( 5 ) 



than thofe confin'd in parks in S. Britain*. 

 Is very dellriicHve to corn : in Skie the far- 

 mer is obliged to watch his crop. The 

 Duke of Argyle has, in fome parts of his 

 cftate, humanely permitted the tenant to 

 deilroy an animal fo no3<ioiis to his labors. 



Roe. . Roe, Br. Zool. I. 39. Syn. qua^i. No. 43. 



' Er. Boc-earba. doe, Maoiljeach, young, rnean-n. yearling, 



minnfeach. 



FOUNI> in plenty from the wooded banks 

 of LotLgh-Lomond, to the foreft near 

 Langwall in the S. of Cathnefs., in Mull 

 and in Skie. The fkin and horns articles of 

 commerce. Brouze much - fond of the rubus 

 faxatilis, called in Scotland th^ roe-buck-berry. 

 The fawns, when taken, are with great diffi- 

 culty reared, eight out of ten dying. 



Fallow deer, Br. Zool. I. 34. Sy??, quad. No. 37. 



NONE wild in Scotland -, confin'd to 

 parks, and not common : probably 

 introduced there from Denmark by James VI, 

 in his return from his vifit to that court in 

 1589 i for Moyfes., a fer^ant of his, mentions 

 in his memoirs, under the year 1586, that 

 his majefty one morning palied over from 

 Leith to Falkland, and had along with him 

 a tame fallow deer, prefented to him by 

 B 3 the 



