Aldersgate Street,89,122.Aldgate,155.All Hallows, Barking,143.All Hallows Church, Bread St.,42,45,306.All Hallows, Staining, tower of,155.Amersham,116.Andrewes, Bishop,289.“Arcades,”81.“Areopagitica,”94.Artillery Walk,110,119.Ascham, Roger,201.Askew, Anne,191.Austin Friars,24.Austin Friars’ Church,185-188.Bacon, Francis,225.Bancroft, Francis,173.Barbican,95.Bartholomew Close,105.Bartholomew Fair,218.Baroni, Leonora,87.Baxter, Richard,107,108,197,276.Beaconsfield,113,115.Beaumont,288.Bethlehem Hospital,175,303.Billingsgate,292.Blake, Admiral,257.“Blindness, On His,” Milton’s ode,104.Blue Coat School,195-199.Boleyn, Annie,132,283.Bread Street,42-46,120.Browne, Robert,68.Buckingham, Duke of,243,256.Buckinghamshire,112-119.Bunhill Fields,111,120.Burke, Edmund,116.Burleigh,226.Cæsar, Sir Julius,174.Cambridge,57-77;university life in Milton’s time,64.Camden, William,252,266.Caxton, William,269.Chalfont St. Giles,111,112.Charles I.,244-248,272,274.Charles II.,250,262,298.Charing Cross,99.Charterhouse,202-208.Cheever, Ezekiel,198.Chenies,112.Chequer’s Court,118.“Cheshire Cheese, The,”229.Christ’s Church,197.Christ’s College,59,62.Christ’s Hospital,195-199.Civil War,87,92.Clarendon, Earl of,259.“Comus,”80,82,96.Conventual establishments,22.Covent Garden,237-239.Cranmer, Archbishop,280.Cromwell, Oliver,59,92,101,141,180,228,244,248,249,256-258,261.“Cromwell, Ode to,” Milton’s,104,106.Cromwell, Richard,105,111.Crosby Hall,164-170.Danish Remains in London,20.Darwin at Christ’s College,64.Dickens on Old London Churches,152-154.Diodati, Charles,88,91.Dryden, John,122,248,297,306.Dutch in London,186.Education, Milton’s Essay on,94.Eliot, Sir John,134-136,268,270.Elizabethan Age,36.Elizabeth, Queen,208,241,262.Ellwood, Thomas,109,111,115.Ely Cathedral,71.Ely Place,221.Emmanuel College,60,62.Evelyn,267,296.Exchange, The Royal,184,298.Fire of London, The Great,120,145,189,295-298.Fletcher,288.Forest Hill,93.Fox, George,120.Fox, John,181.“Fresher’s Don’t, The,”76.Frobisher, Martin,181.Galileo,86.Gatehouse, Westminster,267.Geneva, Milton at,87.Gill, Alexander, Milton’s schoolmaster,53.Globe Theatre,286.Gog and Magog,190.Gothic architecture,26-30,34.Gray’s Inn,225.Great Hampden,117.Great Kimble,119.Gresham College,184.Gresham, Sir Thomas,172,184.Grey, Lady Jane,132.Grotius, Hugo,85.Grub Street,111.Guild Hall, The,189-193.Hakluyt, Richard,266.Hampden, John,117-119,268.Hatton, Sir Christopher,223.Haw, The,51.Heminge and Condell, monument to,193.Henry VIII.,249.Heylin, Peter,261.Hobson,57.Holbein,157,241.Holborn,98,106,225.Hooker, Richard,234.Horton,78-84,92.“Il Penseroso,”68,82.Inns of Court,225-235.Ireland, Horrors in,92.Italy, Milton in,86.James I.,262.Jeffreys, Judge,196,234.Jerusalem Chamber,264.Jesus College,60.Jewin Street,107.Jones, Inigo,238,240,242,262.Jonson, Ben,180,228,252.Jordan’s,115.Juxon, Bishop,246,280.King’s College Chapel,67.King, Edward,82.Knox, John,116.“L’Allegro,”82.Lambeth Palace,277-286.Lasco, John a,186,188.Laud, Archbishop,144,156,281,284.Lawes, Henry,81,96,97,224.Lincoln’s Inn,227-228.Lincoln’s Inn Fields,98.Lollard’s Tower,49,282.London, origin and early topography,14-25.London life in Milton’s time,38-40.London Bridge,289-291.Long Acre,237.Lovelace, Richard,268.