iv. [400].
- Fortune by Land and Sea, iii. [343].
- ‘1, 2 Fortune’s Tennis’ (plot), ii. [177], [180]; iii. [448]; iv. [14].
- Fortunia. See [Susenbrotus].
- ‘Fount of New Fashions’. See [‘Isle of a Woman’].
- Fountain of Self-Love. See [Cynthia’s Revels].
- Four Elements, ii. [30]; iii. [23].
- ‘Four Kings’, ii. [167], [169]; iv. [6].
- Four PP., ii. [30].
- ‘Four Plays in One’, ii. [122]; iii. [497].
- Four Plays in One. See [Yorkshire Tragedy].
- Four Plays or Moral Representations in One, iii. [231].
- Four Prentices of London, iii. [221], [340].
- ‘Four Sons of Aymon’, ii. [181].
- ‘Four Sons of Fabius’, ii. [98], [394]; iv. [97], [156], [216].
- Fox. See [Volpone].
- Frederick and Basilea (plot), ii. [150]; iv. [14].
- Free Will (tr.), iii. [262].
- ‘Freeman’s Honour’, iii. [493].
- ‘French Comedy’ (1595), ii. [143].
- ‘French Comedy’ (1597), ii. [144].
- ‘French Doctor’, ii. [146], [180]; iii. [301].
- Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay, ii. [114]; iii. [328]; iv. [12].
- ‘Friar Fox and Gillian of Brentford’, ii. [169].
- ‘Friar Francis’, ii. [95]; iv. [253].
- ‘Friar Rush and the Proud Woman of Antwerp’, ii. [178].
- ‘Friar Spendleton’, ii. [132], [156], [166].
- ‘Fromme Frau zu Antorf’, ii. [281].
- Fucus, sive, Histriomastix, i. [253].
- Fulgens and Lucres, iii. [22–4].
- ‘Funeral of Richard Cœur de Lion’, i. [320]; ii. [166].
G
- Galathea, ii. [18]; iii. [34], [415]; iv. [103].
- ‘Galiaso’, ii. [143].
- Game at Chess, i. [327]; iii. [438].
- ‘Game of the Cards’, i. [268]; ii. [37]; iv. [99], [158].
- Gammer Gurton’s Needle, ii. [274]; iii. [27]; iv. [229].
- Genièvre, iii. [14].
- Gentle Craft. See [Shoemaker’s Holiday].
- Gentleman Usher, iii. [146], [251], [253].
- Gentleness and Nobility, ii. [30].
- George a Greene, the Pinner of Wakefield, iv. [14].
- ‘George Scanderbeg’, iv. [400].
- Gesta Grayorum (mask), i. [168]; iii. [240]; iv. [56], [109].
- ‘Gevatter’, ii. [286].
- ‘Ginecocratia’, iii. [470].
- Giocasta, iii. [321].
- Gismond of Salerne, iii. [30], [514]; iv. [82].
- ‘Give a Man Luck and Throw him into the Sea’, iv. [400].
- Glass of Government, iii. [321]; iv. [196].
- ‘God Speed the Plough’, ii. [95]; iv. [400].
- ‘2 Godfrey of Bulloigne’, ii. [143]; iii. [340].
- Godly Queen Hester, iii. [25], [311], [350].
- Golden Age, iii. [109], [114], [344].
- Golden Age Restored (mask), i. [174]; iii. [390]; iv. [130].
- ‘Golden Ass’. See [‘Cupid and Psyche’].
- Goosecap, Sir Giles, iii. [146], [251], [255]; iv. [11], [15].
- Gorboduc, i. [265]; iii. [29], [456]; iv. [80], [226].
- ‘Gowry’, i. [328]; ii. [211].
- ‘Graf von Angiers’, ii. [286].
- Great Duke of Florence, ii. [286].
- ‘Grecian Comedy’. See [‘Love of a Grecian Lady’].
- ‘Greek Maid’, ii. [89]; iv. [96], [154].
- Greene’s Tu Quoque, iii. [269]; iv. [20], [125], [126], [178], [254].
- Grim the Collier of Croydon, iv. [16].
- Griseldis, iii. [292].
- ‘Guido’, ii. [144].
- Guise (Marlowe). See [Massacre at Paris].
- ‘Guise’ (Webster), iii. [426], [434]; iv. [400].
- ‘Gustavus King of Swethland’, iii, [304].
- Guy Earl of Warwick, iii. [304].
- ‘Guy of Warwick’, ii. [127]; iii. [289], [304].
H
- Haddington Mask, i. [173]; iii. [381].
- Hamlet, i. [380]; ii. [193], [195], [202], [206], [209], [219], [286], [395]; iii. [107], [112], [116], [117], [185], [252], [397], [486]; iv. [33], [53], [234], [371].
- ‘Hannibal and Hermes’, ii. [166].
