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*IZAAK WALTON COMPLEAT ANGLER RARE ORIGINAL 1839 THEATRE BROADSIDE FISHING*

$ 527.99

Availability: 99 in stock
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Industry: Theater
  • Object Type: Poster

    Description

    A magnificent original April 3, 1839 Royal Olympic Theatre double broadside featuring legendary Compleat Angler author Izaak Walton portrayed on the stage and singing "The Angler's Song." See illustrations for details. Dimensions fourteen and three quarters by twenty inches. Light wear otherwise fine. See Izaak Walton's extraordinary biography below.
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    From Wikipedia:
    Izaak Walton
    (baptised 21 September 1593 – 15 December 1683) was an English writer. Best known as the author of
    The Compleat Angler
    , he also wrote a number of short biographies including one of his friend
    John Donne
    . They have been collected under the title of
    Walton's Lives
    .
    Biography
    Walton was born at
    Stafford
    in
    c.
    1593. The register of his
    baptism
    on 21 September 1593 gives his father's name as
    Jervis
    , or Gervase. His father, who was an
    innkeeper
    as well as a landlord of a
    tavern
    , died before Izaak was three, being buried in February 1596/7
    [a]
    as
    Jarvicus Walton
    . His mother then married another innkeeper by the name of Bourne, who later ran the Swan in Stafford.
    [1]
    Izaak also had a brother named Ambrose, as indicated by an entry in the
    parish register
    recording the burial in March 1595/6 of an
    Ambrosius filius Jervis Walton
    .
    His date of birth is traditionally given as 9 August 1593. However, this date is based on a misinterpretation of his will, which he began on 9 August 1683.
    [2]
    He is believed to have been educated in Stafford before moving to
    London
    in his teens. He is often described as an
    ironmonger
    , but he trained as a linen draper, a trade which came under the
    Ironmongers' Company
    .
    [3]
    He had a small shop in the upper storey of
    Thomas Gresham
    's
    Royal Burse or Exchange
    in
    Cornhill
    . In 1614 he had a shop in
    Fleet Street
    , two doors west of
    Chancery Lane
    in the
    parish
    of
    St Dunstan's
    .
    [4]
    He became verger and churchwarden of the church, and a friend of the vicar,
    John Donne
    .
    [2]
    He joined the Ironmongers' Company in November 1618.
    [2]
    Walton's first wife was Rachel Floud (married December 1626), a great-great-niece of
    Archbishop Cranmer
    . She died in 1640. He soon remarried, to Anne Ken (m. 1641?-1662), who appears as the pastoral
    Kenna
    of
    The Angler's Wish
    ; she was a stepsister of
    Thomas Ken
    , afterwards
    bishop of Bath and Wells
    .
    [1]
    After the
    Royalist
    defeat at
    Marston Moor
    in 1644, Walton retired from his trade. He went to live just north of his birthplace, at a spot between the towns of Stafford and
    Stone
    , where he had bought some land edged by a small river. His new land at
    Shallowford
    included a farm, and a parcel of land; however by 1650 he was living in
    Clerkenwell
    , London. Following the Restoration of the Monarchy it was revealed he had aided the Royalists, Izaak was a staunch Royalist supporter, and at great personal risk he managed to safeguard one of the Crown Jewels (referred to as the Little or Lesser George) following
    Charles II
    's defeat at the
    battle of Worcester
    . Walton was entrusted with returning it to London from where it was smuggled out of the country to Charles II who was then in exile.
    [5]
    The first edition of his book
    The Compleat Angler
    was published in 1653. His second wife died in 1662, and was buried in
    Worcester Cathedral
    , where there is a monument to her memory. One of his daughters married Dr Hawkins, a
    prebendary
    of
    Winchester
    .
    [1]
    The last forty years of his life were spent visiting eminent clergymen and others who enjoyed
    fishing
    , compiling the biographies of people he liked, and collecting information for the
    Compleat Angler
    . After 1662 he found a home at
    Farnham Castle
    with
    George Morley
    ,
    Bishop of Winchester
    , to whom he dedicated his
    Life of George Herbert
    and his biography of
    Richard Hooker
    . He sometimes visited
    Charles Cotton
    in his fishing house on the
    Dove
    .
    [1]
    Walton died, aged 90, in his daughter's house at Winchester on 15 December 1683 and was buried in
    Winchester Cathedral
    .
