Something Fishy

Winchester Cathedral, window in memory of Isaak Walton. Picture: Hampshire History.

And that ye study to be quiet, and to do your own business, and to work with your own hands, as we commanded you. (I Thessalonians iv:11)

Yesterday I went with my Foreign Office Friend to Winchester. Today I’d like to show him something we missed in the cathedral, a window to Izaak Walton and his memorial stone (he is buried in the cathedral). To briefly digress he was a Freeman of the Ironmongers’ Company where I lunched recently.

Walton memorial, Winchester Cathedral. Picture: Hampshire History.

And something we did see.

Winchester Cathedral, May 2022.

FF, not as famous as Izaak W, was also a fisherman and author.

A Book on Angling, Frontispiece from 4th Edition (1876) – The Author and His Gillie.

I have a friend who was Hunting Correspondent for The Field giving him opportunities to hunt with most packs in the British Isles. Likewise Francis Francis was angling correspondent for the same magazine. Here is the preface to the first edition of his 508 page book on angling.

“When first infected with the fever of Angling, more years ago than I care to count up, my ambition was to catch every species of freshwater fish, from the minnow up to the salmon, which inhabits our British waters. That satisfied, my next desire was to write a work, which should contain within one volume (as far as might be possible) the fullest and most varied information upon Angling generally, in every branch of the art, which had ever been published; and with this resolve I commenced collecting the matter for the present work nearly twenty years ago. Taken up and laid aside from time to time, little by little it has steadily progressed towards completion. In the course of that twenty years I took occasion to visit and to fish nearly every river of note in the kingdom, my connection with ‘The Field’ affording me peculiar facilities for obtaining permission to fish very many waters which are closely locked against the general public; and I have roamed England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland over to gather fresh knowledge, and to put it into a practical and concentrated form for the use of my readers.

In inducting the tyro into the mysteries of the art, I have endeavored to make every direction and information as clear and practicable as possible. This work is intended to be a useful and not merely a decorative one: thus, the plates are not for the sake of ornamentation, but for direction, and as an aid to the student of tackle-making and fly-tying. Each illustration of tackle is really needed, and the flies shown are not a mere selection of gorgeous and pretty subjects, or I should have chosen very differently; but each fly is a specimen of some separate class of flies, in which a special peculiarity of manufacture is evident. 

I have to thank many kind friends for assistance in lending tackle and flies as subjects for the engravings, and also for description, as will be found in the body of the work.

I have given much time to this book, but I have given it willingly, for it was indeed and in truth a labour of love. Whether the Angling public, to whom I dedicate it (desiring no more potent patron), will appreciate my labours remains to be seen; and so, without further apology if an attempt to supply a long-felt and obvious want, the existence of which few persons have been in a position to know and feel so well as myself, be thought to require an apology into their hands I commit it.

FRANCIS FRANCIS. THE FIRS, TWICKENHAM : 1867”

Anglers visit these two notable fishermen and make their Devotions at the Chapel of St John the Evangelist and the Fisherman Apostles in the cathedral.