298 



INDEX. 



own spawn ; will not fatten where there 

 arc many tench, 145 «.; directions for 

 angHng for, 145, 147 ; baits for, 146, 147, 

 150, 185 ; the haunts of, 147 ; recipe for 

 cooking, 147; called the water fox, 182 ; 

 the spawn of, devoured by ducks, igg ; 

 thrive and breed best when no other fi-^h is 

 put into the same pond, 200 ; directions for 

 storing ponds with^and feeding them, 200 n., 



20I. 



Carpenter, Anne, sister of John, second son 

 of John Carpenter, of Rye, in Sussex, 

 supposed to have been the mother of Izaak 

 Walton's first wife, xxiiii, cxxxv. 



Carthusians, the college of, never eat flesh, 



59- . 



Cartwright, Edmund, of Ossington, in the 

 county of Notts, cxxxv. 



■ , William, a collection of his poems pub- 

 lished in 1643, xxxii ; elegies on his death, 

 referred to by Walton, cxlviii ; was one of 

 the adopted sons of Ben Jonson, 217 n. 



Gary [or Carew], Mr Thomas, *'a poet of 

 note," anecdote of, cxlvi. 



Casaubon, Dr, his '* Discourse of Credulity 

 and Incredulity," quoted by Walton, 41, 

 116 ; biographical account of, 41 n. 



Cases of Conscience, Hale's letters on, cxivii. 



Case-worm, the,' a bait for chub, 69. 



Catechism, dissertation on the authorship of 

 the, 52 n. 



Caterpillars, mode of generation, and dif- 

 ferent kinds of, 95-97- 



Cats.quotationfrom Montaigne relative 10,23. 



Caussin, Nicholas, account of, 207 «. ; quota- 

 tion from, cxv. 



Caviare, made from the roes of carp, 145. 



Cecil, the arms of, on a building called the 

 Almshouse, on the road leading from 

 Waltham Cross to Cheshunt, 36 w. 



, Sir Robert, afterwards Earl of Salis- 

 bury, 35 71. 



, Sir William, afterwards Lord Burleigh, 



Theobald's Palace built by, 35. 



" Ce que Dieu garde est bien gard^," a 

 French proverb quoted by Cotton, 232. 



" Certaine Experiments concerning Fish," 

 ,4to, 1600, by Taverner, extract from, 

 132 n. 



Chalkhill, Anne, daughter of Roger, 283. 



•^^, John, Esq., the author of a poem en- 

 titled " Thealma and Clearchus,'' xciii ; 

 his identity unascertained, xciv ; styled by 

 Walion in a presentation copy of his Lives, 

 now in the possession of the Rev. W. 

 Cotton, '* my brother Chalkhill, 282 ; song, 

 "Oh the sweet contentment," composed 

 by, 86 K. ; verses of Angling by, 174; the 

 supposed author of '* Alcilia," xix. 



— , John, fellow of Winchester College, 

 his monumental inscription in Winchester 

 Cathedral, xciv n. 



~ — , Martha, daughter of Ion, married Mr 

 Thomas Ken, xxxix «., xlviii, cciv. 



, pedigree of, ccv. 



Chalk hills, near London Bridge, formerly 

 resorted to for roach-fishing, 182 71. 



Chancery Lane, Walton's residence in, xxix , 



xl ; a house in, bequeathed by Walton to 

 his son -in - law, Dr Hawkins, and his 

 wife, c. 



Chaniilly, tame carp at the Prince of Condi's 

 seat at, 144. 



Chapman, Geo., the poet, alluded to in some 

 verses by Sir Aston Cokayne, clxviii. 



Char, the, 165 ; where found, 165 «. 



Charles the First, expres*ied his approbation 

 of Walton's Life of Dr Donne, xxviii, Ixiv ; 

 anecdotes of, xxxvi ; Walton's account of 

 the religious dissensions which preceded 

 his death, cix. 



Charles the Second, his restoration attended 

 by the promotion of many eminent divines 

 who had suffered in his cause, jxv ; satirical 

 verses on his angling, by Lord Rochester, 

 285. 



Charleton, Sir Job, chief-justice of Chester, 

 III n. 



"Charon of Wisdom," 4to, Lond. n. d,, copy 

 of, formerly belonging to Walton, in the 

 cathedral library of Salisbury, cxivii. 



Chatfield, Elizabeth.^ wife of William, of 

 Bermondsey Street in Southwark, civ. 



Chatsworth, in the county of Derby, 231 ; 

 a poem descriptive of, published by Cotton 

 in 1681, clxxxvi. 



Chaucer's prologue to the Canterbury Tale-^, 

 quotation from, 140. 



Chauncy, Sir Henry, 21 71. 



Chavender, vide Chub. 



Cheeke, Sir John, secretary of state and pre- 

 ceptor to Edward the Sixth, clxiii tt. 



Chelsea, Bishop Morley's house at, Ixxviii. 



Chepstow, the town of, 230 n. 



Chester, Cotton's account of his meeting 

 with, and visit to the Mayor of, clxxv. 



Chesterfield, Philip, first Earl of, xliii. 



, Philip, second Earl of, ccii ; the third 



edition of the " Reliquiae Wottonianae " 

 dedicated to him by Walton in 1673, Ixxix ; 

 the translation of De Moniluc's *' Com- 

 mentaries" dedicated to him by Charles 

 Cotton, clxxx. 



, Katherine, wife of Henry, Lord Stan- 

 hope, created Countess of, for life, xliii, 

 ccii.; the "Reliquise Wottonianas" dedi- 

 cated to her, xliii. 



" Chevy Chace," a song, 79. , 



Chichester lobsters considered superior to 

 others, 73, 140. 



Child and Greenhilt, the case of, cited, 213. 



Chillingworth, Mr, mentioned in the dedi- 

 cation of Walton's Life of Bishop Sander- 

 son, xci. 



China, gold and silver fish brought from, 

 192 n. 



Chiswick, the drag-net much used by the 

 fishermen of, 182' ». 



" Choice Ayres, Songs, and Dialogues, to 

 sing to the Theorbo, Lute, and Bass Viol," 



fol. 1675, 185 7t. 



" Choice Drollery, with Son^s and Sonnets," 

 1656, written by Thomas Weaver, 13 «. 



Cholmondeley, Lord, 131 71. 



'* Christ's Passion," a tragedy, translated 

 from Grotius, 1640, i2mo, 27 n. 



