146 IZAAK WALTON AND HIS FRIENDS 



where he interested himself in the preservation 

 of the Episcopal succession during the Common- 

 wealth, even admitting men privately to holy 

 orders. He died at Richmond, Surrey, and was 

 buried on the north side of Edward the Con- 

 fessor's Chapel in Westminster Abbey ; and King, 

 Bishop of Chichester, preached his funeral sermon. 

 His portrait is at Salisbury and at Christ Church, 

 and a bust of him is at All Souls' College. He 

 bequeathed legacies to his old school, to Christ 

 Church and All Souls, to his former sees, and 

 to various charities. 



DANIEL FEATLEY 



(1582-1645). 



"The whirligig of time brings in his revenges." 



He was born at Charlton-upon-Otmoor, in 

 Oxfordshire, and educated at Corpus Christi 

 College, Oxford. He became domestic chaplain 

 to Abbot, Archbishop of Canterbury, and was 

 presented to the living of Lambeth in Febru- 

 ary 1618, on resigning Northhill Eectory, in 

 Cornwall. He became a great controversialist 

 and was a Calvinist. His best known works 

 are, " The Dippers dipt : or, the Anabaptists duck'd 

 and plung'd over head and ears at a Disputa- 

 tion in South wark, &c.," and Clavis Mystica. 



J 



