Droxford, Walton's books at, mentioned in his will, c, ci, civ.
Dryden, imitation by, of lines quoted by Walton, from an unknown poet, lii n. Du Bartas, quoted by Walton, 45-47, account of his works, 45 %. Dubbing, list of materials for, 103 μ. Dubravius. Janus, biographical account of, 133 .; his treatise "De Piscinis et Pis- cium qui in eis aluntur naturis," quoted by Walton, Ixi, 133, 134, 144, 145, 199; anec- dote related by, 289.
Duck, the, destructive to fish, 63. "Ductor Dubitantium," by Bishop Taylor, cited, 27.
Dugdale, Sir William, showed to Walton a letter from Sir Thomas Herbert, wherein he and others were directed to compare with the original King Charles the First's translation of Dr Sanderson's lectures "De Juramento," xxxvii. Dug-worm, the, 91.
Dulas, the name of, common to many rivers in Wales, 230 #.
Duncombe, Mr, extract from his "History of Herefordshire," relative to the salmon of the Wye, 126 n.
Dun-cut fly for May, the directions for mak- ing, 257.
Dundell, co. of Herts, the source of one of the heads of the river Thames, 195. Dunnington, the town of, 229. Duport, Dr James, Latin verses addressed by him to Walton, lxxxviii, 18; translation thereof by Archdeacon Wrangham, 274; biographical account of him, 18 n. Duppa, Dr, presented by Dr Donne, with a seal of bloodstone, engraven with a repre- sentation of the Saviour extended on an anchor, xxiv.
Durfey's "Pills to purge Melancholy," 83 n.
"Dutch Fair," the picture of a, cxlii. Dyrham, in Gloucestershire, 276.
EAGLE, the, styled Jove's servant in ordinary, 25; a species of hawk, 28. Eastcarlton, county of Norfolk, tenure of the manor of, 198 n. Eaton-fords, clxxxvi.
Eaton, James, of Stafford, apprenticed by Izaak Walton, cxlix.
Eccleshall, in Staffordshire, xlv; a farm near, bequeathed by Walton to the town of Stafford, ci.
Edghill, Thomas, Walton's servant, a be- quest made to him, ci.
Eels, said to be found in river Ganges, thirty feet in length, 42; unbed themselves and stir during thunder, 118; better for age and size, 130; much esteemed by the Romans, 158; different opinions as to their mode of generation, 159, 164 n; those bred in rivers near the sea said never to return to fresh water, 160; supposed to lie torpid half the year, 160; varieties of, 161; baits and direc- tions for fishing for, 161; mode of sniggling for, 162; bobbing for, 162 n.; directions
for cooking, 163; very large one caught at Peterborough, 163: their haunts, 164 %. Eggington, county of Derby, 299. Erie, the, a species of hawk, 29. Elephant, the, 30, 33.
Elijah, the prophet, fed by ravens, 27. Elizabeth, Queen, often wished herself a milkmaid all the month of May, 81. Elusina, the river, 41.
" England's Helicon," published in 1600, 80 2. "English Guzman," the, or the history of that unparalleled thief, James Hind, 4to, 1652, 113 22.
"Epigrams," by Sir John Harrington, xix. Epirus, a river in, that puts out any lighted torch, and kindles any that was not lighted,
Eroways, the river, county of Derby, 231. Espernon, Gerard's Life of the Duke of, translated by Charles Cotton, clxxviii. Evans, Eyans, or Janes, Thomas, of Bow, county of Middlesex, cxxxiv. -, Susan, cXXXV.
"Eusebius, Socrates, and Evagrius, Eccle- siastical Histories," fol. Lond. 1636, for- merly belonging to Izaak Walton, now in the cathedral library at Salisbury, cxlviii. Exton, Sir Thomas, cii.
FAIRCLOUGH, alias Featley, Dr Daniel, 13 n. Fairfax, Sir Thomas, 33 n.
"Fair One of Tunis, or the Generous Mis- tress; a new piece of gallantry, out of the French," published by Charles Cotton, in 1674, clxxxi.
Faithorne, the fish in the first edition of the "Complete Angler," supposed to have been engraved by, 3 ".
Falcon, the, a species of the hawk, 28. Fa kland, Lord, his visit to John Heals, cxlvi. Faringdon, Mr Anthony, cxlvi; Mr Fulman
referred to him for information relative to the Life of John Hales, lxxx; his sermons bequeathed by Walton to Mr John Darbi- shire, cii.
