Piscatorial Reminiscences and Gleanings: To which is Added A Catalogue of Books on AnglingWilliam Pickering, 1835 - 255 pages |
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Page 112
... nets . Dr. Bloch found in a fish of six pounds one hundred and thirty - seven thousand eggs . Gesner reports , that in Poland a great number of breams were put into a pond , which , in the following winter was frozen into entire ice ...
... nets . Dr. Bloch found in a fish of six pounds one hundred and thirty - seven thousand eggs . Gesner reports , that in Poland a great number of breams were put into a pond , which , in the following winter was frozen into entire ice ...
Page 143
... nets , and every obstacle , making room for other fish to pass in the spring ; its length is from seven to eight feet , and it is very heavy . Pallas ' Voyage . The beluga , though an inhabitant of the Black sea AND FISHING . 143.
... nets , and every obstacle , making room for other fish to pass in the spring ; its length is from seven to eight feet , and it is very heavy . Pallas ' Voyage . The beluga , though an inhabitant of the Black sea AND FISHING . 143.
Page 152
... nets are used to catch them for the table . Dr. Anderson . Fishes at Ilmen , and the mode of curing them . — At lake Ilmen , near Valdai , they have a fish like a herring , and also another resembling a smelt . They prepare them for a ...
... nets are used to catch them for the table . Dr. Anderson . Fishes at Ilmen , and the mode of curing them . — At lake Ilmen , near Valdai , they have a fish like a herring , and also another resembling a smelt . They prepare them for a ...
Page 158
... nets , nor has it ever been seen alive . It is supposed to reside only in the gulfs of Baikal . It exists in the centre of the lake , which is very deep : lines of three or four hundred feet have failed to reach the bottom . These fish ...
... nets , nor has it ever been seen alive . It is supposed to reside only in the gulfs of Baikal . It exists in the centre of the lake , which is very deep : lines of three or four hundred feet have failed to reach the bottom . These fish ...
Page 168
... nets , hooks , and harping irons . They take also a fork of wood , with two grains or points , and set a gin to it , almost in the same way as they catch partridges in France ; they put it into the water , and when the fish ( which are ...
... nets , hooks , and harping irons . They take also a fork of wood , with two grains or points , and set a gin to it , almost in the same way as they catch partridges in France ; they put it into the water , and when the fish ( which are ...
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Common terms and phrases
2nd edit 3rd edit 4th edit Angler in Ireland animals appears Art of Angling bait barbel begynneth boat boke bones bottom bream carp catch caught chub colour dace Dagenham delight Editor eels fastened feet long fins Fish and Fish Fish Ponds fisher fishermen five flies fly-fishing four fresh water fysshyng Gent gentle gentleman grayling gudgeon Hawking Hist hook hundred Hunting huntynge Ichthyophagi Imprynted at London inches in length inches long inhabitants Ireland John Hawkins lake Lond mackerel Method of Fishing minnow mouth native natural Pallas Pennant perch pike Piscatory pounds weight quantity red worm resembles river River Thames roach salmon salt sea fish season shad small fish smelt spawn species Sporting Mag stickleback streams sturgeon surface swimming tackle tail taken tench Thames Treatise trolling trout Walton weighed wood-cut Wynkyn de Worde young
Popular passages
Page 8 - ... and put it under a sitting fowl. At the expiration of a certain number of days, they break the shell in water warmed by the sun. The young fry are presently hatched, and are kept in pure fresh water till they are large enough to be thrown into a pond with the old fish.
Page 19 - No life, my honest scholar, no life so happy and so pleasant as the life of a well-governed angler; for when the lawyer is swallowed up with business, and the statesman is preventing or contriving plots, then we sit on cowslip banks, hear the birds sing, and possess ourselves in as much quietness as these silent silver streams, which we now see glide so quietly by us.
Page 20 - Fishing is a kind of hunting by water, be it with nets, weeles, baites, angling, or otherwise, and yields all out as much pleasure to some men as dogs or hawkes. When they draw the fish upon the banke, saith Nic.
Page 44 - Some years since a herdsman, on a very sultry day in July, while looking for a missing sheep, observed an Eagle posted on a bank that overhung a pool. Presently the bird stooped and seized a salmon, and a violent struggle ensued : when the...
Page 182 - Indians, gain the banks, and, overcome by fatigue, and benumbed by the shocks, stretch themselves at their length on the ground. There could not, says Humboldt, be a finer subject for the painter : groups of Indians surrounding the bason; the horses with their hair on end, and terror and agony in their eyes ; the eels, yellowish and livid, looking like great aquatic serpents, swimming on the surface of the water in pursuit of their enemy.