AND ANGLING SONGS. 3 1 7 



Fondly we dream 

 Of joy in the breeze 

 Singing-birds in the trees 



Flowers by the stream. 



in. 



Often our fancy brings 

 Pictures of sunny things 



Home to our hearth ; 

 And we seem as we stray'd 

 Amid sunshine and shade 



Music and mirth ! 



IV. 



Then with unconscious hand 

 Grasp we the idle wand, 



Full of the boy, 

 When to our sad surprise 

 Swiftly the vision flies, 



Summer and Joy ! 



THE TRANSPLANTATION OF FRESH-WATER FISHES. 



Continued. 



THE transportation of one and all of the different species of 

 the Salmonidce has, as far as experience goes, been attended with 

 difficulty. In conducting it there is required the greatest care, 

 both in the regulation of the temperature of the water and in the 

 keeping up of a proper supply of oxygen an element which the 

 respiratory organs of the fish in question consume with some 

 rapidity. The secret of success in transporting trout from one 

 place to another, consists in employing as a medium the coldest 

 and purest water that can be procured, and in giving plenty 

 of accommodation in the vessel made use of to the subjects in 



