CONCLUSION. 239 



is.) ; this useful book appears twice every year, and 

 is of great service to anyone who wants to get an 

 idea of fishing quarters in Scotland. Ireland is 

 very ill-served in the matter of modern piscatorial 

 guide-books but a recent little volume, " The Land 

 of Lakes" by E. S. Shrubsole (published by the 

 Midland Railway Company), may be of use in 

 exploring the waters of Donegal. " Highways and 

 Byways in Donegal and Antrim" (Macmillan) also 

 touches on fishing to some purpose ; its author, 

 Mr. Stephen Gwynn, M.P., is a keen and skilful 

 angler. A few references to likely fishing resorts 

 are also to be found in Mr. J, Harris Stone's 

 " Connemara " (Health Resort Publishing Com- 

 pany), but they do not bulk very large in the volume. 

 For the rest the novice must either make local 

 inquiry or depend on articles published from time 

 to time in " The Field," " The Fishing Gazette," 

 " The Angler's News," and other sporting papers. 



England and Wales are blessed with a certain 

 number of local guide-books which sometimes 

 contain useful information about fishing. Of more 

 ambitious volumes of recent date Mr. W. M. 

 'Gallichan's " Fishing in Wales," and " Fishing in 

 Derbyshire " (Robinson) are to be commended. 

 Mr. G. A. B. Dewar's " South Country Trout 

 Streams" ("The Angler's Library," Lawrence and 



