INDEX. 



301 



cxcix ; commemorated in a poem entitled 

 the " Innocent Epicure, or Angling," pub- 

 lished in 1697, 274. 



Cotton, Charles, son 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 n. 



, 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 Colcayne, 

 clxiv H. 



, Olive, wife of Dr Stanhope, ccii. 



, Persis, daughter of Charles, clxv «. 



, Sir Richard, comptroller of the house- 

 hold, and privy councillor to Edward VI,, 

 of Warblenton, county Essex, clxiii. 



, Susan, sister of SirG., 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 n. 

 "Country Contentments," by Markham, 



quotation from, 37 n, 

 "Country Parsons," Herbert's, eulogised by 

 Walton, Ixxvi. 



Court of Judicature for 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 Garden Drollery," 1672, 15 «. 



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



making, 257. 

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



, merly belonging to Walton, in the cathe- 

 dral library of Salisbury, cxlviii, 

 "Cowper's Heaven Opened," 4to, 1631, cony 

 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, wife 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, cHv. 



, 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. 

 -y 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., T. 



, John, of Crew, Ekq., 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 K. 

 , Oliver, offered a pension of ;^3oo 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 «. 

 Crowther's Well Alley, near Aldersgate 



Sireet, the residence of a descendant of 



Charles Kerbye, famous for the shape and 



temper of his hooks, 188 h. 

 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. 

 Cul'en, R., clxxxi «. 



"Cunning Lovers," the, atraj^edy, 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 a-^d instructions 

 for angling for, 187; directions for cook- 

 ing, 189 «. 



Dalbm, Mrs, mentioned in Walton's will, 

 cii ; not identified, cvi. 



Dallaway's " Letherseum sive Horti Lc- 

 ther8eani,".4i «. 



Dale, Mr, a pedigree of Ken compiled by, 

 cxxii n. 



" Damon and Dorus," an humble eclogue, 

 addressed by Walton to "his ingenious 

 friend, Mr Brorae/' Ixvi. 



