feen many excellent Breeds of this Kind, but I 

 think none are fo worthy of being taken No- 

 tice of as Mr Hencages Dog-Kennels, more par- 

 ticularly the Right Norrils, which were bred 

 from the Old Nonpareil Dog-Kennel Cock, and 

 out of Sir Windfor Hunlock's Hens, which Fowl 

 fought in every Main more or lels againft Lord 

 Exeter ; indeed there was one Main which 

 chiefly confifted of them, beat at Louth, being 

 the iecond Main that was fought, which was ap- 

 parently thrown away by bad Feeding and I 

 am of Opinion, that if the Feeders had under- 

 taken the contrary Pens, it would have beat a 

 hollow Main in Behalf of Mr Heneage ; the 

 worft Failing belonging to thefe Cocks, was 

 their Want of being a proper Size, which was a 

 great Misfortune. 



In the laft Main of the four, tho' it was won 

 by Mr Heneage in great Extremity, having fe- 

 ven Battles to win iucceffively to win the 

 Main, yet there was a great many of the Ri$ht 

 Norrils that fell out of Match, which went im- 

 mediately from thence to Grantham, being for- 

 ty Miles, to affiftMr Turner againft Mr tholm- 

 ley, moft of which fell into Match, and all won 

 except one that prov'd exceeding good, which 

 v/as beat, without any Difgrace to him, by a 

 limit Ey'd Cock, Son of the Old Tlimouth of 

 IVilkniS) and out of thcFavourite^r^V/(--jSr^///^ 

 Hens, which came from an unknown Part of the 

 World. 



The Second Sort I am to treat of, is what I 

 call the Bull-dog Kind, and differs as much from 



the 



