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Jonson, Ben, author of the "Beggar's | Killigrew, Mr Thomas, bequest made to, by
Bush," 113; his adopted sons, 217 n.
"Jovial Crew, the, or the Merry Beggars,"
a comedy by Brome, 87 n.

Jovius, Paulus, the author of a tract, "De
Romanis Piscibus," 142 ".
Judea, a river in, mentioned by Josephus,
that runs swiftly all the six days of the
week, and stands still on the Sabbath, 42.
Juxon, Dr, Bishop of London, attended
Charles I. during his imprisonment, xxxvi.

KEN, pedigree of, cciv.

-, Anne, the second wife of Izaak Walton,
xxxix, cciv.

Elizabeth, xxxix n., cxxiii, cciv.
Jane, the wife of Thomas, xxxix.
Jane, the wife of John Symons, xxxix n.,
xlvii, cciv.

-, Ion, Treasurer of the East India Com-
pany, xxxix ., xlviii, cxxii, cciv; a ring
bequeathed to him by Walton, cii.

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Ion, B.D., cxxii, cciv.

John, xxxix n., cciv, 283.
Margaret, xxxix n., cxxii, cciv.
Martha, wife of Thomas, xxxix ., cciv.
Martha, wife of Christopher Frederick
Kreinberg, xxxix 2., xlii, xlviii, cxxii, cciv.
Martin, cciv.

Mary, xxxix n., cciv.

Rose, cxxii, cciv; Isaac Walton the
younger directed by his father's will to be
kind to her, ci, civ; bequest to her, by her
nephew, Izaak Walton the younger, cxviii.

Thomas, xxxix; his will, xlvii.

-, Thos., his son by his first wife, xxxix n.
-, Thomas, his son by his second wife,
Bishop of Bath and Wells, xxxix; sup-
posed by Mr Bowles to have been the issue
of the first wife, xxxix; mentioned in his
father's will, xlviii; a ring bequeathed to
by Walton, cii; after being deprived of his
see resided with Izaak Walton the younger,
cxvi; bequeathed part of his books to him,
cxvii; his death, cciv, cxli; his portrait, in
the possession of the Rev. Dr Hawes, cli.
Kenilworth, near Coventry, a pike in a pond
at, seized a woman's foot whilst washing
clothes, 130.

Kennet, the river, a trout taken in, forty-five
inches in length, 115 m.; famed for eels,
164 n.

Kenrick, Dorothy, a ring bequeathed to, by
Walton, cii, cv, cxxxiv.

Edward, of London, merchant, cv,

cxxxiv.

-, John, of Shropshire, cxxxiv.
John, of London, xxii, cxxxiv.
Mary, cxxxiv.

-, Mathew, cxxxiv.

Kentish hens, great compared with others,
76.

Kerbye, Charles, famed for a method of tem-
pering hooks, obtained from Prince Rupert,
188 22.

Kerobyn, Thomas, of Burton, co. Stafford,
surgeon, clv.

Killigrew, Sir H., ambassador to France, xxii.

Dr Donne the younger, cxlii: stated by
Pepys to have introduced good music,

III N.

Kilmorrey, Robert, Viscount, 1 %.

King, Dr Henry, Bishop of Chichester, inti-
mate friend of Walton, xx, lxiv; executor
to Dr Donne, xxiii; presented by him
with a seal of bloodstone, with a repre-
sentation of the Saviour extended on an
anchor, xxiv; verses on Dr Donne's death,
xxiv; mentioned by Walton, in the second
edition of his Life of Dr Donne, lxiv; re-
stored to his see, after the Restoration,
lxv; bequest to him by Dr Donne the
younger, lxxi; letter to Walton, lxxi.
-, H., of Foster Lane, London, gent., clv.
Dr John, Bishop of London, Ixiv.
John, son of the Bishop of Chichester,

cxcix.

John, of Fleet Street, London, gent.,clv.
Mrs, the wife of Dr Philip, a ring be-
queathed to, by Walton, cii, cv.
Kingfisher, destructive to fish, 63; its nest,

190.

Kingston-upon-Hull, the town of, 230.
Kingston-upon-Thames, 283.
Kirby, in Westmoreland, a well near, which
ebbs and flows several times a day, 41.
Kniveton, Mary, daughter of Sir Gilbert, of
Murcaston, in Derbyshire, ccii.

