Jodelle, Estienne, resemblances in ‘Venus and Adonis’ to a poem by, [75] n 2
his parody of the vituperative sonnet, [121] [122] and n
and ‘La Pléiade,’ [443]
John, King, old play on, attributed to the poet, [181]
John, King, Shakespeare’s play of, printed in 1623, [69]
the originality and strength of the three chief characters in, [69] [70]
For editions see Section xix. (Bibliography) [301-325]
Johnson, Dr., his story of Shakespeare, [33]
his edition of Shakespeare, [319] [320] [321]
his reply to Voltaire, [348]
Johnson, Gerard, his monument to the poet in Stratford Church, [276]
Johnson, Robert, lyrics set to music by, [255] and n
Jones, Inigo, designs scenic decoration for masques, [38] n 2
Jonson, Ben, on Shakespeare’s lack of exact scholarship, [16]
Shakespeare takes part in the performance of Every Man in his Humour and in Sejanus, [44]
on Titus Andronicus, [65]
on the appreciation of Shakespeare shown by Elizabeth and James I, [82]
on metrical artifice in sonnets, [106] n 1
use of the word ‘lover,’ [127] n
identified by some as the ‘rival poet,’ [136]
his ‘dedicatory’ sonnets, [138] n 2
his apostrophe of the Earl of Desmond, [140]
relations with Shakespeare, [176] [177]
gift of Shakespeare to his son, [177]
share in the appendix to ‘Love’s’ Martyr,’ [183]
quarrel with Marston and Dekker, [214-20]
his ‘Poetaster,’ [217] [218] and n
allusions to him in the Return from Parnassus, [219]
his scornful criticism of Julius Cæsar, [220] n
satiric allusion to A Winters Tale, [251]
his sneering reference to The Tempest in Bartholomew Fair, [255]
entertained by Shakespeare at New Place, Stratford, [271]
testimony to Shakespeare’s character, [277]
his tribute to Shakespeare in the First Folio, [306] [311] [327]
his Hue and Cry after Cupid, [432] n 2
Thorpe’s publication of some of his works, [395] n 3 [401]