- ‘Hannibal and Scipio’, ii. [177].
- ‘Hardicanute’, ii. [132], [156], [167].
- ‘Hardshifte for Husbands’, iii. [472].
- Harefield Entertainment, iv. [67].
- Hay Mask, iii. [240].
- Heautontimorumenus, i. [75]; ii. [72]; iv. [82].
- Heautontimorumenus (tr.), iii. [236].
- Heaven’s Blessing and Earth’s Joy. See [Marriage of Frederick and Elizabeth].
- Hector of Germany, iii. [493].
- Hecyra (tr.), iii. [236].
- ‘Heliogabalus’, iii. [324]; iv. [401].
- Hemetes the Hermit. See [Woodstock Entertainment].
- ‘Hemidos and Thelay’, iv. [401].
- ‘Hengist’. See [‘Vortigern’].
- ‘Henry I’, ii. [144]; iii. [307], [489].
- ‘Henry II’, iii. [489].
- 1 Henry IV, i. [220], [311]; ii. [6], [196], [204], [217], [443]; iii. [307], [484]; iv. [36], [127], [180], [246], [371].
- 2 Henry IV, ii. [196], [217], [293], [443]; iii. [485]; iv. [127], [180], [246], [371].
- ‘Henry V’ (Anon.), ii. [144], [211]; iv. [17].
- Henry V (Shakespeare), ii. [203], [211], [415]; iii. [485]; iv. [9], [119], [171].
- Henry V. See [Famous Victories].
- 1 Henry VI, i. [260]; ii. [122], [129–30], [201]; iii. [55], [97], [481]; iv. [8], [17], [238].
- 2 Henry VI, ii. [129–30], [202]; iii. [113], [481]; iv. [8], [34], [43].
- 3 Henry VI, ii. [129–30], [200], [202]; iii. [481]; iv. [8].
- Henry VIII (Rowley). See [When You See Me, You Know Me].
- Henry VIII (Shakespeare), ii. [95], [130], [202], [217], [219], [419]; iii. [489].
- ‘Henry of Cornwall’, ii. [122]; iv. [2].
- ‘2 Henry Richmond’, ii. [161], [171].
- ‘Herbert Mask’, iii. [377].
- ‘1, 2 Hercules’, ii. [143–4], [167]; iii. [345]; iv. [4].
- Hercules Furens (tr.), iii. [477].
- Hercules Oetaeus (fr. tr.), iii. [311].
- Hercules Oetaeus (tr.), iii. [478].
- Herod and Antipater, iii. [417].
- Herodes, iv. [375].
- ‘Herpetulus the Blue Knight and Perobia’, ii. [97]; iv. [89], [148].
- ‘Herzog von Florenz und Edelmanns Tochter’, ii. [281], [286].
- ‘Herzog von Mantua und Herzog von Verona’, ii. [286].
- ‘Hester and Ahasuerus’, ii. [140], [193], [202].
- Hickscorner, iii. [22].
- Highgate Entertainment, i. [126]; iii. [392].
- Himatia Poleos (show), i. [137]; iii. [449].
- Hippolytus, iii. [3], [319].
- Hippolytus (tr.), iii. [478].
- Hispanus, iv. [375].
- ‘Histoire Angloise contre la Roine d’Angleterre’, i. [323].
- ‘History of Love and Fortune’, iv. [28].
- ‘History of the Old Testament’, ii. [11].
- Histriomastix, i. [381–2]; iii. [135], [362]; iv. [17].
- ‘Hit Nail o’ th’ Head’, iii. [437].
- Hoffman, iii. [264].
- Honest Lawyer, iv. [19].
- Honest Man’s Fortune, i. [321]; ii. [251]; iii. [227].
- 1, 2 Honest Whore, iii. [294].
- Horestes, iii. [38], [466]; iv. [84], [144].
- ‘Hot Anger Soon Cold’, ii. [169].
- How a Man may Choose a Good Wife from a Bad, iii. [342]; iv. [19].
- ‘How to Learn of a Woman to Woo’, iii. [342]; iv. [119], [171].
- Hue and Cry after Cupid. See [Haddington Mask].
- Huff, Suff, and Ruff. See [Cambyses].
- Humorous Day’s Mirth, iii. [251].
- ‘Humorous Earl of Gloucester with his Conquest of Portugal’, ii. [179]; iv. [28].
- Humour out of Breath, iii. [287].
- Hunting of Cupid, iii. [462]; iv. [54].
- ‘Huon of Bordeaux’, ii. [95]; iii. [304].
- Hymenaei (mask), i. [172]; iii. [378]; iv. [120].
- Hymenaeus, iv, [375].
- ‘Hymen’s Holiday’, ii. [244]; iv. [126], [178].
- Hymen’s Triumph, i. [174]; iii. [276]; iv. [129].
I