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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Letters on the Natural History of
+Norfolk, by Thomas Browne
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Notes and Letters on the Natural History of Norfolk
+ More Especially on the Birds and Fishes
+
+Author: Thomas Browne
+
+Release Date: April 16, 2011 [EBook #35888]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NATURAL HISTORY OF NORFOLK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Leonard Johnson and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NOTES AND LETTERS
+
+ ON THE
+
+ NATURAL HISTORY OF NORFOLK
+
+
+
+[Illustration: SIR THOMAS BROWNE TO DOCTOR CHRISTOPHER MERRETT.
+
+MS. RAWLINSON D. cviii., FOL. 105. --_See p. 80._]
+
+
+
+
+ Notes and Letters
+
+ ON THE
+
+ Natural History of Norfolk
+
+ MORE ESPECIALLY ON THE
+
+ BIRDS AND FISHES
+
+
+
+ FROM THE MSS. OF
+
+ SIR THOMAS BROWNE, M.D.
+
+ (1605-1682)
+
+ IN THE SLOANE COLLECTION IN THE LIBRARY OF THE BRITISH
+ MUSEUM AND IN THE BODLEIAN LIBRARY, OXFORD
+
+
+
+ WITH NOTES BY
+
+ THOMAS SOUTHWELL, F.Z.S.
+
+ _Member of the British Ornithologists' Union; Vice-President of the
+ Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society_
+
+
+
+ LONDON
+
+ JARROLD & SONS, 10 & 11, WARWICK LANE, E.C.
+
+ [ALL RIGHTS RESERVED]
+
+ 1902
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ OBSERVATIONS
+
+ ON THE
+
+ FAUNA OF NORFOLK,
+
+ AND MORE PRACTICALLY ON
+
+ The Popular District of the Broads of Norfolk and Suffolk,
+
+
+ BY THE LATE
+
+ REV. RICHARD LUBBOCK, M.A.
+
+
+ _New Edition, 6s.; Half Roxburgh, 7s. 6d._
+
+
+ WITH ADDITIONS FROM UNPUBLISHED MANUSCRIPTS OF THE AUTHOR, AND NOTES BY
+
+ THOMAS SOUTHWELL, F.Z.S.,
+
+
+ ALSO A MEMOIR BY
+
+ HENRY STEVENSON, F.L.S.,
+
+
+ AN APPENDIX CONTAINING NOTES ON HAWKING IN NORFOLK, BY
+
+ ALFRED NEWTON, M.A., F.R.S., ETC.,
+
+
+ AND ON THE DECOYS, REPTILES, SEA FISH, LEPIDOPTERA,
+ AND BOTANY OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+ "In addition to the intrinsic merits of the book, of which we can
+ personally speak in the superlative degree as one of the most
+ pleasantly-written of the many pleasant natural history books our
+ language is so rich in--describing, as it does, the 'Broad
+ District'--a country unlike any other part of England, and a very
+ paradise to the Botanist, Entomologist, and Ornithologist. This
+ new edition is edited by Mr. Thomas Southwell, the active
+ Secretary of the Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society, whose
+ full and accurate knowledge of the natural history of Norfolk
+ better fits him for the task than any other man we know
+ of."--_Science Gossip._
+
+ "The book in its original form is well known to naturalists, and
+ it would be difficult to find another volume of its size which
+ conveys in so agreeable a manner so much accurate and trustworthy
+ information on the subject of which it treats. We promise to
+ those who have never yet read this book a rare treat from its
+ perusal."--_Zoologist._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SUPPLEMENT
+
+ TO THE
+
+ FLORA OF NORFOLK,
+
+
+ BY
+
+ REV. KIRBY TRIMMER, A.B.
+
+
+ _Crown 8vo. Cloth 6s._
+
+ The Supplement to the "Flora of Norfolk" is a record of
+ additional localities of many of the plants contained in that
+ publication, and an entry of some other plants new in the
+ country.
+
+
+ LONDON: JARROLD AND SONS, 10 AND 11, WARWICK LANE, E.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE OFFICIAL GUIDE
+
+ TO THE
+
+ NORWICH CASTLE MUSEUM,
+
+ _With an Account of its Origin and Progress_,
+
+ BY
+
+ THOMAS SOUTHWELL, F.Z.S.,
+
+ _Member of the British Ornithologists' Union, Vice-President of the
+ Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society, etc._:
+
+ ALSO AN HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE CASTLE KEEP BY
+
+ REV. WM. HUDSON, M.A.,
+
+ _Hon. Sec. Norfolk and Norwich Archĉological Society:_
+
+
+ AND A GUIDE TO THE COLLECTION OF PICTURES, WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF
+ THE "NORWICH SCHOOL" OF ARTISTS BY
+
+ G. C. EATON, ESQ.,
+
+ _Late Hon. Sec. Norfolk and Norwich Museum._
+
+ (Published under the Special Sanction of the Castle Museum Committee.)
+
+ _Profusely Illustrated, 1 6. Abridged Edition, 6d._
+
+ "Mr. Southwell is himself an authority on natural history, and he
+ has contrived to invest his description of the various specimens
+ with a liveliness and vigour, as well as a scientific accuracy.
+ He has taken care to include every object of importance, and his
+ work should at once take its place as the popular guide to the
+ Museum."--_Bookseller._
+
+ "An interesting and useful guide to the collection in the Museum.
+ It is not merely a catalogue, but a popular natural history, in
+ which the specimens in the cases are used as illustrations.
+ Sightseers will pleasantly acquire a knowledge of the leading
+ characteristics of the different groups of animals, and students
+ will gain a large amount of sound instruction."--_Nature._
+
+ "There is an abundance of useful information confined in a small
+ compass, while there are many capital illustrations."--_The
+ Record._
+
+ "Its collections are of interest not only to the antiquarian and
+ to the geologist, but also to the ornithologist; and the picture
+ gallery is worth a visit."--_Daily Telegraph._
+
+ "Visitors will find this cheap, handy, well-filled volume of much
+ service."--_The Guardian._
+
+ LONDON: JARROLD AND SONS, 10 AND 11, WARWICK LANE, E.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ INTRODUCTION vii
+
+ NOTES ON CERTAIN BIRDS FOUND IN NORFOLK 1
+
+ NOTES ON CERTAIN FISHES, ETC., FOUND IN NORFOLK 31
+
+ LETTERS TO MERRETT 57
+
+ APPENDIX A. 86
+
+ APPENDIX B. 90
+
+ APPENDIX C. 95
+
+ APPENDIX D. 96
+
+ INDEX 99
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ "Every kingdom, every province, should have its own
+ monographer."--_Gilbert White. Seventh Letter to Barrington._
+
+
+The excellent Memoir of Sir Thomas Browne, in Wilkin's Edition of his
+works, renders it unnecessary here to repeat what has already been so
+well done; suffice it to say that he was born in London on the 19th of
+October, 1605; he was educated at Winchester School and entered at
+Broadgates Hall (now Pembroke College), Oxford, in 1623; graduated B.A.
+31st January, 1626-7, and M.A. 11th June, 1629. About the year 1633 he
+was created Doctor of Physick at Leyden. In 1636 he took up his
+residence in Norwich, in 1637 was incorporated Doctor of Physic in
+Oxford, and in 1665 was chosen an Honorary Fellow of the College of
+Physicians. In 1671 Browne was knighted at Norwich by Charles II., and
+after a useful and honourable career died on his seventy-sixth birthday,
+the 19th of October, 1682, and his body lies buried in the church of St.
+Peter Mancroft, Norwich.
+
+Browne in early life travelled much and was a voluminous writer; he made
+many friendships with men celebrated in his day, and his advice and
+assistance were sought and gratefully acknowledged by Dugdale, Evelyn,
+Ray and Willughby, Merrett, Sir Robert Paston (afterwards Earl of
+Yarmouth), Ashmole, Aubrey, and others; but his general correspondence
+does not now concern us, my object being to supply in a convenient form
+what I believe will be acceptable to modern naturalists, namely, an
+accurate transcript of his notes and letters on the "Natural History of
+the County of Norfolk."
+
+These notes and letters were first published by Simon Wilkin in his
+Edition of Sir Thomas Browne's Works in 1835, but they were not treated
+from a naturalist's point of view, and in some places were not correctly
+transcribed, added to which, in the vast mass of matter contained in
+Wilkin's four large volumes (or in the closely printed three volumes of
+Bohn's Edition), these interesting passages are in danger of being
+overlooked or are inconvenient for reference. Two letters, moreover,
+were needed to make the correspondence with Merrett complete, and these
+I have been enabled to supply. I hope also that my explanatory notes,
+which I trust will not be deemed too voluminous, will be found more
+useful than the necessarily brief notes furnished by Wilkin and his
+collaborators. Furthermore, I think that the retention of the original
+spelling and punctuation may lend a charm to the quaintness of the
+language which is in a measure destroyed by any attempt at modernising.
+
+There is much that is interesting bearing upon Natural Science scattered
+throughout Browne's writings, especially in his _Pseudodoxia Epidemica_,
+or inquiries into Vulgar and Common Errors, first published in 1646, and
+the reader cannot fail to be impressed not only with the extent of his
+classical knowledge but also with the shrewdness with which he pursued
+his original investigations; but here it is only proposed to deal with
+certain manuscript notes and a series of rough notes for, or copies of,
+letters addressed to Dr. Christopher Merrett, the author of the _Pinax
+Rerum Naturalium Britannicarum_. These, as remarked by their editor,
+with regard to some other manuscripts published[A] in 1684, under the
+title of "Certain Miscellany Tracts," were doubtless "rather the
+_diversions_ than the _Labours_ of his Pen; and ... He did, as it
+were, drop down his Thoughts of a sudden, in those spaces of vacancy
+which he snatch'd from those very many occasions which gave him hourly
+interruption;" but I cannot in this instance agree with the conclusion
+arrived at by the same writer that it "seemeth probable that He designed
+them for publick use," for they appear to be the rough drafts or
+memoranda used in the production of the finished letters (which are
+unfortunately not forthcoming), and were never intended for publication
+in their present crude form, thus rendering pardonable such annotations
+as I have ventured to add. But before proceeding further it is necessary
+to consider briefly the time and circumstances under which they were
+written, and the state of what passed for Natural Science at that
+period.
+
+ [A] The "Miscellany Tracts" were put forth by "Tho. Tenison"
+ (1636-1715), who afterwards became Archbishop of Canterbury, but
+ was then the Rector of a London parish, St. Martin-in-the-Fields.
+ He had been a Norwich school-boy, and subsequently minister of St.
+ Peter's Mancroft. He was doubtless well acquainted with Browne and
+ his family, and hence his reference in the preface quoted to "the
+ _Lady_ and _Son_ of the excellent Authour," who, he says,
+ "deliver'd" the papers to him.
+
+Browne wrote early in the second half of the seventeenth century, during
+a period of great awakening in the study of Nature. Hitherto it could
+hardly be said that a direct appeal to the works of Nature had been the
+prevailing method. Aristotle was still the established authority, and
+commentaries on his works occupied the minds of men to the exclusion of
+original investigation, notwithstanding that this great philosopher had
+himself, both by precept and example, urged the importance of direct
+observation and inquiry; the Mediĉval school of thought still prevailed
+and cramped every effort at progress. How keenly Browne lamented this
+spirit of slavish adherence to tradition may be judged from a passage in
+one of his Essays in the "Vulgar Errors" condemning the obstinate
+adherence unto antiquity; he writes, "but the mortallist enemy unto
+knowledge, and that which hath done the greatest execution upon truth,
+hath been a peremptory adhesion unto authority; and more especially the
+establishing of our belief upon the dictates of antiquity. For (as every
+capacity may observe) most men of ages present, so supersticiously do
+look upon ages past, that the authorities of one exceed the reason of
+the other." In another place he argues that the present should be the
+age of authority, seeing that we possess all the wisdom of the ancients
+which has come down to us, with that of our own times added. In fact,
+Browne's motto appears to have been "prove all things and hold fast
+only to that which is good."[B]
+
+ [B] There was one form of ancient authority before which Browne
+ bowed down with absolute and unquestioning submission--the
+ authority of the Scriptures. In all secular matters he was ever
+ ready to point the lance and do battle, but all that appealed to
+ him on what he regarded as divine authority was beyond the pale,
+ and it never entered into his mind to submit it to the test of
+ reason. In the "Religio Medici" he declares his devoted adherence
+ first to the guidance of Scripture, and secondly to the Articles of
+ the Church, "whatsoever is beyond, as points indifferent, I observe
+ according to the rules of my private reason;" and again, "where the
+ Scripture is silent, the Church is my text; where that speaks 'tis
+ but my comment; where there is a joint silence of both I borrow not
+ the rules of my religion from Rome or Geneva, but the dictates of
+ my own reason." This implicit adherence to the literal text of
+ Scripture led to his--shall I say active belief in, or passive
+ acceptance of, the existence of Witchcraft, and thus to the only
+ act in an otherwise blameless life which we must regard with regret
+ and astonishment. I refer to the consenting part he took in the
+ doing to death of two poor women at Bury St. Edmund's in the year
+ 1664. It is my business to act as Browne's exponent, not as his
+ apologist, but it must be borne in mind that in his day the "higher
+ criticism" was a thing unheard of, and that the literal sense of
+ the English translation of the Bible was accepted as binding not
+ only by him but by the vast majority of the people, including the
+ most learned men of the time. "Thou shalt not suffer a witch to
+ live" was a plain command, and given a witch the believer's duty
+ was also plain; that there _had_ been witches there was ample
+ scriptural evidence, but there was none that the days of witchcraft
+ had passed away. Browne only shared this belief with his pious
+ friend, the venerable Bishop Hall, and many men equally devout
+ according to their lights; he makes no secret of the fact and acts
+ in accordance with his convictions and the plain authority of
+ Scripture. Thus it came about that these conscientious but mistaken
+ men were induced to render possible, if not actually to
+ countenance, the fiendish cruelties perpetrated by their
+ unscrupulous allies. In matters which he considered less
+ authoritative his views were so liberal as to gain for him the
+ stigma of infidel or heretic; but let a man govern his thoughts and
+ actions by the private rules Browne laid down for his own guidance
+ (vol. iv., p. 420), and it would be hard to regard him as otherwise
+ than a God-fearing man, striving to live up to his profession.
+
+Aristotle, whose works on Natural History have descended to us in a very
+imperfect condition, lived in 385-322 B.C., and it was not till A.D. 79
+that the _Historia Naturalis_ of Pliny the Elder the next great work,
+which has survived till our days, was completed, and by some of those
+most competent to form a judgment the additions which he made were not
+in all cases improvements. Other writers followed, but their productions
+were of little value, and it was not till the year 1544 that William
+Turner published at Cologne what Professor Newton describes as "the
+first commentary on the birds mentioned by Aristotle and Pliny conceived
+in anything like the spirit that moves modern Naturalists." Turner's
+book is very rare and unfortunately at present beyond the reach of most
+modern students. No attempt at systematic arrangement, as now
+understood, was made until the _Histoire de la Nature des Oyseaux_ of
+Pierre Belon (Bellonius) appeared at Paris in 1555, for the much greater
+work of Conrad Gesner, being the third book of his _Historia Animalium_,
+which was published at Zurich in the same year, and treated of Birds,
+followed, more or less closely, an alphabetical plan which brought upon
+him the censure of Aldrovandus, three of whose sixteen folio volumes
+forming the _Historia Naturalium_ bore the title of _Ornithologiĉ hoc
+est de Avibus Historiĉ, Libri XII._, and were brought out at Bologna
+between the years 1599 and 1603. The _Historia Naturalis_ of John
+Jonston, or "Jonstonus" (1603-1675), originally published in four
+sections between the years 1649 and 1653, ran through several editions,
+and was a popular book in the seventeenth century; it is frequently
+referred to by Browne, but is a work of very little originality. Though
+all these authors undoubtedly influenced their successors, it may be
+fairly said that it was Browne's contemporaries and fellow-countrymen,
+Francis Willughby and John Ray, who laid the first solid foundation of
+systematic zoology in their _Ornithologia_ and _Historia Piscium_,
+published in 1676 and 1686 respectively; but dying in 1682, Browne was
+indebted to neither of them, though he doubtless exercised much
+influence over them, and he had to use the clumsy descriptive
+terminology then in vogue.[C] Let me illustrate this by a single
+example. In one of his letters to Merrett he names a "little elegant
+sea plant" (probably _Halecium halecinum_, a species of Hydroid
+Zoophyte), "_Fucus marinus vertebratus pisciculi spinum referens
+ichthyorachius_, or what you think fit." On another occasion Merrett
+thus expresses his approval of Browne's efforts in this direction: "You
+have very well named the _rutilus_ and expressed fully the cours to bee
+taken in the imposition of names, viz: the most obvious and most
+peculiar difference to the ey or any other sens." We can hardly conceive
+the difficulties these pioneers of Natural Science had to contend with;
+the works of their predecessors were so indefinite as to be of little
+value in determining species; they had to depend upon the vague
+descriptions of fowlers and others; the same bird would probably be
+known in half a dozen different localities by as many different names,
+and since no satisfactory mode of preserving specimens had then been
+discovered, examples for comparison were not available. If inextricable
+confusion arose with regard to such a bird as the Osprey, well might
+Browne write with regard to those less readily characterized, "I confess
+for such little birds I am much unsatisfied on the names given to many
+by countrymen, and uncertaine what to give them myself, or to what
+classis of authors cleerly to reduce them. Surely there are many found
+among us which are not described; and therefore such which you cannot
+well reduce, may (if at all) be set down after the exacter nomination of
+small birds as yet of uncertain class of knowledge."
+
+ [C] In 1735 appeared the first edition of the _Systema Naturĉ of
+ Linnĉus_ which, meagre as it was, ushered in a more definite system
+ of classification, whilst his invention of the binomial method of
+ nomenclature, first used by him in the tenth edition of that work
+ published in 1758, contributed not a little in reducing to order
+ what had hitherto been a chaos, although in his classification of
+ birds he for the most part followed his predecessor Ray.
+
+I must ask pardon for this digression, but my object has been to show
+the difficulties Browne had to contend with and to emphasise the
+originality which pervades all his observations, a characteristic so
+conspicuously absent in the work of most of his predecessors. I should
+like also to call attention to his references to the migratory habits of
+many species of birds, a phenomenon attracting little notice in his day,
+but one which can be so readily observed on the coast of Norfolk. These
+remarks were penned at a time when hibernation in a state of torpidity
+was thoroughly believed in--an idea of which even Gilbert White a
+hundred years later could not thoroughly divest himself. In his tract on
+"Hawks and Falconry," Browne further says: "How far the hawks, merlins,
+and wild-fowl which come unto us with a north-west [east?] wind in
+Autumn, fly in a day, there is no clear account: but coming over the sea
+their flight hath been long or very speedy. For I have known them to
+light so weary on the coast, that many have been taken with dogs, and
+some knocked down with staves and stones." Further than this, he knew
+the seasons of their appearing--the Hobby "coming to us in the spring,"
+the Merlin "about autumn." His frequent mention of anatomical
+peculiarities and of his dissections of many birds and beasts clearly
+prove his passion for original research, and the frequent records of the
+contents of the stomachs of the birds which he had the opportunity of
+examining was a mode of obtaining exact information as to the nature of
+their food, which I imagine was not common in those days.
+
+How highly Browne was esteemed by his contemporaries may be judged from
+the acknowledgments of his assistance by Dugdale, Evelyn (who visited
+him in Norwich in 1671), and others; and Ray especially mentions his
+indebtedness to "the deservedly famous Sir Thomas Browne, Professor of
+Physic in the City of Norwich." His letters to his son, Dr. Edward
+Browne, are full of instructions as to the course of study he should
+pursue, and subsequently, when the latter became celebrated and was
+appointed Physician to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, it was still to his
+father that he looked for advice in his hospital practice and in the
+preparation of his lectures. Browne was proud of his adopted county, a
+feeling evidently shared by his son, and I trust I may be pardoned for
+quoting the concluding passage of the latter's account of a tour into
+Derbyshire, wherein he expresses a sentiment which survives with
+undiminished force in the breast of many a Norfolk man in the present
+day. There is a very interesting account of his crossing the Wash on
+leaving Lynn for Boston, but on his return to Norwich in September,
+1662, he thus concludes his journal: "Give me leave to say this much:
+let any stranger find mee out so pleasant a country, such good way
+[roads], large heath, three such places as Norwich. Yar [Yarmouth] and
+Lin [Lynn], in any county of England, and I'll bee once again a vagabond
+to visit them."
+
+The manuscripts of which the following selection forms a part are
+contained, with a few exceptions to be named hereafter, in the Sloane
+Collection in the Library of the British Museum, consisting of nearly
+one hundred volumes, numbered 1825 to 1923 both inclusive. A catalogue
+is given by Simon Wilkin[D] (himself a Norfolk man), by whom Browne's
+collected writings were first published in a connected form, as already
+mentioned, under the title of "Sir Thomas Browne's Works, including his
+Life and Correspondence, edited by Simon Wilkin, F.L.S. London, William
+Pickering. Josiah Fletcher, Norwich, 1836." 4 volumes, 8vo; the first
+volume only is dated 1836, Vols. 2, 3, and 4 being dated 1835.[E] It was
+here that the Notes and Letters were first given to the public. A second
+edition of the "Works," also edited by Wilkin, in three closely printed
+volumes, was issued in Bohn's Antiquarian Library in 1852. In the first
+edition the Notes on the Birds and Fishes will be found in Vol. IV., pp.
+313 to 336, and the letters to Merrett in Vol. I., pp. 393 to 408. In
+the second edition both are in Vol. III., pp. 311 to 335 and pp. 502 to
+513 respectively. The references here, as a rule, will be made to the
+1836 edition, when otherwise Bohn's edition will be specified.
+
+ [D] _Simon Wilkin_ (1790-1862), the able editor of Sir Thomas
+ Browne's collected works, was born at Costessey near Norwich, in
+ the year 1790. He came to Norwich after his father's death in 1799,
+ taking up his temporary abode with his guardian, Joseph Kinghorn, a
+ Baptist minister of note and a prominent member of a literary
+ circle then existing in Norwich, by whom his education was
+ superintended. On arriving at man's estate and being at that time
+ possessed of ample means, he devoted himself to the study of
+ Natural History, especially to Entomology, and was the possessor of
+ a large collection of insects which, in the year 1827, was
+ purchased for the Norwich Museum at a cost of one hundred guineas,
+ a large sum in those days. He was one of the founders and the first
+ librarian of the Norfolk and Norwich Literary Institution in 1822,
+ also of the Norfolk and Norwich Museum in 1825, both of which
+ institutions (the former reunited to its parent Library, founded in
+ 1784) are still flourishing. Wilkin was a Fellow of the Linnean
+ Society, also a Member of the Wernerian Society of Edinburgh. In
+ later years the loss of the bulk of his property by a commercial
+ failure necessitated his turning his attention to some means of
+ earning a livelihood, and he established himself in Norwich as a
+ printer and publisher; later in life he removed to Hampstead, where
+ he died on 28th July, 1862, and was buried in his native village of
+ Costessey.
+
+ [E] Some copies of this Edition have a title-page, bearing the name
+ of H. G. Bohn as publisher, and the date of 1846, but differing
+ only in that respect.
+
+The foot-notes in Wilkin's edition, many of them very curious,
+initialled "Wr.," are by Dr. Christopher Wren, Dean of Windsor (father
+of the Architect of St. Paul's Cathedral), and were found on the margins
+of a copy of the first edition of the _Pseudodoxia_ now preserved in the
+Bodleian Library at Oxford; those initialled "G." were written for
+Wilkin's first edition by the late Miss Anna Gurney, of Northrepps, near
+Cromer, Norfolk.
+
+The first papers to which I shall refer are a series of rough notes
+contained for the most part in volume 1830 of the Sloane MSS., the first
+portion being devoted to _Birds_ found in Norfolk, followed by a similar
+series relating to marine and freshwater _Fishes_, including a few
+marine invertebrata and plants. They are written on one side only of
+foolscap paper, the portion relating to Birds occupying folios 5 to 19
+inclusive, folios 1 to 4 consist of two inserted letters from Merrett
+to Browne (see Appendix A.), which are printed by Wilkin in his first
+edition, Vol. I., pp. 442-5. The notes on Fishes are in the same volume
+of manuscripts, folios 23 to 38; but there are some irregularities which
+will be explained as they occur. The whole of the notes are very roughly
+written, and present the appearance of a commonplace book, in which the
+entries were made as the events occurred to the writer, being quite
+devoid of any system or arrangement. The entries doubtless extend over
+several years, but it is impossible to fix the dates on which they were
+made, the only internal evidence I can find being that speaking of the
+occurrence of a certain shark he states it was taken "this year, 1662,"
+and on the next page of the MS. there is the record of the occurrence of
+a sun-fish in the year 1667; this latter, however, is evidently an
+interpolation. A few pages further on there is the record of what he
+calls a large mackerel, "taken this year, 1668," but this also is an
+addition. We may take it, I think, that most of the notes were made
+about the year 1662, but that they were added to on various occasions up
+to 1668, in which year his first letter to Merrett is dated. It has been
+suggested that these notes were prepared in the interest of Dr. Merrett
+for his use in an enlarged edition of his _Pinax_, but the remark in his
+first letter to this correspondent, "I have observed and taken notice of
+many animals in these parts whereof 3 years agoe a learned gentleman of
+this country wished me to give him some account, which while I was doing
+ye gentleman my good friend died," clearly shows that they were
+originally prepared for another purpose, although they eventually
+furnished the materials for his letters to Merrett, but who his deceased
+friend was it seems now useless to conjecture, although it would be
+interesting to know. The notes were certainly never intended to appear
+in their present form, and failing their use by Merrett which never took
+place, the information they contained was, as we know, of great service
+to Ray and Willughby.
+
+Browne's correspondent, Dr. Christopher Merrett, was born at Winchcomb,
+in Gloucestershire, on the 16th of February, 1614. He graduated B.A. at
+Oriel College, Oxford, about the year 1635; M.B. 1636; M.D. 1643. Was
+elected Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1651, and was made
+first Keeper of the Library and Museum; he was Censor of the College
+seven times. Having entered into litigation with the College with
+regard to his appointment, which was considered by that body to have
+terminated when the Library was destroyed by the great fire, he was
+defeated, and in 1681 expelled from his fellowship. He died in London in
+1695. ("Dict. of Nat. Biog.") Merrett was the author of several works on
+various subjects, as well as of the _Pinax_, and a translation of the
+"Art of Glass" referred to further on. His _Pinax Rerum Naturalium
+Britannicarum_, said to have been brought out in 1666, contained the
+earliest list of British Birds ever published, but it is little more
+than a bare list. Copies bearing the date of 1666 are very rare, and it
+is believed the edition was burned in a fire at the publishers; but
+Professor Newton ("Dict. of Birds," Introduction, p. xviii.) says that
+in 1667 there were two issues of a reprint; one, nominally a second
+edition, only differs from the others in having a new title-page, an
+example doubtless of what Wilkin severely condemns as "that contemptible
+form of lying under which publishers have endeavoured to persuade the
+public of the rapidity of their sales." Merrett was contemplating a new
+and improved edition of his work when, as Wilkin happily puts it, "in an
+auspicious moment he sought the assistance of Browne, whose liberal
+response is evidenced in the [drafts of the] letters still fortunately
+extant, but either superseded by the more learned labours of Willughby
+and Ray, or laid aside on account of the perplexities in which Merrett
+became involved with the College of Physicians, the _Pinax_ never
+attained an enlarged edition. Had Browne completed and published his own
+'Natural History of Norfolk,' he might have contended for precedency
+among the writers of County Natural Histories with [his friend] Dr.
+Robert Plot,[F] who published the earliest of such works--those of
+Oxford and Staffordshire, in 1677 and 1686 respectively. He seems,
+however, to have preferred contributing to the labours of those whom he
+considered better naturalists than himself; and in his third attempt
+thus to render his observations useful he had somewhat better success.
+He placed his materials, including a number of coloured drawings, at
+the disposal of Ray, the father of systematic Natural History in Great
+Britain, who has acknowledged the assistance he derived from him in his
+editions of Willughby's 'Ornithology' and 'Ichthyology,' especially in
+the former. But Browne, it seems, found it more easy to lend than to
+recover such materials; for he complains, several years afterwards, that
+these drawings, of whose safe return he was assured, both by Ray and by
+their mutual friend, Sir Philip Skippon, had not been sent back to
+him."[G]
+
+ [F] Dr. Robert Plot (1640-1696) was born at Sutton Barne, Kent, in
+ 1640; he graduated M.A. in 1664, and D.C.L. at Oxford in 1671. He
+ was chiefly noted as an antiquary, and was Secretary of the Royal
+ Society from 1682 to 1684, also the first custodian of the
+ Ashmoleian Museum and Professor of Chemistry at Oxford. In 1677 he
+ published his "Natural History of Oxfordshire," the first local
+ work of the kind which appeared; it was illustrated by sixteen
+ plates. In 1686 he also published "The Natural History of
+ Staffordshire," and subsequently many other books and papers. He
+ was evidently acquainted with most of the learned men of his time.
+ Plot died at his family estate Sutton Barne, on the 30th of April,
+ 1696, and was buried at Borden in Kent. Dr. Plot was a friend of
+ Browne's, and his companion in a tour in England in 1693.--"Dict.
+ Nat. Biog."
+
+ [G] See letter to his son, Dr. Edward Browne (Wilkin, i., p. 337),
+ also Appendix C.
+
+I have endeavoured to reproduce as accurately as possible the text of
+the notes and letters, which, as will be seen from the example
+photographed for the frontispiece of this volume, was often very
+difficult to decipher. The originals of the notes and of seven of the
+nine letters to Merrett, as also the two letters in Appendix A., are in
+the Sloane Collection of MSS. in the British Museum Library; those
+numbered vii. and viii., as well as two letters in Appendix D., which
+have not hitherto been printed, are in the Bodleian Library; and the
+letter to Dugdale in Appendix B. is extracted from the "Eastern
+Counties Collectanea." All the MSS. in the Sloane Collection I have
+transcribed myself; of those in the Bodleian Library, No. vii. is from a
+photograph, the remainder were copied for me by a person recommended as
+being highly reliable. I thought it best to retain all the erasures and
+interlineations in order to show as much as possible what was passing in
+their author's mind: in the foot-notes I have sought to acknowledge _in
+situ_ the valuable help I received from numerous correspondents to whom
+my best thanks are due, but I owe a special debt of gratitude to
+Professor Newton, at whose instigation the work was undertaken, for his
+kind assistance and for the loan of scarce books which it was necessary
+to consult in the interesting investigations needful to elucidate, if
+possible, some of the obscure passages in the text, a task in which if
+with the best intentions should I have sometimes failed, I must ask the
+reader's indulgence.
+
+It may be truly said of Sir Thomas Browne that a prophet hath no honour
+in his own country; the writings of this remarkable man are little known
+in the city of his adoption, and a recent movement to erect a monument
+to his memory has hitherto met with feeble support.
+
+ T. S.
+
+_Norwich, December, 1901._
+
+
+
+
+Notes and Letters
+
+ON THE
+
+Natural History of Norfolk.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES[H] ON CERTAIN BIRDS FOUND IN NORFOLK.
+
+ [H] The heading adopted by Wilkin, for which I cannot find that he
+ had any authority, is certainly misleading, for the brief and
+ fragmentary notes which follow, although of great interest, can
+ hardly be called "An Account of the Birds (or Fishes) found in
+ Norfolk," as there are many species of each inhabiting or visiting
+ the county which must have been well-known to Browne, but of which
+ we find no mention.
+
+[MSS. SLOAN. 1830. FOL. 5-19. AND 31.]
+
+ [The first four pages in the volume of Manuscript consist of two
+ inserted letters from Merrett to Browne (see Appendix A.); these
+ are on ordinary letter paper 6-1/4 inches by 7 inches. The notes
+ commence on folio 5 and are continued to folio 19; one leaf,
+ containing an account of the Roller (numbered 31), is bound up
+ with the notes on the Fishes, &c., which are numbered
+ consecutively with the Birds; the paper of the volume is
+ foolscap, 11-1/2 by 7-1/2 inches, and written, with a few
+ exceptions, which appear to be subsequent additions, on the
+ right-hand opening only. There are four folios after the Birds,
+ the first of which is blank; the others, numbered 20, 21, and
+ 22, contain rough memoranda on the Birds and Fishes, the
+ substance of which is embodied in the other notes; the Fishes
+ commence on folio 23. There are many erasures, interlineations,
+ and substituted words which indicate hasty writing, and the
+ alterations are not in all cases complete, thus rendering the
+ sense occasionally obscure; these emendations I have thought it
+ best to preserve as indicating the author's line of thought. In
+ the foot-notes which follow I have endeavoured to identify the
+ species treated of. This, notwithstanding the kind assistance of
+ the friends whose help I gratefully acknowledge, I may not in
+ all cases have successfully accomplished; the conclusions
+ arrived at are occasionally only conjectural, and it may be that
+ in some instances I have erred. Should such be the case I must
+ plead in excuse the difficulty arising from vagueness of
+ description, the frequent use of vernacular names which have
+ long since become obsolete (_see Note_ 22), and the imperfection
+ of the record. This especially applies to the Marine Animals,
+ and one of my correspondents rightly remarks that "the early
+ accounts of marine beasts are so vague, and the figures (where
+ referred to) so incomplete and often fanciful, that it is
+ difficult even to make out the family, to say nothing of genera
+ and species." Any assistance or correction in this respect would
+ be gladly received by me.]
+
+
+[_Fol. 5._] I willingly obey your comands[1] in setting down such birds
+fishes & other animals wch for many years I have observed in Norfolk.
+
+ [1] With regard to the probable origin of these notes (see
+ "Introduction," p. xxi.). The opening passage was probably
+ addressed to the deceased correspondent who had asked his
+ assistance, whereas his first letter to Merrett seems to indicate
+ that the offer of help to him came spontaneously from Browne ("I
+ take ye boldness to salute you," &c.), and was not in response to
+ Merrett's request.
+
+Beside the ordinarie birds which keep constantly in the country many are
+discouerable both in winter & summer wch are of a migrant nature &
+exchange their seats according to the season.[2] those wch come in the
+spring coming for the most part from the southward those wch come in the
+Autumn or winter from the northward. so that they are obserued to come
+in great flocks with a north east wind & to depart with a south west.
+nor to come [in _struck out_] only in flocks of one kind butt teals
+woodcocks felfars thrushes & small birds to come & light together. for
+the most part some hawkes & birds of pray attending them.
+
+ [2] Browne seems to have had on the whole a fairly correct idea
+ with regard to the migratory movements of the birds on the Norfolk
+ coast where peculiar facilities exist for such observations, but of
+ course he could have formed no notion of the extent to which they
+ prevail, perhaps no species being altogether sedentary. The general
+ line of the autumn migration for those which spend their summer in
+ Northern Europe is south or south-west, returning in the spring by
+ the reverse route; those which visit us in spring from Western
+ Europe, or countries lying still more to the eastward, adopt what
+ is known as the east to west route, and reverse the direction in
+ the autumn; but this latter is as nothing compared with the vast
+ number of immigrants by both routes in the early autumn, at which
+ time, especially, the movements are so exceedingly complex that it
+ would be impossible here to attempt to explain them, and the reader
+ must be referred to Mr. Eagle Clarke's digest of the Reports of the
+ Migration Committee of the British Association ("Report Brit. Ass.
+ for 1876," pp. 451-477).
+
+The great & noble kind of Agle calld Aquila Gesneri[3] I have not seen
+in this country but one I met with [with _crossed out_] in this country
+brought from ireland wch I [presented unto _struck out_] kept 2 yeares,
+feeding it with whelpes cattes ratts & the like. in all that while not
+giving it any water wch I afterwards presented unto the [colledge of
+physitians at London _struck out_] my worthy friend Dr Scarburgh.
+
+ [3] The "Aquila" of Gesner here referred to is evidently the Golden
+ Eagle, which species Browne is careful to mention that he had not
+ met with in this county, and that the specimen he sent to Dr.
+ Scarburgh, more than once mentioned, was brought from Ireland. This
+ bird has never been recorded alive in Norfolk. Immature
+ White-tailed Eagles, the "Halyĉtus" of the text, still occur almost
+ every autumn or winter on this coast, but no mature example has
+ hitherto been killed. Browne's friend, Sir Charles Scarburgh
+ (1616-1694), was born in London, and is buried at Cranford, in
+ Middlesex. He seems to have been greatly distinguished as an
+ anatomist and physician. He was a friend of William Harvey, whom he
+ succeeded as Lumleyan Lecturer at the College of Physicians (of
+ which he was elected a fellow in 1650). Harvey, out of regard for
+ his "lovinge friend" Dr. Scarburgh, bequeathed to him his "little
+ silver instruments of surgerie" and his velvet gown. ("Dict. of
+ Nat. Biog.") The Golden Eagle sent him by Browne was kept in the
+ College of Physicians in Warwick Lane for two years.
+
+of other sorts of Agles there are severall kinds especially of the
+Halyĉtus or fenne Agles some of 3 yards & a quarter from the extremitie
+of the wings. whereof one being taken aliue grewe so tame that it went
+about the yard feeding on fish redherrings flesh & any offells without
+the least trouble.
+
+There is also a lesser sort of Agle called an ospray[4] wch houers about
+the fennes & broads & will dippe his [foot _crossed out_] claws & take
+up a fish oftimes for wch his foote is made of an extraordinarie
+roughnesse for the better fastening & holding of it & the like they will
+do unto cootes.
+
+ [4] This species is a not unfrequent autumn visitor to the Broads
+ and Rivers of Norfolk. Browne names it correctly, but there was
+ much confusion with regard to this species in the minds of the old
+ authors. Willughby knew the bird and calls it the "Bald Buzzard,"
+ but in describing its nesting site and eggs (probably not on his
+ own authority,) evidently confounds it with the Marsh Harrier, for
+ he says that "it builds upon the ground among reeds, and lays three
+ or four large white eggs of a figure exactly elliptical, lesser
+ than hens' eggs." _See Note_ 6.
+
+[_Fol._ 6.] Aldrovandus takes particular notice of the great number of
+Kites[5] about London & about the Thames. wee are not without them heare
+though not in such numbers. there are also the gray & bald Buzzard[6]
+[wch the all wth _crossed out_] of all wch the great number of broad
+waters & warrens makes no small number & more than in woodland counties.
+
+ [5] The Glede, or Puttock, of Turner, once so plentiful, is now
+ only an extremely rare visitor to Norfolk. In 1815, it appears from
+ Hunt ("British Ornithology"), not to have been uncommon, but the
+ same authority in his list of Norfolk Birds contributed to Stacey's
+ "History" of that County, speaks of the Kite as having in 1829
+ become extremely rare. It probably ceased to nest in this County
+ about the year 1830, or perhaps a little later. Browne's reason for
+ its comparative scarcity about the City of Norwich, viz., the
+ abundance of Ravens mentioned at p. 27 _infra_, is very interesting
+ to us in the present day when Kites and Ravens are almost equally
+ rare.
+
+ [6] It seems likely that Browne here refers to two species of
+ Harrier, the Grey Buzzard being the male of the Hen Harrier
+ (including of course Montagu's Harrier which was not discriminated
+ till long after) in its grey adult plumage, whereas the Marsh
+ Harrier, with its light yellow head, to which the word "bald" as
+ then used might well be applied, would stand for the "Bald
+ Buzzard." The Harriers, which were till long after the time he
+ wrote extremely numerous, are generally called "Buzzards" by the
+ natives, and it will be noticed at p. 15 _infra_, that what is
+ doubtless intended for the Marsh Harrier is spoken of as an enemy
+ to the Coots; also at p. 56, it is said that young Otters "have
+ been found in the Buzzards nests," a very likely circumstance with
+ so fierce a bird, and one of which I have an impression I have
+ heard in recent years. The Hen Harrier is now an extremely rare
+ bird with us; the Marsh Harrier still occasionally nests in the
+ Broads, and Montagu's Harrier now and then attempts to rear a
+ brood, but even should the parents succeed in escaping it is very
+ seldom they carry their young with them. Professor Newton has
+ kindly favoured me with the following additional interesting note
+ on this bird. "The Marsh Harrier is certainly the 'Balbushardus' of
+ Turner (1544), which, though he says it is bigger and longer than
+ the ordinary _Buteo_, has a white patch on the head and is
+ generally of a dark brown (_fuscus_) colour, hunting the banks of
+ rivers, pools, and marshes, living by the capture of Ducks, and the
+ black birds which the English call Coots (_Coutas_). This he,
+ Turner, has himself very often seen, and he describes its habits
+ correctly; adding that it also takes Rabbits occasionally. Gesner,
+ 1555, quotes Turner, but refers the Bald Buzzard to the Osprey
+ (which he figures), and so the mistake began. Certainly Willughby's
+ Bald Buzzard is the Osprey, but his book was not published when
+ Browne wrote."
+
+Cranes[7] are often seen here in hard winters especially about the
+champian & feildie part it seems they have been more plentifull for in a
+bill of fare when the maior entertaind the duke of norfolk I meet with
+Cranes in a dish.
+
+ [7] In the present day the Crane is only a rare straggler to this
+ country generally at the seasons of its migration; that it was in
+ times past abundant in suitable localities there is ample evidence;
+ that it also bred in the fens of the Eastern Counties there is no
+ reason to doubt, but very little direct evidence is forthcoming,
+ therefore every fact bearing upon this point is of value. Had Sir
+ Thomas Browne written with the intention of publishing his
+ observations he would doubtless have told us much about this grand
+ bird, which would have been of the greatest interest to modern
+ ornithologists, but even the above brief remarks, as will be seen,
+ are worthy of note.
+
+ With regard to the occurrence of the Crane in the fens of East
+ Anglia we have the following evidence; its fossil remains have been
+ found in the peat at Burwell, in Cambridgeshire, and in excavating
+ the docks at Lynn. Turner, in his "Avium Historia," Coloniĉ, 1544,
+ speaks of having seen young Cranes in this country, and as he
+ passed fifteen years at Cambridge, it was probably in that
+ neighbourhood that he met with them; then again there is the Act of
+ Parliament, passed in 1534 (25th Hen. VIII. c. ii.), prohibiting
+ the taking of their eggs (amongst those of other species) under a
+ penalty of twenty pence. All this is well known, but being desirous
+ to ascertain whether any reference to the Crane was to be found in
+ the records of the Corporation of Norwich, Mr. J. C. Tingey,
+ F.S.A., the custodian of the Muniment Room, at my request, most
+ kindly searched the accounts of the City Chamberlain between the
+ years 1531 and 1549. He there found numerous entries of sums
+ expended in the purchase of cranes, swans, porpoises, &c., as
+ presents to the Dukes of Norfolk and Suffolk and others, and
+ amongst them, on the 6th of June, 1543, a charge for a "yong pyper
+ crane" from Hickling, which appears conclusive evidence of the
+ breeding of this bird near Norwich at that time. (See "Transactions
+ of the N. and N. Nat. Soc.," vii., pp. 160-170.)
+
+ In Wilkin's Edition of the Notes the statement, "I met" with Cranes
+ in a dish should be, "I meet with," &c., as it is in the original.
+ The occasion referred to was probably an entertainment given by the
+ Mayor of Norwich, on the Guild day in 1663, which in that year fell
+ on the 19th June; at this banquet Henry, Duke of Norfolk and the
+ Hon. Henry Howard were present, and the latter presented to the
+ City a silver basin and ewer of the value of £60. Can it be that
+ even at that time young Cranes were to be obtained? otherwise the
+ middle of June seems a most unseasonable time for such a dish; for
+ in a copy of a curious old manuscript, dated 1605, and published in
+ the 13th Volume of "Archĉologia" (p. 315), entitled "A Breviate
+ touching the Order and Government of a Nobleman's house," &c.,
+ there is a "Monthlie Table, for a Diatorie" for each month in the
+ year, and the Crane appears only in the tables from November till
+ March inclusive. The modern gourmet would view with disgust some of
+ the dishes included in this "diatorie" if set before him--only to
+ mention among birds, auks, stares, petterells, puffines, didapers,
+ and martins. The crane being "in the dish" must not be subjected to
+ the vulgar process of "kervyng," but in the stilted heraldic
+ language of the day must be "desplayed," whereas a heron must be
+ "dismembered" and a bittern "unjointed." The price of a crane
+ varied from 3_s._ 4_d._ to 5_s._, and a fat swan from 3_s._ to
+ 4_s._ The sum of 6_d._ mentioned in the le Strange Household-book,
+ in the year 1533 (see "Archĉologia," vol. xxv., p. 529), quoted in
+ Yarrell's "British Birds," iii., p. 180, was only the reward for
+ bringing in a crane killed on the estate. That Cranes must at times
+ have been numerous in Norfolk in the sixteenth century is evident,
+ for in an account of the presents sent to William Moore, Esq., of
+ Loseley, on the occasion of the marriage of his daughter, on 3rd
+ November, 1567, Mr. Balam, "out of Marshland in Norfolk," sent him
+ nine cranes, nine swans, and sixteen bitterns, with a large number
+ of other wild-fowl. "Archĉologia," vol. xxxvi., p. 36.
+
+In hard winters elkes[8] a kind of wild swan are seen in no small
+numbers. in whom & not in co[=m]on swans is remarkable that strange
+recurvation of the windpipe through the sternon. & the same is also
+obseruable in cranes. tis probable they come very farre for all the
+northern discouerers have [ha _struck out_] obserued them in the
+remotest parts & like diuers [&] other northern birds if the winter bee
+mild they co[=m]only come no further southward then scotland if very
+hard they go lower & seeke more southern places. wch is the cause that
+sometimes wee see them not before christmas or the hardest time of
+winter.
+
+ [8] The "Elke" is an obsolete name for the Wild Swan (_Cygnus
+ musicus_), which occurs in the present day in the same numbers and
+ under precisely similar circumstances as Browne describes; but of
+ course this was the only species of wild swan known to him. The
+ remarkable recurvation of the trachea within the keel of the
+ sternum, which also prevails to a greater or less degree in four
+ out of the five or six species of Cygnus found in the Northern
+ Hemisphere, did not escape Browne's notice, although he was not the
+ first to describe it, and he rightly observes that this peculiarity
+ is absent in the Mute Swan (_C. olor_), but exists in a different
+ and even more exaggerated form in the Crane. He, however, was
+ mistaken as to the extreme northerly range which he assigns to this
+ species. So marked a feature as the absence of the "berry" on the
+ beak of this species did not escape Browne's observation, and he
+ refers to it in the eighth letter to Merrett, who in his second
+ letter to Browne remarks "the difference in the elk's bill by you
+ signified is remarkable to distinguish it from others of its kind,"
+ indicating that this distinction was previously unknown to him.
+
+A white large & strong billd fowle called a Ganet[9] which seemes to
+bee the greater sort of Larus. whereof I met with one kild by a
+greyhound neere swaffam another in marshland while it fought & would not
+bee forced to take wing another intangled in an herring net wch taken
+aliue was fed with herrings for a while it may be named Larus maior
+Leucophĉopterus as being white & the top of the wings browne.
+
+ [9] As a rule the Gannet does not approach the shore, except to
+ breed, but follows the shoals of fish far out at sea. The
+ circumstance mentioned by Browne is by no means singular, and
+ several such instances of storm-driven Gannets being captured far
+ inland are recorded. The "Scotch Goose, _Anser scoticus_,"
+ mentioned further on (p. 13 _infra_), is also in all probability
+ intended for the Gannet; it is the _Anser Bassanus sive Scoticus_
+ of Jonston. The "Marshland" here mentioned is a tract of country
+ reclaimed in ancient times from the sea, lying to the west of the
+ town of Lynn, of some 57,000 acres in extent, and bordering upon
+ the estuary of the Wash.
+
+[_Fol. 7._] In hard winters I have also met with that large & strong
+billd fowle wch clusius describeth by the name of Skua Hoyeri[10] [fr
+_struck out_] sent him from the faro Island by Hoierus a physitian. one
+whereof was shot at Hickling while 2 thereof were feeding upon a dead
+horse.
+
+ [10] Willughby ("Ornithology," English Ed., p. 348) gives a good
+ description of the Great Skua (_Stercorarius catarrhactes_) under
+ the name of _Catarracta_, a skin of which he says was sent him by
+ Dr. Walter Needham, and rightly identified it with the Skua which
+ Hoier sent to Clusius, but his figure is evidently drawn from a
+ skin of the Great Black-backed Gull. Hoier, whose name so often
+ occurs about this time in connection with birds from the north, was
+ a physician, living at Bergen in Norway. The Great Skua still
+ breeds in sadly reduced numbers on the Shetland and Faröe Islands,
+ but is rarely met with in Norfolk.
+
+As also that [strong _struck out_] large & strong billd fowle [Clusius
+nameth _struck out_] spotted like a starling wch clusius nameth Mergus
+maior farroensis[11] as frequenting the faro islands seated above
+shetland. one whereof I sent unto my worthy friend Dr Scarburgh.
+
+ [11] The bird here mentioned is doubtless the Great Northern Diver,
+ _Colymbus glacialis_. In another place Browne again refers to it as
+ _Mergus maximus Farrensis_, which Clusius ("Exotic.," p. 102) calls
+ _Mergus maximus Farrensis_, a name used by Willughby as a synonym
+ for his "Greatest Speckled Diver or Loon" (p. 341). This bird is
+ known to our fishermen as the Herring Loon, the Red-throated and
+ perhaps also the Black-throated Divers being called Sprat Loons. It
+ is a pity Browne's "draught" is not forthcoming.
+
+Here is also the pica marina[12] or seapye many sorts of Lari,[13]
+seamewes & cobs. the Larus maior in great abundance [about _struck out_]
+in [_written above_] herring time about yarmouth.
+
+ [12] The Oyster Catcher, or Sea Pie, is found in greater numbers on
+ the north-west portion of the County of Norfolk than on the eastern
+ shore; it breeds occasionally about Wells, where it is universally
+ known as the "Dickey-bird."
+
+ [13] Browne here refers to the family in general terms. The various
+ species of Gulls in their different stages of plumage were very
+ puzzling to the Ornithologists of the last century, and it is often
+ extremely difficult to say to what individual species they refer.
+ By _Larus major_ he would probably mean the Black-backed and
+ Herring Gulls which are found on the shore all the year round, most
+ frequently in the immature plumage, but they most abound "in
+ herring time." By far the commonest species at all times is
+ Browne's _Larus alba_ or Puet, the Black-headed Gull. Large flocks
+ of this species and _L. canus_ frequent Breydon and the tidal
+ shores, especially the young birds of the year. There are now two
+ large breeding-places of the Black-headed Gull in Norfolk, a very
+ old-established one at Scoulton Mere, and a more recent colony at
+ Hoveton Broad. The former extensive gullery at Horsey, mentioned by
+ Browne, has long since been banished by the drainage of the marsh
+ they frequented, and it is probable that a small colony which bred
+ on Ormesby Broad some forty years ago, owed its origin to their
+ banishment from Horsey. They, in their turn, deserted Ormesby on
+ the erection of the works for supplying Yarmouth with water about
+ the year 1855, and fixed upon Hoveton as their new home, in which
+ place, as at Scoulton, they are carefully preserved.
+
+ Professor Newton has been kind enough to furnish me with the
+ following note on the Terns. "_Larus cinereus_ of Aldrovandus (and
+ afterwards of Jonston), is said to be of three kinds: one with red
+ legs, apparently the Black-headed Gull, and figured by Jonston, the
+ second with yellow legs and a slender curved black bill, the third
+ with a pointed scarlet bill. Both these last were most likely
+ Terns--and all these were grey above and white below. Gesner quotes
+ Turner for _Sterna_, and there is no doubt that his bird of that
+ name was a Black Tern; but Gesner says that it is the _Stirn_ of
+ the Frisians, and figures a white and grey bird with a black head
+ only (most likely a Common Tern, but possibly one of the larger
+ species), as Sterna, thus using the word in a more general sense,
+ and it may have been so used in Browne's time. I see no
+ impossibility in people having thought of eating Terns in those
+ days [as to that _see Note_ 7, p. 6 _ante_]. The Common Tern was
+ most likely very abundant, and we know that the Black Tern was
+ exceedingly common in certain reed-beds, as stated by Turner, and
+ noisy beyond measure." The Great and Lesser Terns still nest in one
+ or two localities on our coast, although as the result of great
+ persecution in very reduced numbers. The Black Tern, or Mire Crow,
+ has quite ceased to do so.
+
+Larus alba or puets in such plentie about Horsey that they sometimes
+bring them in carts to norwich & sell them at small rates. & the country
+people make use of their egges in puddings & otherwise. great plentie
+thereof haue bred about scoulton [mere _struck out_] meere, & from
+thence sent to London.
+
+Larus cinereus greater & smaller, butt a coars meat. commonly called
+sternes.
+
+Hirundo marina or sea swallowe a neat white & forked tayle bird butt
+longer then a swallowe.
+
+The ciconia or stork[14] I have seen in the fennes & some haue been shot
+in the marshes between this and yarmouth. [See also third letter to
+Merrett and Appendix D.]
+
+ [14] Although it has been met with in Norfolk, more frequently than
+ perhaps in any other part of England, the Stork was never other
+ than a rare spring and autumn visitor to Norfolk. Turner writes of
+ it in 1544 as unknown in England, save as a captive, and Merrett a
+ hundred years later says it rarely flies hither, which is equally
+ true at the present time. Hewittson ("Eggs of Brit. Birds," Ed. 3,
+ ii., p. 309; under Crane) was evidently misled by some remarks made
+ by Evelyn, who visited Sir Thomas Browne in Norwich in October,
+ 1671, and says in his diary that he saw Browne's "Collection of the
+ eggs of all the fowl and birds he could procure; that country,
+ especially the promontory of Norfolk, being frequented, as he said,
+ by several birds which seldom or never go further into the land--as
+ cranes, storks, eagles, and a variety of water-fowl." From this
+ Hewitson infers that the Stork bred in Norfolk, a construction
+ which the somewhat ambiguously worded passage will certainly not
+ bear. I imagine collections of eggs were not very common in
+ Browne's time.
+
+[_Fol. 8._] The platea or shouelard,[15] wch build upon the topps of
+high trees. they haue formerly built in the Hernerie at claxton &
+Reedham now at Trimley in Suffolk. they come in march & are shot by
+fowlers not for their meat butt the handsomenesse of the same,
+remarkable in their white colour copped crowne & spoone or spatule like
+bill.
+
+ [15] This interesting record has recently been supplemented by a
+ much earlier record of the breeding of the "Popeler," or Shovelard,
+ in Norfolk. Professor Newton ("Transactions of N. and N. Nat.
+ Soc.," vi., p. 158) has called attention to an ancient document
+ bearing date A.D. 1300, instituting a commission to inquire into
+ the harrying of the eyries of these and other birds, &c., at
+ Cantley and other places in Norfolk. Documents also exist, showing
+ that in 1523 they nested at Fulham in Middlesex, and in 1570 in
+ West Sussex, as pointed out by Mr. Harting in the "Zoologist" for
+ 1877, p. 425, and 1886, p. 81, in each case constructing their
+ nests in trees. At what precise date this bird ceased to breed in
+ Norfolk and Suffolk is unknown, but Sir T. Browne's statement that
+ they were "shot by fowlers not for their meat, butt the
+ handsomenesse of the same," probably explains the circumstances
+ which brought about that event. The Spoonbill visits Norfolk
+ regularly every spring in small parties now more numerously than a
+ few years since, which possibly may be accounted for by the
+ destruction of nearly all its breeding-places in Holland, and it is
+ possible that with due encouragement it might again be induced to
+ breed in some of the localities in the Broads still suitable for
+ the purpose.
+
+corvus marinus. cormorants.[16] building at Reedham upon trees from
+whence King charles the first was wont to bee supplyed. beside the Rock
+cormorant wch breedeth in the rocks in northerne countries & cometh to
+us in the winter, somewhat differing from the other in largenesse &
+whitenesse under the wings.
+
+ [16] The Cormorant continued to nest in the trees on the shore of
+ Fritton Lake for many years after Sir T. Browne's time. A
+ manuscript note in a copy of Berkenhout's "Natural History of Great
+ Britain and Ireland," published in 1769, is descriptive of a
+ Cormorant killed at Belton Decoy (near the same lake) on the 11th
+ September, 1775, and also states that "a vast number of these
+ birds, even to some thousands, roost every night upon the trees,"
+ being in the neighbourhood of the decoy they are never shot, and
+ "build their nests upon the top of these trees." According to Mr.
+ Lubbock ("Fauna of Norf.," Ed. 2, p. 174), "in 1825 there were many
+ nests at Herringfleet, also on Fritton Lake, and in 1827 not one."
+ We may therefore assume that they ceased to nest at Herringfleet in
+ 1825 or 1826. It will be noticed that Browne made free use of young
+ Cormorants in his experiments as to the properties of certain drugs
+ (cf. Wilkin, iv., p. 452), which would seem to indicate that he
+ could obtain a plentiful supply of these birds. When the Cormorants
+ ceased to breed at Reedham is unknown. They are not unfrequently
+ seen now, generally in spring and autumn. The Rock Cormorant was
+ possibly the Crested Cormorant or Shag.
+
+A sea fowl called a shearwater,[17] somewhat billed like a cormorant
+butt much lesser a strong & feirce fowle houering about shipps when they
+[clense _struck out_] cleanse their fish. 2 were kept 6 weekes
+cra[=m]ing them with fish wch they would not feed on of themselues. the
+seamen told mee they had kept them 3 weekes without meat. & I giuing
+ouer to feed them found they liued 16 dayes without [any hin _struck
+out_] taking any thing.
+
+ [17] Willughby's first acquaintance with the adult Manx Shearwater
+ ("Ornithology," p. 334) was from a drawing sent him by Sir T.
+ Browne, who describes the bird, as above, under the accepted name
+ of Shearwater, and Willughby's excellent figure on plate lxvii.
+ (which plate I believe is not to be found in some copies of the
+ "Ornithology," and to which there is no reference in the text) has
+ all the appearance of having been drawn from life. The drawing here
+ referred to is mentioned by Ray in his "Collection of English words
+ not generally known," as having been received, with others, from
+ the "learned and deservedly famous Sir Thomas Browne, of Norwich."
+ George Edwards ("Gleanings of Nat. Hist.," vii., p. 315), prior to
+ 1764. says that he went to the British Museum and examined Browne's
+ "old draught," but I could not find it among any of the papers I
+ examined. In Browne's fourth letter to Merrett, by an error in the
+ transcription, he is made by Wilkin to say that he kept twenty of
+ these birds alive for five weeks; in the MS. it is clearly only
+ two.
+
+Barnacles[18] Brants Branta [wer _struck out_] are co[=m]on
+
+ [18] Barnacle and Brent Geese as we know them, the first by no
+ means common here; the Wild Goose, probably _Anser cinereus_; the
+ Scotch Goose (_see Note_ 9), probably the Gannet; and the
+ Bergander, an old name for the Sheld-drake, as used by Turner in
+ 1544, and derived from the Dutch Berg-eende, German Bergente
+ ("Dict. Birds," p. 835). Browne's statement that this bird formerly
+ bred about Northwold, or as it is even now occasionally called by
+ the natives, "Norrold," some twenty miles from the sea; or, as he
+ says, in the fourth letter to Merrett, "abounding in vast and
+ spatious commons," is very interesting, although not a solitary
+ instance, for I am informed that this bird breeds in the present
+ day on the Gull Lake, Twig Moor, in Lincolnshire; but that it
+ should have chosen such a nesting site is not more surprising than
+ the fact of the Ring Plover, quite as strictly a marine species,
+ frequenting the extensive sandy warrens about Thetford and Brandon,
+ near the south-west border of the county, for the same purpose, as
+ they still continue to do. But for Browne's mention of the
+ circumstance we should not have been aware of this singular
+ departure from the normal nesting habits of the Sheld-duck, as no
+ tradition I believe exists on the subject, and at present it only
+ nests in the sand-hills in some parts of the coast of N.W.
+ Norfolk.
+
+sheldrakes sheledracus jonstoni
+
+Barganders a noble coloured fowle vulpanser wch breed in cunny burrowes
+about norrold & other places.
+
+[_Fol. 9._] Wild geese Anser ferus.
+
+scoch goose Anser scoticus.
+
+Goshander,[19] merganser.
+
+ [19] This evidently refers to the Goosander, which as he says in
+ another place most answers to the Merganser.
+
+Mergus acutirostris speciosus or Loone an handsome & specious fowle
+cristated & with diuided finne feet placed very backward and after the
+manner of all such wch the Duch call [Assf _struck out_] Arsvoote.[20]
+they haue a peculiar formation in the leggebone wch hath a long & sharpe
+processe extending aboue the thigh bone [it _struck out_] they come
+about April & breed in the broad waters so making their nest on the
+water that their egges are seldom drye while they are sett on.
+
+ [20] This well describes the Great-crested Grebe, which Browne
+ rightly says comes to us about the month of April. Browne notices
+ the peculiar formation of the tibia in this family of birds, but it
+ had long been known. The next, named _Mergus acutirostris
+ cinereus_, is most likely the same species in winter plumage. The
+ other birds mentioned are Mergus minor, the Little Grebe or
+ Dabchick, and _M. serratus_, the Red-breasted Merganser, even now
+ known as the "Saw-bill."
+
+Mergus acutarostris cinereus [another d _struck out_] wch seemeth to bee
+a difference of the former.
+
+Mergus minor the smaller diuers or dabchicks in riuers & broade waters.
+
+Mergus serratus the saw billd diuer bigger & longer than a duck
+distinguished from other diuers by a notable sawe bill to retaine its
+slipperie pray as liuing much upon eeles whereof we haue seldome fayled
+to find some in their bellies.
+
+Diuers other sorts of diuefowle more remarkable the mustela fusca &
+mustela variegata[21] the graye dunne & the variegated or partie
+coloured wesell so called from the resemblance it beareth vnto a wesell
+in the head.
+
+ [21] The Smew, male and female, or either in the immature plumage
+ are here referred to.
+
+[_Fol. 12._[I]] many sorts of wild ducks[22] wch passe under names well
+knowne unto the fowlers though of no great signification as smee [wige
+_struck out_] widgeon Arts ankers noblets.
+
+ [I] Fols. 10 and 11 are (10 written on both sides) on the
+ "Ostridge," _vide_ Wilkin, Vol. 4, p. 337-9. The paper is a
+ different size, 11-1/2 by 7-1/2, and the article is evidently bound
+ out of place.
+
+ [22] The local names of the various Ducks are simply legion and
+ differ both in time and place, not to mention the confusion
+ occasioned by sex and season when these birds were not so well
+ understood as at present. Many such names are quite lost, as
+ "Ankers" and "Noblets," but the following are a few examples: Adult
+ Smew, White Nun; female or immature Smew, Wesel Coot; the Wigeon
+ was known as the Smee, Whewer, or Whim; the Tufted Duck, Arts or
+ Arps; the Gadwall, Grey Duck or Rodge; the Pochard, Dunbird; the
+ Shoveller, Beck or Kertlutock (Hunt); Pintail, Sea Pheasant or
+ Cracker; Long-tailed Duck, Mealy Bird; Golden Eye, Morillon or
+ Rattle-wing; Scaup, Grey-back, and on Breydon White-nosed Day Fowl;
+ Scoter, Whilk; Velvet Scoter, Double Scoter (Hunt); Teal, Crick;
+ Garganey, Summer Teal, Pied Wigeon, Cricket Teal; other names might
+ be mentioned, and some will be found in the notes which will
+ follow. _Anas platyrhincus_ here mentioned is the Shoveller. It may
+ seem strange that the abundance of Teal should in any way be
+ attributed to the number of Decoys, but such was really the case,
+ the quiet and shelter afforded by these extensive preserves being
+ very favourable to the increase of all the members of the Duck
+ family, especially to those breeding in their immediate
+ neighbourhood. In the returns of the old Decoys, Teal figured
+ largely; in the present day they form a very much smaller
+ proportion of the spoils.
+
+the most remarkable are Anas platyrinchos [_sic_] a remarkably broad
+bild duck.
+
+And the sea phaysant holding some resemblance unto that bird [in the
+tayle _crossed out_] in some fethers in the tayle.
+
+Teale Querquedula. wherein scarce any place more abounding. the
+condition of the country & the very many decoys [mo _struck out_]
+especially between Norwich and the sea making this place very much to
+abound in wild fowle.
+
+fulicĉ cottĉ cootes[23] in very great flocks upon the broad waters. upon
+the appearance of a Kite or buzzard I have seen them vnite from all
+parts of the shoare in strange numbers when if the Kite stoopes neare
+them they will fling up [and] spred such a flash of water up with there
+wings that they will endanger the Kite. & so [es _struck out_] keepe him
+of [in of _struck out_] agayne & agayne in open opposition. & an
+handsome prouision they make about their nest agaynst the same bird of
+praye by bending & twining the rushes & reeds so about them that they
+cannot stoope at their yong ones or the damme while she setteth.
+
+ [23] In the present day the Coots have nothing to fear from Kites
+ and little from Moor Buzzards; it may be that it is in consequence
+ of this that they have discontinued the practice of twining the
+ rushes and reeds above their nests in the manner mentioned above as
+ being an unnecessary precaution. I have, however, in some cases
+ noticed some approach to this practice. The Coot, although fairly
+ numerous on the Broads, appears to be far less so than formerly.
+ Lubbock, in his "Fauna of Norfolk," says on asking a Broadman how
+ many Coots there were on Hickling Broad, his reply was, "About an
+ acre and a half," referring to their practice of swimming evenly at
+ regular distances from each other without huddling together in
+ dense masses, like wild-fowl.
+
+ I am indebted to Professor Newton for the following additional note
+ on the Coot. He says "Turner, and after him Gesner, was puzzled as
+ to what was the _Fulica_ of classical writers (Virgil and others),
+ and thought it to be some kind of Gull; but the _Fulica_ of later
+ authors was certainly the Coot, as shown by Gesner's figure."
+
+Gallinula aquatica[24] more hens.
+
+ [24] Moor-hens are of course numerous in all suitable localities,
+ and the Water Rail is still fairly common, but its eggs have a
+ market value and are (or were) sadly stolen; a few years ago a
+ London dealer is said to have received over 200 eggs of this bird
+ in one season from Yarmouth.
+
+And a kind of Ralla aquatica or water Rayle.
+
+[_Fol. 13._] An onocrotalus or pelican[25] shott upon Horsey fenne 1663
+May 22 wch stuffed and cleansed I yet retaine it was 3 yards & half
+between the extremities of the wings the chowle & beake answering the
+vsuall discription the extremities of the wings for a spanne deepe
+browne the rest of the body white. a fowle [not found _struck out_] wch
+none could remember upon this coast. about the same time I heard one of
+the kings pellicans was lost at St James', perhaps this might bee the
+same.
+
+ [25] There is every reason to believe that a species of Pelican,
+ probably from its size _P. crispus_, was formerly an inhabitant of
+ the East Anglian Fens; its bones have been found in the peat on
+ three occasions, one of these being the bone of a bird so young as
+ to show that it must have been bred in the locality, and therefore
+ that the species was a true native and not a casual visitant. Bones
+ of a species of Pelican have also been found in the remains of
+ lake-dwellings at Glastonbury, in Somersetshire.
+
+ With regard to the species of the bird recorded by Browne and its
+ origin, he is careful to point out that a Pelican had about that
+ time escaped from the King's collection in St. James' Park, and to
+ surmise that it might be the same bird; from what follows this
+ seems probable, but as _P. onocrotalus_ is believed to stray
+ occasionally into the northern parts of Germany and France ("Dict.
+ of Birds," p. 702) the occurrence of that species on the East Coast
+ of Britain, where, even at present, it would find a state of things
+ in every way suited to its requirements (guns excepted), would not
+ be very extraordinary. Browne's Pelican was killed in May, 1663,
+ and although Dr. Edward Browne visited St. James' Park in February,
+ 1664, and saw "many strange creatures," including the Stork with
+ the wooden leg (mentioned by Evelyn), he says nothing of the
+ Pelicans, still it may be that it was from him that his father
+ heard of the escape. Evelyn, in his Diary, mentioned that he
+ visited St. James' Park on February 9th, 1665, and speaks of only
+ one Pelican, which he states was brought from Astrakan by the
+ Russian Ambassador as a present to the King; Willughby says
+ distinctly that the Emperor of Russia sent the King two Pelicans,
+ and further, that he took the description in his "Ornithology" from
+ a bird in the Royal Aviary, St. James' Park, near Westminster; it
+ seems therefore highly probable that Browne's bird was one of these
+ which had escaped from confinement. But a rather curious
+ circumstance arises out of this, the bird described by Willughby
+ does not appear to be _P. onocrotalus_, but a similar species, _P.
+ roseus_, found chiefly in Indio-China and westward to South-eastern
+ Europe, but occurring as far west as the River Volga ("Cat. of
+ Birds," B. M., xxvi., p. 466). In this Mr. Ogilvie Grant, the
+ author of that section of the Catalogue, whom I consulted, agrees
+ with me, and the locality whence the birds were derived, mentioned
+ by Willughby, renders not unlikely. Onocrotalus in Browne's time
+ was a general term for "the Pelican," and he probably knew but one
+ species and one individual, the escaped bird from Charles II.'s
+ Aviary. Browne's very miscellaneous collection was destroyed by the
+ authorities at the time of the plague (see ninth letter to
+ Merrett), and probably the remains of this Pelican perished with
+ the rest.
+
+Anas Arctica clusii wch though hee placeth about the faro Islands is the
+same wee call a puffin co[=m]on about Anglisea in wales & sometimes [for
+_struck out_] taken upon our seas not sufficiently described by the name
+of puffinus the bill being so remarkably differing from other ducks &
+not horizontally butt meridionally formed to feed in the clefts of the
+rocks of insecks, shell-fish & others.
+
+The great number of riuers riuulets & plashes of water makes hernes [to
+abound in these _struck out_] & herneries to abound in these parts. yong
+hensies being esteemed a festiuall dish & much desired by some palates.
+
+The Ardea stellaris botaurus, or bitour[26] is also co[=m]on & esteemed
+the better dish. in the belly of one I found a frog in an hard frost at
+christmas. another I kept in a garden 2 yeares feeding it with fish mice
+& frogges. in defect whereof making a scrape for sparrowes & small
+birds, the bitour made shifft to maintaine herself upon them.
+
+ [26] This is one of the birds once common enough in Norfolk, which
+ in the present day is only a winter and spring migrant. The last
+ eggs of the Bittern were taken in this county on 30th of March,
+ 1868; the last "boom" of a resident was heard in May, 1886, in the
+ August of which year a young female was killed at Reedham with down
+ still adhering to its feathers; this was probably the last
+ Norfolk-bred Bittern. In the "Vulgar Errors," book 3, chapter
+ xxvii., section 4, is a discourse on the "mugient noise" of the
+ Bittern and the mode of its production, and in a foot-note in the
+ same place is a curious anecdote illustrating the difficulty of
+ detecting a wounded Bittern, even when marked down in short,
+ recently mown grass and flags. The spring cry of the Bittern is
+ mentioned by Robert Marsham in his unpublished journal nineteen
+ times, between the years 1739 and 1775, as first heard at Stratton
+ Strawless, generally between the 15th of March and the 15th of
+ April; and it was on the 14th of the latter month that Benjamin
+ Stillingfleet records it in the "Calendar of Flora" as heard in the
+ same locality in 1755. He does not describe the note, but uses the
+ words "makes a noise." Marsham, however, on one occasion, in 1750,
+ a very early year, records it on the 20th of February. As a once
+ familiar sound, but one which will probably never again be heard
+ here under purely normal conditions, these dates seem worthy of
+ recording.
+
+[_Fol. 14._] Bistardĉ or Bustards[27] are not vnfrequent in the champain
+& feildie part of this country a large Bird accounted a dayntie dish,
+obseruable in the strength of the brest bone & short heele layes an
+egge much larger then a Turkey.
+
+ [27] The last of the Norfolk and therefore certainly the last of
+ the British-bred Bustards, was killed in May, 1838; those which
+ have since occurred in this country were Continental immigrants. An
+ exhaustive history of the extinction of this bird will be found in
+ Stevenson's "Birds of Norfolk," vols. 2 and 3. The Bustard,
+ although found in some numbers, associated in small flocks or
+ "droves" in the few localities which it frequented in Great
+ Britain, was probably never a very numerous species. The following
+ extract from one of Browne's letters to his son Edward, dated April
+ 30th, and written probably in 1681, shows that he was on the verge
+ of discovering an anatomical peculiarity in this family of birds,
+ which in after years gave rise to much controversy. He says,
+ "yesterday I had a cock Bustard sent me from beyond Thetford. I
+ never did see such a vast thick neck: the crop was pulled out, butt
+ as [a] turkey hath an odde large substance without, so hath this
+ within the inside of the skinne, and the strongest and largest
+ neckbone of any bird in England. This I tell you, that if you meet
+ with one you may further observe it." The presence of a gular pouch
+ in the Bustard was first demonstrated by James Douglas, a Scotch
+ Physician, in 1740, and it appears to be fully developed only in
+ the adult male bird, and at the breeding season. Hence, although it
+ has undoubtedly been found on several occasions, the frequent
+ unsuccessful searches for it under unfavourable conditions led to
+ much scepticism as to its existence. The use of this singular
+ appendage is still a moot point, but it seems probable that it has
+ to do with "voice production," and assists in the remarkable
+ "showing off" exhibited by the male bird in the breeding season.
+ Pennant, in his "British Zoology," 1768, i., p. 215, gives a
+ sentimental account of its use, and an exaggerated estimate of its
+ proportions. In the Tables of Dietary referred to at p. 6 (note)
+ _ante_, the Bustard is mentioned as in season from October to May.
+
+Morinellus or Dotterell[28] about Thetford & the champain wch comes vnto
+us in september & march staying not long. & is an excellent dish.
+
+ [28] The Dotterel visits us much as in Sir T. Browne's time, but in
+ decreased numbers. The Sea Dotterel which Wilkin supposes to be the
+ Ring Plover, is undoubtedly the Turnstone. Willughby says, "Our
+ honoured Friend, Sir Thomas Browne, of Norwich, sent us the picture
+ of this bird by the title of the Sea Dotterel." This is also
+ mentioned in the fifth letter to Merrett. See "Birds of Norfolk,"
+ ii., p. 82, for an interesting account of Dotterel hawking near
+ Thetford by James I. in the year 1610.
+
+There is also a sea dotterell somewhat lesse butt better coloured then
+the former.
+
+Godwyts taken chiefly in marshland, though other parts not without them
+accounted the dayntiest dish in England & I think for the bignesse, of
+the biggest price.
+
+Gnatts or Knots [only so far on p. 14, but as follows on fol. 13
+_verso_].
+
+Gnats or Knots a small bird which taken with netts grow excessively
+fatt. If [by mew _struck out_] being mewed & fed with corne a candle
+lighted in the roome they feed day & night, & when they are at their
+hight of fattnesse they beginne to grow lame & are then killed or [else
+they will fall aw _struck out_] as at their prime & apt to decline.
+
+[resume p. 14.] Erythropus or Redshanck a bird co[=m]on in the marshes &
+of co[=m]on food butt no dayntie dish.
+
+A may chitt[29] a small dark gray bird litle bigger then a stint of
+fatnesse beyond any. it comes in may into marshland & other parts &
+abides not aboue a moneth or 6 weekes.
+
+ [29] Mr. Stevenson, "Birds of Norfolk," ii., p. 233, gives his
+ reasons for coming to the conclusion that the Sanderling (_Calidris
+ arenaria_) is here referred to, which the absence of a hind toe
+ (see third letter to Merrett) tends to confirm. The "_Churre_" is
+ only a variant of the name "_Purre_," by which the next species,
+ the Stint, is commonly known, and the _Green Plover_, now applied
+ to the Lapwing, is an old name for the _Golden Plover_, which he
+ rightly says [p. 20] does not breed in Norfolk.
+
+[fol. 13 _verso_.] Another small bird somewhat larger than a stint
+called a churre & is co[=m]only taken amongst them.
+
+[resume fol. 14.] Stints in great numbers about the seashore & marshes
+about stifkey Burnham & other parts.
+
+Pluuialis or plouer green & graye in great plentie about Thetford & many
+other heaths. they breed not with us butt in some parts of scotland, and
+plentifully in Island [Iceland].
+
+[_Fol. 15._] The lapwing or vannellus co[=m]on ouer all the heaths.
+
+Cuccowes[30] of 2 sorts the one farre exceeding the other in bignesse.
+some have attempted to keepe them in warme roomes all the winter butt it
+hath not succeeded. in their migration they range very farre northward
+for in the summer they are to bee found as high as Island.
+
+ [30] The circumstance which gave rise to the idea that there were
+ two kinds of Cuckoos, differing only in size, might possibly be
+ discovered were it worth the research; possibly it would be found
+ that the second species was of foreign origin. Aldrovandus, as
+ quoted by Willughby, says, "Our Bolognese Fowlers do unanimously
+ affirm, that there are found a greater and a lesser sort of
+ Cuckows; and besides, that the greater are of two kinds, which are
+ distinguished one from the other by the only difference of colour:
+ but the lesser differ from the greater in nothing else but
+ magnitude." Perhaps it was Browne's latent respect for antiquity
+ which led him to mention the tradition.
+
+ Avis pugnax. Ruffes[31] a marsh bird of the greatest varietie of
+ colours euery one therein somewhat varying from other. The female
+ is called a Reeve without any ruffe about the neck, lesser then the
+ other & hardly to bee got. They are almost all cocks & putt
+ together fight & destroy each other. & prepare themselues to fight
+ like cocks though they seeme to haue no other offensive part butt
+ the bill. they loose theire Ruffes about the Autumne or beginning
+ of winter as wee haue obserued [they _struck out_] keeping them in
+ a garden from may till the next spring. they most abound in
+ Marshland butt are also in good number in the marshes between
+ norwich & yarmouth.
+
+ [31] It is only necessary to add to Browne's interesting account of
+ this remarkable bird that it lingered longer in Norfolk as a
+ breeding species than in any other part of Britain, but that
+ although it still visits us in spring it is doubtful whether it has
+ bred for the last few years in the one favourite locality to which
+ it clung so tenaciously. The "Marshland," here referred to as
+ explained in a previous note, is a tract of country situated in
+ north-west Norfolk, near King's Lynn.
+
+Of picus martius[32] or woodspeck many kinds. The green the Red the
+Leucomelanus or neatly marked [red _crossed out_] black & white & the
+cinereus or dunne calld [a re _struck out_] little [bird calld _written
+above_] a nuthack. remarkable in the larger are the hardnesse of the
+bill & skull & the long nerues wch tend vnto the tongue whereby it
+strecheth out the tongue aboue an inch out of the mouth & so [lik
+_crossed out_] licks up insecks. they make the holes in trees without
+any consideration of the winds or quarters of heauen butt as the
+rottenesse thereof best affordeth conuenience.
+
+ [32] _Picus martius_ is here used, as it is by Sibbald, and all
+ preceding writers, in a general sense for all birds commonly called
+ "Woodpeckers," and does not imply that the Great Black Woodpecker
+ (_Picus niger maximus_, of Ray's Synopsis), to which species the
+ name was restricted by Linnĉus, is found here, and Browne goes on
+ to mention the three British Woodpeckers, the Green, the Red, by
+ which the Great Spotted Woodpecker is intended, and the
+ Leucomelanus, or Lesser-spotted Woodpecker. He also includes the
+ Nuthatch, which was at that time (as well as the Wryneck) called a
+ "Woodpecker." In this passage Browne, in making a correction, does
+ not seem to have proceeded far enough, the word which Wilkin has
+ rendered "dun-coloured," is certainly "dunne calld" in the MS.; but
+ there are two alterations in the passage, and there is little doubt
+ that he intended to write "dunne cull'd" (or coloured), which would
+ make it read as Wilkin has printed it. The use of the word "nerve,"
+ for tendon or ligament, was in accordance with the phraseology of
+ the time.
+
+[fol. 15 _verso_.] black heron[33] black on both sides the bottom of the
+neck neck [_sic_] white gray on the outside spotted all along with black
+on the inside a black coppe of small feathers some a spanne long. bill
+poynted and yallowe 3 inches long
+
+ [33] This passage is not part of the original MS., but is written
+ on a separate slip of paper and pasted on the left-hand side of the
+ opening (p. 15 _verso_). I doubt whether it is more than a casual
+ memorandum, descriptive possibly of the plumage of the Purple
+ Heron, but not intended to apply to any Norfolk bird. The Black
+ Heron of Willughby is the Glossy Ibis, a bird which is said to have
+ been known to the West Norfolk gunners as the "Black Curlew."
+
+back heron coloured intermixed with long white fethers
+
+the flying (?) fethers black
+
+the brest black & white most black
+
+the legges & feet not green but an ordinarie dark cork [?] colour.
+
+[_Fol. 16._] The number of riuulets becks & streames whose banks are
+beset with willowes & Alders wch giue occasion of easier fishing &
+slooping to the water makes that [bir _crossed out_] handsome coulered
+bird abound wch is calld Alcedo Ispida or the King fisher. they bild in
+holes about grauell pitts [have their nests very full _crossed out_]
+wherein [are _crossed out_] is [_above_] to bee found great quantitie of
+small fish bones. & lay [a _crossed out_] very handsome round & as it
+were polished egges.
+
+An Hobby bird[34] so calld becaus it comes in ether with or a litle
+before the Hobbies in the spring. of the bignesse of a Thrush coloured
+& paned[J] like an hawke marueliously subiet to the vertigo & and are
+sometimes taken in those fitts.
+
+ [34] This is evidently the Wryneck, which we now call the "Cuckoo's
+ Mate," probably for the same reason that Browne associates it with
+ the Hobby. It may be that the Hobby having become comparatively
+ scarce, it was necessary to find another travelling companion for
+ this bird, and that the Cuckoo was chosen as the most suitable. Old
+ Norfolk names are Emmet-eater, and in one old book it is called
+ Turkey-bird in a MS. note.
+
+ [J] That is marked with a barred or checkered pattern.
+
+Upupa or Hoopebird[35] so named from its note a gallant marked bird wch
+I have often seen & tis not hard to shoote them.
+
+ [35] The Hoopoe would seem from this note to have been of more
+ frequent occurrence than in the present day, see also in his answer
+ to "Certain Queries" (Tract iv., Wilkin iv., p. 183), in which he
+ says of this bird, "though it be not seen every day, yet we often
+ meet with it in this country."
+
+Ringlestones[36] a small [bird _crossed out_] white & black bird like a
+wagtayle & seemes to bee some kind of motacilla marina co[=m]on about
+yarmouth sands. they lay their egges in the sand & shingle about june
+and as the eryngo diggers tell mee not sett them flat butt upright likes
+[_sic_] egges in [a _crossed out_] salt.
+
+ [36] The Ring Plover is evidently the bird here referred to, but I
+ have never known the name of Ringlestone applied to this species in
+ Norfolk, nor have I met with it elsewhere. The Eryngo is now no
+ longer an article of commerce, and its diggers are extinct, but not
+ their tradition as to the position in which the eggs of this bird
+ are said to be placed--a "vulgar error" which does not accord with
+ the writer's experience. When the full complement of four eggs is
+ laid, they are arranged with their pointed ends towards the centre
+ of the nest, which is a slight hollow in the soil. The concavity of
+ the nest therefore, as well as the disproportionate size of the
+ larger end, gives the eggs somewhat the appearance of being placed
+ in the position referred to, but the small end of the egg is always
+ visible, Sir Thomas Browne does not seem to have been aware of the
+ remarkable fact of this essentially marine bird habitually nesting
+ on the sandy warrens about Thetford in the south-west of Norfolk,
+ far from the sea, which it still does, though in reduced numbers,
+ and is there known as the Stone-hatch, from its habit of paving its
+ nest with small stones.
+
+The Arcuata or curlewe frequent about the sea coast.
+
+[_Fol. 17._] There is also an handsome tall bird Remarkably eyed and
+with a bill not aboue 2 inches long co[=m]only calld a stone
+curlewe[37] butt the note thereof more resembleth that of a green plouer
+[it _crossed out_] & breeds about Thetford about the stones & shingle of
+the Riuers.
+
+ [37] This characteristic Norfolk bird is still far from rare in the
+ locality named by Browne, and is found in several other parts of
+ the county. Willughby says, "The learned and famous Sir Thomas
+ Brown, Physician in Norwich," informed him to the same effect, and
+ repeats that its note (one of the most charming sounds uttered on
+ the wild trackless heath on a summer's night) resembles that of the
+ Green (_i.e._, Golden) Plover, but in the ear of the writer it is
+ even more musical. In the third letter to Merrett, Browne says that
+ he has kept the Stone Curlew (not "four Curlews," as Wilkin has
+ it,) in large cages.
+
+Auoseta[38] calld [I thinck a Barker _crossed out_] shoohingg-horne
+[_written above_] a tall black & white bird with a bill semicircularly
+reclining or bowed upward so that it is not easie to conceiue how it can
+feed answerable vnto the Auoseta Italorum in Aldrovandus a summer marsh
+bird & not unfrequent in Marshland.
+
+ [38] The Avoset is another bird which formerly frequented the
+ marshy districts of Norfolk at the breeding time, but which has now
+ been lost to us except as a very rare passing migrant in the
+ spring. It probably ceased to breed in this county in or about the
+ year 1818, and is said to have been exterminated in consequence of
+ the demand for its feathers for the purpose of dressing artificial
+ flies. It was called "Shoeing-horn," from the peculiar form of its
+ beak, which, however, rather resembles the bent awl used by
+ shoemakers. Girdlestone, who knew the bird well in its breeding
+ haunts at Salthouse and Horsey, called it "Shoe-awl," a much more
+ appropriate name. In his third letter to Merrett, Browne again
+ mentions this bird, and applies to it the name of "Barker" (which
+ he had crossed out in the above note), remarking that it was so
+ called from its barking note. Jonston figures this bird twice; once
+ in Tab. 48 under the name of _Avosetta Italor._, _i.e._, the
+ Avosetta of the Italians, and again in Tab. 54 under the second
+ name _Avoselta species_, an obvious error.
+
+[A bird calld Barker from the note it hath _crossed out_]
+
+A yarwhelp[39] so thought to bee named from its note a gray bird
+intermingled with some yellowish [whitish _written above_] fethers [the
+bill _crossed out_] somewhat long legged & the bill about an inch &
+half. esteemed a dayntie dish.
+
+ [39] This paragraph is written on the back of fol. 16. The Yarwhelp
+ is the name by which the Black-tailed Godwit, a species which
+ formerly nested in abundance in the marshes about Horsey and some
+ adjacent localities in the Broads, was known. It virtually ceased
+ to nest here sometime between the years 1829 and 1835, but perhaps
+ an instance or two may have occurred rather later. It was also
+ known as the "Shrieker." Browne again refers to this bird in the
+ fourth letter to Merrett, where he calls it "barker" (a name which
+ he had no doubt erroneously previously applied to the Avoset), or
+ "Latrator, a marshbird, about the bigness of a Godwitt," and once
+ again under the name of "Yare-whelp, or barker," in his fifth
+ letter; it may be that the name "barker" was applied
+ indiscriminately to either species. As Lubbock names this bird as
+ one of the "five species in particular" which "used formerly to
+ swarm in our marshes" ("Fauna of Norfolk"), one would have thought
+ Browne would have been better acquainted with it than seems to have
+ been the case from the hesitating way in which he uses the
+ vernacular name.
+
+Loxias or curuirostra a bird a litle bigger than a Thrush of fine
+colours & prittie note [the m _crossed out_] differently from other
+birds, the [lower _crossed out_] upper & lower bill crossing each other.
+of a very tame nature, comes about the beginning of summer. I have known
+them kept in cages butt not to outliue the winter.
+
+A kind of coccothraustes calld a [cobble _crossed out_] coble bird[40]
+bigger than a Thrush, finely coloured & shaped like a Bunting [it comes
+_crossed out_] it is [sometimes _crossed out_] chiefly [_written above_]
+seen [about _crossed out_] in su[=m]er about cherrie time.
+
+ [40] The Hawfinch was evidently not a very well-known bird in
+ Browne's time, either to himself or Willughby; the latter says, "it
+ is said to build in holes of trees." It has steadily increased in
+ frequency as a breeding species with us for the last twenty years.
+
+[fol. 16 _verso._] A small bird of prey[41] [_something smeared out
+here_] calld a birdcatcher about the bignesse of a Thrush and linnet
+coloured with a longish white bill & sharpe of a very feirce & wild
+nature though kept in a cage & fed with flesh. [_Added after in same
+hand but fresher ink_] a kind of Lanius [Lanius _crossed out and written
+more distinctly under_].
+
+ [41] This paragraph is written on the back of fol. 16. The
+ Red-backed Shrike, _Lanius collurio_, is the only species of Lanius
+ mentioned by Browne; it is singular that he omits all mention of
+ another bird, and that an essentially Norfolk species which would
+ have been new to the _Pinax_--the Bearded Titmouse, afterwards
+ known to Edwards as the Least Butcher Bird. Browne certainly sent a
+ drawing of this bird to Ray, who in his "Collection of English
+ words not generally used" (1674), as pointed out by Mr. Gurney,
+ mentions it as a "little Bird of a tawny colour on the back, and a
+ blew head, yellow bill, black legs, shot in an Osiar yard, called
+ by Sr. Tho. for distinction sake silerella," the drawing of which
+ he acknowledges he had received. Pennant, 1768 ("Brit. Zool.," i.,
+ p. 165), follows Edwards ("Nat. Hist. of Birds," &c., 1745), who
+ classes it with the Laniidĉ, and it was not till long after, and as
+ the result of much discussion, that it was finally established as
+ the only representative of a new genus under the name of _Panurus
+ biarmicus_. The local name is Reed Pheasant, but Browne's name of
+ Silerella seems an exceedingly appropriate one.
