Page:The works of Anne Bradstreet in prose and verse.djvu/507

 INDEX.

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��in thankful acknowledgment of his safe arrival home, 38. Poetical Letters to him, 394-S.

Bradstreet, Rev. Simon, of New London, Conn., son of Anne Bradstreet, Ixviii, 2, 73 «., 74 and n., 405 «., 407 n. Sketch of, Ixvii n. His account of his birth and education, xxxvi-vii. Enters Harvard College, 401 and n. "Meditations" written at his re- quest, and dedicated to him, Ixi, 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, 3. His handwriting, viii. His account of his mother's last sick- ness and death. Ixiv-v.

Bradstreet, Rev. Simon, of Charles- town. Mass., Ixviii-ix.

Bradstreet, Rev. Simon, of Marble- head, Mass., sketch of, 74 ;/. His 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, l.xxi n.

Britain, how cut from France, 117.

Brutus. Junius, 32S.

Bucephala, 27^.

Buchanan, George, xix.

Buckingham, Duke of, xxiii. His unsuccessful attempt to take the Isle de Rhc. 163 and ;/. Assassi- nation of, 164 and ;/., 165 ;/.

Buckminster, Rev. Joseph, a de- scendant of Mrs. Bradstreet, Ixix.

Buckminster, Rev. J. S., a descend- ant of Mrs. Bradstreet, ib.

Budington, Rev. W. I., D.D., his articles on Mrs. Bradstreet, and re- print of some of her writings, ix-x.

Burning of her house, Verses on the, 40.

Burton, 336 «.

Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy, xvii.

B. W,, explanation of the initials,

89 71.

��Cadiz (Cades), 163 «., 165 n. Taken by the Earl of Essex, 360.

��CiEsar, Julius, 319. Gives his name

to July, 174. Cain, 374. Calais won, 162. Surprise of, in

1596, 162 ;/. Spanish Armada

put to flight before, ib. Caligula, Anecdote of, 108. Callisthenes, xlvii. Mrs. Bradstreet's

account of the murder of. taken

from Raleigh, xliv-v. Murder of,

284-5.

Calvin, xxiv.

Cambridge, The Agreement at, xxv.

Cambridge (Newtown), founding of, xxxii-iii. Laid out in squares, xxxiii. Arrival of Rev. Thomas Hooker's congregation in, xxxiv. Wood's description of, ib. Its limits enlarged, xxxv.

Cambyses, 113,212-17,219. Father of Cyrus, 20S. And Darius Hys- taspes, Interregnum between, 216-

Camden, \\ illiam, his "Britannia" and " Annales," xix. His " An- nales," 358 and ?/. Mrs. Brad- street's knowledge of, lii.

Canaan, 196, 205.

Canute, 331.

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

Cassander, 299-316. Son of Anti- pater, 2S7.

Cassandreia, 306.

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

C. B., Commendatory verses \>y^ 90. Others, 92.

Cecil, Sir Edward, his expedition to Cadiz, 163 71.

Cena, 29S 71.

Ceraunus, Ptolemy, 316.

Cervantes, xvi.

Chaldeans, 201.

Channing, Rev. Wm. E., a descend- ant of ]VIrs. Bradstreet, Ixix.

Chapman's Homer, xvii.

Charlemagne, 355.

Charles I. of England, xxiii, 30 «., 338, 341. Thrust from liis throne, 164 and ;/. Beheaded, 164 and 71. And Parliament, xxv.

Charles II. of England, Ixix, 30 71. Restoration of, 165 «. Relations between him and Massachusetts Colony, lix-lx.

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

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