INDEX. 



35 



Gloucester, the town of, 195. 



Goedartius, Joannes, " De Insectis," Lond. 

 Svo, 1685, 96 . 



Golden Lane, London, the Swan, in, lix. 



Goldsmith, Francis, Esq., 197 ., vide Gro- 

 tius. 



"Go, lovely rose, &c.," song by Waller, cxcv. 



Goose, the, destructive to fish, 63. 



Gorara, the, destructive to fish, 63. 



( '. hawk, the, 28. 



Gower, Earl, his supercilious mention of Dr 

 Johnson, 124 . 



Grasshopper, the, a good bait for chub, 68, 

 84 ; for trout, 69 ; said to have no mouth, 

 73 ; varieties of, 73 . ; artificial, 106, 261. 



Gravel lastspring, a fish so called, found only 

 in the Wye and Severn, 129 . 



Grayling or Umber, the, styled by the 

 French " an humble chevalier," said to be 

 very medicinable, 120 ; called by St 

 Ambrose "the flower of fishes," 121; en- 

 graving of, 121 ; where found, baits for, 

 i directions for angling for, 121 ; Cotton's 

 instructions for angling for, 240 et seq. 



Great blue fly, for February, 254. 



Great dun fly, for February, 253. 



Gr^\it hackles or palmer flies, for February 

 and May, 253-255. 



Green-drake fly, description of, where found, 

 and directions for making, 241, 257, 259. 



Gregory, Mr John, the posthumous works of, 

 410, Lond. 1683, quoted, 45 n. 



Greinsell, "my cozen's widow," mentioned 

 by Walton in his will, cii ; not identified, 

 cvi, vide Grinsell. 



Greinwood, Mrs, mentioned in Walton's 

 will, c. 



Grey drake, the, for May, 259. 



Greyhound, the, 30. 



Grinsell, Mrs Anne, widow, cliv. 



, John, son of Thomas, cliii. 



, Mr Thomas, cliii. 



, Walter, son of Thomas, cliii. 



''Grotius; his Sophompaneas or Joseph," a 

 tragedy, by Francis Goldsmith, Esq., 

 i2mo, Lond. 1652, quoted, 197 . 



Ground-bait for bream and carp, 151. 



Gudgeon, the, a leather-mouthed fish, 69 ; 

 description of, and directions for angling 

 tor, 171. 



Guiniad, the, description of, and places 

 where found, 166 . 



Gunpowder Alley, near Shoe Lane, clxviii. 



Gustavus Erickson, introduced Protestant- 

 ism into Sweden, 284. 



HACKLES, directions for choosing, 103 n. 



Haddock, the, 30. 



Haddon, county of Derby, 230. 



Hazard, the, a species of hawk, 29. 



Hailes, Lord, said to have contemplated a 

 new edition of Walton's Lives, cxxiv. 



il .kewill, Dr, account of his " Apology of 

 God's Power and Providence," 118 .; 

 quoted, 130 . , 160. 



H.iie, Sir Matthew, prepared a bill for the 

 compression of the more moderate dis- 

 senters from the Church, and allowing cer- 



tain indulgences to such as could not be 

 brought within the comprehension, 96. 



Hales, Anne, wife of Sir Edward, first edi- 

 tion of the " Reliquiae Wottonianae," dedi- 

 cated to, xliii. 



, John, of Eton, intimate friend of Iznak 



Walton, xx, Ixxiii ; styled " the walking 

 library ; " his opinion of the merits of Wal- 

 ton's Life of Dr Donne, xxviii ; collections 

 for his Life by Walton, Ixxx ; his portrait 

 painted after death by Lady Anne Howe, 

 Ixxxi ; Walton's memoranda respecting 

 him, cxliv-cxlvii. 



Hale's Treatise on Fencing, ridiculed by 

 Walton, 3, ,5, 7. 



Halifax, George Savile, Marquis of ; letter 

 to Charles Cotton on his translation of 

 Montaigne's Essays, 1685, clxxxvii. 



Hall, Dr, Bishop of Exeter, presented by 

 Dr Donne with a seal of bloodstone, 

 engraven with a representation of the 

 Saviour extended on an anchor, xxiv ; his 

 works bequeathed by Walton to his daugh- 

 ter, Mrs Hawkins, ci. 



Ham, in Essex, 196 . 



Hambleton Lock, 115 ., vide Howe'l. 



Hammond, Dr, expelled from the University 

 of Oxford, xxxv ; attended King Charles I. 

 during his imprisonment, xxxvi ; intimate 

 with Walton, xci ; copy of his " Christian's 

 Obligations to Peace and Charity," ten 

 Sermons, 410, 1649, formerly belonging to 

 Walton, now in the cathedral library at 

 Salisbury, cxlvii. 



Hampton, chiefly resorted to by Londoners, 

 for the purpose of angling, 183 . 



Hampton Court, the conference at, 52 . 



Hanson, Richard, of Stafford, apprenticed 

 by Izaak Walton, cxlix. 



Hanson-Toot, Derby, engraving of, 233. 



Harboone, John, Esq., of Tackley, county 

 of Oxford, 54. 



Harcourt, Humphrey, son of John Harcourt, 

 of Ranton Hall, co. Stafford, cvi. 



, Mr Valantine, ring bequeathed to, by 



Walton, cii ; notice of, cvi. 



Hare, the, 29, 30 ; formerly supposed to 

 change its sex every year, 116. 



Harington, Dr, 60 n. 



, Sir John, epigrams written by, xix. 



Harp Alley, in Shoe Lane, the residence of 

 Charles Kerbye, 188. 



Harrison, Jas., alias Walton, his will, cxxxix. 



Harry Long-legs, 262. 



Hartley, Thomas, of London, merchant, 

 cxxxiv. 



Hartshorn, co. Derby, Ixxxvi . 



Harvey, Thomas, 108 n. 



Harvie, the Rev. Christopher, verses nd- 

 dressed by him to Walton on publication 

 of the "Complete Angler," xlviii, 10 ; 

 verses by him, on the Book of Common 

 Prayer, Ivii, 108 ; verses addressed bv him 

 to Walton, on publication of the fourth 

 edition of his poem called "The Syna- 

 gogue," Ixvii. 



Harvy, Mr John, bequest made to, by Dr 

 Donne the younger, cxlii. 



t? 