+
+[p. 17 resumed.] A Dorhawke[42] or kind of Accipiter muscarius conceiued
+to haue its name from feeding upon flies & beetles. of a woodcock colour
+but paned like an Hawke a very litle poynted bill. large throat.
+breedeth with us & layes a maruellous handsome spotted egge. Though I
+haue opened many I could neuer find anything considerable in their
+mawes. caprimulgus.
+
+ [42] Browne seems to have been much interested in this remarkable
+ bird, and mentions it again in his second and third letters to
+ Merrett, especially in the latter; he calls it Caprimulgus, but
+ conceives it to be a kind of Accipiter, _muscarius_, or
+ _cantharophagus_, "in brief" [?] "_avis rostratula gutturosa_,
+ _quasi coxans_, _scarabĉis vescens_, _sub vesperam volans_, _ovum
+ speciassisimum excludens_," a fair specimen of the descriptive
+ method of the time. Although he used the name Caprimulgus, it will
+ be observed that he does not mention the "vulgar error" which led
+ to its being so called. Merrett includes this species in the
+ _Pinax_ under the name of "Caprimulgus, or the Goat-sucker," but in
+ a letter to Browne tells him he knows no Hawk called a Dorhawk.
+
+[_Fol. 18._] Auis Trogloditica[43] or Chock a small bird mixed of black
+& white & breeding in cony borrouges whereof the warrens are full from
+April to September. at which time they leaue the country. they are taken
+with an Hobby and a net and are a very good dish.
+
+ [43] The Wheatear is here referred to; the name _trogloditica_
+ would seem to be more appropriate in this country, having reference
+ to its habits of nesting in "Cony borroughs," than that of
+ _ĉnanthe_, as applied to it by those who knew it as frequenting the
+ Continental vineyards. A name still, or recently in use in West
+ Norfolk, is Cony-chuck.
+
+Spermologus. [_sic_] Rookes wch by reason of the [in reason of _crossed
+out_] great quantitie of corn feilds & Rooke groues are in great plentie
+the yong ones are co[=m]only eaten sometimes sold in norwich market &
+many are killd for their Liuers in order to cure of the Rickets.
+
+Crowes[44] as euerywhere and also the coruus variegatus or pyed crowe
+with dunne & black interchangeably they come in the winter & depart in
+the summer & seeme to bee the same wch clusius discribeth in the faro
+Islands from whence perhaps these come. [they are _crossed out_] and I
+have seen them [_written above_] very co[=m]on in Ireland, butt not
+known in many parts of England.
+
+ [44] The Crow (_Corvus corone_) is much less common in Norfolk than
+ formerly, but it still nests here in a few scattered localities.
+ _C. cornix_, the Hooded, Norway, Danish, or "Royston" Crow, is an
+ autumn immigrant as of yore, but not especially from the Faröe
+ Islands; both species (or forms as by some regarded) are immigrants
+ from the east, but the latter, as a rule, occupies a more northern
+ range than the former. The Raven (_C. corax_) is now a very rare
+ visitor to Norfolk; it is probable that it last nested in this
+ county in the year 1859. The Jackdaw, or Caddow, is common enough,
+ but the Chough (_Pyrrhocorax graculus_) is quite unknown in
+ Norfolk. Although the Magpie must have been well known to Browne I
+ find no mention of it in these notes.
+
+Coruus maior Rauens in good plentie about the citty wch makes so few
+Kites to bee seen hereabout. they build in woods very early & lay egges
+in februarie.
+
+Among the many monedulas or Jackdawes I could neuer in these parts
+obserue the pyrrhocorax or cornish chough with red leggs & bill to bee
+co[=m]only seen in Cornwall. & though there bee heere very great [num
+_crossed out_] store of partridges yet [not _crossed out_] the french
+Red leggd partridge[45] is not to bee met with [heere _crossed out_].
+the Ralla or Rayle[46] wee haue counted a dayntie dish. as also no small
+number of Quayles. the Heathpoult[47] co[=m]on in the north is vnknown
+heere as also the Grous. though I haue heard some haue been seen about
+Lynne. the calandrier or great [_Fol. 19_] great [_sic_] crested lark
+Galerita I haue not met with heere though with 3 other sorts [of Larkes
+_written above_] the ground lark woodlark & titlark.
+
+ [45] The Red-legged Partridge is now common enough; it was
+ introduced into the Eastern Counties at Sudbourne and Rendlesham,
+ in East Suffolk, in or about the year 1770, by both the Marquis of
+ Hertford and Lord Rendlesham. How quickly they established
+ themselves may be judged from the fact that in the season of 1806-7
+ of 1,927 Partridges killed at Rendlesham 112 were Red legs, but
+ they do not seem to have spread very far. A second introduction,
+ this time into West Suffolk, much nearer to the Norfolk border, at
+ and about Culford, was effected in the year 1823, and from this
+ centre they rapidly spread into Norfolk, in which county also
+ others were imported by the resident proprietors.
+
+ [46] The Land Rail (_Crex pratensis_) or Daker hen, is doubtless
+ here referred to, as the Water Rail has already been mentioned (p.
+ 15 _ante_) as "a kind of _Ralla aquatica_." This bird is a summer
+ visitor, by no means common and very uncertain in its numbers. The
+ same applies to the Quail, which appears to be less frequent than
+ formerly, no doubt from the great destruction on the Mediterranean
+ coast in spring of the birds migrating to England. In the summer
+ and autumn of 1870 we had an unusual influx of these latter birds.
+
+ [47] How far the indigenous race of Blackgame, which undoubtedly
+ lingered for many years about Wolferton and Sandringham, still
+ exists, it is difficult to say; examples turn up occasionally, but
+ so many of these birds have been introduced and turned off in
+ different parts of the county in the course of the past forty
+ years, that it is impossible to speak with certainty.
+
+Stares or starlings in great numbers. most remarkable in their [great
+_crossed out_] numerous [_written above_] flocks [about the _crossed
+out_] wch I haue obserued about the Autumne when they roost at night [up
+_crossed out_] in the marshes in safe place upon reeds & alders. wch to
+obserue I went to the marshes about sunne set. where standing by their
+vsuall place of resort I obserued very many flocks flying from all
+quarters. wch in lesse than an howers space came all in & settled in
+innumerable [quantitie _crossed out_] numbers [_written below_] in a
+small compasse.
+
+Great varietie of finches[48] and other small birds whereof one very
+small [one _crossed out_] calld a whinne bird marked with fine yellow
+spotts & lesser than a wren. there is also a small bird called a chipper
+somewhat resembling the former wch comes in the spring & feeds upon the
+first buddings of birches & other early trees.
+
+ [48] In his fifth letter to Merrett Browne says, "I confess for
+ such little birds I am much unsatisfied on the names given to many
+ by countrymen and uncertain what to give them myself." This is
+ painfully apparent in the cases of the two little birds here
+ referred to as the "Whinne-bird" and the "Chipper." From the
+ description of the former, "marked with fine yellow spots and
+ lesser than a Wren," also with a "shining yellow spot on the back
+ of the head," it seems likely that the Gold-crested Wren is
+ intended. The Chipper, he says, "comes in the spring and feeds upon
+ the first buddings of birches and other early trees;" he also calls
+ it "_Betulĉ carptor_," and says that he sends a drawing to Merrett;
+ a third mention is as follows: "That which I called a _Betulĉ
+ carptor_, and should rather have called it _Alni carptor_ ... it
+ feeds upon alder buds, nucaments, or seeds, which grow plentifully
+ here; they fly in little flocks." I can only suggest that this bird
+ may be the Siskin, which fairly answers the description. It visits
+ us in small flocks on its way north very early in the year, feeding
+ upon the seeds of the alder, birch, and larch trees. One would
+ however have thought that the Siskin would have been well known to
+ Browne, as it evidently was to Turner, Willughby, and Ray. Merrett
+ mentions it under Turner's name of "Luteola."
+
+A kind of Anthus [or _crossed out_] Goldfinch [_written above_] or
+fooles coat co[=m]only calld a drawe water. finely marked with red &
+yellowe & a white bill. wch they take with trap cages in norwich gardens
+& fastning a chaine about them tyed to a box of water it makes a shift
+with bill and legge to draw up the water unto it from the litle pot
+hanging [abot the length of _crossed out_] by the chaine about a foote
+[downe _crossed out_] belowe.
+
+[The account of the Roller, which is written on smaller paper, will be
+found improperly inserted among the Fishes, between pp. 30 and 32 as
+follows:--]
+
+[_Fol. 31._] On the xiiii of May 1664 a very rare bird was sent mee kild
+about crostwick wch seemed to bee some kind of Jay.[49] the bill was
+black strong and bigger then a Jayes somewhat yellowe clawes tippd
+black. 3 before and one clawe behind the whole bird not so bigge as a
+Jaye [the _crossed out_.]
+
+ [49] This note is interesting as the first record of the occurrence
+ of the Roller in Britain, to which country it is a rare wanderer.
+ Although it had long been known on the Continent, its identity
+ seems to have puzzled Browne, and he imagines (as did others, both
+ before and after him,) it to be some kind of Jay; later, in his
+ second letter to Merrett (January, 1668), he says that it answers
+ to the description of _Garrulus argentoratensis_ (the name given by
+ Aldrovandus to whom it was known), and calls it "the Parrot-jay."
+ This is five years after the original note was made, and we find
+ that the words _Garrulus argentoratensis_, written by the same hand
+ but with a different pen and ink, have been added subsequently,
+ doubtless as the result of further information. In another letter
+ he mentions having sent the bird to Merrett, but adds, "If you have
+ it before I should bee content to have it againe otherwise you may
+ please keep it."
+
+The head neck & throat of a violet colour the back upper parts of the
+wing of a russet yellowe the fore & part of the wing azure succeeded
+downward by a greenish blewe then on the flying feathers bright blewe
+the lower parts of the wing outwardly of a browne [the _crossed out_]
+inwardly of a merry blewe the belly a light faynt blewe the back toward
+the tayle of a purple blewe the tayle eleuen fethers of a greenish
+coulour the extremities of the outward fethers thereof white wth an
+eye[K] of greene. Garrulus Argentoratensis [_the name added in a
+different ink and pen_].
+
+ [K] Tinge, shade, particularly a slight tint.--"Imp. Dict."
+
+
+
+
+NOTES ON CERTAIN FISHES AND MARINE ANIMALS FOUND IN NORFOLK.
+
+[MS. SLOAN. 1882. FOL. 145-146. ALTERED TO 21 AND 22, AND 1830 FOL.
+23-30 AND 32-38.]
+
+ [The introductory remarks, paragraphs one to three, will be
+ found in the volume of the Sloane MSS. numbered 1882 (labelled
+ "Notes on Generation"), on pages 145 and 146, which are altered
+ to 21 and 22. They were placed in their present position by
+ Wilkin, but although appropriate, there is nothing to show that
+ they belong to the set of notes here reproduced, and they may
+ form memoranda for the beginning of some essay never completed.
+ The contents of the volume in question are of a very
+ miscellaneous character, and consist of fragmentary notes, which
+ appear to be memoranda jotted down at random.]
+
+
+[_Fol. 21/145._] It may well seeme no easie matter to giue any
+considerable account of fishes and animals of the sea wherein tis sayd
+that there are things creeping innumerable both small and great beasts
+because they liue in an element wherein they are not so easely
+discouerable notwithstanding probable it is that after this long
+nauigation search of the ocean bayes creeks Estuaries and riuers that
+there is scarce any fish butt hath been seen by some man for the large &
+breathing sort thereof do sometimes discouer themselues aboue water and
+the other are in such numbers that some at one time or other they are
+discouered and taken euen the most barbarous nations being much addicted
+to fishing and in America and the new discouered world the people were
+well acquantd with fishes of sea and riuers, and the fishes thereof haue
+been since described by industrious writers.
+
+Pliny seemes to short in the estimate of their number in the ocean, who
+recons up butt one hundred & seventie six species. butt the seas being
+now farther known & searched [_21/145 verso_] Bellonius much enlargeth.
+
+and in his booke of Birds thus deliuereth himself allthough I think it
+impossible to reduce the same vnto a certain number yet I may freelie
+say that tis beyond the power of man to find out more than fiue hundred
+sorts [kinds _written above_] of fishes three hundred sorts of birds
+more than three hundred sorts of fourfoted animalls and fortie
+diversities of serpents.[50]
+
+ [50] This estimate of the number of species of birds and fishes
+ existing is amusing in the light of the present knowledge of the
+ subject. Of course any such estimate can only be approximate, and
+ open to constant emendation; but according to a statement in the
+ "Zoological Record" of 1896, it was believed that there were
+ something like 386,000 described species: 2,500 of which are
+ mammals, 12,500 birds, 4,400 reptilia and batrachia, 12,000 fishes,
+ 50,000 mollusca, 20,000 crustacea, and 250,000 insecta; the smaller
+ divisions I have omitted. And whereas only about 10,000 species of
+ plants were known to Linnĉus, Professor Vines in his address to the
+ Botanical section at the Bradford meeting of the British
+ Association, 1900, states that the approximate number of recognised
+ plants at present existing is 175,596; but this is far short of the
+ total of existing species. Professor Saccardo states that there are
+ 250,000 fungi alone, and that the number of existing species in
+ other groups would bring the total up to over 400,000.
+
+
+[SLOANE MSS. 1830, FOL. 23-38.]
+
+[_Fol. 23._] Of fishes sometimes the larger sort are taken or come
+ashoar. A spermaceti whale[51] of 62 foote long neere Welles. another of
+the same kind 20 yeares before at Hunstanton. & not farre of 8 or nine
+came ashoare & 2 had yong ones after they were forsaken by ye water.
+
+ [51] In the muniment room at Hunstanton Hall there exists a book of
+ MSS. notes relating to their estates, kept by Sir Hamon and Sir
+ Nicholas le Strange, between the years 1612 and 1723. From this
+ book Mr. Hamon le Strange has been good enough to send me an
+ extract containing the full particulars of the stranding and
+ disposal of a Sperm Whale 57 feet long, which came ashore on their
+ Manor of Holme, on the 6th December, 1626, the skull of which is
+ still in the courtyard at Hunstanton Hall.
+
+ Browne had not come to reside in Norwich at that time, and the
+ chapter on the Spermaceti Whale in his _Pseudodoxia Epidemica_, was
+ inspired by a subsequent occurrence of the same kind, for, as
+ appears from the above note, a larger individual, 62 feet long,
+ came ashore at Wells 20 years later, which he says led him to
+ further inquiry. This would indicate about the year 1646 as the
+ date of the latter occurrence, whereas in his third letter to
+ Merrett, written in 1668, he states that it happened "about 12
+ years ago," or in 1656. There is probably an error in one of these
+ dates.
+
+ Another example seems to have been found at Yarmouth about the year
+ 1652, for we find Browne writing in that year for particulars of
+ its "cutting up." (See Appendix E.)
+
+ In the postscript to a letter also in the muniment room at
+ Hunstanton, dated June 11th, 1653, written to Sir Hamon le Strange,
+ who had been consulting him professionally, Browne says: "I pray
+ you at your leisure doe mee the honor to informe mee how long agoe
+ the Spermaceti Whale was cast upon your shoare & whether you had
+ any spermm with in any other part butt the head." It will be
+ noticed that in both the letters referred to he is anxious to
+ ascertain in what part of the body the "sperm" was situated,
+ doubtless for the purpose of confuting the "vulgar conceit" as to
+ the origin of the "sperm" referred to in the second paragraph of
+ his treatise in the _Pseudodoxia_. His investigations also probably
+ first led to a certain knowledge as to the nature of the food of
+ this animal.
+
+ These, however, although the first to be recorded in this county,
+ were not the first or only occurrences of the kind, for there is in
+ the parish church of Great Yarmouth the base of the skull of a
+ Sperm Whale, used as a chair, for the painting of which a charge of
+ five shillings appears in the churchwardens' accounts for the year
+ 1606; many such events in European waters are to be found recorded.
+
+ But the most interesting circumstance with regard to these whales
+ is the statement that "two had yong ones after they were forsaken
+ by the water." This event renders it highly improbable that they
+ were Sperm Whales, for the stragglers of that species which have
+ been met with in our waters, and indeed in the northern seas
+ generally, have been almost invariably solitary males, or, in one
+ or two instances "schools" of young males. In the only instance in
+ which both sexes were found, the school was composed I believe of
+ immature individuals. (_Vide_ J. Anderson, "Nachrichten von Island,
+ Grönland, und der Strasse Davis," Frantfurt (1747), p. 248.)
+ Moreover, this view is confirmed by a letter which will be found in
+ Appendix B., where the following passage occurs:--"And not only
+ whales, but grampusses have been taken in this Estuarie ... and
+ about twenty years ago four were run ashore near Hunstanton, and
+ two had young ones after they had come to land." A so-called
+ Grampus which came ashore on the 21st July, 1700, was from a
+ description and drawing in the le Strange MS. above quoted, a male
+ _Hyperoodon rostratus_, apparently nearly adult.
+
+ The Grampus (_Orca gladiator_) (mentioned in the next paragraph) is
+ frequently met with in the British seas, and has repeatedly
+ occurred on the Norfolk coast. Some early occurrences are on
+ record, for instance in Mackerell's "History of Lynn," twelve are
+ said to have come ashore near that town in 1636, and another in
+ 1680. Two very juvenile examples were taken off Yarmouth in
+ November 1894.
+
+A grampus aboue 16 foot long taken at yarmouth [3 or _crossed out_] 4
+yeares agoe.
+
+The Tursio or porpose is co[=m]on the Dolphin[52] more rare though
+sometimes taken wch many confound with the porpose. butt it hath a more
+waued line along the skinne sharper toward ye tayle the head longer and
+nose more extended wch maketh good the figure of Rondeletius. the flesh
+more red & [fa _crossed out_] well cooked of very good taste to most
+palates & exceedeth that of porpose.
+
+ [52] There can be no doubt that the Common Dolphin (_Delphinus
+ delphis_) is here referred to, and indeed this species might
+ reasonably be expected to be met with on our coast, as its range
+ extends at least as far to the north as the Scandinavian waters,
+ but so far as the writer is aware Browne's is the only record of
+ its having been met with in Norfolk. The White-beaked Dolphin (_D.
+ albirostris_) is not unfrequent, but it is clear that Browne does
+ not refer to that species.
+
+ In the "Vulgar Errors," Browne devotes a whole chapter (chapter ii.
+ of the fifth book) to a learned treatise on the "Picture of
+ Dolphins," and in one of the letters to his son Edward (Sloane
+ MSS., 1847), dated June 14th [1676?], he writes feelingly as an
+ anatomist, evidently fearing that a specimen then available might
+ be wasted, instead of being reserved for scientific purposes; for,
+ says he, "if the dolphin were to be showed for money in Norwich,
+ little would bee got; if they showed it in London they are like to
+ take out the viscera, and salt the fish, and then the dissection
+ will be unconsiderable." He then refers to the dolphin "opened when
+ the King was here," and describes its anatomical peculiarities,
+ adding that Dame Browne cooked the flesh "so as to make an
+ excellent savory dish of it," and that "collars" thereof (steaks
+ cut transversely) being sent to the King, who was then at
+ Newmarket, for his table, they "were well liked of." It is evident
+ therefore that he was present at the dissection of two of these
+ animals.
+
+The vitulus marinus[53] seacalf or seale wch is often taken sleeping on
+the shoare [4 _crossed out_] 5 [_written above_] yeares agoe one was
+shot in the riuer of norwich about surlingham [wh _crossed out_] ferry
+having continued in the riuer for diuers moneths before being an
+Amphibious animal it may bee caryed about aliue & kept long if it can
+bee brought to feed some haue been kept many moneths in ponds. the
+pizzell the bladder the cartilago ensiformis the figure of the Throttle
+the clusterd & racemous forme of the kidneys [_Fol. 24_] the flat &
+compressed heart are remarkable in it. in stomaks of all that I have
+opened I have found many [short _crossed out_] wormes.
+
+ [53] There is in the present day a considerable number of Common
+ Seals inhabiting the sand-banks of the Wash between the Norfolk and
+ Lincolnshire coasts, and they are frequently captured by the
+ fishermen; nor has the habit of straying into fresh-water deserted
+ them, for in recent years they have been taken in the River Ouse at
+ Bluntisham, forty miles from the sea. Three other species of Seal
+ have been taken on the Norfolk coast, viz., _Phoca hispida_, _P.
+ barbata_, and _Halichoerus gryphus_.
+
+I haue also obserued a scolopendra cetacea[54] of about ten foot long
+answering to the figure in Rondeletius wch the mariners told me was
+taken in these seas.
+
+ [54] A Scolopendra, ten feet long, is at first rather startling,
+ but on referring to Rondeletius's _Libri de piscibus Marinis_ (lib.
+ xvi. p. 488), I find that under the name "Scolopendra" he includes
+ at least three distinct forms--i., _S. terrestris_, a centipede;
+ ii., _S. marina_, certain species of Nereidiform polychaet worms;
+ iii., _Scolopendra cetacea_, regarded as a Cetacean and figured
+ with a Cetacean blow-hole. With regard to this remarkable figure my
+ friend, Dr. S. F. Harmer, has favoured me with the following
+ note:--"In the account given Rondeletius is evidently writing from
+ report; the figure is also no doubt borrowed, and may have been
+ 'improved' when redrawn; it seems to me that it is based upon some
+ kind of Tunny, although he figures a Tunny earlier in the book
+ (lib. viii. p. 249). The idea of the lateral appendages might have
+ been derived from the dorsal and ventral finlets of a Tunny; but
+ the first four finlets on each side are imaginary structures, and
+ in a wrong position. I can offer no opinion with regard to the
+ nasal appendages." Jonston (_De piscibus_, p. 156, Tab. xliv.) also
+ gives a similar figure of _Scolopendra_ _Cetacea_, which appears to
+ be a further modification of Rondeletius's figure; here it has
+ teeth, shown like those of the Sperm Whale, and an extra dorsal-fin
+ is added; the number of lateral appendages is the same, and a
+ column of water proceeding from the blow-hole is falling gracefully
+ forward. It is worthy of notice that Rondeletius also figures the
+ Saw-fish [Pristis] with a blow-hole.
+
+A pristes or serra [_written above_] saw fish[55] taken about Lynne
+co[=m]only mistaken for a [sha _crossed out_] sword fish & answers the
+figure in Rondeletius.
+
+ [55] In the "Transactions of the Linnean Society," ii., p. 273, is
+ an essay by Latham "On the various species of Sawfish," but he does
+ not mention any British locality. So far as I am aware Browne's is
+ the only record of the occurrence of this southern species in
+ British waters, with the exception of a note in Fleming's "British
+ Animals," p. 164, where it is stated on the authority of the late
+ Dr. Walker's MS. "Adversaria" for 1769, that _Pristis antiquorum_
+ is "found sometimes in Loch Long," but Fleming adds that he has met
+ with no other proof of its ever having visited the British shores.
+ Browne mentions in his eighth letter to Merrett that he sends him a
+ "figure in little" of a _Pristis_ which he received of a Yarmouth
+ seaman, and is so precise in his statement that his fish was
+ _Pristis serra_ (the _Pristis antiquorum_ of Cuvier), that his
+ record cannot be disregarded. He specially guards against its being
+ mistaken for the Sword-fish (_Xiphias gladius_), which has been
+ taken on several occasions in our waters, and of which he gives
+ some interesting particulars.
+
+A sword fish or Xiphias or Gladius intangled in the Herring netts at
+yarmouth agreable unto the Icon in Johnstonus with a smooth sword not
+vnlike the Gladius of Rondeletius about a yard & half long, no teeth [n
+_crossed out_] eyes very remarkable enclosed in an hard cartilaginous
+couercle about ye bignesse of a good apple. ye vitreous humor plentifull
+the crystalline larger then a nutmegge [cleare _crossed out_] remaining
+cleare sweet & vntainted when the rest of the eye was vnder a deepe
+corruption wch wee kept clear & limpid many moneths vntill an hard frost
+split it & manifested the foliations thereof.
+
+It is not vnusuall to take seuerall sorts of canis or doggefishes[56]
+great and small wch pursue the shoale of herrings and other fish butt
+this yeare 1662 one was taken intangled in the Herring netts about 9
+foot in length, answering the last figure of Johnstonus lib 7 vnder the
+name of _canis carcherias alter_ & was by the teeth & 5 gills one kind
+of shark particularly [_Fol. 25_] remarkable in the vastnesse of the
+optick nerves & 3 conicall hard pillars wch supported the extraordinarie
+elevated nose wch wee haue reserued with the scull the seamen calld this
+kind a scrape.
+
+ [56] Various species of Dog-fish are frequent off the Norfolk coast
+ as elsewhere. The name "Sweet William" is applied to the larger
+ fish of this kind, especially to the Tope; this appears also to
+ have been the case in Pennant's time, for alluding to this
+ vernacular name he supposes it was applied in ironical allusion to
+ the offensive smell of their flesh and skin. They are objects of
+ great aversion among the fishermen, owing to the disturbance they
+ create among the shoals of fish, and the damage they do to both
+ nets and the enclosed fish. Scarcely a season passes but one or
+ more specimens of Browne's _Canis carcharias_, or, as modern
+ Ichthyologists call it, _Lamna cornubica_, the Porbeagle, being
+ entangled in the drift nets and landed with the herrings. One lies
+ on the fish-wharf at Lowestoft as I write this note on the 19th of
+ October, 1900, measuring 7 feet 10 inches in length. Jonston's
+ figure referred to by Browne is evidently intended for this
+ species, but he makes a slight error in the reference to the
+ _Historia Naturalis (De Piscibus et Cetis)_; it occurs in book v.,
+ and the figure is fig. 6 on Tab. vi., and it is marked _Canis
+ carcharias alius_ (not alter).
+
+Sturio or Sturgeon[57] so co[=m]on on the other side of the sea about
+the mouth of the elbe come seldome into our creekes though some haue
+been taken at yarmouth & more in the great [owse _crossed out_] Owse by
+Lynne butt their heads not so sharpe as represented in the Icons of
+Rondeletius & Johnstonus.
+
+ [57] So great is the variation in the snout of the Sturgeon, that
+ Dr. Parnell in his excellent essay on "The Fishes of the District
+ of the Forth," describes the Sharp-nosed Sturgeon as a distinct
+ species under the name of _Acipenser sturio_, and the broad-nosed
+ form he calls _A. latirostris_. His views, however, have not been
+ generally accepted, and only one British species is recognised. The
+ Sharp-nosed variety has been taken here, but the normal form is
+ much more frequent.
+
+Sometimes wee meet with a mola or moonefish[58] so called from some
+resemblance it hath [from _crossed out_] of a crescent in the extreme
+part of the body from one finne unto another one being taken neere the
+shoare at yarmouth before breake of day seemed to shiuer & grunt like an
+hogge as Authors deliuer of it the flesh being hard & neruous it is not
+like to afford a good dish butt from the Liuer wch is [white _crossed
+out_] large white & tender somewhat [wee _crossed out_] may bee expected
+[for _crossed out_] the gills of these fishes wee found thick beset with
+a kind of sealowse. [Added subsequently] in the yeare 1667 a mola was
+taken at monsley wch weighed 2 [p _crossed out_] hundred pound.
+
+ [58] This fish (_Orthagoriscus mola_), which we know as the
+ Sun-fish, has been repeatedly taken here. For an account of its
+ parasites see Cobbold on the "Sun-fish as a host," "Intellectual
+ Observer," ii., p. 82; also Day, "Brit. Fishes," ii., p. 275.
+ According to Dr. Spencer Cobbold the Sun-fish is infested by nine
+ species of Helminths, three of which are mostly found attached to
+ the gills, while a fourth adheres to the surface of the body.
+
+The Rana piscatrix or frogge fish[59] is sometimes found in a very large
+magnitude & wee haue taken the [paynes _crossed out_] care [_written
+above_] to haue them clend & stuffed. wherein wee obserued all the
+appendices whereby the[y] cach fishes butt much larger then are
+discribed in the Icons of Johnstonus tab xi fig 8.
+
+ [59] Both this species and the Wolf-fish are well known upon our
+ coast.
+
+[_Fol. 26_] The sea [wollf _crossed out_] wolf or Lupus nostras of
+Schoneueldus remarkable for its spotted skinne & notable teeth incisors
+Dogteeth & grinders the dogteeth [in the _crossed out_] both in the
+jawes & palate scarce answerable by any fish of that bulk for [strength
+_crossed out_] the like disposure strength & soliditie.
+
+Mustela marina[60] called by some a wesell ling wch salted & dryed
+becomes a good Lenten dish.
+
+ [60] Some member of the family _Gadidĉ_ is here referred to,
+ probably the five-bearded Rockling, _Motella mustela_, or Brown
+ Whistle-fish of Pennant, which is occasionally taken by our
+ fishermen, but is by no means common.
+
+A Lump or Lumpus Anglorum so named by Aldrouandus by some esteemed a
+festiuall dish though it affordeth butt a glutinous jellie & the skinne
+is beset with stony knobs after no certaine order ours most answereth
+the first figure in the xiii table of Johnstonus butt seemes more round
+& arcuated then that figure makes it.
+
+Before the herrings there co[=m]only cometh a fish about a foot long by
+the fish man called an horse[61] resembling in all poynts the Trachurus
+of Rondeletius of a mixed shape between a mackerell & an herring.
+obseruable from [an oblique bo _crossed out_] its greene eyes rarely
+skye colored back after it is kept a day & an oblique bony line running
+on ye outside from the gills vnto ye tayle. a drye & hard dish butt
+makes an handsome picture.
+
+ [61] This is the Horse Mackerel, or Scad, _Caranx trachurus_; a
+ handsome fish and common enough, especially off Sheringham, but not
+ much esteemed for the table.
+
+The Rubelliones or Rochets[62] butt thinly met with on this coast. the
+gornart cuculus or Lyrĉ species more often wch they seldome eat butt
+bending the back & sprdding the finnes into a liuely posture do hang
+them up in their howses.
+
+ [62] Fish of the Gurnard kind are here referred to. The Rochet of
+ Pennant is the Red Gurnard, _Trigla cuculus_; he calls _T. lyra_
+ the Piper. Large numbers of various species of Gurnard are brought
+ in by our trawlers and sell readily, especially the Sapphirine
+ Gurnard, or Tub-fish (_T. hirundo_), which is known as the "Lachet"
+ on our coast; it reaches a large size, and seems to be much in
+ demand for the table. In spring the colours are very brilliant, and
+ they are frequently seen on the fish stalls with their pectoral
+ fins extended as Browne describes.
+
+[_Fol. 27._] Beside the co[=m]on mullus[63] or mullet there is another
+not vnfrequent wch some call a cunny fish butt rather a red muellett of
+a flosculous redde & somewhat rough on the scales answering the
+discription of [Rond _crossed out_] Icon of Rondeletius vnder the name
+of mullus ruber asper [no _crossed out_] butt not the tast of the
+vsually knowne mullet as [being butt _crossed out_] affording butt a
+drye & leane bitt.
+
+ [63] The Common Mullet I take to be the Grey Mullet (_Mugil
+ capito_), which is at times plentiful on our coast, coming into
+ Breydon and the mouths of the rivers, but the Red Mullet (_Mullus
+ barbatus_) is far less frequently met with. In his third letter to
+ Merrett, Browne says, "There is of them _maior_ and _minor_," the
+ latter probably being the variety known as the Surmullet, by far
+ the most frequently met with here.
+
+Seuerall sorts of fishes[64] there are wch [bear _crossed out_] do
+[_written above_] or may beare the names of seawoodcocks as the Acus
+maior scolopax & saurus. the saurus wee sometimes meet with yonge.
+Rondeletius confesseth it a very rare fish somewhat resembling the Acus
+or needlefish before & a makerell behind. wee have kept one dryed many
+yeares agoe.
+
+ [64] The Saurus of Rondeletius appears to be the Skipper or
+ Saury-pike (_Scombresox saurus_) of modern authors. _Acus major_ is
+ the Gar-fish or Greenback (_Belone vulgaris_); this is the _Acus
+ primus_ of Rondeletius, Dr. Harmer has been good enough to send me
+ the following note on Rondeletius's figures:--"_De Acus secunda
+ specie_" (lib. viii. p. 229). "Two species are figured; the upper
+ figure appears to represent _Siphonostoma typhle_, and the lower
+ one _S. acus_. Günther ('Brit. Mus. Cat.,' viii. p. 157) gives a
+ reference to Rondeletius in his synonyms of _S. acer_ without
+ indicating that the latter figures two species. Under _S. typhle_
+ (p. 154) he gives the synonym _Syngnathus rondeletii_, De la Roche.
+ A reference to Delaroche ('Ann. Mus. Hist. Nat., Paris,' xiii, 1809
+ p. 324, Pl. xxi. fig. 5) shows that _S. rondeletii_ is identified
+ with the first figure on p. 229 of Rondeletius; and it may thus be
+ concluded that Günther agrees with this conclusion. It seems
+ therefore probable that Browne's Acus of Aristotle refers to _S.
+ typhle_."
+
+The Acus maior calld by some a garfish & greenback answering ye figure
+of Rondeletius under the name of Acus prima species remarkable for its
+quadrangular figure and verdigreece green back bone.
+
+[L] A lesser sort of Acus [wee _crossed out_] maior or primĉ specĉei wee
+meet with [answering the saurus of Rondeletius _crossed out_] much
+shorter then the co[=m]on garfish & in taking out the spine wee found it
+not green as in the greater & much answering the saurus of Rondeletius.
+
+ [L] This and the next paragraph on the back of Fol. 26 are in
+ different ink and smaller writing though in the same hand, and
+ appear to have been added subsequently. The first paragraph is
+ omitted by Wilkin.
+
+A scolopax[65] or sea woodcock of Rondeletius was giuen mee by a seaman
+of these seas. about 3 inches long & seemes to bee one kind of Acus or
+needlefish answering the discription of Rondeletius.
+
+ [65] The Scolopax, or Sea Woodcock, is clearly _Centriscus
+ scolopax_, a very rare fish in the British seas, and it would have
+ been well had Browne given a more precise account of the origin of
+ his specimen.
+
+The Acus of Aristotle [_see Note 64_] lesser thinner corticated &
+sexangular by diuers calld an addercock & somewhat resembling a snake
+ours more plainly finned then Rondeletius discribeth it.
+
+A little corticated fish[66] about [4 inches _crossed out_] 3 or 4
+inches long [_several words smeared out_] ours answering that wch is
+named piscis octangularis by wormius, cataphractus by Schoneueldeus.
+octagonius versus caput, versus caudam hexagonius.
+
+ [66] Doubtless the Armed Bull-head, or Pogge, _Agonus
+ cataphractus_. A MS. note in Berkenhout says it was called at
+ Lowestoft a Beetle-head (1769).
+
+[_Fol. 28._] The faber marinus[67] sometimes found very large answering
+ye figure of Rondeletius. which though hee mentioneth as a rare fish &
+to be found in the Atlantick & Gaditane ocean yet wee often meet with it
+in these seas co[=m]only calld a peterfish hauing [a _crossed out_] one
+[_written above_] black spot on ether side the body conceued the
+perpetuall signature from the impression of St Peters fingers or to
+resemble the 2 peeces of money wch St Peter tooke out of this fish
+remarkable also from its disproportionable mouth & many hard prickles
+about other parts.
+
+ [67] _Zeus faber_, the Dory. Many, usually small ones, are brought
+ in by our fishermen.
+
+A kind of scorpius marinus[68] a rough prickly & monstrous headed fish 6
+8 or 12 inches long answerable vnto the figure of Schoneueldeus.
+
+ [68] _Cottus scorpius_, Father Lasher, commonly taken by the
+ shrimpers.
+
+A sting fish[69] wiuer or kind of ophidion or Araneus slender, narrowe
+headed about 4 inches long wth a sharpe small prickly finne along the
+back which often venemously pricketh the hands of fishermen.
+
+ [69] Probably from its size the Lesser Weever, _Trachinus vipera_,
+ as also the _Draco minor_ of Jonstoni. A common fish in our waters.
+ Large numbers of the Greater Weever, _T. draco_, are brought in by
+ the trawlers.
+
+Aphia cobites marina[70] or sea Loche.
+
+ [70] One of the Gobies. Day, "Brit. Fishes," i., p. 169, supposes
+ the _Aphya cobites_ of Rondeletius (p. 20) to be the White Goby,
+ _A. pellucida_; Pennant has _A. cobites_ as a synonym for the
+ Spotted Goby (_G. minutus_) and the Sea Gudgeons, Black Gobies (_G.
+ niger_), but at that time there was no very nice distinction of the
+ members of this genus. The Sea Miller's Thumb is probably the
+ Shanny (_Blennius pholis_). _Alosa_, is the Allis Shad (_Culpea
+ alosa_, L.), not uncommon (_see Note 74_).
+
+Blennus a sea millars thumb.
+
+Funduli marini sea gogions.
+
+Alosĉ or chads to bee met with about Lynne.
+
+Spinachus or smelt[71] in greatest plentie about Lynne butt [co[=m]on on
+yarmouth coast _crossed out_] where they haue also a small fish calld a
+primme answering in [all _crossed out_] tast & shape a smelt & perhaps
+are butt the yonger sort thereof.
+
+ [71] The Smelt, _Osmerus eperlanus_, is abundant in the shallow
+ waters and estuaries on the Norfolk coast in spring, ascending the
+ fresh-water rivers to spawn. The small fish called a Primme by
+ Browne, may be the Atherine (_Atherina presbyter_), which is also
+ found in our waters, where it is often mistaken for the Smelt, but
+ I have not heard it called by the former name.
+
+[_Fol 29._] Aselli or cods of seuerall sorts. Asellus albus or whitings
+in great plentie. Asellus niger carbonarius or [col _crossed out_] coale
+fish. Asellus minor Schoneueldei callarias pliny or Haydocks with many
+more also a weed fish somewhat like an haydock butt larger & dryer meat.
+A Basse also much resembling a flatter kind of Cod.[72]
+
+ [72] The first three fishes named in this paragraph need no
+ comment; the Weed-fish is doubtless a local name, but for what
+ species I cannot discover. The Bass, _Labrax lupus_ (Cuv.), is, as
+ might be expected from the nature of our coast, by no means common
+ here.
+
+Scombri are makerells[73] in greate plentie a dish much desired butt if
+as Rondeletius affirmeth they feed upon sea starres & squalders (_see
+Note 90_) there may bee some doubt whether their flesh bee without some
+ill qualitie sometimes they are of a very large size & one was taken
+this yeare 1668 wch was by measure an ell long and of ye length of a
+good salmon, at Lestoffe.
+
+ [73] The latter part of this paragraph, beginning, "Sometimes they
+ are of a very large size," is written on the left-hand side of the
+ opening, and is evidently a subsequent addition. One would be
+ inclined to think from the great size of the fish here recorded (3
+ ft. 9 in.), that it may have been a species of Tunny, or even a
+ Bonito, both of which have been taken on the Norfolk coast.
+ Seventeen inches is a large mackerel.
+
+Herrings departed sprats or sardĉ not long after succeed in great
+plentie wch are taken with smaller nets [& dryed _crossed out_] & smoakd
+& dryed like herrings become a [daint _crossed out_] sapid bitt &
+vendible abroad.
+
+Among these are found Bleakes or bliccĉ[74] a thinne herring like fishe
+wch some will also think to bee young herrings. And though the sea
+aboundeth not with pilchards, yet they are co[=m]only taken among
+herrings. butt few esteeme thereof or eat them.
+
+ [74] It is quite evident that the fish referred to here, and again
+ in the sixth letter to Merrett, is not the true Bleak (_Alburnus
+ lucideus_) of our freshwaters. It seems that the young of some
+ species of Clupeoid was thus known, for I find it stated in a MS.
+ note in a copy of Berkenhout's "Outlines of the Natural History of
+ Great Britain," (1769), in the possession of Mr. T. E. Gunn, that
+ the Bleak and the Sprat are often caught together in the sea at
+ Aldeburgh (Suffolk) in November, and the writer of the note adds,
+ "the Bleak is larger than the Sprat, its eyes are larger, and the
+ upper part of its belly serrated." I think from this description
+ and from Browne's remarks, that the young of a species of Shad must
+ have been mistaken for the Bleak, which although found low down in
+ our rivers almost to where the salt tide mingles with the fresh,
+ does not I believe enter the salt water.
+
+Congers are not so co[=m]on on these coasts as on many seas about
+England, butt are often found upon the north coast of Norfolk, & in
+frostie wether left in pulks & plashes upon the ebbe of the sea.
+
+[_Fol. 30._] The sand eels Anglorum of Aldrouandus, or Tobianus of
+Schoneueldeus co[=m]only called smoulds taken out of the sea sands with
+forks & rakes about Blakeney and Burnham a small round slender fish
+about 3 or 4 inches long as bigge as a small Tobacco pipe a very dayntie
+dish.
+
+Pungitius marinus[75] or sea bansticle hauing a prickle one each side
+the smallest fish of the sea about an inch long sometimes drawne ashoare
+with netts together with weeds & pargaments[M] of the sea.
+
+ [75] The smallest of the genus _Gasterosteus_, or Stanstickles, is
+ _G. pungitius_, the ten-spined Stickleback, but this fish is two
+ inches long when full grown. All the species seem to be more or
+ less indifferent to the salinity of the water. The fifteen-spined
+ Stickleback, _G. spinachia_, is also sometimes taken by the
+ shrimpers, and is the most truly marine species, but is by no means
+ "the smallest fish of the sea."
+
+ [M] This word which Wilkin renders "fragments," is doubtless from
+ the Latin _pergamentum_, and it seems likely that Browne had in
+ view certain sea-weeds, possibly _Laminaria_ or _Ulva_ which,
+ especially when dry, present somewhat the appearance and texture of
+ parchment.
+
+Many sorts of flat fishes[76] The pastinaca oxyrinchus with a long &
+strong aculeus in the tayle conceuud of speciall venome & virtues.
+
+ [76] _Pastinaca oxyrinchus_ appears to be the Sting Ray (_Trygon
+ pastinaca_); _Raia clavata_, the Thornback; _R. oculata_, the
+ Spotted Ray (_R. maculata_); _R. aspera_; the Shagreen Ray? (_R.
+ fullonica_).
+
+Severall sorts of Raia's skates & Thornebacks the Raia clauata
+oxyrinchus, raia oculata, aspera, spinosa fullonica.
+
+The great Rhombus or Turbot aculeatus & leuis.
+
+The passer or place.
+
+Butts of various kinds.
+
+The passer squamosus Bret Bretcock[77] & skulls comparable in taste and
+delicacy vnto the soale.
+
+ [77] The Brill, _Rhombus lĉvis_ (Lin.), _Passer asper squamosus___,
+ Rondl., formerly known as the Brett, Bretcock, Skull, or Pearl.
+
+The Buglossus solea or soale[78] plana & oculata as also the Lingula or
+small soale all in very great plentie.
+
+ [78] _Solea vulgaris_, the Common Sole. The "_Lingula_, or small
+ Sole," is probably the _Solea variegata_, Flem., the _S. parva sive
+ Lingula_ of Rond. Jonston figures "_Solea lingulata_," Tab. xx.,
+ fig. 12, but I am uncertain what species is intended. It is
+ possible that Browne may have Latinised the trade name by which
+ small Soles are known in the market as "slips" and "tongues." What
+ other species he may have wished to indicate as "plana" and
+ "oculata" it is difficult to determine.
+
+Sometimes a fish aboue half a yard long like a butt[79] or soale called
+asprage wch I haue known taken about Cromer.
+
+ [79] The "asprage" (or it may be "a sprage") may possibly be the
+ Dab, _Pleuranectes limanda_, which Rondeletius calls _Passer
+ asper_. I do not find that species mentioned otherwise, and a great
+ many are taken by the Cromer and Sheringham fishermen.
+
+[_Fol. 31._] [See _Roller ante_ p. 30.]
+
+[_Fol. 32._] Sepia or cuttle fish[80] [smear] & great plentie of the
+bone or shellie substance which sustaineth the whole bulk of that soft
+fishe found co[=m]only on the shoare.
+
+ [80] Of the various species of the Cephalopoda, _Sepia
+ officinalis_, is more often represented by its calcareous dorsal
+ plate than by the entire animal, for large numbers of these
+ "cuttle-bones" are sometimes strewed along the shore for miles. The
+ Squid, _Loligo vulgaris_, is often met with, sometimes of
+ considerable size. The horny "pen" resembles a short leaf-shaped
+ Roman sword, and Browne's term, "Gladiolus," is quite as
+ appropriate as that of "Calamus." His _Polypus_ is probably
+ _Octopus vulgaris_, but it is rarely met with on the Norfolk coast.
+
+The Loligo sleue or calamar found often upon the shoare from head to
+tayle [such _crossed out_] sometimes aboue an ell long, remarkable for
+its parretlike bill, the gladiolus or calamus along the back & the
+notable crystallyne of the eye wch equalleth if not exceedeth the lustre
+of orientall pearle.
+
+A polypus another kind of the mollia[N] sometimes wee haue met with.
+
+ [N] By _mollia_ is meant all soft-bodied shell-less animals.
+
+Lobsters in great number about sheringham and cromer from whence all the
+country is supplyed.
+
+Astacus marinus pediculi [marini _written above_] facie[81] found also
+in that place. with the aduantage of ye long foreclawes about 4 inches
+long.
+
+ [81] Probably _Nephrops norvegicus_, the Norway Lobster, called at
+ Lowestoft a Crayfish or Prawn. They are sometimes brought in in
+ large numbers by the steam trawlers, but the precise locality in
+ which they are captured I am unable to say; the fishermen say the
+ "North Sea," which is rather a vague address, but others say
+ between the Texel and Heligoland.
+
+Crabs large & well tasted found also in the same coast.
+
+Another kind of crab[82] taken for cancer fluuiatilis litle slender & of
+a very quick motion found in the Riuer running through yarmouth. [_added
+subsequently_] & in bliburgh riuer.
+
+ [82] _Carsinus mĉnas_, the Shore-crab, a very common species on the
+ Norfolk coast is here intended.
+
+[_Fol. 33._] Oysters exceeding large about Burnham and [Huns _crossed
+out_] Hunstanton like those of poole St Mallowes or ciuita [vech
+_crossed out_] vechia whereof [some _crossed out_] many are eaten rawe
+the shells being broakin with [cle _crossed out_] cleuers the greater
+part pickled & sent weekly to London & other parts.
+
+Mituli or muscles in great quantitie as also chams or cochles about
+stiskay [_sic_] & ye northwest coast.
+
+Pectines pectunculi varij or scallops of the lesser sort.
+
+Turbines or smaller wilks, leues, striati. as also Trochi, Trochili, or
+scaloppes finely variegated & pearly. [as also _crossed out_.] Lewise
+[_sic_] purpurĉ minores, nerites, cochleĉ, Tellinĉ.
+
+Lepades, patellĉ Limpets, of an vniualue shell wherein an animal like a
+snayle cleauing fast unto the rocks.
+
+Solenes cappe lunge venetorum co[=m]only a razor fish the shell thereof
+dentalia
+
+[The MS. breaks off here, and the next paragraph appears to be an
+interpolation.]
+
+Dentalia by some called pinpaches because pinmeat thereof is taken out
+with a pinne or needle.[83]
+
+ [83] Mussels and Cockles are very abundant all along the shallow
+ shores of North-west Norfolk, as well as Clams, _Mya arenaria_.
+ "Scallops of the lesser sort" are probably _Pecten opercularius_
+ and _P. varius_. The Whelk, _Buccinum undatum_, is also very
+ numerous, and forms the staple of a considerable industry at
+ Sheringham; the lesser, or Dog-Whelk, _Nassa reticulata_, as well
+ as _Purpura lapillus_ and several sorts of Trochus, are commonly
+ met with. The genus Nerita was a very comprehensive one in Browne's
+ time, and included many species of Littorina, of which the
+ well-known Periwinkle, _L. littorea_, is the most numerous here. No
+ true Nerita is now recognised as British, although in the warmer
+ seas the genus is a very numerous one. The most common Tellina here
+ is _T. tenuis_, _Lepades patellĉ_ are of course the common Limpet
+ (_Patella vulgata_), and of the Solen, or Razor Shell, which Gwyn
+ Jeffreys says in the time of Aldrovandus was called by the
+ Venetians "cappa longa," we have two species found on the sandy
+ portions of the coast. Here some confusion exists in the MS., after
+ the words, "the shell thereof dentalia," the note ends abruptly,
+ and is followed by an interpolation which seems quite irrelevant,
+ as Dentalia have surely never been called "Pin-patches" (the
+ vernacular name for _Littorina littorea_), nor is it probable that,
+ like that common univalve, they were ever taken out of their shells
+ with a pin or needle. _Dentalia_ are mentioned on two other
+ occasions as of doubtful occurrence and _Dentalium entalis_ has
+ slight claim to be a native of Norfolk; the only recorded specimen
+ I know of was picked up in 1890 by Mr. Mayfield, from the drift on
+ the beach between Wells and Holkham.
+
+Cancellus Turbinum et neritis[84] Barnard the Hermite of Rondeletius a
+kind of crab or astacus liuing in a forsaken wilk or nerites.
+
+ [84] Hermit Crabs are here referred to, the larger, _Pagurus
+ bernhardus_, found very frequently inhabiting the shells of the
+ Whelk, and a smaller species which takes up its abode in those of a
+ _Trochus_.
+
+echinus echinometrites[85] sea hedghogge whose neat shells are co[=m]on
+on the shoare the fish aliue often taken [with _crossed out_] by the
+dragges among the oysters.
+
+ [85] Dead _Echini_ are very common on the sea-shore, and many
+ living ones are dredged by the shrimpers. _Echinus sphĉra_ is the
+ most common on the Norfolk coast; _E. miliaris_, a small species,
+ is also very abundant about Cromer.
+
+[This and the next paragraph on fol. 33 _verso_.]
+
+Balani[86] a smaller sort of vniualue growing co[=m]only in clusters.
+the smaller kinds thereof to bee found oftimes upon oysters wilks &
+lobsters.
+
+ [86] The species of Cirripeds referred to are probably the common
+ Acorn Barnacle (_Balanus porcatus_) and the Goose Barnacle (_Lepas
+ anatifera_), the latter occasionally found on ships' bottoms and
+ drift-wood, probably carried by favourable currents from warmer
+ seas than our own.
+
+Concha anatifera or Ansifera or Barnicleshell whereof about 4 yeares
+past were found upon the shoare no small number by yarmouth hanging by
+slender strings of a kind of Alga vnto seuerall splinters or [clefts
+_crossed out_] cleauings of firre boards vnto wch they were seuerally
+fastned & hanged like ropes of onyons: their shell flat & of a peculiar
+forme differing from other shelles, this being of four diuisions.
+containing a small imperfect animal at the lower part diuided into many
+shootes or streames wch prepossed [imag _crossed out_] spectators fancy
+to bee the rudiment of the tayle of some goose or duck to bee [expute
+_crossed out_] produced from it. some whereof in ye shell & some taken
+out & spred upon paper wee shall [still?] keepe by us.
+
+[Fol. 34.] Stellĉ marinĉ[87] or sea starres in great plentie especially
+about yarmouth. whether they bee bred out of the [vrticas _crossed out_]
+vrticĉ squalders or sea gellies as many report wee cannot confirme butt
+the squalderes in the middle seeme to haue some lines or first draughts
+not unlike. our starres exceed not 5 poynts though I haue heard that
+some with more haue been found about Hunstanton and Burnham. where are
+also found stellĉ marinĉ testacĉ or handsome crusted & brittle sea
+[stars _crossed out_] starres much lesse.
+
+ [87] The Five-finger (_Asterias rubens_, L.) is a very numerous
+ species on our coast and very destructive. Brittle Stars
+ (_Ophiocoma sp?_) are as Browne states most frequent about
+ Hunstanton, Burnham, and Cromer. _Solaster papposa_ is also found
+ in the same localities.
+
+The pediculus[88] and culex marin us the sea lowse & flie are [are
+_crossed out_] also no strangeres.
+
+ [88] The Pediculus, or Sea Louse, is probably _Talitrus locusta_,
+ the Sand-hopper; what may be intended by _Culex marinus_ it is
+ difficult to say. A species of gnat is at times very numerous on
+ the wet sand just above the water-line. _See also_ Notes 110 and
+ 115, on a kindred subject.
+
+Physsalus Rondeletij[89] or eruca marina physsaloides according to the
+icon of Rondeletius of very orient green & purple bristles.
+
+ [89] The Sea Mouse, _Aphrodite aculeata_. This is referred to again
+ in the Letters to Merrett.
+
+Urtica marina[90] of diuers kinds some whereof called squalderes. of a
+burning and stinging qualitie if rubbed in the hand. the water thereof
+may afford a good cosmetick.
+
+ [90] Mr. E. T. Browne, of the Zoological Laboratory of University
+ College, London, has kindly furnished me with the following notes
+ on this subject: "Jonston (1657) gives figures of Anemones and
+ large _Medusae_ under the name of _Urtica_. On Tab. xviii. he
+ figures Anemones and other beasts, but not _medusae_. The _medusae_
+ are on the next Tab. (xix.). _Urtica marina_ includes both Anemones
+ and certain Scyphomedusae (not _Pulmo_). Under 'some ... called
+ Squalders of a burning and stinging quality,' I think Browne must
+ refer to our common stinging Scyphomedusae belonging to the genus
+ _Chrysaora_ or _Cyanaea_, of which there are three species.
+
+ "The vague description of what he calls 'sea buttons' [see below,
+ also second letter to Merrett] would suit either a Medusa or a
+ Ctenophore. The additional note, 'two small holes in the ends,'
+ rather upsets matters, but I think he must refer to some sort of
+ jelly-fish, probably damaged, which is usually the case when cast
+ up on the shore. If the buttons worn in those days were like
+ filbert-nuts or eggs, I am inclined to think that the reference
+ must be to a Ctenophore, genus _Pleurobrachia_, but if flat, then
+ to one of the _Hydromedusae_. It would be safe to say, 'probably a
+ kind of jelly-fish,' which is about as vague as the reference." See
+ also Dr. Reuben Robinson's description of "Squalders" in a letter
+ to Browne (Wilkin i., pp. 422-424). It seems probable that the
+ gelatinous masses referred to in the early part of this letter,
+ which Dr. Robinson says were ascribed by Dr. Charleton to "the
+ nocturnall pollution of some plethorick or wanton starr: or rather
+ excrement blowne from the nosthrills of a rheumatick planett," were
+ the remains of the undeveloped spawn of frogs, the bodies of which
+ had been eaten by rats, crows, or herons, and which had become
+ swollen by exposure to moisture.
+
+[The next paragraph on folio 33 _verso_ is evidently added
+subsequently.]
+
+Another elegant sort that is often found cast up by shoare in great
+numbers about ye bignesse of a button cleere & welted & may bee called
+fibula marina crystallina.
+
+hirudines marini or sea Leaches.[91]
+
+ [91] It is difficult to determine the species of marine Annelids
+ referred to by Browne; the Sea Leech is probably _Pontobdella
+ lĉvis_. The "large wormes" digged for bait, mentioned more than
+ once, are Lug-worms, _Arenicola piscatorum_; the _Vermes in tubulis
+ testacei_ may be tube-worms of the genus Terrebella, or a species
+ of Serpula. Tethya or "Sea dugge" (not "Sea dogs," as Wilkin has
+ it) might very well apply to _Ascidia_ or one of the allied genera.
+ Simple Ascidians, generally known as Sea-squirts, are common
+ littoral forms; the animals figured by Rondeletius under the
+ heading "De Tethyis" (p. 127) are simple Ascidians. The _vesicaria
+ marina_, or "fanago," might well refer to the egg capsules of the
+ common Whelk (_Buccinum undatum_), which are very commonly found in
+ masses on the shore. In his sixth letter to Merrett, Browne
+ mentions two kinds of "fanago," the first which I take to be the
+ egg capsules of the Whelk, resembling the "husk of peas;" the
+ smaller that of "barley when the flower [awn?] is mouldered away,"
+ may possibly be the egg capsules of _Purpura lapillus_, or of some
+ species of Natica, which bear a fanciful resemblance to grains of
+ barley. See also Merrett's second letter in Appendix A., in which
+ he describes the Vesicaria found on oyster-shells as resembling
+ flowers of _Hyacinthus botryoides_, which is not a bad description
+ of the form of the egg capsules of _P. lapillus_.
+
+vermes marini very large wormes digged a yarde deepe out of the sands
+at the ebbe for bayt. tis known where they are to bee found by a litle
+flat ouer them on ye surface of ye sand. as also vermes in tubulis
+testacei. Also Tethya or sea dugges some whereof resemble fritters [and
+_crossed out_] the vesicaria marina also & [_see Note 91_] fanago
+sometimes very large conceaued to proceed from some testaceous animals.
+& particularly [_Fol. 35_] from the purpura butt [in _crossed out_] ours
+more probably from other testaceous wee hauing not met with any large
+purpura upon this coast.
+
+[A blank space.]
+
+Many riuer fishes also and animals. Salmon[92] no co[=m]on fish in our
+riuers though many are taken in the owse. in the Bure or north riuer, in
+ye waueney or south riuer, in ye [yare or _crossed out_] norwich riuer
+butt seldome and in the winter butt 4 yeares ago 15 were taken at
+Trowes mill [ab _crossed out_] in Xtmas. whose mouths were stuck with
+small wormes or horsleaches no bigger than fine threads some of these I
+kept in water 3 moneths if a few drops of blood were putt to the water
+they would in a litle time looke red. they sensibly grewe bigger then I
+first found them and were killed by an hard froast freezing the water.
+most of our Salmons haue a recurued peece of flesh in ye end of the
+lower iawe wch when they shutt there mouths deepely enters the upper. as
+Scaliger hath noted in some.
+
+ [92] The Salmon (_Salmo salar_) is at the present day very rarely
+ found in our rivers, and those met with are, as a rule, male Kelts
+ which have strayed into unsuspected situations after floods; a
+ singular exception occurred on the 20th May, 1897, when one
+ weighing 6 lbs. was taken on a fly in the river above Stoke Holy
+ Cross Mill; this fish is preserved in the Norwich Museum. Another
+ curious capture of which I heard (but did not see the fish)
+ occurred on the 1st August, 1898, when a salmon, also of 6 lbs.
+ weight, jumped into a small boat towed behind a yacht which was
+ sailing across Breydon Water. That the salmon was at one time a
+ recognised visitor to our rivers is evident from the following
+ extract from the Norwich Court of Mayoralty Book under date 2 Novr.
+ 1667: "It is ordered that the bell man give notice that if any
+ person shall take any Salmons from the Nativity of our Lady unto
+ St. Martin's day, or destroy any young Salmons by netts or other
+ ingens from the midst of April until the Nativity of St. John
+ Baptist shall be punished according to the law." The Salmon is the
+ host of several parasites both internal and external. Fresh run
+ Salmon are generally infested with a "Sea-louse," which quickly
+ perishes in freshwater; not so, however, with the troublesome
+ worm-like creature, the subject of Browne's experiments; it is
+ known as _Lernĉa salmonis_, and is only found on the gill-covers of
+ spent Kelts; it is not got rid of till the fish returns to the salt
+ water. Browne may be excused being rather sceptical as to the
+ identity of the clean run Salmon and the spent Kelt, for no greater
+ contrast can be imagined than that which exists between the
+ two--the male in the "redding" season develops the unsightly hooked
+ mandible, which so puzzled the worthy doctor, and both in colour
+ and form is as hideous an object as can be imagined. Bécard
+ Gallorum (not _Beccard gallorus_), _i.e._, the fish called "Bécard"
+ by the French (see second letter to Merrett), refers to the use of
+ a name still applied in France to a large Cock Salmon, and
+ "Anchorago" is the name under which the fish was described by
+ Scaliger, whose book I have not seen. Dr. Günther tells me that
+ Artedi, "Ichthyologia," Pt. v., p. 23, quotes this name as a
+ synonym of the Salmon.
+
+The Riuers lakes & broads[93] abound in [the Lucius or _added above_]
+pikes of very large size where also is found the Brama or [breme
+_crossed out_] Breme large & well tasted the Tinca or Tench the Rubecula
+Roach as also Rowds and Dare or Dace perca or pearch great & small.
+whereof such [as] are are in Braden on this side yarmouth in the mixed
+water [are gen _crossed out_] make a dish very dayntie & I think scarce
+to bee bettered in England. butt the Blea[k] [_Fol. 36_] the chubbe the
+barbell [I haue not obserued in these riuers _crossed out_] to bee found
+in diues other Riuers in England I haue not obserued in these. As also
+fewer mennowes then in many other riuers.
+
+ [93] The freshwater fishes named in the next three paragraphs are
+ so well known as to require few remarks. The Bream in our rivers
+ and broads are very numerous and reach a large size, but of their
+ esculent qualities I have had no personal experience; not so,
+ however, with the Perch, which quite deserve Browne's high
+ encomium. It is well known here that this fish shows no aversion of
+ a certain admixture of salt and fresh water, and Mr. Lubbock
+ ("Fauna of Norfolk") says, "the point in Norfolk rivers where the
+ largest are taken with most certainty is where water begins to turn
+ brackish from the influence of the ocean;" in autumn the very
+ finest are taken by angling with a shrimp, a favourite bait in the
+ lower parts of the Yare and Waveney. In such localities a small
+ shrimp (_Hippolyte varians_, Leach) abounds, and it is to this
+ favourite food that Mr. Lubbock attributes the excellence of these
+ Perch. Roud is the local name of the Rudd (_Leuciscus
+ erythropthalmus_). The River Nar is still perhaps the best Trout
+ stream in the county, and the Crawfish is found in most of the
+ rivers but not abundantly.
+
+The Trutta or trout the Gammarus or crawfish [no _crossed out_] butt
+scarce in our riuers butt frequently taken in the Bure or north riuer &
+in the seuerall branches therof. & very remarkable large crawfishes to
+bee found in the riuer wch runnes by castleaker & nerford.
+
+The Aspredo perca minor[94] and probably the cernua of Cardan co[=m]only
+called a Ruffe in great plentie in norwich Riuers & euen in ye streame
+of the citty. which though camden appropriates vnto this citty yet they
+are also found in the riuers of oxforde [&] Cambridge.
+
+ [94] Merrett calls the Ruff _Cernua fluviatilis_, and mentions its
+ abundance in the River Yare at Norwich, which he (no doubt
+ inadvertently) assigns to the County of "Essex"; from this locality
+ Caius obtained the specimen, a drawing of which he sent to Gesner
+ under the name of _Aspredo_. Camden assigns this fish also to
+ Norwich, and Spencer, in his "Marriage of the Thames and Medway,"
+ writes of the Ruff:--
+
+ "Next cometh Yar, soft washing Norwich walls,
+ And with him bringeth to their festival
+ Fish whose like none else can show,
+ The which men Ruffins call."
+
+ This county seems to have been assigned an exclusive proprietorship
+ in the Ruff, to which, as Browne rightly points out, it had no just
+ claim.
+
+Lampetra Lampries great & small[95] found plentifully in norwich riuer &
+euen in the Citty about may [some _crossed out_] whereof some are very
+large & well cooked are counted a dayntie bitt collard up butt
+especially in pyes.
+
+ [95] Both the Sea Lamprey (_Petromyzon marinus_) and the Lampern
+ (_P. fluviatilis_) are found in the Norfolk rivers.
+
+Mustela fluuiatilis or eele poult[96] to bee had in norwich riuer & [in
+thalso _crossed out_] between it & yarmouth as also in the riuers of
+marshland resembling an eele & a cod. a very good dish & the Liuer
+thereof well answers the commendations of the Ancients.
+
+ [96] The Burbot, or Eel Pout (_Lola vulgaris_), called by Merrett a
+ Coney-fish, from its habit of concealing itself in holes in the
+ river banks. It is not sufficiently numerous now to form an article
+ of diet, and I imagine there are few living who could bear
+ testimony as to the esculent qualities of its "Liuer."
+
+[_Fol 37._] Godgions or funduli fluuiatiles, many whereof may bee taken
+within the [citty _crossed out_] Riuer in the citty:
+
+Capitones fluuiatilis or millers thumbs, pungitius fluuiatilis or
+stanticles. Aphia cobites fluuiatilis or Loches. in norwich riuers in
+the runnes about Heueningham heath in the north riuer & streames
+thereof.
+
+Of eeles[97] the co[=m]on eele & the glot wch hath somewhat a different
+shape in the bignesse of the head & is affirmed to have yong ones often
+found within it. & wee haue found a vterus in the same somewhat
+answering the icon thereof in Senesinus.
+
+ [97] The coarse variety of the Eel, known as the "Glout," or
+ Broad-nosed Eel, is believed to be the barren female; Browne's
+ informants were doubtless misled by the presence of certain
+ thread-worms (_Nematoxys_) in the abdomen of the eels, which they
+ mistook for young ones.
+
+Carpiones carpes plentifull in ponds & sometimes large ones in broads
+[_smear_] 2 the largest I euer beheld were [found _crossed out_] taken
+[_added above_] in Norwich Riuer.
+
+[A whole line is smeared out, and a break occurs in the MS. after the
+observation on the Carp; it then proceeds to notice some other
+inhabitants of the county which perhaps Browne had difficulty in
+classifying.]
+
+Though the woods and dryelands about [abound?] with adders and
+vipers[98] yet are there few snakes about our riuers or meadowes more to
+bee found in Marsh land butt ponds & plashes abound in Lizards or
+swifts.
+
+ [98] Both Vipers (or Adders) and Snakes, the latter in particular,
+ are, I imagine, much less abundant than formerly, but the few
+ species of Lizards and Newts (Swifts) are still probably in
+ undiminished numbers; the Mole Cricket (_Gryllotalpa vulgaris_) is
+ rare with us; Horse-leeches (_Aulostoma gulo_) are frequent, and
+ also "Periwinkles," which I take to be various species of
+ freshwater Molluscs, possibly of _Limnĉa_. The Hard-worm (or
+ Hair-worm), _Gordius aquaticus_, which refused to be generated from
+ "horsehayres," is still an object of wonder to the unlearned, and
+ the Great Black Water-Beetle (_Hydrophilus piceus_) is found; but
+ _forficula_ and _corculum_ were a puzzle, as it is evident from
+ their association they must be aquatic forms (and the Earwig
+ certainly does not take to the water voluntarily), till my friend,
+ Mr. C. G. Barrett, referred me to the following passage in
+ Swammerdam's "Book of Nature," p. 93: "This is most certain that
+ the _Forficula aquatica_ of Jonston is the true nymph of the
+ Mordella, or Dragon-fly,"[O] Dr. Charleton in his "Onomasticon," p.
+ 57, has "Corculus, the Water-beetle, resembling an heart;" not very
+ definite, but probably the Whirligig Beetle, _Gyrinus natator_, is
+ intended; it is also an appellation given by some authors to "a
+ small species of cordiformis, or heart-shell, of a rose colour,"
+ doubtless a Cyclas or a Pisidium. Squilla is the Freshwater Shrimp
+ (_Gammarus pulex_), and _Notonecta glauca_, the Waterboatman "which
+ swimmeth on its back," is well known.
+
+ Otters are still numerous in the broads and reed-margined rivers,
+ and so long as these natural fastnesses endure in their present
+ condition they are likely to continue so.
+
+ [O] On reference to Jonston (_Historiĉ Naturalis de Insectis_ Lib.
+ iv., "De Insectis aquaticis" i., p. 189, Tab. xxvii.), I find that
+ under the name of "_Forficulĉ aquat[icĉ]_. M [oufet]," he has two
+ figures, the first of which is possibly a Dytiscus larva, the
+ second that of some form of Dragon-fly, which however is
+ imperfect.
+
+The Gryllotalpa or fencricket co[=m]on in fenny places butt wee haue met
+with them also in dry places dung-hills & church yards of this citty.
+
+Beside horseleaches & periwinkles in plashes & standing waters we haue
+met with vermes setacei or hardwormes butt could neuer conuert
+horsehayres into them by laying them in water as also the [_Fol. 38_]
+the (_bis_) great Hydrocantharus or black shining water Beetle the
+forficula, sqilla, corculum and notonecton that swimmeth on its back.
+
+Camden [_smear_] reports that in former time there haue been [otters
+_crossed out_] Beuers in the Riuer of Cardigan in wales. this wee are to
+sure of that the Riuers great Broads & carres afford great store of
+otters with us, a [des _crossed out_] great destroyer of fish as feeding
+butt from ye vent downewards. [a prey _crossed out_] not free from being
+a prey it self for their yong ones haue been found in Buzzards nests.
+they are accounted no bad dish by many are to bee made very tame and in
+some howses haue [semed _crossed out_] serued for turnespitts.
+
+[Blank space.]
+
+ NOTE.--Although Browne's account of the Fishes is doubtless
+ derived from his personal observation, I have found it very
+ difficult in some families, such as the Cods, Rays, Gurnards,
+ Flat-fishes, and Gobies to identify them with the species as at
+ present known; in fact, they were at that time very imperfectly
+ differentiated, and the figures in the old authors are generally
+ so inexact as not to be recognisable. Ray, in 1674 ("English
+ Words not generally known," p. 101), thus writes of the sea
+ fishes, "several of them, we judge, not yet described by any
+ Author extant in print: indeed the writers of Natural History of
+ Animals living far from the Ocean, and so having never had
+ opportunity of seeing these kind of fishes ... write very
+ confusedly and obscurely concerning them," a remark which I have
+ found abundantly verified.
+
+
+
+
+LETTERS TO MERRETT.
+
+[MS. SLOANE. 1833. FOL. 14.]
+
+No. 1.
+
+"_My father to Dr. Meret July 13, 1668._"
+
+
+ Most honourd Sir,
+
+[_Fol 14._] I take ye boldnesse to salute you as a person of singular
+worth & learning and whom I very much respect & honour. I presented my
+service to you by my sonne some months past, and had thought before this
+time to have done it by him again, but the time of his returne to London
+being yet uncertaine, I would not deferre these at present unto you. I
+should be very glad to serve you by any observations of mine against yr.
+second edition of your Pinax[99] which I cannot sufficiently commende. I
+have observed and taken notice of many animals in these parts whereof 3
+years agoe a learned gentleman of this country desired me to give him
+some account, which while I was doing ye gentleman my good friend died.
+I shall only at this time present and name some few unto you which I
+found not in your catalogue. A Trachurus [_see Note 61_] which yearly
+cometh before or in ye head of ye herrings called therefore an horse.
+Stella marina testacea [_see Note 87_] which I have often found upon the
+sea-shoare, an Astacus marinus pediculi marini facie [_see Note 81_]
+which is sometimes taken with the lobsters at Cromer in Norfolck. a
+pungitius marinus [_see Note 75_] wereof I have known many taken among
+weeds by fishers who drag by ye Sea-shoare on this coast. A Scarabĉus
+capricornus odoratus[100] which I take to be mentioned by Moufetus fol.
+150. I have taken some abroad one in my Seller which I now send he saith
+_nucem moschatam et cinamomum vere Spirat_ to me it smelt like roses
+santalum & Ambegris. I have thrice met with Mergus maximus Farensis
+Clusij, [_see Note 11_] and have a draught thereof. they were taken
+about the time of herring fishing at yarmouth one was taken upon the
+shoare not able to fly away about ten yeares agoe I sent one to Dr.
+Scarborough. Twice I have met with a Skua Hoyeri [_see Note 10_] the
+draught whereof I also have. one was shot in a marsh which I gave unto a
+gentleman which [_sic_] I can sende you another was killd feeding upon a
+dead horse neere a marsh ground. Perusing your catalogue of Plants. upon
+Acorus verus,[101] I find these wordes found by Dr. Browne neere Lin.
+wherein probably there may be some mistake, for I cannot affirme nor I
+doubt any other yt. is found thereabout. Some 25 yeares ago I gave an
+account of this plant unto [this _crossed out_] Mr. Goodyeere:[102] &
+more lately to Dr. How[103] unto whome I sent some notes and a box full
+of the fresh Juli. This elegant plant groweth very plentifully and
+beareth its Julus yearly by the bankes of Norwich river [fol. 13
+_verso_] chiefly about Claxton and Surlingham. & also between norwich &
+Hellsden bridge so that I have known Heigham Church in the suburbes of
+Norwich strowed all over with it, it hath been transplanted and set on
+the sides of Marish pondes in severall places of the country where it
+thrives and beareth ye Julus yearly.
+
+ [99] It is evident that Merrett was collecting a considerable
+ amount of materials for an enlarged edition of his _Pinax Rerum
+ Naturalium Britannicarum_, on behalf of which Browne seems, by this
+ introductory letter, to have tendered his assistance, but the
+ contemplated edition, probably for reasons which I have mentioned
+ elsewhere, never appeared; happily, these rough drafts have been
+ preserved, although it seems not unlikely that the letters
+ themselves, should they ever be found, would differ from them in
+ some respects.
+
+ [100] _Scarabĉus capricornus odoratus._ The Musk Beetle, _Aromia
+ moschata_, L.
+
+ [101] _Acorus calamus_, the Sweet Flag, is still found in plenty in
+ various localities in the county, but it does not appear to develop
+ its curious "julus" every year. It was very abundant at Heigham, a
+ suburb of Norwich, on the site now occupied by the goods yard of
+ the Midland and Great Northern Railway, and it was probably from
+ this spot that the supply was obtained for the purpose of littering
+ the floor of the old parish church. Mr. Vaux, in his "Church
+ Folk-Lore," p. 264, says that up to the passing of the Municipal
+ Reform Bill the Town Clerk of Norwich was accustomed to pay the
+ sub-sacrist of the cathedral an amount of one guinea for strewing
+ the floor with rushes on the Mayor's Day. The custom is said to
+ have been adopted "as well for coolness as for pleasant smell." The
+ pleasant cinnamon-like scent of the rush, on being trodden on, is
+ said to have perfumed the whole building. The root was also used as
+ a remedy in cases of ague, and formed the base of tooth and hair
+ powders.
+
+ [102] Towards the end of the Introductory Letter to Johnson's
+ (1636) Edition of Gerard's "Herball," he acknowledges the
+ assistance he received from Mr. John Goodyer, of Maple-Durham, in
+ Hampshire. Sir J. E. Smith ("Eng. Flora," iv., p. 34) speaks of him
+ as "one of the most deserving of our early English Botanists."
+ Robert Brown named a genus of plants (_Goodyera_) after Goodyer.
+
+ [103] William How, 1620-1656, was the author of "Phytologia
+ Britannica," Lond., 1650, "the earliest work on botany restricted
+ to the plants of this island" ("Dic. of Nat. Biog."). He practised
+ medicine in London.
+
+Sesamoides Salamanticum Magnum.[104] Why you omit Sesamoides
+Salamanticum parvum this groweth not far from Thetford and Brandon and
+plentifull in neighbour places where I found it and have it in my hortus
+hyemalis answering ye description in Gerard.
+
+ [104] _Sesamoides_ is stated in Ree's Encyclopĉdia and in Eng. Fl.
+ to be a synonym of _Reseda_, therefore _Sesamoides magnum_ would
+ appear to be _R. luteola_ and _S. parvum_, _R. lutea_.
+
+Urtica Romana[105] which groweth with button seede bags is not in yr.
+catalogue I have founde it to grow wild at [Golston _crossed out_]
+Golston by Yarmouth, & transplanted it to other places.[P]
+
+ [105] _Urtica Romana_, which is again referred to as _U. mas_ near
+ the end of the third letter and as being found at Gorleston, is the
+ Roman Nettle, _U. pilulifera_. In 1834 the Pagets ("Nat. Hist. of
+ Great Yarmouth") reported it as still found under old walls at
+ Gorleston, "but rarer than formerly," and it is only in recent
+ years that it has been exterminated, owing to building operations
+ in that locality.
+
+ [P] This letter, evidently a copy as shown by the heading "My
+ father to Dr. Meret," is in the writing of Dr. Edwd. Browne.
+
+
+[MS. SLOANE 1830. FOL. 39-40.]
+
+No. II.
+
+_Fol. 39._]
+
+"_My second letter to Dr Meret Aug xiiii 1668._"
+
+Honord Sr I receiued your courteous letter & am sorry some diuersions
+have so long delayed this my second vnto you. You are very exact in the
+account of the fungi. I have met with two,[106] which I have not found
+in any Author, of which I have sent you a rude draught inclosed. The
+first an elegant fungus Ligneus found in an hollow sallowe I haue one of
+them by mee butt without a very good opportunitie dare not send it
+fearing it should bee broken vnto some it seemed to resemble some noble
+or princely ornament of the head & so might bee called fungus Regius
+vnto others a turret, top of a cupola or Lanterne of a building & so
+might bee named fungus pterygoides, pinnacularis or Lanterniformis you
+may name it as you please. The second fungus Ligneus teres Antliarum or
+fungus ligularis longissimus consisting [of _crossed out_] or made of
+many wooddy strings about the bignesse of round poynts or Laces some
+about half a yard long shooting in a bushie forme from the trees wch
+serue vnderground for pumpes. I have obserued diuers especially in
+norwich where wells are sunck deep for pumpes.
+
+ [106] Dr. Plowright informs me that "it is impossible to say with
+ certainty what the first named Fungus is; the description suggests
+ some form of Polyporus perhaps, _P. varius,_ which is a ligneous
+ species and occurs frequently on willows in Norfolk. The second is
+ the abortive form of _Polyporus squamosus_, which is well figured
+ by many of the older botanists, for instance under the name of
+ _Boletus rangiferinus_, by Bolton, t. 138, and _Boletus squamosus_,
+ var. _rangiferinus_, by Hooker, 'Flora Londinensis,' new series. In
+ many cases no pileus at all is formed and it used then to be
+ referred to Clavaria." The Phalloides is _Phallus impudicus_, L., a
+ very common species in this county and even occurring in some of
+ the city gardens where its exceedingly offensive odour renders it
+ very undesirable. Fungus rotundus is the well-known _Lycoperdon
+ giganteum_, Fr., which sometimes reaches a very large size.
+
+The fungus phalloides found not farre from norwich large & very fetid
+answering the description of Hadrianus junius I have a part of one dryed
+by mee.
+
+Fungus rotundus maior I haue found about x inches in Diameter & half
+[_sic_, have?] half a one dryed by mee.
+
+Another small paper containes the rude draughts of fibulĉ marinĉ
+pellucidĉ, [_see Note 90_] or sea buttons a kind of squalder & referring
+to vrtica marina which I haue obserued in great numbers by yarmouth
+after a flood & easterly winds. They resemble pure crystall buttons
+chamfered or welted on the sides with 2 small holes at the ends. They
+cannot bee sent for the included water or thinne gelly soon runneth from
+them.
+
+Vrtica marina minor jonstoni [_see Note 90_] I haue often found on this
+coast. [Continued on fol. 39 _verso_.]
+
+Physsalus [_see Note 89_] I haue often found also I haue one dryed but
+it hath lost its shape & colour.
+
+Galei & caniculĉ [_see Note 56_] are often found I haue a fish hanged up
+in my yard of 2 yards long taken among the Herrings at yarmouth which is
+the Canis carcharias alius Johnstoni. Tab. vi fig. 6.
+
+Lupus marinus you mention upon an handsome experiment butt I find it not
+in the catalogue. This Lupus marinus or Lycostomus is often taken by our
+seamen wch fish for cods I haue had diuers brought mee. they hang up in
+many howses in Yarmouth.
+
+Trutta marina is taken with us--a better dish than the Riuer trowt butt
+of the same bignesse.
+
+Loligo sepia a cuttle page 191 of your Pinax [_see Note 80_] I conceiue
+worthy Sr it were best to putt them in 2 distinct lines as distinct
+species of the Molles. The loligo, calamare or sleue I haue often found
+cast up on the seashoare & some haue been brought mee by fishermen of
+aboue [20 _crossed out_] twentie pound wayet.
+
+Among the fishes of our Norwich riuer wee scarce reckon salmons [_see
+Note 92_] yet some are yearly taken. butt all taken in the Riuer or
+coast haue the end of the lower jaw very much hooked which enters a
+great way into the upper jaw like a socket. you may find the same though
+not in figure if you please to read Johnstonus fol 101 I am not
+satisfied with the conceit of some authors there that is [it?] is a
+difference of male and female for all ours are thus formed. The fish is
+thicker than [oth _crossed out_] ordinarie salmons and very much & more
+largely spotted whether not rather Beccard gallorum or Anchorago
+Scaligeri I haue bothe draught & head of one dryed either of wch you may
+command.
+
+Scyllarus or cancellus in turbine tis probable you have [_see Note 84_].
+haue you cancellus in nerite a small testaceous found upon this coast.
+
+[_Fol. 40._] Haue you mullus ruber asper [_see Note 63_].
+
+Haue [you] piscis octangularis Bivormii?[Q] [_see Note 66_, also pp. 65
+and 87 _infra_].
+
+ [Q] Thus in the MS., but Browne seems to have intended to write
+ Bicornis Vormii, and accidentally to have run the two words
+ together [_see_ p. 41 _supra_].
+
+vermes marini larger than earthwormes [_see Note 91_] digged out of the
+sea sand about 2 foot deepe at an ebbe water for bayte they are
+discouered by a little hole or sinking of the sand at the top aboue
+them.
+
+Haue you that handsome colourd [bird _crossed out_] jay [_see Note 49_]
+answering the description of Garrulus Argentoratensis & may be called
+the parret jay I haue one that was killed upon a tree about 5 yeares
+ago.
+
+Haue you a may chitt a small dark gray bird [_see Note 29_] about the
+bignesse of a stint wch cometh about may & stayeth butt a moneth. a bird
+of exceeding fattnesse and accounted a daintie dish. they are
+plentifully taken in marshland and about wisbich.
+
+Haue you a [caprimulgus or _written above_] dorhawke a bird as bigge as
+[a] pigeon [_see Note 42_] with a wide throat bill as little as a
+titmous & white fethers in the tayle & paned like an hawke.
+
+Succinum rarò occurrit[107] pag 291 of yours. [Should be p. 219] not so
+rarely on the coast of norfolk. tis usually found in small peeces [butt
+_crossed out_] sometimes in peeces of a pound wayght. I haue one by mee
+fat & fayre of x ounces wayght--jet more often found I haue an handsom
+peece of xii ounces in wayet.
+
+ [107] Amber, writes Mr. Clement Reid, in a paper contributed by him
+ to the "Trans. Norf. and Nor. Nat. Soc." (iii., p. 601), "is found
+ on the Norfolk coast, usually mixed with the seaweed thrown up by
+ the Spring gales," but is very rarely found in place; as much as
+ three or four pounds are annually gathered near Cromer. The
+ quality, Mr. Rein says, is very good, but the dark transparent
+ lumps are most generally found. In a subsequent paper (_op. cit._,
+ iv., p. 248) he enumerates seven species of insects which have been
+ found enclosed, and in a third communication mentions an eighth.
+ Mr. A. S. Ford, as the result of an examination of a collection of
+ East-coast Amber made at Yarmouth (_op. cit._, v., p. 92), adds one
+ species of Hymenoptera, three of Coleoptera, two of Orthoptera,
+ with some Araneida, and remains of vegetable substances which had
+ not been identified.
+
+ The Jet found on the Norfolk coast differs considerably from the
+ Whitby Jet, and Mr. Reid, "Geology of the Country Round Cromer" (p.
+ 133), believes that in all probability it was originally derived
+ from Lower Tertiary beds under the North Sea, a few miles from the
+ present coast. Mr. Savin estimates the average annual find of Jet
+ near Cromer at from ten to twenty pounds.
+
+ The doctor does not display his usual acumen when he rejects the
+ "ancient" opinion as to the vegetable origin of Amber, see
+ _Pseudodoxia_, book ii., chap. iv.; also letter from Earl of
+ Yarmouth to T. B. (Wilkin Edit. i., p. 411).
+
+
+No. III.
+
+[FOL. 40 _verso_.]
+
+"_My third letter Sept xiii._"
+
+Sr I receaued your courteous Letter and with all respects I now agayne
+salute you.
+
+The mola piscis is almost yearely taken on our coast [_see Note 58_]
+this [last _crossed out_] year one was taken of about 2 hundred pounds
+wayght diuers of them I haue opened & haue found many lyce sticking
+close vnto thier gills whereof I send you some.
+
+In your pinax I find onocrotalus or pellican [_see Note 25_] whether you
+meane those at St. James or others brought ouer or such as haue been
+taken or killed heere I knowe not. I haue one hangd up in my howse wch
+was shott in a fenne ten miles of about 4 yeares ago and because it was
+so rare some conjectured it might bee one of those which belonged vnto
+the King & flewe away.
+
+Ciconia rarò hue aduolat. I haue seen two [_see Note 14_] one in a
+watery marsh 8 miles of, another shott whose case is yet to bee seen.
+[See Appendix D.]
+
+Vitulus marinus. _In tractibus borealibus et Scotia_ [_see Note 53_]. no
+raritie upon the coast of Norfolk at a lowe water I haue knowne them
+taken asleep vnder the cliffes. diuers haue been brought vnto mee. our
+seale is different from the Mediterranean seale. as hauing a rounder
+head a shorter and stronger body.
+
+Rana piscatrix I haue often known taken on our coast & some very large
+[_see Note 59_].
+
+Xiphias or gladius piscis or sword fish wee haue in our seas [_see Note
+55_]. I haue the head of one which was taken not long ago entangled in
+the Herring netts the sword aboue 2 foot in length.
+
+Among the whales you may very well putt in the spermacetus [_see Note
+51_] or that remarkably peculiar whale which so aboundeth in spermaceti.
+about twelve years ago wee had one cast up on our shoare neer welles wch
+I discribed in a peculiar chapter in the last edition of [_Fol. 41_] my
+pseudodoxia epidemica. another was diuers yeares before cast up at
+Hunstanton. both whose heads are yet to bee seen.
+
+Ophidion or at least ophidion nostras [_see Note 69_] co[=m]only called
+a sting fish hauing a small prickley finne running all along the back, &
+another a good way on the belly, with little black spotts at the bottom
+of the back finne if the fishermens hands bee touched or scrached with
+this venemous fish they grow paynfull and swell the figure hereof I send
+you in colours they are co[=m]on about cromer see Schoneveldeus de
+Ophidiis.
+
+Piscis octogonius or octangularis answering the discription of
+Cataphractus Schoneveldei [_see Note 66_] only his is discribed with the
+finnes spread & when it was fresh taken & a large one howeuer this may
+bee nostras I send you one butt I haue seen much larger which fishermen
+haue brought mee.
+
+Physsalus [_see Note 89_]. I send one which hath been long opened &
+shrunck & lost the colour when I tooke it upon the sea shoare it was
+full & plump answering the figure & discription of Rondeletius. there is
+also a like figure at the end of [Rondeletius _crossed out_] muffetus I
+haue kept them aliue butt obserued no motion [butt _crossed out_] except
+of contraction and dilation when it is fresh the prickles or brisles are
+of a brisk green & Amethest colours--some call it a sea mous.
+
+Our mullet is white & imberbis [_see Note 63_] butt wee haue also a
+mullis barbatus ruber miniaceus or cinnaberinus somewhat rough & butt
+drye meat. there is of them maior & minor resembling the figures in
+Johnstonus tab xvii Rotbart.
+
+Of the Acus marinus or needle fishes [_see Note 64_] I haue obserued 3
+sorts. The Acus Aristotelis called heere an Addercock Acus maior or
+Garfish with a green verdigris backbone the other saurus Acui similis
+Acus sauroides or sauriformis as it may be called much answering to the
+discription of saurus Rondeletij in the hinder part much resembling a
+makerell opening one I found not the backbone green Johnstonus writes
+nearest to it in his Acus minor. I send you the head of one dryed butt
+the bill is broken I haue the whole draught in picture. this kind is
+more rare then the other wch are co[=m]on & is a rounder fish.
+
+[_Fol. 41 verso._] Vermes marini are large wormes [_see Note 91_] found
+2 foot deep in the sea sands & are digged out at an ebbe for bayt.
+
+The Avicula Maialis or may chitt [_see Note 29_] is a litle dark gray
+bird somewhat bigger then a stint which co[=m]eth in may or the later
+end of April & stayeth about a moneth. A marsh bird the legges & feet
+black without an heele the bill black about 3 quarters of an inch long
+they grow very fatt & are accounted a dayntie dish.
+
+A Dorhawke a bird not full so bigge as a pigeon [_see Note 42_] somewhat
+of a woodcock colour & paned somewhat like an hawke with a bill not much
+bigger then that of a Titmouse [& very wide throat _added above_] known
+by the name of a dorhawke or prayer upon beetles, as though it were some
+kind of accipiter muscarius. in brief this accipiter cantharophagus or
+dorhawke [_a word smeared out_] is _Avis Rostratula gutturosa_, _quasi
+coaxans_, _scarabĉis vescens_, _sub vesperam volans_, _ouum
+speciosissim[=u]_ [_word smeared_] _excludens_. I haue had many of them &
+am sorry I have not one to send you I spoake to a friend to shoote one
+butt I doubt they are gone ouer.
+
+of the vpupa [_see Note 35_] diuers have been brought mee & some I haue
+obserued in these parts as I trauuyled about.
+
+The Aquila Gesneri I sent [aliue _added above_] to Dr. Scarburg [_see
+Note 3_] who told mee it was kept in the colledge it was brought mee out
+of Ireland. I kept it 2 yeares in my howse I am sorry I haue only one
+fether of it to send you.