“Lycidas,”82,83.Manso,87.Mary of Modena,278.Marvell, Andrew,104,108,247,248.“Massacre in Piedmont, On the Late,”104.Massinger,288.Mermaid Tavern,46.Milborne, Sir John, almshouses built by,154.Mildmay, Sir Walter,214.Milton, Anne, sister of the poet,43,57,83,89,124.Milton, Christopher, brother of the poet,43,83,92,97,124.Milton, Deborah, daughter of the poet,102,107,108,124.Milton, John, father of the poet,42,78,92,94,97.Milton, John, son of the poet,102.Milton, Mary, daughter of the poet,98,107,108,110.Milton, Sarah, mother of the poet,43,83.Milton Street,111.Minshull, Elizabeth, Milton’s wife,110,123,124.More, Sir Thomas,131,166,241.Morland, Sir Samuel,251.“Morning of Christ’s Nativity, On the,”72.Newgate,199.Newton, Isaac,249.Norman remains in London,21,24.Oxford,62,67,93.Painted Chamber, Westminster,270,272.Paley, William, at Christ’s College,63.Pall Mall,100.“Paradise Lost,”89,105,107,111,114,120-122,158.“Paradise Regained,”114.Paris, Milton in,85,88.Parr, Old,253.Pembroke, Countess of,169.Penn, William,115,145.Pepys, Samuel,147-150.Peter the Great,145.Petty France,102.Philips, Edward,89,94.Philips, John,89,94.Pindar, Sir Paul,177.Plague, The Great,111,293.Plantagenet Period,22,28.Powell, Anne, Milton’s wife’s mother,97.Powell, Mary, Milton’s wife,93,95,97,102.Prynne,273.Puritans at Cambridge,60.Pym, John,260.Queen’s Head Tavern,155.Raleigh, Sir Walter,133,267,268.Ranelagh, Lady,104.Raphael cartoons,248.Reading,92.Red Cross Hall,286.Red Lion Square,106.Renaissance architecture,30-33.Richard II.,129.Richard III.,129,165,190.Rogers, John,201,216,287.Roman remains in London,16.Runnymede,84.Salmasius,102.St. Andrew Undershaft, church of,158.St. Bartholomew the Great, church of,24,211-215.St. Bartholomew’s Hospital,215.St. Bride’s Church,305.St. Bride’s Churchyard,89.St. Catherine Crees Church,156.St. Ethelburga’s Church,175-176.St. Etheldreda’s Church,221-222.St. George’s Chapel, Windsor,248.“Saint Ghastly Grim,”152.St. Giles’s Church, Cripplegate,38,97,107,120,123,178-183.St. Helen’s Church, Bishopsgate,24,171-175.St. James’s Palace,100,246,248.St. James’s Park,99,103.St. John’s Gate,209.St. John, Knights of,209.St. Jude’s Church,156.St. Margaret’s Church,104,268,275.St. Martin’s Lane,99.St. Martin in the Fields,100.St. Mary Aldermanbury, church of,104,193.St. Mary Aldermary, church of,110.St. Mary le Bow, church of,305.St. Mary Overy’s Church,24,287.St. Olave’s Church,146.St. Paul’s, old cathedral,48,121,297;new cathedral,302.St. Paul’s Cross,50.St. Paul’s School,48,52;early cathedral body,23.St. Peter’s Church,126,132.St. Saviour’s, Southwark,287.St. Sepulchre’s Church,199.St. Stephen’s Chapel,270.St. Stephen’s, Wallbrook, church of,33,304.“Samson,”89.Sanctuary, Westminster,269.Saxon names in London,17.Scotland Yard,101,102,240.Scudamore, Lord,85,103.Selden,233.Shakespeare,165,255,288.Sidney, Algernon,107.Sidney Sussex College,59,62.Skinner, Cyriack,97,104,108.Smithfield,215-220.Smith, John, Captain,200.Somerset House,239,257.Spencer, Sir John,166,174.Spenser, Edmund,254.Sprat, Thomas, dean of Westminster,258.Spread Eagle Court,45.Spring Gardens,99,101,103.Staple Inn,266.Star Chamber,270,272.Stow, John,158-163.Strode, William,261.Sutton, Thomas,204.Tabard Inn,286.Temple, The,228-235.Temple