"Farewell to the Vanities of the World," a poem said to have been written by Dr Donne, lx.
Farnham Castle, in Surrey, a seat of the Bishop of Winchester, xcvi; visited by Walton in May 1683, xcix; prints and pictures at, bequeathed by him to his son Izaak, ci, cv.
Farwell, Mrs Anne and Mrs Elizabeth, bequest made to by their " cousin " Izaak Walton, the younger, cxviii; not identified, cxxiii.
Faulkner, "an industrious angler." men- tioned by Robert Frank in his "Northern Memoirs," lxi.
Feathers for fly-making, directions for choosing, 104 ".
Fell, Dr, master of Christ's Church, lxxxv; expelled from the university, xxxv. Fence months, the, regulated by stat. 13 Edw. I. c. 47, and stat. 13 Rich. II. c. 19, 62 n.
Ferabosco, Sig. Alfonso, 111 .
Fern-fly, the, directions for making, 262. Ferrers, John, Esq., a translation of the "Moral Philosophy of the Stoics," from the French of Du Vaix, dedicated to him by Charles Cotton, clxxii. Ferret, the, 29.
Field, Dr Richard, Dean of Gloucester, xxii, lxxviii.
Finlanders, superstition of the, 284. Firman, Raymond, executor of the will of Jane Walton, of Derby, cxxxix. Fish, have hearing, 118; salmon called a fish, par excellence, in Scotland, lxii. Fishing-frog, called by the Dalmatians "the water devil," 134.
Fishing-house, Cotton's, vide Beresford.
Sir Henry Wotton's, near Eton, de- scription of, by Mr Jesse, cxxix. Fishing-lines, directions for making, 202, 203. Fish-ponds, directions for making, 198-200. Fitzwilliam Collection at Cambridge, error respecting a view of Theobalds in, published by Society of Antiquaries, corrected, 275. Flatman, Thomas, the poet, verses addressed to Walton on publication of Chalkhill's poem of Thealma and Clearchus, xcv; to Charles Cotton, on his translation of De Montluc's Commentaries, clxxxi. Fleet Street, Walton's house in, xx. Fesh-flies, directions for breeding, 261. Fletcher, Giles, 177 ".
Phineas, the poet, 111 ., 119 2.; ac- count of, 177 n.; intimate with Charles Cotton the elder, clxiv.
John, his comedy of "Monsieur Thomas," edited by Alexander Brome in 1639, 274:
Florence, the beauty of, 34.
Floud, John, A. M., biographical notices of, xxi, cxxxv; mentioned in his mother's will, xxx; verses to Walton on the publication of the "Complete Angler," xlviii, 9.
Rachel, the wife of Izaak Walton, xxi, cxxxiii, cxxxv.
Robert, son of John Floud, xxi, cxxxv. -, Robert, his son, B. A., xxi, cxxxv; men- tioned in his mother's will, xxx; verses to Walton on the publication of the "Com- plete Angler," xlviii, xlix, 14.
Mrs Susannah, xxx, cxxxv; abstract of her will, xxx.
Sir Thomas, of Milgate, co. Kent, xxi Flounder, the, description of, baits, and directions for angler for, 165. Flower, Alice, daughter of John, of Whit- well, co. Ruand, 60 n. Fly-fishing, Cotton's treatise on the art of, written by him at Walton's request, within ten days, lxxxv, clxxxv; Walton's direc- tions for, quoted from Barker, 101 et seq.; instructions for, from an anonymous writer, 106 m.; Cotton's instructions for, 240 et seq. Fly-making, list of materials necessary for, 103 n., vide Artificial flies.
Ford, John, married Elizabeth Walton, cliv. Fordidge trout, never caught by angling, 73; eats nothing in fresh water, 74.
Forked kite, the, a species of hawk, 29. Fox, the, 29.
Frank. Robert, author of "Northern Me- moirs," his criticism of the "Complete Angler," lx.
French pye, the, a species of hawk, 28. Frescobaldi, Signor, a Florentine merchant, 118 21.
Frog, the, several kinds of, described by Top- sel, 74 m.; said to be venomous in spawning- time, 132; very destructive to carp, 134, 143; a bait for pike, 135; different kinds of, and directions for baiting with, 136, 137- Frome, George, a witness to the will of Izaak Walton the younger, cxix.
Fuller, Dr, Walton's opinion of his "Church History," lxiii; quoted by Walton, 51 ., 52 n.