+
+A shooing horn or Barker from the figure of the bill & barking note
+[_see Note 38_] a long made bird of white & blakish colour finne footed,
+a marsh bird & not rare some times of the yeare in marshland. it may
+upon vewe bee called Recuruirostra nostras or Auoseta much resembling
+the Auosettĉ [species _crossed out_] species in Johnstonus tab (54). I
+send you the head in picture
+
+[A _smeared out_] stone curliews I haue kept in large cages [_see Note
+37_] the[y] haue a prettie shrill note, not hard to bee got in some
+parts of norfolk.
+
+[_Fol. 42_] Haue you Scorpius marinus Schoneueldei [_see Note 68_]
+
+haue you putt in the musca Tulipar[=u] muscata[108]
+
+ [108] It seems impossible to identify this insect; _Merodon
+ narcissi_ has been suggested, but Mr. Verrall, whom I consulted
+ says, "certainly not _Merodon_, which probably was not known in
+ Britain until about 1870," and suggests the small fly _Nemopoda_.
+ Mr. Bloomfield writes that the only fly of which he has seen any
+ mention as having a musky or "excellent fragrant odour" is _Sepsis
+ cynipsea_, which Kirby and Spence state on the authority of De
+ Geer, "emits a fragrant odour of beaum" (balm); this species is
+ very nearly allied to Nemopoda. Several Bees, for instance the
+ Genus _Prosopis_, emit a strong scent of balm, and it is possible
+ that Browne may have used the term "fly" in what is even now a
+ popular sense, and that really some species of Bee may have called
+ forth his remarks. It will be noticed that at p. 74 he speaks of it
+ as a "small beelike flye."
+
+That bird which I sayd much answered the discription of Garrulus
+Argentoratensis [_see Note 49_] I send you it was shott on a tree x
+miles of 4 yeares ago. it may well bee called the Parret Jay or Garrulus
+psittacoides speciosus. the colours are much faded. if you haue it
+before I should bee content to haue it agayne otherwise you may please
+to keep it.
+
+Garrulus Bohemicus[109] probably you haue a prettie handsome bird with
+the fine cinnaberin tipps of the wings some wch I haue seen heere haue
+the tayle tipt with yellowe wch is not in the discription.
+
+ [109] Mr. Stevenson, whom very little relating to Norfolk
+ Ornithology escaped, was well acquainted with Sir Thomas Browne's
+ works, yet has in his "Birds of Norfolk" unaccountably overlooked
+ this passage, and remarks that Browne does not appear to have
+ noticed this species; he however not only refers to it as above,
+ but evidently describes it from his personal observation. It is a
+ very uncertain winter visitor to this county, but on rare occasions
+ makes its appearance in considerable flocks. A remarkable instance
+ of this occurred in the winter of 1866-7, when Mr. Stevenson, as
+ the result of the examination of a very large series, contributed
+ an exhaustive paper on the plumage of this handsome bird to the
+ "Transactions of the Norf. and Nor. Nat. Soc.," iii., pp. 326-344.
+
+I haue also sent you urtica mas [_see Note 105_] which I lately gathered
+at Golston by yarmouth where I found it to growe also 25 yeares ago. of
+the stella marina Testacea which I sent you [_see Note 87_] I do not
+find the figure in any booke.
+
+I send you a few flies[110] which some unhealthful yeares about the
+first part of september I haue obserued so numerous upon plashes in the
+marshes & marish diches that in a small compasse it were no hard matter
+to gather a peck of them I brought some what my box would hold butt the
+greatest part are scatterd lost or giuen away for memorie sake I writ on
+my box muscĉ palustres Autumnales [See Appendix D.]
+
+ [110] Mr. Verrall assures me that even in the present day it is
+ quite impossible to recognise the species of Diptera described by
+ persons unacquainted with the particular group, and that Browne's
+ remarks would apply to hundreds of species. It is possible that an
+ _Ephydra_ may be meant. This genus of small flies, says Mr.
+ Verrall, abounds in such places as Browne describes, but it is
+ likely that other species were with them.
+
+worthy Sr I shall be euer redie to serue you who am Sr your humble
+Seruant
+
+ THO BROWNE.
+
+ _Norwich, Sep 16. 1668._
+
+
+No. IV.
+
+"_The fourth Letter to Dr. Merrett Decemb xxix._" [1668]
+
+[_Fol. 42 verso._] Sr I am very joyfull that you haue recouered your
+health whereof I heartily wish the continuation for your own and the
+publick good. And I humbly thank you for the courteous present of your
+booke.[111] with much delight and satisfaction I had read the same not
+once in English I must needs acknowledge your co[=m]ent more acceptable
+to me then the text which I am sure is an hard obscure peice without it.
+though I haue not been a stranger unto the vitriarie Art both in England
+and abroad.
+
+ [111] This evidently refers to the gift of a copy of Merrett's
+ Latin translation of Antonio Neri's _L'Arte Vetraria_ (Firenze,
+ 1612, 4to), published under the title of "The Art of Glass,
+ translated into English with some observations on the Author," &c.,
+ in 1662, and a Latin edition in 1668.
+
+I perceiue you haue proceeded farre in your Pinax. These few at present
+I am bold to propose & hint unto you intending God willing to salute you
+agayne.
+
+A paragraph might probably be annexed unto Quercus. Though wee haue not
+all the exotick oakes, nor their excretions yet these and probably more
+supercrescences productions or excretions may bee obserued in England.
+
+ Viscum--polypodium--Juli pilulĉ--
+ Gemmĉ foraminatĉ [formicatĉ?] folior[=u]--
+ excrement[=u] fungosum verticibus scatens--
+ Excrementum Lanatum--
+ Capitula squamosa jacĉĉ ĉmula.
+ Nodi--melleus Liquor--Tubera radicum
+ vermibus scatentia--Muscus--Lichen--
+ Fungus--varĉ quercinĉ.[112]
+
+ [112] The Rev. E. N. Bloomfield has most kindly assisted me in
+ attempting to identify the Parasitic products of the Oak mentioned
+ above:
+
+ _Viscum_, is doubtless the Mistletoe.
+
+ _Polypodium_, the Common Polypody Fern.
+
+ _Juli pilulĉ_: "little balls on the flower catkins." The Currant
+ Gall, _Neurosterus baccarum_, which is the spring form of _N.
+ lenticularis_; Oliv.
+
+ _Gemmĉ foraminatĉ [formicatĉ?] foliorum_: "pimple-like buds on the
+ leaves." Leaf-galls, such as the Silky Button, _N. numismatis_,
+ Oliv., and the common Spangle, _N. lenticularus_, Oliv.
+
+ _Excrementum fungosum verticibus scatens_: "a spongy secretion
+ bursting out from the ends of the shoots." The Oak Apple, _Biorhiza
+ terminalis_, Fab.
+
+ _Excrementum lanatum_: the Woolly Gall, _Andricus ramuli_, L., a
+ somewhat rare Gall, resembling a ball of cotton-wool.
+
+ _Capitula squamosa jacĉĉ ĉmula_: "little scaley (or imbricated)
+ heads resembling the heads of Jacea" (Black Knapweed). The
+ Artichoke Gall. _Andricus fecundatrix_; Htg.
+
+ _Nodi_: probably swellings of any sort, whether caused by insects
+ or not.
+
+ _Melleus liquor_: Honey-dew, a secretion of Aphides.
+
+ _Tubera radicum vermibus scatentia_: "swollen tubers on the roots
+ containing grubs;" without doubt the Root-Gall, _Andricus radicis_,
+ Fab. Polythalamous Galls, often very large at the roots or on the
+ trunk near the ground.
+
+ Mosses, Lichens, and Fungi, all "genuine products of the Oak," need
+ no comment, but Mr. Bloomfield remarks, "How wonderfully observant
+ Sir Thomas Browne must have been thus to distinguish the various
+ galls, &c., and to point them out so distinctly."
+
+ Browne's contemporary, Dean Wren, seems sadly to have misunderstood
+ the fructification of the Oak. In a note on Browne's remarks on the
+ "Miseltoe" (_Pseudodoxia_, book ii., chap. vi.), he says,
+ "Arboreous excrescences of the Oak are soe many as may raise the
+ greatest wonder. Besides the gall, which is his proper fruite, hee
+ shootes out oakerns, i.e., _ut nunc vocamus_ (acornes), and oakes
+ apples, and polypodye, and moss; five several sorts of
+ excrescences." See also letter to his son, Dr. Edward Browne, in
+ which Sir Thomas Browne says that "wee haue little or none of
+ _viscus quercinus_, or miselto of the oake, in this country; butt I
+ beleeve they have in the woods and parks of Oxfordshyre."--Wilkin,
+ i, p. 279.
+
+[_Fol. 43._] Capillaris marina sparsa fucus capillaris marinus sparsus
+sive capillitius marinus or sea periwigge.[113] strings of this are
+often found on the sea shoare. but this is the full figure I haue seen 3
+times as large.
+
+ [113] In Sir Thomas Browne's time the Hydrozoa were not
+ distinguished from the Corallines, and both were regarded as
+ vegetable growths. It is almost impossible to determine from his
+ vague descriptions even to which section those mentioned belong,
+ but although our exposed coast-line is not favourable to such
+ growths, there are a few common species of Hydroid Zoophytes which
+ abound here, and to these, fortunately, Browne's specimens appear
+ to belong. What he calls the "Sea-perriwig" is doubtless
+ _Sertularia operculata_, Lin., sometimes known as "Sea-hair," a
+ very common and widely dispersed species.
+
+I send you also [_several words smeared out_] a little elegant sea
+plant[114] which I pulled from a greater bush thereof which I haue
+resembling the back bone of a fish. Fucus marinus vertebratus pisciculi
+spinum referens Icthyorachius or what you thinck fitt.
+
+ [114] The little "Fucus," which he compares to the backbone of a
+ fish, is probably _Halecium halecinum_, Lin., the "Herring-bone
+ Coral" of Ellis, one of the most common Zoophytes on our coast. The
+ "Abies," of which he suggests at p. 75 that this may be a
+ "difference," is most likely _Sertularia abietina_, Lin., which
+ this species resembles, but is less regularly pinnate; this may
+ have led him to suppose that the "sprouts, wings, or leaves" may
+ have fallen off. The _Fucus marinus_ is most likely _Fucus
+ serratus_.
+
+And though perhaps it bee not worth the taking notice of formicĉ
+arenariĉ marinĉ or at least muscus formicarius marinus[115] yet I
+obserue great numbers by the seashoare and at yarmouth an open sandy
+coast, in a sunny day many large and winged ones may bee obserued upon &
+rising out of the [shoare _crossed out_] wet sands when the tide falls
+away.
+
+ [115] Swarms of Ants and Flies are no uncommon sight along the
+ seashore at certain seasons of the year, and under the conditions
+ which Browne describes. The Pagets ("Nat. Hist. of Great Yarmouth")
+ mention that the fly, _Actora ĉstuum_, is common on the beach at
+ high-water mark; but Mr. Verrall writes me that there are many
+ others likely to be thus met with, such as _Orygma luctuosa_ and
+ _Limosina zosterĉ_, widely divergent species. In his "Journal of a
+ Tour" into Derbyshire, Dr. Edward Browne, in crossing the sands of
+ the Wash, mentions his satisfaction at the absence of the swarms of
+ flies "with which all the fenne countrys are extremely pestered."
+ _See also Note 110 supra._
+
+Notonecton an insect that swimmeth on its back [_see Note 98_] &
+mentioned by Muffettus may be obserued with us.
+
+I send you a white Reed chock[116] by name some kind of Junco or litle
+sort thereof I haue had another very white when fresh.
+
+ [116] It is impossible to form an idea as to what is here intended.
+ I know of no _Juncus_ which would answer the description. Professor
+ Newton reminds me__ that "Junco" was a common name for "a bird that
+ inhabited reeds," and was loosely applied, some old authors taking
+ it to be the Reed Thrush (_i.e._, the Great Reed-Warbler of these
+ days), and others, the Reed-Sparrow or Bunting. But bearing in mind
+ Browne's practice of referring to Jonston, it seems possible that
+ the latter's _Junco_ may be here intended, and that, as the figure
+ (pl. 53) shows, is a small Sandpiper, almost certainly the Dunlin.
+ It is lettered "Junco Bellonii," but this he must have taken
+ second-hand from Aldrovandus, since Belon never used the word
+ "Junco" in this connexion, but called it "Schoeniclus" or
+ "Alouette-de-mer"--terms rendered _Junco_ by Aldrovandus (iii. p.
+ 487). Charleton took the same view in his "Onomasticon" (p. 108),
+ published in 1668 (the year assigned as that of this letter),
+ stating that it was so-called because "in juncis libenter degat,"
+ and identifying it with the _Alouette-de-mer_ of the French, and
+ the English "Stint, or Sparr, or Perr." Gilbert White appears to
+ have thus applied the term (_cf._ "Life" by Rashleigh Holt-White,
+ i. pp. 186, 194, 250). In one place he says, "No. five is Ray's
+ _Junco_ and the _Turdus arundinaceus_ of Linn." That "Junco" is the
+ name of a bird is absolutely certain, but the context, "very white
+ when fresh," does not seem to admit of explanation.
+
+Also the draught of a sea fowle called a sherewater [_see Note 17_]
+billed like a cormorant, feirce & snapping like it upon any touch. I
+kept 2 of them aliue 5 weekes cramming them with fish refusing of
+themselues to feed on anything & wearied with cramming them they liued
+17 dayes without food. They often fly about fishing [ves _crossed out_]
+shipps when they cleans their fish & throwe away the offell. so that it
+may bee referred to the Lari as Larus niger gutture albido rostro
+adunco.
+
+Gossander videtur esse puphini species [_Pinax_, p. 184]. worthy Sr that
+wch we call a gossander [_see Note 19_] & is no rare fowle among us is a
+large well colourd & marked diuing fowle most answering the [mer
+_crossed out_] Merganser. it may bee like the puffin in fattnesse and
+[Ranknesse _crossed out_] Ranknesse butt no fowle is I think like the
+puffin differenced from all others by a peculiar kind of bill
+
+[_Fol 43 verso._] Barganders [_see Note 18_] not so rare as Turn
+[Turner] makes them co[=m]on in Norfolk so abounding in vast & spatious
+warrens.
+
+If you haue not yet putt in Larus minor or a sterne [_see Note 13_] it
+would not bee omitted, co[=m]on about broad waters and plashes not
+farre from the sea.
+
+Haue you a Yarwhelp, Barker, or Latrator [_see Note 39_] a marsh bird
+about the bignesse of a Godwitt
+
+Haue you Dentalia [_see Note 83_] which are small vniualue testacea
+whereof sometimes wee find some on the seashoare
+
+Haue you putt in nerites another little Testaceum which wee haue [_see
+Note 83_].
+
+Haue you an Apiaster a small bird calld a Beebird.[117]
+
+ [117] Probably the Spotted Flycatcher is here referred to, the
+ prefix not being used in a technical sense; it is known here as the
+ Beam-bird, either of which names may be a corruption of the other.
+ Another Norfolk name for this bird is the Wall-bird.
+
+Haue you morinellus marinus or the sea Dotterell better colourd then the
+other & somewhat lesse [_see Note 28_].
+
+I send you a draught of 2 small birds the bigger called a Chipper or
+Betulĉ Carptor [_see Note 48_] cropping the first sproutings of the
+Birch trees & comes early in the spring. The other a very small bird
+lesse than the certhya or ox eyecreeper called a whinne bird
+
+I send you the draught of a fish taken sometimes in our seas [_see Note
+69_]. pray compare it with Draco minor Johnstoni. this draught was taken
+from the fish dried & so the prickly finnes less discernible.
+
+There is a very small kind of smelt [_see Note 71_] butt in shape &
+smell like the other taken in good plenty about [wh _crossed out_] Lynne
+& called Primmes.
+
+Though Scombri Or Makerells [_see Note 73_] bee a co[=m]on fish yet [in
+_crossed out_] our seas afford sometimes strange & large ones as I haue
+heard from fishermen & others. & this yeare 1668 one was taken at
+Lestoffe an ell long by measure & presented to a Gentleman a friend of
+myne.
+
+Musca Tuliparum moschata is a small beelike flye [_see Note 108_] of an
+excellent fragrant odour which I haue often found at the bottom of the
+flowers of Tuleps.
+
+[_Fol. 44._] In the little box I send a peece of vesicaria or seminaria
+marina [yo _crossed out_] cutt of from a good full one found on the sea
+shoare [_see Note 91_].
+
+Wee haue [_two or three words smeared out here_] also an eiectment of
+the sea very co[=m]on which is fanago [_see Note 91_] whereof some very
+large.
+
+I thank you for communicating the account of Thunder & lightening some
+strange effects thereof I haue found heere butt this last yeere wee had
+litle or no Thunder & lightening. [_No signature._]
+
+
+No. V.
+
+DR. BROWNE TO MERRETT.
+
+ [This letter which was originally printed in the "Posthumous
+ Works," will be found in MS. Sloane 1911-13, fol. 106, where it
+ is headed in pencil as addressed to Sir Wm. Dugdale, but it was
+ restored to its proper place by Wilkin in the 1836 Edition of
+ the Works, i., p. 404.]
+
+ Honoured Sir
+
+[_Fol. 106._] I am sorry I have had [diuersions _above_] of such
+necessitie, as to hinder my more sudden salute since I receiued your
+last. I thank you for the sight of the _Sperma Ceti_, and such kind of
+effects from [Lightning & Thunder _written above_] I have known and
+about 4 yeares ago about this towne when I with many others saw
+fire-balls fly & go of when they met with resistance, and one carried
+away the tiles and boards of a leucomb Window of my owne howse, being
+higher then the neighbour howses & breaking agaynst it with a report
+like a good canon. I set downe that occurrence in this citty & country,
+& haue it somewhere [in _crossed out_] amongst my papers, and fragments
+of a woman's hat that was shiuered into pieces of the bignesse of a
+groat. I haue still by mee a little of the spermaceti of our whale, as
+also the oyle & balsome wch I made with the oyle & spermaceti. Our whale
+was worth 500 lib. my Apothecarie got about fiftie pounds in one sale of
+a quantitie of sperm [_see Note 51_].
+
+I made enumeration of the excretions of the oake which might bee
+obserued in england [_see Note 112_], because I conceived they would bee
+most obseruable if you set them downe together, not minding whether
+there were any addition by excrementum fungosum vermiculis scatens I
+only meant an vsuall excretion, soft & fungous at first & pale &
+sometimes couered in part with a fresh red growing close vnto the
+sprouts. first full of maggots in little woodden cells which afterwards
+turne into little reddish browne or bay flies. of the tubera indica
+vermiculis scatentia I send you a peece, they are as bigg as good
+Tennis-balls & ligneous.
+
+The little elegant fucus [_see Note 114_] may come in as a difference of
+the abies, being somewhat like it, as also unto the 4 corrallium in
+Gerard of the sprouts whereof I could never find any sprouts wings Or
+leaves as in the abies whether fallen of I knowe not, though I call'd it
+icthyorachius or pisciculi spinam referens yet pray do you call it how
+you please I send you now the figure of a quercus mar. [inus] or alga
+which I found by the seashoare differing from the co[=m]on [_see Note
+114_] as being denticulated & in one place there seemes to bee the
+beginning of some flower pod or seedvessell.
+
+[_Fol 106. verso._] A draught of the morinellus marinus or sea doterell I
+now send you. the bill should not have been so black & the leggs more
+red, [_see Note 28_] & [the _crossed out_] a greater eye of dark red in
+the feathers of wing and back: it is lesse & differently colourd from
+the co[=m]on dotterell, wch [wee haue _crossed out_] cometh to us about
+March & September. these sea-dotterells are often shot near the sea.
+
+A yarewhelp or barker [_some words smeared out_] [_see Note 39_] a
+marsh-bird the bill 2 inches long the legges about that length the bird
+of a brown or russet colour.
+
+That which is knowne by the name of a bee-bird [_see Note 117_] is a
+litle dark gray bird I hope to get one for you.
+
+That whch I call'd a betulĉ carptor & should rather have calld it Alni
+carptor [_see Note 48_] whereof I sent a rude draught. it feeds upon
+alder [budds mucaments or _written above_] seeds which grow plentifully
+heere & they fly in little flocks.
+
+That [calld by some a _written above_] whin-bird is a kind of ox eye
+butt the shining yellow spot on the back of the head [_see Note 48_] is
+scarce to bee well imitated by a pensill.
+
+I confess for such litle birds I am much unsatisfied on the names giuen
+to many by countrymen, and vncertaine what to giue them myself, or to
+what classes of authors cleerly to reduce them. surely there are many
+found among us whch are not described; & therefore such whch you cannot
+well reduce may (if at all) bee set downe after the exacter nomination
+of small birds as yet of uncertain classe or knowledge.
+
+I present you with a draught of a water-fowl not co[=m]on & none of our
+fowlers can name it [_see_ p. 79 _infra_] the bill could not bee exactly
+expressed by a coale or black chalk, whereby the litle incuruitie [at
+the end _written above_] of the upper bill & small recurvitie of the
+lower is not discerned. the wings are very short, & it is finne footed.
+the bill is strong & sharp, if you name it not I am uncertaine what to
+call it pray consider this Anatula or mergulus melanoleucus rostro
+acuto.
+
+[_Fol. 107._] I send you also the heads of mustela or mergus mustelaris
+mas. et fĉmina [_see Note 21_] called a wesel from some resemblance in
+the head especially of the female wch is brown or russet not black &
+white like the male. & from their praying quality upon small fish. I
+have found small eeles small perches & small muscles in their stomacks.
+Have you a sea phaysant [_see Note 22_] so co[=m]only calld from
+resemblance of an hen phaisant in the head & eyes & spotted marks on the
+wings & back. & wth a small bluish flat bill, tayle longer than other
+ducks, long winges crossing over the tayle like those of a long winged
+hawke.
+
+Have you taken notice of a breed of porci solidi pedes.[118] I first
+obserued them above xx yeares ago & they are still among us. [See also
+p. 80 _infra_.]
+
+ [118] Mr. Darwin writes ("Anim. and Plants under Domestication,"
+ i., p. 78), that from the time of Aristotle to the present day,
+ Solid-hoofed Swine have been occasionally observed in various parts
+ of the world. Dr. Coues also says that this variety seems to be
+ persistent in a Texas breed. See also Professor Struthers in the
+ "Edin. New Phil. Journal," April, 1863. The two distal phalanges of
+ the two great toes, both front and back, in the examples described
+ by Professor Struthers, were joined together, forming a single
+ hoof-bearing bone. The next two phalanges were separate, and
+ sometimes kept widely apart from each other by the introduction of
+ a special ossicle. I have been told that about the year 1827, a
+ breed of solid-footed swine existed at or near Upwell. By some it
+ was thought that their flesh was not good for food because they
+ were "uncloven." Dr. Wren, in a note to Browne's _Pseudodoxia_
+ (book vi., chap. x.), says, "About Aug., 1625, at a farm 4 miles
+ from Winchester, I beheld with wonder a great heard of swine,
+ whole-footed, and taller than any other that ever I sawe."
+
+Our nerites or neritĉ are litle ones [_see Note 83_].
+
+I queried whether you had dentalia [_see Note 83_] becaus probably you
+might haue met with them in england. I neuer found any on our shoare
+butt one brought mee a few small ones with smooth with [_sic_] small
+shells from the shoare. I shall inquire further after them.
+
+Urtica marina minor Johnst. tab. xviii. [_see Note 90_] haue found more
+than once by the sea side.
+
+The hobby and the merlin would not bee omitted among hawkes the first
+coming to us in the spring the other about the autumn. Beside the ospray
+wee have a larger kind of agle, calld an erne [_see Note 3_]. I haue had
+many of them.
+
+Worthy deare Sr, if I can do anything farther wch may bee seruiceable
+unto you you shall ever readily co[=m]and my endeauours; who am, Sr,
+Your humble & very respectfull seruant,
+
+ THO. BROWNE.
+
+ _Febr 6 [1668-9.]_
+ _Norwich._
+
+
+No. VI.
+
+[MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS. MS. SLOANE 1847, FOL. 198.]
+
+ [This volume contains a Miscellaneous collection, mostly letters
+ to his son Edward, and some to "Tom." The following (as all in
+ the volume) is on letter-sized paper, 7-1/2 × 6 in.]
+
+ Worthy Sr
+
+[_Fol. 198._] Though I writ vnto you last monday. yet hauing omitted
+some few things wch I thought to have mentioned I am bold to giue you
+this trouble so soone agayne haue you putt in a sea fish calld a bleak
+[_see Note 74_] a fish like an herring often taken with us and eat butt
+a more lanck & thinne & drye fish.
+
+The wild swanne or elk [_see Note 8_] would not bee omitted, [here
+_crossed out_] being co[=m]on in hard winters & differenced from [the
+_crossed out_] our River swanns by the Aspera Arteria. [See also pp. 80
+and 83 _infra_.]
+
+Fulica and cotta Anglorum [_see Note 23_] are different birds though
+good resemblance between them, so some doubt may bee made whether it bee
+to bee made a coote except you set it downe fulica nostras. & cotta
+Anglorum I pray consider whether that waterbird whose draught I sent in
+the last box & thought it might bee named Anatula or mergulus
+melanoleucos may not bee some gallinula. it hath some resemblance with
+gallina hypoleucos of Johnst Tab 32 [31] butt myne hath shorter wings by
+much & the bill not so long [_Fol. 198 verso_] & slender & shorter leggs
+& lesser & so may ether be calld gallina Aquatica hypoleucos nostras or
+hypoleucos or melanoleucos Anatula or mergulus nostras.[119]
+
+ [119] The "draught" of this bird sent to Merrett is not
+ forthcoming. Professor Newton has been kind enough to send me the
+ following note on this puzzling passage. "Jonston's figure (tab.
+ 31) of _Gallina hypoleucos_, to which Browne says it bore some
+ resemblance, undoubtedly represents what we know as the Common
+ Sandpiper, _Totanus hypoleucus_ or _Actitis hypoleuca_, the
+ _Fysterlin_ of the Germans of Jonston's time (p. 160), and
+ _Fisterlein_ or _Pfisterlein_ of modern days. But there seems to be
+ some strange confusion that cannot now be cleared, between this
+ bird and Browne's _Anatula_ or _Mergulus melanoleucos_ [_see_ p. 76
+ _ante_], of which some years later, he sent a drawing, under the
+ latter name, to Willughby, in whose work it is described and
+ figured (Lat. Ed. p. 261, Engl. 343, tab. lix.), for this most
+ certainly is the Rotche or Little Auk, _Mergulus alle_ of modern
+ ornithology." In the next letter (p. 81), Browne mentions that he
+ encloses the draft of "Ralla aquatica" here referred to.
+
+Tis much there should be no Icon of Rallus or Ralla Aquatica I haue a
+draught of one & they are found among us
+
+ Feb xii 1668.
+
+The vesicaria I sent is like that you mention [_see Note 91_] if not the
+same the co[=m]on fanago resembleth the husk of peas this of [Part
+_crossed out_] Barly when the flower is mouldred away. [See also p. 89
+_infra_, where Merrett aptly compares the latter to the flowers of the
+Grape Hyacinth.]
+
+
+No. VII.
+
+[BIBLIOTHECA BODLEIANA. MS. RAWLINSON D. cviii. SR THO BROWN TO DR.
+MERRETT.]
+
+[_Fol. 105._] Sr I craue your pardon for this delayed returne unto your
+last, whose courteus acceptance & worthy entertaynment [?] deserued [a
+speed _blotted out_] even a speedier reply. The small plant may fitly
+come in among the corallines upon the [diff _crossed out_] account of
+articulation Icthyorachius [_see Note 114_] I think will bee a good
+Diference [?]. whether you will subexpand [?] the word I referre it to
+yourself. certhia may best bee vertice aureo [_word blotted out_] or
+vertice aureo penicello vix imitando. morinellus marinus [_see Note 28_]
+I think rather then Aquaticus becuse it is seen most about the sea
+coast. Anas alis oculatis[120] rather then Anser for it is not
+altogether so longe as a wild duck. of porci solidipedes [_see Note
+118_] there are still in this country in some places. and I am promised
+a pigge by a Gentleman that hath still a boar and sow of that kind. I
+tooke notice of them 26 years ago & having not lately [met with _crossed
+out_] met with any thought the race had been worne out butt I perceue it
+is not--they are whole footed in the forfeet & have [only _crossed out_]
+a seame only in the hinder. so they are animalia duplici nomine
+i[=m]unda. The wild swans or elk [_see Note 8_] in [very _crossed out_]
+lasting cold winters are most plentifull. It is larger then the River
+swan somewhat gray & of a lowder note & [differenced call _crossed
+out_] a recuruation of the Aspera arteria in the sternon as I noted in
+the margin long agoe in vulgar errors. the blicca marina [_see Note 74_]
+may well be named Harengiformis. [_several words smeared out_] I have
+the draught of that an Herring & a pilcher in one paper upon that
+account [Fol. 104 _verso_] I belieue [?] you were well informd of the
+cotta [_see_ p. 79] & fulica of our Ralla Aquatica I enclose a draught.
+
+ [120] Possibly the Pintail, _Dafila acuta_ (Linn.), _see_ p. 77.
+
+Of porci solidipedes there are diuers still in the country in some
+places I am promised a pigge by a friend who cherisheth that [new
+_crossed out_] breed. I tooke notice of them 26 yeares ago, & hauing not
+lately minded them thought they had been worn out butt I perceiue they
+are not--some are more plainly wholefooted then others & especially in
+the fore feet & in the rest there is no thorough fissure butt at most a
+superficiall seame, so they are [No. 3 cap 27 _above_] Quadrupedia
+duplici nomine i[=m]unda.
+
+[This last paragraph seems to have been written by way of emendation of
+what appears above on the same subject. A photograph of a portion of the
+above letter will, by the courtesy of the Bodleian Librarian, be found
+as a frontispiece to this volume. Mr. Jenkinson, the Librarian of the
+University of Cambridge, and through him, Mr. G. F. Warner and Mr.
+Kenyon, of the Department of Manuscripts of the British Museum, have
+kindly interested themselves in the transcript of this letter, which was
+very difficult to decipher.]
+
+
+No. VIII.
+
+BIBLIOTHECA BODLEIANA (MS. RAWL. D. cviii.)
+
+ [Draft of a letter from Sir Thomas Browne, described in the
+ Catalogue of the Rawlinson MSS. as to the Secretary of the Royal
+ Society, but from its contents evidently written to Merrett,
+ whose letter, dated 8th May, 1669, is in part a reply to it.]
+
+[_Fol 58._] Honord Sr I humbly thank you for your care of my sonnes
+paper & the Royll Societie for their acceptance of it. If hee bee in
+health I knowe hee is mindfull of their co[=m]ands receiued aboue 2
+months ago by a letter from Mr. Oldenburg.[121] I haue not heard from
+him of late the last I receiued was from Komorn[R] in Lower Hungary and
+hee was then going to the mine countryes. I think the Rowd may bee calld
+Rutilus ventre magis compresso[122] w^{ch} is the first discoverable
+difference to the eye. The weazelling [_see Note 60_] is as you see in
+the draught a long fish figura ad teretem vergente. somewhat of the
+shape butt differing in the head from the _mustela viuipara_ of
+Schoneueld. butt not lozenged on the back though the back bee much
+darker then the other parts. I send you the figure of the head of a
+cristated wild duck. it is black blackish [_sic_] in the greater part of
+the body some white on the brest & wings blewish legges & bill & seems
+to bee of the Latirostrous tribe perhaps you haue it not. it may bee
+called _Anas macrolophos_ [Fol. 59] as excelling in that kind.[123]
+there is also a draught of one sort of _mergus cristatus_ resembling
+that of Aldrovandus or Johnstonus where there is only the figure of the
+head only this is also ruffus butt the head sad red.[124] wee haue a
+kind of teale which some fowlers call crackling teale from the noyse it
+maketh[125] it is almost of the bignesse of a duck coming late of the
+yeare & latest going away hath a russet head & neck with a dark yellow
+stroak about a quarter of an inch broad from the crowne to the bill
+winged like a teale a white streake through the middle of the wings and
+edges thereof the tale blackish. it may be calld Querquedula maior
+serotina. I send you the figure in litle of a pristis[126] w^{ch} I
+receaued from a yarmouth seaman. you may please to compare it w^{th}
+yours. the asper you mention is much like our Rough or Aspredo.
+
+ [121] Henry Oldenburg (1615-1677) was born at Bremen. Came to
+ England about 1640, where he remained eight years. In 1653 he was
+ sent to England from Bremen on a diplomatic mission to Cromwell. He
+ returned to England a third time in 1660. He was an original Member
+ of the Royal Society, and became one of its first Secretaries. A
+ half-length portrait is in the possession of the Royal Society.
+
+ [R] A well-known town on the Danube, forty-seven miles west of
+ Buda-Pesth, probably the Comorra of E. Browne's letter to his
+ father, _cf._ Wilkin, i., p. 159.
+
+ [122] The Rudd (_Leuciscus erythrophthalmus_, Will.) is known in
+ Norfolk as the Roud. Browne seems to treat it as a variety of the
+ Roach (_Rutilus_, Willugh.), and Merrett in his second letter
+ remarks with approval "you have very well named the Rutilus."
+
+ [123] _Fuligula cristata_ (Linnĉus), the Tufted Duck.
+
+ [124] Professor Newton suggests that Browne intended to write
+ _Mergus cirratus_. Aldrovandus figures the head, iii., p. 283, and
+ that of _M. longirostris_ in the preceding page. This last is
+ copied by Jonston (fol. 47). Both birds seem to be female or
+ immature Goosanders. Neither author has a _M. cristatus_.
+
+ [125] The above description certainly applies to the Common Teal,
+ which was well-known to Browne (_vide supra_, p. 14), and that
+ species is with us all the year; I cannot help thinking, however,
+ that he had in his mind the Garganey, or Summer Teal, so called
+ from the season of its visit to us. This species is known to the
+ Norfolk gunners as the "Cricket Teal," and being slightly larger
+ than the common species it might well be called by him
+ "_Querquedula major serotina_."
+
+ [126] _See Note 55_, p. 36. It will be noticed that both this and
+ the _Centriscus_ mentioned at p. 41 were given to Browne by a
+ "seaman of these seas," but may possibly have been brought home as
+ curiosities from a foreign voyage; the Saw-fish, however, mentioned
+ at p. 36, is distinctly stated to have been "taken about Lynn." It
+ is a matter of intense regret that the numerous drawings mentioned
+ in these letters should have been lost.
+
+I forgot in my last to signifie that an oter [an other?] Elk or wild
+swan was headed like a goose that is without any knobb at the bottome of
+the bill. [_See_ p. 80 and _Note 8_.]
+
+Haue you had the duck called Clangula in Ald. [drovandus] & Johnst.[127]
+wee haue one heere w^{ch} answereth their descriptions exactly butt
+[_i.e._, except] only in the colour of their leggs & feet.
+
+ [127] Aldrovandus's figure of "Clangula" (head only, iii., p. 224)
+ is too indefinite for determination. He says the feet are yellow,
+ but Jonston, who refers to it under the name of _Anas platyrhincus_
+ describes it fairly well (p. 145). _Clangula ab alarum clangore_,
+ Aldrov., _i.e._, "Rattlewings," an old name by which the Golden-eye
+ was known to the Norfolk gunners.
+
+Haue you a willock a sea fowl like a rook or crowe.[128]
+
+ [128] A local name for the Guillemot. Merrett says, in a letter
+ dated 8th May, 1669, "The Clangula I know no more of than reading
+ hath informed mee; [_see Note 127_] a willock I have seen brought
+ from Greenland,[S] where they are said exceedingly to abound, but
+ never thought either of them was found in England, and having not
+ taken sufficient notice of the latter, crave your description of
+ both."
+
+ [S] The Greenland of those days was Spitsbergen, where they would
+ be met with by the Whalers, but in that case the bird would be
+ Brünnich's Guillemot, a species not then differentiated.
+
+
+No. IX.
+
+[MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS. MS. SLOANE 1847, FOL. 182.]
+
+[_Fol. 182._] Sr I craue your pardon that I haue no sooner sent unto
+you. I shall be very reddie to do you service in order to your desires
+And shall endeavour to procure you such animalls as I haue formerly met
+with & any other not ordinary wch [shall _crossed out_] are to bee
+acquired. though many of my old assistants are dead. & sometimes they
+fell upon animalls, [not to bee _crossed out_] scarce to bee met with
+agayne. I wish I had been acquainted with your desires 3 yeares ago. for
+I had about fortie hanging up in my howse. wch the plague being at the
+next doores the person intrusted in my howse, burnt or threw away. The
+figure of the weasell Cray [_see Note 60_ and p. 82] was in a long paper
+pasted together at the ends & I make no question you will find it
+otherwise I would send another [the willick wee in _crossed out_] that
+fowl wch some call willick, [_see Note 128_] wee meet with sometimes.
+The last I met with was taken on the sea shoare. the head and body black
+the brest inclining to black headed and billd like a crowe, leggs set
+very backward wings short leggs set very backward (_sic_) that it move
+overland very badly only. it may bee a kind of cornix marina. [The
+latter portion very badly written and difficult to decipher.]
+
+[_Fol. 184 verso._] That litle plant upon oyster shells [_see Note 91_]
+I remember I haue seen & surely is some kind of vescaria or calicularia
+
+of what that other [was _crossed out_] electricall body was Mr.
+Boyle[129] showed [_smear_] by this time more tryall hath probably been
+made, something of jet it might consist of.
+
+ [129] The Hon. Robert Boyle (1627-1691), although deeply learned in
+ many branches of science, was chiefly distinguished as a chemist.
+ He took a leading part in the founding of the Royal Society, and
+ was elected President in 1680, but from some conscientious scruple
+ did not accept the office. Naturalists are deeply indebted to him,
+ as he was "the first that made trial of preserving animals" in
+ spirit (see Grew's "Musĉum Regalis Societatis" (London, 1681), p.
+ 58).
+
+
+I thank you that you were pleased to enquire of those German gentlemen
+concerning my sonne I receiued a letter lately from him he hath not
+been unmindfull of the R. Society's co[=m]ds & hath been in Hungaria in
+the mines of Gold, sylver & copper at Schemets, Cremitz & Neusol &
+desired mee to signifie so much to Mr. Oldenberg.
+
+[The above is hastily scrawled; it was evidently indited to Merrett, as
+indicated by the reference to the German gentlemen, &c.; the date would
+therefore be some time in the year 1669. Wilkin prints it in the 1836
+Edition, Vol. i., p. 408, but it is not in Bohn's reprint.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A.
+
+[TWO LETTERS FROM DOCTOR CHRISTOPHER MERRETT TO SIR THOMAS BROWNE, MS.
+SLOANE 1830, FOL. 1 TO 3. THEY ARE BOUND UP IN INVERSE ORDER OF DATE.]
+
+
+[Reply to No. 2 in the above Series.]
+
+[_Fol. 3._] WORTHY SR,--y^{rs} of y^e 14^{th} instant I recaeved as full
+off learning in discovering so many very great curiosities as kindness
+in communicating them to mee & promising y^r farther assistance. ffor
+which I shall always proclame by my tongue as well as by my pen, my due
+resentment & thanks.
+
+The 2 funguses [guses _crossed out and_ i _inserted_] y^w sent y^e
+figures off [_see Note 106_] are y^e finest & rarest as to their figure
+I have ever seen or read of, & soe is y^r fibula marina, far surpassing
+one I reacived from Cornwall much of y^e same bigness, neither of which
+I find anywhere mentioned. The urtica marina minor Jonst. & physalus I
+never met with, nor have bin informed off y^e canis charcharius alius
+Jonst. Many of y^e Lupus piscis I have seen, & have bin informed by y^e
+Kings fish monger they are taken on our coast, but was not satisfyed for
+some reasons off his relation soe as to enter it into my pinax, though
+tis said to bee peculiar to y^e river Albis [= Elbe] yet I thought they
+might come sometimes thence to y^r coasts. Trutta marina I haue and y^e
+loligo, sepia, & polypus y^e 3 sorts off y^e molles have bin found on
+our western coasts which shall bee exactly distinguished--As for y^e
+Salmons taken a bove London towards Richmond & nearer, & y^t in great
+quantity some years they have all off them their lower jaw as y^w
+observ, [_see Note 92_] & our fishermen [men _crossed out_] say they
+usually wear off some part off it on y^e banks or els y^e lower would
+grow into y^e upper & soe starve them as they have sometimes seen--y^w
+ask whether I haue y^e mullus ruber asper, or y^e piscis Octangularis
+Wormii. or y^e sea worm longer than y^e earth worms, or y^e garrulus
+Argentor. or y^e duck cal'd a May chit or y^e Dor hawke. The 4 first I
+haue noe account off y^e 2 later I know not especially by those names,
+wee have noe hawk by y^t name [_see Note 42_] y^r account of succinum as
+all y^e rest will bee registered. As for y^e Aquila Gesneri I never saw
+nor heard off any such in y^e Collidge for [_fol. 3 verso_] this 25
+years last past. Sr y^w are pleased to say y^w shall write more if y^w
+know how not to bee surpurfluous--certainly what y^w have hitherto done
+hath bin all curiosities, & I doubt not but y^w have many more by you--I
+can direct y^w noe further than y^r own reason dictates to y^w. Besides
+those mentioned in y^e pinax I have 100 to add, & cannot give y^w a
+particular off them--whatever y^w write is either confirmative or
+additional. I doe entreat this favour off y^w to inform mee fuller off
+those unknown things mentioned herein, & to add y^e name page &c of y^e
+Author if mentioned by any or else to give them such a latin name for
+them as y^w have done by y^e fungi which may bee descriptive &
+differencing off them. Sr I hope y^e publigs [_sic_] interest & y^r own
+good genius will plead y^r pardon desired by
+
+ y^r humble servant
+
+ CHR. MERRETT.
+
+ _London Aug. 29. 68._
+
+
+[Reply to No. 8 of the above Series.]
+
+[_Fol. 1._] WORTHY SR,--my due thanks premised I at present acquaint y^w
+y^t y^w have very well named y^e Rutilus & expressed fully y^e cours to
+bee taken in y^e imposition of names viz y^e most obvious & most
+peculiar difference to y^e ey or any other sens. I am farther to say y^t
+y^e icon of y^e weazeling came not to my hands, pray bee pleas'd to look
+amongst y^r papers perhaps it might bee laid by through some accident or
+other [I have _added above_] y^e figures of y^r anas macrolophos, & of
+y^e mergi cristati [_see Note 124_] & of y^e pristis y^t which came from
+Cornwall was of y^e gladius, y^e name of sword fish being applied to
+both of them by our nation. It seemeth by y^w y^t y^e Norwich aspredo is
+not y^e Ceruna fluviatilis contrary to what Camden affirms, for y^e
+rutilus mentioned in mine to y^w differs toto coelo from y^e
+ceruna--The difference of y^e Elks bill by y^w signified is remarkable
+to distinguish it from others of its own kind. [_See_ p. 83 _supra_.]
+The crackling teal seems [clearly _crossed out_] to bee y^e same which
+Dr Charleton[130] mentions in his Onomasticon under y^e name of y^e
+cracker,& showing him y^r description hee acknowledged to bee y^e same,
+y^e clangula I know noe more of than reading hath informed mee, a
+willock I have seen brought from Greenland where they are said
+exceedingly to abound, but never y^t [thought?] either of them was found
+in England, & having [not _added above_] taken sufficient notice of it
+y^e later, crave y^r description off both.
+
+ [130] In Charleton's "Onomasticon," at p. 99, the Cracker is called
+ by him, _Anas caudacuta_, and is said to be the "Gaddel" of the
+ London dealers in fowl. [_See Note 125._]
+
+And now Sr since my last only 2 things remarkable haue come to my
+knowledge. The one was a cake off black amber 1/6 off an inch thick &
+neer a palm each way. Mr. Boyle brought it to y^e R. society to whom it
+was sent from y^e Sussex shore, hee had only tryed it to its electricity
+& found it answer his expectation, farther tryals will be made of it.
+The second is a small plant found on oyster shells which when fresh did
+perfectly represent y^e flowers off Hyacinthus botryoides, [_see Note
+91_] but y^t was somewhat longer & not so much sweld out towards its
+pedunculus, some of them are here inclosed. Tis doubtless a sort off
+vesicaria, though much different from what y^w sent mee. Most off them
+are now shrunk & y^e sides constituting y^e cavity come together &
+appear only a transparent husk. One thing more I had to add (but
+scarcely dare speak it out) y^t is if it would please [you _added
+above_] to let it bee done without y^r charge & 2ly if it might be done
+without y^r trouble, then I would beg off y^w to set some a work to
+procure mee some of those rare animals &c y^w have mentioned in your
+seueral Letters. My intention therein is double: first to take their
+descriptions & furnish our colledge with them as curiosities, all being
+lost by y^e fire this is onely wished but must not bee proposed without
+y^e former limitation by y^r too much allready obliged friend & servant
+
+ _8th May '69._
+
+ CHR. MERRETT.
+
+I met this week with some persons off quality high Germans who lately
+saw y^r son & record all good things off him.
+
+ ffor Dr Browne off Norwich.
+
+[The reply to this letter is No. IX of the above Series.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B.
+
+[MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS. MS. SLOANE 1847, FOL. 56-57.]
+
+[_See Note 51_, p. 32 _supra_.]
+
+
+Praye Request Mr. Johnson to obtayne this fauor of Mr. Bacon who is
+unknown to mee, to afford mee his resolution to these few queries
+concerning the whale [wch _crossed out_] whereof I understand he had the
+cutting up and disposure whether there were any spermacetie found, or
+made out of other parts beside the head; if soe, of what parts & out of
+what most: and whether any out of the meere fleshie parts whether that
+wch runne from it about the shoare came out of the mouth.
+
+ [_Not signed or dated._]
+
+
+REPLY.
+
+Sr in Answer to your questions conserninge the whale, I founde noe
+Sper[=m]e but in his heade and that after I had taken off his scalpe one
+tonn weight [or more _written above_] of a nexuous substance, we found
+in the circumference as large as a small coach wheele in the middle part
+certain round pieces of Sperm as bigge as a mans fist some as large as
+eggs and on the out side of the said rounds, flakes as large as a mans
+head in forme like hony combs being very white and full of oyle. And
+that Sp. wch was cast upon the shore I doe conceive came out of his
+nostrells. thus much ffrom him who doth remayne Sir your humble Servant,
+Arthur Bacon Yarmouth 10th May 1652.
+
+
+BROWNE TO DUGDALE ON CERTAIN FOSSIL BONES.
+
+["EASTERN COUNTIES COLLECTANEA," pp. 193-195].
+
+ The letter referred to in the foot-note on page 33, written by
+ Sir Thomas Browne to Dugdale, and formerly in the possession of
+ the late Mr. Arthur Preston of Norwich, whose collection of
+ manuscripts was dispersed by auction in August, 1888, was
+ printed in a brief-lived and little-known local publication,
+ entitled the "Eastern Counties Collectanea" (1872-3), at page
+ 193. In this letter occurs a passage which confirms the doubt
+ expressed as to the Whales which had young ones after coming on
+ shore at Hunstanton being Sperm Whales. They are expressly said
+ to have been of that sort "which seamen call a Grampus," and as
+ Sir Nicholas le Strange, in a MS. preserved in the Muniment room
+ at Hunstanton, applies the name "Grampus" to an undoubted
+ specimen of _Hyperoodon rostratus_ (as shown both by his
+ description and outline sketch) which came ashore there in the
+ year 1700, I have little doubt that the Cetaceans in question
+ belonged to that species and not to _Physeter macrocephalus_.
+
+ This letter is interesting also as filling a gap in Wilkin's
+ series and I therefore reproduce it, omitting only occasional
+ learned digressions which do not affect the subject. The
+ original not being available, I have used the copy in the
+ "Collectanea" before mentioned.
+
+ Dugdale, in November, 1658, and again later, had written to
+ Browne, sending him a bone of a "fish which was taken up by Sir
+ Robert Cotton, in digging a pond at the skirt of Conington
+ downe," and asking his opinion thereof. (Wilkin, i., pp. 385 and
+ 390.)
+
+ To the first of these letters Browne replied, under date of the
+ 6th December, 1658, "I receaued the bone of the fish, and shall
+ giue you some account of it when I have compared it with
+ another bone which is not by mee" (op. cit. p. 387). The letter
+ which follows and which was unknown to Wilkin supplies this
+ information.
+
+[p. 193.] "Sr I cannot sufficiently admire the ingenious industry of Sr
+Robert Cotton in preserving so many things of rarity and observation nor
+commend your own enquiries for the satisfaction of such particulars. The
+petrified bone you sent me, which with divers others was found
+underground, near Cunnington, seems to be the vertebra, spondyle or
+rackbone of some large fish, and no terrestrious animal as some upon
+sight conceived, as either of Camel, rhinoceros, or elephant, for it is
+not perforated and hollow but solid according to the spine of fishes in
+whom the spinal marrow runs in a channel above these solid racks, or
+spondiles.
+
+"It seems much too big for the largest Dolphins, porpoises, or sword
+fishes, and too little for a true or grown whale, but may be the bone of
+some big cetaceous animal, as particularly of that which seamen call a
+Grampus; a kind of small whale, whereof some come short, some exceed
+twenty foot. And not only whales but Grampusses have been taken in this
+Estuarie or mouth of the fenland rivers. And about twenty years ago four
+were run ashore near Hunstanton and two had young ones after they came
+to land. But whether this fish were of the longitude of twenty foot (as
+is conceived) some doubt may be made for this bone containeth little
+more than an inch in thickness, and not three inches in breadth so that
+it might have a greater number thereof than is easily allowable to make
+out that longitude. For of the whale which was cast upon our coast about
+six years ago a vertebra or rackbone still preserved, containeth a foot
+in breadth and nine inches in depth, yet the whale with all advantages
+but sixty-two foot in length. [p, 194.] We are not ready to believe
+that, wherever such relics of fish or sea animals are found, the sea
+hath had its course. And Goropius Becanus[131] long ago could not digest
+that conceit when he found great numbers of shells upon the highest
+Alps. For many may be brought unto places where they were not first
+found.
+
+ [131] This seems to refer to the "De Gigantibus eorumque reliquiis"
+ of J. van Gorp, Jean Bécan, or Joannes Goropius (as the name is
+ variously given in the "Biographie Universelle" (b. 1518, d. 1572),
+ and apparently published after the Author's death by Jean
+ Chassanion, 8vo, Basileĉ, 1580, and another edition in 1587. See
+ Brit. Mus. Cat.; but I have not seen the book.
+
+"Some bones of our whale were left in several fields which when the
+earth hath obscured them, may deceive some hereafter, that the sea hath
+come so high. In northern nations where men live in houses of fishbones
+and in the land of the Icthiophagi near the Red sea where mortars were
+made of the backbones of whales, doors of their jaws, and arches of
+their ribs, when time hath covered them they might confound after
+discoverers....
+
+"For many years great doubt was made concerning those large bones found
+in some parts of England, and named Giants' bones till men [p. 195]
+considered they might be the bones of elephants brought into this island
+by Claudius, and perhaps also by some succeeding emperors [then follow
+other ancient examples of the finding 'elephants bones' in various
+countries attributed to similar modes of introduction]. But many things
+prove obscure in subterraneous discovery....
+
+"In some chalk pits about Norwich many stag's horns are found of large
+beams and branches, the solid parts converted into a chalky and fragile
+substance, the pithy part sometimes hollow and full of brittle earth and
+clay. In a churchyard of this city an oaken billet was found in a
+coffin. About five years ago an humourous man of this country after his
+death and according to his own desire was wrap't up in a horned hide of
+an ox and so buried.[T] Now when the memory hereof is past how this may
+hereafter confound the discoverers and what connjectures will arise
+thereof it is not easy to conjecture.
+
+ [T] Richard Ferrer, of Thurne, by his will, proved about 1654,
+ directed that his "dead body be handsomely trussed up in a black
+ bullock's hide, and be decently buried in the Churchyard of
+ Thurne."--"Norfolk Archĉology," v., p. 212.
+
+ Sr Your servant to my power,
+
+ THO. BROWNE."
+
+This is endorsed "Sr Thomas Browne's discourse about the Fish bone found
+at Conington Com. Hunt, Shown, Dr. Tanner."
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX C.
+
+[SLOANE MS. ADDITIONAL 5233, LARGE FOLIO, IS A VOLUME LABELLED "DR. EDW.
+BROWN'S DRAWINGS."]
+
+ "Some original drawing of Towns, Castles, Antiquities, Medals
+ &c. by Dr. Edward Browne in his Travels & presented by his
+ Father Sir Thomas Browne. Who hath write upon sev^{ll} of them
+ what they are."
+
+
+The above is the inscription written on the fly-leaf of this volume,
+which I hoped might have contained some drawings of birds or fishes by
+Sir Thomas Browne, but there is nothing in it of interest from a Natural
+History point of view. In Wilkin's Catalogue of the MSS. (Vol. iv., p.
+476) it is described as "a collection of very curious drawings (some
+coloured) of public buildings, habits, _fishes_, mines, rocks, tombs,
+and other antiquities, observed by Sir Thos. and Dr. Edward Browne in
+their travels," but there are no fishes, birds, or other animals in the
+volume.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX D.
+
+
+ Draft of a letter from Sir Thomas Browne to his daughter
+ Elizabeth, enclosing two pictures of a Stork. This and the next
+ letter are in the Bodleian Library (MS. Rawl. D. cviii.)
+
+[_Fol. 70._] This is a picture of the stork [_see Note 14_] I mentiond
+in my last. butt it is different from the co[=m]on stork by red lead
+colourd leggs and bill[132] and the feet hath not vsuall sharp poynted
+clawes butt resembling a mans nayle, such as Herodotus discribeth the
+white Ibis of Ĉgypt to haue. The ends of the wings are black & when shee
+doth not spred them they make all the lower part of the back looke
+black, butt the fethers on the back vnder them are white as also the
+tayle. it fed upon snayles & froggs butt a toad being offered it would
+not touch it. the tongue is about half an inch long. the quills of the
+wing are as bigge or bigger then a swans quills. it was shott by the
+seaside & the wing broake. Some there were who tooke it for an euell
+omen saying If storks come ouer into England, god send that a
+co[=m]onwealth doth not come after.[U]
+
+ [132] Browne evidently was not very familiar with the Stork, which
+ is not surprising, seeing that it is a very rare bird in Britain;
+ it may be that he had only seen the bird in its immature stage, for
+ the "red-lead" hue of the legs is very characteristic of the adult
+ bird. [_See also Note 14_, p. 10.]
+
+ [U] In reference to the Dutch fable of those days that Storks would
+ only inhabit republican countries.
+
+That picture with the lesser head is the better.
+
+
+MS. RAWL. D. cviii.
+
+ Draft of a letter containing further particulars with regard to
+ the Stork. There is nothing to indicate to whom it was
+ addressed.
+
+[_Fol. 77._] A kind of stork was shott in the wing by the sea neere
+Hasburrowe & brought aliue vnto mee. it was about a yard high red lead
+coloard leggs and bill. the clawes resembling human nayles such as
+Herodotus describeth in the white Ibis of Ĉgypt The lower parts of the
+wings are black which gathered up makes the lower part of back looke
+black butt the tayle vnder them is white as the other part of the body.
+it fed readily upon snayles & froggs, butt a toad being offered it would
+not touch it: the tongue very short [not _crossed out_] an inch long. it
+makes a clattering noyse by flapping one bill agaynst the other somewhat
+like the platea or shouelard.[V] the quills [about _crossed out_] of the
+biggnesse of swans bills [_sic_ quills?] when it swallowed a frogge it
+was sent downe into the stomak by the back side of the neck as was
+perceaued upon swallowing. I could not butt take notice of the conceitt
+of some who looked upon it as an ill omen saying if storks come ouer
+into England, pray god a co[=m]on wealth do not come after.
+
+ [V] The Spoonbill.
+
+ In addition to these letters there are in the Bodleian Library a
+ letter from Elizabeth Browne to her brother, describing the
+ above-mentioned Stork, and desiring him to keep one of the two
+ pictures himself, and to give the other to his sister Fairfax
+ (MS. Rawl. D. 108, fol. 71), and a draft of a letter from Sir
+ Thomas Browne about a remarkable fly (_see ante_ p. 68 _and Note
+ 110_), which offended the cattle extraordinarily, found at
+ Horsey Marshes (MS. Rawl. D. 108, fol. 103). There is also (MS.
+ Rawl. D. 391, fol. 55) a letter from Sir Hamon le Strange to Sir
+ T. B., dated Jan. 16, 1653. About half this letter is printed by
+ Wilkin, i., pp. 369-70. He mentions towards the end that he
+ sends certain observations on T. B.'s "Enquiries into Common
+ Errors," at page "27 thereof I write of a whale cast upon my
+ shoare." This criticism is now separated from the letter, which
+ originally covered it, but happily is preserved in the British
+ Museum, MS. Sloane, 1839. fols. 104-145.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ A.
+
+ Acorus verus, 58
+
+ Acus, Needlefish, 40, 41, 66
+
+ Adders, 55
+
+ Addercock, 66
+
+ Alcedo ispida, 21
+
+ Allis Shad, 42 (note)
+
+ Alni carptor, 76
+
+ Amber, 63, 88
+
+ Alosa, 42
+
+ Anas arctica, 17, 73
+
+ Anas macrolophos, 82, 88
+
+ Anas alis oculatis, 80
+
+ Anatula, 76, 79
+
+ Anglorum, Sand Eel, 44
+
+ Apiaster, 73
+
+ Aphia cobites, 42
+
+ Appendix A., 86
+
+ Appendix B., 90
+
+ Appendix C., 95
+
+ Appendix D., 96
+
+ Aquila Gesneri, 3, 67, 87
+
+ Ardea stellaris, 17
+
+ Arcuata, 23
+
+ Armed Bull-head, 41 (note), 62, 65, 87
+
+ Avicula Maialis, 19, 66
+
+ Ascidians, 50 (note)
+
+ Aselli, 43
+
+ Asprage, 45
+
+ Aspredo, 53, 83, 88
+
+ Astacus, 46, 57
+
+ Atherine?, 42 (note), 73
+
+ Auk, Little?, 79 (note)
+
+ Avis pugnax, 20
+
+ Avis trogloditica, 26
+
+ Avocet, 24, 67
+
+
+ B.
+
+ Balani, 48
+
+ Banstickle 44
+
+ Barbel, 53
+
+ Barker, 24, 67, 73, 76
+
+ Barnacle shell, 48
+
+ Barnacle Goose, 12
+
+ Bargander, 13, 73
+
+ Bass, 43
+
+ Bearded Tit, 26 (note)
+
+ Bee-bird, 73, 76
+
+ Betulĉ Carptor, 29, 73, 76
+
+ Birdcatcher, 25
+
+ Birds found in Norfolk, 1
+
+ Birds number of species, 32
+
+ Bittern, 17
+
+ Black Grouse, 28
+
+ Black Heron, 21
+
+ Black-tailed Godwit, 24 (note)
+
+ Bleak, 43, 53, 78, 81
+
+ Bones, Fossil, 91
+
+ Boyle, Robert, 85
+
+ Bream, 52
+
+ Brent Goose, 12
+
+ Brill, Bret, 45
+
+ Brittle Stars, 49
+
+ Browne, Sir Thomas--
+
+ Attitude towards witchcraft, xi. (note)
+
+ Collection of Eggs, 10 (note)
+
+ Correspondents, viii.
+
+ Drawings lost, xxv.
+
+ Editions of his Collected Works, xviii.
+
+ Estimation in which he was held, xvii.
+
+ Letters to Merrett, xxii., 57
+
+ Letters to Dugdale, 91
+
+ Notes on Certain Birds, xx., 1
+
+ Notes on Certain Fishes, xx., 31
+
+ Observations on Migration, xvi., 2 (note)
+
+ Originality, xi., xvi.
+
+ Purpose for which written, xxi., 2
+
+ State of Natural Science in his day, x., xiv.
+
+ Bull-head, Armed, 41 (note), 62, 65, 87
+
+ Burbot, 54
+
+ Bustard, 18
+
+ Butcher bird, 25
+
+ Butt, 45
+
+ Buzzard, Bald, 4, 56
+
+ Buzzard, Gray, 4
+
+
+ C.
+
+ Canis (Dog-fish), 36
+
+ Canis carcharias, 37 (note), 61, 86
+
+ Caprimulgus, 26, 63, 66, 87
+
+ Cancellus, 48, 62
+
+ Carcinus mĉnas, 46
+
+ Carp, 55
+
+ Certhia, 80
+
+ Ceruna, 53, 88
+
+ Chad, 42
+
+ Chipper, 29, 73
+
+ Chock, 26
+
+ Chough, 27
+
+ Chub, 53
+
+ Churre, 19 (note), 20
+
+ Ciconia, 10, 64, 96
+
+ Cirripeds, 48
+
+ Clams, 47
+
+ Clangula, 83, 88
+
+ Coal-fish, 43
+
+ Coble bird, 25
+
+ Cockles, 47
+
+ Cods, 43
+
+ Conger, 44
+
+ Coot, 15
+
+ Corculum, 55, 56
+
+ Cormorant, 11
+
+ Cormorant, Rock, 11
+
+ Corallines, 80
+
+ Cotta Anglorum, 79, 81
+
+ Cottus scorpius, 42
+
+ Corvus marinus, 11
+
+ Crabs, 46
+
+ Crane, 5
+
+ Crawfish, 53
+
+ Crossbill, 25
+
+ Crow, 27
+
+ Crow, Hooded, 25
+
+ Cuckoo, 20
+
+ Cuckoo Mate, 22 (note)
+
+ Culex marinus, 99
+
+ Curlew, 23
+
+ Curlew, Stone, 24
+
+ Cuttle fish, 45, 62
+
+ Cyclas, 55 (note)
+
+
+ D.
+
+ Dab, 45 (note)
+
+ Dabchick, 13
+
+ Dace, 52
+
+ Dentalia, 47, 73, 77
+
+ Divers, 8 (note)
+
+ Dog-fish, 37
+
+ Dog-Whelk, 47 (note)
+
+ Dolphin, 34
+
+ Dorhawk, 26, 63, 66, 87
+
+ Dory, 41
+
+ Dotterel, Land, 19
+
+ Dotterel, Sea, 19, 73, 76, 80
+
+ Draco minor, 42 (note), 73
+
+ Dragon fly, 55 (note)
+
+ Draw Water, 28
+
+ Ducks, Wild, 13, 13 (note), 88
+
+ Duck, Golden-eye, 83
+
+ Duck, Tufted, 82
+
+ Dunlin, 19
+
+
+ E.
+
+ Eagles, 3, 67, 78, 87
+
+ Echinus, 48
+
+ Eels, 54
+
+ Eels, Conger, 44
+
+ Eels, Sand, 44
+
+ Eelpout, 54
+
+ Elke, 7, 78, 80, 83, 88
+
+ Erythropus, 19
+
+
+ F.
+
+ Faber marinus, 41
+
+ Fanago, 51, 74
+
+ Father Lasher, 42 (note)
+
+ Fen Cricket, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Fibula marina, 50, 61, 86
+
+ Finches, 29
+
+ Fishing Frog, 38, 64
+
+ Fishes found in Norfolk, 31
+
+ Fishes number of species, 32
+
+ Flat-fish, 45
+
+ Flies, 67, 71, 97
+
+ Fly-catcher, 73 (note), 76
+
+ Forficula, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Fucus marinus, 71, 75
+
+ Fulica Cotta, 14
+
+ Fungi, various, 60, 61, 86
+
+ Funduli fluviatiles, 54
+
+ Funduli marini, 42
+
+
+ G.
+
+ Gallinula aquatica, 15
+
+ Gannet, 7, 13
+
+ Gammarus, 53
+
+ Garfish, 40, 66
+
+ Garrulus Bohemicus, 68
+
+ Garrulus Argentoratensis, 30, 63, 67, 87
+
+ Geese, 12, 13
+
+ Gladius, 36, 64, 88
+
+ Glot, Eel, 54
+
+ Gnatts or Knots, 19
+
+ Goatsucker, 26, 63, 66, 87
+
+ Gobies, 42 (note)
+
+ Godwit, 19, 24
+
+ Gold-crested Wren, 29 (note), 76
+
+ Golden Eagle, 3 (note), 67
+
+ Golden-eye Duck, 84 (note), 88
+
+ Goldfinch, 29
+
+ Goosander, 13, 72, 83 (note)
+
+ Goodyer, John, 59
+
+ Grampus, 33, 92
+
+ Great Northern Diver, 8
+
+ Green Plover, 19 (note), 20
+
+ Grey Plover, 20
+
+ Grebe, G. Crested, 13
+
+ Grebe, Little, 13
+
+ Grouse, Black, 28
+
+ Gryllotalpa, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Gudgeon, 54
+
+ Guillemot, 84 (note), 88
+
+ Gulls, 8, 9, 10
+
+ Gurnards, 39
+
+ Gurney, Anna, xx.
+
+
+ H.
+
+ Haddock, 43
+
+ Hard-worm, 55, 56
+
+ Harriers, 4, 5 (note)
+
+ Hawfinch, 25
+
+ Hermit Crabs, 48
+
+ Herons, 17
+
+ Heron, Black, 22
+
+ Heron, Purple, 22 (note)
+
+ Heathpoult, 28
+
+ Herring, 39
+
+ Hippolyte varians, 53
+
+ Hirundo marina, Sea Swallow, 10
+
+ Hirudines marini, Sea Leeches, 50
+
+ Horse-leeches, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Horse Mackerel, 39
+
+ Hobby, 78
+
+ Hobby-bird, 22
+
+ Hoopoe, 23, 67
+
+ Hooded Crow, 26
+
+ How, Dr. William, 59 (note)
+
+ Hydrocantharus, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Hydrozoa, 70
+
+
+ J.
+
+ Jackdaw, 27
+
+ Jelly-fish, 50, 61, 78
+
+ Jet, 63 (note), 64, 85
+
+ Junco, 72
+
+
+ K.
+
+ Kingfisher, 22
+
+ Kite, 4, 15, 27
+
+ Knots, 19
+
+
+ L.
+
+ Lampern, 54
+
+ Lamprey, 54
+
+ Lanius, 25
+
+ Lapwing, 20
+
+ Lari, many sorts of, 8, 9
+
+ Larks, 28
+
+ Larus minor, 9, 73
+
+ Leeches, 50
+
+ Lesser Butcher Bird, 26 (note)
+
+ Letters to Dugdale, 91
+
+ Letters to Merrett, 57
+
+ Letters from Merrett, 86
+
+ Limpets, 47
+
+ Lingula, 45
+
+ Little Auk?, 79 (note)
+
+ Littorina, 47
+
+ Lizard, 55
+
+ Loach, 54
+
+ Lobster, 46
+
+ Lolego, 46, 62, 86
+
+ Loon, 13
+
+ Loxia, 25
+
+ Lug Worm, 50 (note)
+
+ Lump-fish, 39
+
+ Lupus marinus, 38, 61, 86
+
+
+ M.
+
+ Mackerel, 43, 74
+
+ Mackerel, Horse, 39
+
+ Marine Worms, 50
+
+ May-chit, 19, 63, 66, 87
+
+ Medusae, 49 (note)
+
+ Merganser, 13, 72
+
+ Mergus acutirostris, 13
+
+ Mergus cristatus, 82, 88
+
+ Mergus major, 8, 57
+
+ Mergus minor, 13
+
+ Mergus mustelaris, 77
+
+ Mergus serratus, 18, 83
+
+ Mergulus, 77, 79
+
+ Merlin, 78
+
+ Merrett, Christopher, xxii., 57
+
+ Mistletoe, 70
+
+ Migration, xvi., 2 (note)
+
+ Miller's Thumb, 54
+
+ Minnow, 53
+
+ Mole Cricket, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Moon-fish (Mola), 38, 64
+
+ Moor Hen, 15
+
+ Morinellus, 19, 73, 76, 80
+
+ Musca tuliparum, 67, 74
+
+ Mullet, 40, 65
+
+ Mullet, Red, 40, 62, 65, 87
+
+ Mussels, 47
+
+ Musk Beetle, 58
+
+ Mustela fluviatilis, 54
+
+ Mustela marina, 39
+
+ Mustela variegata, 14
+
+
+ N.
+
+ Needle-fish, 40 (note), 41, 66
+
+ Nerites, 47, 73, 77
+
+ Night-jar, 26, 63, 66, 87
+
+ Norway Lobster, 46 (note)
+
+ Notonacton, 55 (note), 56, 71
+
+ Nuthatch, 21
+
+
+ O.
+
+ Oak Galls, 69, 70, 75
+
+ Octopus?, 46 (note), 86
+
+ Oldenburg, Henry, 82
+
+ Onocrotalus, 16, 64
+
+ Ophidian, 65
+
+ Osprey, 4, 78
+
+ Otters, 56
+
+ Oysters, 46
+
+ Oyster Catcher, 8 (note)
+
+
+ P.
+
+ Parrot Jay, 30, 63, 67, 87
+
+ Partridge, 27
+
+ Partridge, Red-legged, 28
+
+ Pectines, 47
+
+ Pediculus marinus, 49
+
+ Pelican, 16, 64
+
+ Perch, 52
+
+ Periwinkle, 47, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Peter-fish, 41
+
+ Physalus, 49, 65
+
+ Pica marina, 8
+
+ Picus martius, 21
+
+ Pigs, Solid-footed, 77, 80, 81
+
+ Pike, 52
+
+ Pilchard, 44, 81
+
+ Pinax, 57, 87
+
+ Pintail Duck, 14, 77, 80
+
+ Piscis octangularis, 41, 62, 65, 87
+
+ Pisidium?, 55 (note)
+
+ Place, 45
+
+ Plot, Dr. Robert, xxiv. (note)
+
+ Plover, Green, 19 (note), 20
+
+ Plover, Grey, 20
+
+ Plover, Ring, 23
+
+ Pogge, 41 (note)
+
+ Polypus, 46, 86
+
+ Porbeagle, 57 (note), 61, 86
+
+ Porpoise, 34
+
+ Porci solidi pedes, 77, 80, 81
+
+ Primmes, 42, 73
+
+ Pristis serra, 36, 83, 88
+
+ Puets, 10
+
+ Puffin, 17, 73
+
+ Pungitius, 44, 58
+
+
+ Q.
+
+ Quail, 28
+
+ Quercus Galls, 69, 70
+
+ Quercus marinus, 75
+
+ Querquedula, 14, 83
+
+
+ R.
+
+ Rail, Land, 28
+
+ Rail, Water, 15, 79, 81
+
+ Rana piscatrix, 38, 64
+
+ Raven, 27
+
+ Rays, 45
+
+ Razor shells, 47
+
+ Red-backed Shrike, 25 (note)
+
+ Red-legged Partridge, 28
+
+ Red Mullet, 40, 62, 65, 87
+
+ Redshank, 19
+
+ Reed-chock, 72
+
+ Reseda, 59
+
+ Ringlestones, 23
+
+ Ring Plover, 23
+
+ Roach, 52
+
+ Rochet, 39
+
+ Rock Cormorant, 11
+
+ Rockling, 39 (note)
+
+ Roller, 30, 63, 67, 87
+
+ Roman Nettle, 59, 68
+
+ Rook, 27
+
+ Rudd, Roud, 52, 82
+
+ Ruff (fish), 53, 83, 88
+
+ Ruff (Reeve), 20
+
+ Rubelliones, 39
+
+ Rutilus, 82, 88
+
+
+ S.
+
+ Salmon, 51, 62, 87
+
+ Sand Eel, 44
+
+ Sanderling, 19 (note), 63, 66, 87
+
+ Saurus, 40, 66
+
+ Sawfish, 36, 83, 88
+
+ Sandpiper, Common, 79
+
+ Scad, 39
+
+ Scallop, 47
+
+ Scarabĉus, 58
+
+ Scarburgh, Sir C., 3 (note)
+
+ Scolopax, 41
+
+ Scolopendra, 35
+
+ Scombri, 43, 74
+
+ Scorpius, 42, 67
+
+ Scotch Goose, 12
+
+ Sea Buttons, 50, 61
+
+ Sea Dotterel, 19, 73, 76, 80
+
+ Sea Dugge, 50 (note), 51
+
+ Sea Gudgeon, 42
+
+ Sea Leach, 50
+
+ Sea Loach, 42
+
+ Sea Louse, 49
+
+ Sea Miller's Thumb, 42
+
+ Sea Mouse, 49, 65
+
+ Sea Perriwig, 70
+
+ Sea Pheasant, 14, 77
+
+ Sea Pie, 8
+
+ Sea Stars, 49, 57
+
+ Sea Trout, 62, 86
+
+ Sea Wolf, 38, 61, 86
+
+ Sea Woodcock, 40
+
+ Seal, 35, 64
+
+ Seaweeds, 70
+
+ Sepia, 45, 86
+
+ Sesamoides, 59
+
+ Shad, 42 (note)
+
+ Shag, 11
+
+ Shagreen Ray, 45
+
+ Shearwater, 12, 72
+
+ Sheld-drake, 12 (note), 13, 73
+
+ Shoeing-horn, 24
+
+ Shore Crab, 46 (note)
+
+ Shovelard, 10
+
+ Shoveller Duck, 14
+
+ Shrike, 25
+
+ Shrimp, Freshwater, 55 (note)
+
+ Silerella, 26 (note)
+
+ Siskin, 29 (note), 73, 76
+
+ Skate, 45
+
+ Skipper (Saury), 40 (note)
+
+ Skua, 8, 58
+
+ Smelt, 42
+
+ Smew, 14, 77
+
+ Snakes, 55
+
+ Sole, 45
+
+ Solens, 47
+
+ Solid-footed Swine, 77, 80, 81
+
+ Sperm Whale, 32, 65, 75, 80, 91, 98
+
+ Spermologous, 27
+
+ Spoonbill, 10
+
+ Sported Flycatcher, 73, 76
+
+ Sported Ray, 45
+
+ Sprat, 43
+
+ Squalders, 49, 50 (note), 61
+
+ Squid, 45 (note)
+
+ Squllĉ, 56
+
+ Starling, 28
+
+ Stella marina, 49, 57
+
+ Stern, 10, 73
+
+ Sting-fish, 42, 65
+
+ Sting Ray, 45
+
+ Stint, 19 (note), 20
+
+ Stickleback, 44 (note), 58
+
+ Stone Curlew, 24, 67
+
+ Stork, 10, 64, 96
+
+ Sturgeon, 37
+
+ Succinum, 63
+
+ Sun-fish, 38, 64
+
+ Surmullet, 40
+
+ Swan, Wild, 7, 78, 80, 83, 88
+
+ Sweet Flag, 57
+
+ Swift, 55
+
+ Sword Fish, 36, 64, 88
+
+
+ T.
+
+ Teal, 14, 83, 88
+
+ Tench, 52
+
+ Tenison, Archbishop, ix.
+
+ Terns, 10, 73
+
+ Tethya, 50 (note), 51
+
+ Thornback, 45
+
+ Tope, 37 (note)
+
+ Trachurus, 39, 58
+
+ Trout, 53
+
+ Trout, Sea, 66, 82
+
+ Tufted Duck, 82
+
+ Tunny?, 43 (note), 74
+
+ Turbines, 47
+
+ Turbot, 45
+
+
+ U.
+
+ Upupa, 23, 67
+
+ Urtica marina, 49, 61, 78, 86
+
+ Urtica mas, 68
+
+ Urtica pilulifera, 59 (note)
+
+ Urtica Romana, 59
+
+
+ V.
+
+ Vermes marinus, 50, 62, 66, 87
+
+ Vermes setacei, 56
+
+ Vesicaria, 50 (note), 51, 74, 79, 85, 89
+
+ Vipers, 55
+
+ Vitulus marinus, 35, 64
+
+
+ W.
+
+ Water Beetle, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Water Boatman, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Water Hen, 15
+
+ Water Rail, 15, 79, 81
+
+ Waxwing, 68
+
+ Weasel Cray, 84
+
+ Weasel ling, 39, 82, 88
+
+ Weever-fish, 42 (note), 65, 67
+
+ Wesell, 14, 77
+
+ Whale, Sperm, 32, 65, 75, 90, 91, 98
+
+ Wheatear, 26 (note)
+
+ Whelk, 47
+
+ White-tailed Eagle, 3
+
+ Whiting, 43
+
+ Whinne Bird, 29, 76
+
+ Wild Duck, 14
+
+ Wild Goose, 12, 13
+
+ Wild Swan, 7, 78, 80, 83, 88
+
+ Wilkin, Simon, xviii. (note)
+
+ Willick, 84, 88
+
+ Wolf-fish, 38, 61, 86
+
+ Woodcock (fish), 41
+
+ Woodpecker, 21
+
+ Wren, Dr. Christopher, xx.
+
+ Wren, Gold-crested, 29, 76
+
+ Wryneck, 22 (note)
+
+
+ X.
+
+ Xiphias, 36
+
+
+ Y.
+
+ Yarwhelp, 24, 73, 76
+
+
+
+
+ERRATA.
+
+
+ Page 8, note 10, last line, _delete_ us.
+
+ Page 8, note, first line, after Great Northern Diver, insert
+ _Colymbus glacialis_; line three, _delete Colymbus glacialis_,
+ and after _Mergus maximus_ insert Farrensis.
+
+ Page 12, note 17, line 8, for "English Birds" read "English
+ words."
+
+ Page 12, note 18, line 4 from bottom, for "near the centre" read
+ "near the south-west border."
+
+ Page 14, note 22, line 9, after "(Hunt)" insert ";."
+
+ Page 20, note 31, line 5, transfer the words "for the last few
+ years" to line 4, after "has bred."
+
+ Page 23, note 36, line 3, for "Eringo" read "Eryngo."
+
+ Page 34, note 52, line 1, for "hat" read "that."
+
+ Page 35, note 54, line 5, for "Neridiform" read "Nereidiform."
+
+ Page 36, note 55, line 7, for _pristis antiquoram_ read _pristis
+ antiquorum_.
+
+ Page 46, note 82, line 1, for _Cancer_ read _Carsinus_
+ (corrected in Index).
+
+ Page 47, note 83, lines 9 and 19, for _litoria_, read
+ _littorea_.
+
+ Page 50, note 90, line 2 from bottom, after "and" insert
+ "which."
+
+ Page 53, note 93, line 5 from bottom, for _Pandalus varius_,
+ read _Hippolyte varians_ (corrected in Index).
+
+
+_Jarrold & Sons, The Empire Press, Norwich and London._
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+ Spelling and punctuation are retained as in the original.
+
+ Footnotes were kept as close to the referring paragraph as
+ practicable. They are essentially part of the text.
+
+ The errata section was moved to the end of the book and its changes
+ are entered.
+
+ The following words appear both with and without hyphens.
+
+ Bee-bird
+ Fly-catcher
+ fresh-water
+ Gar-fish
+ Goat-sucker
+ marsh-bird
+ Needle-fish
+ north-west
+ Saw-fish
+ sea-shoare
+ sea-shore
+ whole-footed
+
+ [=m] indicates a double m; e.g. co[=m]on.
+ [=u] indicates a letter u with macron above.
+ w^{ch} indicates multiple letters are superscripted.
+ y^r indicates a single superscripted letter.
+
+
+ Footnote 98
+
+ 'Both Vipers (or Adders) and Snakes, the latter in particular,'
+
+ 'latte ' included a following space, so made the assumption that
+ the word here is 'latter'.
+
+ Changed.
+
+
+ Page 13
+
+ 'Mergus acutarostris cinereus'
+
+ 'acutarostris' may be 'acutirostris' as used elsewhere.
+
+ Spelled as in original.
+
+
+ Page 39
+
+ 'sprdding the finnes into a liuely posture do hang them'
+
+ 'sprdding' is an odd spelling for spreading.
+
+ Spelled as in original.
+
+
+ Page 45
+
+ 'with a long & strong aculeus in the tayle conceuud of'
+
+ 'conceuud' is an odd spelling.
+
+ Unchanged.
+
+
+ Page 76
+
+ 'A yarewhelp or barker [some words smeared out]'
+
+ Closing bracket added.
+
+
+ Page 91
+
+ 'came out of his nostrells. thus much ffrom him who doth'
+
+ 'ffrom' matches original.
+
+ Double 'ff' occurs several places in the book.
+
+
+ Page 93
+
+ 'or Joannes Goropius (as the name is variously given in the
+ "Biographie Universelle" (b. 1518, d. 1572),'
+
+ Missing closed parenthesis.
+
+ Unchanged.
+
+
+ Index 'Notonacton'
+
+ 'Notonacton'
+
+ Refers to 'Notonecton' in all cases.
+
+ Unchanged.
+
+
+ Index 'Porbeagle'
+
+ 'Porbeagle'
+
+ '57' may be a typo for '37'
+
+ Porbeagle is also known as 'Canis carcharius alius' or 'canis
+ charcharius alius Jonst.' or 'Lamna cornubica'.
+
+ Unchanged.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Letters on the Natural
+History of Norfolk, by Thomas Browne
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Letters on the Natural History of
+Norfolk, by Thomas Browne
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Notes and Letters on the Natural History of Norfolk
+ More Especially on the Birds and Fishes
+
+Author: Thomas Browne
+
+Release Date: April 16, 2011 [EBook #35888]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NATURAL HISTORY OF NORFOLK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Leonard Johnson and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="front_matter"><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+<span class="smcap fs12">NOTES AND LETTERS</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7">ON THE</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs12">NATURAL HISTORY OF NORFOLK</span><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/frontispiece-rgb.jpg" width="500" height="670"
+ alt="Sir Thomas Browne to Doctor Christopher Merrett."
+ title="Sir Thomas Browne to Doctor Christopher Merrett." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Sir Thomas Browne to Doctor Christopher Merrett.</span><br />
+MS. RAWLINSON D. cviii., FOL. 105.&mdash;<a href="#Page_80"><i>See p.</i> 80.</a></span><br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="front_matter">
+<h1>Notes and Letters<br />
+
+<span class="fs5">ON THE</span><br />
+
+<span class="fs12">Natural History of Norfolk</span></h1>
+
+<div>
+<span class="fs7">MORE ESPECIALLY ON THE</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs13">BIRDS AND FISHES</span><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="fs7">FROM THE MSS. OF</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs12">SIR THOMAS BROWNE, M.D.</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7">(1605-1682)</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="smcap fs7">In the Sloane Collection in the Library of the British
+Museum and in the Bodleian Library, Oxford</span><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+
+<div>
+<span class="fs7">WITH NOTES BY</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs9">THOMAS SOUTHWELL, F.Z.S.</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7"><i>Member of the British Ornithologists' Union; Vice-President of the
+Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society</i></span><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div>
+LONDON<br /><br />
+
+JARROLD &amp; SONS, 10 &amp; 11, WARWICK LANE, E.C.<br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7">[ALL RIGHTS RESERVED]<br /><br />
+
+1902</span><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="ad_brk" />
+
+<div class="advert">
+<span class="fs15">OBSERVATIONS</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7">ON THE</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs20">FAUNA OF NORFOLK,</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7">AND MORE PRACTICALLY ON</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs8">The Popular District of the Broads of Norfolk and Suffolk,</span><br /><br />
+
+
+<span class="fs7">BY THE LATE</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs9">REV. RICHARD LUBBOCK, M.A.</span><br /><br />
+
+
+<span class="fs9"><i>New Edition, 6s.; Half Roxburgh, 7s. 6d.</i></span><br /><br />
+
+
+<span class="fs7"><span class="smcap">With Additions from Unpublished Manuscripts of the Author, and Notes by</span></span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs9">THOMAS SOUTHWELL, F.Z.S.,</span><br /><br />
+
+
+<span class="fs7"><span class="smcap">Also a Memoir by</span></span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs9">HENRY STEVENSON, F.L.S.,</span><br /><br />
+
+
+<span class="fs7"><span class="smcap">An Appendix containing Notes on Hawking in Norfolk, by</span></span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs9">ALFRED NEWTON, M.A., F.R.S., ETC.,</span><br /><br />
+
+
+<span class="fs7"><span class="smcap">And on the Decoys, Reptiles, Sea Fish, Lepidoptera, and Botany of the Country.</span></span><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<p class="fs7">"In addition to the intrinsic merits of the book, of which we can
+personally speak in the superlative degree as one of the most
+pleasantly-written of the many pleasant natural history books our
+language is so rich in&mdash;describing, as it does, the 'Broad District'&mdash;a
+country unlike any other part of England, and a very paradise to the
+Botanist, Entomologist, and Ornithologist. This new edition is edited by
+Mr. Thomas Southwell, the active Secretary of the Norfolk and Norwich
+Naturalists' Society, whose full and accurate knowledge of the natural
+history of Norfolk better fits him for the task than any other man we
+know of."&mdash;<i>Science Gossip.</i></p>
+
+<p class="fs7">"The book in its original form is well known to naturalists, and it
+would be difficult to find another volume of its size which conveys in
+so agreeable a manner so much accurate and trustworthy information on
+the subject of which it treats. We promise to those who have never yet
+read this book a rare treat from its perusal."&mdash;<i>Zoologist.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="ad_brk" />
+
+<div class="front_matter">
+<span class="fs11">SUPPLEMENT</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7">TO THE</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs20">FLORA OF NORFOLK,</span><br /><br />
+
+
+<span class="fs7">BY</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs9">REV. KIRBY TRIMMER, A.B.</span><br /><br />
+
+
+<span class="fs7"><i>Crown 8vo. Cloth 6s.</i></span><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<p class="fs7">The Supplement to the "Flora of Norfolk" is a record of additional
+localities of many of the plants contained in that publication, and an
+entry of some other plants new in the country.<br /><br /></p>
+
+
+<div class="front_matter">
+<span class="fs7"><span class="smcap">London: Jarrold and Sons, 10 and 11, Warwick Lane, E.C.</span></span><br /><br />
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="ad_brk" />
+
+
+
+<span class="fs12">THE OFFICIAL GUIDE</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7">TO THE</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs20"><span class="smcap">Norwich Castle Museum</span>,</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs9"><i>With an Account of its Origin and Progress</i>,</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7">BY</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs9">THOMAS SOUTHWELL, F.Z.S.,</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7"><i>Member of the British Ornithologists' Union, Vice-President of the Norfolk
+and Norwich Naturalists' Society, etc.</i>:</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7"><span class="smcap">Also an Historical Account of the Castle Keep by</span></span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs9">REV. WM. HUDSON, M.A.,</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7"><i>Hon. Sec. Norfolk and Norwich Archĉological Society:</i></span><br /><br />
+
+
+<span class="fs7"><span class="smcap">And a Guide to the Collection of Pictures, with some Account of
+the "Norwich School" of Artists by</span></span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs9">G. C. EATON, ESQ.,</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="fs7"><i>Late Hon. Sec. Norfolk and Norwich Museum.</i></span><br /><br />
+
+<hr class="narrow" />
+
+<span class="fs9">(Published under the Special Sanction of the Castle Museum Committee.)</span><br /><br />
+
+<hr class="narrow" />
+
+<span class="fs9"><i>Profusely Illustrated, 1 6. Abridged Edition, 6d.</i></span><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<div class="fs7">
+<p>"Mr. Southwell is himself an authority on natural history, and he has
+contrived to invest his description of the various specimens with a
+liveliness and vigour, as well as a scientific accuracy. He has taken
+care to include every object of importance, and his work should at once
+take its place as the popular guide to the Museum."&mdash;<i>Bookseller.</i></p>
+
+<p>"An interesting and useful guide to the collection in the Museum. It is
+not merely a catalogue, but a popular natural history, in which the
+specimens in the cases are used as illustrations. Sightseers will
+pleasantly acquire a knowledge of the leading characteristics of the
+different groups of animals, and students will gain a large amount of
+sound instruction."&mdash;<i>Nature.</i></p>
+
+<p>"There is an abundance of useful information confined in a small
+compass, while there are many capital illustrations."&mdash;<i>The Record.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Its collections are of interest not only to the antiquarian and to the
+geologist, but also to the ornithologist; and the picture gallery is
+worth a visit."&mdash;<i>Daily Telegraph.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Visitors will find this cheap, handy, well-filled volume of much
+service."&mdash;<i>The Guardian.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="m_wide" />
+
+<div class="front_matter">
+<span class="fs9"><span class="smcap">London: Jarrold and Sons, 10 and 11, Warwick Lane, E.C.</span></span><br /><br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="ad_brk" />
+
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of Contents">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#intro">INTRODUCTION</a></td><td align="right">vii</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#birds">NOTES ON CERTAIN BIRDS FOUND IN NORFOLK</a></td><td align="right">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#fish">NOTES ON CERTAIN FISHES, ETC., FOUND IN NORFOLK</a></td><td align="right">31</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#letters">LETTERS TO MERRETT</a></td><td align="right">57</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#APPENDIX_A">APPENDIX A.</a></td><td align="right">86</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#APPENDIX_B">APPENDIX B.</a></td><td align="right">90</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#APPENDIX_C">APPENDIX C.</a></td><td align="right">95</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#APPENDIX_D">APPENDIX D.</a></td><td align="right">96</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#INDEX">INDEX</a></td><td align="right">99</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="intro" id="intro"></a>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>"Every kingdom, every province, should have its own
+monographer."&mdash;<i>Gilbert White. Seventh Letter to Barrington.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The excellent Memoir of Sir Thomas Browne, in Wilkin's Edition of his
+works, renders it unnecessary here to repeat what has already been so
+well done; suffice it to say that he was born in London on the 19th of
+October, 1605; he was educated at Winchester School and entered at
+Broadgates Hall (now Pembroke College), Oxford, in 1623; graduated B.A.