Krienberg, Mr Frederick, and his wife, be-
quests to, by Izaak Walton the younger,
cxviii, cciv.

LADBROKE, Mr, of Gatton, 142 .
Lake Leman; trout of three cubits in length
said to have been taken in, 72.
Lake Lurian in Italy, carp taken in, of fifty
pounds weight, 142.

Lambeth, John Tradescant's house at, now
called Turret House, 43.
Lamperne, the, 165 n.
Lamprey, a favourite dish of the Romans,
33, 119, 160, 165 n.
Laneare, Mr Nicholas, an eminent master of
music, 110 n.

Laner, and Laneret, a species of hawk, 28.
Langdale, Mr, of Ashbourn, 227 %.
Lark, the, 26.

Last-spring, a fish of the salmon kind, 129 %.
Lathkin, the river, 230

Laud, Archbishop, his execution, xxxv, cxlvi,
cxlvii.

Laverock, the, cxiv, 26.
Lawes, Henry, 178 n.
Lawson, W., 54 n.

Lee, the river, account of, 196 n.

Lees, Richard, of Stafford, apprenticed by
Izaak Walton, cxlix.

Lentner, the, a species of hawk, 29.
Leominster, co. Hereford, 119.
Lessius, Leonard, biographical account of,

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Liebault, Dr, author of "L'Agriculture et Mac William, Susan, the wife of Edward

Maison Rustique," account of, 198 n.

Like Hermit Poor," a song, 110 .

Light brown fly for May, 257.

Lilly, the astrologer, 43 n.

Linnet, the, cxiv, 26.

Little brown fly for April, 256.

dun fly for May, 257.

yellow May fly, 257, 260.

Liturgy, abolished by Act of Parliament,
108 n.

Livy, the choicest of historians, 34.
Lloyde, Mr John, a ring bequeathed to, by
Walton, cii; not identified, cvi.
Llyn Quellyn, near Snowdon,
caught in, 166 n.

the char

Raithlyn, co. Merioneth, a singular
variety of perch found in, 157 2.
Loach, the, breeds several times in the
141; description of, 192.

year,

Lobel, Mathias de, biographical account of,

160 n.

Lobster, the, 140, vide Chichester.
Lochmaben, the guiniad found in, 166 m.
Lochmere, in Ireland, 41.

Lombart, the fish in the first edition of the
"Complete Angler," engraved by, 3 n.
London Bridge, an engraving of, 183.
Long, Elizabeth, of Bury St Edmunds, clv.
Longleat, the asylum of Dr Ken, after he
was deprived of his see, cxvi.

Lough Neagh, in Ireland, the guiniad found
in, 166 n.

Lovelace, Colonel Richard, intimate with
Charles Cotton the elder, clxiv; addressed
an Ode to Charles Cotton the elder, and
wrote an elegy on the death of his sister
Cassandra, clxviii; relieved by the younger
Cotton, in his distress, clxviii; his death,
clxviii n.

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Markham, Jervase, author of "The Plea-
sures of Princes, or Good Men's Recrea-
tions," containing a discourse of the general
art of fishing with an angle, or otherwise,
4to, 1614, 37 n.

Markland, Abraham, a witness to Izaak
Walton's will, cii, civ.

Marlowe, Christopher, a song made by, liv;
biographical account of, 78 n.

Marriott, Ann, daughter of Richard, cliii.
Edward, son of John, clii.

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Elizabeth, daughter of John, cliii.
Elizabeth, wife of John, cliii.
Jane, widow, cliii.

-, John, the publisher of Donne's Poems,
ed. 1633, xxiv, xxxvii, cliii.

John, son of John, cliii.

-, Mary, daughter of John, cliii.

Richard, the friend and publisher of
Izaak Walton for nearly half a century,
xxviii, xxxvii, xcviii; letter from Walton,
lxxx; bequest by Walton, cii, civ; his
shop in St Dunstan's Churchyard, 274.

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Richard, an infant, cliii.

Sarah, daughter of John, cliii.
Valentine, son of John, cliii.
Marsh, J., anecdote of Cotton told by, clxxviii.
Marston, John, the author of Pigmalion's
Image, xix.

