ANGLING, FISHES, AND FISH CULTURE. 59 



*Ang. 48.8 [Fitzgibbon, Edward.] Lessons on the natural history 

 and habits of the salmon ; [by] Ephemera. (In FRY, 

 W. H., editor. A complete treatise on artificial fish-breed- 

 ing, 1866, 12, pp. 111-178.) 



* 14454. 10 [Fletcher, Phineas.] Piscatorie eclogs, and other poeti- 

 call miscellanies. By P. F. Cambridge [Eng.]. 1633. 

 {Appended to his Purple island, 1633, 4.) 



Ang. 4533 'The same. With notes, critical and explanatory 



[by A. F. Tytler, Lord Woodhouselee]. Edinburgh, etc. 

 1771. sm. 8. Vign. 



The "poetical miscellanies" in this edition consist of only three poems, 

 while the previous edition has thirty-four. 



*Ang. 18.51 Fly-fishing in salt and fresh water. London. 1851. 

 8. pp. viii., 74. Wdct. and 6 plates. 

 Five of the plates are colored. 



*Ang. 18.87.3 F1 7 maker's hand-book (The) ; illustrated with 

 coloured plates representing upwards of fifty of the most 

 useful artificial flies for trout and grayling fishing. By an 

 angler. Liverpool. [1887.] sq. 24. pp.45. 9 col. 

 plates and wdct. 



Ang. 50.33 Forbes, Stephen Alfred. A catalogue of the native 

 fishes of Illinois. Plates. (Appended to ILLINOIS Fish 



commission. Report, 1884, 8, pp. 6089.) 

 Also in the report of 1886. 



4.116 Ford, Simon. Piscatio. (/ MUSARUM anglicanarum 



analecta, 1699, 8, i. 129-143.) 



4.131 Also in the edition of 1721. 



Ang. 45-34 Ford, Simon. Piscatio, or, Angling; a poem, written 

 originally in Latin. Translated from the Mus<z an g lie ana 

 by Tipping Silvester. Oxford. 1733. sm. 8. pp. (4), 23. 



Also in Silvester's "Original poems and translations," 1733. 



" More an adaptation than a translation." Westwood and Satchell. 



*Ang. 18.81 Ford, Thomas, of Caistor, Eng. Trout-fishing. Lon- 

 don. [1881.] sm. 8. pp.64. 



The author is a tackle-maker. 



Foreign field sports. 1814. 4. See Howitt, Samuel, 

 and others. 



Ang. 38.25 Forester, Thomas. Norway in 1848 and 1849 ; contain- 

 ing rambles among the fjelds and fjords of the central and 

 western districts, and including remarks on its political, mil- 

 itary, ecclesiastical, and social organisation. With extracts 

 from the journals of M. S. Biddulph. London. 1850. 8. 



Front., map, wdcts., and 9 plates. 



Contains a short account of the fisheries of Bergen, and occasional 

 references to angling. 



The illustrations are from sketches made during the rambles by Lieut. Bid- 

 dulph, and the map has been constructed from his personal observations. 