+31st January, 1626-7, and M.A. 11th June, 1629. About the year 1633 he
+was created Doctor of Physick at Leyden. In 1636 he took up his
+residence in Norwich, in 1637 was incorporated Doctor of Physic in
+Oxford, and in 1665 was chosen an Honorary Fellow of the College of
+Physicians. In 1671 Browne was knighted at Norwich by Charles II., and
+after a useful and honourable career died on his seventy-sixth birthday,
+the 19th of October, 1682, and his body lies buried in the church of St.
+Peter Mancroft, Norwich.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Browne in early life travelled much and was a voluminous writer; he made
+many friendships with men celebrated in his day, and his advice and
+assistance were sought and gratefully acknowledged by Dugdale, Evelyn,
+Ray and Willughby, Merrett, Sir Robert Paston (afterwards Earl of
+Yarmouth), Ashmole, Aubrey, and others; but his general correspondence
+does not now concern us, my object being to supply in a convenient form
+what I believe will be acceptable to modern naturalists, namely, an
+accurate transcript of his notes and letters on the "Natural History of
+the County of Norfolk."</p>
+
+<p>These notes and letters were first published by Simon Wilkin in his
+Edition of Sir Thomas Browne's Works in 1835, but they were not treated
+from a naturalist's point of view, and in some places were not correctly
+transcribed, added to which, in the vast mass of matter contained in
+Wilkin's four large volumes (or in the closely printed three volumes of
+Bohn's Edition), these interesting passages are in danger of being
+overlooked or are inconvenient for reference. Two letters, moreover,
+were needed to make the correspondence with Merrett complete, and these
+I have been enabled to supply. I hope also that my explanatory notes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span>
+which I trust will not be deemed too voluminous, will be found more
+useful than the necessarily brief notes furnished by Wilkin and his
+collaborators. Furthermore, I think that the retention of the original
+spelling and punctuation may lend a charm to the quaintness of the
+language which is in a measure destroyed by any attempt at modernising.</p>
+
+<p>There is much that is interesting bearing upon Natural Science scattered
+throughout Browne's writings, especially in his <i>Pseudodoxia Epidemica</i>,
+or inquiries into Vulgar and Common Errors, first published in 1646, and
+the reader cannot fail to be impressed not only with the extent of his
+classical knowledge but also with the shrewdness with which he pursued
+his original investigations; but here it is only proposed to deal with
+certain manuscript notes and a series of rough notes for, or copies of,
+letters addressed to Dr. Christopher Merrett, the author of the <i>Pinax
+Rerum Naturalium Britannicarum</i>. These, as remarked by their editor,
+with regard to some other manuscripts published<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> in 1684, under the
+title of "Certain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span> Miscellany Tracts," were doubtless "rather the
+<i>diversions</i> than the <i>Labours</i> of his Pen; and &hellip; He did, as it
+were, drop down his Thoughts of a sudden, in those spaces of vacancy
+which he snatch'd from those very many occasions which gave him hourly
+interruption;" but I cannot in this instance agree with the conclusion
+arrived at by the same writer that it "seemeth probable that He designed
+them for publick use," for they appear to be the rough drafts or
+memoranda used in the production of the finished letters (which are
+unfortunately not forthcoming), and were never intended for publication
+in their present crude form, thus rendering pardonable such annotations
+as I have ventured to add. But before proceeding further it is necessary
+to consider briefly the time and circumstances under which they were
+written, and the state of what passed for Natural Science at that
+period.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> The "Miscellany Tracts" were put forth by "Tho. Tenison"
+(1636-1715), who afterwards became Archbishop of Canterbury, but was
+then the Rector of a London parish, St. Martin-in-the-Fields. He had
+been a Norwich school-boy, and subsequently minister of St. Peter's
+Mancroft. He was doubtless well acquainted with Browne and his family,
+and hence his reference in the preface quoted to "the <i>Lady</i> and <i>Son</i>
+of the excellent Authour," who, he says, "deliver'd" the papers to him.</p></div>
+
+<p>Browne wrote early in the second half of the seventeenth century, during
+a period of great awakening in the study of Nature. Hitherto it could
+hardly be said that a direct appeal to the works of Nature had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span> the
+prevailing method. Aristotle was still the established authority, and
+commentaries on his works occupied the minds of men to the exclusion of
+original investigation, notwithstanding that this great philosopher had
+himself, both by precept and example, urged the importance of direct
+observation and inquiry; the Mediĉval school of thought still prevailed
+and cramped every effort at progress. How keenly Browne lamented this
+spirit of slavish adherence to tradition may be judged from a passage in
+one of his Essays in the "Vulgar Errors" condemning the obstinate
+adherence unto antiquity; he writes, "but the mortallist enemy unto
+knowledge, and that which hath done the greatest execution upon truth,
+hath been a peremptory adhesion unto authority; and more especially the
+establishing of our belief upon the dictates of antiquity. For (as every
+capacity may observe) most men of ages present, so supersticiously do
+look upon ages past, that the authorities of one exceed the reason of
+the other." In another place he argues that the present should be the
+age of authority, seeing that we possess all the wisdom of the ancients
+which has come down to us, with that of our own times added. In fact,
+Browne's motto appears to have been "prove<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span> all things and hold fast
+only to that which is good."<a name="FNanchor_B_2" id="FNanchor_B_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_B_2" id="Footnote_B_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></a> There was one form of ancient authority before which Browne
+bowed down with absolute and unquestioning submission&mdash;the authority of
+the Scriptures. In all secular matters he was ever ready to point the
+lance and do battle, but all that appealed to him on what he regarded as
+divine authority was beyond the pale, and it never entered into his mind
+to submit it to the test of reason. In the "Religio Medici" he declares
+his devoted adherence first to the guidance of Scripture, and secondly
+to the Articles of the Church, "whatsoever is beyond, as points
+indifferent, I observe according to the rules of my private reason;" and
+again, "where the Scripture is silent, the Church is my text; where that
+speaks 'tis but my comment; where there is a joint silence of both I
+borrow not the rules of my religion from Rome or Geneva, but the
+dictates of my own reason." This implicit adherence to the literal text
+of Scripture led to his&mdash;shall I say active belief in, or passive
+acceptance of, the existence of Witchcraft, and thus to the only act in
+an otherwise blameless life which we must regard with regret and
+astonishment. I refer to the consenting part he took in the doing to
+death of two poor women at Bury St. Edmund's in the year 1664. It is my
+business to act as Browne's exponent, not as his apologist, but it must
+be borne in mind that in his day the "higher criticism" was a thing
+unheard of, and that the literal sense of the English translation of the
+Bible was accepted as binding not only by him but by the vast majority
+of the people, including the most learned men of the time. "Thou shalt
+not suffer a witch to live" was a plain command, and given a witch the
+believer's duty was also plain; that there <i>had</i> been witches there was
+ample scriptural evidence, but there was none that the days of
+witchcraft had passed away. Browne only shared this belief with his
+pious friend, the venerable Bishop Hall, and many men equally devout
+according to their lights; he makes no secret of the fact and acts in
+accordance with his convictions and the plain authority of Scripture.
+Thus it came about that these conscientious but mistaken men were
+induced to render possible, if not actually to countenance, the fiendish
+cruelties perpetrated by their unscrupulous allies. In matters which he
+considered less authoritative his views were so liberal as to gain for
+him the stigma of infidel or heretic; but let a man govern his thoughts
+and actions by the private rules Browne laid down for his own guidance
+(vol. iv., p. 420), and it would be hard to regard him as otherwise than
+a God-fearing man, striving to live up to his profession.</p></div>
+
+<p>Aristotle, whose works on Natural History have descended to us in a very
+imperfect condition, lived in 385-322 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>, and it was not till <span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 79
+that the <i>Historia Naturalis</i> of Pliny the Elder the next great work,
+which has survived till our days, was completed, and by some of those
+most competent to form a judgment the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span> additions which he made were not
+in all cases improvements. Other writers followed, but their productions
+were of little value, and it was not till the year 1544 that William
+Turner published at Cologne what Professor Newton describes as "the
+first commentary on the birds mentioned by Aristotle and Pliny conceived
+in anything like the spirit that moves modern Naturalists." Turner's
+book is very rare and unfortunately at present beyond the reach of most
+modern students. No attempt at systematic arrangement, as now
+understood, was made until the <i>Histoire de la Nature des Oyseaux</i> of
+Pierre Belon (Bellonius) appeared at Paris in 1555, for the much greater
+work of Conrad Gesner, being the third book of his <i>Historia Animalium</i>,
+which was published at Zurich in the same year, and treated of Birds,
+followed, more or less closely, an alphabetical plan which brought upon
+him the censure of Aldrovandus, three of whose sixteen folio volumes
+forming the <i>Historia Naturalium</i> bore the title of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span> <i>Ornithologiĉ hoc
+est de Avibus Historiĉ, Libri XII.</i>, and were brought out at Bologna
+between the years 1599 and 1603. The <i>Historia Naturalis</i> of John
+Jonston, or "Jonstonus" (1603-1675), originally published in four
+sections between the years 1649 and 1653, ran through several editions,
+and was a popular book in the seventeenth century; it is frequently
+referred to by Browne, but is a work of very little originality. Though
+all these authors undoubtedly influenced their successors, it may be
+fairly said that it was Browne's contemporaries and fellow-countrymen,
+Francis Willughby and John Ray, who laid the first solid foundation of
+systematic zoology in their <i>Ornithologia</i> and <i>Historia Piscium</i>,
+published in 1676 and 1686 respectively; but dying in 1682, Browne was
+indebted to neither of them, though he doubtless exercised much
+influence over them, and he had to use the clumsy descriptive
+terminology then in vogue.<a name="FNanchor_C_3" id="FNanchor_C_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a> Let me illustrate this by a single
+example. In one of his letters to Merrett he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span> names a "little elegant
+sea plant" (probably <i>Halecium halecinum</i>, a species of Hydroid
+Zoophyte), "<i>Fucus marinus vertebratus pisciculi spinum referens
+ichthyorachius</i>, or what you think fit." On another occasion Merrett
+thus expresses his approval of Browne's efforts in this direction: "You
+have very well named the <i>rutilus</i> and expressed fully the cours to bee
+taken in the imposition of names, viz: the most obvious and most
+peculiar difference to the ey or any other sens." We can hardly conceive
+the difficulties these pioneers of Natural Science had to contend with;
+the works of their predecessors were so indefinite as to be of little
+value in determining species; they had to depend upon the vague
+descriptions of fowlers and others; the same bird would probably be
+known in half a dozen different localities by as many different names,
+and since no satisfactory mode of preserving specimens had then been
+discovered, examples for comparison were not available. If inextricable
+confusion arose with regard to such a bird as the Osprey, well might
+Browne write with regard to those less readily characterized, "I confess
+for such little birds I am much unsatisfied on the names given to many
+by countrymen, and uncertaine what to give them myself, or to what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[Pg xvi]</a></span>
+classis of authors cleerly to reduce them. Surely there are many found
+among us which are not described; and therefore such which you cannot
+well reduce, may (if at all) be set down after the exacter nomination of
+small birds as yet of uncertain class of knowledge."</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_C_3" id="Footnote_C_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_3"><span class="label">[C]</span></a> In 1735 appeared the first edition of the <i>Systema Naturĉ
+of Linnĉus</i> which, meagre as it was, ushered in a more definite system
+of classification, whilst his invention of the binomial method of
+nomenclature, first used by him in the tenth edition of that work
+published in 1758, contributed not a little in reducing to order what
+had hitherto been a chaos, although in his classification of birds he
+for the most part followed his predecessor Ray.</p></div>
+
+<p>I must ask pardon for this digression, but my object has been to show
+the difficulties Browne had to contend with and to emphasise the
+originality which pervades all his observations, a characteristic so
+conspicuously absent in the work of most of his predecessors. I should
+like also to call attention to his references to the migratory habits of
+many species of birds, a phenomenon attracting little notice in his day,
+but one which can be so readily observed on the coast of Norfolk. These
+remarks were penned at a time when hibernation in a state of torpidity
+was thoroughly believed in&mdash;an idea of which even Gilbert White a
+hundred years later could not thoroughly divest himself. In his tract on
+"Hawks and Falconry," Browne further says: "How far the hawks, merlins,
+and wild-fowl which come unto us with a north-west [east?] wind in
+Autumn, fly in a day, there is no clear account: but coming over the sea
+their flight hath been long or very speedy. For I have known them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[Pg xvii]</a></span> to
+light so weary on the coast, that many have been taken with dogs, and
+some knocked down with staves and stones." Further than this, he knew
+the seasons of their appearing&mdash;the Hobby "coming to us in the spring,"
+the Merlin "about autumn." His frequent mention of anatomical
+peculiarities and of his dissections of many birds and beasts clearly
+prove his passion for original research, and the frequent records of the
+contents of the stomachs of the birds which he had the opportunity of
+examining was a mode of obtaining exact information as to the nature of
+their food, which I imagine was not common in those days.</p>
+
+<p>How highly Browne was esteemed by his contemporaries may be judged from
+the acknowledgments of his assistance by Dugdale, Evelyn (who visited
+him in Norwich in 1671), and others; and Ray especially mentions his
+indebtedness to "the deservedly famous Sir Thomas Browne, Professor of
+Physic in the City of Norwich." His letters to his son, Dr. Edward
+Browne, are full of instructions as to the course of study he should
+pursue, and subsequently, when the latter became celebrated and was
+appointed Physician to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, it was still to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[Pg xviii]</a></span> his
+father that he looked for advice in his hospital practice and in the
+preparation of his lectures. Browne was proud of his adopted county, a
+feeling evidently shared by his son, and I trust I may be pardoned for
+quoting the concluding passage of the latter's account of a tour into
+Derbyshire, wherein he expresses a sentiment which survives with
+undiminished force in the breast of many a Norfolk man in the present
+day. There is a very interesting account of his crossing the Wash on
+leaving Lynn for Boston, but on his return to Norwich in September,
+1662, he thus concludes his journal: "Give me leave to say this much:
+let any stranger find mee out so pleasant a country, such good way
+[roads], large heath, three such places as Norwich. Yar [Yarmouth] and
+Lin [Lynn], in any county of England, and I'll bee once again a vagabond
+to visit them."</p>
+
+<p>The manuscripts of which the following selection forms a part are
+contained, with a few exceptions to be named hereafter, in the Sloane
+Collection in the Library of the British Museum, consisting of nearly
+one hundred volumes, numbered 1825 to 1923 both inclusive. A catalogue
+is given by Simon Wilkin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[Pg xix]</a></span><a name="FNanchor_D_4" id="FNanchor_D_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_D_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a> (himself a Norfolk man), by whom Browne's
+collected writings were first published in a connected form, as already
+mentioned, under the title of "Sir Thomas Browne's Works, including his
+Life and Correspondence, edited by Simon Wilkin, F.L.S. London, William
+Pickering. Josiah Fletcher, Norwich, 1836." 4 volumes, 8vo; the first
+volume only is dated 1836, Vols. 2, 3, and 4 being dated 1835.<a name="FNanchor_E_5" id="FNanchor_E_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_E_5" class="fnanchor">[E]</a> It was
+here that the Notes and Letters were first given to the public. A second
+edition of the "Works," also edited by Wilkin, in three closely printed
+volumes, was issued in Bohn's Antiquarian Library in 1852.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[Pg xx]</a></span> In the first
+edition the Notes on the Birds and Fishes will be found in Vol. IV., pp.
+313 to 336, and the letters to Merrett in Vol. I., pp. 393 to 408. In
+the second edition both are in Vol. III., pp. 311 to 335 and pp. 502 to
+513 respectively. The references here, as a rule, will be made to the
+1836 edition, when otherwise Bohn's edition will be specified.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_D_4" id="Footnote_D_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_D_4"><span class="label">[D]</span></a> <i>Simon Wilkin</i> (1790-1862), the able editor of Sir Thomas
+Browne's collected works, was born at Costessey near Norwich, in the
+year 1790. He came to Norwich after his father's death in 1799, taking
+up his temporary abode with his guardian, Joseph Kinghorn, a Baptist
+minister of note and a prominent member of a literary circle then
+existing in Norwich, by whom his education was superintended. On
+arriving at man's estate and being at that time possessed of ample
+means, he devoted himself to the study of Natural History, especially to
+Entomology, and was the possessor of a large collection of insects
+which, in the year 1827, was purchased for the Norwich Museum at a cost
+of one hundred guineas, a large sum in those days. He was one of the
+founders and the first librarian of the Norfolk and Norwich Literary
+Institution in 1822, also of the Norfolk and Norwich Museum in 1825,
+both of which institutions (the former reunited to its parent Library,
+founded in 1784) are still flourishing. Wilkin was a Fellow of the
+Linnean Society, also a Member of the Wernerian Society of Edinburgh. In
+later years the loss of the bulk of his property by a commercial failure
+necessitated his turning his attention to some means of earning a
+livelihood, and he established himself in Norwich as a printer and
+publisher; later in life he removed to Hampstead, where he died on 28th
+July, 1862, and was buried in his native village of Costessey.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_E_5" id="Footnote_E_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_E_5"><span class="label">[E]</span></a> Some copies of this Edition have a title-page, bearing the
+name of H. G. Bohn as publisher, and the date of 1846, but differing
+only in that respect.</p></div>
+
+<p>The foot-notes in Wilkin's edition, many of them very curious,
+initialled "Wr.," are by Dr. Christopher Wren, Dean of Windsor (father
+of the Architect of St. Paul's Cathedral), and were found on the margins
+of a copy of the first edition of the <i>Pseudodoxia</i> now preserved in the
+Bodleian Library at Oxford; those initialled "G." were written for
+Wilkin's first edition by the late Miss Anna Gurney, of Northrepps, near
+Cromer, Norfolk.</p>
+
+<p>The first papers to which I shall refer are a series of rough notes
+contained for the most part in volume 1830 of the Sloane MSS., the first
+portion being devoted to <i>Birds</i> found in Norfolk, followed by a similar
+series relating to marine and freshwater <i>Fishes</i>, including a few
+marine invertebrata and plants. They are written on one side only of
+foolscap paper, the portion relating to Birds occupying folios 5 to 19
+inclusive, folios 1 to 4 consist of two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">[Pg xxi]</a></span> inserted letters from Merrett
+to Browne (<a href="#APPENDIX_A">see Appendix A.</a>), which are printed by Wilkin in his first
+edition, Vol. I., pp. 442-5. The notes on Fishes are in the same volume
+of manuscripts, folios 23 to 38; but there are some irregularities which
+will be explained as they occur. The whole of the notes are very roughly
+written, and present the appearance of a commonplace book, in which the
+entries were made as the events occurred to the writer, being quite
+devoid of any system or arrangement. The entries doubtless extend over
+several years, but it is impossible to fix the dates on which they were
+made, the only internal evidence I can find being that speaking of the
+occurrence of a certain shark he states it was taken "this year, 1662,"
+and on the next page of the MS. there is the record of the occurrence of
+a sun-fish in the year 1667; this latter, however, is evidently an
+interpolation. A few pages further on there is the record of what he
+calls a large mackerel, "taken this year, 1668," but this also is an
+addition. We may take it, I think, that most of the notes were made
+about the year 1662, but that they were added to on various occasions up
+to 1668, in which year his first <a href="#merrett_1">letter to Merrett</a> is dated. It has been
+suggested that these notes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxii" id="Page_xxii">[Pg xxii]</a></span> were prepared in the interest of Dr. Merrett
+for his use in an enlarged edition of his <i>Pinax</i>, but the remark in his
+first letter to this correspondent, "I have observed and taken notice of
+many animals in these parts whereof 3 years agoe a learned gentleman of
+this country wished me to give him some account, which while I was doing
+ye gentleman my good friend died," clearly shows that they were
+originally prepared for another purpose, although they eventually
+furnished the materials for his letters to Merrett, but who his deceased
+friend was it seems now useless to conjecture, although it would be
+interesting to know. The notes were certainly never intended to appear
+in their present form, and failing their use by Merrett which never took
+place, the information they contained was, as we know, of great service
+to Ray and Willughby.</p>
+
+<p>Browne's correspondent, Dr. Christopher Merrett, was born at Winchcomb,
+in Gloucestershire, on the 16th of February, 1614. He graduated B.A. at
+Oriel College, Oxford, about the year 1635; M.B. 1636; M.D. 1643. Was
+elected Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1651, and was made
+first Keeper of the Library and Museum; he was Censor of the College
+seven times. Having entered into litigation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiii" id="Page_xxiii">[Pg xxiii]</a></span> with the College with
+regard to his appointment, which was considered by that body to have
+terminated when the Library was destroyed by the great fire, he was
+defeated, and in 1681 expelled from his fellowship. He died in London in
+1695. ("Dict. of Nat. Biog.") Merrett was the author of several works on
+various subjects, as well as of the <i>Pinax</i>, and a translation of the
+"Art of Glass" referred to further on. His <i>Pinax Rerum Naturalium
+Britannicarum</i>, said to have been brought out in 1666, contained the
+earliest list of British Birds ever published, but it is little more
+than a bare list. Copies bearing the date of 1666 are very rare, and it
+is believed the edition was burned in a fire at the publishers; but
+Professor Newton ("Dict. of Birds," Introduction, p. xviii.) says that
+in 1667 there were two issues of a reprint; one, nominally a second
+edition, only differs from the others in having a new title-page, an
+example doubtless of what Wilkin severely condemns as "that contemptible
+form of lying under which publishers have endeavoured to persuade the
+public of the rapidity of their sales." Merrett was contemplating a new
+and improved edition of his work when, as Wilkin happily puts it, "in an
+auspicious moment he sought the assistance of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiv" id="Page_xxiv">[Pg xxiv]</a></span> Browne, whose liberal
+response is evidenced in the [drafts of the] letters still fortunately
+extant, but either superseded by the more learned labours of Willughby
+and Ray, or laid aside on account of the perplexities in which Merrett
+became involved with the College of Physicians, the <i>Pinax</i> never
+attained an enlarged edition. Had Browne completed and published his own
+'Natural History of Norfolk,' he might have contended for precedency
+among the writers of County Natural Histories with [his friend] Dr.
+Robert Plot,<a name="FNanchor_F_6" id="FNanchor_F_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_F_6" class="fnanchor">[F]</a> who published the earliest of such works&mdash;those of
+Oxford and Staffordshire, in 1677 and 1686 respectively. He seems,
+however, to have preferred contributing to the labours of those whom he
+considered better naturalists than himself; and in his third attempt
+thus to render his observations useful he had somewhat better success.
+He placed his materials, including a number of coloured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxv" id="Page_xxv">[Pg xxv]</a></span> drawings, at
+the disposal of Ray, the father of systematic Natural History in Great
+Britain, who has acknowledged the assistance he derived from him in his
+editions of Willughby's 'Ornithology' and 'Ichthyology,' especially in
+the former. But Browne, it seems, found it more easy to lend than to
+recover such materials; for he complains, several years afterwards, that
+these drawings, of whose safe return he was assured, both by Ray and by
+their mutual friend, Sir Philip Skippon, had not been sent back to
+him."<a name="FNanchor_G_7" id="FNanchor_G_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_G_7" class="fnanchor">[G]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_F_6" id="Footnote_F_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_F_6"><span class="label">[F]</span></a> Dr. Robert Plot (1640-1696) was born at Sutton Barne, Kent,
+in 1640; he graduated M.A. in 1664, and D.C.L. at Oxford in 1671. He was
+chiefly noted as an antiquary, and was Secretary of the Royal Society
+from 1682 to 1684, also the first custodian of the Ashmoleian Museum and
+Professor of Chemistry at Oxford. In 1677 he published his "Natural
+History of Oxfordshire," the first local work of the kind which
+appeared; it was illustrated by sixteen plates. In 1686 he also
+published "The Natural History of Staffordshire," and subsequently many
+other books and papers. He was evidently acquainted with most of the
+learned men of his time. Plot died at his family estate Sutton Barne, on
+the 30th of April, 1696, and was buried at Borden in Kent. Dr. Plot was
+a friend of Browne's, and his companion in a tour in England in
+1693.&mdash;"Dict. Nat. Biog."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_G_7" id="Footnote_G_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_G_7"><span class="label">[G]</span></a> See letter to his son, Dr. Edward Browne (Wilkin, i., p.
+337), also <a href="#APPENDIX_C">Appendix C.</a></p></div>
+
+<p>I have endeavoured to reproduce as accurately as possible the text of
+the notes and letters, which, as will be seen from the example
+photographed for the frontispiece of this volume, was often very
+difficult to decipher. The originals of the notes and of seven of the
+nine letters to Merrett, as also the two letters in <a href="#APPENDIX_A">Appendix A.</a>, are in
+the Sloane Collection of MSS. in the British Museum Library; those
+numbered vii. and viii., as well as two letters in <a href="#APPENDIX_D">Appendix D.</a>, which
+have not hitherto been printed, are in the Bodleian Library; and the
+letter to Dugdale in <a href="#APPENDIX_B">Appendix B.</a> is extracted from the "Eastern
+Counties<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvi" id="Page_xxvi">[Pg xxvi]</a></span> Collectanea." All the MSS. in the Sloane Collection I have
+transcribed myself; of those in the Bodleian Library, No. vii. is from a
+photograph, the remainder were copied for me by a person recommended as
+being highly reliable. I thought it best to retain all the erasures and
+interlineations in order to show as much as possible what was passing in
+their author's mind: in the foot-notes I have sought to acknowledge <i>in
+situ</i> the valuable help I received from numerous correspondents to whom
+my best thanks are due, but I owe a special debt of gratitude to
+Professor Newton, at whose instigation the work was undertaken, for his
+kind assistance and for the loan of scarce books which it was necessary
+to consult in the interesting investigations needful to elucidate, if
+possible, some of the obscure passages in the text, a task in which if
+with the best intentions should I have sometimes failed, I must ask the
+reader's indulgence.</p>
+
+<p>It may be truly said of Sir Thomas Browne that a prophet hath no honour
+in his own country; the writings of this remarkable man are little known
+in the city of his adoption, and a recent movement to erect a monument
+to his memory has hitherto met with feeble support.</p>
+
+<p class="rt">T. S.</p>
+
+<p><i>Norwich, December, 1901.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="wide" />
+<div class="front_matter"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span>
+<p class="fs20"><a name="notes" id="notes"></a>Notes and Letters</p>
+
+<p class="fs7">ON THE</p>
+
+<p class="fs20">Natural History of Norfolk.</p>
+</div>
+<hr />
+
+
+<h2><a name="birds" id="birds"></a>NOTES<a name="FNanchor_H_8" id="FNanchor_H_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_H_8" class="fnanchor">[H]</a> ON CERTAIN BIRDS FOUND IN NORFOLK.</h2>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_H_8" id="Footnote_H_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_H_8"><span class="label">[H]</span></a> The heading adopted by Wilkin, for which I cannot find that
+he had any authority, is certainly misleading, for the brief and
+fragmentary notes which follow, although of great interest, can hardly
+be called "An Account of the Birds (or Fishes) found in Norfolk," as
+there are many species of each inhabiting or visiting the county which
+must have been well-known to Browne, but of which we find no mention.</p></div>
+
+<p class="center">[MSS. SLOAN. 1830. FOL. 5-19. AND 31.]</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>[The first four pages in the volume of Manuscript consist of two
+inserted letters from Merrett to Browne (see <a href="#APPENDIX_A">Appendix A.</a>); these
+are on ordinary letter paper 6-1/4 inches by 7 inches. The notes
+commence on folio 5 and are continued to folio 19; one leaf,
+containing an account of the Roller (numbered 31), is bound up
+with the notes on the Fishes, &amp;c., which are numbered
+consecutively with the Birds; the paper of the volume is
+foolscap, 11-1/2 by 7-1/2 inches, and written, with a few
+exceptions, which appear to be subsequent additions, on the
+right-hand opening only. There are four folios after the Birds,
+the first of which is blank; the others, numbered 20, 21, and
+22, contain rough memoranda on the Birds and Fishes, the
+substance of which is embodied in the other notes; the Fishes
+commence on folio 23. There are many erasures, interlineations,
+and substituted words which indicate hasty writing, and the
+alterations are not in all cases complete, thus rendering the
+sense occasionally obscure; these emendations I have thought it
+best to preserve as indicating the author's line of thought. In
+the foot-notes which follow I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> endeavoured to identify the
+species treated of. This, notwithstanding the kind assistance of
+the friends whose help I gratefully acknowledge, I may not in
+all cases have successfully accomplished; the conclusions
+arrived at are occasionally only conjectural, and it may be that
+in some instances I have erred. Should such be the case I must
+plead in excuse the difficulty arising from vagueness of
+description, the frequent use of vernacular names which have
+long since become obsolete (<a href="#Footnote_22_32"><i>see Note</i> 22</a>), and the imperfection
+of the record. This especially applies to the Marine Animals,
+and one of my correspondents rightly remarks that "the early
+accounts of marine beasts are so vague, and the figures (where
+referred to) so incomplete and often fanciful, that it is
+difficult even to make out the family, to say nothing of genera
+and species." Any assistance or correction in this respect would
+be gladly received by me.]</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 5.</i>] I willingly obey your comands<a name="FNanchor_1_9" id="FNanchor_1_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_9" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> in setting down such birds
+fishes &amp; other animals wch for many years I have observed in Norfolk.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_9" id="Footnote_1_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_9"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> With regard to the probable origin of these notes (see
+"Introduction," <a href="#Page_xxi">p. xxi.</a>). The opening passage was probably addressed to
+the deceased correspondent who had asked his assistance, whereas his
+first <a href="#merrett_1">letter to Merrett</a> seems to indicate that the offer of help to him
+came spontaneously from Browne ("I take ye boldness to salute you,"
+&amp;c.), and was not in response to Merrett's request.</p></div>
+
+<p>Beside the ordinarie birds which keep constantly in the country many are
+discouerable both in winter &amp; summer wch are of a migrant nature &amp;
+exchange their seats according to the season.<a name="FNanchor_2_10" id="FNanchor_2_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_10" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> those wch come in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span> the
+spring coming for the most part from the southward those wch come in the
+Autumn or winter from the northward. so that they are obserued to come
+in great flocks with a north east wind &amp; to depart with a south west.
+nor to come [in <i>struck out</i>] only in flocks of one kind butt teals
+woodcocks felfars thrushes &amp; small birds to come &amp; light together. for
+the most part some hawkes &amp; birds of pray attending them.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_10" id="Footnote_2_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_10"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Browne seems to have had on the whole a fairly correct idea
+with regard to the migratory movements of the birds on the Norfolk coast
+where peculiar facilities exist for such observations, but of course he
+could have formed no notion of the extent to which they prevail, perhaps
+no species being altogether sedentary. The general line of the autumn
+migration for those which spend their summer in Northern Europe is south
+or south-west, returning in the spring by the reverse route; those which
+visit us in spring from Western Europe, or countries lying still more to
+the eastward, adopt what is known as the east to west route, and reverse
+the direction in the autumn; but this latter is as nothing compared with
+the vast number of immigrants by both routes in the early autumn, at
+which time, especially, the movements are so exceedingly complex that it
+would be impossible here to attempt to explain them, and the reader must
+be referred to Mr. Eagle Clarke's digest of the Reports of the Migration
+Committee of the British Association ("Report Brit. Ass. for 1876," pp.
+451-477).</p></div>
+
+<p>The great &amp; noble kind of Agle calld Aquila Gesneri<a name="FNanchor_3_11" id="FNanchor_3_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_11" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> I have not seen
+in this country but one I met with [with <i>crossed out</i>] in this country
+brought from ireland wch I [presented unto <i>struck out</i>] kept 2 yeares,
+feeding it with whelpes cattes ratts &amp; the like. in all that while not
+giving it any water wch I afterwards presented unto the [colledge of
+physitians at London <i>struck out</i>] my worthy friend Dr Scarburgh.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_11" id="Footnote_3_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_11"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> The "Aquila" of Gesner here referred to is evidently the
+Golden Eagle, which species Browne is careful to mention that he had not
+met with in this county, and that the specimen he sent to Dr. Scarburgh,
+more than once mentioned, was brought from Ireland. This bird has never
+been recorded alive in Norfolk. Immature White-tailed Eagles, the
+"Halyĉtus" of the text, still occur almost every autumn or winter on
+this coast, but no mature example has hitherto been killed. Browne's
+friend, Sir Charles Scarburgh (1616-1694), was born in London, and is
+buried at Cranford, in Middlesex. He seems to have been greatly
+distinguished as an anatomist and physician. He was a friend of William
+Harvey, whom he succeeded as Lumleyan Lecturer at the College of
+Physicians (of which he was elected a fellow in 1650). Harvey, out of
+regard for his "lovinge friend" Dr. Scarburgh, bequeathed to him his
+"little silver instruments of surgerie" and his velvet gown. ("Dict. of
+Nat. Biog.") The Golden Eagle sent him by Browne was kept in the College
+of Physicians in Warwick Lane for two years.</p></div>
+
+<p>of other sorts of Agles there are severall kinds especially of the
+Halyĉtus or fenne Agles some of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> 3 yards &amp; a quarter from the extremitie
+of the wings. whereof one being taken aliue grewe so tame that it went
+about the yard feeding on fish redherrings flesh &amp; any offells without
+the least trouble.</p>
+
+<p>There is also a lesser sort of Agle called an ospray<a name="FNanchor_4_13" id="FNanchor_4_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_13" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> wch houers about
+the fennes &amp; broads &amp; will dippe his [foot <i>crossed out</i>] claws &amp; take
+up a fish oftimes for wch his foote is made of an extraordinarie
+roughnesse for the better fastening &amp; holding of it &amp; the like they will
+do unto cootes.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_13" id="Footnote_4_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_13"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> This species is a not unfrequent autumn visitor to the
+Broads and Rivers of Norfolk. Browne names it correctly, but there was
+much confusion with regard to this species in the minds of the old
+authors. Willughby knew the bird and calls it the "Bald Buzzard," but in
+describing its nesting site and eggs (probably not on his own
+authority,) evidently confounds it with the Marsh Harrier, for he says
+that "it builds upon the ground among reeds, and lays three or four
+large white eggs of a figure exactly elliptical, lesser than hens'
+eggs." <a href="#Footnote_6_15"><i>See Note</i> 6.</a></p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol.</i> 6.] Aldrovandus takes particular notice of the great number of
+Kites<a name="FNanchor_5_14" id="FNanchor_5_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_14" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> about London &amp; about the Thames. wee are not without them heare
+though not in such numbers. there are also the gray &amp; bald Buzzard<a name="FNanchor_6_15" id="FNanchor_6_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_15" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
+[wch the all wth <i>crossed out</i>] of all wch the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> great number of broad
+waters &amp; warrens makes no small number &amp; more than in woodland counties.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_14" id="Footnote_5_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_14"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The Glede, or Puttock, of Turner, once so plentiful, is now
+only an extremely rare visitor to Norfolk. In 1815, it appears from Hunt
+("British Ornithology"), not to have been uncommon, but the same
+authority in his list of Norfolk Birds contributed to Stacey's "History"
+of that County, speaks of the Kite as having in 1829 become extremely
+rare. It probably ceased to nest in this County about the year 1830, or
+perhaps a little later. Browne's reason for its comparative scarcity
+about the City of Norwich, viz., the abundance of Ravens mentioned at <a href="#Page_27">p.
+27</a> <i>infra</i>, is very interesting to us in the present day when Kites and
+Ravens are almost equally rare.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_15" id="Footnote_6_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_15"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> It seems likely that Browne here refers to two species of
+Harrier, the Grey Buzzard being the male of the Hen Harrier (including
+of course Montagu's Harrier which was not discriminated till long after)
+in its grey adult plumage, whereas the Marsh Harrier, with its light
+yellow head, to which the word "bald" as then used might well be
+applied, would stand for the "Bald Buzzard." The Harriers, which were
+till long after the time he wrote extremely numerous, are generally
+called "Buzzards" by the natives, and it will be noticed at <a href="#Page_15">p. 15</a>
+<i>infra</i>, that what is doubtless intended for the Marsh Harrier is spoken
+of as an enemy to the Coots; also at <a href="#Page_56">p. 56</a>, it is said that young Otters
+"have been found in the Buzzards nests," a very likely circumstance with
+so fierce a bird, and one of which I have an impression I have heard in
+recent years. The Hen Harrier is now an extremely rare bird with us; the
+Marsh Harrier still occasionally nests in the Broads, and Montagu's
+Harrier now and then attempts to rear a brood, but even should the
+parents succeed in escaping it is very seldom they carry their young
+with them. Professor Newton has kindly favoured me with the following
+additional interesting note on this bird. "The Marsh Harrier is
+certainly the 'Balbushardus' of Turner (1544), which, though he says it
+is bigger and longer than the ordinary <i>Buteo</i>, has a white patch on the
+head and is generally of a dark brown (<i>fuscus</i>) colour, hunting the
+banks of rivers, pools, and marshes, living by the capture of Ducks, and
+the black birds which the English call Coots (<i>Coutas</i>). This he,
+Turner, has himself very often seen, and he describes its habits
+correctly; adding that it also takes Rabbits occasionally. Gesner, 1555,
+quotes Turner, but refers the Bald Buzzard to the Osprey (which he
+figures), and so the mistake began. Certainly Willughby's Bald Buzzard
+is the Osprey, but his book was not published when Browne wrote."</p></div>
+
+<p>Cranes<a name="FNanchor_7_16" id="FNanchor_7_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_16" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> are often seen here in hard winters especially<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> about the
+champian &amp; feildie part it seems they have been more plentifull for in a
+bill of fare when the maior entertaind the duke of norfolk I meet with
+Cranes in a dish.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_16" id="Footnote_7_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_16"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> In the present day the Crane is only a rare straggler to
+this country generally at the seasons of its migration; that it was in
+times past abundant in suitable localities there is ample evidence; that
+it also bred in the fens of the Eastern Counties there is no reason to
+doubt, but very little direct evidence is forthcoming, therefore every
+fact bearing upon this point is of value. Had Sir Thomas Browne written
+with the intention of publishing his observations he would doubtless
+have told us much about this grand bird, which would have been of the
+greatest interest to modern ornithologists, but even the above brief
+remarks, as will be seen, are worthy of note.
+</p><p>
+With regard to the occurrence of the Crane in the fens of East Anglia we
+have the following evidence; its fossil remains have been found in the
+peat at Burwell, in Cambridgeshire, and in excavating the docks at Lynn.
+Turner, in his "Avium Historia," Coloniĉ, 1544, speaks of having seen
+young Cranes in this country, and as he passed fifteen years at
+Cambridge, it was probably in that neighbourhood that he met with them;
+then again there is the Act of Parliament, passed in 1534 (25th Hen.
+VIII. c. ii.), prohibiting the taking of their eggs (amongst those of
+other species) under a penalty of twenty pence. All this is well known,
+but being desirous to ascertain whether any reference to the Crane was
+to be found in the records of the Corporation of Norwich, Mr. J. C.
+Tingey, F.S.A., the custodian of the Muniment Room, at my request, most
+kindly searched the accounts of the City Chamberlain between the years
+1531 and 1549. He there found numerous entries of sums expended in the
+purchase of cranes, swans, porpoises, &amp;c., as presents to the Dukes of
+Norfolk and Suffolk and others, and amongst them, on the 6th of June,
+1543, a charge for a "yong pyper crane" from Hickling, which appears
+conclusive evidence of the breeding of this bird near Norwich at that
+time. (See "Transactions of the N. and N. Nat. Soc.," vii., pp.
+160-170.)
+</p><p>
+In Wilkin's Edition of the Notes the statement, "I met" with Cranes in a
+dish should be, "I meet with," &amp;c., as it is in the original. The
+occasion referred to was probably an entertainment given by the Mayor of
+Norwich, on the Guild day in 1663, which in that year fell on the 19th
+June; at this banquet Henry, Duke of Norfolk and the Hon. Henry Howard
+were present, and the latter presented to the City a silver basin and
+ewer of the value of £60. Can it be that even at that time young Cranes
+were to be obtained? otherwise the middle of June seems a most
+unseasonable time for such a dish; for in a copy of a curious old
+manuscript, dated 1605, and published in the 13th Volume of
+"Archĉologia" (p. 315), entitled "A Breviate touching the Order and
+Government of a Nobleman's house," &amp;c., there is a "Monthlie Table, for
+a Diatorie" for each month in the year, and the Crane appears only in
+the tables from November till March inclusive. The modern gourmet would
+view with disgust some of the dishes included in this "diatorie" if set
+before him&mdash;only to mention among birds, auks, stares, petterells,
+puffines, didapers, and martins. The crane being "in the dish" must not
+be subjected to the vulgar process of "kervyng," but in the stilted
+heraldic language of the day must be "desplayed," whereas a heron must
+be "dismembered" and a bittern "unjointed." The price of a crane varied
+from 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> to 5<i>s.</i>, and a fat swan from 3<i>s.</i> to 4<i>s.</i> The sum of
+6<i>d.</i> mentioned in the le Strange Household-book, in the year 1533 (see
+"Archĉologia," vol. xxv., p. 529), quoted in Yarrell's "British Birds,"
+iii., p. 180, was only the reward for bringing in a crane killed on the
+estate. That Cranes must at times have been numerous in Norfolk in the
+sixteenth century is evident, for in an account of the presents sent to
+William Moore, Esq., of Loseley, on the occasion of the marriage of his
+daughter, on 3rd November, 1567, Mr. Balam, "out of Marshland in
+Norfolk," sent him nine cranes, nine swans, and sixteen bitterns, with a
+large number of other wild-fowl. "Archĉologia," vol. xxxvi., p. 36.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>In hard winters elkes<a name="FNanchor_8_17" id="FNanchor_8_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_17" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> a kind of wild swan are seen in no small
+numbers. in whom &amp; not in com&#772;on swans is remarkable that strange
+recurvation of the windpipe through the sternon. &amp; the same is also
+obseruable in cranes. tis probable they come very farre for all the
+northern discouerers have [ha <i>struck out</i>] obserued them in the
+remotest parts &amp; like diuers [&amp;] other northern birds if the winter bee
+mild they com&#772;only come no further southward then scotland if very
+hard they go lower &amp; seeke more southern places. wch is the cause that
+sometimes wee see them not before christmas or the hardest time of
+winter.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_17" id="Footnote_8_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_17"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> The "Elke" is an obsolete name for the Wild Swan (<i>Cygnus
+musicus</i>), which occurs in the present day in the same numbers and under
+precisely similar circumstances as Browne describes; but of course this
+was the only species of wild swan known to him. The remarkable
+recurvation of the trachea within the keel of the sternum, which also
+prevails to a greater or less degree in four out of the five or six
+species of Cygnus found in the Northern Hemisphere, did not escape
+Browne's notice, although he was not the first to describe it, and he
+rightly observes that this peculiarity is absent in the Mute Swan (<i>C.
+olor</i>), but exists in a different and even more exaggerated form in the
+Crane. He, however, was mistaken as to the extreme northerly range which
+he assigns to this species. So marked a feature as the absence of the
+"berry" on the beak of this species did not escape Browne's observation,
+and he refers to it in the eighth <a href="#merrett_8">letter to Merrett</a>, who in his second
+letter to Browne remarks "the difference in the elk's bill by you
+signified is remarkable to distinguish it from others of its kind,"
+indicating that this distinction was previously unknown to him.</p></div>
+
+<p>A white large &amp; strong billd fowle called a Ganet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span><a name="FNanchor_9_18" id="FNanchor_9_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_18" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> which seemes to
+bee the greater sort of Larus. whereof I met with one kild by a
+greyhound neere swaffam another in marshland while it fought &amp; would not
+bee forced to take wing another intangled in an herring net wch taken
+aliue was fed with herrings for a while it may be named Larus maior
+Leucophĉopterus as being white &amp; the top of the wings browne.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_18" id="Footnote_9_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_18"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> As a rule the Gannet does not approach the shore, except to
+breed, but follows the shoals of fish far out at sea. The circumstance
+mentioned by Browne is by no means singular, and several such instances
+of storm-driven Gannets being captured far inland are recorded. The
+"Scotch Goose, <i>Anser scoticus</i>," mentioned further on (<a href="#Page_13">p. 13</a> <i>infra</i>),
+is also in all probability intended for the Gannet; it is the <i>Anser
+Bassanus sive Scoticus</i> of Jonston. The "Marshland" here mentioned is a
+tract of country reclaimed in ancient times from the sea, lying to the
+west of the town of Lynn, of some 57,000 acres in extent, and bordering
+upon the estuary of the Wash.</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 7.</i>] In hard winters I have also met with that large &amp; strong
+billd fowle wch clusius describeth by the name of Skua Hoyeri<a name="FNanchor_10_19" id="FNanchor_10_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_19" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> [fr
+<i>struck out</i>] sent him from the faro Island by Hoierus a physitian. one
+whereof was shot at Hickling while 2 thereof were feeding upon a dead
+horse.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_19" id="Footnote_10_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_19"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Willughby ("Ornithology," English Ed., p. 348) gives a
+good description of the Great Skua (<i>Stercorarius catarrhactes</i>) under
+the name of <i>Catarracta</i>, a skin of which he says was sent him by Dr.
+Walter Needham, and rightly identified it with the Skua which Hoier sent
+to Clusius, but his figure is evidently drawn from a skin of the Great
+Black-backed Gull. Hoier, whose name so often occurs about this time in
+connection with birds from the north, was a physician, living at Bergen
+in Norway. The Great Skua still breeds in sadly reduced numbers on the
+Shetland and Faröe Islands, but <ins title="us deleted per errata.">is</ins> rarely met with in
+Norfolk.</p></div>
+
+<p>As also that [strong <i>struck out</i>] large &amp; strong billd fowle [Clusius
+nameth <i>struck out</i>] spotted like a starling wch clusius nameth Mergus
+maior farr&oelig;nsis<a name="FNanchor_11_20" id="FNanchor_11_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_20" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> as frequenting the faro islands seated above
+shetland. one whereof I sent unto my worthy friend Dr Scarburgh.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_20" id="Footnote_11_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_20"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> The bird here mentioned is doubtless the Great Northern
+Diver, <i><ins title="Inserted per errata.">Colymbus glacialis</ins></i>. In another place Browne again refers to it as <i>Mergus maximus
+Farrensis</i>, which Clusius ("Exotic.," p. 102)
+calls <i>Mergus maximus <ins title="Inserted per errata.">Farrensis</ins></i>, a name used by Willughby as a synonym for his
+"Greatest Speckled Diver or Loon" (p. 341). This bird is known to our
+fishermen as the Herring Loon, the Red-throated and perhaps also the
+Black-throated Divers being called Sprat Loons. It is a pity Browne's
+"draught" is not forthcoming.</p></div>
+
+<p>Here is also the pica marina<a name="FNanchor_12_21" id="FNanchor_12_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_21" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> or seapye many sorts of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> Lari,<a name="FNanchor_13_22" id="FNanchor_13_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_22" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
+seamewes &amp; cobs. the Larus maior in great abundance [about <i>struck out</i>]
+in [<i>written above</i>] herring time about yarmouth.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_21" id="Footnote_12_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_21"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> The Oyster Catcher, or Sea Pie, is found in greater
+numbers on the north-west portion of the County of Norfolk than on the
+eastern shore; it breeds occasionally about Wells, where it is
+universally known as the "Dickey-bird."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_22" id="Footnote_13_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_22"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Browne here refers to the family in general terms. The
+various species of Gulls in their different stages of plumage were very
+puzzling to the Ornithologists of the last century, and it is often
+extremely difficult to say to what individual species they refer. By
+<i>Larus major</i> he would probably mean the Black-backed and Herring Gulls
+which are found on the shore all the year round, most frequently in the
+immature plumage, but they most abound "in herring time." By far the
+commonest species at all times is Browne's <i>Larus alba</i> or Puet, the
+Black-headed Gull. Large flocks of this species and <i>L. canus</i> frequent
+Breydon and the tidal shores, especially the young birds of the year.
+There are now two large breeding-places of the Black-headed Gull in
+Norfolk, a very old-established one at Scoulton Mere, and a more recent
+colony at Hoveton Broad. The former extensive gullery at Horsey,
+mentioned by Browne, has long since been banished by the drainage of the
+marsh they frequented, and it is probable that a small colony which bred
+on Ormesby Broad some forty years ago, owed its origin to their
+banishment from Horsey. They, in their turn, deserted Ormesby on the
+erection of the works for supplying Yarmouth with water about the year
+1855, and fixed upon Hoveton as their new home, in which place, as at
+Scoulton, they are carefully preserved.
+</p><p>
+Professor Newton has been kind enough to furnish me with the following
+note on the Terns. "<i>Larus cinereus</i> of Aldrovandus (and afterwards of
+Jonston), is said to be of three kinds: one with red legs, apparently
+the Black-headed Gull, and figured by Jonston, the second with yellow
+legs and a slender curved black bill, the third with a pointed scarlet
+bill. Both these last were most likely Terns&mdash;and all these were grey
+above and white below. Gesner quotes Turner for <i>Sterna</i>, and there is
+no doubt that his bird of that name was a Black Tern; but Gesner says
+that it is the <i>Stirn</i> of the Frisians, and figures a white and grey
+bird with a black head only (most likely a Common Tern, but possibly one
+of the larger species), as Sterna, thus using the word in a more general
+sense, and it may have been so used in Browne's time. I see no
+impossibility in people having thought of eating Terns in those days [as
+to that <a href="#Footnote_7_16"><i>see Note</i> 7</a>, p. 6 <i>ante</i>]. The Common Tern was most likely very
+abundant, and we know that the Black Tern was exceedingly common in
+certain reed-beds, as stated by Turner, and noisy beyond measure." The
+Great and Lesser Terns still nest in one or two localities on our coast,
+although as the result of great persecution in very reduced numbers. The
+Black Tern, or Mire Crow, has quite ceased to do so.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>Larus alba or puets in such plentie about Horsey that they sometimes
+bring them in carts to norwich &amp; sell them at small rates. &amp; the country
+people make use of their egges in puddings &amp; otherwise. great plentie
+thereof haue bred about scoulton [mere <i>struck out</i>] meere, &amp; from
+thence sent to London.</p>
+
+<p>Larus cinereus greater &amp; smaller, butt a coars meat. commonly called
+sternes.</p>
+
+<p>Hirundo marina or sea swallowe a neat white &amp; forked tayle bird butt
+longer then a swallowe.</p>
+
+<p>The ciconia or stork<a name="FNanchor_14_23" id="FNanchor_14_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_23" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> I have seen in the fennes &amp; some haue been shot
+in the marshes between this and yarmouth. [See also third <a href="#merrett_3">letter to
+Merrett</a> and <a href="#APPENDIX_D">Appendix D.</a>]</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_23" id="Footnote_14_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_23"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Although it has been met with in Norfolk, more frequently
+than perhaps in any other part of England, the Stork was never other
+than a rare spring and autumn visitor to Norfolk. Turner writes of it in
+1544 as unknown in England, save as a captive, and Merrett a hundred
+years later says it rarely flies hither, which is equally true at the
+present time. Hewittson ("Eggs of Brit. Birds," Ed. 3, ii., p. 309;
+under Crane) was evidently misled by some remarks made by Evelyn, who
+visited Sir Thomas Browne in Norwich in October, 1671, and says in his
+diary that he saw Browne's "Collection of the eggs of all the fowl and
+birds he could procure; that country, especially the promontory of
+Norfolk, being frequented, as he said, by several birds which seldom or
+never go further into the land&mdash;as cranes, storks, eagles, and a variety
+of water-fowl." From this Hewitson infers that the Stork bred in
+Norfolk, a construction which the somewhat ambiguously worded passage
+will certainly not bear. I imagine collections of eggs were not very
+common in Browne's time.</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 8.</i>] The platea or shouelard,<a name="FNanchor_15_24" id="FNanchor_15_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_24" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> wch build upon the topps of
+high trees. they haue formerly built in the Hernerie at claxton &amp;
+Reedham now at Trimley in Suffolk. they come in march &amp; are shot by
+fowlers not for their meat butt the handsomenesse of the same,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+remarkable in their white colour copped crowne &amp; spoone or spatule like
+bill.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_24" id="Footnote_15_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_24"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> This interesting record has recently been supplemented by
+a much earlier record of the breeding of the "Popeler," or Shovelard, in
+Norfolk. Professor Newton ("Transactions of N. and N. Nat. Soc.," vi.,
+p. 158) has called attention to an ancient document bearing date A.D.
+1300, instituting a commission to inquire into the harrying of the
+eyries of these and other birds, &amp;c., at Cantley and other places in
+Norfolk. Documents also exist, showing that in 1523 they nested at
+Fulham in Middlesex, and in 1570 in West Sussex, as pointed out by Mr.
+Harting in the "Zoologist" for 1877, p. 425, and 1886, p. 81, in each
+case constructing their nests in trees. At what precise date this bird
+ceased to breed in Norfolk and Suffolk is unknown, but Sir T. Browne's
+statement that they were "shot by fowlers not for their meat, butt the
+handsomenesse of the same," probably explains the circumstances which
+brought about that event. The Spoonbill visits Norfolk regularly every
+spring in small parties now more numerously than a few years since,
+which possibly may be accounted for by the destruction of nearly all its
+breeding-places in Holland, and it is possible that with due
+encouragement it might again be induced to breed in some of the
+localities in the Broads still suitable for the purpose.</p></div>
+
+<p>corvus marinus. cormorants.<a name="FNanchor_16_25" id="FNanchor_16_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_25" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> building at Reedham upon trees from
+whence King charles the first was wont to bee supplyed. beside the Rock
+cormorant wch breedeth in the rocks in northerne countries &amp; cometh to
+us in the winter, somewhat differing from the other in largenesse &amp;
+whitenesse under the wings.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_25" id="Footnote_16_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_25"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> The Cormorant continued to nest in the trees on the shore
+of Fritton Lake for many years after Sir T. Browne's time. A manuscript
+note in a copy of Berkenhout's "Natural History of Great Britain and
+Ireland," published in 1769, is descriptive of a Cormorant killed at
+Belton Decoy (near the same lake) on the 11th September, 1775, and also
+states that "a vast number of these birds, even to some thousands, roost
+every night upon the trees," being in the neighbourhood of the decoy
+they are never shot, and "build their nests upon the top of these
+trees." According to Mr. Lubbock ("Fauna of Norf.," Ed. 2, p. 174), "in
+1825 there were many nests at Herringfleet, also on Fritton Lake, and in
+1827 not one." We may therefore assume that they ceased to nest at
+Herringfleet in 1825 or 1826. It will be noticed that Browne made free
+use of young Cormorants in his experiments as to the properties of
+certain drugs (cf. Wilkin, iv., p. 452), which would seem to indicate
+that he could obtain a plentiful supply of these birds. When the
+Cormorants ceased to breed at Reedham is unknown. They are not
+unfrequently seen now, generally in spring and autumn. The Rock
+Cormorant was possibly the Crested Cormorant or Shag.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>A sea fowl called a shearwater,<a name="FNanchor_17_26" id="FNanchor_17_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_26" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> somewhat billed like a cormorant
+butt much lesser a strong &amp; feirce fowle houering about shipps when they
+[clense <i>struck out</i>] cleanse their fish. 2 were kept 6 weekes
+cram&#772;ing them with fish wch they would not feed on of themselues. the
+seamen told mee they had kept them 3 weekes without meat. &amp; I giuing
+ouer to feed them found they liued 16 dayes without [any hin <i>struck
+out</i>] taking any thing.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_26" id="Footnote_17_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_26"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Willughby's first acquaintance with the adult Manx
+Shearwater ("Ornithology," p. 334) was from a drawing sent him by Sir T.
+Browne, who describes the bird, as above, under the accepted name of
+Shearwater, and Willughby's excellent figure on plate lxvii. (which
+plate I believe is not to be found in some copies of the "Ornithology,"
+and to which there is no reference in the text) has all the appearance
+of having been drawn from life. The drawing here referred to is
+mentioned by Ray in his "Collection of English <ins title="Birds in original">words</ins> not generally
+known," as having been received, with others, from the "learned and
+deservedly famous Sir Thomas Browne, of Norwich." George Edwards
+("Gleanings of Nat. Hist.," vii., p. 315), prior to 1764. says that he
+went to the British Museum and examined Browne's "old draught," but I
+could not find it among any of the papers I examined. In Browne's fourth
+<a href="#merrett_4">letter to Merrett</a>, by an error in the transcription, he is made by
+Wilkin to say that he kept twenty of these birds alive for five weeks;
+in the MS. it is clearly only two.</p></div>
+
+<p>Barnacles<a name="FNanchor_18_27" id="FNanchor_18_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_27" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> Brants Branta [wer <i>struck out</i>] are com&#772;on</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_27" id="Footnote_18_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_27"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Barnacle and Brent Geese as we know them, the first by no
+means common here; the Wild Goose, probably <i>Anser cinereus</i>; the Scotch
+Goose (<a href="#Footnote_9_18"><i>see Note</i> 9</a>), probably the Gannet; and the Bergander, an old
+name for the Sheld-drake, as used by Turner in 1544, and derived from
+the Dutch Berg-eende, German Bergente ("Dict. Birds," p. 835). Browne's
+statement that this bird formerly bred about Northwold, or as it is even
+now occasionally called by the natives, "Norrold," some twenty miles
+from the sea; or, as he says, in the fourth <a href="#merrett_4">letter to Merrett</a>,
+"abounding in vast and spatious commons," is very interesting, although
+not a solitary instance, for I am informed that this bird breeds in the
+present day on the Gull Lake, Twig Moor, in Lincolnshire; but that it
+should have chosen such a nesting site is not more surprising than the
+fact of the Ring Plover, quite as strictly a marine species, frequenting
+the extensive sandy warrens about Thetford and Brandon, near the <ins title="center in original">south-west border</ins>
+of the county, for the same purpose, as they still continue to do. But
+for Browne's mention of the circumstance we should not have been aware
+of this singular departure from the normal nesting habits of the
+Sheld-duck, as no tradition I believe exists on the subject, and at
+present it only nests in the sand-hills in some parts of the coast of
+N.W. Norfolk.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>sheldrakes sheledracus jonstoni</p>
+
+<p>Barganders a noble coloured fowle vulpanser wch breed in cunny burrowes
+about norrold &amp; other places.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 9.</i>] Wild geese Anser ferus.</p>
+
+<p>scoch goose Anser scoticus.</p>
+
+<p>Goshander,<a name="FNanchor_19_28" id="FNanchor_19_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_28" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> merganser.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_28" id="Footnote_19_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_28"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> This evidently refers to the Goosander, which as he says
+in another place most answers to the Merganser.</p></div>
+
+<p>Mergus acutirostris speciosus or Loone an handsome &amp; specious fowle
+cristated &amp; with diuided finne feet placed very backward and after the
+manner of all such wch the Duch call [Assf <i>struck out</i>] Arsvoote.<a name="FNanchor_20_29" id="FNanchor_20_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_29" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>
+they haue a peculiar formation in the leggebone wch hath a long &amp; sharpe
+processe extending aboue the thigh bone [it <i>struck out</i>] they come
+about April &amp; breed in the broad waters so making their nest on the
+water that their egges are seldom drye while they are sett on.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_29" id="Footnote_20_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_29"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> This well describes the Great-crested Grebe, which Browne
+rightly says comes to us about the month of April. Browne notices the
+peculiar formation of the tibia in this family of birds, but it had long
+been known. The next, named <i>Mergus acutirostris cinereus</i>, is most
+likely the same species in winter plumage. The other birds mentioned are
+Mergus minor, the Little Grebe or Dabchick, and <i>M. serratus</i>, the
+Red-breasted Merganser, even now known as the "Saw-bill."</p></div>
+
+<p>Mergus <ins class="tn" title="May be 'acutirostris' as spelled elsewhere.">acutarostris</ins> cinereus [another d <i>struck out</i>] wch seemeth to bee
+a difference of the former.</p>
+
+<p>Mergus minor the smaller diuers or dabchicks in riuers &amp; broade waters.</p>
+
+<p>Mergus serratus the saw billd diuer bigger &amp; longer than a duck
+distinguished from other diuers by a notable sawe bill to retaine its
+slipperie pray as liuing much upon eeles whereof we haue seldome fayled
+to find some in their bellies.</p>
+
+<p>Diuers other sorts of diuefowle more remarkable the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> mustela fusca &amp;
+mustela variegata<a name="FNanchor_21_30" id="FNanchor_21_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_30" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> the graye dunne &amp; the variegated or partie
+coloured wesell so called from the resemblance it beareth vnto a wesell
+in the head.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_30" id="Footnote_21_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_30"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> The Smew, male and female, or either in the immature
+plumage are here referred to.</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 12.</i><a name="FNanchor_I_31" id="FNanchor_I_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_I_31" class="fnanchor">[I]</a>] many sorts of wild ducks<a name="FNanchor_22_32" id="FNanchor_22_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_32" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> wch passe under names well
+knowne unto the fowlers though of no great signification as smee [wige
+<i>struck out</i>] widgeon Arts ankers noblets.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_I_31" id="Footnote_I_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_I_31"><span class="label">[I]</span></a> Fols. 10 and 11 are (10 written on both sides) on the
+"Ostridge," <i>vide</i> Wilkin, Vol. 4, p. 337-9. The paper is a different
+size, 11-1/2 by 7-1/2, and the article is evidently bound out of place.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_32" id="Footnote_22_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_32"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> The local names of the various Ducks are simply legion and
+differ both in time and place, not to mention the confusion occasioned
+by sex and season when these birds were not so well understood as at
+present. Many such names are quite lost, as "Ankers" and "Noblets," but
+the following are a few examples: Adult Smew, White Nun; female or
+immature Smew, Wesel Coot; the Wigeon was known as the Smee, Whewer, or
+Whim; the Tufted Duck, Arts or Arps; the Gadwall, Grey Duck or Rodge;
+the Pochard, Dunbird; the Shoveller, Beck or Kertlutock (Hunt); Pintail,
+Sea Pheasant or Cracker; Long-tailed Duck, Mealy Bird; Golden Eye,
+Morillon or Rattle-wing; Scaup, Grey-back, and on Breydon White-nosed
+Day Fowl; Scoter, Whilk; Velvet Scoter, Double Scoter (Hunt); Teal,
+Crick; Garganey, Summer Teal, Pied Wigeon, Cricket Teal; other names
+might be mentioned, and some will be found in the notes which will
+follow. <i>Anas platyrhincus</i> here mentioned is the Shoveller. It may seem
+strange that the abundance of Teal should in any way be attributed to
+the number of Decoys, but such was really the case, the quiet and
+shelter afforded by these extensive preserves being very favourable to
+the increase of all the members of the Duck family, especially to those
+breeding in their immediate neighbourhood. In the returns of the old
+Decoys, Teal figured largely; in the present day they form a very much
+smaller proportion of the spoils.</p></div>
+
+<p>the most remarkable are Anas platyrinchos [<i>sic</i>] a remarkably broad
+bild duck.</p>
+
+<p>And the sea phaysant holding some resemblance unto that bird [in the
+tayle <i>crossed out</i>] in some fethers in the tayle.</p>
+
+<p>Teale Querquedula. wherein scarce any place more abounding. the
+condition of the country &amp; the very many decoys [mo <i>struck out</i>]
+especially between Norwich and the sea making this place very much to
+abound in wild fowle.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>fulicĉ cottĉ cootes<a name="FNanchor_23_33" id="FNanchor_23_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_33" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> in very great flocks upon the broad waters. upon
+the appearance of a Kite or buzzard I have seen them vnite from all
+parts of the shoare in strange numbers when if the Kite stoopes neare
+them they will fling up [and] spred such a flash of water up with there
+wings that they will endanger the Kite. &amp; so [es <i>struck out</i>] keepe him
+of [in of <i>struck out</i>] agayne &amp; agayne in open opposition. &amp; an
+handsome prouision they make about their nest agaynst the same bird of
+praye by bending &amp; twining the rushes &amp; reeds so about them that they
+cannot stoope at their yong ones or the damme while she setteth.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_33" id="Footnote_23_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_33"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> In the present day the Coots have nothing to fear from
+Kites and little from Moor Buzzards; it may be that it is in consequence
+of this that they have discontinued the practice of twining the rushes
+and reeds above their nests in the manner mentioned above as being an
+unnecessary precaution. I have, however, in some cases noticed some
+approach to this practice. The Coot, although fairly numerous on the
+Broads, appears to be far less so than formerly. Lubbock, in his "Fauna
+of Norfolk," says on asking a Broadman how many Coots there were on
+Hickling Broad, his reply was, "About an acre and a half," referring to
+their practice of swimming evenly at regular distances from each other
+without huddling together in dense masses, like wild-fowl.
+</p><p>
+I am indebted to Professor Newton for the following additional note on
+the Coot. He says "Turner, and after him Gesner, was puzzled as to what
+was the <i>Fulica</i> of classical writers (Virgil and others), and thought
+it to be some kind of Gull; but the <i>Fulica</i> of later authors was
+certainly the Coot, as shown by Gesner's figure."</p></div>
+
+<p>Gallinula aquatica<a name="FNanchor_24_34" id="FNanchor_24_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_34" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> more hens.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_34" id="Footnote_24_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_34"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Moor-hens are of course numerous in all suitable
+localities, and the Water Rail is still fairly common, but its eggs have
+a market value and are (or were) sadly stolen; a few years ago a London
+dealer is said to have received over 200 eggs of this bird in one season
+from Yarmouth.</p></div>
+
+<p>And a kind of Ralla aquatica or water Rayle.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 13.</i>] An onocrotalus or pelican<a name="FNanchor_25_35" id="FNanchor_25_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_35" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> shott upon Horsey fenne 1663
+May 22 wch stuffed and cleansed I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> yet retaine it was 3 yards &amp; half
+between the extremities of the wings the chowle &amp; beake answering the
+vsuall discription the extremities of the wings for a spanne deepe
+browne the rest of the body white. a fowle [not found <i>struck out</i>] wch
+none could remember upon this coast. about the same time I heard one of
+the kings pellicans was lost at St James', perhaps this might bee the
+same.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_35" id="Footnote_25_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_35"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> There is every reason to believe that a species of
+Pelican, probably from its size <i>P. crispus</i>, was formerly an inhabitant
+of the East Anglian Fens; its bones have been found in the peat on three
+occasions, one of these being the bone of a bird so young as to show
+that it must have been bred in the locality, and therefore that the
+species was a true native and not a casual visitant. Bones of a species
+of Pelican have also been found in the remains of lake-dwellings at
+Glastonbury, in Somersetshire.
+</p><p>
+With regard to the species of the bird recorded by Browne and its
+origin, he is careful to point out that a Pelican had about that time
+escaped from the King's collection in St. James' Park, and to surmise
+that it might be the same bird; from what follows this seems probable,
+but as <i>P. onocrotalus</i> is believed to stray occasionally into the
+northern parts of Germany and France ("Dict. of Birds," p. 702) the
+occurrence of that species on the East Coast of Britain, where, even at
+present, it would find a state of things in every way suited to its
+requirements (guns excepted), would not be very extraordinary. Browne's
+Pelican was killed in May, 1663, and although Dr. Edward Browne visited
+St. James' Park in February, 1664, and saw "many strange creatures,"
+including the Stork with the wooden leg (mentioned by Evelyn), he says
+nothing of the Pelicans, still it may be that it was from him that his
+father heard of the escape. Evelyn, in his Diary, mentioned that he
+visited St. James' Park on February 9th, 1665, and speaks of only one
+Pelican, which he states was brought from Astrakan by the Russian
+Ambassador as a present to the King; Willughby says distinctly that the
+Emperor of Russia sent the King two Pelicans, and further, that he took
+the description in his "Ornithology" from a bird in the Royal Aviary,
+St. James' Park, near Westminster; it seems therefore highly probable
+that Browne's bird was one of these which had escaped from confinement.
+But a rather curious circumstance arises out of this, the bird described
+by Willughby does not appear to be <i>P. onocrotalus</i>, but a similar
+species, <i>P. roseus</i>, found chiefly in Indio-China and westward to
+South-eastern Europe, but occurring as far west as the River Volga
+("Cat. of Birds," B. M., xxvi., p. 466). In this Mr. Ogilvie Grant, the
+author of that section of the Catalogue, whom I consulted, agrees with
+me, and the locality whence the birds were derived, mentioned by
+Willughby, renders not unlikely. Onocrotalus in Browne's time was a
+general term for "the Pelican," and he probably knew but one species and
+one individual, the escaped bird from Charles II.'s Aviary. Browne's
+very miscellaneous collection was destroyed by the authorities at the
+time of the plague (see ninth <a href="#merrett_9">letter to Merrett</a>), and probably the
+remains of this Pelican perished with the rest.</p></div>
+
+<p>Anas Arctica clusii wch though hee placeth about the faro Islands is the
+same wee call a puffin com&#772;on about Anglisea in wales &amp; sometimes [for
+<i>struck out</i>] taken upon our seas not sufficiently described by the name
+of puffinus the bill being so remarkably differing from other ducks &amp;
+not horizontally butt meridionally formed to feed in the clefts of the
+rocks of insecks, shell-fish &amp; others.</p>
+
+<p>The great number of riuers riuulets &amp; plashes of water makes hernes [to
+abound in these <i>struck out</i>] &amp; herneries to abound in these parts. yong
+hensies being esteemed a festiuall dish &amp; much desired by some palates.</p>
+
+<p>The Ardea stellaris botaurus, or bitour<a name="FNanchor_26_36" id="FNanchor_26_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_36" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> is also com&#772;on &amp; esteemed
+the better dish. in the belly of one I found a frog in an hard frost at
+christmas. another I kept in a garden 2 yeares feeding it with fish mice
+&amp; frogges. in defect whereof making a scrape for sparrowes &amp; small
+birds, the bitour made shifft to maintaine herself upon them.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_36" id="Footnote_26_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_36"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> This is one of the birds once common enough in Norfolk,
+which in the present day is only a winter and spring migrant. The last
+eggs of the Bittern were taken in this county on 30th of March, 1868;
+the last "boom" of a resident was heard in May, 1886, in the August of
+which year a young female was killed at Reedham with down still adhering
+to its feathers; this was probably the last Norfolk-bred Bittern. In the
+"Vulgar Errors," book 3, chapter xxvii., section 4, is a discourse on
+the "mugient noise" of the Bittern and the mode of its production, and
+in a foot-note in the same place is a curious anecdote illustrating the
+difficulty of detecting a wounded Bittern, even when marked down in
+short, recently mown grass and flags. The spring cry of the Bittern is
+mentioned by Robert Marsham in his unpublished journal nineteen times,
+between the years 1739 and 1775, as first heard at Stratton Strawless,
+generally between the 15th of March and the 15th of April; and it was on
+the 14th of the latter month that Benjamin Stillingfleet records it in
+the "Calendar of Flora" as heard in the same locality in 1755. He does
+not describe the note, but uses the words "makes a noise." Marsham,
+however, on one occasion, in 1750, a very early year, records it on the
+20th of February. As a once familiar sound, but one which will probably
+never again be heard here under purely normal conditions, these dates
+seem worthy of recording.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 14.</i>] Bistardĉ or Bustards<a name="FNanchor_27_37" id="FNanchor_27_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_37" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> are not vnfrequent in the champain
+&amp; feildie part of this country a large Bird accounted a dayntie dish,
+obseruable in the strength<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> of the brest bone &amp; short heele layes an
+egge much larger then a Turkey.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_37" id="Footnote_27_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_37"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> The last of the Norfolk and therefore certainly the last
+of the British-bred Bustards, was killed in May, 1838; those which have
+since occurred in this country were Continental immigrants. An
+exhaustive history of the extinction of this bird will be found in
+Stevenson's "Birds of Norfolk," vols. 2 and 3. The Bustard, although
+found in some numbers, associated in small flocks or "droves" in the few
+localities which it frequented in Great Britain, was probably never a
+very numerous species. The following extract from one of Browne's
+letters to his son Edward, dated April 30th, and written probably in
+1681, shows that he was on the verge of discovering an anatomical
+peculiarity in this family of birds, which in after years gave rise to
+much controversy. He says, "yesterday I had a cock Bustard sent me from
+beyond Thetford. I never did see such a vast thick neck: the crop was
+pulled out, butt as [a] turkey hath an odde large substance without, so
+hath this within the inside of the skinne, and the strongest and largest
+neckbone of any bird in England. This I tell you, that if you meet with
+one you may further observe it." The presence of a gular pouch in the
+Bustard was first demonstrated by James Douglas, a Scotch Physician, in
+1740, and it appears to be fully developed only in the adult male bird,
+and at the breeding season. Hence, although it has undoubtedly been
+found on several occasions, the frequent unsuccessful searches for it
+under unfavourable conditions led to much scepticism as to its
+existence. The use of this singular appendage is still a moot point, but
+it seems probable that it has to do with "voice production," and assists
+in the remarkable "showing off" exhibited by the male bird in the
+breeding season. Pennant, in his "British Zoology," 1768, i., p. 215,
+gives a sentimental account of its use, and an exaggerated estimate of
+its proportions. In the Tables of Dietary referred to at <a href="#Footnote_7_16">p. 6 (note)</a>
+<i>ante</i>, the Bustard is mentioned as in season from October to May.</p></div>
+
+<p>Morinellus or Dotterell<a name="FNanchor_28_38" id="FNanchor_28_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_38" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> about Thetford &amp; the champain wch comes vnto
+us in september &amp; march staying not long. &amp; is an excellent dish.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_38" id="Footnote_28_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_38"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> The Dotterel visits us much as in Sir T. Browne's time,
+but in decreased numbers. The Sea Dotterel which Wilkin supposes to be
+the Ring Plover, is undoubtedly the Turnstone. Willughby says, "Our
+honoured Friend, Sir Thomas Browne, of Norwich, sent us the picture of
+this bird by the title of the Sea Dotterel." This is also mentioned in
+the <a href="#merrett_5">fifth letter to Merrett</a>. See "Birds of Norfolk," ii., p. 82, for an
+interesting account of Dotterel hawking near Thetford by James I. in the
+year 1610.</p></div>
+
+<p>There is also a sea dotterell somewhat lesse butt better coloured then
+the former.</p>
+
+<p>Godwyts taken chiefly in marshland, though other parts not without them
+accounted the dayntiest dish in England &amp; I think for the bignesse, of
+the biggest price.</p>
+
+<p>Gnatts or Knots [only so far on p. 14, but as follows on fol. 13
+<i>verso</i>].</p>
+
+<p>Gnats or Knots a small bird which taken with netts grow excessively
+fatt. If [by mew <i>struck out</i>] being mewed &amp; fed with corne a candle
+lighted in the roome they feed day &amp; night, &amp; when they are at their
+hight of fattnesse they beginne to grow lame &amp; are then killed or [else
+they will fall aw <i>struck out</i>] as at their prime &amp; apt to decline.</p>
+
+<p>[resume p. 14.] Erythropus or Redshanck a bird com&#772;on in the marshes &amp;
+of com&#772;on food butt no dayntie dish.</p>
+
+<p>A may chitt<a name="FNanchor_29_39" id="FNanchor_29_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_39" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> a small dark gray bird litle bigger then a stint of
+fatnesse beyond any. it comes in may into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> marshland &amp; other parts &amp;
+abides not aboue a moneth or 6 weekes.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_39" id="Footnote_29_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_39"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Mr. Stevenson, "Birds of Norfolk," ii., p. 233, gives his
+reasons for coming to the conclusion that the Sanderling (<i>Calidris
+arenaria</i>) is here referred to, which the absence of a hind toe (see
+third <a href="#merrett_3">letter to Merrett</a>) tends to confirm. The "<i>Churre</i>" is only a
+variant of the name "<i>Purre</i>," by which the next species, the Stint, is
+commonly known, and the <i>Green Plover</i>, now applied to the Lapwing, is
+an old name for the <i>Golden Plover</i>, which he rightly says [<a href="#Page_20">p. 20</a>] does
+not breed in Norfolk.</p></div>
+
+<p>[fol. 13 <i>verso</i>.] Another small bird somewhat larger than a stint
+called a churre &amp; is com&#772;only taken amongst them.</p>
+
+<p>[resume fol. 14.] Stints in great numbers about the seashore &amp; marshes
+about stifkey Burnham &amp; other parts.</p>
+
+<p>Pluuialis or plouer green &amp; graye in great plentie about Thetford &amp; many
+other heaths. they breed not with us butt in some parts of scotland, and
+plentifully in Island [Iceland].</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 15.</i>] The lapwing or vannellus com&#772;on ouer all the heaths.</p>
+
+<p>Cuccowes<a name="FNanchor_30_40" id="FNanchor_30_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_40" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> of 2 sorts the one farre exceeding the other in bignesse.
+some have attempted to keepe them in warme roomes all the winter butt it
+hath not succeeded. in their migration they range very farre northward
+for in the summer they are to bee found as high as Island.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_40" id="Footnote_30_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_40"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> The circumstance which gave rise to the idea that there
+were two kinds of Cuckoos, differing only in size, might possibly be
+discovered were it worth the research; possibly it would be found that
+the second species was of foreign origin. Aldrovandus, as quoted by
+Willughby, says, "Our Bolognese Fowlers do unanimously affirm, that
+there are found a greater and a lesser sort of Cuckows; and besides,
+that the greater are of two kinds, which are distinguished one from the
+other by the only difference of colour: but the lesser differ from the
+greater in nothing else but magnitude." Perhaps it was Browne's latent
+respect for antiquity which led him to mention the tradition.</p></div>
+
+<p>Avis pugnax. Ruffes<a name="FNanchor_31_41" id="FNanchor_31_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_41" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> a marsh bird of the greatest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span> varietie of
+colours euery one therein somewhat varying from other. The female is
+called a Reeve without any ruffe about the neck, lesser then the other &amp;
+hardly to bee got. They are almost all cocks &amp; putt together fight &amp;
+destroy each other. &amp; prepare themselues to fight like cocks though they
+seeme to haue no other offensive part butt the bill. they loose theire
+Ruffes about the Autumne or beginning of winter as wee haue obserued
+[they <i>struck out</i>] keeping them in a garden from may till the next
+spring. they most abound in Marshland butt are also in good number in
+the marshes between norwich &amp; yarmouth.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_41" id="Footnote_31_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_41"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> It is only necessary to add to Browne's interesting
+account of this remarkable bird that it lingered longer in Norfolk as a
+breeding species than in any other part of Britain, but that although it
+still visits us in spring it is doubtful whether it has bred <ins title="Phrase moved per errata.">for the last few
+years</ins> in the one favourite locality to which it clung so tenaciously. The
+"Marshland," here referred to as explained in a previous
+note, is a tract of country situated in north-west Norfolk, near King's
+Lynn.</p></div>
+
+<p>Of picus martius<a name="FNanchor_32_42" id="FNanchor_32_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_42" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> or woodspeck many kinds. The green the Red the
+Leucomelanus or neatly marked [red <i>crossed out</i>] black &amp; white &amp; the
+cinereus or dunne calld [a re <i>struck out</i>] little [bird calld <i>written
+above</i>] a nuthack. remarkable in the larger are the hardnesse of the
+bill &amp; skull &amp; the long nerues wch tend vnto the tongue whereby it
+strecheth out the tongue aboue an inch out of the mouth &amp; so [lik
+<i>crossed out</i>] licks up insecks. they make the holes in trees without
+any consideration of the winds or quarters of heauen butt as the
+rottenesse thereof best affordeth conuenience.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_42" id="Footnote_32_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_42"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> <i>Picus martius</i> is here used, as it is by Sibbald, and all
+preceding writers, in a general sense for all birds commonly called
+"Woodpeckers," and does not imply that the Great Black Woodpecker
+(<i>Picus niger maximus</i>, of Ray's Synopsis), to which species the name
+was restricted by Linnĉus, is found here, and Browne goes on to mention
+the three British Woodpeckers, the Green, the Red, by which the Great
+Spotted Woodpecker is intended, and the Leucomelanus, or Lesser-spotted
+Woodpecker. He also includes the Nuthatch, which was at that time (as
+well as the Wryneck) called a "Woodpecker." In this passage Browne, in
+making a correction, does not seem to have proceeded far enough, the
+word which Wilkin has rendered "dun-coloured," is certainly "dunne
+calld" in the MS.; but there are two alterations in the passage, and
+there is little doubt that he intended to write "dunne cull'd" (or
+coloured), which would make it read as Wilkin has printed it. The use of
+the word "nerve," for tendon or ligament, was in accordance with the
+phraseology of the time.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>[fol. 15 <i>verso</i>.] black heron<a name="FNanchor_33_43" id="FNanchor_33_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_43" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> black on both sides the bottom of the
+neck neck [<i>sic</i>] white gray on the outside spotted all along with black
+on the inside a black coppe of small feathers some a spanne long. bill
+poynted and yallowe 3 inches long</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_43" id="Footnote_33_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_43"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> This passage is not part of the original MS., but is
+written on a separate slip of paper and pasted on the left-hand side of
+the opening (<a href="#Page_15">p. 15</a> <i>verso</i>). I doubt whether it is more than a casual
+memorandum, descriptive possibly of the plumage of the Purple Heron, but
+not intended to apply to any Norfolk bird. The Black Heron of Willughby
+is the Glossy Ibis, a bird which is said to have been known to the West
+Norfolk gunners as the "Black Curlew."</p></div>
+
+<p>back heron coloured intermixed with long white fethers</p>
+
+<p>the flying (?) fethers black</p>
+
+<p>the brest black &amp; white most black</p>
+
+<p>the legges &amp; feet not green but an ordinarie dark cork [?] colour.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 16.</i>] The number of riuulets becks &amp; streames whose banks are
+beset with willowes &amp; Alders wch giue occasion of easier fishing &amp;
+slooping to the water makes that [bir <i>crossed out</i>] handsome coulered
+bird abound wch is calld Alcedo Ispida or the King fisher. they bild in
+holes about grauell pitts [have their nests very full <i>crossed out</i>]
+wherein [are <i>crossed out</i>] is [<i>above</i>] to bee found great quantitie of
+small fish bones. &amp; lay [a <i>crossed out</i>] very handsome round &amp; as it
+were polished egges.</p>
+
+<p>An Hobby bird<a name="FNanchor_34_44" id="FNanchor_34_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_44" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> so calld becaus it comes in ether with or a litle
+before the Hobbies in the spring. of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> bignesse of a Thrush coloured
+&amp; paned<a name="FNanchor_J_45" id="FNanchor_J_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_J_45" class="fnanchor">[J]</a> like an hawke marueliously subiet to the vertigo &amp; and are
+sometimes taken in those fitts.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_44" id="Footnote_34_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_44"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> This is evidently the Wryneck, which we now call the
+"Cuckoo's Mate," probably for the same reason that Browne associates it
+with the Hobby. It may be that the Hobby having become comparatively
+scarce, it was necessary to find another travelling companion for this
+bird, and that the Cuckoo was chosen as the most suitable. Old Norfolk
+names are Emmet-eater, and in one old book it is called Turkey-bird in a
+MS. note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_J_45" id="Footnote_J_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_J_45"><span class="label">[J]</span></a> That is marked with a barred or checkered pattern.</p></div>
+
+<p>Upupa or Hoopebird<a name="FNanchor_35_46" id="FNanchor_35_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_46" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> so named from its note a gallant marked bird wch
+I have often seen &amp; tis not hard to shoote them.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_46" id="Footnote_35_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_46"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> The Hoopoe would seem from this note to have been of more
+frequent occurrence than in the present day, see also in his answer to
+"Certain Queries" (Tract iv., Wilkin iv., p. 183), in which he says of
+this bird, "though it be not seen every day, yet we often meet with it
+in this country."</p></div>
+
+<p>Ringlestones<a name="FNanchor_36_47" id="FNanchor_36_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_47" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> a small [bird <i>crossed out</i>] white &amp; black bird like a
+wagtayle &amp; seemes to bee some kind of motacilla marina com&#772;on about
+yarmouth sands. they lay their egges in the sand &amp; shingle about june
+and as the eryngo diggers tell mee not sett them flat butt upright likes
+[<i>sic</i>] egges in [a <i>crossed out</i>] salt.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_47" id="Footnote_36_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_47"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> The Ring Plover is evidently the bird here referred to,
+but I have never known the name of Ringlestone applied to this species
+in Norfolk, nor have I met with it elsewhere. The <ins title="Eringo in original.">Eryngo</ins> is now no
+longer an article of commerce, and its diggers are extinct, but not
+their tradition as to the position in which the eggs of this bird are
+said to be placed&mdash;a "vulgar error" which does not accord with the
+writer's experience. When the full complement of four eggs is laid, they
+are arranged with their pointed ends towards the centre of the nest,
+which is a slight hollow in the soil. The concavity of the nest
+therefore, as well as the disproportionate size of the larger end, gives
+the eggs somewhat the appearance of being placed in the position
+referred to, but the small end of the egg is always visible, Sir Thomas
+Browne does not seem to have been aware of the remarkable fact of this
+essentially marine bird habitually nesting on the sandy warrens about
+Thetford in the south-west of Norfolk, far from the sea, which it still
+does, though in reduced numbers, and is there known as the Stone-hatch,
+from its habit of paving its nest with small stones.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Arcuata or curlewe frequent about the sea coast.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 17.</i>] There is also an handsome tall bird Remarkably eyed and
+with a bill not aboue 2 inches long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span> com&#772;only calld a stone
+curlewe<a name="FNanchor_37_48" id="FNanchor_37_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_48" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> butt the note thereof more resembleth that of a green plouer
+[it <i>crossed out</i>] &amp; breeds about Thetford about the stones &amp; shingle of
+the Riuers.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_48" id="Footnote_37_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_48"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> This characteristic Norfolk bird is still far from rare in
+the locality named by Browne, and is found in several other parts of the
+county. Willughby says, "The learned and famous Sir Thomas Brown,
+Physician in Norwich," informed him to the same effect, and repeats that
+its note (one of the most charming sounds uttered on the wild trackless
+heath on a summer's night) resembles that of the Green (<i>i.e.</i>, Golden)
+Plover, but in the ear of the writer it is even more musical. In the
+third <a href="#merrett_3">letter to Merrett</a>, Browne says that he has kept the Stone Curlew
+(not "four Curlews," as Wilkin has it,) in large cages.</p></div>
+
+<p>Auoseta<a name="FNanchor_38_49" id="FNanchor_38_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_49" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> calld [I thinck a Barker <i>crossed out</i>] shoohingg-horne
+[<i>written above</i>] a tall black &amp; white bird with a bill semicircularly
+reclining or bowed upward so that it is not easie to conceiue how it can
+feed answerable vnto the Auoseta Italorum in Aldrovandus a summer marsh
+bird &amp; not unfrequent in Marshland.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_49" id="Footnote_38_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_49"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> The Avoset is another bird which formerly frequented the
+marshy districts of Norfolk at the breeding time, but which has now been
+lost to us except as a very rare passing migrant in the spring. It
+probably ceased to breed in this county in or about the year 1818, and
+is said to have been exterminated in consequence of the demand for its
+feathers for the purpose of dressing artificial flies. It was called
+"Shoeing-horn," from the peculiar form of its beak, which, however,
+rather resembles the bent awl used by shoemakers. Girdlestone, who knew
+the bird well in its breeding haunts at Salthouse and Horsey, called it
+"Shoe-awl," a much more appropriate name. In his third letter to
+Merrett, Browne again mentions this bird, and applies to it the name of
+"Barker" (which he had crossed out in the above note), remarking that it
+was so called from its barking note. Jonston figures this bird twice;
+once in Tab. 48 under the name of <i>Avosetta Italor.</i>, <i>i.e.</i>, the
+Avosetta of the Italians, and again in Tab. 54 under the second name
+<i>Avoselta species</i>, an obvious error.</p></div>
+
+<p>[A bird calld Barker from the note it hath <i>crossed out</i>]</p>
+
+<p>A yarwhelp<a name="FNanchor_39_50" id="FNanchor_39_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_50" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> so thought to bee named from its note a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> gray bird
+intermingled with some yellowish [whitish <i>written above</i>] fethers [the
+bill <i>crossed out</i>] somewhat long legged &amp; the bill about an inch &amp;
+half. esteemed a dayntie dish.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_50" id="Footnote_39_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_50"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> This paragraph is written on the back of fol. 16. The
+Yarwhelp is the name by which the Black-tailed Godwit, a species which
+formerly nested in abundance in the marshes about Horsey and some
+adjacent localities in the Broads, was known. It virtually ceased to
+nest here sometime between the years 1829 and 1835, but perhaps an
+instance or two may have occurred rather later. It was also known as the
+"Shrieker." Browne again refers to this bird in the fourth <a href="#merrett_4">letter to
+Merrett</a>, where he calls it "barker" (a name which he had no doubt
+erroneously previously applied to the Avoset), or "Latrator, a
+marshbird, about the bigness of a Godwitt," and once again under the
+name of "Yare-whelp, or barker," in his <a href="#merrett_5">fifth letter</a>; it may be that the
+name "barker" was applied indiscriminately to either species. As Lubbock
+names this bird as one of the "five species in particular" which "used
+formerly to swarm in our marshes" ("Fauna of Norfolk"), one would have
+thought Browne would have been better acquainted with it than seems to
+have been the case from the hesitating way in which he uses the
+vernacular name.</p></div>
+
+<p>Loxias or curuirostra a bird a litle bigger than a Thrush of fine
+colours &amp; prittie note [the m <i>crossed out</i>] differently from other
+birds, the [lower <i>crossed out</i>] upper &amp; lower bill crossing each other.