Fuller's "Abel Redivivus," 4to. 1651, for- merly belonging to Izaak Walton, now in the cathedral library at Salisbury, cxlvii. Fulman, William, author of the "Notitia Oxoniensis Academiæ," lxxx. Fulimart, the, 29 ".
GAISFORD, Stephen, a witness to the will of Izaac Walton the younger, cxix. "Gammer Gurton's Nedle, a ryght pithy, pleasaunt and merie Comedie," 1575, 281. Ganges, the river, 42, vide Eels.
Gardner, Dr, expelled from the University of Oxford, xXXV.
Garrard, Mr Thomas, a ring bequeathed to by Walton, cii; notice of, cv. Garrick, widow of David, 142. Garter, a, and George, belonging to Charles II.,taken after the battle of Worcester, xlv. Gasius, Antonius, quoted by Walton, 168; account of, 168 n.
Gatehouse at Westminster, the, 283. Gauden, Dr, Bishop of Exeter, published the Life of Richard Hooker, lxxvii. Gay, the poet, verses descriptive of the art of angling, by, 287-289.
Geneva, the trout taken 'in the lake of, a great article of commerce, 72. Gentles, breeding and preserving, 185. George, the King's lesser, preserved by Colonel Blague, after battle of Worcester, xiv; its restoration to his Majesty, xlv. Gerard, John, quoted by Walton, 160; ac- count of, 160 n.
Gerard's History of the Life of the Duke of Espernon, translated by Charles Cotton, clxxviii.
Gerfalcon, the, a species of the hawk, 28. Gesner, Conrade, biographical account of, 44 n.; his "Historia Animalium," and
De Serpentum Naturâ," quoted by Wal- ton, Ixi, 44, 48, 59, 72, 118, 120, 123, 125, 127, 130, 132, 140, 141, 144, 148, 156, 165, 166, 167, 193.
Gise, Mr Christopher, a bequest made to, by Dr Donne, the younger, cxlii. Glanville, Sir Bartholomew, custos of Orford Castle, temp. Hen. II., 45 %. Glascocke, William, a witness to the will of Dr Donne, the younger, cxlii.
Gloucester, the town of, 195. Goedartius, Joannes, "De Insectis," Lond. Svo, 1685, 96 n.
Golden Lane, London, the Swan, in, lix. Goldsmith, Francis, Esq., 197 n., vide Gro- tius.
"Go, lovely rose, &c.," song by Waller, cxcv. Goose, the, destructive to fish, 63. Gorara, the, destructive to fish, 63. Goshawk, the, 28.
Gower, Earl, his supercilious mention of Dr Johnson, 124.
Grasshopper, the, a good bait for chub, 68, 84; for trout, 69; said to have no mouth, 73: varieties of, 73.; artificial, 106, 261. Gravel lastspring, a fish so called, found only in the Wye and Severn, 129 ". Grayling or Umber, the, styled by the French " an humble chevalier," said to be very medicinable, 120; called by St Ambrose "the flower of fishes," 121; en- graving of, 121; where found, baits for, and directions for angling for, 121; Cotton's instructions for angling for, 240 et seq. Great blue fly, for February, 254. Great dun fly, for February, 253. Great hackles or palmer flies, for February and May, 253-255-
Green-drake fly, description of, where found,
and directions for making, 241, 257, 259. Gregory, Mr John, the posthumous works of, 4to, Lond. 1683, quoted. 45 n. Greinsell, "
my cozen's widow," mentioned by Walton in his will, cii; not identified, cvi, vide Grinsell.
Greinwood, Mrs, mentioned in Walton's will, c.
Grey drake, the, for May, 259. Greyhound, the, 30.
Grinsell, Mrs Anne, widow, cliv. John, son of Thomas, cliii. Mr Thomas, cliii.
Walter, son of Thomas, cliii.
"Grotius; his Sophompaneas or Joseph," a tragedy, by Francis Goldsmith, Esq., 12mo, Lond. 1652, quoted, 197 n. Ground-bait for bream and carp, 151. Gudgeon, the, a leather-mouthed fish, 69; description of, and directions for angling for, 171.
Guiniad, the, description of, and places where found, 166 n.
Gunpowder Alley, near Shoe Lane, clxviii. Gustavus Erickson, introduced Protestant- ism into Sweden, 284.
HACKLES, directions for choosing, 103 n. Haddock, the, 30.
