234 FLY FISHING FOR TROUT. 



DAPPING 



mentioned by Lawson, 43. 



DAVY, SIR H.. 26 n, 84, 95, 103, 10&-107, 153, 192, 213. 

 position in history of sport, 215 — 216. 



Salmonia, its fishing excellence, 97; and literary faultB, 

 97, 216. 



DENISON, ALFRED. 



his collection of fishing books, 13. 



DENISON TEXT is earlier than text from which Treatise is 

 printed, 13 — 14; is more accurate, 20 n. 



DENNYS, JOHN. 



Secrets of Angling, account of, 40; high position in fishing 

 poetry, 40, 191. 



DOUBLEDAY, THOMAS, 40. 



DRAKE FLY, 26, 166. 



DRY FLY. 



anticipation of, in early writers, 116 — 121; Maacall, Barker 

 and Boyle not really talking of it, 117, 120. 



invention of, probable date, 115, 116. 



use of, on Itchen, 115—116; by Scotcher 121, 122; Ogden 

 124 — 125; first described by Pulman, 122—124; known 

 to Stoddart 126—127; Francis 127—129; Kingsley and 

 Froude 128; before 1860, 128; 1860—1870, 129; work of 

 Halford, 129—131. 



partial reaction against, 131 — 133; case overstated by 

 Halford, 131; work of Skues, 133. 



early sale of, 125, 126. 



progress since Halford, 131 — ^134. 



attraction of sport, 134—140. 



DRYDEN, MISS ALICE. 

 The Art of Sunting, 5. 



DRYDEN, SIR HENRY, translator of La Chace dou Serf, 1. 



DUBRAVIUS, 59. 



DUKE OF YORK. 



his life and character, 7; author of Master of Oame, 7—8. 



DUN CUT, 26, 26 n, 39. And see YELLOW DUN. 



DUN FLY, 25, 146, 151. 



EDMONDS AND LEE. 



Brook and Biver Trouting, 156. 



ESTIENNE, CHARLES. 



author of Maison Bustique, 52; its fame, ibid. 



FARLOW 



London tackle maker, making three-section split cane in 

 1851, 93. 



