3i6 



INDEX, 



"Triumphs of Philamore and Amoret," an 

 elegy, inscribed by Colonel Lovelace to 

 .Charles Cotton, clxviii. 



Trollope, Sir Thomas, Bart, cxxxv. 



Trolly ILolly, a notorious femade offender, 

 prostitnte, and housebreaker, 87 n. 



Trout, the, when in season, 72, 75 ; caught 

 in the Lake of Geneva three cubits in 

 length ; varieties of, 72 ; Fordidge trout 

 will not take a bait, 72 ; bull-trout, 74 ; 

 time of spawning, 75 ; varieties of, 76 ; en- 

 graving of, Sjf. ; baits for, go, 91, 94 ; direc- 

 tions for angling for, 03, 99, 117, iig ; 

 natural flies for, Walton^s list of, 95 ; list 

 of artificial flies, and directions for making, 

 quoted from Barker, 100, 106 ; painting of 

 a trout near an ell long, at the George Inn, 

 Ware, 115 ; very large ones, noticed, 115 ?2.; 

 instanceof longevity of, 115 «.; its haunts, 

 120 «. ; dies sooner out of water than other 

 fresh-water fish, 141 ; the roe of, recom- 

 mended by Barker as an excellent bait, 189 \ 

 directions for preserving, 189 n. ; Cotton's 

 directions for fishing for, 241 et seq. 



Trout Hall, mentioned by Walton, li. 



" Troy Town," a song, printed in Percy's 

 "Reliques of Ancient English Poetry," 

 79 n. ; copy, 279. 



Tufton, Margaret, wife of Sir John, xliii. 



Tully, the best of orators, 34. 



Turkey-fly, the, for May, 257. 



Turtle-dove, the, 27, 47. 



Tweed, the, mentioned by Drayton. 196 «. 



Twety, master of the game to Edw. II., 116 «. 



Tyne, the river, 196. 



Ullswater, the guiniad taken in, 166 n. 

 Underbill, S., son of Mr Francis, cliv. 

 Usher, Dr, Archbp. of Armagh, xxxvii, Ixxiii. 

 Usk, the salmon of, when in season, 5, 7. 

 Uxbridge, a , gudgeon taken at, weighing 

 half a pound, 171. 



Valdesso, .John, a Spanish author, 40 «. 



Vallans, W., author of '• A Tale of Two 

 Swannes," 275. 



Varro Marcus Terentius, quoted by Walton, 

 33- 



Vaughan, the fish in the first edition of the 

 *' Complete Angler" engraved by, 3. Lord 

 Chief-Justice, intimate with Chas. Cotton 

 the blder, clxiv. 



Venables, Colonel, commemorated in "The 

 Innocent Epicure," in xSot, 274. 



Vernon, Anna, daughter of George, of Sud- 

 bury, civ «. Dorothy^ daughter of George, 

 01 Sudbury, cv n. Elizabeth, daughter of 

 Sir George, of Famham, cv. Sir George, of 

 Famham, a ring bequeathed to, by Izaak 

 Walton, cii. George, son of George, of 

 Sudbury, cv. Henry, son of George, of 

 Sudbury, ancestor of the present Lord, cv 

 ». Henry, of Congerton, in Cheshire, 

 letter to Sir Edward Vernon, of Sudbury, 

 clxxxvi. Rose, sister of Sir Thomas, of 

 Coleman Street, xxxix n., cv. 



Villiers, Colonel George, cxcix. 



Vine-fly, the 95. 



Violet-fly, the, for April, 255. 



Virgil, his tomb, erroneously said by Walton 



to be at Florence, 34. 

 " Voyage to Ireland in Burlesque," a poem 



by Charles Cotton, clxxiv. 

 Vuedvill, Mrs, a ring bequeathed to, by 



Walton, cii; not identified, cvi. 



Wagtail, the, called a half-year bird, 73. 



Walker's "History of the Sufferings of the 

 Clergy," Izaak Walton the younger said 

 to have been a contributor to, cxvi. 



Waller, Edmund, the poet, castigated by 

 Charles Cotton for writing a panegyric on 

 "The Protector," clxix ; extract from a 

 poem by, in praise of music, 179 ; extract 

 from a poem by, on St James' Park, 200 «. 



Wallop, Mrs Dorothy, a copy of the " Com- 

 plete Angler" presented to, by Walton, 

 xcvi ; a ring bequeathed to, by Walton, cii. 

 Henry, of Farley, in Hampshire, Esq., xcvi. 

 John, Viscount Lymington, and Earl of 

 Portsmouth, xcvi. 



Waltham, the town of, 196 «. 



Walton, pedigree of the family of, cxxxii, 

 cxxxiii ; wills of persons of the name of, 

 from the bishop's registry at Lichfield, 

 cxxxvii ; list of portraits in the possession 

 of the Rev. Dr Hawes, cii ; births, mar- 

 riages, and deaths, from the registers of St 

 Dunstan's in the West, clii; from the 

 registers of St Mary, Stafford, cUv ; obser- 

 vations upon the early part of the pedigree 

 of, cliv. Anne, daughter of Izaak, her 

 birth, xli ; married Dr William Hawkins, 

 prebendary of Winchester, Ixxxiv ; be- 

 quests to by her father's will, c ; also by 

 the will of her brother, Isaac Walton, 

 cxviii ; appointed sole executrix of his will, 

 cxviii ; her death, monumental inscription, 

 and issue, cxx. Henry, of Whitechapel, 

 Izaak Walton the elder supposed to have 

 been apprenticed to, civ. 



Walton, Izaak, the Elder ; birth and 

 parentage, xvii; childhood, xvii ; appren- 

 ticed to a sempster or haberdasher in Lon- 

 don, xviii ; observations on an article in 

 "The Freebooter," i8th October 1823, 

 xviii «. ; *' The Love of Amos and Laura, 

 written by S. P.," xix ; corrected, or partly 

 written by him, previous to the first pub- 

 lication, when twenty years of age, xix ; 

 identity of S- P. with Samuel Purchas, 

 author of "The Pilgrimage," unascer- 

 tained, xix ; resided in Fleet Street in 

 1624, XX ; intimacy with Dr Donne, through 

 whom he became acquainted with Sir 

 Henry Wotton, Dr Henry^ King, John 

 Hales of Eton, and other eminent persons, 

 XX ; known to Ben Jonson, and terms 

 Drayton his honest old friend, and lived 

 on terras of intimacy with the most dis- 

 tinguished literary men of his age, xx ; 

 their acquaintance proof of the esteem in 

 which he was held, xx ,* errors of his bio- 



fraphers respecting his wives ; stated by 

 ir John Hawkins and Dr Zouch to have 

 been qnly once married, the name of his 



