258 BIBLIOTHECA PISCATORIA. 



Fardon (Glover). Cornwall, its rocks, its fisheries... A lecture 

 ...at. ..Maidstone. Maidstone, i860. 8°. 



Fea (James). Account of the method of fishing practised on 

 the coasts of Shetland. Edinburgh, 1775. 8°. 



Considerations on the fisheries in the Scotch islands : to 



which is prefixed a general account, etc. By James Fea, 

 Surgeon in the Royal Navy and a native of the Orknies. 

 London : printed for the author at Dover. 1787. 8°. 



Feltham ( John). A tour through the Island of Mann in 1797 

 and 1798; comprising sketches of its. ..fishery, etc. Bath, 

 Cruttwell, 1798. 8°. Maps and plates. 



[Contains " The herring fishery. A poem by a Manx lady."] 



Fish Association. The first report of the Committee of the 

 Fish Association for the benefit of the community, etc..^ (March 

 loth, 1 813.) London, 1813. pp. 24. 8^. 



[Reprinted in "The pamphleteer," vol. i, pp. 445-55.] 



The second report, etc. (May nth, 1813.) 



London, 18 13. 8°. 



[Reprinted in "The pamphleteer," vol. ii, pp. 155-167. This 

 Association, in 1815, transferred "the whole of its remaining stock," 

 ;^'584 28. 2d., to another association with similar objects which had 

 been established about the same time " for the relief of the manu- 

 facturing and labounng poor." See Association.] 



Fisheries. See British, Great Britain, Irish, London, Scot- 

 land, Tay, Tweed. 



The fisheries considered as a national resource. 



Dublin, Milliken, 1856. 8°. 



The great fisheries of the world. London, Nelson 



and Sons. ( n. d.) 8°.; also as : 



The treasures of the deep : or, a descriptive account of the 

 great fisheries and their products. London, Nelson and Sons. 

 1876. 8°. 



Hints preparatory to the serious consideration and 



discussion, of the sundry fisheries of this Kingdom... Dublin: 

 printed for the author, by John Exshaw, 1778. 8°. 



Fishing. The royall fishing revived. Wherein is demonstrated 

 from what causes the Dutch have upon the matter ingrossed 

 the fishing-trade in His Majesty's seas, wherein the principles 

 of all the trades they drive in the world are chiefly founded ; 

 as also from what causes the English have lost the fishing trade, 

 to the endangering the small remainder of the trades they 

 yet enjoy. Together with expedients by which the fishing- 

 trade may be redeemed by the English, and proposals for 