Haddon, county of Derby, 230. Haggard, the, a species of hawk, 29. Hailes, Lord, said to have contemplated a new edition of Walton's Lives, cxxiv. Hakewill, Dr, account of his " God's Power and Providence," Apology of quoted, 130 ., 160. Hale, Sir Matthew, prepared a bill for the compression of the more moderate dis- senters from the Church, and allowing cer-
tain indulgences to such as could not be brought within the comprehension, 96. Hales, Anne, wife of Sir Edward, first edi- tion of the "Reliquia Wottonianæ," dedi- cated to, xliii.
John, of Eton, intimate friend of Izaak Walton, xx, lxxiii; styled "the walking library;" his opinion of the merits of Wal- ton's Life of Dr Donne, xxviii; collections for his Life by Walton, lxxx; his portrait painted after death by Lady Anne Howe, Ixxxi; Walton's memoranda respecting him, cxliv-cxlvii.
Hale's Treatise on Fencing, ridiculed by Halifax, George Savile, Marquis of; letter Walton, 3, 5, 7. to Charles Cotton on his translation of Hall, Dr, Bishop of Exeter, presented by Montaigne's Essays, 1685, clxxxvii. Dr Donne with a seal of bloodstone, engraven with a representation of the Saviour extended on an anchor, xxiv; his works bequeathed by Walton to his daugh- ter, Mrs Hawkins, ci. Ham, in Essex, 196 n.
Hammond, Dr, expelled from the University Hambleton Lock, 115 ., vide Howell. of Oxford, xxxv; attended King Charles I. during his imprisonment, xxxvi; intimate with Walton, xci; copy of his "Christian's Obligations to Peace and Charity," ten Sermons, 4to, 1649, formerly belonging to Walton, now in the cathedral library at Salisbury, cxlvii.
Hampton, chiefly resorted to by Londoners, for the purpose of angling, 183 n. Hampton Court, the conference at, 52 m. Hanson, Richard, of Stafford, apprenticed by Izaak Walton, cxlix.
Hanson-Toot, Derby, engraving of, 233. Harboone, John, Esq., of Tackley, county of Oxford, 54.
Harcourt, Humphrey, son of John Harcourt, of Ranton Hall, co. Stafford, cvi.
Mr Valantine, ring bequeathed to, by Walton, cii; notice of, cvi.
Hare, the, 29, 30; formerly supposed to Harington, Dr, 60 n. change its sex every year, 116.
Harp Alley, in Shoe Lane, the residence of Sir John, epigrams written by, xix. Charles Kerbye, 188.
Harry Long-legs, 262. Harrison, Jas., alias Walton, his will, cxxxix.
Hartley, Thomas, of London, merchant, cxxxiv.
Hartshorn, co. Derby, lxxxvi n. Harvey, Thomas, 108 n.
Harvie, the Rev. Christopher, verses ad- dressed by him to Walton on publication of the " Complete Angler," xlviii, 10; verses by him, on the Book of Common Prayer, lvii, 108; verses addressed by hin to Walton, on publication of the fourth edition of his poem called "The Syna- Harvy, Mr John, bequest made to, by Dr gogue," lxvii. Donne the younger, cxlii.
Hawk, varieties of the, 28, 29; has only four or five young ones at a time, 76. Hawking, the pleasures of, 25. Hawkins, pedigree of, cxxxii, cxxxiii.
-, Anue, daughter of Walton, bequests made to by her father, c, ci; by her brother, Izaak Walton the younger, cxviii; ap- pointed his executrix and residuary legatee, cxviii; her portrait in the possession of the Rev. Dr Hawes, cli.
, Anne, granddaughter of Walton, be- quest made to her by him, ci; by her uncle, Izaak Walton the younger, cxviii; biographical account and epitaph of, cxx; her portrait in the possession of the Rev. Dr Hawes, cli.
Anne, daughter of William Hawkins, Esq., married the Rev. John Hawes, cxxi, cxxxiii.
Frances, the wife of Mr Thomas Knapp Blagden, cxxi, cxxxii.
Henrietta Rebecca, cxxi, cxxxiii. Jane, her epitaph, cxxi, cxxxii.
Sir John, error in his statement re- specting Walton's marriage, xx; his con- jecture that the Life of Wotton was finished! in 1644 supposed to be erroneous, xlii; mentions letters of Walton extant in the Ashmolean Museum, relating to a Life of Mr Henry Savile, lxxiii; his description of the fishing-house at Beresford, lxxxvii, 238. his conjecture that the fish in the first edition of the "6 Complete Angler" were engraved on silver proved to be erroneous, 3 n.; discovered the tune to which the song "Come, live with me," &c., was sung, 81.
