258 BIBLIOTHECA PISCATORIA. 



Fardon (Glover). Cornwall, its rocks, its fisheries... A lecture 

 ...at...Maidstone. Maidstone, 1860. 8. 



Fea ( James). Account of the method of fishing practised on 



the coasts of Shetland. Edinburgh, 1775. 8. 



Considerations on the fisheries in the Scotch islands : to 



which is prefixed a general account, etc. By James Fea, 

 Surgeon in the Royal Navy and a native of the Orknies. 

 London : printed for the author at Dover. 1787. 8. 



Feltham ( John). A tour through the Island of Mann in 1797 

 and 1798; comprising sketches of its. ..fishery, etc. Bath, 

 Crutt well, 1798. 8. Maps and plates. 



[ Contains " The herring fishery. A poem by a Manx lady."] 



Fish Association. The first report of the Committee of the 

 Fish Association for the benefit of the community, etc., (March 

 loth, 1813.) London, 1813. pp, 24. 8. 



[ Reprinted in "The pamphleteer," vol. i, pp. 445-55.] 



The second report, etc. (May nth, 1813.) 



London, 1813. 8. 



[Reprinted in "The pamphleteer," vol. ii, pp. 155-167. This 

 Association, in 1815, transferred "the whole of its remaining stock," 

 ^584 2s. 2d., to another association with similar objects which had 

 been established about the same time " for the relief of the manu- 

 facturing and labouring poor." See ASSOCIATION.] 



Fisheries. See BRITISH, GREAT BRITAIN, IRISH, LONDON, SCOT- 

 LAND, TAY, TWEED. 



- The fisheries considered as a national resource. 



Dublin, Milliken, 1856. 8. 



The great fisheries of the world. London, Nelson 



and Sons. (n. d.) 8.; also as : 



The treasures of the deep : or, a descriptive account of the 

 great fisheries and their products, London, Nelson and Sons. 

 1876. 8. 



Hints preparatory to the serious consideration and 



discussion, of the sundry fisheries of this Kingdom... Dublin: 

 printed for the author, by John Exshaw, 1778. 8. 



Fishing. The royall fishing revived. Wherein is demonstrated 

 from what causes the Dutch have upon the matter ingrossed 

 the fishing-trade in His Majesty's seas, wherein the principles 

 of all the trades they drive in the world are chiefly founded ; 

 as also from what causes the English have lost the fishing trade, 

 to the endangering the small remainder of the trades they 

 yet enjoy. Together with expedients by which the fishing- 

 trade may be redeemed by the English, and proposals for 



