APPENDIX. 161 



verses prefixed. This is the first edition that has tlie title of Barker's 

 Delight. The second edition (likewise so called), London, 1659, is in 

 fact the same, with only a new title-page. 



*tBAUDRiLLART, Traite General des Eaux et Forets, Chasses et 

 Peches. 4""- Partie Dictionnaire des Pechcs, contenant L'Histoire Natu- 

 relle des Poissons et des autres animaux aquatiques (jni font I'objet de la 

 Peche des Eiiropeens ; L'Explication des termcs de Peche et de Navi- 

 gation ; La Description des Lignes, Hamecons, Filets et Instrumens, 

 &:c. Les Dispositions Reglementaires tant sur la Peche Fluviale que 

 sur la Peche iVIaritime. 4to. Paris : 1833. Avec im atlas compose 

 de 40 Planches fol. 



Berisch Anweisung zur ZahmencndWilden Fischerei. Leipzig, 

 Leo., 1794. 



*Berners, Barnes, or Bernes (Lady Juliana). L This present 

 boke shewyth the manere of hawkynge and huntynge : and also of druys- 

 yinge of Cote Armours. It shewyth also a good matere belongynge to 

 horses ; wyth other comendable treatyses. And ferdermore of the blay- 

 synge of Armys : as here after it may appere. Small folio. 

 Juliana Berners, or Barnes, to whom the above treatises were ascribed, 

 is supposed to have been sister to Richard, Lord Berners, of Essex, 

 and Prioress of iSopwell, near St. Albans. She is said to have flour- 

 ished about the year 1460, and is celebrated for her learning and accom- 

 plishments. 

 Besides being the first printed treatise on the subject in the English lan- 

 guage, this work affords us rude representations of the different kinds 

 of tackle in use, and contains directions and remarks which have been 

 copied in some recent Treatises on Angling. 

 On the first page wood-cut of birds, and on the reverse a group of men 



with a hawk underneath the title above. 

 Sig. a. 6 leaves, the first blank making 6 ; b. 6 leaves ; c. 6 leaves. 



(Hawkynge ends on c. 5, and Hunting commences on c. 6.) 

 D. 6 leaves, e. 6 leaves (Coat Armour commences on e. 6), f. 4 leaves, 

 g. 4 leaves (on reverse of g. 4, Here begynnyth the treatise of fisshynge 

 with an angle), h. 6 leaves, i. 4 leaves. Here begynnyth the blasynge 

 of arms. A. 6 leaves, b. 6 leaves, c. leaves, d. 7 leaves. 

 Here in this boke afore ben shewed the treatyses perteynynge to hawk- 

 ynge and huntynge, with others diuyers playsaunt materes belongynge 

 unto noblesse : and also a ryght noble treatise of Cot Armours ; as in 

 this present boke it may appere. And here we end the last treatyse 

 whyche specyfyeth of blaysynge of armys. Empryntcd at Westmes- 

 tre, by Wynkvn the VVorde, the yere of theyn carnacon of our Lorde 

 M.CCCC.LXXXVL 

 On the last leaf (d. 8) is the device of Wynkyn de Worde, and on the 

 reverse that of Caxton. This leaf is wanting in the copy of the Bri- 

 tish Museum. 

 Copies upon vellum are in the Collections of the Earl of Pembroke and 

 the Right Hon. Thomas Grenville, and upon paper in the British 

 Museum ; in the late Mr. Douce's Collection, now in the Bodleian ; 



