‘Troy Book,’ Lydgate’s, [227]
True Tragedie of Richard III, The, an anonymous play, [63] [301]
True Tragedie of Richard, Duke of Yorke, and the death of good King Henry the Sixt, as it was sundrie times acted by the Earl of Pembroke his servants, The, [59]
Turbervile, George, use of the word ‘sonnet’ by, [427] n 2
Twelfth Night: description of a betrothal, [23] n
indebtedness to the story of ‘Apollonius and Silla,’ [53]
date of production, [209]
allusion to the ‘new map,’ [209] [210] n 1
produced at Middle Temple Hall, [210]
Manningham’s description of, [210]
probable source of the story, [210]
For editions see Section xix. (Bibliography), [301-25]
Twiss, F., [364] n
Two Gentlemen of Verona: allusion to Valentine travelling from Verona to Milan by sea, [43]
date of production, [52]
probably an adaptation, [53]
source of the story, [53]
farcical drollery, [53]
first publication, [53]
influence of Lyly, [62]
satirical allusion to sonnetteering, [107] [108]
resemblance of it to All’s Well that Ends Well, [163]
For editions see Section xix. (Bibliography), [301-25]
Two Noble Kinsmen, The: attributed to Fletcher and Shakespeare, [259] and n
Massinger’s alleged share in its production, [259]
plot drawn from Chaucer’s ‘Knight’s Tale,’ [260]
Twyne, Lawrence, the story of Pericles in the ‘Patterne of Painfull Adventures’ by, [244]