INDEX. 



297 



Brookhouse, Anne, wife cf Robert, of Bub- 

 ton, co. Derby, civ. 



Broughton, Mary, daughter of Thomas 

 Broughton, of Broughton, county of Staf- 

 ford, i . 



Brown Gnat, the, for June, directions for 

 making, 261. 



Brown, Miss Elizabeth, married the Rev. 

 Henry Hawes, cxxi, cxxxii. 



Browne, Mr Leonard, alderman of Canter- 

 bury, married Anne, daughter of Captain 

 Richard Bargrave, of Patricksbourne, xxx. 



, Martin, alderman of London, ccv. 



, the Rev. Moses, reprinted the "Com- 

 plete Angler," in 1772, cxxiv ; quotation 

 from his preface, cxxvii, 28 ., 40 ., 59 . 

 , Rebecca, ccv. 



, William, Esq., cxxxii. 



Brvdges, Margaret, of Upleaden, county of 

 Hereford, 143 n. 



Buck, the, 29, 30, 75. 



Bulbourne, a spring so called, near Tring, 

 county of Herts, said to be one of the heads 

 of the Thames, 195 . 



Bullhead, or miller's-thumb, description of 

 the, 193 ; spawning-time, haunts of and 

 baits for the, 193. 



Bullock, Daniel, of Stafford, apprenticed by 

 k Walton, cxlix. 



Bull-trout, a trout so called in Northumber- 

 land, 74. 



Buryess. Mr John, mentioned in the will of 

 M rs Floud, mother-in-law to Izaak Walton, 

 .\.\-.v. 



Burleigh, Lord, extract from instructions to 

 him for the regulation of his fish-ponds, 

 144; Theobalds, the residence of, 180. 



"Burlesque upon Burlesque, or the Scoffer 

 Scoffed," 8vo, 1675, written by Charles 

 Cotton, clxxxiii. 



Burlesque on the great frost, written by 

 Cotton, quotation from, c.vc. 



Btirman, Charles, Esq., his Memoirs of Elias 

 Ashmole, 43 JL 



Burnet, Dr, Bishop of Salisbury, the friend 

 of Isaac Walton, the younger, cxvi. 



, Gilbert, grandson of Dr Stanhope, cc, 



ccii. 



, Thomas, ccii. 



-, Mrs, wife of William, governor of New 

 York, eldest son of Gilbert, Bishop of 

 Salisbury, ccii ; anecdote of, cc. 



Burrowash, county of Derby, 231. 



Burrows, Margaret, of Ashbourn, county of 

 Derby, widow, civ. 



Burton, county of Stafford, 229. 



Kurton, Francis, Esq., cxxxii. 



Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy, extract 



from, relative to the art of angling, 289. 

 Bury, Lady Charlotte, formerly Lady Char- 

 lotte Campbell, verses supposed to have 

 been written by her in a copy of the 

 " Complete Angler," which belonged to 

 Sir Humphrey Davy, cxxv. 



Butterflies, baits for salmon, 127 n. 



ixton, the town of, famous for its baths, 



Buzzard, the, a species of hawk, 29. 

 Bysshe, Sir Edward, Clarenceux king-of- 



arms, solicited Walton to write the Life of 



Sir Henry Wotton, xlii. 



CADARA, an island near the Ganges, the 

 inhabitants whereof make the timber for 

 their houses of fish-bones, 42. 



Cadis or case worms, where found, 189, 191 ; 

 different kinds of, 190. 



Calthorp, Sir William, the case of cited, 

 213. 



Camden's Britannia, quoted by Walton, 5, 

 40, 41, 124, 126, 160, 161, 166, 198. 



Camel brown fly, the, for September, direc- 

 tions for making, 262. 



Cameleon, the, 74. 



" Camerarius' Living Library," fol. Lond. 

 1621, copy of, formerly belonging to 

 Walton, in the cathedral library of Salis- 

 bury, cxlvii. 



Camlet fly, the, mentioned by Cotton, 241 ; 

 directions for making, 261. 



Campbell, Lady Charlotte, cxxv, vide Bury. 



Camphire, said to give worms a tempting 

 smell, 93. 



Cannon, or down-hill fly, the oak-fly so called 

 in Shropshire, 106. 



Canterbury, a bequest of .40 made to the 

 poor of St Mildred's parish by Mrs Fioud, 

 mother-in-law of Izaak Walton, xxx. 



Cantharus, a fish mentioned by Du Bartas, 

 46. 



Cardanus, Hieronymus, quoted by Walton, 

 136 ; account of him, 136 n. 



Carew, the friend of Charhs Cotton, the 

 elder, clxiv. 



Carey, Sir Lucius, verses written by him on 

 the death of Dr Donne, xxiv. 



Carleton, Sir Dudley, ambassador to the 

 States, cxliii. 



Carlingford, in Ireland, Thomas Cranmer, 

 slain in an action with the Irish at, xxii. 



Carp, the, n ; a leather-mouthed fish, 69 ; 

 assembled to feed by the ringing of a bell, 

 118; killed by frogs, 134, 143; said to 

 have been brought into England by Mr 

 Mascal, of Plumstead, in Sussex, 141 ; 

 mentioned in the "Book of St Alban's,'' 

 141 .; quotation from Baker's Chronicle, 

 respecting its first introduction into Eng- 

 land, 141 ; lives longer out of the water 

 than any other fish, 141 ; presents of made 

 to King Henry the Eighth, 141 .; breeds 

 several months in one year, 141 ; will not- 

 breed in cold ponds, 142 ; large size of in 

 Italy, 142 ; receipt for making them fat in 

 gravelly water, 142 .; their breeding and 

 decay very mysterious, 143 ; account of 

 very large ones, 142 n. ; their longevity, 

 144 ; instances thereof at Emanuel College, 

 Cambridge, and at the Prince of Conde's 

 seat at Chantilly, 144 n.; their time of 

 spawning, 144 .; the galls and stones in 

 their heads very medicinable ; great profit 

 made by the Italians by selling their roes 

 to the Jews to make caviare, 145 ; eat their 