Bar,229.Temple Church, The,229.Thackeray on the Charterhouse,206.Throckmorton, Sir Nicholas,157,193.Tower Hill,139,144.Tower of London, The,126-136.Toynbee Hall,156.Trafalgar Square,99,100.Trinity College Library, Milton manuscript in,73,89.Turner, William,150.Tyndale,201.Usher, Archbishop,247,265.Vane, Sir Harry,91,99,107,136-141.Vane, Milton’s Ode to,104.Waller, Edmund,116.Wendover,117.Westminster Abbey,250-266.Westminster Assembly,264.Westminster Hall,261,274.Westminster Palace,269.Westminster School,266.Whitechapel,156.Whitehall,99,101,240-250.Whittington’s Palace,145.Williams, Roger,61,188,204.Windsor,79,248.Wolsey, Cardinal,241.Woodcocke, Katharine,104,193,195,275.Wotton, Sir Henry,85,124.Wren, Sir Christopher,184,240,263,266,299-304.York Street,102.Young, Milton’s early preceptor,47.
Aldersgate Street,89,122.Aldgate,155.All Hallows, Barking,143.All Hallows Church, Bread St.,42,45,306.All Hallows, Staining, tower of,155.Amersham,116.Andrewes, Bishop,289.“Arcades,”81.“Areopagitica,”94.Artillery Walk,110,119.Ascham, Roger,201.Askew, Anne,191.Austin Friars,24.Austin Friars’ Church,185-188.Bacon, Francis,225.Bancroft, Francis,173.Barbican,95.Bartholomew Close,105.Bartholomew Fair,218.Baroni, Leonora,87.Baxter, Richard,107,108,197,276.Beaconsfield,113,115.Beaumont,288.Bethlehem Hospital,175,303.Billingsgate,292.Blake, Admiral,257.“Blindness, On His,” Milton’s ode,104.Blue Coat School,195-199.Boleyn, Annie,132,283.Bread Street,42-46,120.Browne, Robert,68.Buckingham, Duke of,243,256.Buckinghamshire,112-119.Bunhill Fields,111,120.Burke, Edmund,116.Burleigh,226.Cæsar, Sir Julius,174.Cambridge,57-77;university life in Milton’s time,64.Camden, William,252,266.Caxton, William,269.Chalfont St. Giles,111,112.Charles I.,244-248,272,274.Charles II.,250,262,298.Charing Cross,99.Charterhouse,202-208.Cheever, Ezekiel,198.Chenies,112.Chequer’s Court,118.“Cheshire Cheese, The,”229.Christ’s Church,197.Christ’s College,59,62.Christ’s Hospital,195-199.Civil War,87,92.Clarendon, Earl of,259.“Comus,”80,82,96.Conventual establishments,22.Covent Garden,237-239.Cranmer, Archbishop,280.Cromwell, Oliver,59,92,101,141,180,228,244,248,249,256-258,261.“Cromwell, Ode to,” Milton’s,104,106.Cromwell, Richard,105,111.Crosby Hall,164-170.Danish Remains in London,20.Darwin at Christ’s College,64.Dickens on Old London Churches,152-154.Diodati, Charles,88,91.Dryden, John,122,248,297,306.Dutch in London,186.Education, Milton’s Essay on,94.Eliot, Sir John,134-136,268,270.Elizabethan Age,36.Elizabeth, Queen,208,241,262.Ellwood, Thomas,109,111,115.Ely Cathedral,71.Ely Place,221.Emmanuel College,60,62.Evelyn,267,296.Exchange, The Royal,184,298.Fire of London, The Great,120,145,189,295-298.Fletcher,288.Forest Hill,93.Fox, George,120.Fox, John,181.“Fresher’s Don’t, The,”76.Frobisher, Martin,181.Galileo,86.Gatehouse, Westminster,267.Geneva, Milton at,87.Gill, Alexander, Milton’s schoolmaster,53.Globe Theatre,286.Gog and Magog,190.Gothic architecture,26-30,34.Gray’s Inn,225.Great Hampden,117.Great Kimble,119.Gresham College,184.Gresham, Sir Thomas,172,184.Grey, Lady Jane,132.Grotius, Hugo,85.Grub Street,111.Guild Hall, The,189-193.Hakluyt, Richard,266.Hampden, John,117-119,268.Hatton, Sir Christopher,223.Haw, The,51.Heminge and Condell, monument to,193.Henry VIII.,249.Heylin, Peter,261.Hobson,57.Holbein,157,241.Holborn,98,106,225.Hooker, Richard,234.Horton,78-84,92.