504 index
Frauenlied 470, 478
French History, The (Dowriche)
149, 196–197
French language 23–24, 124,
191, 210, 240, 270, 290,
348
Freud, Sigmund 48
“Friar’s Tale, The” (Chaucer)
100
Froissart, Jean 164
“From fairest creatures we desire
increase” (Shakespeare).
See Shakespeare’s sonnets:
Sonnet 1
“From you have I been absent
in the spring” (Shakespeare).
See Shakespeare’s sonnets:
Sonnet 98
“Full many a glorious morning
have I seen” (Shakespeare).
See Shakespeare’s sonnets:
Sonnet 33
Fumerton, Patricia 36
futhark alphabet 94–95, 197–
198, 296, 298, 350
fyttes 208
G
Galen 254
Garland of Laurel (Skelton) 129,
199–202, 417
Garland of Laurel: “To Margery
Wentworthe” (Skelton) 200
Garland of Laurel: “To Mistress
Isabell Pennel” (Skelton)
200–201
Garland of Laurel: “To Mistress
Jane Blennerhasset” (Skelton)
201
Garland of Laurel: “To Mistress
Margarete Hussey” (Skelton)
201–202
Garnet, Henry 422
“Garwuf” (Marie de France). See
“Bisclavret” (Marie de France)
Gascoigne, George 202–203
“Lullabie” 256
Piers Plowman tradition
and 331
and Raleigh (Sir Walter)
336
“Seven Sonnets for
Alexander Neville”
356–357
“Woodmanship” 473–474
Gawain 28, 29, 30, 31, 77,
115, 189, 346, 409–412, 414,
459–460
Gawain Cycle 115, 273, 299,
412
Gawain-poet 28, 86, 119, 151,
203, 312, 409, 426
gender critics
on Chaucer (Geoffrey) 92,
102, 276, 442
on Shakespeare (William)
359, 366–367, 449
on Sidney (Sir Philip) 289
on Sir Gawain and the Green
Knight 412
on Skelton (John) 318
on Wyatt (Sir Thomas) 434
General Prologue to the
Canterbury Tales (Chaucer)
203–208
blazon in 85
descriptions in 99, 100,
101, 261, 292, 306–307,
340, 467
on four humors 192
locus amoenus in 422
Lollardism in 330
personification in 316–317
physiognomy in 319
as satire 204, 207, 208,
320, 351, 435
on social class 195, 435
Geoffrey of Monmouth 28, 29,
30, 95, 348
Georgics (Virgil) 173, 416, 450
Geste des Bretons (Wace). See
Roman de Brut (Wace)
Gest of Robyn Hode, A 208–209,
345
“Get up and bar the door” 190,
209–210
Giovo, Paolo 139
gnomic verse. See Anglo-Saxon
riddles
Golding, Arthur 302, 373
Goodeere, Sir Henry 149
Gower, John 25, 210, 351
and Charles d’Orléans 191
and Chaucer (Geoffrey)
163, 204, 210, 244,
261–262, 469
classical tradition and 117,
118
Confessio Amantis. See
Confessio Amantis (Gower)
and Dunbar (William) 153
and James I (king of
Scotland) 236
on Peasants’ Revolt 316
and Skelton (John) 199
and Surrey (Henry Howard)
34
Graelent 412
“Grave Marked with Ogham, A”
211, 296
Great Rising/Great Revolt. See
Peasants’ Revolt (1381)
Greenblatt, Stephen 183
Gregory the Great (pope) 6,
170, 269–270, 355–356, 426
Greville, Sir Fulke 211
Caelica 97–98, 211
and Sidney (Sir Philip) 211,
407, 408
“Grief, find the words; for thou
hast made my brain” (Sidney).
See Astrophil and Stella: Sonnet
94 (Sidney)
“Guigemar” (Marie de France)
211–212, 242, 264
“Guildeluec and Guilliadun”
(Marie de France). See
“Eliduc” (Marie de France)
Guillaume de Lorris 32, 306,
309
“Gull, The” (Dafydd ap Gwilym)
138
Gullinge Sonnets (Davies) 140,
212
Gwerful Mechain 461
h
hagiography 213, 273
Anglo-Saxon 26, 233
on Arthur 30
by Chaucer (Geoffrey) 100,
101, 263
as exemplum 170
and romance 213, 346
half-line 9, 26, 95, 98, 213,
228, 477
Handlyng Synne (Mannyng)
213–214, 261
Hansen, Elaine Tuttle 470
“Happy ye leaves when as those
lilly hands” (Spenser). See
Amoretti: Sonnet 1 (Spenser)
“Hávamál” 299
“Having this day my horse, my
hand, my lance” (Sidney). See
Astrophil and Stella: Sonnet 41
(Sidney)
Heneage, Sir Thomas 187
Hengwrt manuscript 102
Heninger, S. K. 293, 294
Henry I (king of England) 25,
189
Henry II (king of England)
290, 302
Henry III (king of England) 302
Henry IV (king of England) 24,
25, 121, 125, 164, 165, 210,
230, 249, 282
Henry V (king of England) 3–4,
132, 219, 230
Henry VI (king of England) 92,
440, 458
Henry VII (king of England)
129, 417, 459
Henry VIII (king of England)
129, 214–215, 266
“Corpus Christi Carol”
on 128
“The Holly and the Ivy”
by 104
and More (Sir Thomas) 282
and Skelton (John) 215,
352, 417, 445
and Surrey (Henry Howard)
33–34, 418, 428–429,
463, 479
and Wyatt (Sir Thomas)
188, 215, 283, 285, 419,
424–425, 430, 434, 453,
466, 478
Henryson, Robert 215–216,
352, 353
aureation used by 69, 216
“The Bludy Serk” 86
and Boccaccio (Giovanni)
87, 433
and Dunbar (William) 152,
215, 216
The Morall Fabillis of Esope
the Phrygian 76, 86,
215–216, 278–282
rhyme royal used by 216,
343
“Robene and Makyne” 104,
216, 311, 344
The Testament of Cresseid
216, 353, 433, 447
Henry the Minstrel. See Blind
Hary
heptameter 192
Herbert, Mary Sidney 216–217,
444
and Daniel (Samuel) 139,
142, 143, 216
and Drayton (Michael) 223,
225
“Even now that Care” 168–
169, 403, 404, 444
Sidneian Psalms 109,
168–169, 216, 402–407,
437–438, 444
and Sidney (Sir Philip)
35, 216, 402–407, 408,
437–438
“To Thee Pure Sprite” 216,
402, 437–438
“To the Thrice-Sacred Queen
Elizabeth” 438–439
translations by 109, 168–
169, 216–217, 402–407,
437–438
“Here, hold this glove—this
milk-white cheverel glove”
(Barnfield). See Cynthia, with
Certain Sonnets: Sonnet 14
(Barnfield)
Herebert, William, “What is he,
this lordling, that cometh from
the fyht” 461–462
hermeneutical Latin 5
Hero and Leander (Marlowe)
168, 217–218, 265, 310, 448
heroic couplet 129, 218, 222,
425
Heroic Cycle 154
heroic quatrain 425
Heroides (Ovid) 2, 103, 217,
229, 245, 302
hexameter 1, 5
Heywood, John 266
“A Ballad on the Marriage of
Philip and Mary” 70–71