APPENDIX. 183 



for a Dinner, (forgetting lerom to Nepotian,) and 

 these are Hungry fishers. Some fish with a Net 

 made of Thrums and Knots, and these are Pasport 

 fishers. Some fish for Frogges that may croke 

 against our Church, and these are Scismaticall 

 fishers. Some fish in the Ayre, above the Clouds, 

 and these are Enthusiastic all fishers. Some ^A 

 above, beneath, side-slip, and these are Ubiquitarie 

 fishers. Some ^fo/t for a pair* of unhacht Gallows, 

 and these are Seminarie fishers. Some ^A for 

 Princes Crowns and Sceptres, and these are Belze- 

 bub fishers. Some ^A for Soules and only for 

 Soules, and these are Christian fithers" 



Let the clerical angler observe that the marginal 

 note on, u Some who ^7* with a Pohe-net for a 

 Dinner," is : " Facile contemnitur clericus, qui 

 sa3pe vocatus ad prandium non recusat." 



OBSERVATIONS ON THE SALMON TRIBE, WITH A LIST 



OF THE DIFFERENT SPECIES TAKEN IN THE LAKES 



AND RIVERS OF GREAT BRITAIN. 



IT is so difficult in Natural History to accurately 

 define a species, and so little is positively known 

 respecting the growth, different appearances at dif- 

 ferent ages, habits, and migrations of the Salmon 

 tribe, that it is as doubtful now as it was in the time of 

 Willoughby and Ray whether the salmon, the salmon 

 trout, the bull trout, I mean that which is caught in 



