8(-; BIBLIOTHECA PISCATOKIA. 



Life in London."' .London, Longman, 1847. pp. xii. 363. 

 8°.; Second edition, improved and extended, 1848. pp. xii. 

 361. 8°.; Tliird edition, corrected and improved, 1853. 

 front., pp. viii. 312. 8°.; Fourth edition, 1865. 8°. 



Book of the sahnon : in two parts. Part L The 



theory and ]-)rinciples of fly-fishing for sahnon. with Hsts of 

 sahnon flies for every good river in the Empire. Part IL 

 The natural history of the salmon, all its known habits des- 

 cribed, and the best way of artificially breeding it explained. 

 Usefully illustrated with numerous coloured engravings of 

 salmon flies and salmon fry. By Ephemera, ...assisted by 

 Andrew Young, of Invershin, manager of the Duke of 

 Sutherland's salmon fisheries. London, Longman, 1850. pp. 

 xvi. 242. (^plates. 1 6"^. 



[ These two works are highlv esteemed. The chapters on lly- 

 inaking in the former are unusuallv clear and compreiieiisible.] 



Sec Blaink ( D. P.) An encyclopaedia of rural 



sports... corrected by Ephemera, etc. 1852. 8°. 



See Walton (L) The complete angler. ..edited 



by P^phemera. 1853. ^'^ 

 Epicure. The innocent epicure ; or, the art of angling. A 

 poem. [ Preceded by a paraphrase on Epist. 10. lib. i. of 

 Horace, in \'erses addressed '' From J. S. to C. S."] 



" Tytire amas rivos, rivos tibi, Tvlire, dicam." — Hap. 

 " Si quid novisti rectius istis, 



(aniHdiis imperii, si non, his utcre mecum." — Hor. 

 London, Printed for S. Crouch, H. Playford and W. Brown : 

 against the Royal Exchange, Cornhill ; in the Temple- 

 Exchange, Fleet Street and in Black Horse Alley, near Fleet- 

 Bridge. it>97. pp. xvi. 54. S'-.; 



The innocent epicure : or, the art of angling. A 



poem. The second edition. London, printed by H. Meere, 

 ior R. Gosling at the Mitre and Crown against St. Dunslan's 

 Church in Fleet-s.. 1713. [)p. viii. 87. 8°.; [with a new 

 title-page as :] 



Angling: a poem. Second edition. London, H. 



Slater, 1741. front, pp. viii. 87. 8^. 



[This has an interpolation often new lines, beginning "Of arts I 

 sing, etc." The poem has been atlributt-d to its first editor, Tate, 

 but on insufficient evidence. It has been ascribed also, with a 

 slight peradventure, to .1. S., the author of "True Art of Angling," 

 whose quaint but matter-of-fact little book certainly puts Ibrth no 

 claim of kinship with the smooth classicalisms and antithetical 

 peiiods, of the present writer.] 



Epitome. An epitome of llie delightful art of angling ; shew- 

 nig, al one \ lew. liie liaibL)Ui>, reasons and depths, U)r laleli- 



