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12.

in thankful acknowledgment of his
safe arrival home, 38. Poetical
Letters to him, 394-8.
Bradstreet, Rev. Sinon, of New
London, Conn., son of Anne
Bradstreet, lxviii, 2, 73 m., 74
and n., 405 n., 407 n. Sketch of,
lxvii n. His account of his birth
and education, xxxvi-vii. Enters
Harvard College, 401 and
"Meditations" written at his re-
quest, and dedicated to him, lxi,
47. His account of the burning
of the house at Andover, and his
own and his father's loss thereby,
Ixi-ii. His manuscript copy of
his mother's "Religious Experi-
ences and Occasional Pieces," viii,
2. His handwriting, viii.
account of his mother's last sick-
ness and death, Ixiv-v.
Bradstreet, Rev. Simon, of Charles-
town, Mass., lxviii-ix.
Bradstreet, Rev. Simon, of Marble-
head, Mass., sketch of, 74 n.
Latin translation of the Dedica-
tion and first four Meditations,"
74. viii-ix.
Bradstreet, Simon, son of Samuel,
verses on the death of, 406.
Bradstreet. Tomb at Salem, desecra-
tion of, lxxi n.

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Carter, Robert, his description of
the appearance of Mt. Desert from
the sea, xxviii.

Cassander. 299-316. Son of Anti-
pater, 287.
Cassandreia. 306.

Cavalier, a British, 155. Mrs. Brad-
street's opinion of, Ixiv.

C. B., Commendatory verses by, 90.
Others, 92.

Cecil, Sir Edward, his expedition to
Cadiz, 163 n.

Cena, 298 n.

Ceraunus, Ptolemy, 316.
Cervantes, xvi.
Chaldeans, 201.

Channing, Rev. Wm. E., a descend-
ant of Mrs. Bradstreet, lxix.
Chapman's Homer, xvii.
Charlemagne, 355.

Charles I. of England, xxiii, 30 n.,
338, 341. Thrust from his throne,
164 and n. Beheaded, 164 and n.
And Parliament, xxv.

Charles II. of England, Ixix, 30 n.
Restoration of, 165 ". Relations
between him and Massachusetts
Colony, lix-lx.

Charles V. before Algiers, 121. His
taking Milan, ib.

Charlestown, Mass., settlement of,
ΧΧΧ. Arrival of Winthrop's com-
pany at, xxx-i. Condition of the
people in, in 1630, xxxii. Re-
moval of Winthrop's company
from, to Boston, ib.
Charter of the Massachusetts Com-
pany, dissolution of the, lxx.
Charter Government, temporary re-
establishment of, in Massachu-
setts, lxx. The new, lxx-i.
Charter-Street burying-ground in
Salem, Bradstreet's tomb in, lxxi.
Chaucer, 85.

Childhood, xli, 149–52.

Children, Poem before the birth of
one of her, 393-4.

Children, Poem in reference to her,
400-3. Misprint in, lxvii n. and
401 n.

Chinoes, 196.

Choler, xli, 124–9.
Christmas, 179.

Church, The Established, of Eng-
land, division of, xxiii-iv. Regard
of the Massachusetts Colonists for,
xxvii-viii.

Church, First, at Boston, xv, xxxi,
5, 413 n.

Cicero, 411. Quoted, 160 n.
Civil War in England, 165 and n.
Course of the Massachusetts Col-
ony during the, lix.
Clarence, Duke of, 335.
Clarendon, the Earl of, quoted, xxiii.
Clark, master of ship "Society," 38 n.
Cleitus, or Clitus, quarrel of Alex-

ander with, and death of, 283-4.
Mrs Bradstreet's account of his
murder by Alexander the Great,
taken from Raleigh's "History
of the World," and from North's
"Plutarch's Lives," xlvi-vii, xlix-l.
Cleopatra, 115, 292, 293, 310, 311.
Daughter of Ptolemy Auletes, 319-
20, 360.

Clipsham, in the county of Rutland,

Dudley's residence at, xiv.
Cochichewick, The, xxxviii. First
settlements at Andover made near,
xxxvii. Land about, reserved for
a plantation, afterwards Andover,
xxxvi. Andover, xxxvii.
Colborne, William, xxxi.
Commendatory Verses by N. Ward,
85. I. W., 86-SS. B. W., 89.
B., 90. R. Q., 90 n.

