Ancient Angling AuthorsGurney and Jackson, 1910 - 239 pages |
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Page 28
... nearly extinct in England , and not to be confounded with the viviparous eel pout of salt water : — Also it shall be good for all Gentlemen and others , hauing the gouernment of any riuers , brookes , or 28 ANCIENT ANGLING AUTHORS.
... nearly extinct in England , and not to be confounded with the viviparous eel pout of salt water : — Also it shall be good for all Gentlemen and others , hauing the gouernment of any riuers , brookes , or 28 ANCIENT ANGLING AUTHORS.
Page 37
... viviparous , and as recently as 1840 , Blaine , in his most excellent Encyclopædia of Rural Sports , stated that " The eel is viviparous , and appears to choose the sea as its ANCIENT ANGLING AUTHORS 37.
... viviparous , and as recently as 1840 , Blaine , in his most excellent Encyclopædia of Rural Sports , stated that " The eel is viviparous , and appears to choose the sea as its ANCIENT ANGLING AUTHORS 37.
Page 38
Walter John Turrell. viviparous , and appears to choose the sea as its spawning ( ? ) place . " He , moreover , quotes from a Dr Shaw , who held that " both eggs and ready formed young are occasionally observed in the same individuals ...
Walter John Turrell. viviparous , and appears to choose the sea as its spawning ( ? ) place . " He , moreover , quotes from a Dr Shaw , who held that " both eggs and ready formed young are occasionally observed in the same individuals ...
Page 206
... viviparous : - Being acquainted with an elderly woman who had been wife to a miller near fifty years , and much employ'd in the dressing of Eels , I ask'd her if she had ever found any Spawn or Eggs in those Eels she had open'd , and ...
... viviparous : - Being acquainted with an elderly woman who had been wife to a miller near fifty years , and much employ'd in the dressing of Eels , I ask'd her if she had ever found any Spawn or Eggs in those Eels she had open'd , and ...
Page 207
... of all doubt , and may be sufficient to prove that Eels are of the Viviparous kind . These supposed little eels or elvers were of course parasitic worms , which are now known to frequently exist ANCIENT ANGLING AUTHORS 207.
... of all doubt , and may be sufficient to prove that Eels are of the Viviparous kind . These supposed little eels or elvers were of course parasitic worms , which are now known to frequently exist ANCIENT ANGLING AUTHORS 207.
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Common terms and phrases
Angler's Sure Guide angling portion appears Art of Angling artificial fly bait barbel Barker bayt black Wooll Bodleian Library breed Brookes brown Carps cast catch chapter Chetham chub colour Compleat Angler cork Dace Dennys described doth Drake Dun Fly Feathers feed Fisherman fissh Fissher flie flies float fly-fishing flye following extracts Gervase Markham gives Grayling Green Drake ground ground-baiting gudgeon Hackle hair hath haue hook Howlett hunting inches instructions Juliana Berners kinds of fish length Line Markham Mascall Menow mention method minnow Nobbes pike pleasure poem pond practical printed published Recreation red worm River roach Salmon sayd season second edition Secrets of Angling Silk spawne sport St Albans stream Sunne tackle Tail taken Tench Thames title-page treatise Treatyse of ffysshynge Trolling trout unto Venables viviparous Walton weeds wind wings writer yellow Young Sportsman's Instructor
Popular passages
Page 236 - Complete Angler; or, The Contemplative Man's Recreation : being a Discourse of Rivers, Fishponds. Fish and Fishing, written by IZAAK WALTON ; and Instructions how to Angle for a Trout or Grayling in a clear Stream, by CHARLES COTTON.
Page 182 - To frame the little animal, provide All the gay hues that wait on female pride ; Let Nature guide thee ! sometimes golden wire The shining bellies of the fly require ; The peacock's plumes thy tackle must not fail, Nor the dear purchase of the sable's tail. Each gaudy bird some slender tribute brings, And lends the growing insect proper wings : Silks of all colours must their aid impart, And every fur promote the fisher's art.
Page 181 - Now expectation cheers his eager thought, His bosom glows with treasures yet uncaught ; Before his eyes a banquet seems to stand, Where every guest applauds his skilful hand.
Page 92 - If I had known it but twenty years ago I would have gained a hundred pounds, only with that bait. I am bound in duty to divulge it to your honour, and not to carry it to my grave with me. I do desire that men of quality should have it that delight in that pleasure. The greedy angler will murmur at me : but for -that I care not.
Page 157 - Whitney ( John). The genteel recreation : or, the pleasure of angling. A poem. With a dialogue between Piscator and Corydon. By John Whitney, a lover of the angle.
Page 182 - Mark well the various seasons of the year, How the succeeding insect race appear ; In this revolving moon one colour reigns, Which in the next the fickle trout disdains. Oft...
Page 188 - The Compleat Fisherman, being a Large and Particular Account of all the Several Ways of Fishing now Practised in Europe, with Abundance of Curious Secrets and Niceties in the Art of Fishing as well...
Page xii - ... pleasant shade by the sweet silver streams; he hath good air, and sweet smells of fine fresh meadow flowers, he hears the melodious harmony of birds, he sees the swans, herons, ducks...
Page 181 - When floating clouds their spongy fleeces drain, Troubling the streams with swift-descending rain, And waters, tumbling down the mountain's side, Bear the loose soil into the swelling tide...
Page 12 - I have compylyd it in a greter uolume, of dyuerse bokys concernynge to gentyll and noble men, to the entent that the forsayd ydle persones whyche sholde haue but lytyll mesure in the sayd...