Dr William, prebendary of Winches- ter, married Walton's daughter Anne, lxxxiv, cxxii, cxxxiii; bequests made to him by Walton's will, c, ci; his death, cxli; his portrait in the possession of the Rev. Dr Hawes, cli.
Hawkins, William, Esq., bequest made to him by his uncle, Izaak Walton the younger, cxviii; executor of his will, cxix; biogra- phical account and epitaph of himself, and Jane, his wife, cxx; their issue, cxxi, cxxxii; his portrait in the possession of the Rev. Dr Hawes, cli.
-, Rev. William, vicar of Boldre, county of Hants, cxxxii.
Hawthorn-fly, the, Walton's directions for making, 106; Barker's do., 105 %. Hayne, Richard, Esq., of Ashbourn, 227 %. Headley, a passage from the "Complete Angler," quoted by him in his notes to the Select Beauties of Ancient English Poetry, cxiv n.
Heath, J., the translator of Du Moulin's "Accomplishment of the Prophecies," 39. Heber, Mr, copy of a song entitled “Come, Shepherds, deck your Heads," from a MS. in his possession, 277- Helmet pigeon, the, 76. Henchman, Dr, Bishop of Salisbury, lxv; contributed to Walton's Life of Herbert, lxxvi.
, Humphry, LL D., cxix. Hen-driver, the, a species of hawk, 29. Henley Bridge, 184.
Henly, "old Oliver," a noted fisher, both for trout and salmon, 127.
Henry, Prince, a poem on the death of, printed in 12mo in 1613, by William Basse, 282.
Heury VII.'s Gifts, next door to the Gate-
house in Westminster, the residence of Thomas Barker, author of "The Art of Angling," 283.
Henshaw, Samuel, of Stafford, apprenticed by Izaak Walton, cxlix. Herbert, George, author of "The Temple," presented by Dr Donne with a seal of bloodstone, engraven with a representation of the Saviour extended on an anchor, xxiv; his Life by Walton, published in May 1670, lxxv; quotation from his poem entitled " Contemplation on God's Provi- dence," 44; from "The Temple," 107.
Sir Thomas, attended Charles I. during his imprisonment, xxxvii. Hermit-fish, the, 46.
"Hero and Leander," a poem by Chris- topher Marlow, 78 n..
Heron, the, destructive to fish, 63; marrow of the thigh bone of, a tempting bait, 138 Herrick, the poet, intimate with Charles Cotton the elder, clxiv; his "Hesperides," quoted, 81 n.
Herring, the, dies out of water sooner than any other sea-fish, 141; plentiful near Yar- mouth, 198, vide Yarmouth.
Hertford, the castle of, built by Edward the elder, 196 n.
Heseltine, William, Esq., Tradescant's house in Lambeth now in his occupation,
Heylin's Cosmography, quoted by Walton, 194; copies of his Microcosmus, 4to, 1621, and of his "Parable of the Tares," 4to,
1659, formerly belonging to Walton, now in the cathedral library of Salisbury, cxlvii.
Hickes, Thomas, M.A., his Lucian's Dia- logues, 22 n.
Higgs, Mr Walter, a ring bequeathed to, by Walton, cii; notice of, cvi.
Hind, James, the "English Guzman," bio- graphical account of, 113 .
Hircus, the consul, held intelligence with Decimus Brutus, besieged in Mutina, by means of a pigeon, 27.
"History of Thomas Lord Cromwell," pub- lished as Shakespeare's, 118 . Hobart, Sir Richard, cv.
Hobbes "De Mirabilibus Pecci," clxxxvi. Hobby, the, a species of hawk, 28. Hobson, Ellen, of Bromley, in Kent, clv. Hoddesdon, the Thatched House at, 1, 20, 36; engraving of the, 56. Hog-fish, the, 43.
Holdsworth, Dr Richard, 13 ".
Holinshed, Mr, a bequest made to, by Wal- ton, ci; not identified, cvi.
Hollar, portraits of the John Tradescants, father and son, engraved by, 42 n. Holmes-Chapel, co. Chester, the ale at praised by Cotton, clxxiv. Holt, Sir John, Bart., cxxxv.
Sir Robert, of Aston, co. Warwick, Bart., the second edition of Donne's Life dedicated to, lxiv.
