26 BOOKS ON FALCONRY. 



knell, and the Hare and the hound put the Huntsman to the 

 borne." 



A copy of this book is in the British Museum. 966. c. 26 (3). 



'^'^. BARLOW (Francis). Severall wayes of 

 Hunting, Hawking, and Fishing, according to the 

 English manner. Invented by Francis Barlow, 

 etched by W. Hollar, and are to be sould by John 

 Overton at the White Horse without Newgate, 

 London, 1671. obi. 4to. 



Engraved title with quatrain at foot, and 12 plates, 

 namely: — Hare-hunting, Stagg-hunting, Cony-catching, Otter- 

 hunting, Coursing Fallow-deer, Fox-hunting, Feasant-hawking, 

 Partridge-hawking, Hern-hawking, Angling, River-fishing, and 

 Salmon-fishing. Under each plate is a quatrain similar in style 

 to that on title. Perfect copies are scarce. Dr. E. Hamilton 

 has one ; another is in the possession of Mr. Crawhall of New- 

 castle-upon-Tyne ; and an imperfect copy, wanting the quatrains, 

 is amongst the prints in the British Museum. 



34. LAMBERT (James). The Countryman's 

 Treasure : shewing the nature, causes, and cure of all 

 diseases incident to cows, horses, etc ; with plain rules 

 for improving arable and pasture lands .... To 

 which is added the Art of Hawking, Hunting, An- 

 gling and Ringing. London. Printed for T. Norris, 

 and sold at the Looking Glass on London Bridge, n.d. 



An unimportant i2mo of 167 pages. Other editions, omit- 

 ting the Field Sports, sm. 8vo, 1676 and 1683. 



35. RAY (John, F.R.S.). A Summary of Falconry ; 

 collected out of several authors. London, 1678. folio. 



This treatise, abridged from Turbervile (No. 14) with addi- 



