£cto=<£m$Ianti5 ftaritfes. 65 



Hallibut or Sea Pheafant. Some will have the Turbut all 

 one, others diftinguifh [27] them, calling the young 

 Filh of the firft Buttis, and of the other Birt. There 

 is no queftion to be made of it but that they are diftin6l 

 kinds of Filh. 1 



Sea Hare? 



Sea Hawk. 



HartfiJJi. 



Sea Hermit. 



HettfiJJi. 



Sea Hind. 



Hombeak, Sea Rvff and Reeves. 



Sea Horfeman. 



Hog or Flying FiJJi. 



Sea Kite or Flying Swallow. 



Laynpret or Lamprel. 



Lampreys or Lamprones? 



Limpin. 



Ling, Sea Beef ; the fmaller fort is called Cusk. 



Sea Lanthorn. 



Sea Liver. 



1 "These hollibut be little set by while bass is in season." — Wood, I. c, 

 chap. ix. 



2 "The sea-hare is as big as grampus, or herrin-hog; and as white as a sheet. 

 There hath been of them in Black-Point Harbour, and some way up the river; 

 but we could never take any of them. Several have shot sluggs at them, but lost 

 their labour." — Voyages, p. 105. The Lefus marhius of the old writers is a naked 

 mollusk of the Mediterranean; Laflysia depilans, L. : but Josselyn's was a very 

 different animal. 



3 One of the fishes most valued by the Indians (p. 37) ; but " not much set by" 

 by the English, according to Wood, /. c. 



