r,ini.i()'iiii'.(..\ riscAToiv'i.A. 4q 



Sporting sUctchcs. lloiiu' ami aijioad. [Willi 



memoir of the author.] By the Old Bushman. Lmuloii, 

 Wanie. 1866. front, pp. xii. 434. 8". 



[Ri-inarks (;n the Xorliierii Salmon riveis, j). 6 ; Tlie (i.sliing clay, 

 p. 176.] 



C. (H.) 'I'he tisher boy, a poem, comprising his several avo- 

 cations, during the tour seasons ot the year. 

 " Inest sua i;ratia parvis." 

 " Si je n'ai pas d'autres charmcs, 

 I'ai ail iiioiiis la vcrite." 

 By H. C. Esq. [i.e. S. W. H. Ireland.] Printed for Vernon, 

 Hood and Sharpc. Lomlon. [icSoS.] 12". 

 C. (I. E. B.) ticc Angi.kr. The Angler's Diary. 1S66, etc. 



See Facts. Facts and useful hints. 1866, etc. 



Cabinet. A rich cabinet. ^SV^* Whith (J.) 



Cairncross (David). The origin of the silver eel, with remarks 

 on bait and fly-fishing. London, Shield, 1862. pp. viii. 96. 

 8^\ 



[This amazing little book records the result of "a series of obser- 

 vations e.xtending over .sixty years." "The progenitor of the silver 

 eel," says the author, "is a small beetle," "of this I feel fully 

 satisfied in my own mind, from a rigid and extensive comparison of 

 its structure and habits with those of other insects." " The beetle 

 in the act of parturition," is represented in a frontispiece, and the 

 fact that the beetle is evidently a dead one, would not, we feel 

 assured, if known to the writer, cause him to alter his opinion one 

 jot.] 



Cairn -Lorgh, pseud. A ten pound tour. By Cairn-Lorgh. 

 London, W'yman and Sons, 1873. 8°. 



[Contains a chapter on Spring trout-fishing in the Ardennes.] 



Calabar (Old), /j-rz/a'. Over turf and stubble. London, 1873. 



[ Contains " Fishing gossip. Fly-fishing," etc?\ 



Calmo (Andrea). Le bizzarre, faconde et ingeniose rime 

 pescatorie. Vmegia, 1557. 12'^.; 1576 & 1583. 8°. 



Cambridge Essays, contributed by members of the University. 

 ( The fly-fisher and his library, by H. R. F[rancis], pp. 233- 

 260.) London, Parker, 1856. 8°. 



Camerarius (Joachimus), the younger. Symbolorum et em- 

 blematum ex aquatilibus et reptilibus ilesumptorum centuria 

 quarta, a J.C ...coepta : absoluta post ejus obitum a L. Camer- 

 ax'io, etc. [Nuremberg], 1604. 4^.; Francolurti, 1654. 4°. 

 [Emblems 29, 30, 31, 36, 37 and 45, are drawn from fishing 

 subjects. Camerarius was a learned physician of Nuremburg, 

 (B. 1534. D. 1598), author of " Hortus medicus," and "(Commen- 

 taries on MatthicjUis."] 



