Cromwell, Richard, 40, n. 1; 335, n. 5.
Crook and Hutton, 364 and n. 5.
Cross and Pile, 258 and n. 1; 292.
Crowdero, the fiddler, character of, 46; alluded to, 76, 77, 78, 80, 82, 83, 84, 117.
Crowds and bases, 172 and n. 3.
Crows, belief respecting, 105 and n. 2; birds of ill-omen, 241, n. 4.
Croysado, General, 375 and n. 2.
Crup, 323 and n. 1.
Cucking-stool, 202 and n. 1.
Cuckolds, legal, 289 and n. 3; their names invoked in carving, 186 and n. 1.
Cudgels, crossing of the, 328 and n. 3.
Cully-sex, 429 and n. 2.
Culprits, held up their hand at their trial, 260 and n. 5.
Curmudgin, 193 and n. 1.
Curule, 32 and n. 2; 202.
Cut-purse, 70; meaning of the term, 70 and n. 3.
Cutpurse, Moll, 57.
Dalilahs, 372 and n. 4.
Damosels, distressed, 165 and n. 1.
Dancing jigs, 432 and n. 2.
Darius, the horse of, 47, n. 5.
Darkness, the Secular Prince of, 258 and n. 3.
Datura, properties of, 280.
Davenant, Sir William, 2, n. 2; 58, n. 4; 46, n. 1; 56, n. 4.
Death, from fear, 143. n. 1; sudden, 252 and n. 2; would not depart, 290 and n. 2.
Dee, Dr John, the reputed magician, 220; some account of, 220, n. 4; 221; his angelical stone, 237, n. 4.
Democritus, the laughing philosopher, 139 and n. 2.
Dennis, Mr, inscription written by, preface, 15.
Deodand, meaning of the term, 440 and n. 1.
Dependences, doctrine of, 355 and n. 5.
Desborough, 337 and n. 2.
Destinies, the three. 16, n. 1.
Devil, the, pulling his beard, 95 and n. 5; beat a drum, 140 and n. 3; ledger sent to, 215 and n. 3; appeared to Luther, 216 and n. 4; charms for raising, 235 and n. 5; his oracles, 316 and n. 3; temptations of the, 320 and n. 2; his mother, 327 and n. 4.
Dewtry, 279 and n. 5.
Dial, true to the sun, 333 and n. 2.
Dialecticos, 129 and n. 1.
Dido, story of, 22, n. 4.
Digby, Sir Kenelm, 4, n. 4; 146, n. 4; his book on bodies, 162, n. 3; sneered at, 351, n 1.
Diodorus Siculus, curious people described by, 8, n. 2; alluded to, 380, n. 2.
Diomedes, King of Thrace, his horses, 60, n. 2.
Directory, the, 194 and n. 4.
Dirty Lane, 149 and n. 5.
Disciplinarians, doctrine of the, 36, n. 1; 122, n. 4.
Disparata, 133 and n. 1.
Dispensations, out-goings, &c., 79, n. 5.
Dissenters, left each other in the lurch, 260 and n. 1; their affected sanctity, 285 and n. 1; doctrine of the, 370, n. 4.
Distrain on soul and body, 321 and n. 6.
Diurnals, or daily papers, 87 and n. 2; 138 and n. 1.
Divorces, judges of, 290 and n. 1.
Doctor, epidemic, 54 and n. 5.
Dog, draws his chain after him, 213 and n. 1; a cunning one, 219 and n. 2, 3.
Dog-bolt, 136 and n. 5.
Doggerel, 227, n. 1.
Dole, a common saying, 107 and n. 2.
Doll, Common, 316 and n. 6.
Don Quixote, routs a flock of sheep, 54 and n. 2; remark of, 17, n. 3; penance of, 168 and n. 2; to Sancho, 195, n. 2.
Donship, 398 and n.