INDEX. 



299 



Chub or Chavender, the, n ; reckoned the 

 worst of fish, 64 ; an engraving of the, 65 ; 

 called by the French " un villain," 67 ; re- 

 ceipts for cooking, 67, 68 ; directions for 

 angling for, 68, 106 ; baits for, 69, 70, 184, 

 185, 189 ; the flesh of, accounted best in 

 winter months, 70 ; haunts of, 71. 

 " Chudley's Elegies," referred to by Walton, 



cxlviii. 



Churchey, George, fellow of Lypn's Inn, the 

 translator of Dubravius's treatise of " Fish 

 and Fish-ponds," 133 . 

 Clarenceux king-of-arms, xlii, vide Bysshe. 

 Clarendon, Lord, the friend of Charles 

 Cotton the elder, clxiv ; his account of 

 him, clxiv, clxxi ; his opinion on the sub- 

 ject whether contemplation be preferable 

 to action, 39 n. 



Cleare, Jane, the wife of Richard, xlii n. 

 Cleobury, Sir John, Bart, of Bradstone, in 



the county of Devon, cxxxv. 

 Cleopatra, a feast of wild boars given by, 

 to Mark Antony, 30 ; used the recreation 

 of angling, 50. 

 Clerkenwell, Walton's residence in, xli, xlv ; 



extracts from the parish register of, xli n. 

 Clifford, Mr, the editor of the "Academy 



of Compliments," in . 

 Clifton, Sir Clifford, an epistle to, from 



Charles Cotton, clxxvi. 

 Cock, the, his want of care in hatching his 



brood, 47. 

 Cockle, the, of Shelsey, considered superior 



to others, 73, 140. 

 Cockspur, the case-worm so called, 190 ; 



produces the may-fly, 190 . 

 Cod-worm, the, a bait for chub, 69. 

 Cokayne, the family of, connected with that 

 of Cotton by marriage, clxiv ; anecdote of 

 Cotton's having been disinherited by a 

 female relative of that name, clxxvii. 



, Anne, wife of Sir Francis Boteler, ccii. 



> Sir Aston, ccii; "Small Poems of 



divers sorts," written by him, London, 

 iimo, 1658, xlv n. ; verses written by him, 

 on the death of his cousin, Mrs Cotton, 

 clxiv .; educated at Cambridge, clxv . ; 

 verses addressed by him to Charles Cotton, 

 the poet, clxvi, clxvii, clxxi ; an epitanh 

 by him on the death of his sisters, clxxviii. 



, Isabella, died unmarried, ccii. 



, Katherine,wife of Richard Weston, ccii. 



, Lettice, wife of Gilbert Armstrong, ccii. 



, Mrs Lucy, daughter of Sir Thomas, of 



Ashbourn, clxxviii ., ccii. 

 Coke, Anne, 21 . 



, Sir Edward, chief justice, 21 n. 



man, Charles, doctor of music, 178 . 

 Collar of SS., anecdote respecting a, found 

 amongst the king's baggage, after the 

 battle of Worcester, xlv. 

 "Come live with me and be my love," a 

 song, 79; doubtful whether written by 

 Christopher Marlowe or by Shakespeare, 

 80 . ; imitations of it, 82 . ; a song in 

 imitation of, written by Marlowe, 158. 

 "Come, Shepherds, deck your herds," a 

 song, 79 ; copy thereof, 277. 



" Commentary on the Somnlum Scipionis of 

 Cicero," by Aurelius Macrobius, 33 . 

 Commentaries," the, of De Montluc, 

 Marshal of France, translated by Cotton, 

 clxxxi. 



" Complete Angler," the, first edition of, 

 published in 1653, xlvi ; the second edition 

 in 1655, xlviii ; observations upon, and 

 analysis of the contents of that edition, 

 xlviii, Ixii ; the third edition, published in 

 1661, Ixvii ; the fourth edition, in 1668, 

 Ixxv; the fifth, in 1676, Ixxxv; price and 

 advertisement of the first edition of the, 274. 



"Compleat Gamester," the, published in 

 1674, attributed to Cotton, clxxxi. 



Comprehension, Walton said to have written 

 a letter to a kinsman at Coventry, on the 

 rejection of the Bill of, Ixxiv. 



Compton, Charles, son of George, fourth 

 Earl of Northampton, cci, cciii. 



, Charles, seventh Earl of Northampton, 



cciii. 



, Charles, ninth Earl of Northampton, 



cciii. 



, Spencer, eighth Earl of Northampton, 



cciii. 



, Spencer Joshua Alwyne, second Mar- 

 quess and tenth Earl of Northampton, one 

 of the present representatives of Charles 

 Cotton, cciii. 



Conde", the Prince of, 144, vide Chantilly. 



Conger, the, 165. 



"Considerations," by John Valdesso, 40 n. 



Contemplation, question whether preferable 

 to action, 39; Lord Clarendon's opinion 

 thereupon, 39 n. 



"Contemplation on God's Providence," by 

 Mr George Herbert, quotation from, 44. 



" Contentation," the, a poem, by Charles 

 Cotton, cxcvi. 



Cony-fish, the, 43. 



Cooke, Clarenceux king-of-arms, ccv. 



Coppinger, a Nonconformist, his death al- 

 luded to by Walton, cxi. 



Corbet, Major, brought to the Parliament a 

 collar of SS. and a garter found amongst 

 the king's baggage, after the battle of 

 Worcester, xlv. 



Coriate, Tom, biographical account of, 233 . 



Cormorant, the, 63. 



Corneille's tragedy of Horace, translated by 

 Charles Cotton, clxxii. 



" Corona Florida Medicinae sive de Con- 

 servatione Sanitatis," fo. 1491, 168 . 



Cornwall, famous for otter-hunting, 59. 



Corracle, description of a, 122. 



Cotswold Hills, the Olympic Games annu- 

 ally celebrated upon, by Mr Robert Dover, 

 282. 



Cotton, pedigree of the family of, ccii. 



, Beresford, son of Charles, ccii. 



, Cassandra, wife of Sir George, clxiii, 



cciii. 



, Cassandra, daughter of Sir George, 



clxiii ., cciii ; an Elegy on her deaih, 

 written by Colonel Lovelace, clxiii. 



, Charles, of Ovingdean, county Sussex, 



cciii. 



