206 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Birds, enemies to fish, 50 ; migration 

 of, 62 ; breed of, OG 



Bleak, description of the, I., 192; 

 representation of, ib 



Boteler, Dr., his saying of strawber- 

 ries, I., 105 



Brandling, I., S4 



Bream, observations on the, I., 157; 

 American variety, ib ; representa- 

 tion of the, loS ; how to fish for, 

 159; seasons of the, 163 



Browne. Moses, first edition of Wal- 

 ton, his praise of the " Angler," 

 I., Ixxiv ; sketch of his life, Ixxvi ; 

 his editorship reviewed, Ixxvii 



Brown, Sir Thomas, his commenda- 

 tion of Oppian, I , xx 



Bruler, Michael, an opponent of the 

 Rosicrucians, I., 213 



Burton, his opinion of the angler's 

 pursuit, I., xii 



Bury, Lady Charlotte, lines witten 

 in Sir Humphrey Davy's copy of 

 the " Angler," I , ex 



Byron, Lord, comment on his attack 

 upon Walton, I., Ixiii, 143 



Cadis worms, account of, L, 217 



Cardan, Jerome, account of, I., 142 



Carp, the, known to the ancients, L, 

 147; poetical description of, ib.; 

 introduced to the United States 

 by Henry Robinson of Newburgh, 

 148; observations of the, 150; 

 killed by frogs, 152; their age, 

 152; representation of the, 154; 

 how to fish for, 154, 155 ; how to 

 dress, 156 



Casaubon, M., referred to, L, 2S 



Caterpillar, account of, L, 90 



Caussin, Nicholas, account of, L, 241 



Caxton and De Werde print the first 

 book on Angling, I., xxvii 



Chalkhill, John, his poem of Theal- 

 ma and Clearchus, improperly at- 

 tributed to Walton, L, Ixix; Co- 

 ridon's song, 80 ; Piscator's song, 

 195 



Change of one sex into another, L, 

 112; of men into brutes, 113 



Charr, the notice of, L, 181 



Chub, observations on the, L, 51; 

 representation of the, 52 ; how to 

 fish for and dress the, 54, 77 



Coleridge, his remark on Cotton's 

 poems, n., xiv 



Collier's, J. P., Book of Roxburghe 

 Ballads, Poems from, appendix, 

 H., 115, 119 



Conrov, his tackle-shop. New York, 

 L, S9 



Coriate, Tom, account of, 1 , 48 



Costly illustrated copies of the "An- 

 gler," L, Ixxxiii 



Cotton, Charles, account of the life 

 and writings of, by the American 

 Editor, n., v; Walton's associa- 

 tion with the reckless wit, vi ; 

 Cotton's father, vii ; Cotton bora 

 1630, viii ; his youth and poverty, 

 ib ; the latter illustrated by his 

 verses, ix, x ; his writings, xi ; 

 coarseness of his Virgil Travestied, 

 xii ; satiric lines to Waller on his 

 panegyric of Cromwell, xiii ; the 

 second part of. the Complete An- 

 gler, xiv ; the fishing house in 

 Derbyshire, xv ; Poem of Conten- 

 tation, xvii : dedication to Walton, 

 xxii; letter from Walton, xxiv ; 

 Stanzas to Walton, xxv : the 

 retirement, Stanzas Irreguliers, 

 xxvii 



Cuttle fish, anecdote of, L,31; note, 32 



Dace or Dare, the, representation of, 

 L,20S 



Davison, F., Poetical Rhapsody, L, 

 110 



De Kay, J. E., arrangement of the 

 American species of fishes, appen- 

 dix, IL, 129, et seq. 



Derwent, the river, H., 45 



Diodorus Siculus, referred to, L, 198 



Donne, Dr., his song in imitation of 

 Marlowe, L, 171 ; referred to, 241 



Dove, the river, H., 41, 47, et pas- 

 sim, 103 



Drayton, Michael, verses quoted, L, 

 125, 227, H., 41 



Dubravius, James, his " Booke of 

 Good Husbandry, &c.," I., xxxvi 



J. S., reference to, 



L, xxxviii, 139, 152 



Duport, his Latin lines to Walton, I., 

 cvi ; sketch of, cvii 



Dennys, John, his Secrets of An- 

 gling, a rare poem on Fishing, L, 

 xxxviii-xli ; quoted by Walton, 42 



Earth, Eulogy on, L, 15 



Ecclesiastical sanctions of angling, 

 L, xxvi 