“Il Penseroso,”68,82.Inns of Court,225-235.Ireland, Horrors in,92.Italy, Milton in,86.James I.,262.Jeffreys, Judge,196,234.Jerusalem Chamber,264.Jesus College,60.Jewin Street,107.Jones, Inigo,238,240,242,262.Jonson, Ben,180,228,252.Jordan’s,115.Juxon, Bishop,246,280.King’s College Chapel,67.King, Edward,82.Knox, John,116.“L’Allegro,”82.Lambeth Palace,277-286.Lasco, John a,186,188.Laud, Archbishop,144,156,281,284.Lawes, Henry,81,96,97,224.Lincoln’s Inn,227-228.Lincoln’s Inn Fields,98.Lollard’s Tower,49,282.London, origin and early topography,14-25.London life in Milton’s time,38-40.London Bridge,289-291.Long Acre,237.Lovelace, Richard,268.“Lycidas,”82,83.Manso,87.Mary of Modena,278.Marvell, Andrew,104,108,247,248.“Massacre in Piedmont, On the Late,”104.Massinger,288.Mermaid Tavern,46.Milborne, Sir John, almshouses built by,154.Mildmay, Sir Walter,214.Milton, Anne, sister of the poet,43,57,83,89,124.Milton, Christopher, brother of the poet,43,83,92,97,124.Milton, Deborah, daughter of the poet,102,107,108,124.Milton, John, father of the poet,42,78,92,94,97.Milton, John, son of the poet,102.Milton, Mary, daughter of the poet,98,107,108,110.Milton, Sarah, mother of the poet,43,83.Milton Street,111.Minshull, Elizabeth, Milton’s wife,110,123,124.More, Sir Thomas,131,166,241.Morland, Sir Samuel,251.“Morning of Christ’s Nativity, On the,”72.Newgate,199.Newton, Isaac,249.Norman remains in London,21,24.Oxford,62,67,93.Painted Chamber, Westminster,270,272.Paley, William, at Christ’s College,63.Pall Mall,100.“Paradise Lost,”89,105,107,111,114,120-122,158.“Paradise Regained,”114.Paris, Milton in,85,88.Parr, Old,253.Pembroke, Countess of,169.Penn, William,115,145.Pepys, Samuel,147-150.Peter the Great,145.Petty France,102.Philips, Edward,89,94.Philips, John,89,94.Pindar, Sir Paul,177.Plague, The Great,111,293.Plantagenet Period,22,28.Powell, Anne, Milton’s wife’s mother,97.Powell, Mary, Milton’s wife,93,95,97,102.Prynne,273.Puritans at Cambridge,60.Pym, John,260.Queen’s Head Tavern,155.Raleigh, Sir Walter,133,267,268.Ranelagh, Lady,104.Raphael cartoons,248.Reading,92.Red Cross Hall,286.Red Lion Square,106.Renaissance architecture,30-33.Richard II.,129.Richard III.,129,165,190.Rogers, John,201,216,287.Roman remains in London,16.Runnymede,84.Salmasius,102.St. Andrew Undershaft, church of,158.St. Bartholomew the Great, church of,24,211-215.St. Bartholomew’s Hospital,215.St. Bride’s Church,305.St. Bride’s Churchyard,89.St. Catherine Crees Church,156.St. Ethelburga’s Church,175-176.St. Etheldreda’s Church,221-222.St. George’s Chapel, Windsor,248.“Saint Ghastly Grim,”152.St. Giles’s Church, Cripplegate,38,97,107,120,123,178-183.St. Helen’s Church, Bishopsgate,24,171-175.St. James’s Palace,100,246,248.St. James’s Park,99,103.St. John’s Gate,209.St. John, Knights of,209.St. Jude’s Church,156.St. Margaret’s Church,104,268,275.St. Martin’s Lane,99.St. Martin in the Fields,100.St. Mary Aldermanbury, church of,104,193.St. Mary Aldermary, church of,110.St. Mary le Bow, church of,305.St. Mary Overy’s Church,24,287.St. Olave’s Church,146.St. Paul’s, old cathedral,48,121,297;new cathedral,302.St. Paul’s Cross,50.St. Paul’s School,48,52;early cathedral body,23.St. Peter’s Church,126,132.St. Saviour’s, Southwark,287.St. Sepulchre’s Church,199.St. Stephen’s Chapel,270.St. Stephen’s, Wallbrook, church of,33,304.