Endimion (Lyly), edited by Dilke, [167]; allegory in, [168] n.
Endimion and Phoebe (Drayton), [169]; echoed by Keats, [216]
Endings of Lines Closed, Keats’s avoidance of, [207] Double, Keats’s relinquishment of, [207]
End Moor, the toper at, [273], [277]
End rime-syllables
Chaucerian, [94]-5
Elizabethan, [95] et sqq.
Endymion, the Greek myth of, [166] & n.
Browne’s reference to, [167]-8 & n.
in Elizabethan poetry, [167] et sqq.