+of a very tame nature, comes about the beginning of summer. I have known
+them kept in cages butt not to outliue the winter.</p>
+
+<p>A kind of coccothraustes calld a [cobble <i>crossed out</i>] coble bird<a name="FNanchor_40_51" id="FNanchor_40_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_51" class="fnanchor">[40]</a>
+bigger than a Thrush, finely coloured &amp; shaped like a Bunting [it comes
+<i>crossed out</i>] it is [sometimes <i>crossed out</i>] chiefly [<i>written above</i>]
+seen [about <i>crossed out</i>] in sum&#772;er about cherrie time.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_51" id="Footnote_40_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_51"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> The Hawfinch was evidently not a very well-known bird in
+Browne's time, either to himself or Willughby; the latter says, "it is
+said to build in holes of trees." It has steadily increased in frequency
+as a breeding species with us for the last twenty years.</p></div>
+
+<p>[fol. 16 <i>verso.</i>] A small bird of prey<a name="FNanchor_41_52" id="FNanchor_41_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_52" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> [<i>something smeared out
+here</i>] calld a birdcatcher about the bignesse of a Thrush and linnet
+coloured with a longish white bill &amp; sharpe of a very feirce &amp; wild<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+nature though kept in a cage &amp; fed with flesh. [<i>Added after in same
+hand but fresher ink</i>] a kind of Lanius [Lanius <i>crossed out and written
+more distinctly under</i>].</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_52" id="Footnote_41_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_52"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> This paragraph is written on the back of fol. 16. The
+Red-backed Shrike, <i>Lanius collurio</i>, is the only species of Lanius
+mentioned by Browne; it is singular that he omits all mention of another
+bird, and that an essentially Norfolk species which would have been new
+to the <i>Pinax</i>&mdash;the Bearded Titmouse, afterwards known to Edwards as the
+Least Butcher Bird. Browne certainly sent a drawing of this bird to Ray,
+who in his "Collection of English words not generally used" (1674), as
+pointed out by Mr. Gurney, mentions it as a "little Bird of a tawny
+colour on the back, and a blew head, yellow bill, black legs, shot in an
+Osiar yard, called by Sr. Tho. for distinction sake silerella," the
+drawing of which he acknowledges he had received. Pennant, 1768 ("Brit.
+Zool.," i., p. 165), follows Edwards ("Nat. Hist. of Birds," &amp;c., 1745),
+who classes it with the Laniidĉ, and it was not till long after, and as
+the result of much discussion, that it was finally established as the
+only representative of a new genus under the name of <i>Panurus
+biarmicus</i>. The local name is Reed Pheasant, but Browne's name of
+Silerella seems an exceedingly appropriate one.</p></div>
+
+<p>[<a href="#Page_17">p. 17</a> resumed.] A Dorhawke<a name="FNanchor_42_53" id="FNanchor_42_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_53" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> or kind of Accipiter muscarius conceiued
+to haue its name from feeding upon flies &amp; beetles. of a woodcock colour
+but paned like an Hawke a very litle poynted bill. large throat.
+breedeth with us &amp; layes a maruellous handsome spotted egge. Though I
+haue opened many I could neuer find anything considerable in their
+mawes. caprimulgus.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_53" id="Footnote_42_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_53"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Browne seems to have been much interested in this
+remarkable bird, and mentions it again in his <a href="#merrett_2">second</a> and <a href="#merrett_3">third letters
+to Merrett</a>, especially in the latter; he calls it Caprimulgus, but
+conceives it to be a kind of Accipiter, <i>muscarius</i>, or
+<i>cantharophagus</i>, "in brief" [?] "<i>avis rostratula gutturosa</i>, <i>quasi
+coxans</i>, <i>scarabĉis vescens</i>, <i>sub vesperam volans</i>, <i>ovum
+speciassisimum excludens</i>," a fair specimen of the descriptive method of
+the time. Although he used the name Caprimulgus, it will be observed
+that he does not mention the "vulgar error" which led to its being so
+called. Merrett includes this species in the <i>Pinax</i> under the name of
+"Caprimulgus, or the Goat-sucker," but in a letter to Browne tells him
+he knows no Hawk called a Dorhawk.</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 18.</i>] Auis Trogloditica<a name="FNanchor_43_54" id="FNanchor_43_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_54" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> or Chock a small bird mixed of black
+&amp; white &amp; breeding in cony borrouges<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> whereof the warrens are full from
+April to September. at which time they leaue the country. they are taken
+with an Hobby and a net and are a very good dish.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_54" id="Footnote_43_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_54"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> The Wheatear is here referred to; the name <i>trogloditica</i>
+would seem to be more appropriate in this country, having reference to
+its habits of nesting in "Cony borroughs," than that of <i>ĉnanthe</i>, as
+applied to it by those who knew it as frequenting the Continental
+vineyards. A name still, or recently in use in West Norfolk, is
+Cony-chuck.</p></div>
+
+<p>Spermologus. [<i>sic</i>] Rookes wch by reason of the [in reason of <i>crossed
+out</i>] great quantitie of corn feilds &amp; Rooke groues are in great plentie
+the yong ones are com&#772;only eaten sometimes sold in norwich market &amp;
+many are killd for their Liuers in order to cure of the Rickets.</p>
+
+<p>Crowes<a name="FNanchor_44_55" id="FNanchor_44_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_55" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> as euerywhere and also the coruus variegatus or pyed crowe
+with dunne &amp; black interchangeably they come in the winter &amp; depart in
+the summer &amp; seeme to bee the same wch clusius discribeth in the faro
+Islands from whence perhaps these come. [they are <i>crossed out</i>] and I
+have seen them [<i>written above</i>] very com&#772;on in Ireland, butt not
+known in many parts of England.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_55" id="Footnote_44_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_55"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> The Crow (<i>Corvus corone</i>) is much less common in Norfolk
+than formerly, but it still nests here in a few scattered localities.
+<i>C. cornix</i>, the Hooded, Norway, Danish, or "Royston" Crow, is an autumn
+immigrant as of yore, but not especially from the Faröe Islands; both
+species (or forms as by some regarded) are immigrants from the east, but
+the latter, as a rule, occupies a more northern range than the former.
+The Raven (<i>C. corax</i>) is now a very rare visitor to Norfolk; it is
+probable that it last nested in this county in the year 1859. The
+Jackdaw, or Caddow, is common enough, but the Chough (<i>Pyrrhocorax
+graculus</i>) is quite unknown in Norfolk. Although the Magpie must have
+been well known to Browne I find no mention of it in these notes.</p></div>
+
+<p>Coruus maior Rauens in good plentie about the citty wch makes so few
+Kites to bee seen hereabout. they build in woods very early &amp; lay egges
+in februarie.</p>
+
+<p>Among the many monedulas or Jackdawes I could neuer in these parts
+obserue the pyrrhocorax or cornish chough with red leggs &amp; bill to bee
+com&#772;only seen in Cornwall. &amp; though there bee heere very great [num
+<i>crossed out</i>] store of partridges yet [not <i>crossed out</i>] the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> french
+Red leggd partridge<a name="FNanchor_45_56" id="FNanchor_45_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_56" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> is not to bee met with [heere <i>crossed out</i>].
+the Ralla or Rayle<a name="FNanchor_46_57" id="FNanchor_46_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_57" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> wee haue counted a dayntie dish. as also no small
+number of Quayles. the Heathpoult<a name="FNanchor_47_58" id="FNanchor_47_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_58" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> com&#772;on in the north is vnknown
+heere as also the Grous. though I haue heard some haue been seen about
+Lynne. the calandrier or great [<i>Fol. 19</i>] great [<i>sic</i>] crested lark
+Galerita I haue not met with heere though with 3 other sorts [of Larkes
+<i>written above</i>] the ground lark woodlark &amp; titlark.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_56" id="Footnote_45_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_56"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> The Red-legged Partridge is now common enough; it was
+introduced into the Eastern Counties at Sudbourne and Rendlesham, in
+East Suffolk, in or about the year 1770, by both the Marquis of Hertford
+and Lord Rendlesham. How quickly they established themselves may be
+judged from the fact that in the season of 1806-7 of 1,927 Partridges
+killed at Rendlesham 112 were Red legs, but they do not seem to have
+spread very far. A second introduction, this time into West Suffolk,
+much nearer to the Norfolk border, at and about Culford, was effected in
+the year 1823, and from this centre they rapidly spread into Norfolk, in
+which county also others were imported by the resident proprietors.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_57" id="Footnote_46_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_57"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> The Land Rail (<i>Crex pratensis</i>) or Daker hen, is
+doubtless here referred to, as the Water Rail has already been mentioned
+(<a href="#Page_15">p. 15</a> <i>ante</i>) as "a kind of <i>Ralla aquatica</i>." This bird is a summer
+visitor, by no means common and very uncertain in its numbers. The same
+applies to the Quail, which appears to be less frequent than formerly,
+no doubt from the great destruction on the Mediterranean coast in spring
+of the birds migrating to England. In the summer and autumn of 1870 we
+had an unusual influx of these latter birds.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_58" id="Footnote_47_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_58"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> How far the indigenous race of Blackgame, which
+undoubtedly lingered for many years about Wolferton and Sandringham,
+still exists, it is difficult to say; examples turn up occasionally, but
+so many of these birds have been introduced and turned off in different
+parts of the county in the course of the past forty years, that it is
+impossible to speak with certainty.</p></div>
+
+<p>Stares or starlings in great numbers. most remarkable in their [great
+<i>crossed out</i>] numerous [<i>written above</i>] flocks [about the <i>crossed
+out</i>] wch I haue obserued about the Autumne when they roost at night [up
+<i>crossed out</i>] in the marshes in safe place upon reeds &amp; alders. wch to
+obserue I went to the marshes about sunne set. where standing by their
+vsuall place<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> of resort I obserued very many flocks flying from all
+quarters. wch in lesse than an howers space came all in &amp; settled in
+innumerable [quantitie <i>crossed out</i>] numbers [<i>written below</i>] in a
+small compasse.</p>
+
+<p>Great varietie of finches<a name="FNanchor_48_59" id="FNanchor_48_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_59" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> and other small birds whereof one very
+small [one <i>crossed out</i>] calld a whinne bird marked with fine yellow
+spotts &amp; lesser than a wren. there is also a small bird called a chipper
+somewhat resembling the former wch comes in the spring &amp; feeds upon the
+first buddings of birches &amp; other early trees.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_59" id="Footnote_48_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_59"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> In his fifth <a href="#merrett_5">letter to Merrett</a> Browne says, "I confess for
+such little birds I am much unsatisfied on the names given to many by
+countrymen and uncertain what to give them myself." This is painfully
+apparent in the cases of the two little birds here referred to as the
+"Whinne-bird" and the "Chipper." From the description of the former,
+"marked with fine yellow spots and lesser than a Wren," also with a
+"shining yellow spot on the back of the head," it seems likely that the
+Gold-crested Wren is intended. The Chipper, he says, "comes in the
+spring and feeds upon the first buddings of birches and other early
+trees;" he also calls it "<i>Betulĉ carptor</i>," and says that he sends a
+drawing to Merrett; a third mention is as follows: "That which I called
+a <i>Betulĉ carptor</i>, and should rather have called it <i>Alni carptor</i> . .
+. it feeds upon alder buds, nucaments, or seeds, which grow plentifully
+here; they fly in little flocks." I can only suggest that this bird may
+be the Siskin, which fairly answers the description. It visits us in
+small flocks on its way north very early in the year, feeding upon the
+seeds of the alder, birch, and larch trees. One would however have
+thought that the Siskin would have been well known to Browne, as it
+evidently was to Turner, Willughby, and Ray. Merrett mentions it under
+Turner's name of "Luteola."</p></div>
+
+<p>A kind of Anthus [or <i>crossed out</i>] Goldfinch [<i>written above</i>] or
+fooles coat com&#772;only calld a drawe water. finely marked with red &amp;
+yellowe &amp; a white bill. wch they take with trap cages in norwich gardens
+&amp; fastning a chaine about them tyed to a box of water it makes a shift
+with bill and legge to draw up the water unto it from the litle pot
+hanging [abot the length of <i>crossed out</i>] by the chaine about a foote
+[downe <i>crossed out</i>] belowe.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>[The account of the Roller, which is written on smaller paper, will be
+found improperly inserted among the Fishes, between pp. 30 and 32 as
+follows:&mdash;]</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 31.</i>] On the xiiii of May 1664 a very rare bird was sent mee kild
+about crostwick wch seemed to bee some kind of Jay.<a name="FNanchor_49_60" id="FNanchor_49_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_60" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> the bill was
+black strong and bigger then a Jayes somewhat yellowe clawes tippd
+black. 3 before and one clawe behind the whole bird not so bigge as a
+Jaye [the <i>crossed out</i>.]</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_60" id="Footnote_49_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_60"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> This note is interesting as the first record of the
+occurrence of the Roller in Britain, to which country it is a rare
+wanderer. Although it had long been known on the Continent, its identity
+seems to have puzzled Browne, and he imagines (as did others, both
+before and after him,) it to be some kind of Jay; later, in his second
+<a href="#merrett_2">letter to Merrett</a> (January, 1668), he says that it answers to the
+description of <i>Garrulus argentoratensis</i> (the name given by Aldrovandus
+to whom it was known), and calls it "the Parrot-jay." This is five years
+after the original note was made, and we find that the words <i>Garrulus
+argentoratensis</i>, written by the same hand but with a different pen and
+ink, have been added subsequently, doubtless as the result of further
+information. In another letter he mentions having sent the bird to
+Merrett, but adds, "If you have it before I should bee content to have
+it againe otherwise you may please keep it."</p></div>
+
+<p>The head neck &amp; throat of a violet colour the back upper parts of the
+wing of a russet yellowe the fore &amp; part of the wing azure succeeded
+downward by a greenish blewe then on the flying feathers bright blewe
+the lower parts of the wing outwardly of a browne [the <i>crossed out</i>]
+inwardly of a merry blewe the belly a light faynt blewe the back toward
+the tayle of a purple blewe the tayle eleuen fethers of a greenish
+coulour the extremities of the outward fethers thereof white wth an
+eye<a name="FNanchor_K_61" id="FNanchor_K_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_K_61" class="fnanchor">[K]</a> of greene. Garrulus Argentoratensis [<i>the name added in a
+different ink and pen</i>].</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_K_61" id="Footnote_K_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_K_61"><span class="label">[K]</span></a> Tinge, shade, particularly a slight tint.&mdash;"Imp. Dict."</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="wide" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="fish" id="fish"></a>NOTES ON CERTAIN FISHES AND MARINE ANIMALS FOUND IN NORFOLK.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">[MS. SLOAN. 1882. FOL. 145-146. ALTERED TO 21 AND 22, AND 1830 FOL.
+23-30 AND 32-38.]</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>[The introductory remarks, paragraphs one to three, will be
+found in the volume of the Sloane MSS. numbered 1882 (labelled
+"Notes on Generation"), on pages 145 and 146, which are altered
+to 21 and 22. They were placed in their present position by
+Wilkin, but although appropriate, there is nothing to show that
+they belong to the set of notes here reproduced, and they may
+form memoranda for the beginning of some essay never completed.
+The contents of the volume in question are of a very
+miscellaneous character, and consist of fragmentary notes, which
+appear to be memoranda jotted down at random.]</p></div>
+
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 21/145.</i>] It may well seeme no easie matter to giue any
+considerable account of fishes and animals of the sea wherein tis sayd
+that there are things creeping innumerable both small and great beasts
+because they liue in an element wherein they are not so easely
+discouerable notwithstanding probable it is that after this long
+nauigation search of the ocean bayes creeks Estuaries and riuers that
+there is scarce any fish butt hath been seen by some man for the large &amp;
+breathing sort thereof do sometimes discouer themselues aboue water and
+the other are in such numbers that some at one time or other they are
+discouered and taken euen the most barbarous nations being much addicted
+to fishing and in America and the new discouered world the people were
+well acquantd with fishes of sea and riuers, and the fishes thereof haue
+been since described by industrious writers.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Pliny seemes to short in the estimate of their number in the ocean, who
+recons up butt one hundred &amp; seventie six species. butt the seas being
+now farther known &amp; searched [<i>21/145 verso</i>] Bellonius much enlargeth.</p>
+
+<p>and in his booke of Birds thus deliuereth himself allthough I think it
+impossible to reduce the same vnto a certain number yet I may freelie
+say that tis beyond the power of man to find out more than fiue hundred
+sorts [kinds <i>written above</i>] of fishes three hundred sorts of birds
+more than three hundred sorts of fourfoted animalls and fortie
+diversities of serpents.<a name="FNanchor_50_62" id="FNanchor_50_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_62" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_62" id="Footnote_50_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_62"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> This estimate of the number of species of birds and fishes
+existing is amusing in the light of the present knowledge of the
+subject. Of course any such estimate can only be approximate, and open
+to constant emendation; but according to a statement in the "Zoological
+Record" of 1896, it was believed that there were something like 386,000
+described species: 2,500 of which are mammals, 12,500 birds, 4,400
+reptilia and batrachia, 12,000 fishes, 50,000 mollusca, 20,000
+crustacea, and 250,000 insecta; the smaller divisions I have omitted.
+And whereas only about 10,000 species of plants were known to Linnĉus,
+Professor Vines in his address to the Botanical section at the Bradford
+meeting of the British Association, 1900, states that the approximate
+number of recognised plants at present existing is 175,596; but this is
+far short of the total of existing species. Professor Saccardo states
+that there are 250,000 fungi alone, and that the number of existing
+species in other groups would bring the total up to over 400,000.</p></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">[SLOANE MSS. 1830, FOL. 23-38.]</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 23.</i>] Of fishes sometimes the larger sort are taken or come
+ashoar. A spermaceti whale<a name="FNanchor_51_63" id="FNanchor_51_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_63" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> of 62 foote long neere Welles. another of
+the same kind 20 yeares before at Hunstanton. &amp; not farre of 8 or nine
+came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> ashoare &amp; 2 had yong ones after they were forsaken by ye water.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_63" id="Footnote_51_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_63"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> In the muniment room at Hunstanton Hall there exists a
+book of MSS. notes relating to their estates, kept by Sir Hamon and Sir
+Nicholas le Strange, between the years 1612 and 1723. From this book Mr.
+Hamon le Strange has been good enough to send me an extract containing
+the full particulars of the stranding and disposal of a Sperm Whale 57
+feet long, which came ashore on their Manor of Holme, on the 6th
+December, 1626, the skull of which is still in the courtyard at
+Hunstanton Hall.
+</p><p>
+Browne had not come to reside in Norwich at that time, and the chapter
+on the Spermaceti Whale in his <i>Pseudodoxia Epidemica</i>, was inspired by
+a subsequent occurrence of the same kind, for, as appears from the above
+note, a larger individual, 62 feet long, came ashore at Wells 20 years
+later, which he says led him to further inquiry. This would indicate
+about the year 1646 as the date of the latter occurrence, whereas in his
+third <a href="#merrett_3">letter to Merrett</a>, written in 1668, he states that it happened
+"about 12 years ago," or in 1656. There is probably an error in one of
+these dates.
+</p><p>
+Another example seems to have been found at Yarmouth about the year
+1652, for we find Browne writing in that year for particulars of its
+"cutting up." (See Appendix E.)
+</p><p>
+In the postscript to a letter also in the muniment room at Hunstanton,
+dated June 11th, 1653, written to Sir Hamon le Strange, who had been
+consulting him professionally, Browne says: "I pray you at your leisure
+doe mee the honor to informe mee how long agoe the Spermaceti Whale was
+cast upon your shoare &amp; whether you had any spermm with in any other
+part butt the head." It will be noticed that in both the letters
+referred to he is anxious to ascertain in what part of the body the
+"sperm" was situated, doubtless for the purpose of confuting the "vulgar
+conceit" as to the origin of the "sperm" referred to in the second
+paragraph of his treatise in the <i>Pseudodoxia</i>. His investigations also
+probably first led to a certain knowledge as to the nature of the food
+of this animal.
+</p><p>
+These, however, although the first to be recorded in this county, were
+not the first or only occurrences of the kind, for there is in the
+parish church of Great Yarmouth the base of the skull of a Sperm Whale,
+used as a chair, for the painting of which a charge of five shillings
+appears in the churchwardens' accounts for the year 1606; many such
+events in European waters are to be found recorded.
+</p><p>
+But the most interesting circumstance with regard to these whales is the
+statement that "two had yong ones after they were forsaken by the
+water." This event renders it highly improbable that they were Sperm
+Whales, for the stragglers of that species which have been met with in
+our waters, and indeed in the northern seas generally, have been almost
+invariably solitary males, or, in one or two instances "schools" of
+young males. In the only instance in which both sexes were found, the
+school was composed I believe of immature individuals. (<i>Vide</i> J.
+Anderson, "Nachrichten von Island, Grönland, und der Strasse Davis,"
+Frantfurt (1747), p. 248.) Moreover, this view is confirmed by a letter
+which will be found in <a href="#APPENDIX_B">Appendix B.</a>, where the following passage
+occurs:&mdash;"And not only whales, but grampusses have been taken in this
+Estuarie &hellip; and about twenty years ago four were run ashore near
+Hunstanton, and two had young ones after they had come to land." A
+so-called Grampus which came ashore on the 21st July, 1700, was from a
+description and drawing in the le Strange MS. above quoted, a male
+<i>Hyperoodon rostratus</i>, apparently nearly adult.
+</p><p>
+The Grampus (<i>Orca gladiator</i>) (mentioned in the next paragraph) is
+frequently met with in the British seas, and has repeatedly occurred on
+the Norfolk coast. Some early occurrences are on record, for instance in
+Mackerell's "History of Lynn," twelve are said to have come ashore near
+that town in 1636, and another in 1680. Two very juvenile examples were
+taken off Yarmouth in November 1894.</p></div>
+
+<p>A grampus aboue 16 foot long taken at yarmouth [3 or <i>crossed out</i>] 4
+yeares agoe.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Tursio or porpose is com&#772;on the Dolphin<a name="FNanchor_52_64" id="FNanchor_52_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_64" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> more rare though
+sometimes taken wch many confound with the porpose. butt it hath a more
+waued line along the skinne sharper toward ye tayle the head longer and
+nose more extended wch maketh good the figure of Rondeletius. the flesh
+more red &amp; [fa <i>crossed out</i>] well cooked of very good taste to most
+palates &amp; exceedeth that of porpose.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_64" id="Footnote_52_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_64"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> There can be no doubt <ins title="hat in original">that</ins> the Common Dolphin (<i>Delphinus
+delphis</i>) is here referred to, and indeed this species might reasonably
+be expected to be met with on our coast, as its range extends at least
+as far to the north as the Scandinavian waters, but so far as the writer
+is aware Browne's is the only record of its having been met with in
+Norfolk. The White-beaked Dolphin (<i>D. albirostris</i>) is not unfrequent,
+but it is clear that Browne does not refer to that species.
+</p><p>
+In the "Vulgar Errors," Browne devotes a whole chapter (chapter ii. of
+the fifth book) to a learned treatise on the "Picture of Dolphins," and
+in one of the letters to his son Edward (Sloane MSS., 1847), dated June
+14th [1676?], he writes feelingly as an anatomist, evidently fearing
+that a specimen then available might be wasted, instead of being
+reserved for scientific purposes; for, says he, "if the dolphin were to
+be showed for money in Norwich, little would bee got; if they showed it
+in London they are like to take out the viscera, and salt the fish, and
+then the dissection will be unconsiderable." He then refers to the
+dolphin "opened when the King was here," and describes its anatomical
+peculiarities, adding that Dame Browne cooked the flesh "so as to make
+an excellent savory dish of it," and that "collars" thereof (steaks cut
+transversely) being sent to the King, who was then at Newmarket, for his
+table, they "were well liked of." It is evident therefore that he was
+present at the dissection of two of these animals.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>The vitulus marinus<a name="FNanchor_53_65" id="FNanchor_53_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_65" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> seacalf or seale wch is often taken sleeping on
+the shoare [4 <i>crossed out</i>] 5 [<i>written above</i>] yeares agoe one was
+shot in the riuer of norwich about surlingham [wh <i>crossed out</i>] ferry
+having continued in the riuer for diuers moneths before being an
+Amphibious animal it may bee caryed about aliue &amp; kept long if it can
+bee brought to feed some haue been kept many moneths in ponds. the
+pizzell the bladder the cartilago ensiformis the figure of the Throttle
+the clusterd &amp; racemous forme of the kidneys [<i>Fol. 24</i>] the flat &amp;
+compressed heart are remarkable in it. in stomaks of all that I have
+opened I have found many [short <i>crossed out</i>] wormes.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_65" id="Footnote_53_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_65"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> There is in the present day a considerable number of
+Common Seals inhabiting the sand-banks of the Wash between the Norfolk
+and Lincolnshire coasts, and they are frequently captured by the
+fishermen; nor has the habit of straying into fresh-water deserted them,
+for in recent years they have been taken in the River Ouse at
+Bluntisham, forty miles from the sea. Three other species of Seal have
+been taken on the Norfolk coast, viz., <i>Phoca hispida</i>, <i>P. barbata</i>,
+and <i>Halich&oelig;rus gryphus</i>.</p></div>
+
+<p>I haue also obserued a scolopendra cetacea<a name="FNanchor_54_66" id="FNanchor_54_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_66" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> of about ten foot long
+answering to the figure in Rondeletius wch the mariners told me was
+taken in these seas.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_66" id="Footnote_54_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_66"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> A Scolopendra, ten feet long, is at first rather
+startling, but on referring to Rondeletius's <i>Libri de piscibus Marinis</i>
+(lib. xvi. p. 488), I find that under the name "Scolopendra" he includes
+at least three distinct forms&mdash;i., <i>S. terrestris</i>, a centipede; ii.,
+<i>S. marina</i>, certain species of <ins title="Neridiform in original.">Nereidiform</ins> polychaet worms; iii.,
+<i>Scolopendra cetacea</i>, regarded as a Cetacean and figured with a
+Cetacean blow-hole. With regard to this remarkable figure my friend, Dr.
+S. F. Harmer, has favoured me with the following note:&mdash;"In the account
+given Rondeletius is evidently writing from report; the figure is also
+no doubt borrowed, and may have been 'improved' when redrawn; it seems
+to me that it is based upon some kind of Tunny, although he figures a
+Tunny earlier in the book (lib. viii. p. 249). The idea of the lateral
+appendages might have been derived from the dorsal and ventral finlets
+of a Tunny; but the first four finlets on each side are imaginary
+structures, and in a wrong position. I can offer no opinion with regard
+to the nasal appendages." Jonston (<i>De piscibus</i>, p. 156, Tab. xliv.)
+also gives a similar figure of <i>Scolopendra</i> <i>Cetacea</i>, which appears to
+be a further modification of Rondeletius's figure; here it has teeth,
+shown like those of the Sperm Whale, and an extra dorsal-fin is added;
+the number of lateral appendages is the same, and a column of water
+proceeding from the blow-hole is falling gracefully forward. It is
+worthy of notice that Rondeletius also figures the Saw-fish [Pristis]
+with a blow-hole.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>A pristes or serra [<i>written above</i>] saw fish<a name="FNanchor_55_67" id="FNanchor_55_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_67" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> taken about Lynne
+com&#772;only mistaken for a [sha <i>crossed out</i>] sword fish &amp; answers the
+figure in Rondeletius.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_67" id="Footnote_55_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_67"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> In the "Transactions of the Linnean Society," ii., p. 273,
+is an essay by Latham "On the various species of Sawfish," but he does
+not mention any British locality. So far as I am aware Browne's is the
+only record of the occurrence of this southern species in British
+waters, with the exception of a note in Fleming's "British Animals," p.
+164, where it is stated on the authority of the late Dr. Walker's MS.
+"Adversaria" for 1769, that <i>Pristis <ins title="antiquoram in original.">antiquorum</ins></i> is "found sometimes in
+Loch Long," but Fleming adds that he has met with no other proof of its
+ever having visited the British shores. Browne mentions in his eighth
+<a href="#merrett_8">letter to Merrett</a> that he sends him a "figure in little" of a <i>Pristis</i>
+which he received of a Yarmouth seaman, and is so precise in his
+statement that his fish was <i>Pristis serra</i> (the <i>Pristis antiquorum</i> of
+Cuvier), that his record cannot be disregarded. He specially guards
+against its being mistaken for the Sword-fish (<i>Xiphias gladius</i>), which
+has been taken on several occasions in our waters, and of which he gives
+some interesting particulars.</p></div>
+
+<p>A sword fish or Xiphias or Gladius intangled in the Herring netts at
+yarmouth agreable unto the Icon in Johnstonus with a smooth sword not
+vnlike the Gladius of Rondeletius about a yard &amp; half long, no teeth [n
+<i>crossed out</i>] eyes very remarkable enclosed in an hard cartilaginous
+couercle about ye bignesse of a good apple. ye vitreous humor plentifull
+the crystalline larger then a nutmegge [cleare <i>crossed out</i>] remaining
+cleare sweet &amp; vntainted when the rest of the eye was vnder a deepe
+corruption wch wee kept clear &amp; limpid many moneths vntill an hard frost
+split it &amp; manifested the foliations thereof.</p>
+
+<p>It is not vnusuall to take seuerall sorts of canis or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> doggefishes<a name="FNanchor_56_68" id="FNanchor_56_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_68" class="fnanchor">[56]</a>
+great and small wch pursue the shoale of herrings and other fish butt
+this yeare 1662 one was taken intangled in the Herring netts about 9
+foot in length, answering the last figure of Johnstonus lib 7 vnder the
+name of <i>canis carcherias alter</i> &amp; was by the teeth &amp; 5 gills one kind
+of shark particularly [<i>Fol. 25</i>] remarkable in the vastnesse of the
+optick nerves &amp; 3 conicall hard pillars wch supported the extraordinarie
+elevated nose wch wee haue reserued with the scull the seamen calld this
+kind a scrape.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_68" id="Footnote_56_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_68"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> Various species of Dog-fish are frequent off the Norfolk
+coast as elsewhere. The name "Sweet William" is applied to the larger
+fish of this kind, especially to the Tope; this appears also to have
+been the case in Pennant's time, for alluding to this vernacular name he
+supposes it was applied in ironical allusion to the offensive smell of
+their flesh and skin. They are objects of great aversion among the
+fishermen, owing to the disturbance they create among the shoals of
+fish, and the damage they do to both nets and the enclosed fish.
+Scarcely a season passes but one or more specimens of Browne's <i>Canis
+carcharias</i>, or, as modern Ichthyologists call it, <i>Lamna cornubica</i>,
+the Porbeagle, being entangled in the drift nets and landed with the
+herrings. One lies on the fish-wharf at Lowestoft as I write this note
+on the 19th of October, 1900, measuring 7 feet 10 inches in length.
+Jonston's figure referred to by Browne is evidently intended for this
+species, but he makes a slight error in the reference to the <i>Historia
+Naturalis (De Piscibus et Cetis)</i>; it occurs in book v., and the figure
+is fig. 6 on Tab. vi., and it is marked <i>Canis carcharias alius</i> (not
+alter).</p></div>
+
+<p>Sturio or Sturgeon<a name="FNanchor_57_69" id="FNanchor_57_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_69" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> so com&#772;on on the other side of the sea about
+the mouth of the elbe come seldome into our creekes though some haue
+been taken at yarmouth &amp; more in the great [owse <i>crossed out</i>] Owse by
+Lynne butt their heads not so sharpe as represented in the Icons of
+Rondeletius &amp; Johnstonus.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_57_69" id="Footnote_57_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_69"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> So great is the variation in the snout of the Sturgeon,
+that Dr. Parnell in his excellent essay on "The Fishes of the District
+of the Forth," describes the Sharp-nosed Sturgeon as a distinct species
+under the name of <i>Acipenser sturio</i>, and the broad-nosed form he calls
+<i>A. latirostris</i>. His views, however, have not been generally accepted,
+and only one British species is recognised. The Sharp-nosed variety has
+been taken here, but the normal form is much more frequent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>Sometimes wee meet with a mola or moonefish<a name="FNanchor_58_70" id="FNanchor_58_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_70" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> so called from some
+resemblance it hath [from <i>crossed out</i>] of a crescent in the extreme
+part of the body from one finne unto another one being taken neere the
+shoare at yarmouth before breake of day seemed to shiuer &amp; grunt like an
+hogge as Authors deliuer of it the flesh being hard &amp; neruous it is not
+like to afford a good dish butt from the Liuer wch is [white <i>crossed
+out</i>] large white &amp; tender somewhat [wee <i>crossed out</i>] may bee expected
+[for <i>crossed out</i>] the gills of these fishes wee found thick beset with
+a kind of sealowse. [Added subsequently] in the yeare 1667 a mola was
+taken at monsley wch weighed 2 [p <i>crossed out</i>] hundred pound.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_58_70" id="Footnote_58_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_70"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> This fish (<i>Orthagoriscus mola</i>), which we know as the
+Sun-fish, has been repeatedly taken here. For an account of its
+parasites see Cobbold on the "Sun-fish as a host," "Intellectual
+Observer," ii., p. 82; also Day, "Brit. Fishes," ii., p. 275. According
+to Dr. Spencer Cobbold the Sun-fish is infested by nine species of
+Helminths, three of which are mostly found attached to the gills, while
+a fourth adheres to the surface of the body.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Rana piscatrix or frogge fish<a name="FNanchor_59_71" id="FNanchor_59_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_71" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> is sometimes found in a very large
+magnitude &amp; wee haue taken the [paynes <i>crossed out</i>] care [<i>written
+above</i>] to haue them clend &amp; stuffed. wherein wee obserued all the
+appendices whereby the[y] cach fishes butt much larger then are
+discribed in the Icons of Johnstonus tab xi fig 8.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_59_71" id="Footnote_59_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_71"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> Both this species and the Wolf-fish are well known upon
+our coast.</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 26</i>] The sea [wollf <i>crossed out</i>] wolf or Lupus nostras of
+Schoneueldus remarkable for its spotted skinne &amp; notable teeth incisors
+Dogteeth &amp; grinders the dogteeth [in the <i>crossed out</i>] both in the
+jawes &amp; palate scarce answerable by any fish of that bulk for [strength
+<i>crossed out</i>] the like disposure strength &amp; soliditie.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mustela marina<a name="FNanchor_60_72" id="FNanchor_60_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_72" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> called by some a wesell ling wch salted &amp; dryed
+becomes a good Lenten dish.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_60_72" id="Footnote_60_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_72"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> Some member of the family <i>Gadidĉ</i> is here referred to,
+probably the five-bearded Rockling, <i>Motella mustela</i>, or Brown
+Whistle-fish of Pennant, which is occasionally taken by our fishermen,
+but is by no means common.</p></div>
+
+<p>A Lump or Lumpus Anglorum so named by Aldrouandus by some esteemed a
+festiuall dish though it affordeth butt a glutinous jellie &amp; the skinne
+is beset with stony knobs after no certaine order ours most answereth
+the first figure in the xiii table of Johnstonus butt seemes more round
+&amp; arcuated then that figure makes it.</p>
+
+<p>Before the herrings there com&#772;only cometh a fish about a foot long by
+the fish man called an horse<a name="FNanchor_61_73" id="FNanchor_61_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_73" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> resembling in all poynts the Trachurus
+of Rondeletius of a mixed shape between a mackerell &amp; an herring.
+obseruable from [an oblique bo <i>crossed out</i>] its greene eyes rarely
+skye colored back after it is kept a day &amp; an oblique bony line running
+on ye outside from the gills vnto ye tayle. a drye &amp; hard dish butt
+makes an handsome picture.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_61_73" id="Footnote_61_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_73"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> This is the Horse Mackerel, or Scad, <i>Caranx trachurus</i>; a
+handsome fish and common enough, especially off Sheringham, but not much
+esteemed for the table.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Rubelliones or Rochets<a name="FNanchor_62_74" id="FNanchor_62_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_74" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> butt thinly met with on this coast. the
+gornart cuculus or Lyrĉ species more often wch they seldome eat butt
+bending the back &amp; <ins class="tn" title="Odd spelling retained.">sprdding</ins> the finnes into a liuely posture do hang
+them up in their howses.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_62_74" id="Footnote_62_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_74"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> Fish of the Gurnard kind are here referred to. The Rochet
+of Pennant is the Red Gurnard, <i>Trigla cuculus</i>; he calls <i>T. lyra</i> the
+Piper. Large numbers of various species of Gurnard are brought in by our
+trawlers and sell readily, especially the Sapphirine Gurnard, or
+Tub-fish (<i>T. hirundo</i>), which is known as the "Lachet" on our coast; it
+reaches a large size, and seems to be much in demand for the table. In
+spring the colours are very brilliant, and they are frequently seen on
+the fish stalls with their pectoral fins extended as Browne describes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 27.</i>] Beside the com&#772;on mullus<a name="FNanchor_63_75" id="FNanchor_63_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_75" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> or mullet there is another
+not vnfrequent wch some call a cunny fish butt rather a red muellett of
+a flosculous redde &amp; somewhat rough on the scales answering the
+discription of [Rond <i>crossed out</i>] Icon of Rondeletius vnder the name
+of mullus ruber asper [no <i>crossed out</i>] butt not the tast of the
+vsually knowne mullet as [being butt <i>crossed out</i>] affording butt a
+drye &amp; leane bitt.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_63_75" id="Footnote_63_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_75"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> The Common Mullet I take to be the Grey Mullet (<i>Mugil
+capito</i>), which is at times plentiful on our coast, coming into Breydon
+and the mouths of the rivers, but the Red Mullet (<i>Mullus barbatus</i>) is
+far less frequently met with. In his third <a href="#merrett_3">letter to Merrett</a>, Browne
+says, "There is of them <i>maior</i> and <i>minor</i>," the latter probably being
+the variety known as the Surmullet, by far the most frequently met with
+here.</p></div>
+
+<p>Seuerall sorts of fishes<a name="FNanchor_64_76" id="FNanchor_64_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_76" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> there are wch [bear <i>crossed out</i>] do
+[<i>written above</i>] or may beare the names of seawoodcocks as the Acus
+maior scolopax &amp; saurus. the saurus wee sometimes meet with yonge.
+Rondeletius confesseth it a very rare fish somewhat resembling the Acus
+or needlefish before &amp; a makerell behind. wee have kept one dryed many
+yeares agoe.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_64_76" id="Footnote_64_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_76"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> The Saurus of Rondeletius appears to be the Skipper or
+Saury-pike (<i>Scombresox saurus</i>) of modern authors. <i>Acus major</i> is the
+Gar-fish or Greenback (<i>Belone vulgaris</i>); this is the <i>Acus primus</i> of
+Rondeletius, Dr. Harmer has been good enough to send me the following
+note on Rondeletius's figures:&mdash;"<i>De Acus secunda specie</i>" (lib. viii.
+p. 229). "Two species are figured; the upper figure appears to represent
+<i>Siphonostoma typhle</i>, and the lower one <i>S. acus</i>. Günther ('Brit. Mus.
+Cat.,' viii. p. 157) gives a reference to Rondeletius in his synonyms of
+<i>S. acer</i> without indicating that the latter figures two species. Under
+<i>S. typhle</i> (p. 154) he gives the synonym <i>Syngnathus rondeletii</i>, De la
+Roche. A reference to Delaroche ('Ann. Mus. Hist. Nat., Paris,' xiii,
+1809 p. 324, Pl. xxi. fig. 5) shows that <i>S. rondeletii</i> is identified
+with the first figure on p. 229 of Rondeletius; and it may thus be
+concluded that Günther agrees with this conclusion. It seems therefore
+probable that Browne's Acus of Aristotle refers to <i>S. typhle</i>."</p></div>
+
+<p>The Acus maior calld by some a garfish &amp; greenback answering ye figure
+of Rondeletius under the name of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> Acus prima species remarkable for its
+quadrangular figure and verdigreece green back bone.</p>
+
+<p><a name="FNanchor_L_77" id="FNanchor_L_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_L_77" class="fnanchor">[L]</a> A lesser sort of Acus [wee <i>crossed out</i>] maior or primĉ specĉei wee
+meet with [answering the saurus of Rondeletius <i>crossed out</i>] much
+shorter then the com&#772;on garfish &amp; in taking out the spine wee found it
+not green as in the greater &amp; much answering the saurus of Rondeletius.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_L_77" id="Footnote_L_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_L_77"><span class="label">[L]</span></a> This and the next paragraph on the back of Fol. 26 are in
+different ink and smaller writing though in the same hand, and appear to
+have been added subsequently. The first paragraph is omitted by Wilkin.</p></div>
+
+<p>A scolopax<a name="FNanchor_65_78" id="FNanchor_65_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_78" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> or sea woodcock of Rondeletius was giuen mee by a seaman
+of these seas. about 3 inches long &amp; seemes to bee one kind of Acus or
+needlefish answering the discription of Rondeletius.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_65_78" id="Footnote_65_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_78"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> The Scolopax, or Sea Woodcock, is clearly <i>Centriscus
+scolopax</i>, a very rare fish in the British seas, and it would have been
+well had Browne given a more precise account of the origin of his
+specimen.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Acus of Aristotle [<i><a href="#Footnote_64_76">see Note 64</a></i>] lesser thinner corticated &amp;
+sexangular by diuers calld an addercock &amp; somewhat resembling a snake
+ours more plainly finned then Rondeletius discribeth it.</p>
+
+<p>A little corticated fish<a name="FNanchor_66_79" id="FNanchor_66_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_79" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> about [4 inches <i>crossed out</i>] 3 or 4
+inches long [<i>several words smeared out</i>] ours answering that wch is
+named piscis octangularis by wormius, cataphractus by Schoneueldeus.
+octagonius versus caput, versus caudam hexagonius.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_66_79" id="Footnote_66_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_79"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Doubtless the Armed Bull-head, or Pogge, <i>Agonus
+cataphractus</i>. A MS. note in Berkenhout says it was called at Lowestoft
+a Beetle-head (1769).</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 28.</i>] The faber marinus<a name="FNanchor_67_80" id="FNanchor_67_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_80" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> sometimes found very large answering
+ye figure of Rondeletius. which though hee mentioneth as a rare fish &amp;
+to be found in the Atlantick &amp; Gaditane ocean yet wee often meet with it
+in these seas com&#772;only calld a peterfish hauing [a <i>crossed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> out</i>] one
+[<i>written above</i>] black spot on ether side the body conceued the
+perpetuall signature from the impression of St Peters fingers or to
+resemble the 2 peeces of money wch St Peter tooke out of this fish
+remarkable also from its disproportionable mouth &amp; many hard prickles
+about other parts.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_67_80" id="Footnote_67_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_80"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> <i>Zeus faber</i>, the Dory. Many, usually small ones, are
+brought in by our fishermen.</p></div>
+
+<p>A kind of scorpius marinus<a name="FNanchor_68_81" id="FNanchor_68_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_81" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> a rough prickly &amp; monstrous headed fish 6
+8 or 12 inches long answerable vnto the figure of Schoneueldeus.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_68_81" id="Footnote_68_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_81"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> <i>Cottus scorpius</i>, Father Lasher, commonly taken by the
+shrimpers.</p></div>
+
+<p>A sting fish<a name="FNanchor_69_82" id="FNanchor_69_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_82" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> wiuer or kind of ophidion or Araneus slender, narrowe
+headed about 4 inches long wth a sharpe small prickly finne along the
+back which often venemously pricketh the hands of fishermen.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_69_82" id="Footnote_69_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_82"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Probably from its size the Lesser Weever, <i>Trachinus
+vipera</i>, as also the <i>Draco minor</i> of Jonstoni. A common fish in our
+waters. Large numbers of the Greater Weever, <i>T. draco</i>, are brought in
+by the trawlers.</p></div>
+
+<p>Aphia cobites marina<a name="FNanchor_70_83" id="FNanchor_70_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_83" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> or sea Loche.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_70_83" id="Footnote_70_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_83"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> One of the Gobies. Day, "Brit. Fishes," i., p. 169,
+supposes the <i>Aphya cobites</i> of Rondeletius (p. 20) to be the White
+Goby, <i>A. pellucida</i>; Pennant has <i>A. cobites</i> as a synonym for the
+Spotted Goby (<i>G. minutus</i>) and the Sea Gudgeons, Black Gobies (<i>G.
+niger</i>), but at that time there was no very nice distinction of the
+members of this genus. The Sea Miller's Thumb is probably the Shanny
+(<i>Blennius pholis</i>). <i>Alosa</i>, is the Allis Shad (<i>Culpea alosa</i>, L.),
+not uncommon (<i><a href="#Footnote_74_87">see Note 74</a></i>).</p></div>
+
+<p>Blennus a sea millars thumb.</p>
+
+<p>Funduli marini sea gogions.</p>
+
+<p>Alosĉ or chads to bee met with about Lynne.</p>
+
+<p>Spinachus or smelt<a name="FNanchor_71_84" id="FNanchor_71_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_84" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> in greatest plentie about Lynne butt [com&#772;on on
+yarmouth coast <i>crossed out</i>] where they haue also a small fish calld a
+primme answering in [all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> <i>crossed out</i>] tast &amp; shape a smelt &amp; perhaps
+are butt the yonger sort thereof.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_71_84" id="Footnote_71_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_84"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> The Smelt, <i>Osmerus eperlanus</i>, is abundant in the shallow
+waters and estuaries on the Norfolk coast in spring, ascending the
+fresh-water rivers to spawn. The small fish called a Primme by Browne,
+may be the Atherine (<i>Atherina presbyter</i>), which is also found in our
+waters, where it is often mistaken for the Smelt, but I have not heard
+it called by the former name.</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol 29.</i>] Aselli or cods of seuerall sorts. Asellus albus or whitings
+in great plentie. Asellus niger carbonarius or [col <i>crossed out</i>] coale
+fish. Asellus minor Schoneueldei callarias pliny or Haydocks with many
+more also a weed fish somewhat like an haydock butt larger &amp; dryer meat.
+A Basse also much resembling a flatter kind of Cod.<a name="FNanchor_72_85" id="FNanchor_72_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_85" class="fnanchor">[72]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_72_85" id="Footnote_72_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_85"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> The first three fishes named in this paragraph need no
+comment; the Weed-fish is doubtless a local name, but for what species I
+cannot discover. The Bass, <i>Labrax lupus</i> (Cuv.), is, as might be
+expected from the nature of our coast, by no means common here.</p></div>
+
+<p>Scombri are makerells<a name="FNanchor_73_86" id="FNanchor_73_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_86" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> in greate plentie a dish much desired butt if
+as Rondeletius affirmeth they feed upon sea starres &amp; squalders (<i><a href="#Footnote_90_105">see
+Note 90</a></i>) there may bee some doubt whether their flesh bee without some
+ill qualitie sometimes they are of a very large size &amp; one was taken
+this yeare 1668 wch was by measure an ell long and of ye length of a
+good salmon, at Lestoffe.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_73_86" id="Footnote_73_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_86"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> The latter part of this paragraph, beginning, "Sometimes
+they are of a very large size," is written on the left-hand side of the
+opening, and is evidently a subsequent addition. One would be inclined
+to think from the great size of the fish here recorded (3 ft. 9 in.),
+that it may have been a species of Tunny, or even a Bonito, both of
+which have been taken on the Norfolk coast. Seventeen inches is a large
+mackerel.</p></div>
+
+<p>Herrings departed sprats or sardĉ not long after succeed in great
+plentie wch are taken with smaller nets [&amp; dryed <i>crossed out</i>] &amp; smoakd
+&amp; dryed like herrings become a [daint <i>crossed out</i>] sapid bitt &amp;
+vendible abroad.</p>
+
+<p>Among these are found Bleakes or bliccĉ<a name="FNanchor_74_87" id="FNanchor_74_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_87" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> a thinne herring like fishe
+wch some will also think to bee young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> herrings. And though the sea
+aboundeth not with pilchards, yet they are com&#772;only taken among
+herrings. butt few esteeme thereof or eat them.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_74_87" id="Footnote_74_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_87"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> It is quite evident that the fish referred to here, and
+again in the sixth <a href="#merrett_6">letter to Merrett</a>, is not the true Bleak (<i>Alburnus
+lucideus</i>) of our freshwaters. It seems that the young of some species
+of Clupeoid was thus known, for I find it stated in a MS. note in a copy
+of Berkenhout's "Outlines of the Natural History of Great Britain,"
+(1769), in the possession of Mr. T. E. Gunn, that the Bleak and the
+Sprat are often caught together in the sea at Aldeburgh (Suffolk) in
+November, and the writer of the note adds, "the Bleak is larger than the
+Sprat, its eyes are larger, and the upper part of its belly serrated." I
+think from this description and from Browne's remarks, that the young of
+a species of Shad must have been mistaken for the Bleak, which although
+found low down in our rivers almost to where the salt tide mingles with
+the fresh, does not I believe enter the salt water.</p></div>
+
+<p>Congers are not so com&#772;on on these coasts as on many seas about
+England, butt are often found upon the north coast of Norfolk, &amp; in
+frostie wether left in pulks &amp; plashes upon the ebbe of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 30.</i>] The sand eels Anglorum of Aldrouandus, or Tobianus of
+Schoneueldeus com&#772;only called smoulds taken out of the sea sands with
+forks &amp; rakes about Blakeney and Burnham a small round slender fish
+about 3 or 4 inches long as bigge as a small Tobacco pipe a very dayntie
+dish.</p>
+
+<p>Pungitius marinus<a name="FNanchor_75_88" id="FNanchor_75_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_88" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> or sea bansticle hauing a prickle one each side
+the smallest fish of the sea about an inch long sometimes drawne ashoare
+with netts together with weeds &amp; pargaments<a name="FNanchor_M_89" id="FNanchor_M_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_M_89" class="fnanchor">[M]</a> of the sea.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_75_88" id="Footnote_75_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_88"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> The smallest of the genus <i>Gasterosteus</i>, or Stanstickles,
+is <i>G. pungitius</i>, the ten-spined Stickleback, but this fish is two
+inches long when full grown. All the species seem to be more or less
+indifferent to the salinity of the water. The fifteen-spined
+Stickleback, <i>G. spinachia</i>, is also sometimes taken by the shrimpers,
+and is the most truly marine species, but is by no means "the smallest
+fish of the sea."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_M_89" id="Footnote_M_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_M_89"><span class="label">[M]</span></a> This word which Wilkin renders "fragments," is doubtless
+from the Latin <i>pergamentum</i>, and it seems likely that Browne had in
+view certain sea-weeds, possibly <i>Laminaria</i> or <i>Ulva</i> which, especially
+when dry, present somewhat the appearance and texture of parchment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>Many sorts of flat fishes<a name="FNanchor_76_90" id="FNanchor_76_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_90" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> The pastinaca oxyrinchus with a long &amp;
+strong aculeus in the tayle <ins class="tn" title="Odd spelling retained.">conceuud</ins> of speciall venome &amp; virtues.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_76_90" id="Footnote_76_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_90"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> <i>Pastinaca oxyrinchus</i> appears to be the Sting Ray
+(<i>Trygon pastinaca</i>); <i>Raia clavata</i>, the Thornback; <i>R. oculata</i>, the
+Spotted Ray (<i>R. maculata</i>); <i>R. aspera</i>; the Shagreen Ray? (<i>R.
+fullonica</i>).</p></div>
+
+<p>Severall sorts of Raia's skates &amp; Thornebacks the Raia clauata
+oxyrinchus, raia oculata, aspera, spinosa fullonica.</p>
+
+<p>The great Rhombus or Turbot aculeatus &amp; leuis.</p>
+
+<p>The passer or place.</p>
+
+<p>Butts of various kinds.</p>
+
+<p>The passer squamosus Bret Bretcock<a name="FNanchor_77_91" id="FNanchor_77_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_91" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> &amp; skulls comparable in taste and
+delicacy vnto the soale.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_77_91" id="Footnote_77_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_91"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> The Brill, <i>Rhombus lĉvis</i> (Lin.), <i>Passer asper
+squamosus</i>, Rondl., formerly known as the Brett, Bretcock, Skull, or
+Pearl.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Buglossus solea or soale<a name="FNanchor_78_92" id="FNanchor_78_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_92" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> plana &amp; oculata as also the Lingula or
+small soale all in very great plentie.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_78_92" id="Footnote_78_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_92"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> <i>Solea vulgaris</i>, the Common Sole. The "<i>Lingula</i>, or
+small Sole," is probably the <i>Solea variegata</i>, Flem., the <i>S. parva
+sive Lingula</i> of Rond. Jonston figures "<i>Solea lingulata</i>," Tab. xx.,
+fig. 12, but I am uncertain what species is intended. It is possible
+that Browne may have Latinised the trade name by which small Soles are
+known in the market as "slips" and "tongues." What other species he may
+have wished to indicate as "plana" and "oculata" it is difficult to
+determine.</p></div>
+
+<p>Sometimes a fish aboue half a yard long like a butt<a name="FNanchor_79_93" id="FNanchor_79_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_93" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> or soale called
+asprage wch I haue known taken about Cromer.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_79_93" id="Footnote_79_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_93"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> The "asprage" (or it may be "a sprage") may possibly be
+the Dab, <i>Pleuranectes limanda</i>, which Rondeletius calls <i>Passer asper</i>.
+I do not find that species mentioned otherwise, and a great many are
+taken by the Cromer and Sheringham fishermen.</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 31.</i>] [See <i>Roller ante</i> <a href="#Page_30">p. 30</a>.]</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 32.</i>] Sepia or cuttle fish<a name="FNanchor_80_94" id="FNanchor_80_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_94" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> [smear] &amp; great plentie of the
+bone or shellie substance which sustaineth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> the whole bulk of that soft
+fishe found com&#772;only on the shoare.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_80_94" id="Footnote_80_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_94"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> Of the various species of the Cephalopoda, <i>Sepia
+officinalis</i>, is more often represented by its calcareous dorsal plate
+than by the entire animal, for large numbers of these "cuttle-bones" are
+sometimes strewed along the shore for miles. The Squid, <i>Loligo
+vulgaris</i>, is often met with, sometimes of considerable size. The horny
+"pen" resembles a short leaf-shaped Roman sword, and Browne's term,
+"Gladiolus," is quite as appropriate as that of "Calamus." His <i>Polypus</i>
+is probably <i>Octopus vulgaris</i>, but it is rarely met with on the Norfolk
+coast.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Loligo sleue or calamar found often upon the shoare from head to
+tayle [such <i>crossed out</i>] sometimes aboue an ell long, remarkable for
+its parretlike bill, the gladiolus or calamus along the back &amp; the
+notable crystallyne of the eye wch equalleth if not exceedeth the lustre
+of orientall pearle.</p>
+
+<p>A polypus another kind of the mollia<a name="FNanchor_N_95" id="FNanchor_N_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_N_95" class="fnanchor">[N]</a> sometimes wee haue met with.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_N_95" id="Footnote_N_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_N_95"><span class="label">[N]</span></a> By <i>mollia</i> is meant all soft-bodied shell-less animals.</p></div>
+
+<p>Lobsters in great number about sheringham and cromer from whence all the
+country is supplyed.</p>
+
+<p>Astacus marinus pediculi [marini <i>written above</i>] facie<a name="FNanchor_81_96" id="FNanchor_81_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_96" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> found also
+in that place. with the aduantage of ye long foreclawes about 4 inches
+long.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_81_96" id="Footnote_81_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_96"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> Probably <i>Nephrops norvegicus</i>, the Norway Lobster, called
+at Lowestoft a Crayfish or Prawn. They are sometimes brought in in large
+numbers by the steam trawlers, but the precise locality in which they
+are captured I am unable to say; the fishermen say the "North Sea,"
+which is rather a vague address, but others say between the Texel and
+Heligoland.</p></div>
+
+<p>Crabs large &amp; well tasted found also in the same coast.</p>
+
+<p>Another kind of crab<a name="FNanchor_82_97" id="FNanchor_82_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_97" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> taken for cancer fluuiatilis litle slender &amp; of
+a very quick motion found in the Riuer running through yarmouth. [<i>added
+subsequently</i>] &amp; in bliburgh riuer.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_82_97" id="Footnote_82_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_97"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> <i><ins title="Cancer in original.">Carsinus</ins> mĉnas</i>, the Shore-crab, a very common species on
+the Norfolk coast is here intended.</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 33.</i>] Oysters exceeding large about Burnham and [Huns <i>crossed
+out</i>] Hunstanton like those of poole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> St Mallowes or ciuita [vech
+<i>crossed out</i>] vechia whereof [some <i>crossed out</i>] many are eaten rawe
+the shells being broakin with [cle <i>crossed out</i>] cleuers the greater
+part pickled &amp; sent weekly to London &amp; other parts.</p>
+
+<p>Mituli or muscles in great quantitie as also chams or cochles about
+stiskay [<i>sic</i>] &amp; ye northwest coast.</p>
+
+<p>Pectines pectunculi varij or scallops of the lesser sort.</p>
+
+<p>Turbines or smaller wilks, leues, striati. as also Trochi, Trochili, or
+scaloppes finely variegated &amp; pearly. [as also <i>crossed out</i>.] Lewise
+[<i>sic</i>] purpurĉ minores, nerites, cochleĉ, Tellinĉ.</p>
+
+<p>Lepades, patellĉ Limpets, of an vniualue shell wherein an animal like a
+snayle cleauing fast unto the rocks.</p>
+
+<p>Solenes cappe lunge venetorum com&#772;only a razor fish the shell thereof
+dentalia</p>
+
+<p>[The MS. breaks off here, and the next paragraph appears to be an
+interpolation.]</p>
+
+<p>Dentalia by some called pinpaches because pinmeat thereof is taken out
+with a pinne or needle.<a name="FNanchor_83_98" id="FNanchor_83_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_98" class="fnanchor">[83]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_83_98" id="Footnote_83_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_98"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> Mussels and Cockles are very abundant all along the
+shallow shores of North-west Norfolk, as well as Clams, <i>Mya arenaria</i>.
+"Scallops of the lesser sort" are probably <i>Pecten opercularius</i> and <i>P.
+varius</i>. The Whelk, <i>Buccinum undatum</i>, is also very numerous, and forms
+the staple of a considerable industry at Sheringham; the lesser, or
+Dog-Whelk, <i>Nassa reticulata</i>, as well as <i>Purpura lapillus</i> and several
+sorts of Trochus, are commonly met with. The genus Nerita was a very
+comprehensive one in Browne's time, and included many species of
+Littorina, of which the well-known Periwinkle, <i>L. <ins title="litoria in original.">littorea</ins></i>, is the most
+numerous here. No true Nerita is now recognised as British, although in
+the warmer seas the genus is a very numerous one. The most common
+Tellina here is <i>T. tenuis</i>, <i>Lepades patellĉ</i> are of course the common
+Limpet (<i>Patella vulgata</i>), and of the Solen, or Razor Shell, which Gwyn
+Jeffreys says in the time of Aldrovandus was called by the Venetians
+"cappa longa," we have two species found on the sandy portions of the
+coast. Here some confusion exists in the MS., after the words, "the
+shell thereof dentalia," the note ends abruptly, and is followed by an
+interpolation which seems quite irrelevant, as Dentalia have surely
+never been called "Pin-patches" (the vernacular name for <i>Littorina
+<ins title="litoria in original.">littorea</ins></i>), nor is it probable that, like that common univalve, they were
+ever taken out of their shells with a pin or needle. <i>Dentalia</i> are
+mentioned on two other occasions as of doubtful occurrence and
+<i>Dentalium entalis</i> has slight claim to be a native of Norfolk; the only
+recorded specimen I know of was picked up in 1890 by Mr. Mayfield, from
+the drift on the beach between Wells and Holkham.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>Cancellus Turbinum et neritis<a name="FNanchor_84_99" id="FNanchor_84_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_99" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> Barnard the Hermite of Rondeletius a
+kind of crab or astacus liuing in a forsaken wilk or nerites.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_84_99" id="Footnote_84_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_99"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> Hermit Crabs are here referred to, the larger, <i>Pagurus
+bernhardus</i>, found very frequently inhabiting the shells of the Whelk,
+and a smaller species which takes up its abode in those of a <i>Trochus</i>.</p></div>
+
+<p>echinus echinometrites<a name="FNanchor_85_100" id="FNanchor_85_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_100" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> sea hedghogge whose neat shells are com&#772;on
+on the shoare the fish aliue often taken [with <i>crossed out</i>] by the
+dragges among the oysters.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_85_100" id="Footnote_85_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_100"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> Dead <i>Echini</i> are very common on the sea-shore, and many
+living ones are dredged by the shrimpers. <i>Echinus sphĉra</i> is the most
+common on the Norfolk coast; <i>E. miliaris</i>, a small species, is also
+very abundant about Cromer.</p></div>
+
+<p>[This and the next paragraph on fol. 33 <i>verso</i>.]</p>
+
+<p>Balani<a name="FNanchor_86_101" id="FNanchor_86_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_101" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> a smaller sort of vniualue growing com&#772;only in clusters.
+the smaller kinds thereof to bee found oftimes upon oysters wilks &amp;
+lobsters.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_86_101" id="Footnote_86_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_101"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> The species of Cirripeds referred to are probably the
+common Acorn Barnacle (<i>Balanus porcatus</i>) and the Goose Barnacle
+(<i>Lepas anatifera</i>), the latter occasionally found on ships' bottoms and
+drift-wood, probably carried by favourable currents from warmer seas
+than our own.</p></div>
+
+<p>Concha anatifera or Ansifera or Barnicleshell whereof about 4 yeares
+past were found upon the shoare no small number by yarmouth hanging by
+slender strings of a kind of Alga vnto seuerall splinters or [clefts
+<i>crossed out</i>] cleauings of firre boards vnto wch they were seuerally
+fastned &amp; hanged like ropes of onyons: their shell flat &amp; of a peculiar
+forme differing from other shelles, this being of four diuisions.
+containing a small imperfect animal at the lower part diuided into many
+shootes or streames wch prepossed [imag <i>crossed out</i>] spectators<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> fancy
+to bee the rudiment of the tayle of some goose or duck to bee [expute
+<i>crossed out</i>] produced from it. some whereof in ye shell &amp; some taken
+out &amp; spred upon paper wee shall [still?] keepe by us.</p>
+
+<p>[Fol. 34.] Stellĉ marinĉ<a name="FNanchor_87_102" id="FNanchor_87_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_102" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> or sea starres in great plentie especially
+about yarmouth. whether they bee bred out of the [vrticas <i>crossed out</i>]
+vrticĉ squalders or sea gellies as many report wee cannot confirme butt
+the squalderes in the middle seeme to haue some lines or first draughts
+not unlike. our starres exceed not 5 poynts though I haue heard that
+some with more haue been found about Hunstanton and Burnham. where are
+also found stellĉ marinĉ testacĉ or handsome crusted &amp; brittle sea
+[stars <i>crossed out</i>] starres much lesse.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_87_102" id="Footnote_87_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_102"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> The Five-finger (<i>Asterias rubens</i>, L.) is a very numerous
+species on our coast and very destructive. Brittle Stars (<i>Ophiocoma
+sp?</i>) are as Browne states most frequent about Hunstanton, Burnham, and
+Cromer. <i>Solaster papposa</i> is also found in the same localities.</p></div>
+
+<p>The pediculus<a name="FNanchor_88_103" id="FNanchor_88_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_103" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> and culex marin us the sea lowse &amp; flie are [are
+<i>crossed out</i>] also no strangeres.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_88_103" id="Footnote_88_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_103"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> The Pediculus, or Sea Louse, is probably <i>Talitrus
+locusta</i>, the Sand-hopper; what may be intended by <i>Culex marinus</i> it is
+difficult to say. A species of gnat is at times very numerous on the wet
+sand just above the water-line. <i>See also</i> <a href="#Footnote_110_128">Notes 110</a> and <a href="#Footnote_115_133">115</a>, on a
+kindred subject.</p></div>
+
+<p>Physsalus Rondeletij<a name="FNanchor_89_104" id="FNanchor_89_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_104" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> or eruca marina physsaloides according to the
+icon of Rondeletius of very orient green &amp; purple bristles.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_89_104" id="Footnote_89_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_104"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> The Sea Mouse, <i>Aphrodite aculeata</i>. This is referred to
+again in the Letters to Merrett.</p></div>
+
+<p>Urtica marina<a name="FNanchor_90_105" id="FNanchor_90_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_105" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> of diuers kinds some whereof called squalderes. of a
+burning and stinging qualitie if rubbed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> in the hand. the water thereof
+may afford a good cosmetick.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_90_105" id="Footnote_90_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_105"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> Mr. E. T. Browne, of the Zoological Laboratory of
+University College, London, has kindly furnished me with the following
+notes on this subject: "Jonston (1657) gives figures of Anemones and
+large <i>Medusae</i> under the name of <i>Urtica</i>. On Tab. xviii. he figures
+Anemones and other beasts, but not <i>medusae</i>. The <i>medusae</i> are on the
+next Tab. (xix.). <i>Urtica marina</i> includes both Anemones and certain
+Scyphomedusae (not <i>Pulmo</i>). Under 'some &hellip; called Squalders of a
+burning and stinging quality,' I think Browne must refer to our common
+stinging Scyphomedusae belonging to the genus <i>Chrysaora</i> or <i>Cyanaea</i>,
+of which there are three species.
+</p><p>
+"The vague description of what he calls 'sea buttons' [see below, also
+<a href="#merrett_2">second letter to Merrett</a>] would suit either a Medusa or a Ctenophore.
+The additional note, 'two small holes in the ends,' rather upsets
+matters, but I think he must refer to some sort of jelly-fish, probably
+damaged, which is usually the case when cast up on the shore. If the
+buttons worn in those days were like filbert-nuts or eggs, I am inclined
+to think that the reference must be to a Ctenophore, genus
+<i>Pleurobrachia</i>, but if flat, then to one of the <i>Hydromedusae</i>. It
+would be safe to say, 'probably a kind of jelly-fish,' which is about as
+vague as the reference." See also Dr. Reuben Robinson's description of
+"Squalders" in a letter to Browne (Wilkin i., pp. 422-424). It seems
+probable that the gelatinous masses referred to in the early part of
+this letter, which Dr. Robinson says were ascribed by Dr. Charleton to
+"the nocturnall pollution of some plethorick or wanton starr: or rather
+excrement blowne from the nosthrills of a rheumatick planett," were the
+remains of the undeveloped spawn of frogs, the bodies of which had been
+eaten by rats, crows, or herons, and <ins title="which added per errata.">which</ins> had become swollen by exposure to
+moisture.</p></div>
+
+<p>[The next paragraph on folio 33 <i>verso</i> is evidently added
+subsequently.]</p>
+
+<p>Another elegant sort that is often found cast up by shoare in great
+numbers about ye bignesse of a button cleere &amp; welted &amp; may bee called
+fibula marina crystallina.</p>
+
+<p>hirudines marini or sea Leaches.<a name="FNanchor_91_106" id="FNanchor_91_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_106" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_91_106" id="Footnote_91_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_106"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> It is difficult to determine the species of marine
+Annelids referred to by Browne; the Sea Leech is probably <i>Pontobdella
+lĉvis</i>. The "large wormes" digged for bait, mentioned more than once,
+are Lug-worms, <i>Arenicola piscatorum</i>; the <i>Vermes in tubulis testacei</i>
+may be tube-worms of the genus Terrebella, or a species of Serpula.
+Tethya or "Sea dugge" (not "Sea dogs," as Wilkin has it) might very well
+apply to <i>Ascidia</i> or one of the allied genera. Simple Ascidians,
+generally known as Sea-squirts, are common littoral forms; the animals
+figured by Rondeletius under the heading "De Tethyis" (p. 127) are
+simple Ascidians. The <i>vesicaria marina</i>, or "fanago," might well refer
+to the egg capsules of the common Whelk (<i>Buccinum undatum</i>), which are
+very commonly found in masses on the shore. In his sixth <a href="#merrett_6">letter to
+Merrett</a>, Browne mentions two kinds of "fanago," the first which I take
+to be the egg capsules of the Whelk, resembling the "husk of peas;" the
+smaller that of "barley when the flower [awn?] is mouldered away," may
+possibly be the egg capsules of <i>Purpura lapillus</i>, or of some species
+of Natica, which bear a fanciful resemblance to grains of barley. See
+also <a href="#merrett_2">Merrett's second letter</a> in <a href="#APPENDIX_A">Appendix A.</a>, in which he describes the
+Vesicaria found on oyster-shells as resembling flowers of <i>Hyacinthus
+botryoides</i>, which is not a bad description of the form of the egg
+capsules of <i>P. lapillus</i>.</p></div>
+
+<p>vermes marini very large wormes digged a yarde deepe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> out of the sands
+at the ebbe for bayt. tis known where they are to bee found by a litle
+flat ouer them on ye surface of ye sand. as also vermes in tubulis
+testacei. Also Tethya or sea dugges some whereof resemble fritters [and
+<i>crossed out</i>] the vesicaria marina also &amp; [<i><a href="#Footnote_91_106">see Note 91</a></i>] fanago
+sometimes very large conceaued to proceed from some testaceous animals.
+&amp; particularly [<i>Fol. 35</i>] from the purpura butt [in <i>crossed out</i>] ours
+more probably from other testaceous wee hauing not met with any large
+purpura upon this coast.</p>
+
+<p>[A blank space.]</p>
+
+<p>Many riuer fishes also and animals. Salmon<a name="FNanchor_92_107" id="FNanchor_92_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_107" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> no com&#772;on fish in our
+riuers though many are taken in the owse. in the Bure or north riuer, in
+ye waueney or south riuer, in ye [yare or <i>crossed out</i>] norwich riuer
+butt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> seldome and in the winter butt 4 yeares ago 15 were taken at
+Trowes mill [ab <i>crossed out</i>] in Xtmas. whose mouths were stuck with
+small wormes or horsleaches no bigger than fine threads some of these I
+kept in water 3 moneths if a few drops of blood were putt to the water
+they would in a litle time looke red. they sensibly grewe bigger then I
+first found them and were killed by an hard froast freezing the water.
+most of our Salmons haue a recurued peece of flesh in ye end of the
+lower iawe wch when they shutt there mouths deepely enters the upper. as
+Scaliger hath noted in some.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_92_107" id="Footnote_92_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_107"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> The Salmon (<i>Salmo salar</i>) is at the present day very
+rarely found in our rivers, and those met with are, as a rule, male
+Kelts which have strayed into unsuspected situations after floods; a
+singular exception occurred on the 20th May, 1897, when one weighing 6
+lbs. was taken on a fly in the river above Stoke Holy Cross Mill; this
+fish is preserved in the Norwich Museum. Another curious capture of
+which I heard (but did not see the fish) occurred on the 1st August,
+1898, when a salmon, also of 6 lbs. weight, jumped into a small boat
+towed behind a yacht which was sailing across Breydon Water. That the
+salmon was at one time a recognised visitor to our rivers is evident
+from the following extract from the Norwich Court of Mayoralty Book
+under date 2 Novr. 1667: "It is ordered that the bell man give notice
+that if any person shall take any Salmons from the Nativity of our Lady
+unto St. Martin's day, or destroy any young Salmons by netts or other
+ingens from the midst of April until the Nativity of St. John Baptist
+shall be punished according to the law." The Salmon is the host of
+several parasites both internal and external. Fresh run Salmon are
+generally infested with a "Sea-louse," which quickly perishes in
+freshwater; not so, however, with the troublesome worm-like creature,
+the subject of Browne's experiments; it is known as <i>Lernĉa salmonis</i>,
+and is only found on the gill-covers of spent Kelts; it is not got rid
+of till the fish returns to the salt water. Browne may be excused being
+rather sceptical as to the identity of the clean run Salmon and the
+spent Kelt, for no greater contrast can be imagined than that which
+exists between the two&mdash;the male in the "redding" season develops the
+unsightly hooked mandible, which so puzzled the worthy doctor, and both
+in colour and form is as hideous an object as can be imagined. Bécard
+Gallorum (not <i>Beccard gallorus</i>), <i>i.e.</i>, the fish called "Bécard" by
+the French (<a href="#merrett_2">see second letter to Merrett</a>), refers to the use of a name
+still applied in France to a large Cock Salmon, and "Anchorago" is the
+name under which the fish was described by Scaliger, whose book I have
+not seen. Dr. Günther tells me that Artedi, "Ichthyologia," Pt. v., p.
+23, quotes this name as a synonym of the Salmon.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Riuers lakes &amp; broads<a name="FNanchor_93_108" id="FNanchor_93_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_108" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> abound in [the Lucius or <i>added above</i>]
+pikes of very large size where also is found the Brama or [breme
+<i>crossed out</i>] Breme large &amp; well tasted the Tinca or Tench the Rubecula
+Roach as also Rowds and Dare or Dace perca or pearch great &amp; small.
+whereof such [as] are are in Braden on this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span> side yarmouth in the mixed
+water [are gen <i>crossed out</i>] make a dish very dayntie &amp; I think scarce
+to bee bettered in England. butt the Blea[k] [<i>Fol. 36</i>] the chubbe the
+barbell [I haue not obserued in these riuers <i>crossed out</i>] to bee found
+in diues other Riuers in England I haue not obserued in these. As also
+fewer mennowes then in many other riuers.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_93_108" id="Footnote_93_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_108"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> The freshwater fishes named in the next three paragraphs
+are so well known as to require few remarks. The Bream in our rivers and
+broads are very numerous and reach a large size, but of their esculent
+qualities I have had no personal experience; not so, however, with the
+Perch, which quite deserve Browne's high encomium. It is well known here
+that this fish shows no aversion of a certain admixture of salt and
+fresh water, and Mr. Lubbock ("Fauna of Norfolk") says, "the point in
+Norfolk rivers where the largest are taken with most certainty is where
+water begins to turn brackish from the influence of the ocean;" in
+autumn the very finest are taken by angling with a shrimp, a favourite
+bait in the lower parts of the Yare and Waveney. In such localities a
+small shrimp (<i><ins title="Pandalus varius in original.">Hippolyte varians</ins></i>, Leach) abounds, and it is to this
+favourite food that Mr. Lubbock attributes the excellence of these
+Perch. Roud is the local name of the Rudd (<i>Leuciscus erythropthalmus</i>).
+The River Nar is still perhaps the best Trout stream in the county, and
+the Crawfish is found in most of the rivers but not abundantly.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Trutta or trout the Gammarus or crawfish [no <i>crossed out</i>] butt
+scarce in our riuers butt frequently taken in the Bure or north riuer &amp;
+in the seuerall branches therof. &amp; very remarkable large crawfishes to
+bee found in the riuer wch runnes by castleaker &amp; nerford.</p>
+
+<p>The Aspredo perca minor<a name="FNanchor_94_109" id="FNanchor_94_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_109" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> and probably the cernua of Cardan com&#772;only
+called a Ruffe in great plentie in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> norwich Riuers &amp; euen in ye streame
+of the citty. which though camden appropriates vnto this citty yet they
+are also found in the riuers of oxforde [&amp;] Cambridge.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_94_109" id="Footnote_94_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_109"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> Merrett calls the Ruff <i>Cernua fluviatilis</i>, and mentions
+its abundance in the River Yare at Norwich, which he (no doubt
+inadvertently) assigns to the County of "Essex"; from this locality
+Caius obtained the specimen, a drawing of which he sent to Gesner under
+the name of <i>Aspredo</i>. Camden assigns this fish also to Norwich, and
+Spencer, in his "Marriage of the Thames and Medway," writes of the
+Ruff:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Next cometh Yar, soft washing Norwich walls,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And with him bringeth to their festival<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fish whose like none else can show,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The which men Ruffins call."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>
+This county seems to have been assigned an exclusive proprietorship in
+the Ruff, to which, as Browne rightly points out, it had no just claim.</p></div>
+
+<p>Lampetra Lampries great &amp; small<a name="FNanchor_95_110" id="FNanchor_95_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_110" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> found plentifully in norwich riuer &amp;
+euen in the Citty about may [some <i>crossed out</i>] whereof some are very
+large &amp; well cooked are counted a dayntie bitt collard up butt
+especially in pyes.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_95_110" id="Footnote_95_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_110"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> Both the Sea Lamprey (<i>Petromyzon marinus</i>) and the
+Lampern (<i>P. fluviatilis</i>) are found in the Norfolk rivers.</p></div>
+
+<p>Mustela fluuiatilis or eele poult<a name="FNanchor_96_111" id="FNanchor_96_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_111" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> to bee had in norwich riuer &amp; [in
+thalso <i>crossed out</i>] between it &amp; yarmouth as also in the riuers of
+marshland resembling an eele &amp; a cod. a very good dish &amp; the Liuer
+thereof well answers the commendations of the Ancients.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_96_111" id="Footnote_96_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_111"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> The Burbot, or Eel Pout (<i>Lola vulgaris</i>), called by
+Merrett a Coney-fish, from its habit of concealing itself in holes in
+the river banks. It is not sufficiently numerous now to form an article
+of diet, and I imagine there are few living who could bear testimony as
+to the esculent qualities of its "Liuer."</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol 37.</i>] Godgions or funduli fluuiatiles, many whereof may bee taken
+within the [citty <i>crossed out</i>] Riuer in the citty:</p>
+
+<p>Capitones fluuiatilis or millers thumbs, pungitius fluuiatilis or
+stanticles. Aphia cobites fluuiatilis or Loches. in norwich riuers in
+the runnes about Heueningham heath in the north riuer &amp; streames
+thereof.</p>
+
+<p>Of eeles<a name="FNanchor_97_112" id="FNanchor_97_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_112" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> the com&#772;on eele &amp; the glot wch hath somewhat a different
+shape in the bignesse of the head &amp; is affirmed to have yong ones often
+found within it. &amp; wee haue found a vterus in the same somewhat
+answering the icon thereof in Senesinus.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_97_112" id="Footnote_97_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_112"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> The coarse variety of the Eel, known as the "Glout," or
+Broad-nosed Eel, is believed to be the barren female; Browne's
+informants were doubtless misled by the presence of certain thread-worms
+(<i>Nematoxys</i>) in the abdomen of the eels, which they mistook for young
+ones.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>Carpiones carpes plentifull in ponds &amp; sometimes large ones in broads
+[<i>smear</i>] 2 the largest I euer beheld were [found <i>crossed out</i>] taken
+[<i>added above</i>] in Norwich Riuer.</p>
+
+<p>[A whole line is smeared out, and a break occurs in the MS. after the
+observation on the Carp; it then proceeds to notice some other
+inhabitants of the county which perhaps Browne had difficulty in
+classifying.]</p>
+
+<p>Though the woods and dryelands about [abound?] with adders and
+vipers<a name="FNanchor_98_113" id="FNanchor_98_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_113" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> yet are there few snakes about our riuers or meadowes more to
+bee found in Marsh land butt ponds &amp; plashes abound in Lizards or
+swifts.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_98_113" id="Footnote_98_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_113"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> Both Vipers (or Adders) and Snakes, the <ins class="tn" title="latte in original.">latter</ins> in
+particular, are, I imagine, much less abundant than formerly, but the
+few species of Lizards and Newts (Swifts) are still probably in
+undiminished numbers; the Mole Cricket (<i>Gryllotalpa vulgaris</i>) is rare
+with us; Horse-leeches (<i>Aulostoma gulo</i>) are frequent, and also
+"Periwinkles," which I take to be various species of freshwater
+Molluscs, possibly of <i>Limnĉa</i>. The Hard-worm (or Hair-worm), <i>Gordius
+aquaticus</i>, which refused to be generated from "horsehayres," is still
+an object of wonder to the unlearned, and the Great Black Water-Beetle
+(<i>Hydrophilus piceus</i>) is found; but <i>forficula</i> and <i>corculum</i> were a
+puzzle, as it is evident from their association they must be aquatic
+forms (and the Earwig certainly does not take to the water voluntarily),
+till my friend, Mr. C. G. Barrett, referred me to the following passage
+in Swammerdam's "Book of Nature," p. 93: "This is most certain that the
+<i>Forficula aquatica</i> of Jonston is the true nymph of the Mordella, or
+Dragon-fly,"<a name="FNanchor_O_114" id="FNanchor_O_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_O_114" class="fnanchor">[O]</a> Dr. Charleton in his "Onomasticon," p. 57, has
+"Corculus, the Water-beetle, resembling an heart;" not very definite,
+but probably the Whirligig Beetle, <i>Gyrinus natator</i>, is intended; it is
+also an appellation given by some authors to "a small species of
+cordiformis, or heart-shell, of a rose colour," doubtless a Cyclas or a
+Pisidium. Squilla is the Freshwater Shrimp (<i>Gammarus pulex</i>), and
+<i>Notonecta glauca</i>, the Waterboatman "which swimmeth on its back," is
+well known.
+</p><p>
+Otters are still numerous in the broads and reed-margined rivers, and so
+long as these natural fastnesses endure in their present condition they
+are likely to continue so.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_O_114" id="Footnote_O_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_O_114"><span class="label">[O]</span></a> On reference to Jonston (<i>Historiĉ Naturalis de Insectis</i>
+Lib. iv., "De Insectis aquaticis" i., p. 189, Tab. xxvii.), I find that
+under the name of "<i>Forficulĉ aquat[icĉ]</i>. M [oufet]," he has two
+figures, the first of which is possibly a Dytiscus larva, the second
+that of some form of Dragon-fly, which however is imperfect.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>The Gryllotalpa or fencricket com&#772;on in fenny places butt wee haue met
+with them also in dry places dung-hills &amp; church yards of this citty.</p>
+
+<p>Beside horseleaches &amp; periwinkles in plashes &amp; standing waters we haue
+met with vermes setacei or hardwormes butt could neuer conuert
+horsehayres into them by laying them in water as also the [<i>Fol. 38</i>]
+the (<i>bis</i>) great Hydrocantharus or black shining water Beetle the
+forficula, sqilla, corculum and notonecton that swimmeth on its back.</p>
+
+<p>Camden [<i>smear</i>] reports that in former time there haue been [otters
+<i>crossed out</i>] Beuers in the Riuer of Cardigan in wales. this wee are to
+sure of that the Riuers great Broads &amp; carres afford great store of
+otters with us, a [des <i>crossed out</i>] great destroyer of fish as feeding
+butt from ye vent downewards. [a prey <i>crossed out</i>] not free from being
+a prey it self for their yong ones haue been found in Buzzards nests.
+they are accounted no bad dish by many are to bee made very tame and in
+some howses haue [semed <i>crossed out</i>] serued for turnespitts.</p>
+
+<p>[Blank space.]</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;Although Browne's account of the Fishes is doubtless
+derived from his personal observation, I have found it very
+difficult in some families, such as the Cods, Rays, Gurnards,
+Flat-fishes, and Gobies to identify them with the species as at
+present known; in fact, they were at that time very imperfectly
+differentiated, and the figures in the old authors are generally
+so inexact as not to be recognisable. Ray, in 1674 ("English
+Words not generally known," p. 101), thus writes of the sea
+fishes, "several of them, we judge, not yet described by any
+Author extant in print: indeed the writers of Natural History of
+Animals living far from the Ocean, and so having never had
+opportunity of seeing these kind of fishes &hellip; write very
+confusedly and obscurely concerning them," a remark which I have
+found abundantly verified.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="wide" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="letters" id="letters"></a>LETTERS TO MERRETT.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">[MS. SLOANE. 1833. FOL. 14.]</p>
+
+<p class="center">No. 1.<a name="merrett_1" id="merrett_1"></a></p>
+
+<p class="center">"<i>My father to Dr. Meret July 13, 1668.</i>"</p>
+
+
+<p>Most honourd Sir,</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol 14.</i>] I take ye boldnesse to salute you as a person of singular
+worth &amp; learning and whom I very much respect &amp; honour. I presented my
+service to you by my sonne some months past, and had thought before this
+time to have done it by him again, but the time of his returne to London
+being yet uncertaine, I would not deferre these at present unto you. I
+should be very glad to serve you by any observations of mine against yr.
+second edition of your Pinax<a name="FNanchor_99_115" id="FNanchor_99_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_115" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> which I cannot sufficiently commende. I
+have observed and taken notice of many animals in these parts whereof 3
+years agoe a learned gentleman of this country desired me to give him
+some account, which while I was doing ye gentleman my good friend died.
+I shall only at this time present and name some few unto you which I
+found not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span> in your catalogue. A Trachurus [<i><a href="#Footnote_61_73">see Note 61</a></i>] which yearly
+cometh before or in ye head of ye herrings called therefore an horse.
+Stella marina testacea [<i><a href="#Footnote_87_102">see Note 87</a></i>] which I have often found upon the
+sea-shoare, an Astacus marinus pediculi marini facie [<i><a href="#Footnote_81_96">see Note 81</a></i>]
+which is sometimes taken with the lobsters at Cromer in Norfolck. a
+pungitius marinus [<i><a href="#Footnote_75_88">see Note 75</a></i>] wereof I have known many taken among
+weeds by fishers who drag by ye Sea-shoare on this coast. A Scarabĉus
+capricornus odoratus<a name="FNanchor_100_116" id="FNanchor_100_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_116" class="fnanchor">[100]</a> which I take to be mentioned by Moufetus fol.
+150. I have taken some abroad one in my Seller which I now send he saith
+<i>nucem moschatam et cinamomum vere Spirat</i> to me it smelt like roses
+santalum &amp; Ambegris. I have thrice met with Mergus maximus Farensis
+Clusij, [<i><a href="#Footnote_11_20">see Note 11</a></i>] and have a draught thereof. they were taken
+about the time of herring fishing at yarmouth one was taken upon the
+shoare not able to fly away about ten yeares agoe I sent one to Dr.
+Scarborough. Twice I have met with a Skua Hoyeri [<i><a href="#Footnote_10_19">see Note 10</a></i>] the
+draught whereof I also have. one was shot in a marsh which I gave unto a
+gentleman which [<i>sic</i>] I can sende you another was killd feeding upon a
+dead horse neere a marsh ground. Perusing your catalogue of Plants. upon
+Acorus verus,<a name="FNanchor_101_117" id="FNanchor_101_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_117" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> I find these wordes found by Dr. Browne neere Lin.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+wherein probably there may be some mistake, for I cannot affirme nor I
+doubt any other yt. is found thereabout. Some 25 yeares ago I gave an
+account of this plant unto [this <i>crossed out</i>] Mr. Goodyeere:<a name="FNanchor_102_118" id="FNanchor_102_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_118" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> &amp;
+more lately to Dr. How<a name="FNanchor_103_119" id="FNanchor_103_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_119" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> unto whome I sent some notes and a box full
+of the fresh Juli. This elegant plant groweth very plentifully and
+beareth its Julus yearly by the bankes of Norwich river [fol. 13
+<i>verso</i>] chiefly about Claxton and Surlingham. &amp; also between norwich &amp;
+Hellsden bridge so that I have known Heigham Church in the suburbes of
+Norwich strowed all over with it, it hath been transplanted and set on
+the sides of Marish pondes in severall places of the country where it
+thrives and beareth ye Julus yearly.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_99_115" id="Footnote_99_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_115"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> It is evident that Merrett was collecting a considerable
+amount of materials for an enlarged edition of his <i>Pinax Rerum
+Naturalium Britannicarum</i>, on behalf of which Browne seems, by this
+introductory letter, to have tendered his assistance, but the
+contemplated edition, probably for reasons which I have mentioned
+elsewhere, never appeared; happily, these rough drafts have been
+preserved, although it seems not unlikely that the letters themselves,
+should they ever be found, would differ from them in some respects.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_100_116" id="Footnote_100_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_116"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> <i>Scarabĉus capricornus odoratus.</i> The Musk Beetle,
+<i>Aromia moschata</i>, L.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_101_117" id="Footnote_101_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_117"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> <i>Acorus calamus</i>, the Sweet Flag, is still found in
+plenty in various localities in the county, but it does not appear to
+develop its curious "julus" every year. It was very abundant at Heigham,
+a suburb of Norwich, on the site now occupied by the goods yard of the
+Midland and Great Northern Railway, and it was probably from this spot
+that the supply was obtained for the purpose of littering the floor of
+the old parish church. Mr. Vaux, in his "Church Folk-Lore," p. 264, says
+that up to the passing of the Municipal Reform Bill the Town Clerk of
+Norwich was accustomed to pay the sub-sacrist of the cathedral an amount
+of one guinea for strewing the floor with rushes on the Mayor's Day. The
+custom is said to have been adopted "as well for coolness as for
+pleasant smell." The pleasant cinnamon-like scent of the rush, on being
+trodden on, is said to have perfumed the whole building. The root was
+also used as a remedy in cases of ague, and formed the base of tooth and
+hair powders.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_102_118" id="Footnote_102_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_118"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> Towards the end of the Introductory Letter to Johnson's
+(1636) Edition of Gerard's "Herball," he acknowledges the assistance he
+received from Mr. John Goodyer, of Maple-Durham, in Hampshire. Sir J. E.
+Smith ("Eng. Flora," iv., p. 34) speaks of him as "one of the most
+deserving of our early English Botanists." Robert Brown named a genus of
+plants (<i>Goodyera</i>) after Goodyer.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_103_119" id="Footnote_103_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_119"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> William How, 1620-1656, was the author of "Phytologia
+Britannica," Lond., 1650, "the earliest work on botany restricted to the
+plants of this island" ("Dic. of Nat. Biog."). He practised medicine in
+London.</p></div>
+
+<p>Sesamoides Salamanticum Magnum.<a name="FNanchor_104_120" id="FNanchor_104_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_120" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> Why you omit Sesamoides
+Salamanticum parvum this groweth not far from Thetford and Brandon and
+plentifull in neighbour places where I found it and have it in my hortus
+hyemalis answering ye description in Gerard.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_104_120" id="Footnote_104_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_120"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> <i>Sesamoides</i> is stated in Ree's Encyclopĉdia and in Eng.
+Fl. to be a synonym of <i>Reseda</i>, therefore <i>Sesamoides magnum</i> would
+appear to be <i>R. luteola</i> and <i>S. parvum</i>, <i>R. lutea</i>.</p></div>
+
+<p>Urtica Romana<a name="FNanchor_105_121" id="FNanchor_105_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_121" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> which groweth with button seede<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> bags is not in yr.
