INDEX. 



315 



Swallow, carrying letters between armies, 

 39 ; called a half-year bird, 73. 



Swan, the, destructive to fish, 63. 



Swinfen, Mr, a member of the Committee 

 appointed by the House of Commons in 

 1647, to hear arguments adduced on behalf 

 of the University of Oxford, to show why 

 they should not take the Covenant, xxxv ; 

 conjectured to have been the " powerful 

 man in the Parliament" who desired Wal- 

 ton to advise his friend Dr Morley to leave 

 Oxford on the arrival of the Visitors, xxxvi. 



" Sword and Buckler," a poem by William 

 Basse, 202. 



Sword-fish, the, 43. 



Symonds, John, xxxix ., xlvii, cciv. 



Symson's Historic of the Church, formerly 

 belonging to Izaak Walton, now in the 

 cathedral libraiy of Salisbury, cxlvii. 



" Synagogue," the, a religious poem by the 

 Rev. Christopher Harvie, Ixvii. 



TAGLIS, Thomas, clii. 



e of Two Swannes," by W. Vallans, 

 2 75- 



Tanner, John, Joseph, and Judith, ccv. 



Tarcel, the, a species of hawk, 28. 



Tassel-gentle, a species of hawk, 28. 



Tate, Rev. James, his translation of a Latin 

 ode, addressed by Dr James Duport to 

 Walton, on the publication of the "Com- 

 plete Angler." Ixxxviii. N., editor of 

 " The Innocent Epicure," 274. 



Tawny fly, the, 95. 



Tayler, Joseph, a witness to Izaak Walton's 

 will, cii ; not identified, cvi. Mr, a ring 

 bequeathed to, by Walton, cii. 



Tees, the river, made subject to the fence 

 months by stat. 13 Edw. I., 62 n. 



" Temple," a poem, by G. Herbert, Ixxxi. 



Tench, description of, 153 ; old recipe for 

 cooking, 153 n. ; the Physician of fishes, 

 154 ; engraving of, 155 ; baits for, 155 ; 

 its haunts, 155 n. ; a large one caught at 

 Thornville Royal, 155 n. 



Thame, the town of, 195 n~ 



Thames, the salmon of, when in season, 9, 

 12 ; made subject to the fence months by 

 stat. 13 Rich. II., 62 .; the Lord Mayor 

 appointed conservator of, by stat. 17 Rich. 

 II., 62 n.; complaint made by the Commons 



in 1384, of the taking of fish in, with un- 

 lawful nets, 63 .; directions for chub-fish- 

 ing in, 70 n. ; weirs forbidden to be made 

 in, by Magna Charta, 183 n.; weirs in, be- 

 tween London and Staines, destroyed by 

 the Lord Mayor in 1757, 183 n. ; sources 

 of, 195 n. ; mentioned by Drayton, 196 . 



Thatched House at Hoddesdon, 1, 20, 36 ; 

 engraving of, 56. 



Thaurosthones, gave notice to his father in 

 ^TSgina, by a pigeon stained with purple, of 

 his victory at the Olympian games, 27. 



" Th' alma and Clearchus," a Pastoral, by 

 John Chalkhill, Esq., published by Walton 

 about 1678, xciii. 



"Theatre of Compliments; or, New Aca- 

 demy," 79 n. 



Theobald's Palace, engraving of the interior 

 of, 35 ; historical account of, 35 n. ; one of 

 King James' favourite places of retire- 

 ment, 3S.; general view of, 180 ; verses 

 descriptive of, 2715 ; plate of, under the 

 misnomer of Richmond Palace, 275. 



Thompson, Mr Richard, his observations 

 upon the phrase, " To buy a good wind of 

 one of the honest witches," 283. 



Thomson, quotation from his " Seasons," 

 descriptive of the art of angling, 288. 



Thrustros, Mr, baptized Izaak Walton the 

 younger, xli. 



Thorn tree-fly, the, for March, 254. 



Thornville Royal, in Yorkshire, an extra- 

 ordinary tench taken at, 155 n. 



Thracimane Lake, in Italy, the largest pike 

 said to be found in, 132. 



Thrassel, the, cxiv, 26. 



Throckmorton, Mary, daughter of Sir Ar- 

 thur, xliii. 



Thynne, Lady Isabella, quotation from Wal- 

 ler, on her playing the lute, 179 . 



Titlark, the, cxiv, 26. 



Tivy, the river, in Pembrokeshire, extract 

 from Drayton's Polyolbion respecting the 

 salmon-leap in, 124. 



Tixall, a presentation copy of Walton's Life 

 of Hooker, in the library at, Ixxviii. 



Tobacco, King James' Counterblast, 240 n. 



Toghill, in Gloucestershire, 276. 



Tombs, Mr Thomas, goldsmith of London, 

 inscription on his gravestone, in Hampton 

 Churchyard, 183 . 



Tomlins, Thomas, of London, merchant, 

 cxxxiv. Sarah, wife of Sir Thomas Jen- 

 kinson, cxxxiv. 



"Tom of Bedlam," a song, by William Basse, 

 85 ; copy thereof, 282. 



Topsel, Edward, author of a "History of 

 four-footed Beasts and Serpents," 74 n. 



Tottenham Cross, 19, 191 ., 194, 203, 207. 



Tradescant, John, grandfather, father, and 

 son, collection of Natural History, 42 ; 

 monument in Lambeth Churchyard, 42 . ; 

 residence in Lambeth, 42 n.; now occupied 

 by William Heseltine, Esq., 275. 



" Travels to the Holy Land, Egypt, and 

 elsewhere," by George Sancivs, 27 n. 



" Treatise on the Nature of God," the model 

 adopted by Walton for the " Complete 

 Angler," xlvi ; extract from, 19. 



"Treatyse of Fysshynge wyth an Ang'e," 

 by Juliana Berners, 289. 



Trent, salmon of the, when in season, 5, 7 ; 

 made subject to the fence months by stat. 

 13 Edw. I., 62 .; and 13 Rich. II., 63 n ; 

 the grayling found in, 122 ; " Practical Ob- 

 servations on Angling" in, 165 n. ; source 

 and course of, 195, 229 ; mentioned by 

 Drayton, 196 . 



Trentham, Katherine, daughter of Thomas, 

 of Rowcester, co. Stafford, cciii. Co. Staf- 

 ford, 229. 



" Triall of Treasure," the, a new and merry 

 Enterlude, 1567, 87. 



Tring, co. Hertford, three sources of the 

 river Thame, in the parish of, 195 . 



