APPENDIX. 173 



*Franck's (Richard) Northern Me3ioirs, calculated for the meri- 

 dian of Scotland. Wherein most or all of tiie cities, citadels, seaports, 

 castles, forts, fortresses, rivers, and rivulets, arc compendiously described. 

 Together with choice collections of various discoveries, remarkable 

 observations, theological notions, political axioms, national intrigues, 

 polemick inferences, contemplations, speculations, and several curious 

 and industrious inspections, lineally drawn from antiquaries, and other 

 noted and intelligible persons of honor and eminency. To which is 

 added the Contemplative and Practical Angler, by way of diversion. 

 With a narrative of that experimented in England, and perfected in more 

 remote and solitary parts of Scotland. By way of Dialogue. Writ in 

 the ye'ar 1658, but not till now made publick. 8vo., London, 1694. 

 f New edition with preface and notes by Sir Walter Scott. Svo., Edinb., 

 1821. 



N. B. Only 250 copies of this edition printed ; one of the most curious 

 parts of this work, p. 272, relates to Burbolt, a fish rarely found, even 

 in the Trent, &.c. 

 Franck was a captain in the royal army, under Prince Rupert, and was 

 at the battle of Brentford, Nov. 12, 1642, where they were conquerors, 

 and drove the rebels into the sea. — White. This account by White is 

 erroneous. Franck was an enthusiastic sectary, and fought in the 

 parliamentary army. See account of this work iu the bibliographic 

 preface to Wiley & Putnam's Walton's Angler. 



Gardiner. A Booke of Angling, or Fishing. Wherein is shewed, 

 by conference with Scriptures, the agreement betweene the Fisherman, 

 Fishes, and Fishing of both natures Temporall and Spirituall. By 

 Samuel Gardiner, Doctor of Divinitie. Math, iv., 19. "I will make 

 you fishers of men." ISmo., London, printed by Thomas Parfoot, 1606. 

 Dedicated to Sir Hemie Gaudie, Sir Miles Corbet, Sir Hamond Le 

 Strange, Sir Henry Spellman, knights, my verie kind friends. 

 In the collection of the Rev. Mr. Cotton, who considered, with good 



reason, his copy to be unique. 



*fGENTLE3iAN Farmer, Containing North's Discourse of Fish and 

 Fish Ponds. Lond., 1726. 



*Gentleman Angler, containing short plain instructions, whereby 

 the most ignorant beginner may in a little time become a perfect artist 

 in angling for salmon, &c., <fcc. 8vo., London, 1726 ; t2d edit.. 8vo., 

 1736; 3d edit., 8vo., Lond., Hitch, without date; Svo., Lond., 1753; 

 fl2mo., Lond., Kearsley, 1786. 



fThis work was again prlcted as a novel publication in 1786, viz. as 

 above, by a Gentleman who has made it his diversion upwards of four- 

 teen years. 

 (In the first and other editions, twenty-eight years' experience.) 

 Gentleman's Recreations for 1836. 12mo., Sherwood. 

 *f rEQnONIK A. Geoponicorum sive de Re Rustica, libri xx. Svo., 

 4 vols. Ed. lo. Nic. Niclas, Lipsiaj, 1781. Ed. optima. 

 ^Translated from the Greek by Rev. T. Owen. Svo., 2 vols., Lond., 1805. 



