Complete Angler. 85 



the Grouts that are taken in the Lake 

 of Geneva, are a great part of the Mer- 

 chandize of thatfamous City.And 

 you are further to know, that there be 

 certaine waters that breed 'Trout s re- 

 markable,both for their number and 

 frnalnefs- I know a little Brook in 

 Kent that breeds them to a number 

 incredible, and you may take them 

 twentie or fortie in an hour, but none 

 greater then about the lize of a 

 Gudgion. There are alfo in divers Ri- 

 vers, eipecially that relate to, or be 

 neartotheSea,(as Winchejlerprfat 

 Thames about Windfor ) a little 

 4 Jra//called a SamletvrSkegger Trout 

 (in both which places I have caught 

 twentie or fortie at a ftanding) that 

 will bite as fail and as freely as Min- 

 nows \ thefe be by fome taken to be 

 young Salmons, but in thofe wa- 

 ters they never grow to bee bigger 

 then a Herring. 



There is alfo in Kent, neer to 

 Canterbury, a Trout (called there a 

 G 3 For- 