C. B., 92.

C.

N. II., 91.

H. S., 92.

Rev. J.

Rogers, 93-96.

Compton, William Lord, afterwards
Earl of Northampton, takes Dud-
ley into his family, xii. Recom-
mends Dudley to the Earl of Lin-
coln as steward, xiii.
Consolations, Meditations on Spirit-
ual, 16.

Constitution, The Four Humours in
Man's, xli, lxv, 123-46.
Contemplations, a Poem, 370-SI.
Its merits considered, lxiii.
Corinnæs, The Three, Ixvi.
Cotton. Rev. John, xiii, xviii. xxi.
His son marries Dorothy Brad-
street, lxvii n.

Cotton, Sir Robert, xix.

Cotton, Rev. Seaborn, 401 n. Hus-
band of Dorothy Bradstreet, lxvii
n. Notice of, ib.

Council of Safety, lxvii n., lxx.
Cradock, Gov. Matthew, proposes
the removal of the Massachusetts
Company to America, xxiv.
Craterus, 292-4, 297.

Cræsus (Cressus), 205, 209-10.
Cromwell, Ixix. Mrs. Bradstreet's
views concerning, Ixiv, 164 and #.
Crooke, Helkiah, M D., Mrs. Brad-
street's knowledge of, 1, 144. Watt's
notice of his works, 1 n.
Curiatii, 325.

Curtius, M., 113 n.

Curtius, Quintus, xliii, xlvi, 257, 265.
Curwen, Sam., his note concerning
the sale of Gov. Bradstreet's tomb,
lxxi n.

Cutshamache, Indian Sagamore,
sells land on which Andover was
settled, xxxvii.
Cyclops, xlix, 289.
Cyna, 298 n.

Cyrus, 208-12, 222, 248, 249. 280.
Mrs. Bradstreet's account of Alex-
ander the Great's visit to his tomb,
taken from Raleigh, xlvi.
Cyrus, the younger, 237-41.

Dagon, 184.

Damascus, 194-5.

D.

Dana, Mr. Richard H., a descendant
of Mrs. Bradstreet's, lxix.

Dana, Hon. R. H., Jr., a descendant
of Mrs. Bradstreet's, ib.

Daniel, 200, 204, 206, 207, 211, 261,
289. 317.

Darius, uncle of Cyrus, 208.

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nus, 249 and n., 254-61, 263-71.
Dathan, 112 and 2.

David's Lamentation for Saul and
Jonathan, xlii, 363-4.

Davis, Mr., of New Haven, 29 n.,
32 1.

Dealings, Divine, 25.

Death as a sheriff's officer, 156 nn.
Dedication to Meditations, Ixi, 47.

Fac-simile of, between 46 and 47.
Latin Translation of, 74.
Dedication of the "Poems," lii, lv,
97. Date of, xli, lii.
Deliverance from a Fever, 12. Same
subject, 13. From a Fit of Faint-

ing, 15.

Delphi, 228.

Demades, xlix.

Demetrius, 308, 312-17.
Demosthenes, 293.

Denison, Major-General Daniel, 96
n. Chosen Captain for Ipswich,
xxxvi. One of the first settlers at
Andover, ib. Marries Patience
Dudley, liii n. Marries Rev. Si-
mon Bradstreet to his cousin, Lucy
Woodbridge, lxvii n.
Denison, Elizabeth, 96 n.
Dercyllidas, 244.

Deucalion, Deluge of, 118.
Dialogue between Old England and

New, 330-43, xli-ii, lii.
Dido, Queen, 360.

Distemper of the body, Poem upon

some, 392 3.
Divine Dealings, 25.
Dodd, Rev. John, xiii.

Don Anthony, 359.
Donne, Dr. John, xx.
Don Quixote, xvi.

Downing, Anne, second wife of Gov.
Bradstreet, lxix. Her step-son's
opinion of her, ib.

Downing, Emanuel, his daughter
marries Gov. Bradstreet, ib.
Downing, Sir George, Bart., ib.
Drake, Mr. S. G., x.
Drake, Sir Francis, 360.

