The Facts on File Companion to British Poetry Before 1600

(coco) #1
index 511

Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
124 389–390
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
126 251, 390–391
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
127 391–392, 397
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
128 392–393
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
129 393, 397, 398
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
130 85, 393–394, 397
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
138 394–395
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
139 395–396
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
140 396–397
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
141 397
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
144 390, 394, 397–398
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
146 398–399
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
147 139, 399–400
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
152 400
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
153 401
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
154 140, 401
“Shall I compare thee to a
summer’s day?” (Shakespeare).
See Shakespeare’s sonnets:
Sonnet 18
Shepheardes Calender, The
(Spenser) 74, 118, 158, 173,
225, 330, 401–402, 408,
423, 450
Shepheardes Calender, The: “Maye
Eclogue” (Spenser) 402
“Shipman’s Tale, The” (Chaucer)
87, 101, 173
Ship of Fools (Barclay) 73, 318,
352
Sidneian Psalms (Sidney and
Herbert) 109, 168–169, 216,
402–407, 437–438, 444
Sidneian Psalms: Psalm 50
(Herbert) 403–404
Sidneian Psalms: Psalm 58
(Herbert) 404–405
Sidneian Psalms: Psalm 59
(Herbert) 405
Sidneian Psalms: Psalm 71
(Herbert) 406
Sidneian Psalms: Psalm 120
(Herbert) 406–407
Sidneian Psalms: Psalm 121
(Herbert) 407
Sidneian Psalms: Psalm 139
(Herbert) 407
Sidney, Robert. See Leicester,
Robert Sidney, earl of


Sidney, Sir Philip 407–408
antithesis used by 27
apostrophe used by 28, 42,
44, 46, 52, 54, 59, 60, 64,
65, 66, 221
Astrophil and Stella. See
Astrophil and Stella
(Sidney)
ballades by 70
blazon used by 36, 64,
85, 108
Certain Sonnets 107–109,
335, 408
chiasmus used by 41, 52,
55, 62, 113
classical tradition and 117
The Defense of Poesy 43, 49,
51, 63, 127, 140–142,
166, 288, 401, 408
and Drayton (Michael) 223,
225
and Greville (Sir Fulke)
211, 407, 408
and Herbert (Mary Sidney)
35, 216, 402–407, 408,
437–438
“The Nightingale” 288–289
and Shakespeare (William)
391, 398
Sidneian Psalms 109,
168–169, 216, 402–407,
437–438, 444
and Spenser (Edmund) 11,
12, 159, 177, 401, 408,
424
translations by 107, 109,
168–169, 402–407,
437–438
and Vaughan Lock (Anne)
267
and Wyatt (Sir Thomas) 35,
36, 37, 188
“Siege of Calais, The” (Minot)
408
Siege of Jerusalem, The 10, 11
Siege of Thebes, The (Lydgate)
117, 257, 346
Siege of Troy, The 73, 346
“Sighing, and sadly sitting by my
love” (Barnfield). See Cynthia,
with Certain Sonnets: Sonnet 11
(Barnfield)
“Since brass, nor stone,
nor earth, nor boundless
sea” (Shakespeare). See
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
65
“Since there’s no help, come, let
us kiss and part” (Drayton).
See Ideas Mirrour: Sonnet 61
(Drayton)
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
28, 31, 119, 203, 273, 312,
346, 409–412

alliteration in 9, 10, 213,
412
beheading game in 77, 133
and “The Birth of Robin
Hood” 81
carol in 104
chivalry in 28, 31, 114,
189
manuscript of 264, 409
Trojan War in 117
“Sir Landevale” 240
Sir Launfal (Chestre) 240, 344,
412–414
Sir Orfeo 242, 243, 255, 346,
414–416
“Sir Walter Raleigh to his Son”
(Raleigh) 416–417
“Si Vere Utique.” See Sidneian
Psalms: Psalm 58 (Herbert)
Skeat, Walter 99
Skelton, John 352, 417–418
flyting by 190
Garland of Laurel 129,
199–202, 417
and Henry VIII 215, 352,
417, 445
“Knolege, Aquayntance,
Resort, Fauour with
Grace” 237
“Lullay, Lullay, Like a Child”
256–257
“Philip Sparrow” 317–318
and Shakespeare (William)
319
and Spenser (Edmund) 401
“The Tunning of Elinour
Rumming” 445
“Womanhood, Wanton”
473
Skeltonics 199, 201, 202, 318,
417, 418, 445
Snorra Edda 299
Snorri Sturluson 299
“So Cruel Prison” (Surrey)
418–419
“Some glory in their birth, some
in their skill” (Shakespeare).
See Shakespeare’s sonnets:
Sonnet 91
Somerset, Edward Seymour,
duke of 160, 418, 428
“Sometime I Fled the Fire”
(Wyatt) 419, 479
Song 6 (Leicester) 245–246
Songes and Sonnettes. See Tottel’s
Miscellany
Song of Roland 114
sonnet 419–420. See also
English sonnet; Italian
sonnet; Spenserian sonnet;
strambotto
antithesis in 27
blazon in 85, 420, 421
couplet in 129, 163
enjambment in 163

envois in 163
hyperbole in 221
metonymy in 269
paradox in 317
quatrains in 335
sestet in 354
synecdoche in 429
volta in 452
Sonnet 16 (Petrarch) 142
Sonnet 140 (Petrarch) 250,
255
Sonnet 164 (Petrarch) 4
Sonnet 165 (Petrarch) 144
Sonnet 190 (Petrarch) 465
Sonnet 297 (Petrarch) 144
“Sonnet on Ticho Brahe, A”
(James VI) 420
sonnet sequence 27, 127–128,
317, 420–421
“Soote Season, The” (Surrey)
421–422
“So shall I live supposing thou
art true” (Shakespeare). See
Shakespeare’s sonnets: Sonnet
93
Southampton, Henry
Wriothesley, earl of 251, 357,
421, 448
Southwell, Robert 422–423,
439
“The Burning Babe” 95–96,
423
Spanish Armada 157, 161,
196, 423
“Speak, Echo, tell; how may I
call my love?” (Barnfield). See
Cynthia, with Certain Sonnets:
Sonnet 13 (Barnfield)
Speculum ecclesiae (Edmund of
Abingdon) 290
Spenser, Edmund 130, 423–
424, 427
Amoretti 11–23, 85, 142,
173, 317, 421, 424
ballades by 70
and Barclay (Alexander)
73–74
and Barnfield (Richard) 74,
133, 137
and Drayton (Michael) 149,
223, 225
ekphrasis used by 19, 158
Epithalamion 11, 13, 167–
168, 421, 424
The Faerie Queene. See Faerie
Queene, The (Spenser)
and Herbert (Mary Sidney)
216
laments by 239
and Raleigh (Sir Walter) 8,
12, 173–174, 175, 178,
268–269, 424
rhyme royal used by 343
and Shakespeare (William)
12, 251, 374
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