311 



3d Edit. 12mo, Lond. 1832. 4th Edit, with additions by his 

 brother, Dr. John Davy, 12mo, Lond. 1851. 



%* A review of this work appeared in the Quarterly, attributed to Sir 

 Walter Scott, and another by Professor Wilson, in Blackwood's Magazine. 



DAVY (John, M.D.) The Angler and his Friend, or Piscatory 

 Colloquies and Fishing Excursions. Fcp. 8vo, Lond. Long- 

 mans, 1855. 

 DAWSON (T.W.) The TROUT FISHER'S GUIDE. Pittsburgh, 



Pennsylvania, 1850. 

 DEKAY (James E.) Fishes of New York. 2 vols. 4to, Albany, 



1842. 



D[ENNYS] (J[ohn], Esq.) Secrets of Angling, teaching the choicest 

 Tooles, Baytes, and Seasons for taking of any Fish in pond or 

 riuer, practised and familiarly opened in three bookes, by J. D. 

 Esquire. 12mo, Lond. 1613. 2d Edit, augmented with many 

 approved experiments, by W. Lauson. Lond. printed by Roger 

 Jackson, 1652. 



This poetical treatise is entered in the Stationers' Books as by John 

 Dennys; but Walton ascribed it to John Davors, and by others without 

 sufficient authority it is ascribed to Davies and Donne. It contains com- 

 mendatory verses by Jo. Davies, and is dedicated by the Stationer R. J. to 

 Mr. John Harborne, of Tackley, in the county of Oxford. 



In the title of this book is a wood-cut, representing two men, one with a 

 sphere at the end of his angle, and on a label, 

 Hold, hooke and line, 

 Then all is mine 

 the other with a fish, 



Well fayre the pleasure 

 That brings such treasure. 



"Reprinted in the Censura Literaria, with a short advertisement, and an 

 index. 8vo, Lond. 1811. (A. hundred copies taken off separately.) 



Beloe says, " Perhaps there does not exist in the circle of English Lite- 

 rature a rarer book than this. Sir John Hawkins confessed he could never 

 get a sight of it." Anecd. of Literature, vol. ii, p. 64. 



DODD (James Solas) Essay towards a Natural History of the 



Herring. 8vo, Lond. 1752. 

 DONOVAN (Edward) Natural History of British Fishes, 5 vols. 



royal 8vo, Lond. 1802-8. 

 DOUBLEDAY (T.) Vide COQUET-DALE FISHING SONGS; and 



NORTH COUNTRY ANGLER'S GARLANDS. 

 DUBRAUIUS'S NeweBookeofgood Husbandry, very pleasant and 



of great profite both for Gentlemen and Yeomen, conteining 



the order and manner of making fish pondes, with the breed- 