Du Bartas, 85, 92, 98, 100, 348, 349.
Notice of, li n. Works translated
by Sylvester, xvii, li. Mrs. Brad-
street's obligations to, 98, li. Her
fondness for his works, li-lii. Mil-

ton's obligations to, ib. Poem in
honor of, xlii, lii, 353-6.
Dudleian Lectures at Harvard Col-
lege, founding of, liii n.

Dudley, Dean, his articles on Mrs.
Bradstreet, x.

Dudley, Deborah, liii n.

Dudley, Dorothy, wife of Governor

Dudley, xii-xiii. Signs church
covenant, xxxi. Her death and
virtues, as described by Mrs. Brad-
street, lii-iii. Epitaph on, 369.
Dudley, Dorothy, daughter of Gov.
Thomas Dudley, liii n.

Dudley, John, Duke of Northumber-
land, supposed ancestor of Gov.
Dudley, xi-xii.

Dudley, Joseph, notice of, lii n.

Made President of the Provision-
al Government of Massachusetts,
lxx.

Dudley, the Lady Mary, mother of
Sir P. Sidney, xii.

Dudley, Mercy, notice of, liii ».
Wife of Rev. John Woodbridge,
88 n.

Dudley, Patience, 96 n.

liii n.

Notice of,

Dudley, Paul, son of Gov. T. Dud-
lev, notice of, liii n.
Dudley, Paul, son of Joseph Dudley,
notice of, ib.

Dudley, Capt. Roger, father of Gov.
Dudley, xii.

Dudley, Samuel, first child of Gov.
Dudley, xiv. One of the first set-
tlers at Andover, xxxvi. Notice
of, liii n.

Dudley, Sarah, notice of, ib.
Dudley, Governor Thomas, father of
Anne Bradstreet, xi. One of the
founders of New England, xi, 366.
His ancestry, xi-ii. His birth, xii.
Only son of Capt. Roger Dudley,
ib. Left an orphan, ib. Nothing
known of his mother, ib. Becomes
a page of Lord Compton, ib. A
clerk of Judge Nichols, ib. Goes
to France at the head of a com-
pany of volunteers. ib. At the
siege of Amiens, ib. Returns to
England, ib. Marries, xii - iii.
Becomes a Nonconformist, xiii.
Becomes the Earl of Lincoln's
steward, ib. Moves to Boston, in
Lincolnshire, ib. Returns to the
Earl of Lincoln's family, ib. Lives
at Clipsham, xiv. His first child,
Samuel, born, ib. His daughter

Anne born, ib. Has Simon Brad-
street under his care, xxii. Is
succeeded as steward of the Earl
of Lincoln by Bradstreet, xxii.
Interested in the plan to plant a
colony in New England, xxvi.
Signs the agreement at Cam-
bridge, xxv. His first apparent

connection with the Massachusetts
Company, xxvi. Chosen an As-
sistant, ib. Important position
afterwards held by him in the
Colony, ib. Elected Under-
taker," ib. Chosen Deputy-Gov-
ernor, ib. Visits John Winthrop
at Groton, xxvi-vii. Goes to the
Isle of Wight, xxvii. Embarks
with his family for America, ib.
Probably on the "Arbella." ib.
Signs the farewell to their Breth-
ren in and of the Church of Eng-
land," ib. His passage, xxviii.
Arrival at Salem, xxviii-ix. State
in which he found things there,
xxix-xxx. His account of it in
his letter to the Countess of Lin-

His

coln, xxx. Goes to Charlestown,
ib. Enters into a church cove-
nant, xxxi. Moves to Boston,
xxxii. His picture of their condi-
tion, xxxiii. Moves to Newtown
(Cambridge), ib. His house and
lot there, ib. His displeasure at
Winthrop's removal from, xxxiv.
His temporary alienation from
him, ib. Moves to Ipswich, xxxv.
Mrs. Bradstreet's "Poems" dedi-
cated to him, xli, lii, 97.
letter to the Countess of Lincoln,
XXVI, xxvii, xxx, xxxii, xxxiii and
n. His poetry, lv-vi. lxv-vi. His
poem "On the Four Parts of the
World," 97. Death of his first
wife, lii, 369. Marries again, liii.
His children, liii n. His death,
liii-iv, 365. His removal to Rox-
bury, liv. High offices held by
him. ib. His character, liv - v.
His library, lv. Rogers's Latin
epitaph on him, ib. His learning,
ib.

