502 index
Dark Lady 139–140, 358, 390,
391, 395, 396, 397, 400,
401, 421
Darnley, Henry, Lord 104, 146,
266, 267
Davies, Sir John 140
Gullinge Sonnets 140, 212
and Herbert (Mary Sidney)
216
dawn song. See alba
“Death of Robin Hood, The.”
See “Robin Hood’s Death and
Burial”
Decameron (Boccaccio) 87, 100,
193, 204, 317, 342
Defense of Poesy, The (Sidney)
43, 49, 51, 63, 127, 140–142,
166, 288, 401, 408
deibide 300, 304
Delia (Daniel) 139, 142–145
Delia: Sonnet 5 (Daniel) 145
Delia: Sonnet 6 (Daniel) 143–144
Delia: Sonnet 31 (Daniel) 144
Delia: Sonnet 32 (Daniel) 144
Delia: Sonnet 33 (Daniel) 144
Delia: Sonnet 34 (Daniel) 144
Delia: Sonnet 45 (Daniel) 144–
145, 163
“Deliver me from my enemies”
(Herbert). See Sidneian Psalms:
Psalm 59 (Herbert)
“Deor” 125, 145, 171, 239,
352, 466, 477
“De principe bono et malo”
(More) 146, 282
“Description of Spring, Wherein
Every Thing Renews, Save
Only the Lover” (Surrey). See
“Soote Season, The” (Surrey)
“Descriptions of the contrarious
passions in a lover” (Wyatt).
See “I find no peace, and all
my war is done” (Wyatt)
“Desire, though thou my old
companion art” (Sidney). See
Astrophil and Stella: Sonnet 72
(Sidney)
Destruction of Troy, The 10, 117
“Deus Deorum.” See Sidneian
Psalms: Psalm 50 (Herbert)
Devereux, Penelope 36, 38–39,
49, 51, 53, 62, 63, 74, 408,
421
Devonshire Manuscript 297
“Devouring Time, blunt thou
the lion’s paws” (Shakespeare).
See Shakespeare’s sonnets:
Sonnet 19
Dialogues (Gregory the Great)
6, 170
Diana (Constable) 127, 436
“Diana—on a time—walking the
wood” (Barnfield). See Cynthia,
with Certain Sonnets: Sonnet 9
(Barnfield)
didactic romance 346
Discovery of Guiana (Raleigh)
288
“Divers doth use” (Wyatt) 146
Divine Comedy (Dante) 8, 100,
103, 220, 308, 309, 341
Domesday Book, The 290
“Domine Probasti.” See Sidneian
Psalms: Psalm 139 (Herbert)
Donne, John 54, 217, 224, 310,
403, 421
“Doubt of Future Foes, The”
(Elizabeth I) 146–148
“Doubt which ye misdeeme,
fayre love, is vaine, The”
(Spenser). See Amoretti: Sonnet
65 (Spenser)
Douglas, Gavin 69, 118, 148,
215, 352, 450
Douglas, James 93, 94
Dowland, John 148–149
“Come away, come sweet
love” 104, 120–121
Dowriche, Anne Edgecumbe
149, 444
The French History 149,
196–197
Drayton, Michael 149, 277
and Barnfield (Richard) 74
Ideas Mirrour 149, 223–225
Idea the Shepheards Garland
149, 223, 225
on New World 288
Dream of Scipio (Cicero) 308,
309
Dream of the Rood, The 1, 27,
95, 149–151, 198, 350, 462
dream vision 9, 151–152,
272, 273
by Barnfield (Richard) 133
by Blind Hary 455
by Charles d’Orléans 191
by Chaucer (Geoffrey) 89,
90, 91–92, 151, 204, 219,
220, 243, 307
in “The Crowned King” 132
by Douglas (Gavin) 148
in The Dream of the Rood
95, 150, 198, 350
by English Chaucerians 163
by Henryson (Robert) 281
by James I 230, 236
by Langland (William) 151,
273, 283, 310, 320–330
in Mum and the Sothsegger
283
in Pearl 151, 312, 314
by Skelton (John) 199, 201
Druids 133
Dunbar, William 152–153, 274
aureation used by 69
and Blind Hary 86
and flyting 153, 190
and Henryson (Robert)
215, 216
“Lament for the Makaris”
153, 215, 237, 239–240,
353
rhyme royal used by 343
satires by 352
as Scottish Chaucerian 153,
352, 353
Dyce, Alexander 200
Dyer, Edward 107
e
eardstapa 456
early Irish sagas 133, 154–155,
296
early Irish verse 155–156, 211
early modern v. Renaissance
156–158
“Earth upon Earth.” See “Erthe
toc of the Erthe with woh”
Easter Sonnet (Spenser). See
Amoretti: Sonnet 68 (Spenser)
eclogue 158. See also pastoral
Eclogues (Virgil) 28, 74, 118,
158, 173, 450
ecphrasis. See ekphrasis
Eddas. See Old Norse/Icelandic
Eddas and sagas
Edgecumbe, Anne. See
Dowriche, Anne Edgecumbe
Edgerton manuscript 434
Edmund of Abingdon 290
Edward I (king of England) 93,
345, 439–440, 455, 456
Edward II (king of England)
208, 345
Edward III (king of England)
24, 25, 84, 110, 208, 221,
277, 323, 408
Edward IV (king of England)
208, 458–459
Edward VI (king of England)
129–130, 159, 215, 266
Egerton manuscript 478
ego 48
ekphrasis 19, 158
Elder Edda 299
elegy 158–159, 445
by Chaucer (Geoffrey) 89
consolatio in 125
by Henryson (Robert) 344
by Herbert (Mary Sidney)
402, 437
pastoral 158, 159, 225,
418
by Raleigh (Sir Walter) 336
“The Ruin” 159, 349
“The Seafarer” 353
by Skelton (John) 318
by Spenser (Edmund) 159,
401
by Surrey (Henry Howard)
418, 419
“The Wanderer” 158–159,
456, 457
“The Wife’s Lament” 470,
471
“Wulf and Eadwacer” 477
“Elegy on the Duke of
Richmond” (Surrey). See “So
Cruel Prison” (Surrey)
“Eliduc” (Marie de France) 159,
264
Elizabethan sonnet. See English
sonnet
Elizabeth I (queen of England)
130, 159–162, 215
and Barnfield (Richard) 74,
133, 134
and Campion (Thomas)
130
and courtly love 130, 131,
161
and Davies (Sir John) 140
“The Doubt of Future Foes”
146–148
and Dowland (John) 148
and Drayton (Michael) 225
and Gascoigne (George)
202, 256
and Greville (Sir Fulke)
98, 211
and Herbert (Mary Sidney)
130, 168, 169, 174, 216,
403, 404, 438, 444
and James I (king of
England and [as James VI]
of Scotland) 230
and Mary I 159, 160, 266,
475, 476
and Mary, Queen of Scots
146–148, 160, 161, 266
“On Monsieur’s Departure”
161, 301–302
panegyrics for 304
and Raleigh (Sir Walter)
130, 247, 268–269, 336
and role of women 157
and Shakespeare (William)
162, 319, 357, 389–390,
449
and Sidney (Sir Philip) 44,
53, 62, 69, 130, 142,
408, 421
and Southwell (Robert)
422–423
and Spenser (Edmund) 22,
23, 31, 130, 133, 161,
173, 174, 176, 184, 268,
269, 401, 402, 421, 424,
444
in Tower of London 160,
439, 475
translations by 87, 126
unmarried status of 160–
161, 301, 462–463
on Venus and Adonis 185,
448
“When I Was Fair and
Young” 462–463