+catalogue I have founde it to grow wild at [Golston <i>crossed out</i>]
+Golston by Yarmouth, &amp; transplanted it to other places.<a name="FNanchor_P_122" id="FNanchor_P_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_P_122" class="fnanchor">[P]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_105_121" id="Footnote_105_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_121"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> <i>Urtica Romana</i>, which is again referred to as <i>U. mas</i>
+near the end of the <a href="#merrett_3">third letter</a> and as being found at Gorleston, is the
+Roman Nettle, <i>U. pilulifera</i>. In 1834 the Pagets ("Nat. Hist. of Great
+Yarmouth") reported it as still found under old walls at Gorleston, "but
+rarer than formerly," and it is only in recent years that it has been
+exterminated, owing to building operations in that locality.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_P_122" id="Footnote_P_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_P_122"><span class="label">[P]</span></a> This letter, evidently a copy as shown by the heading "My
+father to Dr. Meret," is in the writing of Dr. Edwd. Browne.</p></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">[MS. SLOANE 1830. FOL. 39-40.]<a name="merrett_2" id="merrett_2"></a></p>
+
+<p class="center">No. II.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fol. 39.</i>]</p>
+
+<p class="center">"<i>My second letter to Dr Meret Aug xiiii 1668.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Honord Sr I receiued your courteous letter &amp; am sorry some diuersions
+have so long delayed this my second vnto you. You are very exact in the
+account of the fungi. I have met with two,<a name="FNanchor_106_123" id="FNanchor_106_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_123" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> which I have not found
+in any Author, of which I have sent you a rude draught inclosed. The
+first an elegant fungus Ligneus found in an hollow sallowe I haue one of
+them by mee butt without a very good opportunitie dare not send it
+fearing it should bee broken vnto some it seemed to resemble some noble
+or princely ornament of the head &amp; so might bee called fungus Regius
+vnto others a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span> turret, top of a cupola or Lanterne of a building &amp; so
+might bee named fungus pterygoides, pinnacularis or Lanterniformis you
+may name it as you please. The second fungus Ligneus teres Antliarum or
+fungus ligularis longissimus consisting [of <i>crossed out</i>] or made of
+many wooddy strings about the bignesse of round poynts or Laces some
+about half a yard long shooting in a bushie forme from the trees wch
+serue vnderground for pumpes. I have obserued diuers especially in
+norwich where wells are sunck deep for pumpes.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_106_123" id="Footnote_106_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_123"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> Dr. Plowright informs me that "it is impossible to say
+with certainty what the first named Fungus is; the description suggests
+some form of Polyporus perhaps, <i>P. varius,</i> which is a ligneous species
+and occurs frequently on willows in Norfolk. The second is the abortive
+form of <i>Polyporus squamosus</i>, which is well figured by many of the
+older botanists, for instance under the name of <i>Boletus rangiferinus</i>,
+by Bolton, t. 138, and <i>Boletus squamosus</i>, var. <i>rangiferinus</i>, by
+Hooker, 'Flora Londinensis,' new series. In many cases no pileus at all
+is formed and it used then to be referred to Clavaria." The Phalloides
+is <i>Phallus impudicus</i>, L., a very common species in this county and
+even occurring in some of the city gardens where its exceedingly
+offensive odour renders it very undesirable. Fungus rotundus is the
+well-known <i>Lycoperdon giganteum</i>, Fr., which sometimes reaches a very
+large size.</p></div>
+
+<p>The fungus phalloides found not farre from norwich large &amp; very fetid
+answering the description of Hadrianus junius I have a part of one dryed
+by mee.</p>
+
+<p>Fungus rotundus maior I haue found about x inches in Diameter &amp; half
+[<i>sic</i>, have?] half a one dryed by mee.</p>
+
+<p>Another small paper containes the rude draughts of fibulĉ marinĉ
+pellucidĉ, [<i><a href="#Footnote_90_105">see Note 90</a></i>] or sea buttons a kind of squalder &amp; referring
+to vrtica marina which I haue obserued in great numbers by yarmouth
+after a flood &amp; easterly winds. They resemble pure crystall buttons
+chamfered or welted on the sides with 2 small holes at the ends. They
+cannot bee sent for the included water or thinne gelly soon runneth from
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Vrtica marina minor jonstoni [<i><a href="#Footnote_90_105">see Note 90</a></i>] I haue often found on this
+coast. [Continued on fol. 39 <i>verso</i>.]</p>
+
+<p>Physsalus [<i><a href="#Footnote_89_104">see Note 89</a></i>] I haue often found also I haue one dryed but
+it hath lost its shape &amp; colour.</p>
+
+<p>Galei &amp; caniculĉ [<i><a href="#Footnote_56_68">see Note 56</a></i>] are often found I haue a fish hanged up
+in my yard of 2 yards long taken among the Herrings at yarmouth which is
+the Canis carcharias alius Johnstoni. Tab. vi fig. 6.</p>
+
+<p>Lupus marinus you mention upon an handsome experiment butt I find it not
+in the catalogue. This Lupus marinus or Lycostomus is often taken by our
+seamen wch fish for cods I haue had diuers brought mee. they hang up in
+many howses in Yarmouth.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Trutta marina is taken with us&mdash;a better dish than the Riuer trowt butt
+of the same bignesse.</p>
+
+<p>Loligo sepia a cuttle page 191 of your Pinax [<i><a href="#Footnote_80_94">see Note 80</a></i>] I conceiue
+worthy Sr it were best to putt them in 2 distinct lines as distinct
+species of the Molles. The loligo, calamare or sleue I haue often found
+cast up on the seashoare &amp; some haue been brought mee by fishermen of
+aboue [20 <i>crossed out</i>] twentie pound wayet.</p>
+
+<p>Among the fishes of our Norwich riuer wee scarce reckon salmons [<i><a href="#Footnote_92_107">see
+Note 92</a></i>] yet some are yearly taken. butt all taken in the Riuer or
+coast haue the end of the lower jaw very much hooked which enters a
+great way into the upper jaw like a socket. you may find the same though
+not in figure if you please to read Johnstonus fol 101 I am not
+satisfied with the conceit of some authors there that is [it?] is a
+difference of male and female for all ours are thus formed. The fish is
+thicker than [oth <i>crossed out</i>] ordinarie salmons and very much &amp; more
+largely spotted whether not rather Beccard gallorum or Anchorago
+Scaligeri I haue bothe draught &amp; head of one dryed either of wch you may
+command.</p>
+
+<p>Scyllarus or cancellus in turbine tis probable you have [<i><a href="#Footnote_84_99">see Note 84</a></i>].
+haue you cancellus in nerite a small testaceous found upon this coast.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 40.</i>] Haue you mullus ruber asper [<i><a href="#Footnote_63_75">see Note 63</a></i>].</p>
+
+<p>Haue [you] piscis octangularis Bivormii?<a name="FNanchor_Q_124" id="FNanchor_Q_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_Q_124" class="fnanchor">[Q]</a> [<i><a href="#Footnote_66_79">see Note 66</a></i>, also pp. 65
+and 87 <i>infra</i>].</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_Q_124" id="Footnote_Q_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_Q_124"><span class="label">[Q]</span></a> Thus in the MS., but Browne seems to have intended to write
+Bicornis Vormii, and accidentally to have run the two words together
+[<i>see</i> <a href="#Page_41">p. 41</a> <i>supra</i>].</p></div>
+
+<p>vermes marini larger than earthwormes [<i><a href="#Footnote_91_106">see Note 91</a></i>] digged out of the
+sea sand about 2 foot deepe at an ebbe water for bayte they are
+discouered by a little hole or sinking of the sand at the top aboue
+them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Haue you that handsome colourd [bird <i>crossed out</i>] jay [<i><a href="#Footnote_49_60">see Note 49</a></i>]
+answering the description of Garrulus Argentoratensis &amp; may be called
+the parret jay I haue one that was killed upon a tree about 5 yeares
+ago.</p>
+
+<p>Haue you a may chitt a small dark gray bird [<i><a href="#Footnote_29_39">see Note 29</a></i>] about the
+bignesse of a stint wch cometh about may &amp; stayeth butt a moneth. a bird
+of exceeding fattnesse and accounted a daintie dish. they are
+plentifully taken in marshland and about wisbich.</p>
+
+<p>Haue you a [caprimulgus or <i>written above</i>] dorhawke a bird as bigge as
+[a] pigeon [<i><a href="#Footnote_42_53">see Note 42</a></i>] with a wide throat bill as little as a
+titmous &amp; white fethers in the tayle &amp; paned like an hawke.</p>
+
+<p>Succinum rarò occurrit<a name="FNanchor_107_125" id="FNanchor_107_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_125" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> pag 291 of yours. [Should be p. 219] not so
+rarely on the coast of norfolk. tis usually found in small peeces [butt
+<i>crossed out</i>] sometimes in peeces of a pound wayght. I haue one by mee<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+fat &amp; fayre of x ounces wayght&mdash;jet more often found I haue an handsom
+peece of xii ounces in wayet.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_107_125" id="Footnote_107_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_125"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> Amber, writes Mr. Clement Reid, in a paper contributed by
+him to the "Trans. Norf. and Nor. Nat. Soc." (iii., p. 601), "is found
+on the Norfolk coast, usually mixed with the seaweed thrown up by the
+Spring gales," but is very rarely found in place; as much as three or
+four pounds are annually gathered near Cromer. The quality, Mr. Rein
+says, is very good, but the dark transparent lumps are most generally
+found. In a subsequent paper (<i>op. cit.</i>, iv., p. 248) he enumerates
+seven species of insects which have been found enclosed, and in a third
+communication mentions an eighth. Mr. A. S. Ford, as the result of an
+examination of a collection of East-coast Amber made at Yarmouth (<i>op.
+cit.</i>, v., p. 92), adds one species of Hymenoptera, three of Coleoptera,
+two of Orthoptera, with some Araneida, and remains of vegetable
+substances which had not been identified.
+</p><p>
+The Jet found on the Norfolk coast differs considerably from the Whitby
+Jet, and Mr. Reid, "Geology of the Country Round Cromer" (p. 133),
+believes that in all probability it was originally derived from Lower
+Tertiary beds under the North Sea, a few miles from the present coast.
+Mr. Savin estimates the average annual find of Jet near Cromer at from
+ten to twenty pounds.
+</p><p>
+The doctor does not display his usual acumen when he rejects the
+"ancient" opinion as to the vegetable origin of Amber, see
+<i>Pseudodoxia</i>, book ii., chap. iv.; also letter from Earl of Yarmouth to
+T. B. (Wilkin Edit. i., p. 411).</p></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">No. III.<a name="merrett_3" id="merrett_3"></a></p>
+
+<p class="center">[<span class="smcap">Fol.</span> 40 <i>verso</i>.]</p>
+
+<p class="center">"<i>My third letter Sept xiii.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Sr I receaued your courteous Letter and with all respects I now agayne
+salute you.</p>
+
+<p>The mola piscis is almost yearely taken on our coast [<i><a href="#Footnote_58_70">see Note 58</a></i>]
+this [last <i>crossed out</i>] year one was taken of about 2 hundred pounds
+wayght diuers of them I haue opened &amp; haue found many lyce sticking
+close vnto thier gills whereof I send you some.</p>
+
+<p>In your pinax I find onocrotalus or pellican [<i><a href="#Footnote_25_35">see Note 25</a></i>] whether you
+meane those at St. James or others brought ouer or such as haue been
+taken or killed heere I knowe not. I haue one hangd up in my howse wch
+was shott in a fenne ten miles of about 4 yeares ago and because it was
+so rare some conjectured it might bee one of those which belonged vnto
+the King &amp; flewe away.</p>
+
+<p>Ciconia rarò hue aduolat. I haue seen two [<i><a href="#Footnote_14_23">see Note 14</a></i>] one in a
+watery marsh 8 miles of, another shott whose case is yet to bee seen.
+[<a href="#APPENDIX_D">See Appendix D.</a>]</p>
+
+<p>Vitulus marinus. <i>In tractibus borealibus et Scotia</i> [<i><a href="#Footnote_53_65">see Note 53</a></i>]. no
+raritie upon the coast of Norfolk at a lowe water I haue knowne them
+taken asleep vnder the cliffes. diuers haue been brought vnto mee. our
+seale is different from the Mediterranean seale. as hauing a rounder
+head a shorter and stronger body.</p>
+
+<p>Rana piscatrix I haue often known taken on our coast &amp; some very large
+[<i><a href="#Footnote_59_71">see Note 59</a></i>].</p>
+
+<p>Xiphias or gladius piscis or sword fish wee haue in our seas [<i><a href="#Footnote_55_67">see Note
+55</a></i>]. I haue the head of one which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> was taken not long ago entangled in
+the Herring netts the sword aboue 2 foot in length.</p>
+
+<p>Among the whales you may very well putt in the spermacetus [<i><a href="#Footnote_51_63">see Note
+51</a></i>] or that remarkably peculiar whale which so aboundeth in spermaceti.
+about twelve years ago wee had one cast up on our shoare neer welles wch
+I discribed in a peculiar chapter in the last edition of [<i>Fol. 41</i>] my
+pseudodoxia epidemica. another was diuers yeares before cast up at
+Hunstanton. both whose heads are yet to bee seen.</p>
+
+<p>Ophidion or at least ophidion nostras [<i><a href="#Footnote_69_82">see Note 69</a></i>] com&#772;only called
+a sting fish hauing a small prickley finne running all along the back, &amp;
+another a good way on the belly, with little black spotts at the bottom
+of the back finne if the fishermens hands bee touched or scrached with
+this venemous fish they grow paynfull and swell the figure hereof I send
+you in colours they are com&#772;on about cromer see Schoneveldeus de
+Ophidiis.</p>
+
+<p>Piscis octogonius or octangularis answering the discription of
+Cataphractus Schoneveldei [<i><a href="#Footnote_66_79">see Note 66</a></i>] only his is discribed with the
+finnes spread &amp; when it was fresh taken &amp; a large one howeuer this may
+bee nostras I send you one butt I haue seen much larger which fishermen
+haue brought mee.</p>
+
+<p>Physsalus [<i><a href="#Footnote_89_104">see Note 89</a></i>]. I send one which hath been long opened &amp;
+shrunck &amp; lost the colour when I tooke it upon the sea shoare it was
+full &amp; plump answering the figure &amp; discription of Rondeletius. there is
+also a like figure at the end of [Rondeletius <i>crossed out</i>] muffetus I
+haue kept them aliue butt obserued no motion [butt <i>crossed out</i>] except
+of contraction and dilation when it is fresh the prickles or brisles are
+of a brisk green &amp; Amethest colours&mdash;some call it a sea mous.</p>
+
+<p>Our mullet is white &amp; imberbis [<i><a href="#Footnote_63_75">see Note 63</a></i>] butt wee haue also a
+mullis barbatus ruber miniaceus or cinnaberinus somewhat rough &amp; butt
+drye meat. there is of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> them maior &amp; minor resembling the figures in
+Johnstonus tab xvii Rotbart.</p>
+
+<p>Of the Acus marinus or needle fishes [<i><a href="#Footnote_64_76">see Note 64</a></i>] I haue obserued 3
+sorts. The Acus Aristotelis called heere an Addercock Acus maior or
+Garfish with a green verdigris backbone the other saurus Acui similis
+Acus sauroides or sauriformis as it may be called much answering to the
+discription of saurus Rondeletij in the hinder part much resembling a
+makerell opening one I found not the backbone green Johnstonus writes
+nearest to it in his Acus minor. I send you the head of one dryed butt
+the bill is broken I haue the whole draught in picture. this kind is
+more rare then the other wch are com&#772;on &amp; is a rounder fish.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 41 verso.</i>] Vermes marini are large wormes [<i><a href="#Footnote_91_106">see Note 91</a></i>] found
+2 foot deep in the sea sands &amp; are digged out at an ebbe for bayt.</p>
+
+<p>The Avicula Maialis or may chitt [<i><a href="#Footnote_29_39">see Note 29</a></i>] is a litle dark gray
+bird somewhat bigger then a stint which com&#772;eth in may or the later
+end of April &amp; stayeth about a moneth. A marsh bird the legges &amp; feet
+black without an heele the bill black about 3 quarters of an inch long
+they grow very fatt &amp; are accounted a dayntie dish.</p>
+
+<p>A Dorhawke a bird not full so bigge as a pigeon [<i><a href="#Footnote_42_53">see Note 42</a></i>] somewhat
+of a woodcock colour &amp; paned somewhat like an hawke with a bill not much
+bigger then that of a Titmouse [&amp; very wide throat <i>added above</i>] known
+by the name of a dorhawke or prayer upon beetles, as though it were some
+kind of accipiter muscarius. in brief this accipiter cantharophagus or
+dorhawke [<i>a word smeared out</i>] is <i>Avis Rostratula gutturosa</i>, <i>quasi
+coaxans</i>, <i>scarabĉis vescens</i>, <i>sub vesperam volans</i>, <i>ouum
+speciosissim&#363;</i> [<i>word smeared</i>] <i>excludens</i>. I haue had many of them &amp;
+am sorry I have not one to send you I spoake to a friend to shoote one
+butt I doubt they are gone ouer.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>of the vpupa [<i><a href="#Footnote_35_46">see Note 35</a></i>] diuers have been brought mee &amp; some I haue
+obserued in these parts as I trauuyled about.</p>
+
+<p>The Aquila Gesneri I sent [aliue <i>added above</i>] to Dr. Scarburg [<i><a href="#Footnote_3_11">see
+Note 3</a></i>] who told mee it was kept in the colledge it was brought mee out
+of Ireland. I kept it 2 yeares in my howse I am sorry I haue only one
+fether of it to send you.</p>
+
+<p>A shooing horn or Barker from the figure of the bill &amp; barking note
+[<i><a href="#Footnote_38_49">see Note 38</a></i>] a long made bird of white &amp; blakish colour finne footed,
+a marsh bird &amp; not rare some times of the yeare in marshland. it may
+upon vewe bee called Recuruirostra nostras or Auoseta much resembling
+the Auosettĉ [species <i>crossed out</i>] species in Johnstonus tab (54). I
+send you the head in picture</p>
+
+<p>[A <i>smeared out</i>] stone curliews I haue kept in large cages [<i><a href="#Footnote_37_48">see Note
+37</a></i>] the[y] haue a prettie shrill note, not hard to bee got in some
+parts of norfolk.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 42</i>] Haue you Scorpius marinus Schoneueldei [<i><a href="#Footnote_68_81">see Note 68</a></i>]</p>
+
+<p>haue you putt in the musca Tulipar&#363; muscata<a name="FNanchor_108_126" id="FNanchor_108_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_126" class="fnanchor">[108]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_108_126" id="Footnote_108_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_126"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> It seems impossible to identify this insect; <i>Merodon
+narcissi</i> has been suggested, but Mr. Verrall, whom I consulted says,
+"certainly not <i>Merodon</i>, which probably was not known in Britain until
+about 1870," and suggests the small fly <i>Nemopoda</i>. Mr. Bloomfield
+writes that the only fly of which he has seen any mention as having a
+musky or "excellent fragrant odour" is <i>Sepsis cynipsea</i>, which Kirby
+and Spence state on the authority of De Geer, "emits a fragrant odour of
+beaum" (balm); this species is very nearly allied to Nemopoda. Several
+Bees, for instance the Genus <i>Prosopis</i>, emit a strong scent of balm,
+and it is possible that Browne may have used the term "fly" in what is
+even now a popular sense, and that really some species of Bee may have
+called forth his remarks. It will be noticed that at <a href="#Page_74">p. 74</a> he speaks of
+it as a "small beelike flye."</p></div>
+
+<p>That bird which I sayd much answered the discription of Garrulus
+Argentoratensis [<i><a href="#Footnote_49_60">see Note 49</a></i>] I send you it was shott on a tree x
+miles of 4 yeares ago. it may well bee called the Parret Jay or Garrulus
+psittacoides speciosus. the colours are much faded. if you haue it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+before I should bee content to haue it agayne otherwise you may please
+to keep it.</p>
+
+<p>Garrulus Bohemicus<a name="FNanchor_109_127" id="FNanchor_109_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_127" class="fnanchor">[109]</a> probably you haue a prettie handsome bird with
+the fine cinnaberin tipps of the wings some wch I haue seen heere haue
+the tayle tipt with yellowe wch is not in the discription.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_109_127" id="Footnote_109_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_127"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> Mr. Stevenson, whom very little relating to Norfolk
+Ornithology escaped, was well acquainted with Sir Thomas Browne's works,
+yet has in his "Birds of Norfolk" unaccountably overlooked this passage,
+and remarks that Browne does not appear to have noticed this species; he
+however not only refers to it as above, but evidently describes it from
+his personal observation. It is a very uncertain winter visitor to this
+county, but on rare occasions makes its appearance in considerable
+flocks. A remarkable instance of this occurred in the winter of 1866-7,
+when Mr. Stevenson, as the result of the examination of a very large
+series, contributed an exhaustive paper on the plumage of this handsome
+bird to the "Transactions of the Norf. and Nor. Nat. Soc.," iii., pp.
+326-344.</p></div>
+
+<p>I haue also sent you urtica mas [<i><a href="#Footnote_105_121">see Note 105</a></i>] which I lately gathered
+at Golston by yarmouth where I found it to growe also 25 yeares ago. of
+the stella marina Testacea which I sent you [<i><a href="#Footnote_87_102">see Note 87</a></i>] I do not
+find the figure in any booke.</p>
+
+<p>I send you a few flies<a name="FNanchor_110_128" id="FNanchor_110_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_128" class="fnanchor">[110]</a> which some unhealthful yeares about the
+first part of september I haue obserued so numerous upon plashes in the
+marshes &amp; marish diches that in a small compasse it were no hard matter
+to gather a peck of them I brought some what my box would hold butt the
+greatest part are scatterd lost or giuen away for memorie sake I writ on
+my box muscĉ palustres Autumnales [<a href="#APPENDIX_D">See Appendix D.</a>]</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_110_128" id="Footnote_110_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_128"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> Mr. Verrall assures me that even in the present day it is
+quite impossible to recognise the species of Diptera described by
+persons unacquainted with the particular group, and that Browne's
+remarks would apply to hundreds of species. It is possible that an
+<i>Ephydra</i> may be meant. This genus of small flies, says Mr. Verrall,
+abounds in such places as Browne describes, but it is likely that other
+species were with them.</p></div>
+
+<p>worthy Sr I shall be euer redie to serue you who am Sr your humble
+Seruant</p>
+
+<p class="rt"><span class="smcap">Tho Browne.</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Norwich, Sep 16. 1668.</i></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">No. IV.<a name="merrett_4" id="merrett_4"></a></p>
+
+<p class="center">"<i>The fourth Letter to Dr. Merrett Decemb xxix.</i>" [1668]</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 42 verso.</i>] Sr I am very joyfull that you haue recouered your
+health whereof I heartily wish the continuation for your own and the
+publick good. And I humbly thank you for the courteous present of your
+booke.<a name="FNanchor_111_129" id="FNanchor_111_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_129" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> with much delight and satisfaction I had read the same not
+once in English I must needs acknowledge your com&#772;ent more acceptable
+to me then the text which I am sure is an hard obscure peice without it.
+though I haue not been a stranger unto the vitriarie Art both in England
+and abroad.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_111_129" id="Footnote_111_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_129"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> This evidently refers to the gift of a copy of Merrett's
+Latin translation of Antonio Neri's <i>L'Arte Vetraria</i> (Firenze, 1612,
+4to), published under the title of "The Art of Glass, translated into
+English with some observations on the Author," &amp;c., in 1662, and a Latin
+edition in 1668.</p></div>
+
+<p>I perceiue you haue proceeded farre in your Pinax. These few at present
+I am bold to propose &amp; hint unto you intending God willing to salute you
+agayne.</p>
+
+<p>A paragraph might probably be annexed unto Quercus. Though wee haue not
+all the exotick oakes, nor their excretions yet these and probably more
+supercrescences productions or excretions may bee obserued in England.</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Viscum&mdash;polypodium&mdash;Juli pilulĉ&mdash;</li>
+<li>Gemmĉ foraminatĉ [formicatĉ?] folior&#363;&mdash;</li>
+<li>excrement&#363; fungosum verticibus scatens&mdash;</li>
+<li>Excrementum Lanatum&mdash;</li>
+<li>Capitula squamosa jacĉĉ ĉmula.</li>
+<li>Nodi&mdash;melleus Liquor&mdash;Tubera radicum</li>
+<li>vermibus scatentia&mdash;Muscus&mdash;Lichen&mdash;</li>
+<li>Fungus&mdash;varĉ quercinĉ.<a name="FNanchor_112_130" id="FNanchor_112_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_130" class="fnanchor">[112]</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_112_130" id="Footnote_112_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_130"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> The Rev. E. N. Bloomfield has most kindly assisted me in
+attempting to identify the Parasitic products of the Oak mentioned
+above:
+</p><p>
+<i>Viscum</i>, is doubtless the Mistletoe.
+</p><p>
+<i>Polypodium</i>, the Common Polypody Fern.
+</p><p>
+<i>Juli pilulĉ</i>: "little balls on the flower catkins." The Currant Gall,
+<i>Neurosterus baccarum</i>, which is the spring form of <i>N. lenticularis</i>;
+Oliv.
+</p><p>
+<i>Gemmĉ foraminatĉ [formicatĉ?] foliorum</i>: "pimple-like buds on the
+leaves." Leaf-galls, such as the Silky Button, <i>N. numismatis</i>, Oliv.,
+and the common Spangle, <i>N. lenticularus</i>, Oliv.
+</p><p>
+<i>Excrementum fungosum verticibus scatens</i>: "a spongy secretion bursting
+out from the ends of the shoots." The Oak Apple, <i>Biorhiza terminalis</i>,
+Fab.
+</p><p>
+<i>Excrementum lanatum</i>: the Woolly Gall, <i>Andricus ramuli</i>, L., a
+somewhat rare Gall, resembling a ball of cotton-wool.
+</p><p>
+<i>Capitula squamosa jacĉĉ ĉmula</i>: "little scaley (or imbricated) heads
+resembling the heads of Jacea" (Black Knapweed). The Artichoke Gall.
+<i>Andricus fecundatrix</i>; Htg.
+</p><p>
+<i>Nodi</i>: probably swellings of any sort, whether caused by insects or
+not.
+</p><p>
+<i>Melleus liquor</i>: Honey-dew, a secretion of Aphides.
+</p><p>
+<i>Tubera radicum vermibus scatentia</i>: "swollen tubers on the roots
+containing grubs;" without doubt the Root-Gall, <i>Andricus radicis</i>, Fab.
+Polythalamous Galls, often very large at the roots or on the trunk near
+the ground.
+</p><p>
+Mosses, Lichens, and Fungi, all "genuine products of the Oak," need no
+comment, but Mr. Bloomfield remarks, "How wonderfully observant Sir
+Thomas Browne must have been thus to distinguish the various galls, &amp;c.,
+and to point them out so distinctly."
+</p><p>
+Browne's contemporary, Dean Wren, seems sadly to have misunderstood the
+fructification of the Oak. In a note on Browne's remarks on the
+"Miseltoe" (<i>Pseudodoxia</i>, book ii., chap. vi.), he says, "Arboreous
+excrescences of the Oak are soe many as may raise the greatest wonder.
+Besides the gall, which is his proper fruite, hee shootes out oakerns,
+i.e., <i>ut nunc vocamus</i> (acornes), and oakes apples, and polypodye, and
+moss; five several sorts of excrescences." See also letter to his son,
+Dr. Edward Browne, in which Sir Thomas Browne says that "wee haue little
+or none of <i>viscus quercinus</i>, or miselto of the oake, in this country;
+butt I beleeve they have in the woods and parks of
+Oxfordshyre."&mdash;Wilkin, i, p. 279.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 43.</i>] Capillaris marina sparsa fucus capillaris marinus sparsus
+sive capillitius marinus or sea periwigge.<a name="FNanchor_113_131" id="FNanchor_113_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_131" class="fnanchor">[113]</a> strings of this are
+often found on the sea shoare. but this is the full figure I haue seen 3
+times as large.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_113_131" id="Footnote_113_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_131"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> In Sir Thomas Browne's time the Hydrozoa were not
+distinguished from the Corallines, and both were regarded as vegetable
+growths. It is almost impossible to determine from his vague
+descriptions even to which section those mentioned belong, but although
+our exposed coast-line is not favourable to such growths, there are a
+few common species of Hydroid Zoophytes which abound here, and to these,
+fortunately, Browne's specimens appear to belong. What he calls the
+"Sea-perriwig" is doubtless <i>Sertularia operculata</i>, Lin., sometimes
+known as "Sea-hair," a very common and widely dispersed species.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>I send you also [<i>several words smeared out</i>] a little elegant sea
+plant<a name="FNanchor_114_132" id="FNanchor_114_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_132" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> which I pulled from a greater bush thereof which I haue
+resembling the back bone of a fish. Fucus marinus vertebratus pisciculi
+spinum referens Icthyorachius or what you thinck fitt.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_114_132" id="Footnote_114_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_132"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> The little "Fucus," which he compares to the backbone of
+a fish, is probably <i>Halecium halecinum</i>, Lin., the "Herring-bone Coral"
+of Ellis, one of the most common Zoophytes on our coast. The "Abies," of
+which he suggests at <a href="#Page_75">p. 75</a> that this may be a "difference," is most
+likely <i>Sertularia abietina</i>, Lin., which this species resembles, but is
+less regularly pinnate; this may have led him to suppose that the
+"sprouts, wings, or leaves" may have fallen off. The <i>Fucus marinus</i> is
+most likely <i>Fucus serratus</i>.</p></div>
+
+<p>And though perhaps it bee not worth the taking notice of formicĉ
+arenariĉ marinĉ or at least muscus formicarius marinus<a name="FNanchor_115_133" id="FNanchor_115_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_133" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> yet I
+obserue great numbers by the seashoare and at yarmouth an open sandy
+coast, in a sunny day many large and winged ones may bee obserued upon &amp;
+rising out of the [shoare <i>crossed out</i>] wet sands when the tide falls
+away.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_115_133" id="Footnote_115_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_133"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> Swarms of Ants and Flies are no uncommon sight along the
+seashore at certain seasons of the year, and under the conditions which
+Browne describes. The Pagets ("Nat. Hist. of Great Yarmouth") mention
+that the fly, <i>Actora ĉstuum</i>, is common on the beach at high-water
+mark; but Mr. Verrall writes me that there are many others likely to be
+thus met with, such as <i>Orygma luctuosa</i> and <i>Limosina zosterĉ</i>, widely
+divergent species. In his "Journal of a Tour" into Derbyshire, Dr.
+Edward Browne, in crossing the sands of the Wash, mentions his
+satisfaction at the absence of the swarms of flies "with which all the
+fenne countrys are extremely pestered." <i><a href="#Footnote_110_128">See also Note 110 supra.</a></i></p></div>
+
+<p>Notonecton an insect that swimmeth on its back [<i><a href="#Footnote_98_113">see Note 98</a></i>] &amp;
+mentioned by Muffettus may be obserued with us.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I send you a white Reed chock<a name="FNanchor_116_134" id="FNanchor_116_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_134" class="fnanchor">[116]</a> by name some kind of Junco or litle
+sort thereof I haue had another very white when fresh.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_116_134" id="Footnote_116_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_134"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> It is impossible to form an idea as to what is here
+intended. I know of no <i>Juncus</i> which would answer the description.
+Professor Newton reminds me that "Junco" was a common name for "a bird
+that inhabited reeds," and was loosely applied, some old authors taking
+it to be the Reed Thrush (<i>i.e.</i>, the Great Reed-Warbler of these days),
+and others, the Reed-Sparrow or Bunting. But bearing in mind Browne's
+practice of referring to Jonston, it seems possible that the latter's
+<i>Junco</i> may be here intended, and that, as the figure (pl. 53) shows, is
+a small Sandpiper, almost certainly the Dunlin. It is lettered "Junco
+Bellonii," but this he must have taken second-hand from Aldrovandus,
+since Belon never used the word "Junco" in this connexion, but called it
+"Sch&oelig;niclus" or "Alouette-de-mer"&mdash;terms rendered <i>Junco</i> by
+Aldrovandus (iii. p. 487). Charleton took the same view in his
+"Onomasticon" (p. 108), published in 1668 (the year assigned as that of
+this letter), stating that it was so-called because "in juncis libenter
+degat," and identifying it with the <i>Alouette-de-mer</i> of the French, and
+the English "Stint, or Sparr, or Perr." Gilbert White appears to have
+thus applied the term (<i>cf.</i> "Life" by Rashleigh Holt-White, i. pp. 186,
+194, 250). In one place he says, "No. five is Ray's <i>Junco</i> and the
+<i>Turdus arundinaceus</i> of Linn." That "Junco" is the name of a bird is
+absolutely certain, but the context, "very white when fresh," does not
+seem to admit of explanation.</p></div>
+
+<p>Also the draught of a sea fowle called a sherewater [<i><a href="#Footnote_17_26">see Note 17</a></i>]
+billed like a cormorant, feirce &amp; snapping like it upon any touch. I
+kept 2 of them aliue 5 weekes cramming them with fish refusing of
+themselues to feed on anything &amp; wearied with cramming them they liued
+17 dayes without food. They often fly about fishing [ves <i>crossed out</i>]
+shipps when they cleans their fish &amp; throwe away the offell. so that it
+may bee referred to the Lari as Larus niger gutture albido rostro
+adunco.</p>
+
+<p>Gossander videtur esse puphini species [<i>Pinax</i>, p. 184]. worthy Sr that
+wch we call a gossander [<i><a href="#Footnote_19_28">see Note 19</a></i>] &amp; is no rare fowle among us is a
+large well colourd &amp; marked diuing fowle most answering the [mer
+<i>crossed out</i>] Merganser. it may bee like the puffin in fattnesse and
+[Ranknesse <i>crossed out</i>] Ranknesse butt no fowle is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> I think like the
+puffin differenced from all others by a peculiar kind of bill</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol 43 verso.</i>] Barganders [<i><a href="#Footnote_18_27">see Note 18</a></i>] not so rare as Turn
+[Turner] makes them comm&#772;on in Norfolk so abounding in vast &amp; spatious
+warrens.</p>
+
+<p>If you haue not yet putt in Larus minor or a sterne [<i><a href="#Footnote_13_22">see Note 13</a></i>] it
+would not bee omitted, comm&#772;on about broad waters and plashes not
+farre from the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Haue you a Yarwhelp, Barker, or Latrator [<i><a href="#Footnote_39_50">see Note 39</a></i>] a marsh bird
+about the bignesse of a Godwitt</p>
+
+<p>Haue you Dentalia [<i><a href="#Footnote_83_98">see Note 83</a></i>] which are small vniualue testacea
+whereof sometimes wee find some on the seashoare</p>
+
+<p>Haue you putt in nerites another little Testaceum which wee haue [<i><a href="#Footnote_83_98">see
+Note 83</a></i>].</p>
+
+<p>Haue you an Apiaster a small bird calld a Beebird.<a name="FNanchor_117_135" id="FNanchor_117_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_135" class="fnanchor">[117]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_117_135" id="Footnote_117_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_135"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> Probably the Spotted Flycatcher is here referred to, the
+prefix not being used in a technical sense; it is known here as the
+Beam-bird, either of which names may be a corruption of the other.
+Another Norfolk name for this bird is the Wall-bird.</p></div>
+
+<p>Haue you morinellus marinus or the sea Dotterell better colourd then the
+other &amp; somewhat lesse [<i><a href="#Footnote_28_38">see Note 28</a></i>].</p>
+
+<p>I send you a draught of 2 small birds the bigger called a Chipper or
+Betulĉ Carptor [<i><a href="#Footnote_48_59">see Note 48</a></i>] cropping the first sproutings of the
+Birch trees &amp; comes early in the spring. The other a very small bird
+lesse than the certhya or ox eyecreeper called a whinne bird</p>
+
+<p>I send you the draught of a fish taken sometimes in our seas [<i><a href="#Footnote_69_82">see Note
+69</a></i>]. pray compare it with Draco minor Johnstoni. this draught was taken
+from the fish dried &amp; so the prickly finnes less discernible.</p>
+
+<p>There is a very small kind of smelt [<i><a href="#Footnote_71_84">see Note 71</a></i>] butt in shape &amp;
+smell like the other taken in good plenty about [wh <i>crossed out</i>] Lynne
+&amp; called Primmes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Though Scombri Or Makerells [<i><a href="#Footnote_73_86">see Note 73</a></i>] bee a com&#772;on fish yet [in
+<i>crossed out</i>] our seas afford sometimes strange &amp; large ones as I haue
+heard from fishermen &amp; others. &amp; this yeare 1668 one was taken at
+Lestoffe an ell long by measure &amp; presented to a Gentleman a friend of
+myne.</p>
+
+<p>Musca Tuliparum moschata is a small beelike flye [<i><a href="#Footnote_108_126">see Note 108</a></i>] of an
+excellent fragrant odour which I haue often found at the bottom of the
+flowers of Tuleps.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 44.</i>] In the little box I send a peece of vesicaria or seminaria
+marina [yo <i>crossed out</i>] cutt of from a good full one found on the sea
+shoare [<i><a href="#Footnote_91_106">see Note 91</a></i>].</p>
+
+<p>Wee haue [<i>two or three words smeared out here</i>] also an eiectment of
+the sea very com&#772;on which is fanago [<i><a href="#Footnote_91_106">see Note 91</a></i>] whereof some very
+large.</p>
+
+<p>I thank you for communicating the account of Thunder &amp; lightening some
+strange effects thereof I haue found heere butt this last yeere wee had
+litle or no Thunder &amp; lightening. [<i>No signature.</i>]</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">No. V.<a name="merrett_5" id="merrett_5"></a></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Dr. Browne To Merrett.</span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>[This letter which was originally printed in the "Posthumous
+Works," will be found in MS. Sloane 1911-13, fol. 106, where it
+is headed in pencil as addressed to Sir Wm. Dugdale, but it was
+restored to its proper place by Wilkin in the 1836 Edition of
+the Works, i., p. 404.]</p></div>
+
+<p>Honoured Sir</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 106.</i>] I am sorry I have had [diuersions <i>above</i>] of such
+necessitie, as to hinder my more sudden salute since I receiued your
+last. I thank you for the sight of the <i>Sperma Ceti</i>, and such kind of
+effects from [Lightning &amp; Thunder <i>written above</i>] I have known and
+about 4 yeares ago about this towne when I with many others<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> saw
+fire-balls fly &amp; go of when they met with resistance, and one carried
+away the tiles and boards of a leucomb Window of my owne howse, being
+higher then the neighbour howses &amp; breaking agaynst it with a report
+like a good canon. I set downe that occurrence in this citty &amp; country,
+&amp; haue it somewhere [in <i>crossed out</i>] amongst my papers, and fragments
+of a woman's hat that was shiuered into pieces of the bignesse of a
+groat. I haue still by mee a little of the spermaceti of our whale, as
+also the oyle &amp; balsome wch I made with the oyle &amp; spermaceti. Our whale
+was worth 500 lib. my Apothecarie got about fiftie pounds in one sale of
+a quantitie of sperm [<i><a href="#Footnote_51_63">see Note 51</a></i>].</p>
+
+<p>I made enumeration of the excretions of the oake which might bee
+obserued in england [<i><a href="#Footnote_112_130">see Note 112</a></i>], because I conceived they would bee
+most obseruable if you set them downe together, not minding whether
+there were any addition by excrementum fungosum vermiculis scatens I
+only meant an vsuall excretion, soft &amp; fungous at first &amp; pale &amp;
+sometimes couered in part with a fresh red growing close vnto the
+sprouts. first full of maggots in little woodden cells which afterwards
+turne into little reddish browne or bay flies. of the tubera indica
+vermiculis scatentia I send you a peece, they are as bigg as good
+Tennis-balls &amp; ligneous.</p>
+
+<p>The little elegant fucus [<i><a href="#Footnote_114_132">see Note 114</a></i>] may come in as a difference of
+the abies, being somewhat like it, as also unto the 4 corrallium in
+Gerard of the sprouts whereof I could never find any sprouts wings Or
+leaves as in the abies whether fallen of I knowe not, though I call'd it
+icthyorachius or pisciculi spinam referens yet pray do you call it how
+you please I send you now the figure of a quercus mar. [inus] or alga
+which I found by the seashoare differing from the com&#772;on [<i><a href="#Footnote_114_132">see Note
+114</a></i>] as being denticulated &amp; in one place there seemes to bee the
+beginning of some flower pod or seedvessell.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 106 verso.</i>] A draught of the morinellus marinus or sea doterell I
+now send you. the bill should not have been so black &amp; the leggs more
+red, [<i><a href="#Footnote_28_38">see Note 28</a></i>] &amp; [the <i>crossed out</i>] a greater eye of dark red in
+the feathers of wing and back: it is lesse &amp; differently colourd from
+the com&#772;on dotterell, wch [wee haue <i>crossed out</i>] cometh to us about
+March &amp; September. these sea-dotterells are often shot near the sea.</p>
+
+<p>A yarewhelp or barker [<i>some words smeared <ins class="tn" title="Closed bracket added.">out</ins></i>] [<i><a href="#Footnote_39_50">see Note 39</a></i>] a
+marsh-bird the bill 2 inches long the legges about that length the bird
+of a brown or russet colour.</p>
+
+<p>That which is knowne by the name of a bee-bird [<i><a href="#Footnote_117_135">see Note 117</a></i>] is a
+litle dark gray bird I hope to get one for you.</p>
+
+<p>That whch I call'd a betulĉ carptor &amp; should rather have calld it Alni
+carptor [<i><a href="#Footnote_48_59">see Note 48</a></i>] whereof I sent a rude draught. it feeds upon
+alder [budds mucaments or <i>written above</i>] seeds which grow plentifully
+heere &amp; they fly in little flocks.</p>
+
+<p>That [calld by some a <i>written above</i>] whin-bird is a kind of ox eye
+butt the shining yellow spot on the back of the head [<i><a href="#Footnote_48_59">see Note 48</a></i>] is
+scarce to bee well imitated by a pensill.</p>
+
+<p>I confess for such litle birds I am much unsatisfied on the names giuen
+to many by countrymen, and vncertaine what to giue them myself, or to
+what classes of authors cleerly to reduce them. surely there are many
+found among us whch are not described; &amp; therefore such whch you cannot
+well reduce may (if at all) bee set downe after the exacter nomination
+of small birds as yet of uncertain classe or knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>I present you with a draught of a water-fowl not com&#772;on &amp; none of our
+fowlers can name it [<i>see</i> <a href="#Page_79">p. 79</a> <i>infra</i>] the bill could not bee exactly
+expressed by a coale or black chalk, whereby the litle incuruitie [at
+the end<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span> <i>written above</i>] of the upper bill &amp; small recurvitie of the
+lower is not discerned. the wings are very short, &amp; it is finne footed.
+the bill is strong &amp; sharp, if you name it not I am uncertaine what to
+call it pray consider this Anatula or mergulus melanoleucus rostro
+acuto.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 107.</i>] I send you also the heads of mustela or mergus mustelaris
+mas. et fĉmina [<i><a href="#Footnote_21_30">see Note 21</a></i>] called a wesel from some resemblance in
+the head especially of the female wch is brown or russet not black &amp;
+white like the male. &amp; from their praying quality upon small fish. I
+have found small eeles small perches &amp; small muscles in their stomacks.
+Have you a sea phaysant [<i><a href="#Footnote_22_32">see Note 22</a></i>] so com&#772;only calld from
+resemblance of an hen phaisant in the head &amp; eyes &amp; spotted marks on the
+wings &amp; back. &amp; wth a small bluish flat bill, tayle longer than other
+ducks, long winges crossing over the tayle like those of a long winged
+hawke.</p>
+
+<p>Have you taken notice of a breed of porci solidi pedes.<a name="FNanchor_118_136" id="FNanchor_118_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_136" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> I first
+obserued them above xx yeares ago &amp; they are still among us. [<a href="#Page_80">See also
+p. 80</a> <i>infra</i>.]</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_118_136" id="Footnote_118_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_136"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> Mr. Darwin writes ("Anim. and Plants under
+Domestication," i., p. 78), that from the time of Aristotle to the
+present day, Solid-hoofed Swine have been occasionally observed in
+various parts of the world. Dr. Coues also says that this variety seems
+to be persistent in a Texas breed. See also Professor Struthers in the
+"Edin. New Phil. Journal," April, 1863. The two distal phalanges of the
+two great toes, both front and back, in the examples described by
+Professor Struthers, were joined together, forming a single hoof-bearing
+bone. The next two phalanges were separate, and sometimes kept widely
+apart from each other by the introduction of a special ossicle. I have
+been told that about the year 1827, a breed of solid-footed swine
+existed at or near Upwell. By some it was thought that their flesh was
+not good for food because they were "uncloven." Dr. Wren, in a note to
+Browne's <i>Pseudodoxia</i> (book vi., chap. x.), says, "About Aug., 1625, at
+a farm 4 miles from Winchester, I beheld with wonder a great heard of
+swine, whole-footed, and taller than any other that ever I sawe."</p></div>
+
+<p>Our nerites or neritĉ are litle ones [<i><a href="#Footnote_83_98">see Note 83</a></i>].</p>
+
+<p>I queried whether you had dentalia [<i><a href="#Footnote_83_98">see Note 83</a></i>] becaus probably you
+might haue met with them in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span> england. I neuer found any on our shoare
+butt one brought mee a few small ones with smooth with [<i>sic</i>] small
+shells from the shoare. I shall inquire further after them.</p>
+
+<p>Urtica marina minor Johnst. tab. xviii. [<i><a href="#Footnote_90_105">see Note 90</a></i>] haue found more
+than once by the sea side.</p>
+
+<p>The hobby and the merlin would not bee omitted among hawkes the first
+coming to us in the spring the other about the autumn. Beside the ospray
+wee have a larger kind of agle, calld an erne [<i><a href="#Footnote_3_11">see Note 3</a></i>]. I haue had
+many of them.</p>
+
+<p>Worthy deare Sr, if I can do anything farther wch may bee seruiceable
+unto you you shall ever readily com&#772;and my endeauours; who am, Sr,
+Your humble &amp; very respectfull seruant,</p>
+
+<p class="rt"><span class="smcap">Tho. Browne.</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Febr 6 [1668-9.]</i><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;"><i>Norwich.</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">No. VI.<a name="merrett_6" id="merrett_6"></a></p>
+
+<p class="center">[MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS. MS. SLOANE 1847, FOL. 198.]</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>[This volume contains a Miscellaneous collection, mostly letters
+to his son Edward, and some to "Tom." The following (as all in
+the volume) is on letter-sized paper, 7-1/2 × 6 in.]</p></div>
+
+<p>Worthy Sr</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 198.</i>] Though I writ vnto you last monday. yet hauing omitted
+some few things wch I thought to have mentioned I am bold to giue you
+this trouble so soone agayne haue you putt in a sea fish calld a bleak
+[<i><a href="#Footnote_74_87">see Note 74</a></i>] a fish like an herring often taken with us and eat butt
+a more lanck &amp; thinne &amp; drye fish.</p>
+
+<p>The wild swanne or elk [<i><a href="#Footnote_8_17">see Note 8</a></i>] would not bee<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> omitted, [here
+<i>crossed out</i>] being com&#772;on in hard winters &amp; differenced from [the
+<i>crossed out</i>] our River swanns by the Aspera Arteria. [See also <a href="#Page_80">pp. 80</a>
+and <a href="#Page_83">83</a> <i>infra</i>.]</p>
+
+<p>Fulica and cotta Anglorum [<i><a href="#Footnote_23_33">see Note 23</a></i>] are different birds though
+good resemblance between them, so some doubt may bee made whether it bee
+to bee made a coote except you set it downe fulica nostras. &amp; cotta
+Anglorum I pray consider whether that waterbird whose draught I sent in
+the last box &amp; thought it might bee named Anatula or mergulus
+melanoleucos may not bee some gallinula. it hath some resemblance with
+gallina hypoleucos of Johnst Tab 32 [31] butt myne hath shorter wings by
+much &amp; the bill not so long [<i>Fol. 198 verso</i>] &amp; slender &amp; shorter leggs
+&amp; lesser &amp; so may ether be calld gallina Aquatica hypoleucos nostras or
+hypoleucos or melanoleucos Anatula or mergulus nostras.<a name="FNanchor_119_137" id="FNanchor_119_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_137" class="fnanchor">[119]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_119_137" id="Footnote_119_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_137"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> The "draught" of this bird sent to Merrett is not
+forthcoming. Professor Newton has been kind enough to send me the
+following note on this puzzling passage. "Jonston's figure (tab. 31) of
+<i>Gallina hypoleucos</i>, to which Browne says it bore some resemblance,
+undoubtedly represents what we know as the Common Sandpiper, <i>Totanus
+hypoleucus</i> or <i>Actitis hypoleuca</i>, the <i>Fysterlin</i> of the Germans of
+Jonston's time (p. 160), and <i>Fisterlein</i> or <i>Pfisterlein</i> of modern
+days. But there seems to be some strange confusion that cannot now be
+cleared, between this bird and Browne's <i>Anatula</i> or <i>Mergulus
+melanoleucos</i> [<i>see</i> <a href="#Page_76">p. 76</a> <i>ante</i>], of which some years later, he sent a
+drawing, under the latter name, to Willughby, in whose work it is
+described and figured (Lat. Ed. p. 261, Engl. 343, tab. lix.), for this
+most certainly is the Rotche or Little Auk, <i>Mergulus alle</i> of modern
+ornithology." In the next letter (<a href="#Page_81">p. 81</a>), Browne mentions that he
+encloses the draft of "Ralla aquatica" here referred to.</p></div>
+
+<p>Tis much there should be no Icon of Rallus or Ralla Aquatica I haue a
+draught of one &amp; they are found among us</p>
+
+<p>Feb xii&nbsp; &nbsp; 1668.</p>
+
+<p>The vesicaria I sent is like that you mention [<i><a href="#Footnote_91_106">see Note 91</a></i>] if not the
+same the com&#772;on fanago resembleth the husk of peas this of [Part
+<i>crossed out</i>] Barly when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> flower is mouldred away. [See also <a href="#Page_89">p. 89</a>
+<i>infra</i>, where Merrett aptly compares the latter to the flowers of the
+Grape Hyacinth.]</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">No. VII.<a name="merrett_7" id="merrett_7"></a></p>
+
+<p class="center">[BIBLIOTHECA BODLEIANA. MS. RAWLINSON D. cviii. SR THO BROWN TO DR.
+MERRETT.]</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 105.</i>] Sr I craue your pardon for this delayed returne unto your
+last, whose courteus acceptance &amp; worthy entertaynment [?] deserued [a
+speed <i>blotted out</i>] even a speedier reply. The small plant may fitly
+come in among the corallines upon the [diff <i>crossed out</i>] account of
+articulation Icthyorachius [<i><a href="#Footnote_114_132">see Note 114</a></i>] I think will bee a good
+Diference [?]. whether you will subexpand [?] the word I referre it to
+yourself. certhia may best bee vertice aureo [<i>word blotted out</i>] or
+vertice aureo penicello vix imitando. morinellus marinus [<i><a href="#Footnote_28_38">see Note 28</a></i>]
+I think rather then Aquaticus becuse it is seen most about the sea
+coast. Anas alis oculatis<a name="FNanchor_120_138" id="FNanchor_120_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_138" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> rather then Anser for it is not
+altogether so longe as a wild duck. of porci solidipedes [<i><a href="#Footnote_118_136">see Note
+118</a></i>] there are still in this country in some places. and I am promised
+a pigge by a Gentleman that hath still a boar and sow of that kind. I
+tooke notice of them 26 years ago &amp; having not lately [met with <i>crossed
+out</i>] met with any thought the race had been worne out butt I perceue it
+is not&mdash;they are whole footed in the forfeet &amp; have [only <i>crossed out</i>]
+a seame only in the hinder. so they are animalia duplici nomine
+im&#772;unda. The wild swans or elk [<i><a href="#Footnote_8_17">see Note 8</a></i>] in [very <i>crossed out</i>]
+lasting cold winters are most plentifull. It is larger then the River
+swan somewhat gray &amp; of a lowder note &amp; [differenced call <i>crossed
+out</i>]<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> a recuruation of the Aspera arteria in the sternon as I noted in
+the margin long agoe in vulgar errors. the blicca marina [<i><a href="#Footnote_74_87">see Note 74</a></i>]
+may well be named Harengiformis. [<i>several words smeared out</i>] I have
+the draught of that an Herring &amp; a pilcher in one paper upon that
+account [Fol. 104 <i>verso</i>] I belieue [?] you were well informd of the
+cotta [<i>see</i> <a href="#Page_79">p. 79</a>] &amp; fulica of our Ralla Aquatica I enclose a draught.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_120_138" id="Footnote_120_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_138"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> Possibly the Pintail, <i>Dafila acuta</i> (Linn.), <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_77">p.
+77.</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Of porci solidipedes there are diuers still in the country in some
+places I am promised a pigge by a friend who cherisheth that [new
+<i>crossed out</i>] breed. I tooke notice of them 26 yeares ago, &amp; hauing not
+lately minded them thought they had been worn out butt I perceiue they
+are not&mdash;some are more plainly wholefooted then others &amp; especially in
+the fore feet &amp; in the rest there is no thorough fissure butt at most a
+superficiall seame, so they are [No. 3 cap 27 <i>above</i>] Quadrupedia
+duplici nomine im&#772;unda.</p>
+
+<p>[This last paragraph seems to have been written by way of emendation of
+what appears above on the same subject. A photograph of a portion of the
+above letter will, by the courtesy of the Bodleian Librarian, be found
+as a frontispiece to this volume. Mr. Jenkinson, the Librarian of the
+University of Cambridge, and through him, Mr. G. F. Warner and Mr.
+Kenyon, of the Department of Manuscripts of the British Museum, have
+kindly interested themselves in the transcript of this letter, which was
+very difficult to decipher.]</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">No. VIII.<a name="merrett_8" id="merrett_8"></a></p>
+
+<p class="center">BIBLIOTHECA BODLEIANA (MS. RAWL. D. cviii.)</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>[Draft of a letter from Sir Thomas Browne, described in the
+Catalogue of the Rawlinson MSS. as to the Secretary of the Royal
+Society, but from its contents evidently written to Merrett,
+whose letter, dated 8th May, 1669, is in part a reply to it.]</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol 58.</i>] Honord Sr I humbly thank you for your care of my sonnes
+paper &amp; the Royll Societie for their acceptance of it. If hee bee in
+health I knowe hee is mindfull of their com&#772;ands receiued aboue 2
+months ago by a letter from Mr. Oldenburg.<a name="FNanchor_121_139" id="FNanchor_121_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_139" class="fnanchor">[121]</a> I haue not heard from
+him of late the last I receiued was from Komorn<a name="FNanchor_R_140" id="FNanchor_R_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_R_140" class="fnanchor">[R]</a> in Lower Hungary and
+hee was then going to the mine countryes. I think the Rowd may bee calld
+Rutilus ventre magis compresso<a name="FNanchor_122_141" id="FNanchor_122_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_141" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> w<sup>ch</sup> is the first discoverable
+difference to the eye. The weazelling [<i><a href="#Footnote_60_72">see Note 60</a></i>] is as you see in
+the draught a long fish figura ad teretem vergente. somewhat of the
+shape butt differing in the head from the <i>mustela viuipara</i> of
+Schoneueld. butt not lozenged on the back though the back bee much
+darker then the other parts. I send you the figure of the head of a
+cristated wild duck. it is black blackish [<i>sic</i>] in the greater part of
+the body some white on the brest &amp; wings blewish legges &amp; bill &amp; seems
+to bee of the Latirostrous tribe perhaps you haue it not. it may bee
+called <i>Anas macrolophos</i> [Fol. 59] as excelling in that kind.<a name="FNanchor_123_142" id="FNanchor_123_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_142" class="fnanchor">[123]</a>
+there is also a draught of one sort of <i>mergus cristatus</i> resembling
+that of Aldrovandus or Johnstonus where there is only the figure of the
+head only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> this is also ruffus butt the head sad red.<a name="FNanchor_124_143" id="FNanchor_124_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_143" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> wee haue a
+kind of teale which some fowlers call crackling teale from the noyse it
+maketh<a name="FNanchor_125_144" id="FNanchor_125_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_144" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> it is almost of the bignesse of a duck coming late of the
+yeare &amp; latest going away hath a russet head &amp; neck with a dark yellow
+stroak about a quarter of an inch broad from the crowne to the bill
+winged like a teale a white streake through the middle of the wings and
+edges thereof the tale blackish. it may be calld Querquedula maior
+serotina. I send you the figure in litle of a pristis<a name="FNanchor_126_145" id="FNanchor_126_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_145" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> w<sup>ch</sup> I
+receaued from a yarmouth seaman. you may please to compare it w<sup>th</sup>
+yours. the asper you mention is much like our Rough or Aspredo.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_121_139" id="Footnote_121_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_139"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> Henry Oldenburg (1615-1677) was born at Bremen. Came to
+England about 1640, where he remained eight years. In 1653 he was sent
+to England from Bremen on a diplomatic mission to Cromwell. He returned
+to England a third time in 1660. He was an original Member of the Royal
+Society, and became one of its first Secretaries. A half-length portrait
+is in the possession of the Royal Society.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_R_140" id="Footnote_R_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_R_140"><span class="label">[R]</span></a> A well-known town on the Danube, forty-seven miles west of
+Buda-Pesth, probably the Comorra of E. Browne's letter to his father,
+<i>cf.</i> Wilkin, i., p. 159.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_122_141" id="Footnote_122_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_141"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> The Rudd (<i>Leuciscus erythrophthalmus</i>, Will.) is known
+in Norfolk as the Roud. Browne seems to treat it as a variety of the
+Roach (<i>Rutilus</i>, Willugh.), and Merrett in his second letter remarks
+with approval "you have very well named the Rutilus."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_123_142" id="Footnote_123_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_142"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> <i>Fuligula cristata</i> (Linnĉus), the Tufted Duck.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_124_143" id="Footnote_124_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_143"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> Professor Newton suggests that Browne intended to write
+<i>Mergus cirratus</i>. Aldrovandus figures the head, iii., p. 283, and that
+of <i>M. longirostris</i> in the preceding page. This last is copied by
+Jonston (fol. 47). Both birds seem to be female or immature Goosanders.
+Neither author has a <i>M. cristatus</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_125_144" id="Footnote_125_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_144"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> The above description certainly applies to the Common
+Teal, which was well-known to Browne (<i>vide supra</i>, <a href="#Page_14">p. 14</a>), and that
+species is with us all the year; I cannot help thinking, however, that
+he had in his mind the Garganey, or Summer Teal, so called from the
+season of its visit to us. This species is known to the Norfolk gunners
+as the "Cricket Teal," and being slightly larger than the common species
+it might well be called by him "<i>Querquedula major serotina</i>."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_126_145" id="Footnote_126_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_145"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> <i><a href="#Footnote_55_67">See Note 55</a></i>, p. 36. It will be noticed that both this
+and the <i>Centriscus</i> mentioned at <a href="#Page_41">p. 41</a> were given to Browne by a
+"seaman of these seas," but may possibly have been brought home as
+curiosities from a foreign voyage; the Saw-fish, however, mentioned at
+<a href="#Page_36">p. 36</a>, is distinctly stated to have been "taken about Lynn." It is a
+matter of intense regret that the numerous drawings mentioned in these
+letters should have been lost.</p></div>
+
+<p>I forgot in my last to signifie that an oter [an other?] Elk or wild
+swan was headed like a goose that is without any knobb at the bottome of
+the bill. [<i>See</i> <a href="#Page_80">p. 80</a> and <i><a href="#Footnote_8_17">Note 8</a></i>.]</p>
+
+<p>Haue you had the duck called Clangula in Ald. [drovandus] &amp; Johnst.<a name="FNanchor_127_146" id="FNanchor_127_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_146" class="fnanchor">[127]</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>wee haue one heere w<sup>ch</sup> answereth their descriptions exactly butt
+[<i>i.e.</i>, except] only in the colour of their leggs &amp; feet.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_127_146" id="Footnote_127_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_146"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> Aldrovandus's figure of "Clangula" (head only, iii., p.
+224) is too indefinite for determination. He says the feet are yellow,
+but Jonston, who refers to it under the name of <i>Anas platyrhincus</i>
+describes it fairly well (p. 145). <i>Clangula ab alarum clangore</i>,
+Aldrov., <i>i.e.</i>, "Rattlewings," an old name by which the Golden-eye was
+known to the Norfolk gunners.</p></div>
+
+<p>Haue you a willock a sea fowl like a rook or crowe.<a name="FNanchor_128_147" id="FNanchor_128_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_147" class="fnanchor">[128]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_128_147" id="Footnote_128_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_147"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> A local name for the Guillemot. Merrett says, in a letter
+dated 8th May, 1669, "The Clangula I know no more of than reading hath
+informed mee; [<i><a href="#Footnote_127_146">see Note 127</a></i>] a willock I have seen brought from
+Greenland,<a name="FNanchor_S_148" id="FNanchor_S_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_S_148" class="fnanchor">[S]</a> where they are said exceedingly to abound, but never
+thought either of them was found in England, and having not taken
+sufficient notice of the latter, crave your description of both."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_S_148" id="Footnote_S_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_S_148"><span class="label">[S]</span></a> The Greenland of those days was Spitsbergen, where they
+would be met with by the Whalers, but in that case the bird would be
+Brünnich's Guillemot, a species not then differentiated.</p></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">No. IX.<a name="merrett_9" id="merrett_9"></a></p>
+
+<p class="center">[MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS. MS. SLOANE 1847, FOL. 182.]</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 182.</i>] Sr I craue your pardon that I haue no sooner sent unto
+you. I shall be very reddie to do you service in order to your desires
+And shall endeavour to procure you such animalls as I haue formerly met
+with &amp; any other not ordinary wch [shall <i>crossed out</i>] are to bee
+acquired. though many of my old assistants are dead. &amp; sometimes they
+fell upon animalls, [not to bee <i>crossed out</i>] scarce to bee met with
+agayne. I wish I had been acquainted with your desires 3 yeares ago. for
+I had about fortie hanging up in my howse. wch the plague being at the
+next doores the person intrusted in my howse, burnt or threw away. The
+figure of the weasell Cray [<i><a href="#Footnote_60_72">see Note 60</a></i> and <a href="#Page_82">p. 82</a>] was in a long paper
+pasted together at the ends &amp; I make no question you will find it
+otherwise I would send another [the willick wee in <i>crossed out</i>] that
+fowl wch some call willick, [<i>see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> Note 128</i>] wee meet with sometimes.
+The last I met with was taken on the sea shoare. the head and body black
+the brest inclining to black headed and billd like a crowe, leggs set
+very backward wings short leggs set very backward (<i>sic</i>) that it move
+overland very badly only. it may bee a kind of cornix marina. [The
+latter portion very badly written and difficult to decipher.]</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 184 verso.</i>] That litle plant upon oyster shells [<i><a href="#Footnote_91_106">see Note 91</a></i>]
+I remember I haue seen &amp; surely is some kind of vescaria or calicularia</p>
+
+<p>of what that other [was <i>crossed out</i>] electricall body was Mr.
+Boyle<a name="FNanchor_129_149" id="FNanchor_129_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_149" class="fnanchor">[129]</a> showed [<i>smear</i>] by this time more tryall hath probably been
+made, something of jet it might consist of.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_129_149" id="Footnote_129_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_149"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> The Hon. Robert Boyle (1627-1691), although deeply
+learned in many branches of science, was chiefly distinguished as a
+chemist. He took a leading part in the founding of the Royal Society,
+and was elected President in 1680, but from some conscientious scruple
+did not accept the office. Naturalists are deeply indebted to him, as he
+was "the first that made trial of preserving animals" in spirit (see
+Grew's "Musĉum Regalis Societatis" (London, 1681), p. 58).</p></div>
+
+<hr class="medium" />
+
+<p>I thank you that you were pleased to enquire of those German gentlemen
+concerning my sonne I receiued a letter lately from him he hath not
+been unmindfull of the R. Society's com&#772;ds &amp; hath been in Hungaria in
+the mines of Gold, sylver &amp; copper at Schemets, Cremitz &amp; Neusol &amp;
+desired mee to signifie so much to Mr. Oldenberg.</p>
+
+<p>[The above is hastily scrawled; it was evidently indited to Merrett, as
+indicated by the reference to the German gentlemen, &amp;c.; the date would
+therefore be some time in the year 1669. Wilkin prints it in the 1836
+Edition, Vol. i., p. 408, but it is not in Bohn's reprint.]</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="wide" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="APPENDIX_A" id="APPENDIX_A"></a>APPENDIX A.</h2>
+
+<div class="blockquot">[TWO LETTERS FROM DOCTOR CHRISTOPHER MERRETT TO SIR THOMAS BROWNE, MS.
+SLOANE 1830, FOL. 1 TO 3. THEY ARE BOUND UP IN INVERSE ORDER OF DATE.]</div>
+
+
+<p class="center">[Reply to No. 2 in the above Series.]</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 3.</i>] <span class="smcap">Worthy Sr</span>,&mdash;y<sup>rs</sup> of y<sup>e</sup> 14<sup>th</sup> instant I recaeved as full
+off learning in discovering so many very great curiosities as kindness
+in communicating them to mee &amp; promising y<sup>r</sup> farther assistance. ffor
+which I shall always proclame by my tongue as well as by my pen, my due
+resentment &amp; thanks.</p>
+
+<p>The 2 funguses [guses <i>crossed out and</i> i <i>inserted</i>] y<sup>w</sup> sent y<sup>e</sup>
+figures off [<i><a href="#Footnote_106_123">see Note 106</a></i>] are y<sup>e</sup> finest &amp; rarest as to their figure
+I have ever seen or read of, &amp; soe is y<sup>r</sup> fibula marina, far surpassing
+one I reacived from Cornwall much of y<sup>e</sup> same bigness, neither of which
+I find anywhere mentioned. The urtica marina minor Jonst. &amp; physalus I
+never met with, nor have bin informed off y<sup>e</sup> canis charcharius alius
+Jonst. Many of y<sup>e</sup> Lupus piscis I have seen, &amp; have bin informed by y<sup>e</sup>
+Kings fish monger they are taken on our coast, but was not satisfyed for
+some reasons off his relation soe as to enter it into my pinax, though
+tis said to bee peculiar to y<sup>e</sup> river Albis [= Elbe] yet I thought they
+might come sometimes thence to y<sup>r</sup> coasts. Trutta marina I haue and y<sup>e</sup>
+loligo, sepia, &amp; polypus y<sup>e</sup> 3 sorts off y<sup>e</sup> molles have bin found on
+our western coasts which shall bee exactly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> distinguished&mdash;As for y<sup>e</sup>
+Salmons taken a bove London towards Richmond &amp; nearer, &amp; y<sup>t</sup> in great
+quantity some years they have all off them their lower jaw as y<sup>w</sup>
+observ, [<i><a href="#Footnote_92_107">see Note 92</a></i>] &amp; our fishermen [men <i>crossed out</i>] say they
+usually wear off some part off it on y<sup>e</sup> banks or els y<sup>e</sup> lower would
+grow into y<sup>e</sup> upper &amp; soe starve them as they have sometimes seen&mdash;y<sup>w</sup>
+ask whether I haue y<sup>e</sup> mullus ruber asper, or y<sup>e</sup> piscis Octangularis
+Wormii. or y<sup>e</sup> sea worm longer than y<sup>e</sup> earth worms, or y<sup>e</sup> garrulus
+Argentor. or y<sup>e</sup> duck cal'd a May chit or y<sup>e</sup> Dor hawke. The 4 first I
+haue noe account off y<sup>e</sup> 2 later I know not especially by those names,
+wee have noe hawk by y<sup>t</sup> name [<i><a href="#Footnote_42_53">see Note 42</a></i>] y<sup>r</sup> account of succinum as
+all y<sup>e</sup> rest will bee registered. As for y<sup>e</sup> Aquila Gesneri I never saw
+nor heard off any such in y<sup>e</sup> Collidge for [<i>fol. 3 verso</i>] this 25
+years last past. Sr y<sup>w</sup> are pleased to say y<sup>w</sup> shall write more if y<sup>w</sup>
+know how not to bee surpurfluous&mdash;certainly what y<sup>w</sup> have hitherto done
+hath bin all curiosities, &amp; I doubt not but y<sup>w</sup> have many more by you&mdash;I
+can direct y<sup>w</sup> noe further than y<sup>r</sup> own reason dictates to y<sup>w</sup>. Besides
+those mentioned in y<sup>e</sup> pinax I have 100 to add, &amp; cannot give y<sup>w</sup> a
+particular off them&mdash;whatever y<sup>w</sup> write is either confirmative or
+additional. I doe entreat this favour off y<sup>w</sup> to inform mee fuller off
+those unknown things mentioned herein, &amp; to add y<sup>e</sup> name page &amp;c. of y<sup>e</sup>
+Author if mentioned by any or else to give them such a latin name for
+them as y<sup>w</sup> have done by y<sup>e</sup> fungi which may bee descriptive &amp;
+differencing off them. Sr I hope y<sup>e</sup> publigs [<i>sic</i>] interest &amp; y<sup>r</sup> own
+good genius will plead y<sup>r</sup> pardon desired by</p>
+
+<p class="rt">y<sup>r</sup> humble servant</p>
+<p class="rt"><span class="smcap">Chr. Merrett</span>.</p>
+
+<p><i>London Aug. 29. 68.</i></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">[Reply to No. 8 of the above Series.]</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 1.</i>] <span class="smcap">Worthy Sr</span>,&mdash;my due thanks premised I at present acquaint y<sup>w</sup>
+y<sup>t</sup> y<sup>w</sup> have very well named y<sup>e</sup> Rutilus &amp; expressed fully y<sup>e</sup> cours to
+bee taken in y<sup>e</sup> imposition of names viz y<sup>e</sup> most obvious &amp; most
+peculiar difference to y<sup>e</sup> ey or any other sens. I am farther to say y<sup>t</sup>
+y<sup>e</sup> icon of y<sup>e</sup> weazeling came not to my hands, pray bee pleas'd to look
+amongst y<sup>r</sup> papers perhaps it might bee laid by through some accident or
+other [I have <i>added above</i>] y<sup>e</sup> figures of y<sup>r</sup> anas macrolophos, &amp; of
+y<sup>e</sup> mergi cristati [<i><a href="#Footnote_124_143">see Note 124</a></i>] &amp; of y<sup>e</sup> pristis y<sup>t</sup> which came from
+Cornwall was of y<sup>e</sup> gladius, y<sup>e</sup> name of sword fish being applied to
+both of them by our nation. It seemeth by y<sup>w</sup> y<sup>t</sup> y<sup>e</sup> Norwich aspredo is
+not y<sup>e</sup> Ceruna fluviatilis contrary to what Camden affirms, for y<sup>e</sup>
+rutilus mentioned in mine to y<sup>w</sup> differs toto c&oelig;lo from y<sup>e</sup>
+ceruna&mdash;The difference of y<sup>e</sup> Elks bill by y<sup>w</sup> signified is remarkable
+to distinguish it from others of its own kind. [<i>See</i> <a href="#Page_83">p. 83</a> <i>supra</i>.]
+The crackling teal seems [clearly <i>crossed out</i>] to bee y<sup>e</sup> same which
+Dr Charleton<a name="FNanchor_130_150" id="FNanchor_130_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_150" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> mentions in his Onomasticon under y<sup>e</sup> name of y<sup>e</sup>
+cracker,&amp; showing him y<sup>r</sup> description hee acknowledged to bee y<sup>e</sup> same,
+y<sup>e</sup> clangula I know noe more of than reading hath informed mee, a
+willock I have seen brought from Greenland where they are said
+exceedingly to abound, but never y<sup>t</sup> [thought?] either of them was found
+in England, &amp; having [not <i>added above</i>] taken sufficient notice of it
+y<sup>e</sup> later, crave y<sup>r</sup> description off both.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_130_150" id="Footnote_130_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_150"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> In Charleton's "Onomasticon," at p. 99, the Cracker is
+called by him, <i>Anas caudacuta</i>, and is said to be the "Gaddel" of the
+London dealers in fowl. [<i><a href="#Footnote_125_144">See Note 125.</a></i>]</p></div>
+
+<p>And now Sr since my last only 2 things remarkable haue come to my
+knowledge. The one was a cake off black amber 1/6 off an inch thick &amp;
+neer a palm each way.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> Mr. Boyle brought it to y<sup>e</sup> R. society to whom it
+was sent from y<sup>e</sup> Sussex shore, hee had only tryed it to its electricity
+&amp; found it answer his expectation, farther tryals will be made of it.
+The second is a small plant found on oyster shells which when fresh did
+perfectly represent y<sup>e</sup> flowers off Hyacinthus botryoides, [<i><a href="#Footnote_91_106">see Note
+91</a></i>] but y<sup>t</sup> was somewhat longer &amp; not so much sweld out towards its
+pedunculus, some of them are here inclosed. Tis doubtless a sort off
+vesicaria, though much different from what y<sup>w</sup> sent mee. Most off them
+are now shrunk &amp; y<sup>e</sup> sides constituting y<sup>e</sup> cavity come together &amp;
+appear only a transparent husk. One thing more I had to add (but
+scarcely dare speak it out) y<sup>t</sup> is if it would please [you <i>added
+above</i>] to let it bee done without y<sup>r</sup> charge &amp; 2ly if it might be done
+without y<sup>r</sup> trouble, then I would beg off y<sup>w</sup> to set some a work to
+procure mee some of those rare animals &amp;c. y<sup>w</sup> have mentioned in your
+seueral Letters. My intention therein is double: first to take their
+descriptions &amp; furnish our colledge with them as curiosities, all being
+lost by y<sup>e</sup> fire this is onely wished but must not bee proposed without
+y<sup>e</sup> former limitation by y<sup>r</sup> too much allready obliged friend &amp; servant</p>
+
+<p class="rt"><span class="smcap">Chr. Merrett.</span></p>
+
+<p><i>8th May '69.</i></p>
+
+
+<p>I met this week with some persons off quality high Germans who lately
+saw y<sup>r</sup> son &amp; record all good things off him.</p>
+
+<p>ffor Dr Browne off Norwich.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[The reply to this letter is No. IX of the above Series.]</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="wide" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="APPENDIX_B" id="APPENDIX_B"></a>APPENDIX B.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">[MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS. MS. SLOANE 1847, FOL. 56-57.]</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<i><a href="#Footnote_51_63">See Note 51</a></i>, <a href="#Page_32">p. 32</a> <i>supra</i>.]</p>
+
+
+<p>Praye Request Mr. Johnson to obtayne this fauor of Mr. Bacon who is
+unknown to mee, to afford mee his resolution to these few queries
+concerning the whale [wch <i>crossed out</i>] whereof I understand he had the
+cutting up and disposure whether there were any spermacetie found, or
+made out of other parts beside the head; if soe, of what parts &amp; out of
+what most: and whether any out of the meere fleshie parts whether that
+wch runne from it about the shoare came out of the mouth.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Not signed or dated.</i>]</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">REPLY.</p>
+
+<p>Sr in Answer to your questions conserninge the whale, I founde noe
+Sperm&#772;e but in his heade and that after I had taken off his scalpe one
+tonn weight [or more <i>written above</i>] of a nexuous substance, we found
+in the circumference as large as a small coach wheele in the middle part
+certain round pieces of Sperm as bigge as a mans fist some as large as
+eggs and on the out side of the said rounds, flakes as large as a mans
+head in forme like hony combs being very white and full of oyle. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+that Sp. wch was cast upon the shore I doe conceive came out of his
+nostrells. thus much <ins class="tn" title="'ff' occurs in several places. Unchanged.">ffrom</ins> him who doth remayne Sir your humble Servant,
+Arthur Bacon Yarmouth 10th May 1652.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Browne to Dugdale on certain fossil bones.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">["<span class="smcap">Eastern Counties Collectanea</span>," pp. 193-195].</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The letter referred to in the foot-note on page 33, written by
+Sir Thomas Browne to Dugdale, and formerly in the possession of
+the late Mr. Arthur Preston of Norwich, whose collection of
+manuscripts was dispersed by auction in August, 1888, was
+printed in a brief-lived and little-known local publication,
+entitled the "Eastern Counties Collectanea" (1872-3), at page
+193. In this letter occurs a passage which confirms the doubt
+expressed as to the Whales which had young ones after coming on
+shore at Hunstanton being Sperm Whales. They are expressly said
+to have been of that sort "which seamen call a Grampus," and as
+Sir Nicholas le Strange, in a MS. preserved in the Muniment room
+at Hunstanton, applies the name "Grampus" to an undoubted
+specimen of <i>Hyperoodon rostratus</i> (as shown both by his
+description and outline sketch) which came ashore there in the
+year 1700, I have little doubt that the Cetaceans in question
+belonged to that species and not to <i>Physeter macrocephalus</i>.</p>
+
+<p>This letter is interesting also as filling a gap in Wilkin's
+series and I therefore reproduce it, omitting only occasional
+learned digressions which do not affect the subject. The
+original not being available, I have used the copy in the
+"Collectanea" before mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>Dugdale, in November, 1658, and again later, had written to
+Browne, sending him a bone of a "fish which was taken up by Sir
+Robert Cotton, in digging a pond at the skirt of Conington
+downe," and asking his opinion thereof. (Wilkin, i., pp. 385 and
+390.)</p>
+
+<p>To the first of these letters Browne replied, under date of the
+6th December, 1658, "I receaued the bone of the fish, and shall
+giue you some account of it when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> I have compared it with
+another bone which is not by mee" (op. cit. p. 387). The letter
+which follows and which was unknown to Wilkin supplies this
+information.</p></div>
+
+<p>[p. 193.] "Sr I cannot sufficiently admire the ingenious industry of Sr
+Robert Cotton in preserving so many things of rarity and observation nor
+commend your own enquiries for the satisfaction of such particulars. The
+petrified bone you sent me, which with divers others was found
+underground, near Cunnington, seems to be the vertebra, spondyle or
+rackbone of some large fish, and no terrestrious animal as some upon
+sight conceived, as either of Camel, rhinoceros, or elephant, for it is
+not perforated and hollow but solid according to the spine of fishes in
+whom the spinal marrow runs in a channel above these solid racks, or
+spondiles.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems much too big for the largest Dolphins, porpoises, or sword
+fishes, and too little for a true or grown whale, but may be the bone of
+some big cetaceous animal, as particularly of that which seamen call a
+Grampus; a kind of small whale, whereof some come short, some exceed
+twenty foot. And not only whales but Grampusses have been taken in this
+Estuarie or mouth of the fenland rivers. And about twenty years ago four
+were run ashore near Hunstanton and two had young ones after they came
+to land. But whether this fish were of the longitude of twenty foot (as
+is conceived) some doubt may be made for this bone containeth little
+more than an inch in thickness, and not three inches in breadth so that
+it might have a greater number thereof than is easily allowable to make
+out that longitude. For of the whale which was cast upon our coast about
+six years ago a vertebra or rackbone still preserved, containeth a foot
+in breadth and nine inches in depth, yet the whale with all advantages
+but sixty-two foot in length. [p, 194.] We are not ready to believe
+that, wherever such relics of fish or sea animals are found, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> sea
+hath had its course. And Goropius Becanus<a name="FNanchor_131_151" id="FNanchor_131_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_151" class="fnanchor">[131]</a> long ago could not digest
+that conceit when he found great numbers of shells upon the highest
+Alps. For many may be brought unto places where they were not first
+found.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_131_151" id="Footnote_131_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_151"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> This seems to refer to the "De Gigantibus eorumque
+reliquiis" of J. van Gorp, Jean Bécan, or Joannes Goropius <ins class="tn" title="Missing closed parenthesis. Unchanged.">(as</ins> the name
+is variously given in the "Biographie Universelle" (b. 1518, d. 1572),
+and apparently published after the Author's death by Jean Chassanion,
+8vo, Basileĉ, 1580, and another edition in 1587. See Brit. Mus. Cat.;
+but I have not seen the book.</p></div>
+
+<p>"Some bones of our whale were left in several fields which when the
+earth hath obscured them, may deceive some hereafter, that the sea hath
+come so high. In northern nations where men live in houses of fishbones
+and in the land of the Icthiophagi near the Red sea where mortars were
+made of the backbones of whales, doors of their jaws, and arches of
+their ribs, when time hath covered them they might confound after
+discoverers.&hellip;</p>
+
+<p>"For many years great doubt was made concerning those large bones found
+in some parts of England, and named Giants' bones till men [p. 195]
+considered they might be the bones of elephants brought into this island
+by Claudius, and perhaps also by some succeeding emperors [then follow
+other ancient examples of the finding 'elephants bones' in various
+countries attributed to similar modes of introduction]. But many things
+prove obscure in subterraneous discovery.&hellip;</p>
+
+<p>"In some chalk pits about Norwich many stag's horns are found of large
+beams and branches, the solid parts converted into a chalky and fragile
+substance, the pithy part sometimes hollow and full of brittle earth and
+clay. In a churchyard of this city an oaken billet was found in a
+coffin. About five years ago an humourous man of this country after his
+death and according to his own desire was wrap't up in a horned hide of
+an ox and so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> buried.<a name="FNanchor_T_152" id="FNanchor_T_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_T_152" class="fnanchor">[T]</a> Now when the memory hereof is past how this may
+hereafter confound the discoverers and what connjectures will arise
+thereof it is not easy to conjecture.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_T_152" id="Footnote_T_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_T_152"><span class="label">[T]</span></a> Richard Ferrer, of Thurne, by his will, proved about 1654,
+directed that his "dead body be handsomely trussed up in a black
+bullock's hide, and be decently buried in the Churchyard of
+Thurne."&mdash;"Norfolk Archĉology," v., p. 212.</p></div>
+
+<p class="rt">Sr Your servant to my power,</p>
+<p class="rt"><span class="smcap">Tho. Browne.</span></p>
+
+<p>This is endorsed "Sr Thomas Browne's discourse about the Fish bone found
+at Conington Com. Hunt, Shown, Dr. Tanner."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="wide" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="APPENDIX_C" id="APPENDIX_C"></a>APPENDIX C.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">[SLOANE MS. ADDITIONAL 5233, LARGE FOLIO, IS A VOLUME LABELLED "DR. EDW.
+BROWN'S DRAWINGS."]</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Some original drawing of Towns, Castles, Antiquities, Medals
+&amp;c. by Dr. Edward Browne in his Travels &amp; presented by his
+Father Sir Thomas Browne. Who hath write upon sev<sup>ll</sup> of them
+what they are."</p></div>
+
+<p>The above is the inscription written on the fly-leaf of this volume,
+which I hoped might have contained some drawings of birds or fishes by
+Sir Thomas Browne, but there is nothing in it of interest from a Natural
+History point of view. In Wilkin's Catalogue of the MSS. (Vol. iv., p.
+476) it is described as "a collection of very curious drawings (some
+coloured) of public buildings, habits, <i>fishes</i>, mines, rocks, tombs,
+and other antiquities, observed by Sir Thos. and Dr. Edward Browne in
+their travels," but there are no fishes, birds, or other animals in the
+volume.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="wide" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="APPENDIX_D" id="APPENDIX_D"></a>APPENDIX D.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Draft of a letter from Sir Thomas Browne to his daughter
+Elizabeth, enclosing two pictures of a Stork. This and the next
+letter are in the Bodleian Library (MS. Rawl. D. cviii.)</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 70.</i>] This is a picture of the stork [<i><a href="#Footnote_14_23">see Note 14</a></i>] I mentiond
+in my last. butt it is different from the com&#772;on stork by red lead
+colourd leggs and bill<a name="FNanchor_132_153" id="FNanchor_132_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_153" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> and the feet hath not vsuall sharp poynted
+clawes butt resembling a mans nayle, such as Herodotus discribeth the
+white Ibis of Ĉgypt to haue. The ends of the wings are black &amp; when shee
+doth not spred them they make all the lower part of the back looke
+black, butt the fethers on the back vnder them are white as also the
+tayle. it fed upon snayles &amp; froggs butt a toad being offered it would
+not touch it. the tongue is about half an inch long. the quills of the
+wing are as bigge or bigger then a swans quills. it was shott by the
+seaside &amp; the wing broake. Some there were who tooke it for an euell
+omen saying If storks come ouer into England, god send that a
+com&#772;onwealth doth not come after.<a name="FNanchor_U_154" id="FNanchor_U_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_U_154" class="fnanchor">[U]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_132_153" id="Footnote_132_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_153"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> Browne evidently was not very familiar with the Stork,
+which is not surprising, seeing that it is a very rare bird in Britain;
+it may be that he had only seen the bird in its immature stage, for the
+"red-lead" hue of the legs is very characteristic of the adult bird.
+[<i><a href="#Footnote_14_23">See also Note 14</a></i>, <a href="#Page_10">p. 10.</a>]</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_U_154" id="Footnote_U_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_U_154"><span class="label">[U]</span></a> In reference to the Dutch fable of those days that Storks
+would only inhabit republican countries.</p></div>
+
+<p>That picture with the lesser head is the better.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr />
+<p class="center">MS. RAWL. D. cviii.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Draft of a letter containing further particulars with regard to
+the Stork. There is nothing to indicate to whom it was
+addressed.</p></div>
+
+<p>[<i>Fol. 77.</i>] A kind of stork was shott in the wing by the sea neere
+Hasburrowe &amp; brought aliue vnto mee. it was about a yard high red lead
+coloard leggs and bill. the clawes resembling human nayles such as
+Herodotus describeth in the white Ibis of Ĉgypt The lower parts of the
+wings are black which gathered up makes the lower part of back looke
+black butt the tayle vnder them is white as the other part of the body.
+it fed readily upon snayles &amp; froggs, butt a toad being offered it would
+not touch it: the tongue very short [not <i>crossed out</i>] an inch long. it
+makes a clattering noyse by flapping one bill agaynst the other somewhat
+like the platea or shouelard.<a name="FNanchor_V_155" id="FNanchor_V_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_V_155" class="fnanchor">[V]</a> the quills [about <i>crossed out</i>] of the
+biggnesse of swans bills [<i>sic</i> quills?] when it swallowed a frogge it
+was sent downe into the stomak by the back side of the neck as was
+perceaued upon swallowing. I could not butt take notice of the conceitt
+of some who looked upon it as an ill omen saying if storks come ouer
+into England, pray god a com&#772;on wealth do not come after.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_V_155" id="Footnote_V_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_V_155"><span class="label">[V]</span></a> The Spoonbill.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In addition to these letters there are in the Bodleian Library a
+letter from Elizabeth Browne to her brother, describing the
+above-mentioned Stork, and desiring him to keep one of the two
+pictures himself, and to give the other to his sister Fairfax
+(MS. Rawl. D. 108, fol. 71), and a draft of a letter from Sir
+Thomas Browne about a remarkable fly (<i>see ante</i> <a href="#Page_68">p. 68</a> <i>and <a href="#Footnote_110_128">Note
+110</a></i>), which offended the cattle extraordinarily, found at
+Horsey Marshes (MS. Rawl. D. 108, fol. 103). There is also (MS.