“Samson,”89.Sanctuary, Westminster,269.Saxon names in London,17.Scotland Yard,101,102,240.Scudamore, Lord,85,103.Selden,233.Shakespeare,165,255,288.Sidney, Algernon,107.Sidney Sussex College,59,62.Skinner, Cyriack,97,104,108.Smithfield,215-220.Smith, John, Captain,200.Somerset House,239,257.Spencer, Sir John,166,174.Spenser, Edmund,254.Sprat, Thomas, dean of Westminster,258.Spread Eagle Court,45.Spring Gardens,99,101,103.Staple Inn,266.Star Chamber,270,272.Stow, John,158-163.Strode, William,261.Sutton, Thomas,204.Tabard Inn,286.Temple, The,228-235.Temple Bar,229.Temple Church, The,229.Thackeray on the Charterhouse,206.Throckmorton, Sir Nicholas,157,193.Tower Hill,139,144.Tower of London, The,126-136.Toynbee Hall,156.Trafalgar Square,99,100.Trinity College Library, Milton manuscript in,73,89.Turner, William,150.Tyndale,201.Usher, Archbishop,247,265.Vane, Sir Harry,91,99,107,136-141.Vane, Milton’s Ode to,104.Waller, Edmund,116.Wendover,117.Westminster Abbey,250-266.Westminster Assembly,264.Westminster Hall,261,274.Westminster Palace,269.Westminster School,266.Whitechapel,156.Whitehall,99,101,240-250.Whittington’s Palace,145.Williams, Roger,61,188,204.Windsor,79,248.Wolsey, Cardinal,241.Woodcocke, Katharine,104,193,195,275.Wotton, Sir Henry,85,124.Wren, Sir Christopher,184,240,263,266,299-304.York Street,102.Young, Milton’s early preceptor,47.
Footnotes:
[1]ONE OF MILTON’S TWO EPITAPHS ON HOBSON
“Here lies old Hobson. Death hath broke his girt,And here, alas, hath laid him in the dirt;Or else, the ways being foul, twenty to one,He’s here stuck in a slough, or overthrown.’Twas such a shifter, that if truth were known,Death was half glad when he had got him down;For he had any time these ten years full,Dodged with him, betwixt Cambridge and the ‘Bull,’And surely death could never have prevailed,Had not his weekly course of carriage failed.But lately finding him so long at home,And thinking now his journey’s end was come,And that he had ta’en up his latest inn,In the kind office of a chamberlain,Showed him his room, where he must lodge that night,Pulled off his boots and took away the light;If any ask for him, it shall be said,‘Hobson has supt and’s newly gone to bed.’”S
[2]It is interesting here to contrast John Morley’s judgment with that of Clarendon:
“Surrounded by men who were often apt to take other views, Pym, if ever English statesmen did, took broad ones; and to impose broad views upon the narrow is one of the things that a party leader exists for. He had the double gift, so rare even among leaders in popular assemblies, of being at once practical and elevated; a master of tactics and organising arts, and yet the inspirer of sound and lofty principles. How can we measure the perversity of a king and counsellors who forced into opposition a man so imbued with the deep instinct of government, so whole-hearted, so keen of sight, so skilful in resource as Pym?”
Transcriber’s Notes:
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