154 IZAAK WALTON AND HIS FRIENDS 



he wrote one entitled No Peace with Rome. Lord 

 Clarendon refers to him as being a popular 

 prelate. He married, and several of his sons 

 obtained good positions as clergymen. Walton, by 

 his will, bequeathed to his daughter "Dr Hall's 

 works, which be now at Farnham." In 1643, upon 

 being turned out of his Norwich bishopric by the 

 Commissioners who were sent there on the passing 

 of the Act for Sequestration of the Property of 

 Malignants, in which he was named, Hall retired 

 to Heigham village, near to Norwich, where he 

 lived till his death. He was buried in the church- 

 yard there and not in the church, for he did not 

 hold " God's house a meet repository for the dead 

 bodies of the greatest saints." Affixed to some 

 of his books is a portrait of him. 



HENRY HAMMOND 



(1605-1660). 



" Inter Silvas Academi quserere Verum." 



He was a son of Dr John Hammond, Physician 

 to Prince Henry, and was born at Chertsey in 

 Surrey, and educated at Eton and at Magdalene 

 College, Oxford. He became Canon of Christ 

 Church and Public Orator, and one of Charles the 

 First's chaplains. In 1630 he was Eector of 

 Penshurst, Kent, and in 1639 became D.D. He 



