INDEX. 233 



CARP. 



mentioned in Treatise, 14. 



CASTING THE FLY. 



early method of, 24, 25. 



fly must fall first, 24, 25, 76. 



first mention of, 42; in Cotton's time, 75. 



CASTING LINE. 



nine hairs thick recommended by Treatise, 23. 



three hairs by Lawson, 23. 



single hair by Barker, 23. 



Cotton used single, double or treble, 24, 68, 69; 



Markham's practice, 48. 



of lute or viol string, mentioned by Venables and Samuel 



Pepys, 69. 

 Gut, 94, 95. / 



Indian Weed, 70 and 81 n. 



LA CEAOE DOU SEBF, 1, 4. 



CHETHAM, JAMES, 55, 103—105, 146, 149—156, 158. 

 excellence of his dressings of flies, 71, 74, 145. 

 ointments to allure fish, 202—203. 



CHOLMONDELEY PENNELL. 108, 217. 



CLARK. London tackle maker, making split cane rods in 

 1805, 93. 



CLERK & Co., ANDREW, of New York, 

 early makers of six-section split cane, 94. 



COCHERIS, M., editor of La Vieille, 52 n. 



COLQUHOUN, JOHN, 84, 96, 98, 103. 192, 213. 



COMPLEAT ANOLEB, 

 see WALTON, IZAAK. 



COPYRIGHT. 



in fifteenth century, 12; in seventeenth, 44. 



CORK BODIES FOR PLIES. 



first mentioned by Mascall, 38. 

 COTTON, CHARLES, 56, 67, 68, 89, 103—105, 146, 148, 150—151, 

 154—5, 159—161, 163—165. 



as fly dressef, 71, 73—75, 145. 



good naturalist, 182. 



position in history of sport, 24, 48, 65, 74, 104, 220. 



relation between him and Walton, 65, 198 : its influence 

 on his prose style, 198. 



style, in plose and verse, 65, 198; 



superiority of his verse, 199. 



COX, NICHOLAS. 



The Gentleman's Becreation, 103. 



CREEL, mentioned by Dennys, 40. 



