INDEX. 



301 



cxcix ; commemorated in a poem entitled 

 the " Innocent Epicure, or Angling," pub- 

 lished in 1697, 274. 



Cotton, Chancs, sun of Charles, of Beresford, 

 cciii. 



, Sir George, of Warblenton, CO. Essex, 



clxiii, cciii. 



, Isabella, first wife of Charles, of Beres- 

 ford, cciii. 



, Isabella, daughter of Charles, ccii. 



, Jane, daughter of Charles, cciii. 



, Katherine, daughter of Charles, cciii. 



, Mary, wife of Sir George, clxiii . 



, Mary, second wife of Charles, of Beres- 

 ford, cciii. 



, Mary, daughter of Charles, cciii. 



, Olive, mother of Charles Cotton, the 



poet, clxiv, cciii ; her death, clxiv ; verses 

 to her memory, by Sir Aston Cokayiie, 

 clxiv . 



, Olive, wife of Dr Stanhope, ccii. 



. Persis, daughter of Charles, clxv n. 



, Sir Richard, comptroller of the house- 

 hold, and privy councillor to Edward VI., 

 of Warblenton, county Essex, clxiii. 



, Susan, sister of Sir G., of Warblenton, 



and wife of Charles, Earl of Kent, clxiii n. 



, Wingfield, son of Charles, of Beres- 

 ford, ccii. 



" Counterblast to Tobacco," by King James 

 I., 240 . 



" Country Contentments," by Markham, 

 ^notation from, 37 n. 



"Country Parsons," Herbert's, eulogised by 

 Walton, Ixxvi. 



Court of Judicature fir determination of 

 differences touching houses burnt in Lon- 

 don, Ixxix. 



Covenanters, the Scottish, invited into Eng- 

 land by the Presbyterian party in 1643, 

 xxxiv ; their motto, xxxiv. 



" Covent G.irden Drollery," 1672, 15 . 



Cow-dung fly, a, for May, directions for 

 making, 257. 



"Cowley's Works," fol. 1674, copy of, for- 

 merly belonging to Walton, in the cathe- 

 dral library of Salisbury, cxlviii. 



" Cowper's Heaven Opened," 410, 1631, copy 

 of, formerly belonging to Walton, in the 

 cathedral library of Salisbury, cxlviii. 



Cowper the poet, one of Walton's ideas beau- 

 tifully expressed in his "Task," 285. 



" Cozen' s Devotions," referred to by Walton, 

 cxlviii. 



Craber, the, or water-rat, 64. 



Cranefield, Thomas, of Bromham, county of 

 Norfolk, 131 n. 



Cranmer, pedigree of, cxxxiv. cxxxv. 



, Anne, wile of John Sellar, xxii, cxxxv. 



, Dorothy, supposed to have married 



Dr Richard Field, Dean of Gloucester, 

 xxii, cxxxv. 



, Elizabeth, the wife of Alexander Nor- 

 wood, xxii, cxxxv. 



, Francis, son of John, cliv. 



, George, of Christ's Church, Oxford, 

 uncle of Mrs Walton, biographical account 

 of, xxii ., cxxxiv ; alluded to in a letter 



from Dr King, Bishop of Chichester, to 



Izaak Walton, Ixxii. 

 Cranmer, Humphry, cliv. 



, Jane, xxii, cxxxv. 



, Margaret, xxii, cxxxv. 



, Rachael, wife of John Blowfield, gent., 



xxii, cxxxiv. 

 , Susan, sister and co-heiress of Sir 



William, cv, cxxxiv. 

 , Susanna, the daughter of Thomas, of 



Canterbury, married Floud, xxi, xxii, 



cxxxiv. 



, Thomas, xxii, cxxxiv. 



, William, the intimate friend of Izaak 



Walton, xxii, cxxxiv. 

 , Sir William, governor of the Merchants' 



Adventurers of England, xxii, cxxxiv. 

 Crassus, the orator, his grief for the death of 



a tame lamprey, 160. 



Crawley, Thomas, a witness to Izaak Wal- 

 ton's will, cii. 

 Crew, Anne, daughter and co-heiress of 



John, Esq., i. 



, John, of Crew, Esq., i. 



Crispes, , Isabel, widow of, cxxxii. 



Crocodile, the, 75 ; longevity of the, 142. 

 Cromwell, Lord, an instance of his gratitude 



to Sir Frescobaldi, a Florentine merchant, 



118 n. 

 , Oliver, offered a pension of ,300 per 



annum to Dr Casaubon, to write a history 



of his time, 42 . 



, Wingfield, fifth baron, clxxxiv. 



Crook, John, a publisher, of the Ship, in St 



Paul's Churchyard, 210 . 

 Crooked Lane, many fishing-tackle shops 



formerly in, 182 n. 



" Crown of Laurell," the, by Skelton, ex- 

 tract from, 149 n. 

 Crowther's Well Alley, near Aldersgate 



Street, the residence of a descendant of 



Charles Kerbye, famous for the shape and 



temper of his hooks, 188 n. 

 Crucian carp, brought into England, from 



Germany, since Walton wrote, 192 . 

 Cuckoo, the, its want of care of its eggs, 48. 

 Cuckow's spit, 73. 

 Cullen, R., clxxxi . 



"Cunning Lovers," the, atragedy, 1654,15 . 

 Curiosities, formerly the custom to exhibit, 



in coffee-houses, 285. 

 Cuttle-fish, account of the, 46. 

 Cyrus, hunting one of the qualifications be- 

 stowed upon him by Xenophon, 30. 



DACE, the, swims in shoals, 132 ; baits for, 

 184-186, 188 ; their haunts, and instructions 

 for angling for, 187 ; directions for cook- 

 ing, 189 . 



Dalbin, Mrs, mentioned in Walton's will, 

 cii ; not identified, cvi. 



Dallaway's " Letheraeum sive Horti Le- 

 therseani," 41 n. 



Dale, Mr, a pedigree of Ken compiled by, 

 cxxii n. 



" Damon and Dorus," an humble eclogue, 

 addressed by Walton to " his ingenious 

 friend, Mr Brome," Ixvi. 





