Moralities, or moral plays, [347].
More, Sir T., his psychological character, [289]—[302].
Mulcaster attempts orthographical reform, [385]; his praise of the English language, [386].
Mysteries, or Scriptural plays, [344]—[348].
Nobility, the, decline in grandeur in the time of Henry VII., [371]; decay of great households, [372]; restrained in their marriages by Elizabeth, [374].
Occasionalists, [423].
Occleve, the scholar of Chaucer, [191]—[195].
Oceana, the, of Sir J. Harrington, [692]—[705].
Oldmixon denies the genuine character of Clarendon’s history, [728]—[732].