Page:The works of Anne Bradstreet in prose and verse.djvu/514

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428

��INDEX.

��Lissus, 226,

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

London, Great Fire of, 107, T08 n.

Longing for Heaven, verses express- ing her, 42.

Louis VIII. of France, 333 ;/.

Lucretia, 32S.

LucuUus, 318.

Lud, Put and, 203.

Ljsimachus, 307, 310, 314-16.

��M.

Maccabees, 318.

Magi, 216.

INIanasseh, 198.

Mandana, 208.

Man's Constitution, The Four Hu- mours in, xli, Ixv, 123-46.

Man., The Four Ages of, xli, Ixv, 147-67.

Marathon, Battle of, 221.

Marblehead, Mass., Second Church

in, 75-

Marcellus, 137.

March, Earl of, 333.

Marcius, Ancus, 326.

Mardonius, 223-4, 229-30.

Maro, 410, 411.

Martel, 355.

Marj, Princess of Orange, her death, 30 and it.

Mather, Cotton, Iv. The verses which he attributes to Gov. T. Dudle}^ Ivi ti. His eulogy on Mrs. Bradstreet, Ixv-vi. His opin- ion of President John Rogers, 96 n.

Matilda, the Empress, 333 n.

Massachusetts Companj, xvi, xxiv, xxvi. Motives of those who trans- ferred it to America, xxv. Em- barkation for New England, xxvii.

Massachusetts Colonists, their fare- well to their brethren in and of the Church of England, xxvii-viii. Their voyage to New England, xxviii ; and arrival there, xxix.

Massachusetts Colony, its condition in 1630, XXX, xxxii. Its course in the civil war, lix. Treatment of the Qiiakers, ib. Obliged to send agents to England, lix-lx. Suc- cess of the mission, Ix. Dissolu- tion of the charter, Ixx. Estab- lishment of the Provisional Gov- ernment, ib. Governed by An-

��dros, ib- Re-establishment of Charter Government in, ib.

Massachusetts Bay, Sir William Phipps made Governor of the Province of the, Ixx-i. The new charter of. ib.

ISIassinger, Philip, xvi.

Maud, 331, 333 and n.

Mayhew, Mr., son of the Indian teacher at Martha's Vineyard, his loss at sea, 29 ;/.

Meditations Divine and Moral, 45-76. Dedication of, 47. Manu- script of, viii-x. Fac-simile of dedication of, between 46 and 47. Their composition, character, and originality, Ixi. Latin Transla- tion of tlie dedication and first four of, 74-75. Occasional, 11. On Spiritual Consolations, 16.

Melancholy, xli, 136-41.

Meleager, 291.

Memucan, 233.

Menahem, 193.

Merodach Balladan, 198.

Meroe, 215 and ;/.

Meroz, (Mero's) curse, 340 and n.

Merrimac, The river, xxxviii, Ixiii.

Methuselah, 373.

Michaud's notice of Du Bartas, li «.

Midas, 254.

Middle Age, xli, 156-61.

Middleton, Thomas, xvi.

Milan (Millain), Charles the Fifth, his taking of, 121.

Miltiades, 221.

Milton, his "Comus" quoted, Ixiii. His nephew Edward Phillips, Ixv.

Mnemon, Artaxerxes, 237-46.

Moab, 203.

Monarchies, The Four, xli, Ixv, 181- 32S. Sources from which Mrs. Bradstreet derived materials for the Poem of, xliii-1. The Assyr- ian, xli, iSi-207. The Grecian, xli, 251-321. The Persian, xli, 20S-50. The Roman, xli, 323-8.

Monarchist, Mrs. Bradstreet inclined to be a, Ixiv.

Montaigne, translated into English by John Floric, xvii

Moore, Jacob B., quoted, xi.

Mordecai, 234, 266.

More, Miss Hannah, her popularity as a writer, Ixii ;/.

More, SirThomas, his daughter, Ixvi.

Mount Desert, its appearance from the sea, xxviii.

Mycale, 231.

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