+Rawl. D. 391, fol. 55) a letter from Sir Hamon le Strange to Sir
+T. B., dated Jan. 16, 1653. About half this letter is printed by
+Wilkin, i., pp. 369-70. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> mentions towards the end that he
+sends certain observations on T. B.'s "Enquiries into Common
+Errors," at page "27 thereof I write of a whale cast upon my
+shoare." This criticism is now separated from the letter, which
+originally covered it, but happily is preserved in the British
+Museum, MS. Sloane, 1839. fols. 104-145.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="wide" />
+<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX.</h2>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">A.</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li> Acorus verus, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
+
+<li> Acus, Needlefish, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+
+<li> Adders, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
+
+<li> Addercock, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+
+<li> Alcedo ispida, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
+
+<li> Allis Shad, <a href="#Footnote_70_83">42 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Alni carptor, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li> Amber, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Alosa, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
+
+<li> Anas arctica, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Anas macrolophos, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Anas alis oculatis, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li> Anatula, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
+
+<li> Anglorum, Sand Eel, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+
+<li> Apiaster, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Aphia cobites, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
+
+<li> Appendix A., <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Appendix B., <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
+
+<li> Appendix C., <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
+
+<li> Appendix D., <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
+
+<li> Aquila Gesneri, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Ardea stellaris, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
+
+<li> Arcuata, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+<li> Armed Bull-head, <a href="#Footnote_66_79">41 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Avicula Maialis, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+
+<li> Ascidians, <a href="#Footnote_91_106">50 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Aselli, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+<li> Asprage, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Aspredo, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Astacus, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
+
+<li> Atherine?, <a href="#Footnote_71_84">42 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Auk, Little?, <a href="#Footnote_119_137">79 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Avis pugnax, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li> Avis trogloditica, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
+
+<li> Avocet, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="fs12">B.</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li> Balani, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
+
+<li> Banstickle, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+
+<li> Barbel, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+<li> Barker, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li> Barnacle shell, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
+
+<li> Barnacle Goose, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
+
+<li> Bargander, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Bass, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+<li> Bearded Tit, <a href="#Footnote_41_52">26 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Bee-bird, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li> Betulĉ Carptor, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li> Birdcatcher, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+<li> Birds found in Norfolk, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
+
+<li> Birds number of species, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
+
+<li> Bittern, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
+
+<li> Black Grouse, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li> Black Heron, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
+
+<li> Black-tailed Godwit, <a href="#Footnote_39_50">24 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Bleak, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
+
+<li> Bones, Fossil, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
+
+<li> Boyle, Robert, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
+
+<li> Bream, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
+
+<li> Brent Goose, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
+
+<li> Brill, Bret, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Brittle Stars, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
+
+<li> Browne, Sir Thomas&mdash;
+
+<ul>
+<li> Attitude towards witchcraft, <a href="#Footnote_B_2">xi. (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Collection of Eggs, <a href="#Footnote_14_23">10 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Correspondents, <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>.</li>
+
+<li> Drawings lost, <a href="#Page_xxv">xxv</a>.</li>
+
+<li> Editions of his Collected Works, <a href="#Page_xviii">xviii</a>.</li>
+
+<li> Estimation in which he was held, <a href="#Page_xvii">xvii</a>.</li>
+
+<li> Letters to Merrett, <a href="#Page_xxii">xxii</a>., <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
+
+<li> Letters to Dugdale, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
+
+<li> Notes on Certain Birds, <a href="#Page_xx">xx</a>., <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
+
+<li> Notes on Certain Fishes, <a href="#Page_xx">xx</a>., <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
+
+<li> Observations on Migration, <a href="#Page_xvi">xvi</a>., <a href="#Footnote_2_10">2 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Originality, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>., <a href="#Page_xvi">xvi</a>.</li>
+
+<li> Purpose for which written, <a href="#Page_xxi">xxi</a>., <a href="#Page_2">2</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></li>
+
+<li> State of Natural Science in his day, <a href="#Page_x">x</a>., <a href="#Page_xiv">xiv</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li> Bull-head, Armed, <a href="#Page_41">41</a> (note), <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Burbot, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Bustard, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
+
+<li> Butcher bird, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+<li> Butt, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Buzzard, Bald, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Buzzard, Gray, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="fs12">C.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Canis (Dog-fish), <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
+
+<li> Canis carcharias, <a href="#Footnote_56_68">37 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Caprimulgus, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Cancellus, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
+
+<li> Carcinus mĉnas, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
+
+<li> Carp, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
+
+<li> Certhia, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li> Ceruna, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Chad, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
+
+<li> Chipper, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Chock, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
+
+<li> Chough, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
+
+<li> Chub, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+<li> Churre, <a href="#Footnote_29_39">19 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li> Ciconia, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
+
+<li> Cirripeds, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
+
+<li> Clams, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> Clangula, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Coal-fish, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+<li> Coble bird, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+<li> Cockles, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> Cods, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+<li> Conger, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+
+<li> Coot, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
+
+<li> Corculum, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Cormorant, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
+
+<li> Cormorant, Rock, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
+
+<li> Corallines, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li> Cotta Anglorum, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
+
+<li> Cottus scorpius, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
+
+<li> Corvus marinus, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
+
+<li> Crabs, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
+
+<li> Crane, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+<li> Crawfish, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+<li> Crossbill, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+<li> Crow, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
+
+<li> Crow, Hooded, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+<li> Cuckoo, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li> Cuckoo Mate, <a href="#Footnote_34_44">22 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Culex marinus, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
+
+<li> Curlew, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+<li> Curlew, Stone, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
+
+<li> Cuttle fish, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
+
+<li> Cyclas, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">D.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Dab, <a href="#Footnote_79_93">45 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Dabchick, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li> Dace, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
+
+<li> Dentalia, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
+
+<li> Divers, <a href="#Footnote_11_20">8 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Dog-fish, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
+
+<li> Dog-Whelk, <a href="#Footnote_83_98">47 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Dolphin, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
+
+<li> Dorhawk, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Dory, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
+
+<li> Dotterel, Land, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
+
+<li> Dotterel, Sea, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li> Draco minor, <a href="#Footnote_69_82">42 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Dragon fly, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Draw Water, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li> Ducks, Wild, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Footnote_19_28">13 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Duck, Golden-eye, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
+
+<li> Duck, Tufted, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
+
+<li> Dunlin, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">E.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Eagles, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Echinus, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
+
+<li> Eels, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Eels, Conger, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+
+<li> Eels, Sand, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+
+<li> Eelpout, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Elke, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Erythropus, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">F.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Faber marinus, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
+
+<li> Fanago, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+
+<li> Father Lasher, <a href="#Footnote_68_81">42 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Fen Cricket, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Fibula marina, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Finches, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
+
+<li> Fishing Frog, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
+
+<li> Fishes found in Norfolk, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
+
+<li> Fishes number of species, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
+
+<li> Flat-fish, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Flies, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
+
+<li> Fly-catcher, <a href="#Footnote_117_135">73 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li> Forficula, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Fucus marinus, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
+
+<li> Fulica Cotta, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
+
+<li> Fungi, various, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Funduli fluviatiles, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Funduli marini, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">G.</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li> Gallinula aquatica, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
+
+<li> Gannet, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li> Gammarus, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+<li> Garfish, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+
+<li> Garrulus Bohemicus, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
+
+<li> Garrulus Argentoratensis, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Geese, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li> Gladius, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Glot, Eel, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Gnatts or Knots, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
+
+<li> Goatsucker, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Gobies, <a href="#Footnote_70_83">42 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Godwit, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
+
+<li> Gold-crested Wren, <a href="#Footnote_48_59">29 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>Golden Eagle, <a href="#Footnote_3_11">3 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
+
+<li> Golden-eye Duck, <a href="#Footnote_127_146">84 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Goldfinch, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
+
+<li> Goosander, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Footnote_124_143">83 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Goodyer, John, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
+
+<li> Grampus, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
+
+<li> Great Northern Diver, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
+
+<li> Green Plover, <a href="#Footnote_29_39">19 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li> Grey Plover, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li> Grebe, G. Crested, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li> Grebe, Little, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li> Grouse, Black, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li> Gryllotalpa, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Gudgeon, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Guillemot, <a href="#Footnote_S_148">84 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Gulls, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
+
+<li> Gurnards, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li> Gurney, Anna, <a href="#Page_xx">xx</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">H.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Haddock, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+<li> Hard-worm, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Harriers, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Footnote_6_15">5 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Hawfinch, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+<li> Hermit Crabs, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
+
+<li> Herons, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
+
+<li> Heron, Black, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
+
+<li> Heron, Purple, <a href="#Footnote_33_43">22 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Heathpoult, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li> Herring, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li> Hippolyte varians, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+<li> Hirundo marina, Sea Swallow, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
+
+<li> Hirudines marini, Sea Leeches, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
+
+<li> Horse-leeches, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Horse Mackerel, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li> Hobby, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
+
+<li> Hobby-bird, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
+
+<li> Hoopoe, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
+
+<li> Hooded Crow, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
+
+<li> How, Dr. William, <a href="#Footnote_103_119">59 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Hydrocantharus, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Hydrozoa, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">J.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Jackdaw, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
+
+<li> Jelly-fish, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
+
+<li> Jet, <a href="#Footnote_107_125">63 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
+
+<li> Junco, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="fs12">K.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Kingfisher, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
+
+<li> Kite, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
+
+<li> Knots, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">L.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Lampern, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Lamprey, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Lanius, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+<li> Lapwing, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li> Lari, many sorts of, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
+
+<li> Larks, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li> Larus minor, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Leeches, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
+
+<li> Lesser Butcher Bird, <a href="#Footnote_41_52">26 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Letters to Dugdale, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
+
+<li> Letters to Merrett, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
+
+<li> Letters from Merrett, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Limpets, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> Lingula, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Little Auk?, <a href="#Footnote_119_137">79 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Littorina, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> Lizard, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
+
+<li> Loach, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Lobster, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
+
+<li> Lolego, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Loon, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li> Loxia, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+<li> Lug Worm, <a href="#Footnote_91_106">50 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Lump-fish, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li> Lupus marinus, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">M.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Mackerel, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+
+<li> Mackerel, Horse, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li> Marine Worms, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
+
+<li> May-chit, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Medusae, <a href="#Footnote_90_105">49 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Merganser, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
+
+<li> Mergus acutirostris, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li> Mergus cristatus, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Mergus major, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
+
+<li> Mergus minor, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li> Mergus mustelaris, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
+
+<li> Mergus serratus, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
+
+<li> Mergulus, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
+
+<li> Merlin, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
+
+<li> Merrett, Christopher, <a href="#Page_xxii">xxii</a>., <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
+
+<li> Mistletoe, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
+
+<li> Migration, <a href="#Page_xvi">xvi</a>., <a href="#Footnote_2_10">2 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Miller's Thumb, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Minnow, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+<li> Mole Cricket, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Moon-fish (Mola), <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
+
+<li> Moor Hen, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
+
+<li> Morinellus, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li> Musca tuliparum, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+
+<li> Mullet, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
+
+<li> Mullet, Red, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Mussels, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> Musk Beetle, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
+
+<li> Mustela fluviatilis, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li> Mustela marina, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li> Mustela variegata, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">N.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Needle-fish, <a href="#Footnote_64_76">40 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+
+<li> Nerites, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
+
+<li> Night-jar, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Norway Lobster, <a href="#Footnote_81_96">46 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> <a name="notonacton"></a><ins class="tn" title="Notonecta/notonecton in text.">Notonacton</ins>, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
+
+<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>Nuthatch, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="fs12">O.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Oak Galls, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
+
+<li> Octopus?, <a href="#Footnote_80_94">46 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Oldenburg, Henry, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
+
+<li> Onocrotalus, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
+
+<li> Ophidian, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
+
+<li> Osprey, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
+
+<li> Otters, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Oysters, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
+
+<li> Oyster Catcher, <a href="#Footnote_12_21">8 (note)</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">P.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Parrot Jay, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Partridge, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
+
+<li> Partridge, Red-legged, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li> Pectines, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> Pediculus marinus, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
+
+<li> Pelican, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
+
+<li> Perch, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
+
+<li> Periwinkle, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Peter-fish, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
+
+<li> Physalus, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
+
+<li> Pica marina, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
+
+<li> Picus martius, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
+
+<li> Pigs, Solid-footed, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
+
+<li> Pike, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
+
+<li> Pilchard, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
+
+<li> Pinax, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Pintail Duck, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li> Piscis octangularis, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Pisidium?, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Place, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Plot, Dr. Robert, <a href="#Footnote_F_6">xxiv. (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Plover, Green, <a href="#Footnote_29_39">19 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li> Plover, Grey, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li> Plover, Ring, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+<li> Pogge, <a href="#Footnote_66_79">41 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Polypus, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> <a name="porbeagle"></a><ins class="tn" title="May be typo for 37 (note), as here linked; another name is 'canis charcharius'">Porbeagle</ins>, <a href="#Footnote_56_68">57 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Porpoise, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
+
+<li> Porci solidi pedes, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
+
+<li> Primmes, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Pristis serra, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Puets, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
+
+<li> Puffin, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Pungitius, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">Q.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Quail, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li> Quercus Galls, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
+
+<li> Quercus marinus, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
+
+<li> Querquedula, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">R.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Rail, Land, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li> Rail, Water, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
+
+<li> Rana piscatrix, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
+
+<li> Raven, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
+
+<li> Rays, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Razor shells, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> Red-backed Shrike, <a href="#Footnote_41_52">25 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Red-legged Partridge, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li> Red Mullet, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Redshank, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
+
+<li> Reed-chock, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
+
+<li> Reseda, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
+
+<li> Ringlestones, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+<li> Ring Plover, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+<li> Roach, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
+
+<li> Rochet, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li> Rock Cormorant, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
+
+<li> Rockling, <a href="#Footnote_60_72">39 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Roller, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Roman Nettle, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
+
+<li> Rook, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
+
+<li> Rudd, Roud, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
+
+<li> Ruff (fish), <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Ruff (Reeve), <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li> Rubelliones, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li> Rutilus, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">S.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Salmon, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Sand Eel, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+
+<li> Sanderling, <a href="#Footnote_29_39">19 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Saurus, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+
+<li> Sawfish, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Sandpiper, Common, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
+
+<li> Scad, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li> Scallop, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> Scarabĉus, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
+
+<li> Scarburgh, Sir C., <a href="#Footnote_3_11">3 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Scolopax, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
+
+<li> Scolopendra, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
+
+<li> Scombri, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+
+<li> Scorpius, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
+
+<li> Scotch Goose, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Buttons, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Dotterel, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Dugge, <a href="#Footnote_91_106">50 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Gudgeon, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Leach, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Loach, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Louse, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Miller's Thumb, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Mouse, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Perriwig, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Pheasant, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Pie, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Stars, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Trout, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Wolf, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Sea Woodcock, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
+
+<li> Seal, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
+
+<li> Seaweeds, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
+
+<li> Sepia, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Sesamoides, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
+
+<li> Shad, <a href="#Footnote_70_83">42 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Shag, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
+
+<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>Shagreen Ray, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Shearwater, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
+
+<li> Sheld-drake, <a href="#Footnote_18_27">12 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Shoeing-horn, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
+
+<li> Shore Crab, <a href="#Footnote_82_97">46 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Shovelard, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
+
+<li> Shoveller Duck, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
+
+<li> Shrike, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+<li> Shrimp, Freshwater, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Silerella, <a href="#Footnote_41_52">26 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Siskin, <a href="#Footnote_48_59">29 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li> Skate, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Skipper (Saury), <a href="#Footnote_64_76">40 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Skua, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
+
+<li> Smelt, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
+
+<li> Smew, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
+
+<li> Snakes, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
+
+<li> Sole, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Solens, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> Solid-footed Swine, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
+
+<li> Sperm Whale, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
+
+<li> Spermologous, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
+
+<li> Spoonbill, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
+
+<li> Sported Flycatcher, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li> Sported Ray, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Sprat, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+<li> Squalders, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Footnote_90_105">50 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
+
+<li> Squid, <a href="#Footnote_80_94">45 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Squllĉ, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Starling, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li> Stella marina, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
+
+<li> Stern, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Sting-fish, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
+
+<li> Sting Ray, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Stint, <a href="#Footnote_29_39">19 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li> Stickleback, <a href="#Footnote_75_88">44 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
+
+<li> Stone Curlew, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
+
+<li> Stork, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
+
+<li> Sturgeon, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
+
+<li> Succinum, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
+
+<li> Sun-fish, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
+
+<li> Surmullet, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
+
+<li> Swan, Wild, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Sweet Flag, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
+
+<li> Swift, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
+
+<li> Sword Fish, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">T.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Teal, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Tench, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
+
+<li> Tenison, Archbishop, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>.</li>
+
+<li> Terns, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li> Tethya, <a href="#Footnote_91_106">50 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
+
+<li> Thornback, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+
+<li> Tope, <a href="#Footnote_56_68">37 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Trachurus, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
+
+<li> Trout, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+<li> Trout, Sea, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
+
+<li> Tufted Duck, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
+
+<li> Tunny?, <a href="#Footnote_73_86">43 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+
+<li> Turbines, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> Turbot, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">U.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Upupa, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
+
+<li> Urtica marina, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Urtica mas, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
+
+<li> Urtica pilulifera, <a href="#Footnote_105_121">59 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Urtica Romana, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">V.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Vermes marinus, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
+
+<li> Vermes setacei, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Vesicaria, <a href="#Footnote_91_106">50 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
+
+<li> Vipers, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
+
+<li> Vitulus marinus, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">W.</p>
+
+<ul><li> Water Beetle, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Water Boatman, <a href="#Footnote_98_113">55 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li> Water Hen, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
+
+<li> Water Rail, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
+
+<li> Waxwing, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
+
+<li> Weasel Cray, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
+
+<li> Weasel ling, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Weever-fish, <a href="#Footnote_69_82">42 (note)</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
+
+<li> Wesell, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
+
+<li> Whale, Sperm, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
+
+<li> Wheatear, <a href="#Footnote_43_54">26 (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Whelk, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li> White-tailed Eagle, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
+
+<li> Whiting, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+<li> Whinne Bird, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li> Wild Duck, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
+
+<li> Wild Goose, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li> Wild Swan, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Wilkin, Simon, <a href="#Footnote_D_4">xviii. (note)</a></li>
+
+<li> Willick, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li> Wolf-fish, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li> Woodcock (fish), <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
+
+<li> Woodpecker, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
+
+<li> Wren, Dr. Christopher, <a href="#Page_xx">xx</a>.</li>
+
+<li> Wren, Gold-crested, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li> Wryneck, <a href="#Footnote_34_44">22 (note)</a></li></ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="fs12">X.</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li> Xiphias, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="fs12">Y.</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li> Yarwhelp, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="wide" />
+<h2><a name="ERRATA" id="ERRATA"></a>ERRATA.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>Page 8, <a href="#Footnote_10_19">note 10</a>, last line, <i>delete</i> us.</p>
+
+<p>Page 8, <a href="#Footnote_11_20">note 11</a>, first line, after Great Northern Diver, insert
+<i>Colymbus glacialis</i>; line three, <i>delete Colymbus glacialis</i>,
+and after <i>Mergus maximus</i> insert Farrensis.</p>
+
+<p>Page 12, <a href="#Footnote_17_26">note 17</a>, line 8, for "English Birds" read "English
+words."</p>
+
+<p>Page 12, <a href="#Footnote_18_27">note 18</a>, line 4 from bottom, for "near the centre" read
+"near the south-west border."</p>
+
+<p>Page 14, <a href="#Footnote_22_32">note 22</a>, line 9, after "(Hunt)" insert ";."</p>
+
+<p>Page 20, <a href="#Footnote_31_41">note 31</a>, line 5, transfer the words "for the last few
+years" to line 4, after "has bred."</p>
+
+<p>Page 23, <a href="#Footnote_36_47">note 36</a>, line 3, for "Eringo" read "Eryngo."</p>
+
+<p>Page 34, <a href="#Footnote_52_64">note 52</a>, line 1, for "hat" read "that."</p>
+
+<p>Page 35, <a href="#Footnote_54_66">note 54</a>, line 5, for "Neridiform" read "Nereidiform."</p>
+
+<p>Page 36, <a href="#Footnote_55_67">note 55</a>, line 7, for <i>pristis antiquoram</i> read <i>pristis
+antiquorum</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Page 46, <a href="#Footnote_82_97">note 82</a>, line 1, for <i>Cancer</i> read <i>Carsinus</i>
+(corrected in Index).</p>
+
+<p>Page 47, <a href="#Footnote_83_98">note 83</a>, lines 9 and 19, for <i>litoria</i>, read
+<i>littorea</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Page 50, <a href="#Footnote_90_105">note 90</a>, line 2 from bottom, after "and" insert
+"which."</p>
+
+<p>Page 53, <a href="#Footnote_93_108">note 93</a>, line 5 from bottom, for <i>Pandalus varius</i>,
+read <i>Hippolyte varians</i> (corrected in Index).</p></div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><br /><br /><i>Jarrold &amp; Sons, The Empire Press, Norwich and London.</i></p>
+
+<h2>Transcriber's Notes</h2>
+
+<div class="tnotes">
+
+
+<p>Spelling and punctuation are retained as in the original.</p>
+
+<p>Footnotes were kept as close to the referring paragraph as practicable.
+They are essentially part of the text.</p>
+
+<p>The errata section was moved to the end of the book and its changes
+are entered.</p>
+
+<p>The following words appear both with and without hyphens.</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li> Bee-bird</li>
+<li> Fly-catcher</li>
+<li> fresh-water</li>
+<li> Gar-fish</li>
+<li> Goat-sucker</li>
+<li> marsh-bird</li>
+<li> Needle-fish</li>
+<li> north-west</li>
+<li> Saw-fish</li>
+<li> sea-shoare</li>
+<li> sea-shore</li>
+<li> whole-footed</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p><a href="#Footnote_98_113">Footnote 98</a></p>
+
+<p>'Both Vipers (or Adders) and Snakes, the latter in particular,'</p>
+
+<p>'latte ' included a following space, so made the assumption that
+the word here is 'latter'.</p>
+
+<p>Changed.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Page_13">Page 13</a></p>
+
+<p>'Mergus acutarostris cinereus'</p>
+
+<p>'acutarostris' may be 'acutirostris' as used elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Spelled as in original.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Page_39">Page 39</a></p>
+
+<p>'sprdding the finnes into a liuely posture do hang them'</p>
+
+<p>'sprdding' is an odd spelling for spreading.</p>
+
+<p>Spelled as in original.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Page_45">Page 45</a></p>
+
+<p>'with a long &amp; strong aculeus in the tayle conceuud of'</p>
+
+<p>'conceuud' is an odd spelling.</p>
+
+<p>Unchanged.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Page_76">Page 76</a></p>
+
+<p>'A yarewhelp or barker [<i>some words smeared out</i>]'</p>
+
+<p>Closing bracket added.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Page_91">Page 91</a></p>
+
+<p>'came out of his nostrells. thus much ffrom him who doth'</p>
+
+<p>'ffrom' matches original.</p>
+
+<p>Double 'ff' occurs several places in the book.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Page_93">Page 93</a></p>
+
+<p>'or Joannes Goropius (as the name is
+variously given in the "Biographie Universelle" (b. 1518, d. 1572),'</p>
+
+<p>Missing closed parenthesis.</p>
+
+<p>Unchanged.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#notonacton">Index 'Notonacton'</a></p>
+
+<p>'Notonacton'</p>
+
+<p>Refers to 'Notonecton' in all cases.</p>
+
+<p>Unchanged.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#porbeagle">Index 'Porbeagle'</a></p>
+
+<p>'Porbeagle'</p>
+
+<p>'57' may be a typo for '37'</p>
+
+<p>Porbeagle is also known as 'Canis carcharius alius' or 'canis charcharius alius Jonst.'
+or 'Lamna cornubica'.</p>
+
+<p>Unchanged.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Letters on the Natural
+History of Norfolk, by Thomas Browne
+
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Letters on the Natural History of
+Norfolk, by Thomas Browne
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Notes and Letters on the Natural History of Norfolk
+ More Especially on the Birds and Fishes
+
+Author: Thomas Browne
+
+Release Date: April 16, 2011 [EBook #35888]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NATURAL HISTORY OF NORFOLK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Leonard Johnson and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ NOTES AND LETTERS
+
+ ON THE
+
+ NATURAL HISTORY OF NORFOLK
+
+
+
+[Illustration: SIR THOMAS BROWNE TO DOCTOR CHRISTOPHER MERRETT.
+
+MS. RAWLINSON D. cviii., FOL. 105. --_See p. 80._]
+
+
+
+
+ Notes and Letters
+
+ ON THE
+
+ Natural History of Norfolk
+
+ MORE ESPECIALLY ON THE
+
+ BIRDS AND FISHES
+
+
+
+ FROM THE MSS. OF
+
+ SIR THOMAS BROWNE, M.D.
+
+ (1605-1682)
+
+ IN THE SLOANE COLLECTION IN THE LIBRARY OF THE BRITISH
+ MUSEUM AND IN THE BODLEIAN LIBRARY, OXFORD
+
+
+
+ WITH NOTES BY
+
+ THOMAS SOUTHWELL, F.Z.S.
+
+ _Member of the British Ornithologists' Union; Vice-President of the
+ Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society_
+
+
+
+ LONDON
+
+ JARROLD & SONS, 10 & 11, WARWICK LANE, E.C.
+
+ [ALL RIGHTS RESERVED]
+
+ 1902
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ OBSERVATIONS
+
+ ON THE
+
+ FAUNA OF NORFOLK,
+
+ AND MORE PRACTICALLY ON
+
+ The Popular District of the Broads of Norfolk and Suffolk,
+
+
+ BY THE LATE
+
+ REV. RICHARD LUBBOCK, M.A.
+
+
+ _New Edition, 6s.; Half Roxburgh, 7s. 6d._
+
+
+ WITH ADDITIONS FROM UNPUBLISHED MANUSCRIPTS OF THE AUTHOR, AND NOTES BY
+
+ THOMAS SOUTHWELL, F.Z.S.,
+
+
+ ALSO A MEMOIR BY
+
+ HENRY STEVENSON, F.L.S.,
+
+
+ AN APPENDIX CONTAINING NOTES ON HAWKING IN NORFOLK, BY
+
+ ALFRED NEWTON, M.A., F.R.S., ETC.,
+
+
+ AND ON THE DECOYS, REPTILES, SEA FISH, LEPIDOPTERA,
+ AND BOTANY OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+ "In addition to the intrinsic merits of the book, of which we can
+ personally speak in the superlative degree as one of the most
+ pleasantly-written of the many pleasant natural history books our
+ language is so rich in--describing, as it does, the 'Broad
+ District'--a country unlike any other part of England, and a very
+ paradise to the Botanist, Entomologist, and Ornithologist. This
+ new edition is edited by Mr. Thomas Southwell, the active
+ Secretary of the Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society, whose
+ full and accurate knowledge of the natural history of Norfolk
+ better fits him for the task than any other man we know
+ of."--_Science Gossip._
+
+ "The book in its original form is well known to naturalists, and
+ it would be difficult to find another volume of its size which
+ conveys in so agreeable a manner so much accurate and trustworthy
+ information on the subject of which it treats. We promise to
+ those who have never yet read this book a rare treat from its
+ perusal."--_Zoologist._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SUPPLEMENT
+
+ TO THE
+
+ FLORA OF NORFOLK,
+
+
+ BY
+
+ REV. KIRBY TRIMMER, A.B.
+
+
+ _Crown 8vo. Cloth 6s._
+
+ The Supplement to the "Flora of Norfolk" is a record of
+ additional localities of many of the plants contained in that
+ publication, and an entry of some other plants new in the
+ country.
+
+
+ LONDON: JARROLD AND SONS, 10 AND 11, WARWICK LANE, E.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE OFFICIAL GUIDE
+
+ TO THE
+
+ NORWICH CASTLE MUSEUM,
+
+ _With an Account of its Origin and Progress_,
+
+ BY
+
+ THOMAS SOUTHWELL, F.Z.S.,
+
+ _Member of the British Ornithologists' Union, Vice-President of the
+ Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society, etc._:
+
+ ALSO AN HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE CASTLE KEEP BY
+
+ REV. WM. HUDSON, M.A.,
+
+ _Hon. Sec. Norfolk and Norwich Archaeological Society:_
+
+
+ AND A GUIDE TO THE COLLECTION OF PICTURES, WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF
+ THE "NORWICH SCHOOL" OF ARTISTS BY
+
+ G. C. EATON, ESQ.,
+
+ _Late Hon. Sec. Norfolk and Norwich Museum._
+
+ (Published under the Special Sanction of the Castle Museum Committee.)
+
+ _Profusely Illustrated, 1 6. Abridged Edition, 6d._
+
+ "Mr. Southwell is himself an authority on natural history, and he
+ has contrived to invest his description of the various specimens
+ with a liveliness and vigour, as well as a scientific accuracy.
+ He has taken care to include every object of importance, and his
+ work should at once take its place as the popular guide to the
+ Museum."--_Bookseller._
+
+ "An interesting and useful guide to the collection in the Museum.
+ It is not merely a catalogue, but a popular natural history, in
+ which the specimens in the cases are used as illustrations.
+ Sightseers will pleasantly acquire a knowledge of the leading
+ characteristics of the different groups of animals, and students
+ will gain a large amount of sound instruction."--_Nature._
+
+ "There is an abundance of useful information confined in a small
+ compass, while there are many capital illustrations."--_The
+ Record._
+
+ "Its collections are of interest not only to the antiquarian and
+ to the geologist, but also to the ornithologist; and the picture
+ gallery is worth a visit."--_Daily Telegraph._
+
+ "Visitors will find this cheap, handy, well-filled volume of much
+ service."--_The Guardian._
+
+ LONDON: JARROLD AND SONS, 10 AND 11, WARWICK LANE, E.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ INTRODUCTION vii
+
+ NOTES ON CERTAIN BIRDS FOUND IN NORFOLK 1
+
+ NOTES ON CERTAIN FISHES, ETC., FOUND IN NORFOLK 31
+
+ LETTERS TO MERRETT 57
+
+ APPENDIX A. 86
+
+ APPENDIX B. 90
+
+ APPENDIX C. 95
+
+ APPENDIX D. 96
+
+ INDEX 99
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ "Every kingdom, every province, should have its own
+ monographer."--_Gilbert White. Seventh Letter to Barrington._
+
+
+The excellent Memoir of Sir Thomas Browne, in Wilkin's Edition of his
+works, renders it unnecessary here to repeat what has already been so
+well done; suffice it to say that he was born in London on the 19th of
+October, 1605; he was educated at Winchester School and entered at
+Broadgates Hall (now Pembroke College), Oxford, in 1623; graduated B.A.
+31st January, 1626-7, and M.A. 11th June, 1629. About the year 1633 he
+was created Doctor of Physick at Leyden. In 1636 he took up his
+residence in Norwich, in 1637 was incorporated Doctor of Physic in
+Oxford, and in 1665 was chosen an Honorary Fellow of the College of
+Physicians. In 1671 Browne was knighted at Norwich by Charles II., and
+after a useful and honourable career died on his seventy-sixth birthday,
+the 19th of October, 1682, and his body lies buried in the church of St.
+Peter Mancroft, Norwich.
+
+Browne in early life travelled much and was a voluminous writer; he made
+many friendships with men celebrated in his day, and his advice and
+assistance were sought and gratefully acknowledged by Dugdale, Evelyn,
+Ray and Willughby, Merrett, Sir Robert Paston (afterwards Earl of
+Yarmouth), Ashmole, Aubrey, and others; but his general correspondence
+does not now concern us, my object being to supply in a convenient form
+what I believe will be acceptable to modern naturalists, namely, an
+accurate transcript of his notes and letters on the "Natural History of
+the County of Norfolk."
+
+These notes and letters were first published by Simon Wilkin in his
+Edition of Sir Thomas Browne's Works in 1835, but they were not treated
+from a naturalist's point of view, and in some places were not correctly
+transcribed, added to which, in the vast mass of matter contained in
+Wilkin's four large volumes (or in the closely printed three volumes of
+Bohn's Edition), these interesting passages are in danger of being
+overlooked or are inconvenient for reference. Two letters, moreover,
+were needed to make the correspondence with Merrett complete, and these
+I have been enabled to supply. I hope also that my explanatory notes,
+which I trust will not be deemed too voluminous, will be found more
+useful than the necessarily brief notes furnished by Wilkin and his
+collaborators. Furthermore, I think that the retention of the original
+spelling and punctuation may lend a charm to the quaintness of the
+language which is in a measure destroyed by any attempt at modernising.
+
+There is much that is interesting bearing upon Natural Science scattered
+throughout Browne's writings, especially in his _Pseudodoxia Epidemica_,
+or inquiries into Vulgar and Common Errors, first published in 1646, and
+the reader cannot fail to be impressed not only with the extent of his
+classical knowledge but also with the shrewdness with which he pursued
+his original investigations; but here it is only proposed to deal with
+certain manuscript notes and a series of rough notes for, or copies of,
+letters addressed to Dr. Christopher Merrett, the author of the _Pinax
+Rerum Naturalium Britannicarum_. These, as remarked by their editor,
+with regard to some other manuscripts published[A] in 1684, under the
+title of "Certain Miscellany Tracts," were doubtless "rather the
+_diversions_ than the _Labours_ of his Pen; and ... He did, as it
+were, drop down his Thoughts of a sudden, in those spaces of vacancy
+which he snatch'd from those very many occasions which gave him hourly
+interruption;" but I cannot in this instance agree with the conclusion
+arrived at by the same writer that it "seemeth probable that He designed
+them for publick use," for they appear to be the rough drafts or
+memoranda used in the production of the finished letters (which are
+unfortunately not forthcoming), and were never intended for publication
+in their present crude form, thus rendering pardonable such annotations
+as I have ventured to add. But before proceeding further it is necessary
+to consider briefly the time and circumstances under which they were
+written, and the state of what passed for Natural Science at that
+period.
+
+ [A] The "Miscellany Tracts" were put forth by "Tho. Tenison"
+ (1636-1715), who afterwards became Archbishop of Canterbury, but
+ was then the Rector of a London parish, St. Martin-in-the-Fields.
+ He had been a Norwich school-boy, and subsequently minister of St.
+ Peter's Mancroft. He was doubtless well acquainted with Browne and
+ his family, and hence his reference in the preface quoted to "the
+ _Lady_ and _Son_ of the excellent Authour," who, he says,
+ "deliver'd" the papers to him.
+
+Browne wrote early in the second half of the seventeenth century, during
+a period of great awakening in the study of Nature. Hitherto it could
+hardly be said that a direct appeal to the works of Nature had been the
+prevailing method. Aristotle was still the established authority, and
+commentaries on his works occupied the minds of men to the exclusion of
+original investigation, notwithstanding that this great philosopher had
+himself, both by precept and example, urged the importance of direct
+observation and inquiry; the Mediaeval school of thought still prevailed
+and cramped every effort at progress. How keenly Browne lamented this
+spirit of slavish adherence to tradition may be judged from a passage in
+one of his Essays in the "Vulgar Errors" condemning the obstinate
+adherence unto antiquity; he writes, "but the mortallist enemy unto
+knowledge, and that which hath done the greatest execution upon truth,
+hath been a peremptory adhesion unto authority; and more especially the
+establishing of our belief upon the dictates of antiquity. For (as every
+capacity may observe) most men of ages present, so supersticiously do
+look upon ages past, that the authorities of one exceed the reason of
+the other." In another place he argues that the present should be the
+age of authority, seeing that we possess all the wisdom of the ancients
+which has come down to us, with that of our own times added. In fact,
+Browne's motto appears to have been "prove all things and hold fast
+only to that which is good."[B]
+
+ [B] There was one form of ancient authority before which Browne
+ bowed down with absolute and unquestioning submission--the
+ authority of the Scriptures. In all secular matters he was ever
+ ready to point the lance and do battle, but all that appealed to
+ him on what he regarded as divine authority was beyond the pale,
+ and it never entered into his mind to submit it to the test of
+ reason. In the "Religio Medici" he declares his devoted adherence
+ first to the guidance of Scripture, and secondly to the Articles of
+ the Church, "whatsoever is beyond, as points indifferent, I observe
+ according to the rules of my private reason;" and again, "where the
+ Scripture is silent, the Church is my text; where that speaks 'tis
+ but my comment; where there is a joint silence of both I borrow not
+ the rules of my religion from Rome or Geneva, but the dictates of
+ my own reason." This implicit adherence to the literal text of
+ Scripture led to his--shall I say active belief in, or passive
+ acceptance of, the existence of Witchcraft, and thus to the only
+ act in an otherwise blameless life which we must regard with regret
+ and astonishment. I refer to the consenting part he took in the
+ doing to death of two poor women at Bury St. Edmund's in the year
+ 1664. It is my business to act as Browne's exponent, not as his
+ apologist, but it must be borne in mind that in his day the "higher
+ criticism" was a thing unheard of, and that the literal sense of
+ the English translation of the Bible was accepted as binding not
+ only by him but by the vast majority of the people, including the
+ most learned men of the time. "Thou shalt not suffer a witch to
+ live" was a plain command, and given a witch the believer's duty
+ was also plain; that there _had_ been witches there was ample
+ scriptural evidence, but there was none that the days of witchcraft
+ had passed away. Browne only shared this belief with his pious
+ friend, the venerable Bishop Hall, and many men equally devout
+ according to their lights; he makes no secret of the fact and acts
+ in accordance with his convictions and the plain authority of
+ Scripture. Thus it came about that these conscientious but mistaken
+ men were induced to render possible, if not actually to
+ countenance, the fiendish cruelties perpetrated by their
+ unscrupulous allies. In matters which he considered less
+ authoritative his views were so liberal as to gain for him the
+ stigma of infidel or heretic; but let a man govern his thoughts and
+ actions by the private rules Browne laid down for his own guidance
+ (vol. iv., p. 420), and it would be hard to regard him as otherwise
+ than a God-fearing man, striving to live up to his profession.
+
+Aristotle, whose works on Natural History have descended to us in a very
+imperfect condition, lived in 385-322 B.C., and it was not till A.D. 79
+that the _Historia Naturalis_ of Pliny the Elder the next great work,
+which has survived till our days, was completed, and by some of those
+most competent to form a judgment the additions which he made were not
+in all cases improvements. Other writers followed, but their productions
+were of little value, and it was not till the year 1544 that William
+Turner published at Cologne what Professor Newton describes as "the
+first commentary on the birds mentioned by Aristotle and Pliny conceived
+in anything like the spirit that moves modern Naturalists." Turner's
+book is very rare and unfortunately at present beyond the reach of most
+modern students. No attempt at systematic arrangement, as now
+understood, was made until the _Histoire de la Nature des Oyseaux_ of
+Pierre Belon (Bellonius) appeared at Paris in 1555, for the much greater
+work of Conrad Gesner, being the third book of his _Historia Animalium_,
+which was published at Zurich in the same year, and treated of Birds,
+followed, more or less closely, an alphabetical plan which brought upon
+him the censure of Aldrovandus, three of whose sixteen folio volumes
+forming the _Historia Naturalium_ bore the title of _Ornithologiae hoc
+est de Avibus Historiae, Libri XII._, and were brought out at Bologna
+between the years 1599 and 1603. The _Historia Naturalis_ of John
+Jonston, or "Jonstonus" (1603-1675), originally published in four
+sections between the years 1649 and 1653, ran through several editions,
+and was a popular book in the seventeenth century; it is frequently
+referred to by Browne, but is a work of very little originality. Though
+all these authors undoubtedly influenced their successors, it may be
+fairly said that it was Browne's contemporaries and fellow-countrymen,
+Francis Willughby and John Ray, who laid the first solid foundation of
+systematic zoology in their _Ornithologia_ and _Historia Piscium_,
+published in 1676 and 1686 respectively; but dying in 1682, Browne was
+indebted to neither of them, though he doubtless exercised much
+influence over them, and he had to use the clumsy descriptive
+terminology then in vogue.[C] Let me illustrate this by a single
+example. In one of his letters to Merrett he names a "little elegant
+sea plant" (probably _Halecium halecinum_, a species of Hydroid
+Zoophyte), "_Fucus marinus vertebratus pisciculi spinum referens
+ichthyorachius_, or what you think fit." On another occasion Merrett
+thus expresses his approval of Browne's efforts in this direction: "You
+have very well named the _rutilus_ and expressed fully the cours to bee
+taken in the imposition of names, viz: the most obvious and most
+peculiar difference to the ey or any other sens." We can hardly conceive
+the difficulties these pioneers of Natural Science had to contend with;
+the works of their predecessors were so indefinite as to be of little
+value in determining species; they had to depend upon the vague
+descriptions of fowlers and others; the same bird would probably be
+known in half a dozen different localities by as many different names,
+and since no satisfactory mode of preserving specimens had then been
+discovered, examples for comparison were not available. If inextricable
+confusion arose with regard to such a bird as the Osprey, well might
+Browne write with regard to those less readily characterized, "I confess
+for such little birds I am much unsatisfied on the names given to many
+by countrymen, and uncertaine what to give them myself, or to what
+classis of authors cleerly to reduce them. Surely there are many found
+among us which are not described; and therefore such which you cannot
+well reduce, may (if at all) be set down after the exacter nomination of
+small birds as yet of uncertain class of knowledge."
+
+ [C] In 1735 appeared the first edition of the _Systema Naturae of
+ Linnaeus_ which, meagre as it was, ushered in a more definite system
+ of classification, whilst his invention of the binomial method of
+ nomenclature, first used by him in the tenth edition of that work
+ published in 1758, contributed not a little in reducing to order
+ what had hitherto been a chaos, although in his classification of
+ birds he for the most part followed his predecessor Ray.
+
+I must ask pardon for this digression, but my object has been to show
+the difficulties Browne had to contend with and to emphasise the
+originality which pervades all his observations, a characteristic so
+conspicuously absent in the work of most of his predecessors. I should
+like also to call attention to his references to the migratory habits of
+many species of birds, a phenomenon attracting little notice in his day,
+but one which can be so readily observed on the coast of Norfolk. These
+remarks were penned at a time when hibernation in a state of torpidity
+was thoroughly believed in--an idea of which even Gilbert White a
+hundred years later could not thoroughly divest himself. In his tract on
+"Hawks and Falconry," Browne further says: "How far the hawks, merlins,
+and wild-fowl which come unto us with a north-west [east?] wind in
+Autumn, fly in a day, there is no clear account: but coming over the sea
+their flight hath been long or very speedy. For I have known them to
+light so weary on the coast, that many have been taken with dogs, and
+some knocked down with staves and stones." Further than this, he knew
+the seasons of their appearing--the Hobby "coming to us in the spring,"
+the Merlin "about autumn." His frequent mention of anatomical
+peculiarities and of his dissections of many birds and beasts clearly
+prove his passion for original research, and the frequent records of the
+contents of the stomachs of the birds which he had the opportunity of
+examining was a mode of obtaining exact information as to the nature of
+their food, which I imagine was not common in those days.
+
+How highly Browne was esteemed by his contemporaries may be judged from
+the acknowledgments of his assistance by Dugdale, Evelyn (who visited
+him in Norwich in 1671), and others; and Ray especially mentions his
+indebtedness to "the deservedly famous Sir Thomas Browne, Professor of
+Physic in the City of Norwich." His letters to his son, Dr. Edward
+Browne, are full of instructions as to the course of study he should
+pursue, and subsequently, when the latter became celebrated and was
+appointed Physician to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, it was still to his
+father that he looked for advice in his hospital practice and in the
+preparation of his lectures. Browne was proud of his adopted county, a
+feeling evidently shared by his son, and I trust I may be pardoned for
+quoting the concluding passage of the latter's account of a tour into
+Derbyshire, wherein he expresses a sentiment which survives with
+undiminished force in the breast of many a Norfolk man in the present
+day. There is a very interesting account of his crossing the Wash on
+leaving Lynn for Boston, but on his return to Norwich in September,
+1662, he thus concludes his journal: "Give me leave to say this much:
+let any stranger find mee out so pleasant a country, such good way
+[roads], large heath, three such places as Norwich. Yar [Yarmouth] and
+Lin [Lynn], in any county of England, and I'll bee once again a vagabond
+to visit them."
+
+The manuscripts of which the following selection forms a part are
+contained, with a few exceptions to be named hereafter, in the Sloane
+Collection in the Library of the British Museum, consisting of nearly
+one hundred volumes, numbered 1825 to 1923 both inclusive. A catalogue
+is given by Simon Wilkin[D] (himself a Norfolk man), by whom Browne's
+collected writings were first published in a connected form, as already
+mentioned, under the title of "Sir Thomas Browne's Works, including his
+Life and Correspondence, edited by Simon Wilkin, F.L.S. London, William
+Pickering. Josiah Fletcher, Norwich, 1836." 4 volumes, 8vo; the first
+volume only is dated 1836, Vols. 2, 3, and 4 being dated 1835.[E] It was
+here that the Notes and Letters were first given to the public. A second
+edition of the "Works," also edited by Wilkin, in three closely printed
+volumes, was issued in Bohn's Antiquarian Library in 1852. In the first
+edition the Notes on the Birds and Fishes will be found in Vol. IV., pp.
+313 to 336, and the letters to Merrett in Vol. I., pp. 393 to 408. In
+the second edition both are in Vol. III., pp. 311 to 335 and pp. 502 to
+513 respectively. The references here, as a rule, will be made to the
+1836 edition, when otherwise Bohn's edition will be specified.
+
+ [D] _Simon Wilkin_ (1790-1862), the able editor of Sir Thomas
+ Browne's collected works, was born at Costessey near Norwich, in
+ the year 1790. He came to Norwich after his father's death in 1799,
+ taking up his temporary abode with his guardian, Joseph Kinghorn, a
+ Baptist minister of note and a prominent member of a literary
+ circle then existing in Norwich, by whom his education was
+ superintended. On arriving at man's estate and being at that time
+ possessed of ample means, he devoted himself to the study of
+ Natural History, especially to Entomology, and was the possessor of
+ a large collection of insects which, in the year 1827, was
+ purchased for the Norwich Museum at a cost of one hundred guineas,
+ a large sum in those days. He was one of the founders and the first
+ librarian of the Norfolk and Norwich Literary Institution in 1822,
+ also of the Norfolk and Norwich Museum in 1825, both of which
+ institutions (the former reunited to its parent Library, founded in
+ 1784) are still flourishing. Wilkin was a Fellow of the Linnean
+ Society, also a Member of the Wernerian Society of Edinburgh. In
+ later years the loss of the bulk of his property by a commercial
+ failure necessitated his turning his attention to some means of
+ earning a livelihood, and he established himself in Norwich as a
+ printer and publisher; later in life he removed to Hampstead, where
+ he died on 28th July, 1862, and was buried in his native village of
+ Costessey.
+
+ [E] Some copies of this Edition have a title-page, bearing the name
+ of H. G. Bohn as publisher, and the date of 1846, but differing
+ only in that respect.
+
+The foot-notes in Wilkin's edition, many of them very curious,
+initialled "Wr.," are by Dr. Christopher Wren, Dean of Windsor (father
+of the Architect of St. Paul's Cathedral), and were found on the margins
+of a copy of the first edition of the _Pseudodoxia_ now preserved in the
+Bodleian Library at Oxford; those initialled "G." were written for
+Wilkin's first edition by the late Miss Anna Gurney, of Northrepps, near
+Cromer, Norfolk.
+
+The first papers to which I shall refer are a series of rough notes
+contained for the most part in volume 1830 of the Sloane MSS., the first
+portion being devoted to _Birds_ found in Norfolk, followed by a similar
+series relating to marine and freshwater _Fishes_, including a few
+marine invertebrata and plants. They are written on one side only of
+foolscap paper, the portion relating to Birds occupying folios 5 to 19
+inclusive, folios 1 to 4 consist of two inserted letters from Merrett
+to Browne (see Appendix A.), which are printed by Wilkin in his first
+edition, Vol. I., pp. 442-5. The notes on Fishes are in the same volume
+of manuscripts, folios 23 to 38; but there are some irregularities which
+will be explained as they occur. The whole of the notes are very roughly
+written, and present the appearance of a commonplace book, in which the
+entries were made as the events occurred to the writer, being quite
+devoid of any system or arrangement. The entries doubtless extend over
+several years, but it is impossible to fix the dates on which they were
+made, the only internal evidence I can find being that speaking of the
+occurrence of a certain shark he states it was taken "this year, 1662,"
+and on the next page of the MS. there is the record of the occurrence of
+a sun-fish in the year 1667; this latter, however, is evidently an
+interpolation. A few pages further on there is the record of what he
+calls a large mackerel, "taken this year, 1668," but this also is an
+addition. We may take it, I think, that most of the notes were made
+about the year 1662, but that they were added to on various occasions up
+to 1668, in which year his first letter to Merrett is dated. It has been
+suggested that these notes were prepared in the interest of Dr. Merrett
+for his use in an enlarged edition of his _Pinax_, but the remark in his
+first letter to this correspondent, "I have observed and taken notice of
+many animals in these parts whereof 3 years agoe a learned gentleman of
+this country wished me to give him some account, which while I was doing
+ye gentleman my good friend died," clearly shows that they were
+originally prepared for another purpose, although they eventually
+furnished the materials for his letters to Merrett, but who his deceased
+friend was it seems now useless to conjecture, although it would be
+interesting to know. The notes were certainly never intended to appear
+in their present form, and failing their use by Merrett which never took
+place, the information they contained was, as we know, of great service
+to Ray and Willughby.
+
+Browne's correspondent, Dr. Christopher Merrett, was born at Winchcomb,
+in Gloucestershire, on the 16th of February, 1614. He graduated B.A. at
+Oriel College, Oxford, about the year 1635; M.B. 1636; M.D. 1643. Was
+elected Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1651, and was made
+first Keeper of the Library and Museum; he was Censor of the College
+seven times. Having entered into litigation with the College with
+regard to his appointment, which was considered by that body to have
+terminated when the Library was destroyed by the great fire, he was
+defeated, and in 1681 expelled from his fellowship. He died in London in
+1695. ("Dict. of Nat. Biog.") Merrett was the author of several works on
+various subjects, as well as of the _Pinax_, and a translation of the
+"Art of Glass" referred to further on. His _Pinax Rerum Naturalium
+Britannicarum_, said to have been brought out in 1666, contained the
+earliest list of British Birds ever published, but it is little more
+than a bare list. Copies bearing the date of 1666 are very rare, and it
+is believed the edition was burned in a fire at the publishers; but
+Professor Newton ("Dict. of Birds," Introduction, p. xviii.) says that
+in 1667 there were two issues of a reprint; one, nominally a second
+edition, only differs from the others in having a new title-page, an
+example doubtless of what Wilkin severely condemns as "that contemptible
+form of lying under which publishers have endeavoured to persuade the
+public of the rapidity of their sales." Merrett was contemplating a new
+and improved edition of his work when, as Wilkin happily puts it, "in an
+auspicious moment he sought the assistance of Browne, whose liberal
+response is evidenced in the [drafts of the] letters still fortunately
+extant, but either superseded by the more learned labours of Willughby
+and Ray, or laid aside on account of the perplexities in which Merrett
+became involved with the College of Physicians, the _Pinax_ never
+attained an enlarged edition. Had Browne completed and published his own
+'Natural History of Norfolk,' he might have contended for precedency
+among the writers of County Natural Histories with [his friend] Dr.
+Robert Plot,[F] who published the earliest of such works--those of
+Oxford and Staffordshire, in 1677 and 1686 respectively. He seems,
+however, to have preferred contributing to the labours of those whom he
+considered better naturalists than himself; and in his third attempt
+thus to render his observations useful he had somewhat better success.
+He placed his materials, including a number of coloured drawings, at
+the disposal of Ray, the father of systematic Natural History in Great
+Britain, who has acknowledged the assistance he derived from him in his
+editions of Willughby's 'Ornithology' and 'Ichthyology,' especially in
+the former. But Browne, it seems, found it more easy to lend than to
+recover such materials; for he complains, several years afterwards, that
+these drawings, of whose safe return he was assured, both by Ray and by
+their mutual friend, Sir Philip Skippon, had not been sent back to
+him."[G]
+
+ [F] Dr. Robert Plot (1640-1696) was born at Sutton Barne, Kent, in
+ 1640; he graduated M.A. in 1664, and D.C.L. at Oxford in 1671. He
+ was chiefly noted as an antiquary, and was Secretary of the Royal
+ Society from 1682 to 1684, also the first custodian of the
+ Ashmoleian Museum and Professor of Chemistry at Oxford. In 1677 he
+ published his "Natural History of Oxfordshire," the first local
+ work of the kind which appeared; it was illustrated by sixteen
+ plates. In 1686 he also published "The Natural History of
+ Staffordshire," and subsequently many other books and papers. He
+ was evidently acquainted with most of the learned men of his time.
+ Plot died at his family estate Sutton Barne, on the 30th of April,
+ 1696, and was buried at Borden in Kent. Dr. Plot was a friend of
+ Browne's, and his companion in a tour in England in 1693.--"Dict.
+ Nat. Biog."
+
+ [G] See letter to his son, Dr. Edward Browne (Wilkin, i., p. 337),
+ also Appendix C.
+
+I have endeavoured to reproduce as accurately as possible the text of
+the notes and letters, which, as will be seen from the example
+photographed for the frontispiece of this volume, was often very
+difficult to decipher. The originals of the notes and of seven of the
+nine letters to Merrett, as also the two letters in Appendix A., are in
+the Sloane Collection of MSS. in the British Museum Library; those
+numbered vii. and viii., as well as two letters in Appendix D., which
+have not hitherto been printed, are in the Bodleian Library; and the
+letter to Dugdale in Appendix B. is extracted from the "Eastern
+Counties Collectanea." All the MSS. in the Sloane Collection I have
+transcribed myself; of those in the Bodleian Library, No. vii. is from a
+photograph, the remainder were copied for me by a person recommended as
+being highly reliable. I thought it best to retain all the erasures and
+interlineations in order to show as much as possible what was passing in
+their author's mind: in the foot-notes I have sought to acknowledge _in
+situ_ the valuable help I received from numerous correspondents to whom
+my best thanks are due, but I owe a special debt of gratitude to
+Professor Newton, at whose instigation the work was undertaken, for his
+kind assistance and for the loan of scarce books which it was necessary
+to consult in the interesting investigations needful to elucidate, if
+possible, some of the obscure passages in the text, a task in which if
+with the best intentions should I have sometimes failed, I must ask the
+reader's indulgence.
+
+It may be truly said of Sir Thomas Browne that a prophet hath no honour
+in his own country; the writings of this remarkable man are little known
+in the city of his adoption, and a recent movement to erect a monument
+to his memory has hitherto met with feeble support.
+
+ T. S.
+
+_Norwich, December, 1901._
+
+
+
+
+Notes and Letters
+
+ON THE
+
+Natural History of Norfolk.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES[H] ON CERTAIN BIRDS FOUND IN NORFOLK.
+
+ [H] The heading adopted by Wilkin, for which I cannot find that he
+ had any authority, is certainly misleading, for the brief and
+ fragmentary notes which follow, although of great interest, can
+ hardly be called "An Account of the Birds (or Fishes) found in
+ Norfolk," as there are many species of each inhabiting or visiting
+ the county which must have been well-known to Browne, but of which
+ we find no mention.
+
+[MSS. SLOAN. 1830. FOL. 5-19. AND 31.]
+
+ [The first four pages in the volume of Manuscript consist of two
+ inserted letters from Merrett to Browne (see Appendix A.); these
+ are on ordinary letter paper 6-1/4 inches by 7 inches. The notes
+ commence on folio 5 and are continued to folio 19; one leaf,
+ containing an account of the Roller (numbered 31), is bound up
+ with the notes on the Fishes, &c., which are numbered
+ consecutively with the Birds; the paper of the volume is
+ foolscap, 11-1/2 by 7-1/2 inches, and written, with a few
+ exceptions, which appear to be subsequent additions, on the
+ right-hand opening only. There are four folios after the Birds,
+ the first of which is blank; the others, numbered 20, 21, and
+ 22, contain rough memoranda on the Birds and Fishes, the
+ substance of which is embodied in the other notes; the Fishes
+ commence on folio 23. There are many erasures, interlineations,
+ and substituted words which indicate hasty writing, and the
+ alterations are not in all cases complete, thus rendering the
+ sense occasionally obscure; these emendations I have thought it
+ best to preserve as indicating the author's line of thought. In
+ the foot-notes which follow I have endeavoured to identify the
+ species treated of. This, notwithstanding the kind assistance of
+ the friends whose help I gratefully acknowledge, I may not in
+ all cases have successfully accomplished; the conclusions
+ arrived at are occasionally only conjectural, and it may be that
+ in some instances I have erred. Should such be the case I must
+ plead in excuse the difficulty arising from vagueness of
+ description, the frequent use of vernacular names which have
+ long since become obsolete (_see Note_ 22), and the imperfection
+ of the record. This especially applies to the Marine Animals,
+ and one of my correspondents rightly remarks that "the early
+ accounts of marine beasts are so vague, and the figures (where
+ referred to) so incomplete and often fanciful, that it is
+ difficult even to make out the family, to say nothing of genera
+ and species." Any assistance or correction in this respect would
+ be gladly received by me.]
+
+
+[_Fol. 5._] I willingly obey your comands[1] in setting down such birds
+fishes & other animals wch for many years I have observed in Norfolk.
+
+ [1] With regard to the probable origin of these notes (see
+ "Introduction," p. xxi.). The opening passage was probably
+ addressed to the deceased correspondent who had asked his
+ assistance, whereas his first letter to Merrett seems to indicate
+ that the offer of help to him came spontaneously from Browne ("I
+ take ye boldness to salute you," &c.), and was not in response to
+ Merrett's request.
+
+Beside the ordinarie birds which keep constantly in the country many are
+discouerable both in winter & summer wch are of a migrant nature &
+exchange their seats according to the season.[2] those wch come in the
+spring coming for the most part from the southward those wch come in the
+Autumn or winter from the northward. so that they are obserued to come
+in great flocks with a north east wind & to depart with a south west.
+nor to come [in _struck out_] only in flocks of one kind butt teals
+woodcocks felfars thrushes & small birds to come & light together. for
+the most part some hawkes & birds of pray attending them.
+
+ [2] Browne seems to have had on the whole a fairly correct idea
+ with regard to the migratory movements of the birds on the Norfolk
+ coast where peculiar facilities exist for such observations, but of
+ course he could have formed no notion of the extent to which they
+ prevail, perhaps no species being altogether sedentary. The general
+ line of the autumn migration for those which spend their summer in
+ Northern Europe is south or south-west, returning in the spring by
+ the reverse route; those which visit us in spring from Western
+ Europe, or countries lying still more to the eastward, adopt what
+ is known as the east to west route, and reverse the direction in
+ the autumn; but this latter is as nothing compared with the vast
+ number of immigrants by both routes in the early autumn, at which
+ time, especially, the movements are so exceedingly complex that it
+ would be impossible here to attempt to explain them, and the reader
+ must be referred to Mr. Eagle Clarke's digest of the Reports of the
+ Migration Committee of the British Association ("Report Brit. Ass.
+ for 1876," pp. 451-477).
+
+The great & noble kind of Agle calld Aquila Gesneri[3] I have not seen
+in this country but one I met with [with _crossed out_] in this country
+brought from ireland wch I [presented unto _struck out_] kept 2 yeares,
+feeding it with whelpes cattes ratts & the like. in all that while not
+giving it any water wch I afterwards presented unto the [colledge of
+physitians at London _struck out_] my worthy friend Dr Scarburgh.
+
+ [3] The "Aquila" of Gesner here referred to is evidently the Golden
+ Eagle, which species Browne is careful to mention that he had not
+ met with in this county, and that the specimen he sent to Dr.
+ Scarburgh, more than once mentioned, was brought from Ireland. This
+ bird has never been recorded alive in Norfolk. Immature
+ White-tailed Eagles, the "Halyaetus" of the text, still occur almost
+ every autumn or winter on this coast, but no mature example has
+ hitherto been killed. Browne's friend, Sir Charles Scarburgh
+ (1616-1694), was born in London, and is buried at Cranford, in
+ Middlesex. He seems to have been greatly distinguished as an
+ anatomist and physician. He was a friend of William Harvey, whom he
+ succeeded as Lumleyan Lecturer at the College of Physicians (of
+ which he was elected a fellow in 1650). Harvey, out of regard for
+ his "lovinge friend" Dr. Scarburgh, bequeathed to him his "little
+ silver instruments of surgerie" and his velvet gown. ("Dict. of
+ Nat. Biog.") The Golden Eagle sent him by Browne was kept in the
+ College of Physicians in Warwick Lane for two years.
+
+of other sorts of Agles there are severall kinds especially of the
+Halyaetus or fenne Agles some of 3 yards & a quarter from the extremitie
+of the wings. whereof one being taken aliue grewe so tame that it went
+about the yard feeding on fish redherrings flesh & any offells without
+the least trouble.
+
+There is also a lesser sort of Agle called an ospray[4] wch houers about
+the fennes & broads & will dippe his [foot _crossed out_] claws & take
+up a fish oftimes for wch his foote is made of an extraordinarie
+roughnesse for the better fastening & holding of it & the like they will
+do unto cootes.
+
+ [4] This species is a not unfrequent autumn visitor to the Broads
+ and Rivers of Norfolk. Browne names it correctly, but there was
+ much confusion with regard to this species in the minds of the old
+ authors. Willughby knew the bird and calls it the "Bald Buzzard,"
+ but in describing its nesting site and eggs (probably not on his
+ own authority,) evidently confounds it with the Marsh Harrier, for
+ he says that "it builds upon the ground among reeds, and lays three
+ or four large white eggs of a figure exactly elliptical, lesser
+ than hens' eggs." _See Note_ 6.
+
+[_Fol._ 6.] Aldrovandus takes particular notice of the great number of
+Kites[5] about London & about the Thames. wee are not without them heare
+though not in such numbers. there are also the gray & bald Buzzard[6]
+[wch the all wth _crossed out_] of all wch the great number of broad
+waters & warrens makes no small number & more than in woodland counties.
+
+ [5] The Glede, or Puttock, of Turner, once so plentiful, is now
+ only an extremely rare visitor to Norfolk. In 1815, it appears from
+ Hunt ("British Ornithology"), not to have been uncommon, but the
+ same authority in his list of Norfolk Birds contributed to Stacey's
+ "History" of that County, speaks of the Kite as having in 1829
+ become extremely rare. It probably ceased to nest in this County
+ about the year 1830, or perhaps a little later. Browne's reason for
+ its comparative scarcity about the City of Norwich, viz., the
+ abundance of Ravens mentioned at p. 27 _infra_, is very interesting
+ to us in the present day when Kites and Ravens are almost equally
+ rare.
+
+ [6] It seems likely that Browne here refers to two species of
+ Harrier, the Grey Buzzard being the male of the Hen Harrier
+ (including of course Montagu's Harrier which was not discriminated
+ till long after) in its grey adult plumage, whereas the Marsh
+ Harrier, with its light yellow head, to which the word "bald" as
+ then used might well be applied, would stand for the "Bald
+ Buzzard." The Harriers, which were till long after the time he
+ wrote extremely numerous, are generally called "Buzzards" by the
+ natives, and it will be noticed at p. 15 _infra_, that what is
+ doubtless intended for the Marsh Harrier is spoken of as an enemy
+ to the Coots; also at p. 56, it is said that young Otters "have
+ been found in the Buzzards nests," a very likely circumstance with
+ so fierce a bird, and one of which I have an impression I have
+ heard in recent years. The Hen Harrier is now an extremely rare
+ bird with us; the Marsh Harrier still occasionally nests in the
+ Broads, and Montagu's Harrier now and then attempts to rear a
+ brood, but even should the parents succeed in escaping it is very
+ seldom they carry their young with them. Professor Newton has
+ kindly favoured me with the following additional interesting note
+ on this bird. "The Marsh Harrier is certainly the 'Balbushardus' of
+ Turner (1544), which, though he says it is bigger and longer than
+ the ordinary _Buteo_, has a white patch on the head and is
+ generally of a dark brown (_fuscus_) colour, hunting the banks of
+ rivers, pools, and marshes, living by the capture of Ducks, and the
+ black birds which the English call Coots (_Coutas_). This he,
+ Turner, has himself very often seen, and he describes its habits
+ correctly; adding that it also takes Rabbits occasionally. Gesner,
+ 1555, quotes Turner, but refers the Bald Buzzard to the Osprey
+ (which he figures), and so the mistake began. Certainly Willughby's
+ Bald Buzzard is the Osprey, but his book was not published when
+ Browne wrote."
+
+Cranes[7] are often seen here in hard winters especially about the
+champian & feildie part it seems they have been more plentifull for in a
+bill of fare when the maior entertaind the duke of norfolk I meet with
+Cranes in a dish.
+
+ [7] In the present day the Crane is only a rare straggler to this
+ country generally at the seasons of its migration; that it was in
+ times past abundant in suitable localities there is ample evidence;
+ that it also bred in the fens of the Eastern Counties there is no
+ reason to doubt, but very little direct evidence is forthcoming,
+ therefore every fact bearing upon this point is of value. Had Sir
+ Thomas Browne written with the intention of publishing his
+ observations he would doubtless have told us much about this grand
+ bird, which would have been of the greatest interest to modern
+ ornithologists, but even the above brief remarks, as will be seen,
+ are worthy of note.
+
+ With regard to the occurrence of the Crane in the fens of East
+ Anglia we have the following evidence; its fossil remains have been
+ found in the peat at Burwell, in Cambridgeshire, and in excavating
+ the docks at Lynn. Turner, in his "Avium Historia," Coloniae, 1544,
+ speaks of having seen young Cranes in this country, and as he
+ passed fifteen years at Cambridge, it was probably in that
+ neighbourhood that he met with them; then again there is the Act of
+ Parliament, passed in 1534 (25th Hen. VIII. c. ii.), prohibiting
+ the taking of their eggs (amongst those of other species) under a
+ penalty of twenty pence. All this is well known, but being desirous
+ to ascertain whether any reference to the Crane was to be found in
+ the records of the Corporation of Norwich, Mr. J. C. Tingey,
+ F.S.A., the custodian of the Muniment Room, at my request, most
+ kindly searched the accounts of the City Chamberlain between the
+ years 1531 and 1549. He there found numerous entries of sums
+ expended in the purchase of cranes, swans, porpoises, &c., as
+ presents to the Dukes of Norfolk and Suffolk and others, and
+ amongst them, on the 6th of June, 1543, a charge for a "yong pyper
+ crane" from Hickling, which appears conclusive evidence of the
+ breeding of this bird near Norwich at that time. (See "Transactions
+ of the N. and N. Nat. Soc.," vii., pp. 160-170.)
+
+ In Wilkin's Edition of the Notes the statement, "I met" with Cranes
+ in a dish should be, "I meet with," &c., as it is in the original.
+ The occasion referred to was probably an entertainment given by the
+ Mayor of Norwich, on the Guild day in 1663, which in that year fell
+ on the 19th June; at this banquet Henry, Duke of Norfolk and the
+ Hon. Henry Howard were present, and the latter presented to the
+ City a silver basin and ewer of the value of L60. Can it be that
+ even at that time young Cranes were to be obtained? otherwise the
+ middle of June seems a most unseasonable time for such a dish; for
+ in a copy of a curious old manuscript, dated 1605, and published in
+ the 13th Volume of "Archaeologia" (p. 315), entitled "A Breviate
+ touching the Order and Government of a Nobleman's house," &c.,
+ there is a "Monthlie Table, for a Diatorie" for each month in the
+ year, and the Crane appears only in the tables from November till
+ March inclusive. The modern gourmet would view with disgust some of
+ the dishes included in this "diatorie" if set before him--only to
+ mention among birds, auks, stares, petterells, puffines, didapers,
+ and martins. The crane being "in the dish" must not be subjected to
+ the vulgar process of "kervyng," but in the stilted heraldic
+ language of the day must be "desplayed," whereas a heron must be
+ "dismembered" and a bittern "unjointed." The price of a crane
+ varied from 3_s._ 4_d._ to 5_s._, and a fat swan from 3_s._ to
+ 4_s._ The sum of 6_d._ mentioned in the le Strange Household-book,
+ in the year 1533 (see "Archaeologia," vol. xxv., p. 529), quoted in
+ Yarrell's "British Birds," iii., p. 180, was only the reward for
+ bringing in a crane killed on the estate. That Cranes must at times
+ have been numerous in Norfolk in the sixteenth century is evident,
+ for in an account of the presents sent to William Moore, Esq., of
+ Loseley, on the occasion of the marriage of his daughter, on 3rd
+ November, 1567, Mr. Balam, "out of Marshland in Norfolk," sent him
+ nine cranes, nine swans, and sixteen bitterns, with a large number
+ of other wild-fowl. "Archaeologia," vol. xxxvi., p. 36.
+
+In hard winters elkes[8] a kind of wild swan are seen in no small
+numbers. in whom & not in co[=m]on swans is remarkable that strange
+recurvation of the windpipe through the sternon. & the same is also
+obseruable in cranes. tis probable they come very farre for all the
+northern discouerers have [ha _struck out_] obserued them in the
+remotest parts & like diuers [&] other northern birds if the winter bee
+mild they co[=m]only come no further southward then scotland if very
+hard they go lower & seeke more southern places. wch is the cause that
+sometimes wee see them not before christmas or the hardest time of
+winter.
+
+ [8] The "Elke" is an obsolete name for the Wild Swan (_Cygnus
+ musicus_), which occurs in the present day in the same numbers and
+ under precisely similar circumstances as Browne describes; but of
+ course this was the only species of wild swan known to him. The
+ remarkable recurvation of the trachea within the keel of the
+ sternum, which also prevails to a greater or less degree in four
+ out of the five or six species of Cygnus found in the Northern
+ Hemisphere, did not escape Browne's notice, although he was not the
+ first to describe it, and he rightly observes that this peculiarity
+ is absent in the Mute Swan (_C. olor_), but exists in a different
+ and even more exaggerated form in the Crane. He, however, was
+ mistaken as to the extreme northerly range which he assigns to this
+ species. So marked a feature as the absence of the "berry" on the
+ beak of this species did not escape Browne's observation, and he
+ refers to it in the eighth letter to Merrett, who in his second
+ letter to Browne remarks "the difference in the elk's bill by you
+ signified is remarkable to distinguish it from others of its kind,"
+ indicating that this distinction was previously unknown to him.
+
+A white large & strong billd fowle called a Ganet[9] which seemes to
+bee the greater sort of Larus. whereof I met with one kild by a
+greyhound neere swaffam another in marshland while it fought & would not
+bee forced to take wing another intangled in an herring net wch taken
+aliue was fed with herrings for a while it may be named Larus maior
+Leucophaeopterus as being white & the top of the wings browne.
+
+ [9] As a rule the Gannet does not approach the shore, except to
+ breed, but follows the shoals of fish far out at sea. The
+ circumstance mentioned by Browne is by no means singular, and
+ several such instances of storm-driven Gannets being captured far
+ inland are recorded. The "Scotch Goose, _Anser scoticus_,"
+ mentioned further on (p. 13 _infra_), is also in all probability
+ intended for the Gannet; it is the _Anser Bassanus sive Scoticus_
+ of Jonston. The "Marshland" here mentioned is a tract of country
+ reclaimed in ancient times from the sea, lying to the west of the
+ town of Lynn, of some 57,000 acres in extent, and bordering upon
+ the estuary of the Wash.
+
+[_Fol. 7._] In hard winters I have also met with that large & strong
+billd fowle wch clusius describeth by the name of Skua Hoyeri[10] [fr
+_struck out_] sent him from the faro Island by Hoierus a physitian. one
+whereof was shot at Hickling while 2 thereof were feeding upon a dead
+horse.
+
+ [10] Willughby ("Ornithology," English Ed., p. 348) gives a good
+ description of the Great Skua (_Stercorarius catarrhactes_) under
+ the name of _Catarracta_, a skin of which he says was sent him by
+ Dr. Walter Needham, and rightly identified it with the Skua which
+ Hoier sent to Clusius, but his figure is evidently drawn from a
+ skin of the Great Black-backed Gull. Hoier, whose name so often
+ occurs about this time in connection with birds from the north, was
+ a physician, living at Bergen in Norway. The Great Skua still
+ breeds in sadly reduced numbers on the Shetland and Faroee Islands,
+ but is rarely met with in Norfolk.
+
+As also that [strong _struck out_] large & strong billd fowle [Clusius
+nameth _struck out_] spotted like a starling wch clusius nameth Mergus
+maior farroensis[11] as frequenting the faro islands seated above
+shetland. one whereof I sent unto my worthy friend Dr Scarburgh.
+
+ [11] The bird here mentioned is doubtless the Great Northern Diver,
+ _Colymbus glacialis_. In another place Browne again refers to it as
+ _Mergus maximus Farrensis_, which Clusius ("Exotic.," p. 102) calls
+ _Mergus maximus Farrensis_, a name used by Willughby as a synonym
+ for his "Greatest Speckled Diver or Loon" (p. 341). This bird is
+ known to our fishermen as the Herring Loon, the Red-throated and
+ perhaps also the Black-throated Divers being called Sprat Loons. It
+ is a pity Browne's "draught" is not forthcoming.
+
+Here is also the pica marina[12] or seapye many sorts of Lari,[13]
+seamewes & cobs. the Larus maior in great abundance [about _struck out_]
+in [_written above_] herring time about yarmouth.
+
+ [12] The Oyster Catcher, or Sea Pie, is found in greater numbers on
+ the north-west portion of the County of Norfolk than on the eastern
+ shore; it breeds occasionally about Wells, where it is universally
+ known as the "Dickey-bird."
+
+ [13] Browne here refers to the family in general terms. The various
+ species of Gulls in their different stages of plumage were very
+ puzzling to the Ornithologists of the last century, and it is often
+ extremely difficult to say to what individual species they refer.
+ By _Larus major_ he would probably mean the Black-backed and
+ Herring Gulls which are found on the shore all the year round, most
+ frequently in the immature plumage, but they most abound "in
+ herring time." By far the commonest species at all times is
+ Browne's _Larus alba_ or Puet, the Black-headed Gull. Large flocks
+ of this species and _L. canus_ frequent Breydon and the tidal
+ shores, especially the young birds of the year. There are now two
+ large breeding-places of the Black-headed Gull in Norfolk, a very
+ old-established one at Scoulton Mere, and a more recent colony at
+ Hoveton Broad. The former extensive gullery at Horsey, mentioned by
+ Browne, has long since been banished by the drainage of the marsh
+ they frequented, and it is probable that a small colony which bred
+ on Ormesby Broad some forty years ago, owed its origin to their
+ banishment from Horsey. They, in their turn, deserted Ormesby on
+ the erection of the works for supplying Yarmouth with water about
+ the year 1855, and fixed upon Hoveton as their new home, in which
+ place, as at Scoulton, they are carefully preserved.
+
+ Professor Newton has been kind enough to furnish me with the
+ following note on the Terns. "_Larus cinereus_ of Aldrovandus (and
+ afterwards of Jonston), is said to be of three kinds: one with red
+ legs, apparently the Black-headed Gull, and figured by Jonston, the
+ second with yellow legs and a slender curved black bill, the third
+ with a pointed scarlet bill. Both these last were most likely
+ Terns--and all these were grey above and white below. Gesner quotes
+ Turner for _Sterna_, and there is no doubt that his bird of that
+ name was a Black Tern; but Gesner says that it is the _Stirn_ of
+ the Frisians, and figures a white and grey bird with a black head
+ only (most likely a Common Tern, but possibly one of the larger
+ species), as Sterna, thus using the word in a more general sense,
+ and it may have been so used in Browne's time. I see no
+ impossibility in people having thought of eating Terns in those
+ days [as to that _see Note_ 7, p. 6 _ante_]. The Common Tern was
+ most likely very abundant, and we know that the Black Tern was
+ exceedingly common in certain reed-beds, as stated by Turner, and
+ noisy beyond measure." The Great and Lesser Terns still nest in one
+ or two localities on our coast, although as the result of great
+ persecution in very reduced numbers. The Black Tern, or Mire Crow,
+ has quite ceased to do so.
+
+Larus alba or puets in such plentie about Horsey that they sometimes
+bring them in carts to norwich & sell them at small rates. & the country
+people make use of their egges in puddings & otherwise. great plentie
+thereof haue bred about scoulton [mere _struck out_] meere, & from
+thence sent to London.
+
+Larus cinereus greater & smaller, butt a coars meat. commonly called
+sternes.
+
+Hirundo marina or sea swallowe a neat white & forked tayle bird butt
+longer then a swallowe.
+
+The ciconia or stork[14] I have seen in the fennes & some haue been shot
+in the marshes between this and yarmouth. [See also third letter to
+Merrett and Appendix D.]
+
+ [14] Although it has been met with in Norfolk, more frequently than
+ perhaps in any other part of England, the Stork was never other
+ than a rare spring and autumn visitor to Norfolk. Turner writes of
+ it in 1544 as unknown in England, save as a captive, and Merrett a
+ hundred years later says it rarely flies hither, which is equally
+ true at the present time. Hewittson ("Eggs of Brit. Birds," Ed. 3,
+ ii., p. 309; under Crane) was evidently misled by some remarks made
+ by Evelyn, who visited Sir Thomas Browne in Norwich in October,
+ 1671, and says in his diary that he saw Browne's "Collection of the
+ eggs of all the fowl and birds he could procure; that country,
+ especially the promontory of Norfolk, being frequented, as he said,
+ by several birds which seldom or never go further into the land--as
+ cranes, storks, eagles, and a variety of water-fowl." From this
+ Hewitson infers that the Stork bred in Norfolk, a construction
+ which the somewhat ambiguously worded passage will certainly not
+ bear. I imagine collections of eggs were not very common in
+ Browne's time.
+
+[_Fol. 8._] The platea or shouelard,[15] wch build upon the topps of
+high trees. they haue formerly built in the Hernerie at claxton &
+Reedham now at Trimley in Suffolk. they come in march & are shot by
+fowlers not for their meat butt the handsomenesse of the same,
+remarkable in their white colour copped crowne & spoone or spatule like
+bill.
+
+ [15] This interesting record has recently been supplemented by a
+ much earlier record of the breeding of the "Popeler," or Shovelard,
+ in Norfolk. Professor Newton ("Transactions of N. and N. Nat.
+ Soc.," vi., p. 158) has called attention to an ancient document
+ bearing date A.D. 1300, instituting a commission to inquire into
+ the harrying of the eyries of these and other birds, &c., at
+ Cantley and other places in Norfolk. Documents also exist, showing
+ that in 1523 they nested at Fulham in Middlesex, and in 1570 in
+ West Sussex, as pointed out by Mr. Harting in the "Zoologist" for
+ 1877, p. 425, and 1886, p. 81, in each case constructing their
+ nests in trees. At what precise date this bird ceased to breed in
+ Norfolk and Suffolk is unknown, but Sir T. Browne's statement that
+ they were "shot by fowlers not for their meat, butt the
+ handsomenesse of the same," probably explains the circumstances
+ which brought about that event. The Spoonbill visits Norfolk
+ regularly every spring in small parties now more numerously than a
+ few years since, which possibly may be accounted for by the
+ destruction of nearly all its breeding-places in Holland, and it is
+ possible that with due encouragement it might again be induced to
+ breed in some of the localities in the Broads still suitable for
+ the purpose.
+
+corvus marinus. cormorants.[16] building at Reedham upon trees from
+whence King charles the first was wont to bee supplyed. beside the Rock
+cormorant wch breedeth in the rocks in northerne countries & cometh to
+us in the winter, somewhat differing from the other in largenesse &
+whitenesse under the wings.
+
+ [16] The Cormorant continued to nest in the trees on the shore of
+ Fritton Lake for many years after Sir T. Browne's time. A
+ manuscript note in a copy of Berkenhout's "Natural History of Great
+ Britain and Ireland," published in 1769, is descriptive of a
+ Cormorant killed at Belton Decoy (near the same lake) on the 11th
+ September, 1775, and also states that "a vast number of these
+ birds, even to some thousands, roost every night upon the trees,"
+ being in the neighbourhood of the decoy they are never shot, and
+ "build their nests upon the top of these trees." According to Mr.
+ Lubbock ("Fauna of Norf.," Ed. 2, p. 174), "in 1825 there were many
+ nests at Herringfleet, also on Fritton Lake, and in 1827 not one."
+ We may therefore assume that they ceased to nest at Herringfleet in
+ 1825 or 1826. It will be noticed that Browne made free use of young
+ Cormorants in his experiments as to the properties of certain drugs
+ (cf. Wilkin, iv., p. 452), which would seem to indicate that he
+ could obtain a plentiful supply of these birds. When the Cormorants
+ ceased to breed at Reedham is unknown. They are not unfrequently
+ seen now, generally in spring and autumn. The Rock Cormorant was
+ possibly the Crested Cormorant or Shag.
+
+A sea fowl called a shearwater,[17] somewhat billed like a cormorant
+butt much lesser a strong & feirce fowle houering about shipps when they
+[clense _struck out_] cleanse their fish. 2 were kept 6 weekes
+cra[=m]ing them with fish wch they would not feed on of themselues. the
+seamen told mee they had kept them 3 weekes without meat. & I giuing
+ouer to feed them found they liued 16 dayes without [any hin _struck
+out_] taking any thing.
+
+ [17] Willughby's first acquaintance with the adult Manx Shearwater
+ ("Ornithology," p. 334) was from a drawing sent him by Sir T.
+ Browne, who describes the bird, as above, under the accepted name
+ of Shearwater, and Willughby's excellent figure on plate lxvii.
+ (which plate I believe is not to be found in some copies of the
+ "Ornithology," and to which there is no reference in the text) has
+ all the appearance of having been drawn from life. The drawing here
+ referred to is mentioned by Ray in his "Collection of English words
+ not generally known," as having been received, with others, from
+ the "learned and deservedly famous Sir Thomas Browne, of Norwich."
+ George Edwards ("Gleanings of Nat. Hist.," vii., p. 315), prior to
+ 1764. says that he went to the British Museum and examined Browne's
+ "old draught," but I could not find it among any of the papers I
+ examined. In Browne's fourth letter to Merrett, by an error in the
+ transcription, he is made by Wilkin to say that he kept twenty of
+ these birds alive for five weeks; in the MS. it is clearly only
+ two.
+
+Barnacles[18] Brants Branta [wer _struck out_] are co[=m]on
+
+ [18] Barnacle and Brent Geese as we know them, the first by no
+ means common here; the Wild Goose, probably _Anser cinereus_; the
+ Scotch Goose (_see Note_ 9), probably the Gannet; and the
+ Bergander, an old name for the Sheld-drake, as used by Turner in
+ 1544, and derived from the Dutch Berg-eende, German Bergente
+ ("Dict. Birds," p. 835). Browne's statement that this bird formerly
+ bred about Northwold, or as it is even now occasionally called by
+ the natives, "Norrold," some twenty miles from the sea; or, as he
+ says, in the fourth letter to Merrett, "abounding in vast and
+ spatious commons," is very interesting, although not a solitary
+ instance, for I am informed that this bird breeds in the present
+ day on the Gull Lake, Twig Moor, in Lincolnshire; but that it
+ should have chosen such a nesting site is not more surprising than
+ the fact of the Ring Plover, quite as strictly a marine species,
+ frequenting the extensive sandy warrens about Thetford and Brandon,
+ near the south-west border of the county, for the same purpose, as
+ they still continue to do. But for Browne's mention of the
+ circumstance we should not have been aware of this singular
+ departure from the normal nesting habits of the Sheld-duck, as no
+ tradition I believe exists on the subject, and at present it only
+ nests in the sand-hills in some parts of the coast of N.W.
+ Norfolk.
+
+sheldrakes sheledracus jonstoni
+
+Barganders a noble coloured fowle vulpanser wch breed in cunny burrowes
+about norrold & other places.
+
+[_Fol. 9._] Wild geese Anser ferus.
+
+scoch goose Anser scoticus.
+
+Goshander,[19] merganser.
+
+ [19] This evidently refers to the Goosander, which as he says in
+ another place most answers to the Merganser.
+
+Mergus acutirostris speciosus or Loone an handsome & specious fowle
+cristated & with diuided finne feet placed very backward and after the
+manner of all such wch the Duch call [Assf _struck out_] Arsvoote.[20]
+they haue a peculiar formation in the leggebone wch hath a long & sharpe
+processe extending aboue the thigh bone [it _struck out_] they come
+about April & breed in the broad waters so making their nest on the
+water that their egges are seldom drye while they are sett on.
+
+ [20] This well describes the Great-crested Grebe, which Browne
+ rightly says comes to us about the month of April. Browne notices
+ the peculiar formation of the tibia in this family of birds, but it
+ had long been known. The next, named _Mergus acutirostris
+ cinereus_, is most likely the same species in winter plumage. The
+ other birds mentioned are Mergus minor, the Little Grebe or
+ Dabchick, and _M. serratus_, the Red-breasted Merganser, even now
+ known as the "Saw-bill."
+
+Mergus acutarostris cinereus [another d _struck out_] wch seemeth to bee
+a difference of the former.
+
+Mergus minor the smaller diuers or dabchicks in riuers & broade waters.
+
+Mergus serratus the saw billd diuer bigger & longer than a duck
+distinguished from other diuers by a notable sawe bill to retaine its
+slipperie pray as liuing much upon eeles whereof we haue seldome fayled
+to find some in their bellies.
+
+Diuers other sorts of diuefowle more remarkable the mustela fusca &
+mustela variegata[21] the graye dunne & the variegated or partie
+coloured wesell so called from the resemblance it beareth vnto a wesell
+in the head.
+
+ [21] The Smew, male and female, or either in the immature plumage
+ are here referred to.
+
+[_Fol. 12._[I]] many sorts of wild ducks[22] wch passe under names well
+knowne unto the fowlers though of no great signification as smee [wige
+_struck out_] widgeon Arts ankers noblets.
+
+ [I] Fols. 10 and 11 are (10 written on both sides) on the
+ "Ostridge," _vide_ Wilkin, Vol. 4, p. 337-9. The paper is a
+ different size, 11-1/2 by 7-1/2, and the article is evidently bound
+ out of place.
+
+ [22] The local names of the various Ducks are simply legion and
+ differ both in time and place, not to mention the confusion
+ occasioned by sex and season when these birds were not so well
+ understood as at present. Many such names are quite lost, as
+ "Ankers" and "Noblets," but the following are a few examples: Adult
+ Smew, White Nun; female or immature Smew, Wesel Coot; the Wigeon
+ was known as the Smee, Whewer, or Whim; the Tufted Duck, Arts or
+ Arps; the Gadwall, Grey Duck or Rodge; the Pochard, Dunbird; the
+ Shoveller, Beck or Kertlutock (Hunt); Pintail, Sea Pheasant or
+ Cracker; Long-tailed Duck, Mealy Bird; Golden Eye, Morillon or
+ Rattle-wing; Scaup, Grey-back, and on Breydon White-nosed Day Fowl;
+ Scoter, Whilk; Velvet Scoter, Double Scoter (Hunt); Teal, Crick;
+ Garganey, Summer Teal, Pied Wigeon, Cricket Teal; other names might
+ be mentioned, and some will be found in the notes which will
+ follow. _Anas platyrhincus_ here mentioned is the Shoveller. It may
+ seem strange that the abundance of Teal should in any way be
+ attributed to the number of Decoys, but such was really the case,
+ the quiet and shelter afforded by these extensive preserves being
+ very favourable to the increase of all the members of the Duck
+ family, especially to those breeding in their immediate
+ neighbourhood. In the returns of the old Decoys, Teal figured
+ largely; in the present day they form a very much smaller
+ proportion of the spoils.
+
+the most remarkable are Anas platyrinchos [_sic_] a remarkably broad
+bild duck.
+
+And the sea phaysant holding some resemblance unto that bird [in the
+tayle _crossed out_] in some fethers in the tayle.
+
+Teale Querquedula. wherein scarce any place more abounding. the
+condition of the country & the very many decoys [mo _struck out_]
+especially between Norwich and the sea making this place very much to
+abound in wild fowle.
+
+fulicae cottae cootes[23] in very great flocks upon the broad waters. upon
+the appearance of a Kite or buzzard I have seen them vnite from all
+parts of the shoare in strange numbers when if the Kite stoopes neare
+them they will fling up [and] spred such a flash of water up with there
+wings that they will endanger the Kite. & so [es _struck out_] keepe him
+of [in of _struck out_] agayne & agayne in open opposition. & an
+handsome prouision they make about their nest agaynst the same bird of
+praye by bending & twining the rushes & reeds so about them that they
+cannot stoope at their yong ones or the damme while she setteth.
+
+ [23] In the present day the Coots have nothing to fear from Kites
+ and little from Moor Buzzards; it may be that it is in consequence
+ of this that they have discontinued the practice of twining the
+ rushes and reeds above their nests in the manner mentioned above as
+ being an unnecessary precaution. I have, however, in some cases
+ noticed some approach to this practice. The Coot, although fairly
+ numerous on the Broads, appears to be far less so than formerly.
+ Lubbock, in his "Fauna of Norfolk," says on asking a Broadman how
+ many Coots there were on Hickling Broad, his reply was, "About an
+ acre and a half," referring to their practice of swimming evenly at
+ regular distances from each other without huddling together in
+ dense masses, like wild-fowl.
+
+ I am indebted to Professor Newton for the following additional note
+ on the Coot. He says "Turner, and after him Gesner, was puzzled as
+ to what was the _Fulica_ of classical writers (Virgil and others),
+ and thought it to be some kind of Gull; but the _Fulica_ of later
+ authors was certainly the Coot, as shown by Gesner's figure."
+
+Gallinula aquatica[24] more hens.
+
+ [24] Moor-hens are of course numerous in all suitable localities,
+ and the Water Rail is still fairly common, but its eggs have a
+ market value and are (or were) sadly stolen; a few years ago a
+ London dealer is said to have received over 200 eggs of this bird
+ in one season from Yarmouth.
+
+And a kind of Ralla aquatica or water Rayle.
+
+[_Fol. 13._] An onocrotalus or pelican[25] shott upon Horsey fenne 1663
+May 22 wch stuffed and cleansed I yet retaine it was 3 yards & half
+between the extremities of the wings the chowle & beake answering the
+vsuall discription the extremities of the wings for a spanne deepe
+browne the rest of the body white. a fowle [not found _struck out_] wch
+none could remember upon this coast. about the same time I heard one of
+the kings pellicans was lost at St James', perhaps this might bee the
+same.
+
+ [25] There is every reason to believe that a species of Pelican,
+ probably from its size _P. crispus_, was formerly an inhabitant of
+ the East Anglian Fens; its bones have been found in the peat on
+ three occasions, one of these being the bone of a bird so young as
+ to show that it must have been bred in the locality, and therefore
+ that the species was a true native and not a casual visitant. Bones
+ of a species of Pelican have also been found in the remains of
+ lake-dwellings at Glastonbury, in Somersetshire.
+
+ With regard to the species of the bird recorded by Browne and its
+ origin, he is careful to point out that a Pelican had about that
+ time escaped from the King's collection in St. James' Park, and to
+ surmise that it might be the same bird; from what follows this
+ seems probable, but as _P. onocrotalus_ is believed to stray
+ occasionally into the northern parts of Germany and France ("Dict.
+ of Birds," p. 702) the occurrence of that species on the East Coast
+ of Britain, where, even at present, it would find a state of things
+ in every way suited to its requirements (guns excepted), would not
+ be very extraordinary. Browne's Pelican was killed in May, 1663,
+ and although Dr. Edward Browne visited St. James' Park in February,
+ 1664, and saw "many strange creatures," including the Stork with
+ the wooden leg (mentioned by Evelyn), he says nothing of the
+ Pelicans, still it may be that it was from him that his father
+ heard of the escape. Evelyn, in his Diary, mentioned that he
+ visited St. James' Park on February 9th, 1665, and speaks of only
+ one Pelican, which he states was brought from Astrakan by the
+ Russian Ambassador as a present to the King; Willughby says
+ distinctly that the Emperor of Russia sent the King two Pelicans,
+ and further, that he took the description in his "Ornithology" from
+ a bird in the Royal Aviary, St. James' Park, near Westminster; it
+ seems therefore highly probable that Browne's bird was one of these
+ which had escaped from confinement. But a rather curious
+ circumstance arises out of this, the bird described by Willughby
+ does not appear to be _P. onocrotalus_, but a similar species, _P.