Martins, caught by whipping with a fly, 172.
Martyn, Susannah, wife of, ccv.
Mascal, Leonard, author of the "Booke of
Fishing with Hooke and Line," 4to, Lond.
1600, 141 n.

introduced the carp into England, 141.
Mason, Mr, 54 .

Low, the river, made subject to the fence, Mr, of Plumstead, county of Essex,
months, by stat. 13 Rich. II., 62 n.
Lowe, Mrs Bridget, a bequest made to, by
Izaak Walton the younger, cxviii.
Lowth, Bishop, his translation of a passage
in Isaiah, where fishing-hooks are men-
tioned, 49 n.

Luce, the old name for Pike, 129.

John, a hosier, joint tenant with Wal-
ton of a house in Fleet Street, xx.
Matlock, 231.

Mayerne, Sir Theodore, 73 n.
May-fly, the directions for making, 105.

Lucian's Dialogues, translated by Mr Francis Maynard, Wm., 2d son of Wm. Lord, cxxxv.

Hickes, 22 n.

Lucy, arms of the family of, 140 n.

Geoffry de, temp. Hen. III., 140 n.
-, Sir Berkeley, Bart., of Broxbourne, co.
Herts, cci, cciii.

-, Katherine, Lady, cci, cciii.

-, Mary, wife of the Hon. Charles Comp-
ton, cciii.

Lymington, John Wallop, Viscount, and
Earl of Portsmouth, xcvi.

MACROBIUS, Aurelius, account of, 33 m.;
quoted by Walton, 33.
Mac William, Ambrose, clxiii n.

Medway, the, 195, 196.

Memoirs of the Sieur de Pontis, translated by
Charles Cotton, clxxxviii, clxxxix.
Mendez Pinto, Ferdinand, account of, 50 n.
"Mensa Lubrica," a poem, by Thomas
Master, 173 n.

Mercator, Gerard, account of, 72 n.
"Mercurius Politicus," the first edition of
the Complete Angler," advertised in
the, 274.

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Merewether, Jane, the wife of William Haw-
kins, Esq., cxx, cxxxii.

, John, M. D., cxx, cxxxii.
Merlin, the, a species of hawk, 28.

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an industrious angler, men-
tioned by Frank, in his "Northern Me-
moirs," lxi.

Mersey, the river, made subject to the fence
months by stat. 13 Rich. II., 62 n.

Mew, definition of the term, 20 n.
Milington, Mr, mentioned by Walton in a
letter to his publisher, 1xxx.
Miller's Thumb, or Bullhead, the, 192.
Millington, Sir Thomas, M.D., cxcix.
Milton, supposed to have taken the hint for
the last lines of "L'Allegro and Penser-
oso," from the ballad, Come, live with
me," &c., 81 n.
Milward, Mrs Eliza, a ring bequeathed to,
by Walton, cii, cv.

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, Henry, of Dovebridge, co. Stafford,
cxxxii, cliv.

-, John, of Dovebridge, cliv.

Margaret, wife of Henry, cxxxii, cliv.
Robert, of Catton, in the county of
Derby, cxxxii.

Robert, Esq., an intimate friend of
Izaak Walton's, xlv.

William, of Christ Church, Oxford, a
ring bequeathed to, by Walton, cii, cv.
Milwood, Robert (? Milward), cxxxviii.
Minnow, the, directions for baiting with, 94,
193; artificial, instructions for making, 94;
description of the, 192.

Mole, the river, erroneously said to run
underground, 41 #.

Monings, John, lieutenant of Dover Castle,

CXXXV.

"Monsieur Thomas," Fletcher's comedy of,

274-

Montague, Edward, Lord, General of the
Navy, and one of the Lords Commissioners
of the Treasury, 283.

Montaigne's fondness for cats, 23; his Essays
translated by Charles Cotton, clxxxvii.
Montfort, Dr, residentiary of St Paul's, xxiii.
Moor, Sir Thomas, a portrait of, bequeathed
by Dr Donne the younger to Mr Chris-
topher Gise, cxlii.

Moore, Elizabeth, daughter of William, cciii.
Moor-fly, the, 95; directions for making, 101.
"Moral Philosophy of the Stoics," from the
French of Du Vaix, translated by Charles
Cotton, clxxii.

Mordiford, co. Hereford, 230 n.