Holtenby, Daniel, overseer of the parish of St Dunstan's in the West, clii. Hooker, Richard, author of the "Ecclesias- tical Polity," xxii; his Life, by Walton, published in January 1665, lxxi; reprinted in 1666, lxxiv; republished with the Lives of Donne, Herbert, and Wotton, about 1670, lxxvi; again in 1675, lxxxi; a copy of his "Ecclesiastical Politie," fol. 1666, formerly belonging to Walton, now in the cathedral library at Salisbury, cxlviii. Hooks, for fishing, mentioned by the prophet Amos, and in the Book of Job, 38, 49; Charles Kerbye, famed for his method of tempering, 188 n.
Hooper, Mr, warden of the Stationers' Com- pany in 1612, 54 n.
Hope," an Ode to, by Charles Cotton,cxciii. Hopton, Edward, gent., commendatory verses by, prefixed to Barker's "Art of Angling," 1657 or 1659. 283.
Horne, Bishop, a passage from the "Com- plete Angler," quoted in his commentary on the 104th Psalm, cxiv n.; contemplated the republication of Walton's Lives, cxxiv. Horse-flesh fly, the, for April, 256. Hoskins, Elizabeth, Susan, and William, bequests to by their "cousin" Izaak Wal- ton the younger, cxviii, cxxiii.
Matthew, cxvii, cxxiii. Howe, the Lady Anne; formerly Mrs Anne King, cxliv; painted the portrait of John Hales, after his death, lxxxi, cxliv; a ring bequeathed to, by Walton, cii; biographi- cal account of, cv. -, Sir Richard, Bart., lxxxi.
Howell, Mr, large trout taken by, at Hamble ton Lock, 115 #.
Hubball, Adam, of Stafford, apprenticed by Walton, cxlix.
Hughes, Jane, daughter of Rowland, of Essenden, co. Herts, the mother of Walton's second wife, xxxix, cciv.
Humber, the river, made subject to the fence months by stat. 13 Edw. I. c. 47. 62 n.; grayling plentiful in the, 122; the æstuarium, 196
"Hunter in his Choice Career," the, a song by William Basse, 85; copy of, 281. Huntingdon, Ferdinand, Earl of, clxvi . -, George, 4th Earl of, 72 n. Hunting, the pleasures of, 29, 31. Hutchinson, Charles, of Willoughby on the Wolds, co. Derby, cciii.
Isabella, daughter of Sir Thomas, of Owthorpe, co. Notts, wife of Charles Cotton the younger, clxxi, cciii.
Katherine, wife of Sir Thomas, ccii. Miss Stanhope, clxxii, cciii. "Hygrasticon, seu vera ratio valetudinis bonæ et vitæ ad extremam senectutem conservandæ," by Leonard Lessius, 99.
INGELO, N., and the Life of Hales, cxlvi. "Innocent Epicure," a poem, commemorat- ing Walton, Cotton, and Venables, 274. Ireland, Mrs Mary, bequest to, by Izaak Walton the younger, cxviii; not identified, cxxiii.
Irk. the river, in Lancashire, famed for eels, 164 N.
Iron, the, a species of hawk, 28. Isabella, the colour, why so termed, 254 n. Isis, the river, 195, 196. Ivy-berries, worms anointed with the oil of, very attractive to fish, 127.
JACK, the pike, so called until it attains the length of twenty-four inches, 138.
the, a species of hawk, 28. Jackson, Captain Henry, ccxlv.
-, Mr Roger, 54 n.
James I., a copy of his works, fol. Lond. 1616, formerly belonging to Walton, now in the cathedral library of Salisbury, cxlvii.
Jenkinson, Sir Robert, of Oxfordshire, Bart., cxxxiv.
Jerkin, the, a species of the hawk, 28. Jervis, Mrs, only child of John Swinfen, Esq., grandmother of the late Earl St Vincent; a MS. note in a copy of the Life of Bishop Sanderson, presented by Walton to her grandfather, supposed to have been written by her, xxxvi.
Jew of Malta," a tragedy by Marlowe, 80 . "Johnny Armstrong," a song, 79, 278. Johnson, Mrs Elyza, a ring bequeathed to, by Walton, cii; notice of, cvi; bequest to her by Izaak Walton the younger, cxviii. Johnson, Dr, a great admirer of Walton,
Jons, Mr, large trout speared by, at Cook's Ferry, 115.
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