INDEX, 



3'3 



Rowell, Ge6rge> citizen and upholder, of I 

 London, civ. 



Rowsley, co. Derby, 230. 



Royal Society, the, absurdity of the regula- 

 tions respecting their library, 285. 



Rud, kind of bastard roach engendered be- 

 tween the roach and the bream, 182. 



Ruddy-fly, the, for May, 100. 



RufFcoat, the, a species of cadis, 190. 



RuSe, the, description of, and directions for 

 angling for, 171. 



Rufford, Francis, of Sapy, co. Worcester, 

 Esq., 143 «.; Benjamin, 143 «. ; Francis, 

 his son and heir, 143- «. ; Tamerlane, of 

 London, 143 n. 



Running-line, the, why so called, and direc- 

 tions for making it, 93 n. 



Rupert, Prince, communicated to Charles 

 Kerbye a method of tempering hooks, 188. 



Russell, Mary, daughter of fair William, 

 of Strensham, in Worcestershire, Bart., 

 clxxxiv, cciii. 



Rusticatio Religiosi in Vacantiis, verses by 

 Sir Henry Wotton, 275. 



Sacaret, the, a species of hawk, 28. 



Sadler, Ralph, of Standon, co. Herts, Esq., 

 his otter-hounds ; Sir Ralph, knight ban- 

 neret, temp. Hen. VIIL and Eliz., «.; Sir 

 Thomas, knight, zz. 



St Dunstan's in the West, parish books and 

 registers, clii, 284 ; Richard Marriott's shop 

 in the chilrchyard of, 274. 



St James's Park, 111 w.; ladies angling in 

 the 6anal in, alluded to by Waller, 200 ». 



St Peter never visited Rome, 34 «. 



Saker, the, a species of hawkf, 28. 



Salamander, the, 43. 



Salisbury Cathedral, epitaph of Izaak Wal- 

 ton the younger in, cxvii ; bequest to the 

 dean and chapter of, cxviii ; list of books 

 belonging to Izaak Walton the elder in 

 the library of, cxlvii. 



Salmon — salmon rivers made subject to the 

 fence months by stat 13 Kdw. I. cap. 47, 

 and 13 Riph. IL caj). 19, 62 «.; spawning- 

 time of, 122 ; migration, 123, 124 ; growth, 

 125 ; extract from Duncombe's History of 

 Herefordshire respecting the salmon _ of 

 the Wye, 126 ».; engraving of, 126 ; baits. 

 flies, and directions for Ashing for, 126^ 

 127; varieties of, tzgn.; the roe of, re- 

 commended by Barker as an excellent 

 bait, 189 w.; directions for preserving it, 

 189 n. 



Salter, Mr Edmund, the son of Lady Salter, 

 cxlvi. Sir William, cxlvi. 



Sancroft, Archbishop, attributed to Walton 

 the authorship of two letters of political 

 affairs in 1678 and 1679, xcvii, xcviii. 



Sanderson, Dr Robert, expelled from the 

 University of Oxford, xxxv ; his lectures 

 " De Juramento," approved of by Charles 

 I., and translated by him into English 

 during his imprisonment, xxxvi ; Walton's 

 interview with, Ixiii ; made Bishop of Lin- 

 coln after the Restoration, Ixv ; his Life 

 by Walton, xc ; a copy of his Sermons, 



which belonged to Walton, now in the 

 possession of Mr Pickering, xcii. 



Sandwich, Lord and Lady, 129 n. 



Sandys, Dr Edwin, Archbp. of York, 27 «. 

 Sir Edwyn, xxii, Ixxii. Mr George, bio- 

 graphical account of, 27. 



Sargas, account of a fish called the, 46. 



Saturnalia Convivia, by Aurelius Hacrobius, 

 quoted by Walton, 33. 



Saunde, Anne, wife of Ed. Cranmer, cxxxv. 



Saunders, Susan, wife of Edward, clxiii. 



Saville, George, Marquis of Halifax, Cotton's 

 translation of *' Montaigne's Essays"dedi- 

 cated to, clxxxvii. Sir Henry, cxliii ; 

 Walton erroneously supposed to have in- 

 tended to write the Life of, Ixxii. 



Scala, Janus Dubravius, Bishop of Olmutz in 

 Moravia, account of, 133 n. 



**Scarronides, or the First Book of Virgil 

 Travestie," published by Charles Cotton in 

 1664, _ clxxi ; a new edition in 1670, 

 clxxvi. 



Schoo Brook, in Derbyshire, 227 «. 



" Sciltaes Metamorphosis, enterlaced with 

 the unfortunate love of Glaucus, &c.," by 

 Thomas Lodge, 1589, 4to, no «. 



" Scintillula Altaris, or a Pious Reflection on 

 Primitive Devotion, as to the Feasts and 

 Fasts of the Christian Church," by E. 

 Sparke, xlvi. 1 



Scott, John, Esq., 56 «. Su- Walter, his de- 

 fence of Walton against the criticism of 

 Robert Frank, author of the *' Northern 

 Memoirs," Ixii ; allusions to Walton in his 

 works, cxxiv. 



Sea-angler, the cuttle-fish so called, 46. 



Sea-gull, the, destructive to fish, 63. 



Scale, Edward, a witness to the will of Izaak 

 Walton the younger, cxix. 



Seals of helitropium or bloodstone engraven 

 with a representation of the Saviour ex- 

 tended on an anchor instead of a cross, 

 ■ presented by Mr Donne to his friends be- 

 fore his death, xxiv. 



" Secrets of Angling," a poem, by John 

 Davors, Esq., 37 «., s<^ 7i. ; observations 

 respecting the authorship of, 276 ; quota- 

 tion from, 128. 



Segrave, Charles, of Scalford, co. Leicester, 

 Esq., 60. Nicholas, mentioned by Walton 

 as having tamed an otter, 60, 130. 



Selarus, the river of, said to possess the 

 power of converting wood into stone, 41, 



Selby, John, of Kin|;sbury, co. Middlesex, 

 cc ; his issue, cciii. Robert, Esq., of 

 Kingsbury, in Middlesex, one of the repre- 

 sentatives of Charles Cotton, c'c, cciii. 



Selden, John, intimate with Charles Cotton 

 the elder, clxiv. 



*' Select Ayres and Dialogues for one, two, 

 and three Voyces : to the Theorbo-Lute 

 and Basse Viol," by John Wilson and C. 

 Coleman, doctors in music, 178 «. 



Select Musical Ayres and Dialogues for 1633, 

 III n. 



Sellar, C has. » mentioned in the will of Mrs 

 Floud, XXX. John, xxii, vide Cranmer. 



Seneca's " Natural Questions" quoted, 71. 