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Moreton, near Thame in Oxfordshire, the
birthplace of William Basse, 282.
Morley, Dr George, anecdote told by Wal-
ton respecting his expulsion from Oxford,
XXXV; no authority for Mr Bowles' as
sumption that he was Walton's guest at
his cottage in Staffordshire, from April
1648 to May 1649, xl; verses addressed by
him to Walton on the publication of the
Complete Angler," xlviii; Dean of
Christ Church and Bishop of Worcester,
lxv; Walton's second wife supposed to
have died whilst on a visit to him at Wor-
cester, lxix; translated to the see of Win-
chester in 1662, from which year Walton
constantly resided with him, lxx; the Lives
of Hooker, Herbert, and Sanderson dedi-
cated to him by Walton, lxxi, lxxvii, xc;
a bequest made to him by Walton, ci, ciii.
Mr Francis, a ring bequeathed to, by
Walton, cii.
Morney, on the Christian Religion, 4to, 1617,

a copy of, formerly belonging to Walton,
now in the cathedral library at Salisbury,
cxlviii.

Morton, Dr, Bishop of Durham, intimate
with Walton, lxxiii.
Mossop, Mr William, 115 %.
Mouldwarp, the, 29.

Mountague, Mr, formerly schoolmaster of
Eton, promised to afford information to
Walton respecting John Hales, lxxx, cxiv,
cxlvi.

Mountjoy, Lord, lord-lieutenant in Ireland,
xxii.

Moxon, Mr, a sonnet by him, cxxvi.
Mullet, a favourite dish of the Romans, 33,
47; those taken at Arundel superior to
others, 73, 140.

Musket, the, a species of hawk, 28.

NARES, Archdeacon, first discovered the fal-
lacy of the hypothesis that the poem of
Thealma and Clearchus was written by
Walton, xciii, xcviii.

Nelson, the Rev. Henry, rector of Haugham,
co. Lincoln, cv.

-, Mrs, a ring bequeathed to, by Walton,
cii, cv.

Neville, Mr Henry, xlii n.
Newark, the town of, 229.
Newbury, the town of, 115 n.
Newcastle, the Duchess of, her plays alluded
to by Cotton, clxxxiii.
Newport. Francis Lord, a bequest made to,
by Dr Donne the younger, cxlii.
Nid, the river, made subject to the fence
months, by stat, 13 Edw. I., 62 n.
Nightingale, the, cxiv, 26.
Nie, the river, 197.

Noel, Sir John, of Kirby, co. Leicester,

CXXXV.

Noell, Mr Walter, lands near Stafford bought
of him by Walton, c, ciii.
Norington farm, held by Walton, by lease
from the Bishop of Winchester, c.
Northampton, George, 4th Earl of, cci, vide
Compton.

"Northern Memoirs," written by Robert

Frank; extract from, relative to the
"Complete Angler," lx.

Norton, Alice, wife of Thomas, cxxxv.
Norwood, Alexander, gent., xx, cxxxv.
Notley Abbey, 195 n.
Nottingham, the town of, 229.
Nowel, Dr Alexander, Dean of St Paul's,
biographical account of, 51.; his portrait,
52, 53.

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Offley, Mary, wife of Robert, Viscount Kil- | Parkyns, Jane, cci, cciii.

morrey, I n.

-, Sir Thomas, lord mayor in 1557, I .
"Oh! the Gallant Fisher's Life," a song
partly composed by Walton, lviii, 174.
"On! the sweet Contentment,' a song by
John Chalkhill, 86.

Olaus Magnus, Archbishop of Upsal, and
Metropolitan of Sweden, 284.
Oldbury-sur-Montem, co. Gloucester, 276.
"Old Rose," the song so called, li, 60.
Oldys, William, Norroy king-of-arms, lxxiii.
Oley, Barnabas, his preface to Herbert's
"Country Parson," Ixxvi.
Orange-fly, the, for June, 261.

Orford, account of a sea monster taken at,
temp. Hen. II., 45 2.

Ormond, the Duke of; the Memoirs of the
Sieur de Pontis dedicated to him by Charles
Cotton, cc.

Osprey, the, 63.

