Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
In both his Life of Sir Henry Wotton and The Compleat Angler, Izaac Walton testifies to Wotton's love of angling. Wotton was, says Walton, “a most dear lover, and frequent practiser of the art,” and intended “to write a Discourse of the Art, and in praise of Angling.” Doubtless when Walton went down from London to visit Wotton at Eton, they would turn aside from discussions of letters and the vexatious questions of church and state to talk about fish and the best methods of catching them. It is not improbable that they cast their lines together in convenient brooks and rivers. Was their talk about angling overheard by a lad who later made both a literal and a literary application of their ideas? It is not unlikely; and it would seem that herein lies a kinship between the fourth section of Robert Boyle's Occasional Reflections and the great masterpiece of mid-seventeenth century literature.
1 The Compleat Angler, ed. Nicolas, 1860, I, 77.
2 Life of Wotton, prefixed to Reliquiae Wottonianae, 1651, p. 35.
3 See “An Account of Philaretus during his Minority,” in Thomas Birch's life of Boyle prefixed to his edition of Boyle's works, 1772, I, xv.
4 Life, p. 35.
5 “Advertisement” to the fourth section of Occasional Reflections. See Birch, II, 390.
6 Ibid.
7 See “Account of Philaretus during his Minority.”
8 See Birch's life of Boyle.
9 Life of Walton prefixed to his edition of The Compleat Angler, 1860, I, xxx.
10 See Works, II, 392 ff.