Page:Hudibras - Volume 2 (Butler, Nash, Bohn; 1859).djvu/318

 Chillingworth, 440, n. 4.

Chimæra, 130; fable of, 130, n. 2.

Chineses, lie in, in their ladies' stead, 293 and n. 2.

Chiron, the Centaur, 47, n. 2.

Choused, origin of the word, 214, n. 6; used, 254, n. 3.

Christ, his attestation to the piety of woman, 203 and n. 2. Christmas-day, a fast and feast, 13, n. 3.

Church militant, explained, 12, n. 4.

Church, plunder of the, 380 and n. 3, 4.

Church dignitaries, 399, n. 2.

Church livings, 312 and n. 4.

Clapper-clawing, 175 and n. 1.

Clap-up souls, 321 and n. 2.

Clarendon, Lord, remarks of, 3, n. 2; 62, n. 5; 81, n. 1.

Clarges, Anne, mistress of General Monk, 430, n. 2.

Cleveland, his letter to the Protector, 114, n. 3.

Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, the three destinies, 16, n. 1.

Coachman, the, 247 and n. 2

Coals, extracted from wood, 151 and n. 7; exorbitant price of, 340 and n. 4.

Cobler and Vicar of Bray, a poem, 15, n. 5.

Cock-a-hoop, 86 and n. 4.

Cock-crow, superstition respecting it, 322 and n.4.

Colon, the hostler, his character, 60 and n. 1; alluded to, 74, 103.

Columbus, discoveries of, 242.

Comet, supposed to portend some calamity, 14, n. 4; 45, n. 6

Commissions, thrown up, 76.

Committee-men, 7.

Committee of Safety, sneer at the, 336 and n. 2; 337 and n. 3.

Committees, grievances of, 70 and n. 4.

Complexion, man judged by the. 124. n. 2.

Conclave and Conventicle, 382 and n. 4.

Confession-free, 309 and n. 2.

Conscience, liberty of, 34; the wear and tear of, 309 and n. 4; 313 and n. 3; 356 and n. 1.

Conscience-stretchers, 421 and n. 2.

Consciences, kept in cases, 172 and n. 2.

Constellations, called houses, 230 and n. 1.

Constollidation, 125, n. 2.

Consults, 332 and n. 3.

Cook, solicitor, employed against the king, hanged at Tyburn, 387, n. 4.

Cooper, Sir Anthony Ashley, 341, n. 6; 342, n. 1.

Copernicus, 249 and n. 1.

Cordeliere, order of, 15.

Corona Civica, 404 and n. 3.

Coscinomancy, explained, 234, n. 2.

Cossacks of the Don, 52, n. 3.

Coughing and hemming, 7, n. 4.

Coursing, a University-term, 377 and n. 3.

Covenant, taking of the, 218 and n. 7; 260 and n. 4; 363 and n. 1.

Covenanters, declaration of the, 177, n. 3.

Covenanting Trustees, 321 and n. 3.

Covert-Baron, 200 and n. 6.

Covin, a term in law, 443 and n. 1.

Cow, print of, the emblem of the Commonwealth, 39, n. 4.

Cow-itch, 279 and n. 4.

Coy, 301 and n. 2.

Cranfield, his panegyric on Tom Coriate, 6, n. 1.

Crincum-Crancum, 293.

Crisis, 146 and n. 5.

Croft, Herbert, Bishop of Hereford, 400.

Cromwell, Colonel, anecdote of, 33, n. 5.

Cromwell, Oliver, joke upon, 19, n. 7; his conduct to Lord Capel, 81, n. 1; prudence of, 103, n. 3; anecdote of, 177, n. 1; declaration of, 179, n, 1; turns out the Parliament, 179 and n. 6; filthy conduct of, 207, n.4; hurricane at the time of his death, 334 and n. 3.