S.P.also remarks:
'No ill thing can be clothed in thy verse';hence Izaak was already a rhymer,and a harmless one,under the Royal Prentice,gentle King Jamie.
By this time Walton was probably settled in London.A deed in the possession of his biographer,Dr.Johnson's friend,Sir John Hawkins,shows that,in 1614,Walton held half of a shop on the north side of Fleet Street,two doors west of Chancery Lane:the other occupant was a hosier.Mr.Nicholl has discovered that Walton was made free of the Ironmongers.'
Company on Nov.12,1618.He is styled an Ironmonger in his marriage licence.The facts are given in Mr.Marston's Life of Walton,prefixed to his edition of The Compleat Angler (1888).It is odd that a prentice ironmonger should have been a poet and a critic of poetry.Dr.Donne,before 1614,was Vicar of St.Dunstan's in the West,and in Walton had a parishioner,a disciple,and a friend.Izaak greatly loved the society of the clergy:he connected himself with Episcopal families,and had a natural taste for a Bishop.
Through Donne,perhaps,or it may be in converse across the counter,he made acquaintance with Hales of Eton,Dr.King,and Sir Henry Wotton,himself an angler,and one who,like Donne and Izaak,loved a ghost story,and had several in his family.Drayton,the river-poet,author of the Polyolbion,is also spoken of by Walton as 'my old deceased friend.'
On Dec.27,1626,Walton married,at Canterbury,Rachel Floud,a niece,on the maternal side,by several descents,of Cranmer,the famous Archbishop of Canterbury.The Cranmers were intimate with the family of the judicious Hooker,and Walton was again connected with kinsfolk of that celebrated divine.Donne died in 1631,leaving to Walton,and to other friends,a bloodstone engraved with Christ crucified on an anchor:the seal is impressed on Walton's will.When Donne's poems were published in 1633,Walton added commendatory verses:-'As all lament (Or should)this general cause of discontent.'