Mrs. Bradstreet's instructor,
ib. His estate, Ivi. Heads the
agreement to support a free school
in Roxbury, lvi-vii. Verses to,
398-9. Poem to the memory of,
365-8. Mr. C. M. Ellis's sketch
of his life, lvii n.
Duvckinck, Mr., his notice of Mrs.
Bradstreet, x.

Dwight, Dr. Timothy, his descrip-
tion of North Andover, xxxix.

E.

"Eagle," The, afterwards the "Ar-
bella," xxvii.

Earth, xli, 109-13.
Eden, 177, 373.

Edom, 203.

Edward II. of England, 332, 333.
Edward III. of England, 334-

Edward IV. of England, the murder
of his children, 335-
Egypt, 203, 205.

Elector Palatine, Frederic V., 163
and n., 165 m.

Elements, The Four, xli, lxv, 103-22.
"The Interlude of the Four," old
moral play, xli n.

Elizabeth, Princess, daughter of
James I., 163 and n.

Elizabeth, Queen, xii, xvi, 162 nn.,
344. Poem in honor of, xlii, lii,
87 and 2., 357-62.

Ellis, Mr. C. M., his history of Rox-
bury, and sketch of Gov. T. Dud-
ley's life, lvii n.

Emilius, 317. See Paulus.
Emmanuel College, in Cambridge,
xxi, xxii.

Endicott, Gov. John, sent to Ameri-

ca, xxx.

England, Civil War in, xxiii, lix,
lxiv, 165 and ".

England, Dialogue between Old and
New, xli-ii, lii, 330-43. Perhaps
partly derived from Speed's His-
tory, lii.

England under Queen Elizabeth,
359-61.

English Fair, Mrs. Bradstreet's de-
scription of, xv.

English Literature at the close of
the Elizabethan Age, xv-xx.
Epaminondas, 245.

Epiphanes, Ptolemy, 318. Successor
to Evergetes, 319.
Erthogrul, 173.
Esar-haddon, 197.

Essex, Earl of, 341 and n. Takes
Cadiz, 360.

Esther, 233, 236, 266.
Eudocia, The Empress, Ixvi.
Euergetes, Ptolemy, son of Phila-
delphus, 319.

Euergetes (II.), successor of Philo-
metor, 319.

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First Monarchy, 181-207.

Flegme, xli, 141-6.

See

Flesh and the Spirit, poem, 381-5.
Fletcher, John, xvi.

Florio, John, English translator of
Montaigne's Essays, xvii.

Foster, John, first printer in Boston,
Ixvi-vii. Printer of second edition
of Poems, v, lxvi, 81.

Four Ages of Man, xli, lxv, 147-
67.

Four Elements, xli, lxv, 103-22.
Four Humours in Man's Constitu-
tion, xli, lxv, 123-46.

Four Monarchies, xli, xliii - 1, lxv,
181-328.

Fourth Monarchy, 323-8.

Four Seasons of the Year, xli, lxv,
168-79.

France, 332, 333.

France and Holland saved, 162.
France, how Britain cut from, 117.
Frederic V., Elector Palatine, 163
and n.. 165 n.

Funeral Elegy, Rev. John Norton's,
upon Mrs. Bradstreet, 409-13.

Gager, William, xxxi.

Galen, 143. Mrs. Bradstreet's knowl-
edge of, 1.
Galenists, 110.
Galilee, 195.

Gardner, Capt. Joseph, his widow
marries Gov. Bradstreet, lxix.
Garrett, James, account of the loss
of his ship, 29 n.

Genevan version of the Bible, 21 n.,
Mrs. Bradstreet's familiar-

203 n.

ity with, 1.

Germany, 336.

Gibraltar, 118.

Gideon, the sword of God and, 340.
Gilboa, Mount, 363-4.

Gloucester, Henry, Duke of, his
death, 30 and n.

Gobryas, 220-1, 224.

God, Verses in Praise of, 17. On
Joy in, 18.

Gofle, Thomas, xxvi.

Gog, 342.

Gookin, Daniel, his account of the
loss of James Garrett's ship, 29 n.
Graves, Mr., xxxi.

Great Plague, The, 334 and n.
Grecian Monarchy, xli, 251-321.
Greek and Latin authors, as to Mrs.
Bradstreet's acquaintance with,
xliii-iv.

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