Otter, very destructive to fish, 21; pleasures
of hunting it, 29; gloves made of the skin
of the, recommended by Walton, 59; said
to travel as much as ten miles in a night,
59; a young one tamed by Mr Nicholas
Segrave of Leicestershire, 60; said to smell
fish at a distance of forty furlongs, 118, 127.
Otter-hounds, belonging to Mr Sadler, of
Standon, co. Herts, mentioned by Walton,
1, 21; the pack of Walter Bindulph, Esq.,
of Barton-under-Needwood, advertised for
sale in May 1760, 55.

Ottersey, the river, co. Devon, so called from
the number of otters that breed in it, 59.
Oudert, Nicholas, a confidential servant of
Sir Henry Wotton, xlii.

Oughtred, Mr, his "Key to the Mathe-
matics." 33.

Ouse, the river, made subject to the fence
months, by stat. 13 Edward I., 62 n., 196;
the name common to several rivers in
England, 230 n.

Overall, Dr John, 52 n.
Overbury, Sir Thomas, his "character" of a
milkmaid, 82 n.

Ovid's Metamorphoses, 1626, a copy of, for-
merly belonging to Izaak Walton, now in
the cathedral library at Salisbury, cxlviii.
Owen, John, anecdote of, 34 n.
Owldham, Isaac, an industrious angler,
mentioned by Frank, in his "Northern
Memoirs," lxi.

Owl-fly, the, for June, 261.

Oziander, Anne, niece to the wife of
CXXXIV.

PAINE, Dr, expelled from the University of
Oxford, xxxv.

Palmer, Mr, a ring bequeathed to, by
Walton, cii; not identified, cvi.
Palmer-fly, the, 96, 102.

Paraphrase on the Song of Solomon," 4to,
1641, 27 n.

Parke. James, Esq.; verses by him in praise
of Walton, cxxvi.

Parkyns, Beaumont, of Sutton Bonington,
co. Notts, cci, cciii.

-

Sir Thomas, Bart., cciii.
Parrot-fish, the, 43.
Partridge, the, 47.

"Passionate Pilgrim," and other sonnets, by
Mr William Shakespeare, 1599, 80 n.
Paternoster-line, the, why so called, 172.
Paternoster Row, a house in, called "The
Cross Keys," rented by Walton, lxxi;
burnt during the Fire of London, lxxix;
Walton's interest therein bequeathed to
his son-in-law, Dr Hawkins, c.
Peacock-fly, the, for June, 261.
Pemble Mere, the char caught in, 166 n.
Perch, description of the, 156; German pro-
verb respecting, 156; its time of spawning,
156, 157; engraving of the, 157; baits and
directions for angling for, 157; haunts of,
157 n.; a singular variety of, found in a
lake called Lyn Raithlyn, in Merioneth-
shire, 157 n.

"Perfect Diurnal," first edition of the
"Complete Angler," advertised in, 274.
Perkins, Dr William, biographical account
of, 51 n.

Petty, George, clxviii n.
"Pheer," definition of the term, 47 n.
"Philida flouts me,' a song, liv, 79; copy of,

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277.

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Phoenix Nest," the, a collection of poems,
published in 1593, 110 n.

Philips, Mrs Katherine; her translation of
Corneille's Tragedy of Horace, clxxii.
Phillippes, Margaret, cliv.
Pickerel, their appearance in ponds not
known to have been stored with them,
accounted for, lxi.

Pickering Tor and the Iron Chest in Dove-
dale, view of, 235.

Pierce, Dr, letter from, to Walton, xciii.
Pigeons, used to convey letters, 27.
Pigmalion's Image," xix.

Pike, the said by Gesner to be generated by
the pickerel weed, 129; instance of lon-
gevity of, 130 .; voracity of, 130-132; time
of breeding, 132; destroyed by frogs, 133;
directions for fishing for with a live bait,
135-137; baits for, and trolling for, 138 m.;
recipe for cooking, 139; cooking in the
14th and 15th centuries, 140 m.; not intro-
duced into England before the reign of
Henry VIII., 140 m.; early mention of,

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Pliny, quoted by Walton, 42, 44, 48, 95, 142,

160.

Plot's Natural History of Staffordshire,
clxxxviii.

Poetical Rhapsody, the, edited by Francis
Davison, 113 N.
Poison-fish, the, 43.

Poker, William, cxxxix.
Pole-cat, the, 29.

