Cotton, Sir Robert, his famous library, [668]; his melancholy death, [669].
Coxeter prepares an edition of old plays, [559].
Cromwell and his grants of church lands, [318]; his opinion of his position, [699].
Cross, the enthusiasm for the sign of, [79].
Crowley, Robert, and his works, [329]—[332].
Cryptography practised by Dr. Dee, [640].
Cudworth, R., and his “System of the Universe,” 714—[723].
Dante and his allegories, [491].
Day, John, the printer, [748].
Dee, Dr., the occult philosopher, [617]; his scholastic career, [618], [619]; his troubles at court, [620]; his acquaintance with Princess Elizabeth, [621]; fixes a lucky day for her coronation, ib.; is consulted by her privy council, [622]; his library, ib.; his works, [623]; his mystic studies, [624]—[629]; his foreign travels, [630]—[634]; his return and death, [635], [636]; his connexion with spirits, [636]; his political position, [640].