    [1]
    [6]
    Extract of Walton's Will
    "Isaac Walton, by will, dated 9 August 1698, gave to the town or corporation of Stafford, in which he was born, a farm, situate at Halfhead (adjoining to Shallowford), in the parish of
    Chebsey
    , for the good and benefit of some of the said town, to bind out, yearly, two boys, the sons of honest and poor parents, to be apprentices to some tradesmen or handicraftmen, to the intent that the said boys might the better afterwards get their own living: And he also gave £5. yearly, out of the said rent, to some maid servant that should have attained the age of 21 years, or to some honest poor man's daughter, to be paid to her on her marriage; and this being done, his will was, that what rent should remain of the said farm and land, should be disposed of as follows; first, he gave 20s, yearly, to be spent by the mayor of Stafford, and that what money or rent should remain undisposed of, should be employed to buy coals for some poor people that should have most need thereof in the said town."
    Walton's cottage at Shallowford
    Main article:
    Izaak Walton's Cottage
    Photogravure
    of Walton's Shallowford house, 1888
    Walton left his property as described above at
    Shallowford
    in
    Staffordshire
    for the benefit of the poor of his native town. He had purchased Halfhead Farm there in May 1655. In doing this he was part of a more general retreat of Royalist gentlemen into the English countryside, in the aftermath of the
    English Civil War
    , a move summed up by his friend Charles Cotton's well-known poem "The Retirement" (first published in the 5th edition of Walton's
    Compleat Angler
    ). The cost of Shallowford was £350, and the property included a farmhouse, a cottage, courtyard, garden and nine fields along which a river ran. Part of its attraction may have been that the River Meece, which he mentions in one of his poems, formed part of the boundary. The farm was let to tenants, and Walton kept the excellent fishing.
    [1]
    The cottage is now a Walton Museum. The ground floor of the museum is set-out in period, with information boards covering Walton's life, his writings and the story of the Izaak Walton Cottage. Upstairs a collection of fishing related items is displayed, the earliest dating from the mid-eighteenth century, while a room is dedicated to his
    Lives
    and
    The Compleat Angler
    . The Izaak Walton Cottage and gardens are open to the public on Sunday afternoons during the summer.
    [7]
    The Compleat Angler
    Main article:
    The Compleat Angler
    Izaak Walton and his scholar
    woodcut by
    Louis Rhead
    Viator's bridge near
    Milldale (Peak District)
    is named for its reference in
    The Compleat Angler
    The Compleat Angler
    [8]
    was first published in 1653, but Walton continued to add to it for a quarter of a century. It is a celebration of the art and spirit of fishing in prose and verse; 6 verses were quoted from
    John Dennys
    's 1613 work
    The Secrets of Angling
    . It was dedicated to John Offley, his most honoured friend. There was a second edition in 1655, a third in 1661 (identical with that of 1664), a fourth in 1668 and a fifth in 1676. In this last edition the thirteen chapters of the original had grown to twenty-one, and a second part was added by his friend and brother angler
    Charles Cotton
    , who took up Venator where Walton had left him and completed his instruction in
    fly fishing
    and the making of
    flies
    .
    [1]
    Walton did not profess to be an expert with a fishing fly; the fly fishing in his first edition was contributed by
    Thomas Barker
    , a retired cook and
    humorist
    , who published a
    treatise
    of his own,
    The Art of Angling
    in 1651;
    [9]
    but in the use of the live
    worm
    , the
    grasshopper
    and the
    frog
    "Piscator" himself could speak as a master. The famous passage about the frog, often misquoted as being about the worm—"use him as though you loved him, that is, harm him as little as you may possibly, that he may live the longer"—appears in the original edition. The additions made as the work grew did not affect the technical part alone; quotations, new turns of phrase, songs, poems and anecdotes were introduced as if the author, who wrote it as a recreation, had kept it constantly in his mind and talked it over point by point with his many friends. There were originally only two interlocutors in the opening scene, "Piscator" and "Viator"; but in the second edition, as if in answer to an objection that "Piscator" had it too much in his own way in praise of angling, he introduced the
    falconer
    , "Auceps," changed "Viator" into "Venator" and made the new companions each dilate on the joys of his favourite sport.
    [1]
    The best-known old edition of the
    Angler
    is J. Major's (2nd ed., 1824). The book was edited by
    Andrew Lang
    in 1896, followed by many other editions.
