126 BIBLIOTHECA PISCATORIA. 



trated. London, Bazaar Office. 1881. pp. iv. 481. 8. 

 [First issued in parts.] 



Keill (James). A practical treatise upon angling with small 

 and great rode, shewing the different flies and baits through 

 the various seasons of the year ; to which is adjoined fishing 

 in ponds. Edinburgh, 1729. pp. 16. 8. 



Keller ( Franz.) The Amazon and Madeira rivers, etc. With 

 68 illustrations. London, Chapman and Hall, 1874. 8. 

 [Chap. iv. treats of hunting and fishing.] 



Kemp (John). Shooting and fishing in Lower Brittany. A 

 complete and practical guide to sportsmen. London, Long- 

 man, 1859. PP- xn> - 2 39- map. 12. 



Kemp ( Samuel). The young Thames angler's instructor. By 

 Samuel Kemp, Fisherman, Bleachfield Cottage, Teddington, 

 Middlesex. [In verse]. London, [1842]. pp. 8. 8. 



Kentish. The Kentish angler ; or, the young fisherman's 

 instructor : shewing the nature and properties of fish which 

 are generally angled for in Kent ; their haunts, spawning 

 times, etc. Rules and cautions to be observed by young 

 anglers; the proper method of angling for trout, carp, etc.; 

 worm, minnow, cadis and maggot fishing ; fly-fishing and the 

 preparation of artificial flies ; and an abstract of the laws of 

 angling. By an Experienced Angler. Canterbury, printed 

 by J. Saffery. 1804. front, pp. 40. ii (errata}. 12. 



[One of the rare local books. Under the hea i of " roach," the 

 author says : "It is really surprising to see the s'.ioals of roach that 

 come up the river to Fordwich and Sturry ; in spawning time the 

 number is so very great, that it is customary for the mayor, jurats, 

 or some of the freemen of that town, and likewise ihe gentlemen of 

 Sturry, to catch them with a drag net and make presents of them to 

 their acquaintances and poor inhabitants of Fordwich and Sturry. 

 In the year 1782, Mr. Woodrouff, Mr. Pidduck, two of the jurats, 

 and some of the Freemen, did catch in one draught, one hundred 

 and twenty bushels of roach, and many of them weighed two 

 pounds, and some upwards of three pounds a fish." At page 20 

 are some " Lines by a gentleman, relative to fishing, which are too 

 beautiful to be omitted by an angler."] 



[ Kett (Rev. Henry)]. On angling. By an amateur. (The 

 New Monthly Magazine. 1820. part. ii. pp. 16-21, 133-7, 

 251-6, 626-9). London, 1820. 8. 



[ A series of eight letters, but evidently incomplete. The com- 

 mencement of a new series of this magazine in the following year, 

 with a different style of contribution, may account for the abrupt 

 termination. Kett was drowned, while bathing, in 1825. He was 

 perpetual curate of Hykeham, Lincolnshire, and was eminent as a 

 scholar and divine. The soubriquet of 'Emily' Kett was acquired 

 by the publication of a novel with that title in 1809.] 