Pollen, the guiniad, in Ireland, 166 n.
Polshot, bequest to the poor of the parish of,
by Izaak Walton the younger, cxviii.
"Polyhymnia," a poem, by Wm. Basse, 282.
"Polyolbion,' the, by Michael Drayton,
quotation from, 124.

Pope, quotation from, in reference to angling,
287.

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Port, the family of, connected with that of
Cotton, by marriage, clxiv.
Portland, Jerome, Earl of, executor to the
will of Dr Donne the younger, cxlii.
Poverty," an Ode to, by Cotton, cxci.
Powell, Charles, rector of Cheddington,
author of "The Religious Rebel." 14 2.
Edward, verses to Walton, on the publica-
tion of the "Complete Angler," xiviii, 13.
Sir Edward, of Pengethley, co. Hereford,
cxxxiv. Susannah, his sister and co-heir,
wife of William Cranmer, cxxxiv.
Powny, Mrs, of Windsor, lxxx, cxlv, cxlvi.
Prescott, George, Esq., 36 n. Sir George,
Bart., 36 .

Prestwich, Edmund; his translation of the
Hippolitus of Seneca, clxvi 2.
Pride, small species of lamprey, 162.
Prior, Mathew, and Bishop Burnet, 124 .
"Private School of Defence," the, by Hales,

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Randolph, Thomas, one of Ben Jonson's
adopted sons, 217.

"Rascal game," definition of, 30 n.
Ratclyffe, Mary, daughter of Sir John, of
Ordsall, co. Lancaster, cciii.
Ravens, the prophet Elijah fed by, 27.
Rawson, Ralph, fellow of Brazen Nose Col-
lege, Oxford, tutor of Charles Cotton the
younger, clxv; verses addressed by him
to Cotton, cixv.

Red-brown flies for February, 253.
Rede, Mr, a ring bequeathed to, by Walton,
cii, cvi.

Reeves, John, a waterman, obtained a living
by giving notice to anglers of the arrival of
roach in the Thames, near London Bridge,
182 n.

"Religious Rebel," by Edward Powel, 14 %.
Reliquiæ Wottonianæ," published by Wal-
ton in 1651, xlii; a second edition in 1654,
xlviii; a third in 1673, lxxix.

"Retirement," the, "Stanzes Irreguliers to
Mr Izaak Walton," by Charles Cotton,

219-221.

Reynell and Champernon, case of, 214.
Reynolds, Bishop, a copy of his "Treatise
of the Passions," 4to, 1640, formerly be-
longing to Izaak Walton, now in the cathe-
dral library of Salisbury, cxlvii.
Rhodes, besieged by the Turks, 27.
Ribble, the river, made subject to the fence
months by stat. 13 Rich. II., 62 n.
Richmond Palace, an engraving of Theo-
balds, published by the Society of Anti-
quaries, under the misnomer of, 275.
Ricking, abode of John Hales, cxlv.
Ringtail, the, a species of hawk, 28.
Roach, the, why so called, 182; the season
for angling for in the Thames, 182 .;
the Londoners considered the best roach-
anglers, 183; baits for, 184-186, 188; direc-
tions for angling for, 183.; their haunts,
187 n.; method of cooking, 189
Roberts, Mr John, of the Cross Keys, Little-
port, 131 n.

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Lewis, the publisher of the Merchants'
Map of Commerce, xxxii.
Robin, the, cxiv, 26.

Robinson, George, Esq, editor of Marlowe's
Dramatic and Poetical Works, 78.
Rochester, Lord. satirical verses by, on
seeing Charles II. angling, 285.
Rock, Mrs, a ring bequeathed to, by Wal-
ton, cii; not identified, cvi.

Rods, Walton's directions for painting, 203;
Roe, or Row, Mrs, the godmother of Izaak
Cotton's directions for choosing, 242.
Walton the younger, xlii, cxl.

Nat. and R., mentioned by Walton,
xlii, xlvii, lx, lxvi, 3, 5, 7.

persons of the name of, interred in St
Dunstan's Churchyard, 284.

Rogers, Mrs Mary, a ring bequeathed to, by
Walton, cii; not identified, cvi.
Rondeletius, quoted by Walton, 44, 153,
159, 160, 167; account of him, 44 #.
Rosicrucians, account of the, 186 n.
Rossell, Dorothy, wife of Harrold, cxxxv.

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