    [1]
    Walton's
    Lives
    Walton also made significant contributions to seventeenth-century life-writing throughout his career. His leisurely labours as a biographer seem to have grown out of his devotion to angling. It was probably as an angler that he made the acquaintance of Sir
    Henry Wotton
    , but it is clear that Walton had more than a love of fishing and a humorous temper to recommend him to the friendship of the accomplished ambassador. At any rate, Wotton, who had intended to write the life of
    John Donne
    , and had already corresponded with Walton on the subject, left the task to him. Walton had already contributed an
    elegy
    to the 1633 edition of Donne's poems, and he completed and published the life, much to the satisfaction of the most learned critics, in 1640. Sir Henry Wotton dying in 1639, Walton undertook his life also; it was finished in 1642 and published in 1651 as a preface to the volume
    Reliquiae Wottonianae
    . His life of
    Hooker
    was published in 1665, and his biography of
    George Herbert
    in 1670, the latter coinciding with a collected edition of Walton's biographical writings,
    The Lives of Dr. John Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, Mr. Richard Hooker, Mr. George Herbert
    (1670, 1675). His life of Bishop
    Robert Sanderson
    appeared in 1678. All these subjects were endeared to the biographer by a certain gentleness of disposition and cheerful piety; three of them at least—Donne, Wotton and Herbert—were anglers. Walton studied these men's lives in detail, and provides many insights into their character.
    [10]
    Other literary works
    Sir John Skeffington
    John Chalkhill
    Waltoniana
    – an 1878 collection of Walton's poems and prose fragments
    Walton in literature
    Walton has appeared in a number of works of literature, both non-fiction and fiction.
    Non-fiction
    Charles Lamb
    , in his
    letter
    to
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge
    , recommends the
    Compleat Angler
    : "It breathes the very spirit of innocence, purity, and simplicity of the heart. There are many choice old verses interspersed in it; it would sweeten a man's temper at any time to read it; it would Christianise every discordant angry passion; pray make yourself acquainted with it."
    [11]
    Gilbert Ryle
    uses him in his 1949 book
    The Concept of Mind
    as an example of "'knowing how' before 'knowing that'"; in his collected essays he writes that "We certainly can, in respect of many practices, like fishing, cooking and reasoning, extract principles from their applications by people who know how to fish, cook and reason. Hence Isaak Walton, Mrs Beeton and Aristotle. But when we try to express these principles we find that they cannot easily be put in the indicative mood. They fall automatically into the imperative mood."
    [12]
    Zane Grey
    mentions him in a fishing passage in his 1903 book
    Betty Zane
    on page 84. "Alfred Clark said 'I never knew one (girl) who cared for fishing.'" "Betty Zane answered 'Now you behold one. I love dear old Izaak Walton. Of course you (Clark) have read his book?'"
    [13]
    Fiction
    Charles Dickens
    makes reference to him in chapter 14 of book 2 of
    A Tale of Two Cities
    . "The honoured parent steering Northward, had not gone far, when he was joined by another disciple of Izaak Walton, and the two trudged on together."
    [14]
    Other commemorations
    Advertising mogul and land developer
    Barron Collier
    founded the Izaak Walton Fly Fishing Club in 1908 at his
    Useppa Island
    resort near
    Fort Myers, Florida
    . The
    Izaak Walton League
    is an American association formed in 1922 in
    Chicago, Illinois
    , to preserve fishing streams. Walton has been inducted into the American
    National Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame
    .
    [15]
    There is a forest preserve in Homewood, Illinois, called the Izaak Walton Forest Preserve. The Izaak Walton Hotel, in the Staffordshire village of Ilam overlooks the river Dove, at the entrance to Dovedale. There are also two pubs in England named The Izaak Walton: one in the village of
    East Meon
    , Hampshire,
    [16]
    the other in
    Cresswell
    ,
    Staffordshire
    .
    [17]
    In the county town of
    Stafford
    , there is now a statue of him placed in the town park, by the bank of the river. This route through the park was originally known as 'Izaak Walton Walk', there is also a street in the north part of Stafford named for him.
    There is a creek named after him in
    Owatonna, Minnesota
    .
    [
    citation needed
    ]
    There is also a pub in
    Norwich
    named 'The Compleat Angler'. The Compleat Angler Hotel in
    Bimini
    ,
    Bahamas
    , was destroyed by fire in 2006; the hotel bar was frequented by
    Ernest Hemingway
    . The Allen-Edmonds shoe company of
    Port Washington, Wisconsin
    , produces a "Walton" style in tribute. In the Silver Divide region of the
    Sierra Nevada
    mountain range of California, a major peak is named after Izaak Walton. The Izaak Walton State Recreation Site in
    Sterling, Alaska
    , is located at the confluence of the Moose River and the
    Kenai River
    ,
    [18]
    and his name is lent to the historic
    Izaak Walton Inn
    in Montana. There is an Izaak Walton Inn in Embu, Kenya,
    [19]
    overlooking a small stream that feeds into the Rupingazi River.
    In the movie School Ties 1992 the history teacher refers to Izaak Walton as a personal favorite after mentioning the date of his birth to see if any students knew it.