240 ELEMENTS OF ANGLING. 



Bullen) is an interesting and useful little book r 

 though the rivers of which it treats are not as a 

 rule likely to prove a happy fishing-ground for the 

 ordinary man, being, as has been said, things of 

 price. "Exmoor Streams" by C. F. Wade (Chatto 

 and Windus) gives a good idea of the fishing to be 

 obtained in that delectable part of the country. 

 Mr. F. H. Amphlett's " The Thames, Where to Fish 

 it and How," is a useful guide to the Metropolitan 

 river. The volumes on Wales in the " Highways 

 and Byways" series (Macmillan) from the pen of 

 that good angler Mr. A. G. Bradley are enriched 

 with a good deal of fishing information happily 

 Conveyed. Mr. P. Geen's " What I have seen 

 while Fishing" (Fisher Unwin) also gives some 

 topographical information both about Scotland and 

 Ireland. There are valuable pages also in the 

 books of Mr. J. W. Martin ("The Trent Otter ") 

 describing reaches of the Ouse, Trent, and other 

 East Anglian waters, and there is a good deal of 

 detached information scattered about in the 

 angling library generally, while articles answering 

 the question "Where?" are frequent in the sporting 

 press. 



A word of caution, however, with regard to> 

 fishing guide books and literature is not out of 

 place. However accurate the information in a 