+ roseus_, found chiefly in Indio-China and westward to South-eastern
+ Europe, but occurring as far west as the River Volga ("Cat. of
+ Birds," B. M., xxvi., p. 466). In this Mr. Ogilvie Grant, the
+ author of that section of the Catalogue, whom I consulted, agrees
+ with me, and the locality whence the birds were derived, mentioned
+ by Willughby, renders not unlikely. Onocrotalus in Browne's time
+ was a general term for "the Pelican," and he probably knew but one
+ species and one individual, the escaped bird from Charles II.'s
+ Aviary. Browne's very miscellaneous collection was destroyed by the
+ authorities at the time of the plague (see ninth letter to
+ Merrett), and probably the remains of this Pelican perished with
+ the rest.
+
+Anas Arctica clusii wch though hee placeth about the faro Islands is the
+same wee call a puffin co[=m]on about Anglisea in wales & sometimes [for
+_struck out_] taken upon our seas not sufficiently described by the name
+of puffinus the bill being so remarkably differing from other ducks &
+not horizontally butt meridionally formed to feed in the clefts of the
+rocks of insecks, shell-fish & others.
+
+The great number of riuers riuulets & plashes of water makes hernes [to
+abound in these _struck out_] & herneries to abound in these parts. yong
+hensies being esteemed a festiuall dish & much desired by some palates.
+
+The Ardea stellaris botaurus, or bitour[26] is also co[=m]on & esteemed
+the better dish. in the belly of one I found a frog in an hard frost at
+christmas. another I kept in a garden 2 yeares feeding it with fish mice
+& frogges. in defect whereof making a scrape for sparrowes & small
+birds, the bitour made shifft to maintaine herself upon them.
+
+ [26] This is one of the birds once common enough in Norfolk, which
+ in the present day is only a winter and spring migrant. The last
+ eggs of the Bittern were taken in this county on 30th of March,
+ 1868; the last "boom" of a resident was heard in May, 1886, in the
+ August of which year a young female was killed at Reedham with down
+ still adhering to its feathers; this was probably the last
+ Norfolk-bred Bittern. In the "Vulgar Errors," book 3, chapter
+ xxvii., section 4, is a discourse on the "mugient noise" of the
+ Bittern and the mode of its production, and in a foot-note in the
+ same place is a curious anecdote illustrating the difficulty of
+ detecting a wounded Bittern, even when marked down in short,
+ recently mown grass and flags. The spring cry of the Bittern is
+ mentioned by Robert Marsham in his unpublished journal nineteen
+ times, between the years 1739 and 1775, as first heard at Stratton
+ Strawless, generally between the 15th of March and the 15th of
+ April; and it was on the 14th of the latter month that Benjamin
+ Stillingfleet records it in the "Calendar of Flora" as heard in the
+ same locality in 1755. He does not describe the note, but uses the
+ words "makes a noise." Marsham, however, on one occasion, in 1750,
+ a very early year, records it on the 20th of February. As a once
+ familiar sound, but one which will probably never again be heard
+ here under purely normal conditions, these dates seem worthy of
+ recording.
+
+[_Fol. 14._] Bistardae or Bustards[27] are not vnfrequent in the champain
+& feildie part of this country a large Bird accounted a dayntie dish,
+obseruable in the strength of the brest bone & short heele layes an
+egge much larger then a Turkey.
+
+ [27] The last of the Norfolk and therefore certainly the last of
+ the British-bred Bustards, was killed in May, 1838; those which
+ have since occurred in this country were Continental immigrants. An
+ exhaustive history of the extinction of this bird will be found in
+ Stevenson's "Birds of Norfolk," vols. 2 and 3. The Bustard,
+ although found in some numbers, associated in small flocks or
+ "droves" in the few localities which it frequented in Great
+ Britain, was probably never a very numerous species. The following
+ extract from one of Browne's letters to his son Edward, dated April
+ 30th, and written probably in 1681, shows that he was on the verge
+ of discovering an anatomical peculiarity in this family of birds,
+ which in after years gave rise to much controversy. He says,
+ "yesterday I had a cock Bustard sent me from beyond Thetford. I
+ never did see such a vast thick neck: the crop was pulled out, butt
+ as [a] turkey hath an odde large substance without, so hath this
+ within the inside of the skinne, and the strongest and largest
+ neckbone of any bird in England. This I tell you, that if you meet
+ with one you may further observe it." The presence of a gular pouch
+ in the Bustard was first demonstrated by James Douglas, a Scotch
+ Physician, in 1740, and it appears to be fully developed only in
+ the adult male bird, and at the breeding season. Hence, although it
+ has undoubtedly been found on several occasions, the frequent
+ unsuccessful searches for it under unfavourable conditions led to
+ much scepticism as to its existence. The use of this singular
+ appendage is still a moot point, but it seems probable that it has
+ to do with "voice production," and assists in the remarkable
+ "showing off" exhibited by the male bird in the breeding season.
+ Pennant, in his "British Zoology," 1768, i., p. 215, gives a
+ sentimental account of its use, and an exaggerated estimate of its
+ proportions. In the Tables of Dietary referred to at p. 6 (note)
+ _ante_, the Bustard is mentioned as in season from October to May.
+
+Morinellus or Dotterell[28] about Thetford & the champain wch comes vnto
+us in september & march staying not long. & is an excellent dish.
+
+ [28] The Dotterel visits us much as in Sir T. Browne's time, but in
+ decreased numbers. The Sea Dotterel which Wilkin supposes to be the
+ Ring Plover, is undoubtedly the Turnstone. Willughby says, "Our
+ honoured Friend, Sir Thomas Browne, of Norwich, sent us the picture
+ of this bird by the title of the Sea Dotterel." This is also
+ mentioned in the fifth letter to Merrett. See "Birds of Norfolk,"
+ ii., p. 82, for an interesting account of Dotterel hawking near
+ Thetford by James I. in the year 1610.
+
+There is also a sea dotterell somewhat lesse butt better coloured then
+the former.
+
+Godwyts taken chiefly in marshland, though other parts not without them
+accounted the dayntiest dish in England & I think for the bignesse, of
+the biggest price.
+
+Gnatts or Knots [only so far on p. 14, but as follows on fol. 13
+_verso_].
+
+Gnats or Knots a small bird which taken with netts grow excessively
+fatt. If [by mew _struck out_] being mewed & fed with corne a candle
+lighted in the roome they feed day & night, & when they are at their
+hight of fattnesse they beginne to grow lame & are then killed or [else
+they will fall aw _struck out_] as at their prime & apt to decline.
+
+[resume p. 14.] Erythropus or Redshanck a bird co[=m]on in the marshes &
+of co[=m]on food butt no dayntie dish.
+
+A may chitt[29] a small dark gray bird litle bigger then a stint of
+fatnesse beyond any. it comes in may into marshland & other parts &
+abides not aboue a moneth or 6 weekes.
+
+ [29] Mr. Stevenson, "Birds of Norfolk," ii., p. 233, gives his
+ reasons for coming to the conclusion that the Sanderling (_Calidris
+ arenaria_) is here referred to, which the absence of a hind toe
+ (see third letter to Merrett) tends to confirm. The "_Churre_" is
+ only a variant of the name "_Purre_," by which the next species,
+ the Stint, is commonly known, and the _Green Plover_, now applied
+ to the Lapwing, is an old name for the _Golden Plover_, which he
+ rightly says [p. 20] does not breed in Norfolk.
+
+[fol. 13 _verso_.] Another small bird somewhat larger than a stint
+called a churre & is co[=m]only taken amongst them.
+
+[resume fol. 14.] Stints in great numbers about the seashore & marshes
+about stifkey Burnham & other parts.
+
+Pluuialis or plouer green & graye in great plentie about Thetford & many
+other heaths. they breed not with us butt in some parts of scotland, and
+plentifully in Island [Iceland].
+
+[_Fol. 15._] The lapwing or vannellus co[=m]on ouer all the heaths.
+
+Cuccowes[30] of 2 sorts the one farre exceeding the other in bignesse.
+some have attempted to keepe them in warme roomes all the winter butt it
+hath not succeeded. in their migration they range very farre northward
+for in the summer they are to bee found as high as Island.
+
+ [30] The circumstance which gave rise to the idea that there were
+ two kinds of Cuckoos, differing only in size, might possibly be
+ discovered were it worth the research; possibly it would be found
+ that the second species was of foreign origin. Aldrovandus, as
+ quoted by Willughby, says, "Our Bolognese Fowlers do unanimously
+ affirm, that there are found a greater and a lesser sort of
+ Cuckows; and besides, that the greater are of two kinds, which are
+ distinguished one from the other by the only difference of colour:
+ but the lesser differ from the greater in nothing else but
+ magnitude." Perhaps it was Browne's latent respect for antiquity
+ which led him to mention the tradition.
+
+ Avis pugnax. Ruffes[31] a marsh bird of the greatest varietie of
+ colours euery one therein somewhat varying from other. The female
+ is called a Reeve without any ruffe about the neck, lesser then the
+ other & hardly to bee got. They are almost all cocks & putt
+ together fight & destroy each other. & prepare themselues to fight
+ like cocks though they seeme to haue no other offensive part butt
+ the bill. they loose theire Ruffes about the Autumne or beginning
+ of winter as wee haue obserued [they _struck out_] keeping them in
+ a garden from may till the next spring. they most abound in
+ Marshland butt are also in good number in the marshes between
+ norwich & yarmouth.
+
+ [31] It is only necessary to add to Browne's interesting account of
+ this remarkable bird that it lingered longer in Norfolk as a
+ breeding species than in any other part of Britain, but that
+ although it still visits us in spring it is doubtful whether it has
+ bred for the last few years in the one favourite locality to which
+ it clung so tenaciously. The "Marshland," here referred to as
+ explained in a previous note, is a tract of country situated in
+ north-west Norfolk, near King's Lynn.
+
+Of picus martius[32] or woodspeck many kinds. The green the Red the
+Leucomelanus or neatly marked [red _crossed out_] black & white & the
+cinereus or dunne calld [a re _struck out_] little [bird calld _written
+above_] a nuthack. remarkable in the larger are the hardnesse of the
+bill & skull & the long nerues wch tend vnto the tongue whereby it
+strecheth out the tongue aboue an inch out of the mouth & so [lik
+_crossed out_] licks up insecks. they make the holes in trees without
+any consideration of the winds or quarters of heauen butt as the
+rottenesse thereof best affordeth conuenience.
+
+ [32] _Picus martius_ is here used, as it is by Sibbald, and all
+ preceding writers, in a general sense for all birds commonly called
+ "Woodpeckers," and does not imply that the Great Black Woodpecker
+ (_Picus niger maximus_, of Ray's Synopsis), to which species the
+ name was restricted by Linnaeus, is found here, and Browne goes on
+ to mention the three British Woodpeckers, the Green, the Red, by
+ which the Great Spotted Woodpecker is intended, and the
+ Leucomelanus, or Lesser-spotted Woodpecker. He also includes the
+ Nuthatch, which was at that time (as well as the Wryneck) called a
+ "Woodpecker." In this passage Browne, in making a correction, does
+ not seem to have proceeded far enough, the word which Wilkin has
+ rendered "dun-coloured," is certainly "dunne calld" in the MS.; but
+ there are two alterations in the passage, and there is little doubt
+ that he intended to write "dunne cull'd" (or coloured), which would
+ make it read as Wilkin has printed it. The use of the word "nerve,"
+ for tendon or ligament, was in accordance with the phraseology of
+ the time.
+
+[fol. 15 _verso_.] black heron[33] black on both sides the bottom of the
+neck neck [_sic_] white gray on the outside spotted all along with black
+on the inside a black coppe of small feathers some a spanne long. bill
+poynted and yallowe 3 inches long
+
+ [33] This passage is not part of the original MS., but is written
+ on a separate slip of paper and pasted on the left-hand side of the
+ opening (p. 15 _verso_). I doubt whether it is more than a casual
+ memorandum, descriptive possibly of the plumage of the Purple
+ Heron, but not intended to apply to any Norfolk bird. The Black
+ Heron of Willughby is the Glossy Ibis, a bird which is said to have
+ been known to the West Norfolk gunners as the "Black Curlew."
+
+back heron coloured intermixed with long white fethers
+
+the flying (?) fethers black
+
+the brest black & white most black
+
+the legges & feet not green but an ordinarie dark cork [?] colour.
+
+[_Fol. 16._] The number of riuulets becks & streames whose banks are
+beset with willowes & Alders wch giue occasion of easier fishing &
+slooping to the water makes that [bir _crossed out_] handsome coulered
+bird abound wch is calld Alcedo Ispida or the King fisher. they bild in
+holes about grauell pitts [have their nests very full _crossed out_]
+wherein [are _crossed out_] is [_above_] to bee found great quantitie of
+small fish bones. & lay [a _crossed out_] very handsome round & as it
+were polished egges.
+
+An Hobby bird[34] so calld becaus it comes in ether with or a litle
+before the Hobbies in the spring. of the bignesse of a Thrush coloured
+& paned[J] like an hawke marueliously subiet to the vertigo & and are
+sometimes taken in those fitts.
+
+ [34] This is evidently the Wryneck, which we now call the "Cuckoo's
+ Mate," probably for the same reason that Browne associates it with
+ the Hobby. It may be that the Hobby having become comparatively
+ scarce, it was necessary to find another travelling companion for
+ this bird, and that the Cuckoo was chosen as the most suitable. Old
+ Norfolk names are Emmet-eater, and in one old book it is called
+ Turkey-bird in a MS. note.
+
+ [J] That is marked with a barred or checkered pattern.
+
+Upupa or Hoopebird[35] so named from its note a gallant marked bird wch
+I have often seen & tis not hard to shoote them.
+
+ [35] The Hoopoe would seem from this note to have been of more
+ frequent occurrence than in the present day, see also in his answer
+ to "Certain Queries" (Tract iv., Wilkin iv., p. 183), in which he
+ says of this bird, "though it be not seen every day, yet we often
+ meet with it in this country."
+
+Ringlestones[36] a small [bird _crossed out_] white & black bird like a
+wagtayle & seemes to bee some kind of motacilla marina co[=m]on about
+yarmouth sands. they lay their egges in the sand & shingle about june
+and as the eryngo diggers tell mee not sett them flat butt upright likes
+[_sic_] egges in [a _crossed out_] salt.
+
+ [36] The Ring Plover is evidently the bird here referred to, but I
+ have never known the name of Ringlestone applied to this species in
+ Norfolk, nor have I met with it elsewhere. The Eryngo is now no
+ longer an article of commerce, and its diggers are extinct, but not
+ their tradition as to the position in which the eggs of this bird
+ are said to be placed--a "vulgar error" which does not accord with
+ the writer's experience. When the full complement of four eggs is
+ laid, they are arranged with their pointed ends towards the centre
+ of the nest, which is a slight hollow in the soil. The concavity of
+ the nest therefore, as well as the disproportionate size of the
+ larger end, gives the eggs somewhat the appearance of being placed
+ in the position referred to, but the small end of the egg is always
+ visible, Sir Thomas Browne does not seem to have been aware of the
+ remarkable fact of this essentially marine bird habitually nesting
+ on the sandy warrens about Thetford in the south-west of Norfolk,
+ far from the sea, which it still does, though in reduced numbers,
+ and is there known as the Stone-hatch, from its habit of paving its
+ nest with small stones.
+
+The Arcuata or curlewe frequent about the sea coast.
+
+[_Fol. 17._] There is also an handsome tall bird Remarkably eyed and
+with a bill not aboue 2 inches long co[=m]only calld a stone
+curlewe[37] butt the note thereof more resembleth that of a green plouer
+[it _crossed out_] & breeds about Thetford about the stones & shingle of
+the Riuers.
+
+ [37] This characteristic Norfolk bird is still far from rare in the
+ locality named by Browne, and is found in several other parts of
+ the county. Willughby says, "The learned and famous Sir Thomas
+ Brown, Physician in Norwich," informed him to the same effect, and
+ repeats that its note (one of the most charming sounds uttered on
+ the wild trackless heath on a summer's night) resembles that of the
+ Green (_i.e._, Golden) Plover, but in the ear of the writer it is
+ even more musical. In the third letter to Merrett, Browne says that
+ he has kept the Stone Curlew (not "four Curlews," as Wilkin has
+ it,) in large cages.
+
+Auoseta[38] calld [I thinck a Barker _crossed out_] shoohingg-horne
+[_written above_] a tall black & white bird with a bill semicircularly
+reclining or bowed upward so that it is not easie to conceiue how it can
+feed answerable vnto the Auoseta Italorum in Aldrovandus a summer marsh
+bird & not unfrequent in Marshland.
+
+ [38] The Avoset is another bird which formerly frequented the
+ marshy districts of Norfolk at the breeding time, but which has now
+ been lost to us except as a very rare passing migrant in the
+ spring. It probably ceased to breed in this county in or about the
+ year 1818, and is said to have been exterminated in consequence of
+ the demand for its feathers for the purpose of dressing artificial
+ flies. It was called "Shoeing-horn," from the peculiar form of its
+ beak, which, however, rather resembles the bent awl used by
+ shoemakers. Girdlestone, who knew the bird well in its breeding
+ haunts at Salthouse and Horsey, called it "Shoe-awl," a much more
+ appropriate name. In his third letter to Merrett, Browne again
+ mentions this bird, and applies to it the name of "Barker" (which
+ he had crossed out in the above note), remarking that it was so
+ called from its barking note. Jonston figures this bird twice; once
+ in Tab. 48 under the name of _Avosetta Italor._, _i.e._, the
+ Avosetta of the Italians, and again in Tab. 54 under the second
+ name _Avoselta species_, an obvious error.
+
+[A bird calld Barker from the note it hath _crossed out_]
+
+A yarwhelp[39] so thought to bee named from its note a gray bird
+intermingled with some yellowish [whitish _written above_] fethers [the
+bill _crossed out_] somewhat long legged & the bill about an inch &
+half. esteemed a dayntie dish.
+
+ [39] This paragraph is written on the back of fol. 16. The Yarwhelp
+ is the name by which the Black-tailed Godwit, a species which
+ formerly nested in abundance in the marshes about Horsey and some
+ adjacent localities in the Broads, was known. It virtually ceased
+ to nest here sometime between the years 1829 and 1835, but perhaps
+ an instance or two may have occurred rather later. It was also
+ known as the "Shrieker." Browne again refers to this bird in the
+ fourth letter to Merrett, where he calls it "barker" (a name which
+ he had no doubt erroneously previously applied to the Avoset), or
+ "Latrator, a marshbird, about the bigness of a Godwitt," and once
+ again under the name of "Yare-whelp, or barker," in his fifth
+ letter; it may be that the name "barker" was applied
+ indiscriminately to either species. As Lubbock names this bird as
+ one of the "five species in particular" which "used formerly to
+ swarm in our marshes" ("Fauna of Norfolk"), one would have thought
+ Browne would have been better acquainted with it than seems to have
+ been the case from the hesitating way in which he uses the
+ vernacular name.
+
+Loxias or curuirostra a bird a litle bigger than a Thrush of fine
+colours & prittie note [the m _crossed out_] differently from other
+birds, the [lower _crossed out_] upper & lower bill crossing each other.
+of a very tame nature, comes about the beginning of summer. I have known
+them kept in cages butt not to outliue the winter.
+
+A kind of coccothraustes calld a [cobble _crossed out_] coble bird[40]
+bigger than a Thrush, finely coloured & shaped like a Bunting [it comes
+_crossed out_] it is [sometimes _crossed out_] chiefly [_written above_]
+seen [about _crossed out_] in su[=m]er about cherrie time.
+
+ [40] The Hawfinch was evidently not a very well-known bird in
+ Browne's time, either to himself or Willughby; the latter says, "it
+ is said to build in holes of trees." It has steadily increased in
+ frequency as a breeding species with us for the last twenty years.
+
+[fol. 16 _verso._] A small bird of prey[41] [_something smeared out
+here_] calld a birdcatcher about the bignesse of a Thrush and linnet
+coloured with a longish white bill & sharpe of a very feirce & wild
+nature though kept in a cage & fed with flesh. [_Added after in same
+hand but fresher ink_] a kind of Lanius [Lanius _crossed out and written
+more distinctly under_].
+
+ [41] This paragraph is written on the back of fol. 16. The
+ Red-backed Shrike, _Lanius collurio_, is the only species of Lanius
+ mentioned by Browne; it is singular that he omits all mention of
+ another bird, and that an essentially Norfolk species which would
+ have been new to the _Pinax_--the Bearded Titmouse, afterwards
+ known to Edwards as the Least Butcher Bird. Browne certainly sent a
+ drawing of this bird to Ray, who in his "Collection of English
+ words not generally used" (1674), as pointed out by Mr. Gurney,
+ mentions it as a "little Bird of a tawny colour on the back, and a
+ blew head, yellow bill, black legs, shot in an Osiar yard, called
+ by Sr. Tho. for distinction sake silerella," the drawing of which
+ he acknowledges he had received. Pennant, 1768 ("Brit. Zool.," i.,
+ p. 165), follows Edwards ("Nat. Hist. of Birds," &c., 1745), who
+ classes it with the Laniidae, and it was not till long after, and as
+ the result of much discussion, that it was finally established as
+ the only representative of a new genus under the name of _Panurus
+ biarmicus_. The local name is Reed Pheasant, but Browne's name of
+ Silerella seems an exceedingly appropriate one.
+
+[p. 17 resumed.] A Dorhawke[42] or kind of Accipiter muscarius conceiued
+to haue its name from feeding upon flies & beetles. of a woodcock colour
+but paned like an Hawke a very litle poynted bill. large throat.
+breedeth with us & layes a maruellous handsome spotted egge. Though I
+haue opened many I could neuer find anything considerable in their
+mawes. caprimulgus.
+
+ [42] Browne seems to have been much interested in this remarkable
+ bird, and mentions it again in his second and third letters to
+ Merrett, especially in the latter; he calls it Caprimulgus, but
+ conceives it to be a kind of Accipiter, _muscarius_, or
+ _cantharophagus_, "in brief" [?] "_avis rostratula gutturosa_,
+ _quasi coxans_, _scarabaeis vescens_, _sub vesperam volans_, _ovum
+ speciassisimum excludens_," a fair specimen of the descriptive
+ method of the time. Although he used the name Caprimulgus, it will
+ be observed that he does not mention the "vulgar error" which led
+ to its being so called. Merrett includes this species in the
+ _Pinax_ under the name of "Caprimulgus, or the Goat-sucker," but in
+ a letter to Browne tells him he knows no Hawk called a Dorhawk.
+
+[_Fol. 18._] Auis Trogloditica[43] or Chock a small bird mixed of black
+& white & breeding in cony borrouges whereof the warrens are full from
+April to September. at which time they leaue the country. they are taken
+with an Hobby and a net and are a very good dish.
+
+ [43] The Wheatear is here referred to; the name _trogloditica_
+ would seem to be more appropriate in this country, having reference
+ to its habits of nesting in "Cony borroughs," than that of
+ _aenanthe_, as applied to it by those who knew it as frequenting the
+ Continental vineyards. A name still, or recently in use in West
+ Norfolk, is Cony-chuck.
+
+Spermologus. [_sic_] Rookes wch by reason of the [in reason of _crossed
+out_] great quantitie of corn feilds & Rooke groues are in great plentie
+the yong ones are co[=m]only eaten sometimes sold in norwich market &
+many are killd for their Liuers in order to cure of the Rickets.
+
+Crowes[44] as euerywhere and also the coruus variegatus or pyed crowe
+with dunne & black interchangeably they come in the winter & depart in
+the summer & seeme to bee the same wch clusius discribeth in the faro
+Islands from whence perhaps these come. [they are _crossed out_] and I
+have seen them [_written above_] very co[=m]on in Ireland, butt not
+known in many parts of England.
+
+ [44] The Crow (_Corvus corone_) is much less common in Norfolk than
+ formerly, but it still nests here in a few scattered localities.
+ _C. cornix_, the Hooded, Norway, Danish, or "Royston" Crow, is an
+ autumn immigrant as of yore, but not especially from the Faroee
+ Islands; both species (or forms as by some regarded) are immigrants
+ from the east, but the latter, as a rule, occupies a more northern
+ range than the former. The Raven (_C. corax_) is now a very rare
+ visitor to Norfolk; it is probable that it last nested in this
+ county in the year 1859. The Jackdaw, or Caddow, is common enough,
+ but the Chough (_Pyrrhocorax graculus_) is quite unknown in
+ Norfolk. Although the Magpie must have been well known to Browne I
+ find no mention of it in these notes.
+
+Coruus maior Rauens in good plentie about the citty wch makes so few
+Kites to bee seen hereabout. they build in woods very early & lay egges
+in februarie.
+
+Among the many monedulas or Jackdawes I could neuer in these parts
+obserue the pyrrhocorax or cornish chough with red leggs & bill to bee
+co[=m]only seen in Cornwall. & though there bee heere very great [num
+_crossed out_] store of partridges yet [not _crossed out_] the french
+Red leggd partridge[45] is not to bee met with [heere _crossed out_].
+the Ralla or Rayle[46] wee haue counted a dayntie dish. as also no small
+number of Quayles. the Heathpoult[47] co[=m]on in the north is vnknown
+heere as also the Grous. though I haue heard some haue been seen about
+Lynne. the calandrier or great [_Fol. 19_] great [_sic_] crested lark
+Galerita I haue not met with heere though with 3 other sorts [of Larkes
+_written above_] the ground lark woodlark & titlark.
+
+ [45] The Red-legged Partridge is now common enough; it was
+ introduced into the Eastern Counties at Sudbourne and Rendlesham,
+ in East Suffolk, in or about the year 1770, by both the Marquis of
+ Hertford and Lord Rendlesham. How quickly they established
+ themselves may be judged from the fact that in the season of 1806-7
+ of 1,927 Partridges killed at Rendlesham 112 were Red legs, but
+ they do not seem to have spread very far. A second introduction,
+ this time into West Suffolk, much nearer to the Norfolk border, at
+ and about Culford, was effected in the year 1823, and from this
+ centre they rapidly spread into Norfolk, in which county also
+ others were imported by the resident proprietors.
+
+ [46] The Land Rail (_Crex pratensis_) or Daker hen, is doubtless
+ here referred to, as the Water Rail has already been mentioned (p.
+ 15 _ante_) as "a kind of _Ralla aquatica_." This bird is a summer
+ visitor, by no means common and very uncertain in its numbers. The
+ same applies to the Quail, which appears to be less frequent than
+ formerly, no doubt from the great destruction on the Mediterranean
+ coast in spring of the birds migrating to England. In the summer
+ and autumn of 1870 we had an unusual influx of these latter birds.
+
+ [47] How far the indigenous race of Blackgame, which undoubtedly
+ lingered for many years about Wolferton and Sandringham, still
+ exists, it is difficult to say; examples turn up occasionally, but
+ so many of these birds have been introduced and turned off in
+ different parts of the county in the course of the past forty
+ years, that it is impossible to speak with certainty.
+
+Stares or starlings in great numbers. most remarkable in their [great
+_crossed out_] numerous [_written above_] flocks [about the _crossed
+out_] wch I haue obserued about the Autumne when they roost at night [up
+_crossed out_] in the marshes in safe place upon reeds & alders. wch to
+obserue I went to the marshes about sunne set. where standing by their
+vsuall place of resort I obserued very many flocks flying from all
+quarters. wch in lesse than an howers space came all in & settled in
+innumerable [quantitie _crossed out_] numbers [_written below_] in a
+small compasse.
+
+Great varietie of finches[48] and other small birds whereof one very
+small [one _crossed out_] calld a whinne bird marked with fine yellow
+spotts & lesser than a wren. there is also a small bird called a chipper
+somewhat resembling the former wch comes in the spring & feeds upon the
+first buddings of birches & other early trees.
+
+ [48] In his fifth letter to Merrett Browne says, "I confess for
+ such little birds I am much unsatisfied on the names given to many
+ by countrymen and uncertain what to give them myself." This is
+ painfully apparent in the cases of the two little birds here
+ referred to as the "Whinne-bird" and the "Chipper." From the
+ description of the former, "marked with fine yellow spots and
+ lesser than a Wren," also with a "shining yellow spot on the back
+ of the head," it seems likely that the Gold-crested Wren is
+ intended. The Chipper, he says, "comes in the spring and feeds upon
+ the first buddings of birches and other early trees;" he also calls
+ it "_Betulae carptor_," and says that he sends a drawing to Merrett;
+ a third mention is as follows: "That which I called a _Betulae
+ carptor_, and should rather have called it _Alni carptor_ ... it
+ feeds upon alder buds, nucaments, or seeds, which grow plentifully
+ here; they fly in little flocks." I can only suggest that this bird
+ may be the Siskin, which fairly answers the description. It visits
+ us in small flocks on its way north very early in the year, feeding
+ upon the seeds of the alder, birch, and larch trees. One would
+ however have thought that the Siskin would have been well known to
+ Browne, as it evidently was to Turner, Willughby, and Ray. Merrett
+ mentions it under Turner's name of "Luteola."
+
+A kind of Anthus [or _crossed out_] Goldfinch [_written above_] or
+fooles coat co[=m]only calld a drawe water. finely marked with red &
+yellowe & a white bill. wch they take with trap cages in norwich gardens
+& fastning a chaine about them tyed to a box of water it makes a shift
+with bill and legge to draw up the water unto it from the litle pot
+hanging [abot the length of _crossed out_] by the chaine about a foote
+[downe _crossed out_] belowe.
+
+[The account of the Roller, which is written on smaller paper, will be
+found improperly inserted among the Fishes, between pp. 30 and 32 as
+follows:--]
+
+[_Fol. 31._] On the xiiii of May 1664 a very rare bird was sent mee kild
+about crostwick wch seemed to bee some kind of Jay.[49] the bill was
+black strong and bigger then a Jayes somewhat yellowe clawes tippd
+black. 3 before and one clawe behind the whole bird not so bigge as a
+Jaye [the _crossed out_.]
+
+ [49] This note is interesting as the first record of the occurrence
+ of the Roller in Britain, to which country it is a rare wanderer.
+ Although it had long been known on the Continent, its identity
+ seems to have puzzled Browne, and he imagines (as did others, both
+ before and after him,) it to be some kind of Jay; later, in his
+ second letter to Merrett (January, 1668), he says that it answers
+ to the description of _Garrulus argentoratensis_ (the name given by
+ Aldrovandus to whom it was known), and calls it "the Parrot-jay."
+ This is five years after the original note was made, and we find
+ that the words _Garrulus argentoratensis_, written by the same hand
+ but with a different pen and ink, have been added subsequently,
+ doubtless as the result of further information. In another letter
+ he mentions having sent the bird to Merrett, but adds, "If you have
+ it before I should bee content to have it againe otherwise you may
+ please keep it."
+
+The head neck & throat of a violet colour the back upper parts of the
+wing of a russet yellowe the fore & part of the wing azure succeeded
+downward by a greenish blewe then on the flying feathers bright blewe
+the lower parts of the wing outwardly of a browne [the _crossed out_]
+inwardly of a merry blewe the belly a light faynt blewe the back toward
+the tayle of a purple blewe the tayle eleuen fethers of a greenish
+coulour the extremities of the outward fethers thereof white wth an
+eye[K] of greene. Garrulus Argentoratensis [_the name added in a
+different ink and pen_].
+
+ [K] Tinge, shade, particularly a slight tint.--"Imp. Dict."
+
+
+
+
+NOTES ON CERTAIN FISHES AND MARINE ANIMALS FOUND IN NORFOLK.
+
+[MS. SLOAN. 1882. FOL. 145-146. ALTERED TO 21 AND 22, AND 1830 FOL.
+23-30 AND 32-38.]
+
+ [The introductory remarks, paragraphs one to three, will be
+ found in the volume of the Sloane MSS. numbered 1882 (labelled
+ "Notes on Generation"), on pages 145 and 146, which are altered
+ to 21 and 22. They were placed in their present position by
+ Wilkin, but although appropriate, there is nothing to show that
+ they belong to the set of notes here reproduced, and they may
+ form memoranda for the beginning of some essay never completed.
+ The contents of the volume in question are of a very
+ miscellaneous character, and consist of fragmentary notes, which
+ appear to be memoranda jotted down at random.]
+
+
+[_Fol. 21/145._] It may well seeme no easie matter to giue any
+considerable account of fishes and animals of the sea wherein tis sayd
+that there are things creeping innumerable both small and great beasts
+because they liue in an element wherein they are not so easely
+discouerable notwithstanding probable it is that after this long
+nauigation search of the ocean bayes creeks Estuaries and riuers that
+there is scarce any fish butt hath been seen by some man for the large &
+breathing sort thereof do sometimes discouer themselues aboue water and
+the other are in such numbers that some at one time or other they are
+discouered and taken euen the most barbarous nations being much addicted
+to fishing and in America and the new discouered world the people were
+well acquantd with fishes of sea and riuers, and the fishes thereof haue
+been since described by industrious writers.
+
+Pliny seemes to short in the estimate of their number in the ocean, who
+recons up butt one hundred & seventie six species. butt the seas being
+now farther known & searched [_21/145 verso_] Bellonius much enlargeth.
+
+and in his booke of Birds thus deliuereth himself allthough I think it
+impossible to reduce the same vnto a certain number yet I may freelie
+say that tis beyond the power of man to find out more than fiue hundred
+sorts [kinds _written above_] of fishes three hundred sorts of birds
+more than three hundred sorts of fourfoted animalls and fortie
+diversities of serpents.[50]
+
+ [50] This estimate of the number of species of birds and fishes
+ existing is amusing in the light of the present knowledge of the
+ subject. Of course any such estimate can only be approximate, and
+ open to constant emendation; but according to a statement in the
+ "Zoological Record" of 1896, it was believed that there were
+ something like 386,000 described species: 2,500 of which are
+ mammals, 12,500 birds, 4,400 reptilia and batrachia, 12,000 fishes,
+ 50,000 mollusca, 20,000 crustacea, and 250,000 insecta; the smaller
+ divisions I have omitted. And whereas only about 10,000 species of
+ plants were known to Linnaeus, Professor Vines in his address to the
+ Botanical section at the Bradford meeting of the British
+ Association, 1900, states that the approximate number of recognised
+ plants at present existing is 175,596; but this is far short of the
+ total of existing species. Professor Saccardo states that there are
+ 250,000 fungi alone, and that the number of existing species in
+ other groups would bring the total up to over 400,000.
+
+
+[SLOANE MSS. 1830, FOL. 23-38.]
+
+[_Fol. 23._] Of fishes sometimes the larger sort are taken or come
+ashoar. A spermaceti whale[51] of 62 foote long neere Welles. another of
+the same kind 20 yeares before at Hunstanton. & not farre of 8 or nine
+came ashoare & 2 had yong ones after they were forsaken by ye water.
+
+ [51] In the muniment room at Hunstanton Hall there exists a book of
+ MSS. notes relating to their estates, kept by Sir Hamon and Sir
+ Nicholas le Strange, between the years 1612 and 1723. From this
+ book Mr. Hamon le Strange has been good enough to send me an
+ extract containing the full particulars of the stranding and
+ disposal of a Sperm Whale 57 feet long, which came ashore on their
+ Manor of Holme, on the 6th December, 1626, the skull of which is
+ still in the courtyard at Hunstanton Hall.
+
+ Browne had not come to reside in Norwich at that time, and the
+ chapter on the Spermaceti Whale in his _Pseudodoxia Epidemica_, was
+ inspired by a subsequent occurrence of the same kind, for, as
+ appears from the above note, a larger individual, 62 feet long,
+ came ashore at Wells 20 years later, which he says led him to
+ further inquiry. This would indicate about the year 1646 as the
+ date of the latter occurrence, whereas in his third letter to
+ Merrett, written in 1668, he states that it happened "about 12
+ years ago," or in 1656. There is probably an error in one of these
+ dates.
+
+ Another example seems to have been found at Yarmouth about the year
+ 1652, for we find Browne writing in that year for particulars of
+ its "cutting up." (See Appendix E.)
+
+ In the postscript to a letter also in the muniment room at
+ Hunstanton, dated June 11th, 1653, written to Sir Hamon le Strange,
+ who had been consulting him professionally, Browne says: "I pray
+ you at your leisure doe mee the honor to informe mee how long agoe
+ the Spermaceti Whale was cast upon your shoare & whether you had
+ any spermm with in any other part butt the head." It will be
+ noticed that in both the letters referred to he is anxious to
+ ascertain in what part of the body the "sperm" was situated,
+ doubtless for the purpose of confuting the "vulgar conceit" as to
+ the origin of the "sperm" referred to in the second paragraph of
+ his treatise in the _Pseudodoxia_. His investigations also probably
+ first led to a certain knowledge as to the nature of the food of
+ this animal.
+
+ These, however, although the first to be recorded in this county,
+ were not the first or only occurrences of the kind, for there is in
+ the parish church of Great Yarmouth the base of the skull of a
+ Sperm Whale, used as a chair, for the painting of which a charge of
+ five shillings appears in the churchwardens' accounts for the year
+ 1606; many such events in European waters are to be found recorded.
+
+ But the most interesting circumstance with regard to these whales
+ is the statement that "two had yong ones after they were forsaken
+ by the water." This event renders it highly improbable that they
+ were Sperm Whales, for the stragglers of that species which have
+ been met with in our waters, and indeed in the northern seas
+ generally, have been almost invariably solitary males, or, in one
+ or two instances "schools" of young males. In the only instance in
+ which both sexes were found, the school was composed I believe of
+ immature individuals. (_Vide_ J. Anderson, "Nachrichten von Island,
+ Groenland, und der Strasse Davis," Frantfurt (1747), p. 248.)
+ Moreover, this view is confirmed by a letter which will be found in
+ Appendix B., where the following passage occurs:--"And not only
+ whales, but grampusses have been taken in this Estuarie ... and
+ about twenty years ago four were run ashore near Hunstanton, and
+ two had young ones after they had come to land." A so-called
+ Grampus which came ashore on the 21st July, 1700, was from a
+ description and drawing in the le Strange MS. above quoted, a male
+ _Hyperoodon rostratus_, apparently nearly adult.
+
+ The Grampus (_Orca gladiator_) (mentioned in the next paragraph) is
+ frequently met with in the British seas, and has repeatedly
+ occurred on the Norfolk coast. Some early occurrences are on
+ record, for instance in Mackerell's "History of Lynn," twelve are
+ said to have come ashore near that town in 1636, and another in
+ 1680. Two very juvenile examples were taken off Yarmouth in
+ November 1894.
+
+A grampus aboue 16 foot long taken at yarmouth [3 or _crossed out_] 4
+yeares agoe.
+
+The Tursio or porpose is co[=m]on the Dolphin[52] more rare though
+sometimes taken wch many confound with the porpose. butt it hath a more
+waued line along the skinne sharper toward ye tayle the head longer and
+nose more extended wch maketh good the figure of Rondeletius. the flesh
+more red & [fa _crossed out_] well cooked of very good taste to most
+palates & exceedeth that of porpose.
+
+ [52] There can be no doubt that the Common Dolphin (_Delphinus
+ delphis_) is here referred to, and indeed this species might
+ reasonably be expected to be met with on our coast, as its range
+ extends at least as far to the north as the Scandinavian waters,
+ but so far as the writer is aware Browne's is the only record of
+ its having been met with in Norfolk. The White-beaked Dolphin (_D.
+ albirostris_) is not unfrequent, but it is clear that Browne does
+ not refer to that species.
+
+ In the "Vulgar Errors," Browne devotes a whole chapter (chapter ii.
+ of the fifth book) to a learned treatise on the "Picture of
+ Dolphins," and in one of the letters to his son Edward (Sloane
+ MSS., 1847), dated June 14th [1676?], he writes feelingly as an
+ anatomist, evidently fearing that a specimen then available might
+ be wasted, instead of being reserved for scientific purposes; for,
+ says he, "if the dolphin were to be showed for money in Norwich,
+ little would bee got; if they showed it in London they are like to
+ take out the viscera, and salt the fish, and then the dissection
+ will be unconsiderable." He then refers to the dolphin "opened when
+ the King was here," and describes its anatomical peculiarities,
+ adding that Dame Browne cooked the flesh "so as to make an
+ excellent savory dish of it," and that "collars" thereof (steaks
+ cut transversely) being sent to the King, who was then at
+ Newmarket, for his table, they "were well liked of." It is evident
+ therefore that he was present at the dissection of two of these
+ animals.
+
+The vitulus marinus[53] seacalf or seale wch is often taken sleeping on
+the shoare [4 _crossed out_] 5 [_written above_] yeares agoe one was
+shot in the riuer of norwich about surlingham [wh _crossed out_] ferry
+having continued in the riuer for diuers moneths before being an
+Amphibious animal it may bee caryed about aliue & kept long if it can
+bee brought to feed some haue been kept many moneths in ponds. the
+pizzell the bladder the cartilago ensiformis the figure of the Throttle
+the clusterd & racemous forme of the kidneys [_Fol. 24_] the flat &
+compressed heart are remarkable in it. in stomaks of all that I have
+opened I have found many [short _crossed out_] wormes.
+
+ [53] There is in the present day a considerable number of Common
+ Seals inhabiting the sand-banks of the Wash between the Norfolk and
+ Lincolnshire coasts, and they are frequently captured by the
+ fishermen; nor has the habit of straying into fresh-water deserted
+ them, for in recent years they have been taken in the River Ouse at
+ Bluntisham, forty miles from the sea. Three other species of Seal
+ have been taken on the Norfolk coast, viz., _Phoca hispida_, _P.
+ barbata_, and _Halichoerus gryphus_.
+
+I haue also obserued a scolopendra cetacea[54] of about ten foot long
+answering to the figure in Rondeletius wch the mariners told me was
+taken in these seas.
+
+ [54] A Scolopendra, ten feet long, is at first rather startling,
+ but on referring to Rondeletius's _Libri de piscibus Marinis_ (lib.
+ xvi. p. 488), I find that under the name "Scolopendra" he includes
+ at least three distinct forms--i., _S. terrestris_, a centipede;
+ ii., _S. marina_, certain species of Nereidiform polychaet worms;
+ iii., _Scolopendra cetacea_, regarded as a Cetacean and figured
+ with a Cetacean blow-hole. With regard to this remarkable figure my
+ friend, Dr. S. F. Harmer, has favoured me with the following
+ note:--"In the account given Rondeletius is evidently writing from
+ report; the figure is also no doubt borrowed, and may have been
+ 'improved' when redrawn; it seems to me that it is based upon some
+ kind of Tunny, although he figures a Tunny earlier in the book
+ (lib. viii. p. 249). The idea of the lateral appendages might have
+ been derived from the dorsal and ventral finlets of a Tunny; but
+ the first four finlets on each side are imaginary structures, and
+ in a wrong position. I can offer no opinion with regard to the
+ nasal appendages." Jonston (_De piscibus_, p. 156, Tab. xliv.) also
+ gives a similar figure of _Scolopendra_ _Cetacea_, which appears to
+ be a further modification of Rondeletius's figure; here it has
+ teeth, shown like those of the Sperm Whale, and an extra dorsal-fin
+ is added; the number of lateral appendages is the same, and a
+ column of water proceeding from the blow-hole is falling gracefully
+ forward. It is worthy of notice that Rondeletius also figures the
+ Saw-fish [Pristis] with a blow-hole.
+
+A pristes or serra [_written above_] saw fish[55] taken about Lynne
+co[=m]only mistaken for a [sha _crossed out_] sword fish & answers the
+figure in Rondeletius.
+
+ [55] In the "Transactions of the Linnean Society," ii., p. 273, is
+ an essay by Latham "On the various species of Sawfish," but he does
+ not mention any British locality. So far as I am aware Browne's is
+ the only record of the occurrence of this southern species in
+ British waters, with the exception of a note in Fleming's "British
+ Animals," p. 164, where it is stated on the authority of the late
+ Dr. Walker's MS. "Adversaria" for 1769, that _Pristis antiquorum_
+ is "found sometimes in Loch Long," but Fleming adds that he has met
+ with no other proof of its ever having visited the British shores.
+ Browne mentions in his eighth letter to Merrett that he sends him a
+ "figure in little" of a _Pristis_ which he received of a Yarmouth
+ seaman, and is so precise in his statement that his fish was
+ _Pristis serra_ (the _Pristis antiquorum_ of Cuvier), that his
+ record cannot be disregarded. He specially guards against its being
+ mistaken for the Sword-fish (_Xiphias gladius_), which has been
+ taken on several occasions in our waters, and of which he gives
+ some interesting particulars.
+
+A sword fish or Xiphias or Gladius intangled in the Herring netts at
+yarmouth agreable unto the Icon in Johnstonus with a smooth sword not
+vnlike the Gladius of Rondeletius about a yard & half long, no teeth [n
+_crossed out_] eyes very remarkable enclosed in an hard cartilaginous
+couercle about ye bignesse of a good apple. ye vitreous humor plentifull
+the crystalline larger then a nutmegge [cleare _crossed out_] remaining
+cleare sweet & vntainted when the rest of the eye was vnder a deepe
+corruption wch wee kept clear & limpid many moneths vntill an hard frost
+split it & manifested the foliations thereof.
+
+It is not vnusuall to take seuerall sorts of canis or doggefishes[56]
+great and small wch pursue the shoale of herrings and other fish butt
+this yeare 1662 one was taken intangled in the Herring netts about 9
+foot in length, answering the last figure of Johnstonus lib 7 vnder the
+name of _canis carcherias alter_ & was by the teeth & 5 gills one kind
+of shark particularly [_Fol. 25_] remarkable in the vastnesse of the
+optick nerves & 3 conicall hard pillars wch supported the extraordinarie
+elevated nose wch wee haue reserued with the scull the seamen calld this
+kind a scrape.
+
+ [56] Various species of Dog-fish are frequent off the Norfolk coast
+ as elsewhere. The name "Sweet William" is applied to the larger
+ fish of this kind, especially to the Tope; this appears also to
+ have been the case in Pennant's time, for alluding to this
+ vernacular name he supposes it was applied in ironical allusion to
+ the offensive smell of their flesh and skin. They are objects of
+ great aversion among the fishermen, owing to the disturbance they
+ create among the shoals of fish, and the damage they do to both
+ nets and the enclosed fish. Scarcely a season passes but one or
+ more specimens of Browne's _Canis carcharias_, or, as modern
+ Ichthyologists call it, _Lamna cornubica_, the Porbeagle, being
+ entangled in the drift nets and landed with the herrings. One lies
+ on the fish-wharf at Lowestoft as I write this note on the 19th of
+ October, 1900, measuring 7 feet 10 inches in length. Jonston's
+ figure referred to by Browne is evidently intended for this
+ species, but he makes a slight error in the reference to the
+ _Historia Naturalis (De Piscibus et Cetis)_; it occurs in book v.,
+ and the figure is fig. 6 on Tab. vi., and it is marked _Canis
+ carcharias alius_ (not alter).
+
+Sturio or Sturgeon[57] so co[=m]on on the other side of the sea about
+the mouth of the elbe come seldome into our creekes though some haue
+been taken at yarmouth & more in the great [owse _crossed out_] Owse by
+Lynne butt their heads not so sharpe as represented in the Icons of
+Rondeletius & Johnstonus.
+
+ [57] So great is the variation in the snout of the Sturgeon, that
+ Dr. Parnell in his excellent essay on "The Fishes of the District
+ of the Forth," describes the Sharp-nosed Sturgeon as a distinct
+ species under the name of _Acipenser sturio_, and the broad-nosed
+ form he calls _A. latirostris_. His views, however, have not been
+ generally accepted, and only one British species is recognised. The
+ Sharp-nosed variety has been taken here, but the normal form is
+ much more frequent.
+
+Sometimes wee meet with a mola or moonefish[58] so called from some
+resemblance it hath [from _crossed out_] of a crescent in the extreme
+part of the body from one finne unto another one being taken neere the
+shoare at yarmouth before breake of day seemed to shiuer & grunt like an
+hogge as Authors deliuer of it the flesh being hard & neruous it is not
+like to afford a good dish butt from the Liuer wch is [white _crossed
+out_] large white & tender somewhat [wee _crossed out_] may bee expected
+[for _crossed out_] the gills of these fishes wee found thick beset with
+a kind of sealowse. [Added subsequently] in the yeare 1667 a mola was
+taken at monsley wch weighed 2 [p _crossed out_] hundred pound.
+
+ [58] This fish (_Orthagoriscus mola_), which we know as the
+ Sun-fish, has been repeatedly taken here. For an account of its
+ parasites see Cobbold on the "Sun-fish as a host," "Intellectual
+ Observer," ii., p. 82; also Day, "Brit. Fishes," ii., p. 275.
+ According to Dr. Spencer Cobbold the Sun-fish is infested by nine
+ species of Helminths, three of which are mostly found attached to
+ the gills, while a fourth adheres to the surface of the body.
+
+The Rana piscatrix or frogge fish[59] is sometimes found in a very large
+magnitude & wee haue taken the [paynes _crossed out_] care [_written
+above_] to haue them clend & stuffed. wherein wee obserued all the
+appendices whereby the[y] cach fishes butt much larger then are
+discribed in the Icons of Johnstonus tab xi fig 8.
+
+ [59] Both this species and the Wolf-fish are well known upon our
+ coast.
+
+[_Fol. 26_] The sea [wollf _crossed out_] wolf or Lupus nostras of
+Schoneueldus remarkable for its spotted skinne & notable teeth incisors
+Dogteeth & grinders the dogteeth [in the _crossed out_] both in the
+jawes & palate scarce answerable by any fish of that bulk for [strength
+_crossed out_] the like disposure strength & soliditie.
+
+Mustela marina[60] called by some a wesell ling wch salted & dryed
+becomes a good Lenten dish.
+
+ [60] Some member of the family _Gadidae_ is here referred to,
+ probably the five-bearded Rockling, _Motella mustela_, or Brown
+ Whistle-fish of Pennant, which is occasionally taken by our
+ fishermen, but is by no means common.
+
+A Lump or Lumpus Anglorum so named by Aldrouandus by some esteemed a
+festiuall dish though it affordeth butt a glutinous jellie & the skinne
+is beset with stony knobs after no certaine order ours most answereth
+the first figure in the xiii table of Johnstonus butt seemes more round
+& arcuated then that figure makes it.
+
+Before the herrings there co[=m]only cometh a fish about a foot long by
+the fish man called an horse[61] resembling in all poynts the Trachurus
+of Rondeletius of a mixed shape between a mackerell & an herring.
+obseruable from [an oblique bo _crossed out_] its greene eyes rarely
+skye colored back after it is kept a day & an oblique bony line running
+on ye outside from the gills vnto ye tayle. a drye & hard dish butt
+makes an handsome picture.
+
+ [61] This is the Horse Mackerel, or Scad, _Caranx trachurus_; a
+ handsome fish and common enough, especially off Sheringham, but not
+ much esteemed for the table.
+
+The Rubelliones or Rochets[62] butt thinly met with on this coast. the
+gornart cuculus or Lyrae species more often wch they seldome eat butt
+bending the back & sprdding the finnes into a liuely posture do hang
+them up in their howses.
+
+ [62] Fish of the Gurnard kind are here referred to. The Rochet of
+ Pennant is the Red Gurnard, _Trigla cuculus_; he calls _T. lyra_
+ the Piper. Large numbers of various species of Gurnard are brought
+ in by our trawlers and sell readily, especially the Sapphirine
+ Gurnard, or Tub-fish (_T. hirundo_), which is known as the "Lachet"
+ on our coast; it reaches a large size, and seems to be much in
+ demand for the table. In spring the colours are very brilliant, and
+ they are frequently seen on the fish stalls with their pectoral
+ fins extended as Browne describes.
+
+[_Fol. 27._] Beside the co[=m]on mullus[63] or mullet there is another
+not vnfrequent wch some call a cunny fish butt rather a red muellett of
+a flosculous redde & somewhat rough on the scales answering the
+discription of [Rond _crossed out_] Icon of Rondeletius vnder the name
+of mullus ruber asper [no _crossed out_] butt not the tast of the
+vsually knowne mullet as [being butt _crossed out_] affording butt a
+drye & leane bitt.
+
+ [63] The Common Mullet I take to be the Grey Mullet (_Mugil
+ capito_), which is at times plentiful on our coast, coming into
+ Breydon and the mouths of the rivers, but the Red Mullet (_Mullus
+ barbatus_) is far less frequently met with. In his third letter to
+ Merrett, Browne says, "There is of them _maior_ and _minor_," the
+ latter probably being the variety known as the Surmullet, by far
+ the most frequently met with here.
+
+Seuerall sorts of fishes[64] there are wch [bear _crossed out_] do
+[_written above_] or may beare the names of seawoodcocks as the Acus
+maior scolopax & saurus. the saurus wee sometimes meet with yonge.
+Rondeletius confesseth it a very rare fish somewhat resembling the Acus
+or needlefish before & a makerell behind. wee have kept one dryed many
+yeares agoe.
+
+ [64] The Saurus of Rondeletius appears to be the Skipper or
+ Saury-pike (_Scombresox saurus_) of modern authors. _Acus major_ is
+ the Gar-fish or Greenback (_Belone vulgaris_); this is the _Acus
+ primus_ of Rondeletius, Dr. Harmer has been good enough to send me
+ the following note on Rondeletius's figures:--"_De Acus secunda
+ specie_" (lib. viii. p. 229). "Two species are figured; the upper
+ figure appears to represent _Siphonostoma typhle_, and the lower
+ one _S. acus_. Guenther ('Brit. Mus. Cat.,' viii. p. 157) gives a
+ reference to Rondeletius in his synonyms of _S. acer_ without
+ indicating that the latter figures two species. Under _S. typhle_
+ (p. 154) he gives the synonym _Syngnathus rondeletii_, De la Roche.
+ A reference to Delaroche ('Ann. Mus. Hist. Nat., Paris,' xiii, 1809
+ p. 324, Pl. xxi. fig. 5) shows that _S. rondeletii_ is identified
+ with the first figure on p. 229 of Rondeletius; and it may thus be
+ concluded that Guenther agrees with this conclusion. It seems
+ therefore probable that Browne's Acus of Aristotle refers to _S.
+ typhle_."
+
+The Acus maior calld by some a garfish & greenback answering ye figure
+of Rondeletius under the name of Acus prima species remarkable for its
+quadrangular figure and verdigreece green back bone.
+
+[L] A lesser sort of Acus [wee _crossed out_] maior or primae specaeei wee
+meet with [answering the saurus of Rondeletius _crossed out_] much
+shorter then the co[=m]on garfish & in taking out the spine wee found it
+not green as in the greater & much answering the saurus of Rondeletius.
+
+ [L] This and the next paragraph on the back of Fol. 26 are in
+ different ink and smaller writing though in the same hand, and
+ appear to have been added subsequently. The first paragraph is
+ omitted by Wilkin.
+
+A scolopax[65] or sea woodcock of Rondeletius was giuen mee by a seaman
+of these seas. about 3 inches long & seemes to bee one kind of Acus or
+needlefish answering the discription of Rondeletius.
+
+ [65] The Scolopax, or Sea Woodcock, is clearly _Centriscus
+ scolopax_, a very rare fish in the British seas, and it would have
+ been well had Browne given a more precise account of the origin of
+ his specimen.
+
+The Acus of Aristotle [_see Note 64_] lesser thinner corticated &
+sexangular by diuers calld an addercock & somewhat resembling a snake
+ours more plainly finned then Rondeletius discribeth it.
+
+A little corticated fish[66] about [4 inches _crossed out_] 3 or 4
+inches long [_several words smeared out_] ours answering that wch is
+named piscis octangularis by wormius, cataphractus by Schoneueldeus.
+octagonius versus caput, versus caudam hexagonius.
+
+ [66] Doubtless the Armed Bull-head, or Pogge, _Agonus
+ cataphractus_. A MS. note in Berkenhout says it was called at
+ Lowestoft a Beetle-head (1769).
+
+[_Fol. 28._] The faber marinus[67] sometimes found very large answering
+ye figure of Rondeletius. which though hee mentioneth as a rare fish &
+to be found in the Atlantick & Gaditane ocean yet wee often meet with it
+in these seas co[=m]only calld a peterfish hauing [a _crossed out_] one
+[_written above_] black spot on ether side the body conceued the
+perpetuall signature from the impression of St Peters fingers or to
+resemble the 2 peeces of money wch St Peter tooke out of this fish
+remarkable also from its disproportionable mouth & many hard prickles
+about other parts.
+
+ [67] _Zeus faber_, the Dory. Many, usually small ones, are brought
+ in by our fishermen.
+
+A kind of scorpius marinus[68] a rough prickly & monstrous headed fish 6
+8 or 12 inches long answerable vnto the figure of Schoneueldeus.
+
+ [68] _Cottus scorpius_, Father Lasher, commonly taken by the
+ shrimpers.
+
+A sting fish[69] wiuer or kind of ophidion or Araneus slender, narrowe
+headed about 4 inches long wth a sharpe small prickly finne along the
+back which often venemously pricketh the hands of fishermen.
+
+ [69] Probably from its size the Lesser Weever, _Trachinus vipera_,
+ as also the _Draco minor_ of Jonstoni. A common fish in our waters.
+ Large numbers of the Greater Weever, _T. draco_, are brought in by
+ the trawlers.
+
+Aphia cobites marina[70] or sea Loche.
+
+ [70] One of the Gobies. Day, "Brit. Fishes," i., p. 169, supposes
+ the _Aphya cobites_ of Rondeletius (p. 20) to be the White Goby,
+ _A. pellucida_; Pennant has _A. cobites_ as a synonym for the
+ Spotted Goby (_G. minutus_) and the Sea Gudgeons, Black Gobies (_G.
+ niger_), but at that time there was no very nice distinction of the
+ members of this genus. The Sea Miller's Thumb is probably the
+ Shanny (_Blennius pholis_). _Alosa_, is the Allis Shad (_Culpea
+ alosa_, L.), not uncommon (_see Note 74_).
+
+Blennus a sea millars thumb.
+
+Funduli marini sea gogions.
+
+Alosae or chads to bee met with about Lynne.
+
+Spinachus or smelt[71] in greatest plentie about Lynne butt [co[=m]on on
+yarmouth coast _crossed out_] where they haue also a small fish calld a
+primme answering in [all _crossed out_] tast & shape a smelt & perhaps
+are butt the yonger sort thereof.
+
+ [71] The Smelt, _Osmerus eperlanus_, is abundant in the shallow
+ waters and estuaries on the Norfolk coast in spring, ascending the
+ fresh-water rivers to spawn. The small fish called a Primme by
+ Browne, may be the Atherine (_Atherina presbyter_), which is also
+ found in our waters, where it is often mistaken for the Smelt, but
+ I have not heard it called by the former name.
+
+[_Fol 29._] Aselli or cods of seuerall sorts. Asellus albus or whitings
+in great plentie. Asellus niger carbonarius or [col _crossed out_] coale
+fish. Asellus minor Schoneueldei callarias pliny or Haydocks with many
+more also a weed fish somewhat like an haydock butt larger & dryer meat.
+A Basse also much resembling a flatter kind of Cod.[72]
+
+ [72] The first three fishes named in this paragraph need no
+ comment; the Weed-fish is doubtless a local name, but for what
+ species I cannot discover. The Bass, _Labrax lupus_ (Cuv.), is, as
+ might be expected from the nature of our coast, by no means common
+ here.
+
+Scombri are makerells[73] in greate plentie a dish much desired butt if
+as Rondeletius affirmeth they feed upon sea starres & squalders (_see
+Note 90_) there may bee some doubt whether their flesh bee without some
+ill qualitie sometimes they are of a very large size & one was taken
+this yeare 1668 wch was by measure an ell long and of ye length of a
+good salmon, at Lestoffe.
+
+ [73] The latter part of this paragraph, beginning, "Sometimes they
+ are of a very large size," is written on the left-hand side of the
+ opening, and is evidently a subsequent addition. One would be
+ inclined to think from the great size of the fish here recorded (3
+ ft. 9 in.), that it may have been a species of Tunny, or even a
+ Bonito, both of which have been taken on the Norfolk coast.
+ Seventeen inches is a large mackerel.
+
+Herrings departed sprats or sardae not long after succeed in great
+plentie wch are taken with smaller nets [& dryed _crossed out_] & smoakd
+& dryed like herrings become a [daint _crossed out_] sapid bitt &
+vendible abroad.
+
+Among these are found Bleakes or bliccae[74] a thinne herring like fishe
+wch some will also think to bee young herrings. And though the sea
+aboundeth not with pilchards, yet they are co[=m]only taken among
+herrings. butt few esteeme thereof or eat them.
+
+ [74] It is quite evident that the fish referred to here, and again
+ in the sixth letter to Merrett, is not the true Bleak (_Alburnus
+ lucideus_) of our freshwaters. It seems that the young of some
+ species of Clupeoid was thus known, for I find it stated in a MS.
+ note in a copy of Berkenhout's "Outlines of the Natural History of
+ Great Britain," (1769), in the possession of Mr. T. E. Gunn, that
+ the Bleak and the Sprat are often caught together in the sea at
+ Aldeburgh (Suffolk) in November, and the writer of the note adds,
+ "the Bleak is larger than the Sprat, its eyes are larger, and the
+ upper part of its belly serrated." I think from this description
+ and from Browne's remarks, that the young of a species of Shad must
+ have been mistaken for the Bleak, which although found low down in
+ our rivers almost to where the salt tide mingles with the fresh,
+ does not I believe enter the salt water.
+
+Congers are not so co[=m]on on these coasts as on many seas about
+England, butt are often found upon the north coast of Norfolk, & in
+frostie wether left in pulks & plashes upon the ebbe of the sea.
+
+[_Fol. 30._] The sand eels Anglorum of Aldrouandus, or Tobianus of
+Schoneueldeus co[=m]only called smoulds taken out of the sea sands with
+forks & rakes about Blakeney and Burnham a small round slender fish
+about 3 or 4 inches long as bigge as a small Tobacco pipe a very dayntie
+dish.
+
+Pungitius marinus[75] or sea bansticle hauing a prickle one each side
+the smallest fish of the sea about an inch long sometimes drawne ashoare
+with netts together with weeds & pargaments[M] of the sea.
+
+ [75] The smallest of the genus _Gasterosteus_, or Stanstickles, is
+ _G. pungitius_, the ten-spined Stickleback, but this fish is two
+ inches long when full grown. All the species seem to be more or
+ less indifferent to the salinity of the water. The fifteen-spined
+ Stickleback, _G. spinachia_, is also sometimes taken by the
+ shrimpers, and is the most truly marine species, but is by no means
+ "the smallest fish of the sea."
+
+ [M] This word which Wilkin renders "fragments," is doubtless from
+ the Latin _pergamentum_, and it seems likely that Browne had in
+ view certain sea-weeds, possibly _Laminaria_ or _Ulva_ which,
+ especially when dry, present somewhat the appearance and texture of
+ parchment.
+
+Many sorts of flat fishes[76] The pastinaca oxyrinchus with a long &
+strong aculeus in the tayle conceuud of speciall venome & virtues.
+
+ [76] _Pastinaca oxyrinchus_ appears to be the Sting Ray (_Trygon
+ pastinaca_); _Raia clavata_, the Thornback; _R. oculata_, the
+ Spotted Ray (_R. maculata_); _R. aspera_; the Shagreen Ray? (_R.
+ fullonica_).
+
+Severall sorts of Raia's skates & Thornebacks the Raia clauata
+oxyrinchus, raia oculata, aspera, spinosa fullonica.
+
+The great Rhombus or Turbot aculeatus & leuis.
+
+The passer or place.
+
+Butts of various kinds.
+
+The passer squamosus Bret Bretcock[77] & skulls comparable in taste and
+delicacy vnto the soale.
+
+ [77] The Brill, _Rhombus laevis_ (Lin.), _Passer asper squamosus___,
+ Rondl., formerly known as the Brett, Bretcock, Skull, or Pearl.
+
+The Buglossus solea or soale[78] plana & oculata as also the Lingula or
+small soale all in very great plentie.
+
+ [78] _Solea vulgaris_, the Common Sole. The "_Lingula_, or small
+ Sole," is probably the _Solea variegata_, Flem., the _S. parva sive
+ Lingula_ of Rond. Jonston figures "_Solea lingulata_," Tab. xx.,
+ fig. 12, but I am uncertain what species is intended. It is
+ possible that Browne may have Latinised the trade name by which
+ small Soles are known in the market as "slips" and "tongues." What
+ other species he may have wished to indicate as "plana" and
+ "oculata" it is difficult to determine.
+
+Sometimes a fish aboue half a yard long like a butt[79] or soale called
+asprage wch I haue known taken about Cromer.
+
+ [79] The "asprage" (or it may be "a sprage") may possibly be the
+ Dab, _Pleuranectes limanda_, which Rondeletius calls _Passer
+ asper_. I do not find that species mentioned otherwise, and a great
+ many are taken by the Cromer and Sheringham fishermen.
+
+[_Fol. 31._] [See _Roller ante_ p. 30.]
+
+[_Fol. 32._] Sepia or cuttle fish[80] [smear] & great plentie of the
+bone or shellie substance which sustaineth the whole bulk of that soft
+fishe found co[=m]only on the shoare.
+
+ [80] Of the various species of the Cephalopoda, _Sepia
+ officinalis_, is more often represented by its calcareous dorsal
+ plate than by the entire animal, for large numbers of these
+ "cuttle-bones" are sometimes strewed along the shore for miles. The
+ Squid, _Loligo vulgaris_, is often met with, sometimes of
+ considerable size. The horny "pen" resembles a short leaf-shaped
+ Roman sword, and Browne's term, "Gladiolus," is quite as
+ appropriate as that of "Calamus." His _Polypus_ is probably
+ _Octopus vulgaris_, but it is rarely met with on the Norfolk coast.
+
+The Loligo sleue or calamar found often upon the shoare from head to
+tayle [such _crossed out_] sometimes aboue an ell long, remarkable for
+its parretlike bill, the gladiolus or calamus along the back & the
+notable crystallyne of the eye wch equalleth if not exceedeth the lustre
+of orientall pearle.
+
+A polypus another kind of the mollia[N] sometimes wee haue met with.
+
+ [N] By _mollia_ is meant all soft-bodied shell-less animals.
+
+Lobsters in great number about sheringham and cromer from whence all the
+country is supplyed.
+
+Astacus marinus pediculi [marini _written above_] facie[81] found also
+in that place. with the aduantage of ye long foreclawes about 4 inches
+long.
+
+ [81] Probably _Nephrops norvegicus_, the Norway Lobster, called at
+ Lowestoft a Crayfish or Prawn. They are sometimes brought in in
+ large numbers by the steam trawlers, but the precise locality in
+ which they are captured I am unable to say; the fishermen say the
+ "North Sea," which is rather a vague address, but others say
+ between the Texel and Heligoland.
+
+Crabs large & well tasted found also in the same coast.
+
+Another kind of crab[82] taken for cancer fluuiatilis litle slender & of
+a very quick motion found in the Riuer running through yarmouth. [_added
+subsequently_] & in bliburgh riuer.
+
+ [82] _Carsinus maenas_, the Shore-crab, a very common species on the
+ Norfolk coast is here intended.
+
+[_Fol. 33._] Oysters exceeding large about Burnham and [Huns _crossed
+out_] Hunstanton like those of poole St Mallowes or ciuita [vech
+_crossed out_] vechia whereof [some _crossed out_] many are eaten rawe
+the shells being broakin with [cle _crossed out_] cleuers the greater
+part pickled & sent weekly to London & other parts.
+
+Mituli or muscles in great quantitie as also chams or cochles about
+stiskay [_sic_] & ye northwest coast.
+
+Pectines pectunculi varij or scallops of the lesser sort.
+
+Turbines or smaller wilks, leues, striati. as also Trochi, Trochili, or
+scaloppes finely variegated & pearly. [as also _crossed out_.] Lewise
+[_sic_] purpurae minores, nerites, cochleae, Tellinae.
+
+Lepades, patellae Limpets, of an vniualue shell wherein an animal like a
+snayle cleauing fast unto the rocks.
+
+Solenes cappe lunge venetorum co[=m]only a razor fish the shell thereof
+dentalia
+
+[The MS. breaks off here, and the next paragraph appears to be an
+interpolation.]
+
+Dentalia by some called pinpaches because pinmeat thereof is taken out
+with a pinne or needle.[83]
+
+ [83] Mussels and Cockles are very abundant all along the shallow
+ shores of North-west Norfolk, as well as Clams, _Mya arenaria_.
+ "Scallops of the lesser sort" are probably _Pecten opercularius_
+ and _P. varius_. The Whelk, _Buccinum undatum_, is also very
+ numerous, and forms the staple of a considerable industry at
+ Sheringham; the lesser, or Dog-Whelk, _Nassa reticulata_, as well
+ as _Purpura lapillus_ and several sorts of Trochus, are commonly
+ met with. The genus Nerita was a very comprehensive one in Browne's
+ time, and included many species of Littorina, of which the
+ well-known Periwinkle, _L. littorea_, is the most numerous here. No
+ true Nerita is now recognised as British, although in the warmer
+ seas the genus is a very numerous one. The most common Tellina here
+ is _T. tenuis_, _Lepades patellae_ are of course the common Limpet
+ (_Patella vulgata_), and of the Solen, or Razor Shell, which Gwyn
+ Jeffreys says in the time of Aldrovandus was called by the
+ Venetians "cappa longa," we have two species found on the sandy
+ portions of the coast. Here some confusion exists in the MS., after
+ the words, "the shell thereof dentalia," the note ends abruptly,
+ and is followed by an interpolation which seems quite irrelevant,
+ as Dentalia have surely never been called "Pin-patches" (the
+ vernacular name for _Littorina littorea_), nor is it probable that,
+ like that common univalve, they were ever taken out of their shells
+ with a pin or needle. _Dentalia_ are mentioned on two other
+ occasions as of doubtful occurrence and _Dentalium entalis_ has
+ slight claim to be a native of Norfolk; the only recorded specimen
+ I know of was picked up in 1890 by Mr. Mayfield, from the drift on
+ the beach between Wells and Holkham.
+
+Cancellus Turbinum et neritis[84] Barnard the Hermite of Rondeletius a
+kind of crab or astacus liuing in a forsaken wilk or nerites.
+
+ [84] Hermit Crabs are here referred to, the larger, _Pagurus
+ bernhardus_, found very frequently inhabiting the shells of the
+ Whelk, and a smaller species which takes up its abode in those of a
+ _Trochus_.
+
+echinus echinometrites[85] sea hedghogge whose neat shells are co[=m]on
+on the shoare the fish aliue often taken [with _crossed out_] by the
+dragges among the oysters.
+
+ [85] Dead _Echini_ are very common on the sea-shore, and many
+ living ones are dredged by the shrimpers. _Echinus sphaera_ is the
+ most common on the Norfolk coast; _E. miliaris_, a small species,
+ is also very abundant about Cromer.
+
+[This and the next paragraph on fol. 33 _verso_.]
+
+Balani[86] a smaller sort of vniualue growing co[=m]only in clusters.
+the smaller kinds thereof to bee found oftimes upon oysters wilks &
+lobsters.
+
+ [86] The species of Cirripeds referred to are probably the common
+ Acorn Barnacle (_Balanus porcatus_) and the Goose Barnacle (_Lepas
+ anatifera_), the latter occasionally found on ships' bottoms and
+ drift-wood, probably carried by favourable currents from warmer
+ seas than our own.
+
+Concha anatifera or Ansifera or Barnicleshell whereof about 4 yeares
+past were found upon the shoare no small number by yarmouth hanging by
+slender strings of a kind of Alga vnto seuerall splinters or [clefts
+_crossed out_] cleauings of firre boards vnto wch they were seuerally
+fastned & hanged like ropes of onyons: their shell flat & of a peculiar
+forme differing from other shelles, this being of four diuisions.
+containing a small imperfect animal at the lower part diuided into many
+shootes or streames wch prepossed [imag _crossed out_] spectators fancy
+to bee the rudiment of the tayle of some goose or duck to bee [expute
+_crossed out_] produced from it. some whereof in ye shell & some taken
+out & spred upon paper wee shall [still?] keepe by us.
+
+[Fol. 34.] Stellae marinae[87] or sea starres in great plentie especially
+about yarmouth. whether they bee bred out of the [vrticas _crossed out_]
+vrticae squalders or sea gellies as many report wee cannot confirme butt
+the squalderes in the middle seeme to haue some lines or first draughts
+not unlike. our starres exceed not 5 poynts though I haue heard that
+some with more haue been found about Hunstanton and Burnham. where are
+also found stellae marinae testacae or handsome crusted & brittle sea
+[stars _crossed out_] starres much lesse.
+
+ [87] The Five-finger (_Asterias rubens_, L.) is a very numerous
+ species on our coast and very destructive. Brittle Stars
+ (_Ophiocoma sp?_) are as Browne states most frequent about
+ Hunstanton, Burnham, and Cromer. _Solaster papposa_ is also found
+ in the same localities.
+
+The pediculus[88] and culex marin us the sea lowse & flie are [are
+_crossed out_] also no strangeres.
+
+ [88] The Pediculus, or Sea Louse, is probably _Talitrus locusta_,
+ the Sand-hopper; what may be intended by _Culex marinus_ it is
+ difficult to say. A species of gnat is at times very numerous on
+ the wet sand just above the water-line. _See also_ Notes 110 and
+ 115, on a kindred subject.
+
+Physsalus Rondeletij[89] or eruca marina physsaloides according to the
+icon of Rondeletius of very orient green & purple bristles.
+
+ [89] The Sea Mouse, _Aphrodite aculeata_. This is referred to again
+ in the Letters to Merrett.
+
+Urtica marina[90] of diuers kinds some whereof called squalderes. of a
+burning and stinging qualitie if rubbed in the hand. the water thereof
+may afford a good cosmetick.
+
+ [90] Mr. E. T. Browne, of the Zoological Laboratory of University
+ College, London, has kindly furnished me with the following notes
+ on this subject: "Jonston (1657) gives figures of Anemones and
+ large _Medusae_ under the name of _Urtica_. On Tab. xviii. he
+ figures Anemones and other beasts, but not _medusae_. The _medusae_
+ are on the next Tab. (xix.). _Urtica marina_ includes both Anemones
+ and certain Scyphomedusae (not _Pulmo_). Under 'some ... called
+ Squalders of a burning and stinging quality,' I think Browne must
+ refer to our common stinging Scyphomedusae belonging to the genus
+ _Chrysaora_ or _Cyanaea_, of which there are three species.
+
+ "The vague description of what he calls 'sea buttons' [see below,
+ also second letter to Merrett] would suit either a Medusa or a
+ Ctenophore. The additional note, 'two small holes in the ends,'
+ rather upsets matters, but I think he must refer to some sort of
+ jelly-fish, probably damaged, which is usually the case when cast
+ up on the shore. If the buttons worn in those days were like
+ filbert-nuts or eggs, I am inclined to think that the reference
+ must be to a Ctenophore, genus _Pleurobrachia_, but if flat, then
+ to one of the _Hydromedusae_. It would be safe to say, 'probably a
+ kind of jelly-fish,' which is about as vague as the reference." See
+ also Dr. Reuben Robinson's description of "Squalders" in a letter
+ to Browne (Wilkin i., pp. 422-424). It seems probable that the
+ gelatinous masses referred to in the early part of this letter,
+ which Dr. Robinson says were ascribed by Dr. Charleton to "the
+ nocturnall pollution of some plethorick or wanton starr: or rather
+ excrement blowne from the nosthrills of a rheumatick planett," were
+ the remains of the undeveloped spawn of frogs, the bodies of which
+ had been eaten by rats, crows, or herons, and which had become
+ swollen by exposure to moisture.
+
+[The next paragraph on folio 33 _verso_ is evidently added
+subsequently.]
+
+Another elegant sort that is often found cast up by shoare in great
+numbers about ye bignesse of a button cleere & welted & may bee called
+fibula marina crystallina.
+
+hirudines marini or sea Leaches.[91]
+
+ [91] It is difficult to determine the species of marine Annelids
+ referred to by Browne; the Sea Leech is probably _Pontobdella
+ laevis_. The "large wormes" digged for bait, mentioned more than
+ once, are Lug-worms, _Arenicola piscatorum_; the _Vermes in tubulis
+ testacei_ may be tube-worms of the genus Terrebella, or a species
+ of Serpula. Tethya or "Sea dugge" (not "Sea dogs," as Wilkin has
+ it) might very well apply to _Ascidia_ or one of the allied genera.
+ Simple Ascidians, generally known as Sea-squirts, are common
+ littoral forms; the animals figured by Rondeletius under the
+ heading "De Tethyis" (p. 127) are simple Ascidians. The _vesicaria
+ marina_, or "fanago," might well refer to the egg capsules of the
+ common Whelk (_Buccinum undatum_), which are very commonly found in
+ masses on the shore. In his sixth letter to Merrett, Browne
+ mentions two kinds of "fanago," the first which I take to be the
+ egg capsules of the Whelk, resembling the "husk of peas;" the
+ smaller that of "barley when the flower [awn?] is mouldered away,"
+ may possibly be the egg capsules of _Purpura lapillus_, or of some
+ species of Natica, which bear a fanciful resemblance to grains of
+ barley. See also Merrett's second letter in Appendix A., in which
+ he describes the Vesicaria found on oyster-shells as resembling
+ flowers of _Hyacinthus botryoides_, which is not a bad description
+ of the form of the egg capsules of _P. lapillus_.
+
+vermes marini very large wormes digged a yarde deepe out of the sands
+at the ebbe for bayt. tis known where they are to bee found by a litle
+flat ouer them on ye surface of ye sand. as also vermes in tubulis
+testacei. Also Tethya or sea dugges some whereof resemble fritters [and
+_crossed out_] the vesicaria marina also & [_see Note 91_] fanago
+sometimes very large conceaued to proceed from some testaceous animals.
+& particularly [_Fol. 35_] from the purpura butt [in _crossed out_] ours
+more probably from other testaceous wee hauing not met with any large
+purpura upon this coast.
+
+[A blank space.]
+
+Many riuer fishes also and animals. Salmon[92] no co[=m]on fish in our
+riuers though many are taken in the owse. in the Bure or north riuer, in
+ye waueney or south riuer, in ye [yare or _crossed out_] norwich riuer
+butt seldome and in the winter butt 4 yeares ago 15 were taken at
+Trowes mill [ab _crossed out_] in Xtmas. whose mouths were stuck with
+small wormes or horsleaches no bigger than fine threads some of these I
+kept in water 3 moneths if a few drops of blood were putt to the water
+they would in a litle time looke red. they sensibly grewe bigger then I
+first found them and were killed by an hard froast freezing the water.
+most of our Salmons haue a recurued peece of flesh in ye end of the
+lower iawe wch when they shutt there mouths deepely enters the upper. as
+Scaliger hath noted in some.
+
+ [92] The Salmon (_Salmo salar_) is at the present day very rarely
+ found in our rivers, and those met with are, as a rule, male Kelts
+ which have strayed into unsuspected situations after floods; a
+ singular exception occurred on the 20th May, 1897, when one
+ weighing 6 lbs. was taken on a fly in the river above Stoke Holy
+ Cross Mill; this fish is preserved in the Norwich Museum. Another
+ curious capture of which I heard (but did not see the fish)
+ occurred on the 1st August, 1898, when a salmon, also of 6 lbs.
+ weight, jumped into a small boat towed behind a yacht which was
+ sailing across Breydon Water. That the salmon was at one time a
+ recognised visitor to our rivers is evident from the following
+ extract from the Norwich Court of Mayoralty Book under date 2 Novr.
+ 1667: "It is ordered that the bell man give notice that if any
+ person shall take any Salmons from the Nativity of our Lady unto
+ St. Martin's day, or destroy any young Salmons by netts or other
+ ingens from the midst of April until the Nativity of St. John
+ Baptist shall be punished according to the law." The Salmon is the
+ host of several parasites both internal and external. Fresh run
+ Salmon are generally infested with a "Sea-louse," which quickly
+ perishes in freshwater; not so, however, with the troublesome
+ worm-like creature, the subject of Browne's experiments; it is
+ known as _Lernaea salmonis_, and is only found on the gill-covers of
+ spent Kelts; it is not got rid of till the fish returns to the salt
+ water. Browne may be excused being rather sceptical as to the
+ identity of the clean run Salmon and the spent Kelt, for no greater
+ contrast can be imagined than that which exists between the
+ two--the male in the "redding" season develops the unsightly hooked
+ mandible, which so puzzled the worthy doctor, and both in colour
+ and form is as hideous an object as can be imagined. Becard
+ Gallorum (not _Beccard gallorus_), _i.e._, the fish called "Becard"
+ by the French (see second letter to Merrett), refers to the use of
+ a name still applied in France to a large Cock Salmon, and
+ "Anchorago" is the name under which the fish was described by
+ Scaliger, whose book I have not seen. Dr. Guenther tells me that
+ Artedi, "Ichthyologia," Pt. v., p. 23, quotes this name as a
+ synonym of the Salmon.
+
+The Riuers lakes & broads[93] abound in [the Lucius or _added above_]
+pikes of very large size where also is found the Brama or [breme
+_crossed out_] Breme large & well tasted the Tinca or Tench the Rubecula
+Roach as also Rowds and Dare or Dace perca or pearch great & small.
+whereof such [as] are are in Braden on this side yarmouth in the mixed
+water [are gen _crossed out_] make a dish very dayntie & I think scarce
+to bee bettered in England. butt the Blea[k] [_Fol. 36_] the chubbe the
+barbell [I haue not obserued in these riuers _crossed out_] to bee found
+in diues other Riuers in England I haue not obserued in these. As also
+fewer mennowes then in many other riuers.
+
+ [93] The freshwater fishes named in the next three paragraphs are
+ so well known as to require few remarks. The Bream in our rivers
+ and broads are very numerous and reach a large size, but of their
+ esculent qualities I have had no personal experience; not so,
+ however, with the Perch, which quite deserve Browne's high
+ encomium. It is well known here that this fish shows no aversion of
+ a certain admixture of salt and fresh water, and Mr. Lubbock
+ ("Fauna of Norfolk") says, "the point in Norfolk rivers where the
+ largest are taken with most certainty is where water begins to turn
+ brackish from the influence of the ocean;" in autumn the very
+ finest are taken by angling with a shrimp, a favourite bait in the
+ lower parts of the Yare and Waveney. In such localities a small
+ shrimp (_Hippolyte varians_, Leach) abounds, and it is to this
+ favourite food that Mr. Lubbock attributes the excellence of these
+ Perch. Roud is the local name of the Rudd (_Leuciscus
+ erythropthalmus_). The River Nar is still perhaps the best Trout
+ stream in the county, and the Crawfish is found in most of the
+ rivers but not abundantly.
+
+The Trutta or trout the Gammarus or crawfish [no _crossed out_] butt
+scarce in our riuers butt frequently taken in the Bure or north riuer &
+in the seuerall branches therof. & very remarkable large crawfishes to
+bee found in the riuer wch runnes by castleaker & nerford.
+
+The Aspredo perca minor[94] and probably the cernua of Cardan co[=m]only
+called a Ruffe in great plentie in norwich Riuers & euen in ye streame
+of the citty. which though camden appropriates vnto this citty yet they
+are also found in the riuers of oxforde [&] Cambridge.
+
+ [94] Merrett calls the Ruff _Cernua fluviatilis_, and mentions its
+ abundance in the River Yare at Norwich, which he (no doubt
+ inadvertently) assigns to the County of "Essex"; from this locality
+ Caius obtained the specimen, a drawing of which he sent to Gesner
+ under the name of _Aspredo_. Camden assigns this fish also to
+ Norwich, and Spencer, in his "Marriage of the Thames and Medway,"
+ writes of the Ruff:--
+
+ "Next cometh Yar, soft washing Norwich walls,
+ And with him bringeth to their festival
+ Fish whose like none else can show,
+ The which men Ruffins call."
+
+ This county seems to have been assigned an exclusive proprietorship
+ in the Ruff, to which, as Browne rightly points out, it had no just
+ claim.
+
+Lampetra Lampries great & small[95] found plentifully in norwich riuer &
+euen in the Citty about may [some _crossed out_] whereof some are very
+large & well cooked are counted a dayntie bitt collard up butt
+especially in pyes.
+
+ [95] Both the Sea Lamprey (_Petromyzon marinus_) and the Lampern
+ (_P. fluviatilis_) are found in the Norfolk rivers.
+
+Mustela fluuiatilis or eele poult[96] to bee had in norwich riuer & [in
+thalso _crossed out_] between it & yarmouth as also in the riuers of
+marshland resembling an eele & a cod. a very good dish & the Liuer
+thereof well answers the commendations of the Ancients.
+
+ [96] The Burbot, or Eel Pout (_Lola vulgaris_), called by Merrett a
+ Coney-fish, from its habit of concealing itself in holes in the
+ river banks. It is not sufficiently numerous now to form an article
+ of diet, and I imagine there are few living who could bear
+ testimony as to the esculent qualities of its "Liuer."
+
+[_Fol 37._] Godgions or funduli fluuiatiles, many whereof may bee taken
+within the [citty _crossed out_] Riuer in the citty:
+
+Capitones fluuiatilis or millers thumbs, pungitius fluuiatilis or
+stanticles. Aphia cobites fluuiatilis or Loches. in norwich riuers in
+the runnes about Heueningham heath in the north riuer & streames
+thereof.
+
+Of eeles[97] the co[=m]on eele & the glot wch hath somewhat a different
+shape in the bignesse of the head & is affirmed to have yong ones often
+found within it. & wee haue found a vterus in the same somewhat
+answering the icon thereof in Senesinus.
+
+ [97] The coarse variety of the Eel, known as the "Glout," or
+ Broad-nosed Eel, is believed to be the barren female; Browne's
+ informants were doubtless misled by the presence of certain
+ thread-worms (_Nematoxys_) in the abdomen of the eels, which they
+ mistook for young ones.
+
+Carpiones carpes plentifull in ponds & sometimes large ones in broads
+[_smear_] 2 the largest I euer beheld were [found _crossed out_] taken
+[_added above_] in Norwich Riuer.
+
+[A whole line is smeared out, and a break occurs in the MS. after the
+observation on the Carp; it then proceeds to notice some other
+inhabitants of the county which perhaps Browne had difficulty in
+classifying.]
+
+Though the woods and dryelands about [abound?] with adders and
+vipers[98] yet are there few snakes about our riuers or meadowes more to
+bee found in Marsh land butt ponds & plashes abound in Lizards or
+swifts.
+
+ [98] Both Vipers (or Adders) and Snakes, the latter in particular,
+ are, I imagine, much less abundant than formerly, but the few
+ species of Lizards and Newts (Swifts) are still probably in
+ undiminished numbers; the Mole Cricket (_Gryllotalpa vulgaris_) is
+ rare with us; Horse-leeches (_Aulostoma gulo_) are frequent, and
+ also "Periwinkles," which I take to be various species of
+ freshwater Molluscs, possibly of _Limnaea_. The Hard-worm (or
+ Hair-worm), _Gordius aquaticus_, which refused to be generated from
+ "horsehayres," is still an object of wonder to the unlearned, and
+ the Great Black Water-Beetle (_Hydrophilus piceus_) is found; but
+ _forficula_ and _corculum_ were a puzzle, as it is evident from
+ their association they must be aquatic forms (and the Earwig
+ certainly does not take to the water voluntarily), till my friend,
+ Mr. C. G. Barrett, referred me to the following passage in
+ Swammerdam's "Book of Nature," p. 93: "This is most certain that
+ the _Forficula aquatica_ of Jonston is the true nymph of the
+ Mordella, or Dragon-fly,"[O] Dr. Charleton in his "Onomasticon," p.
+ 57, has "Corculus, the Water-beetle, resembling an heart;" not very
+ definite, but probably the Whirligig Beetle, _Gyrinus natator_, is
+ intended; it is also an appellation given by some authors to "a
+ small species of cordiformis, or heart-shell, of a rose colour,"
+ doubtless a Cyclas or a Pisidium. Squilla is the Freshwater Shrimp
+ (_Gammarus pulex_), and _Notonecta glauca_, the Waterboatman "which
+ swimmeth on its back," is well known.
+
+ Otters are still numerous in the broads and reed-margined rivers,
+ and so long as these natural fastnesses endure in their present
+ condition they are likely to continue so.
+
+ [O] On reference to Jonston (_Historiae Naturalis de Insectis_ Lib.
+ iv., "De Insectis aquaticis" i., p. 189, Tab. xxvii.), I find that
+ under the name of "_Forficulae aquat[icae]_. M [oufet]," he has two
+ figures, the first of which is possibly a Dytiscus larva, the
+ second that of some form of Dragon-fly, which however is
+ imperfect.
+
+The Gryllotalpa or fencricket co[=m]on in fenny places butt wee haue met
+with them also in dry places dung-hills & church yards of this citty.
+
+Beside horseleaches & periwinkles in plashes & standing waters we haue
+met with vermes setacei or hardwormes butt could neuer conuert
+horsehayres into them by laying them in water as also the [_Fol. 38_]
+the (_bis_) great Hydrocantharus or black shining water Beetle the
+forficula, sqilla, corculum and notonecton that swimmeth on its back.
+
+Camden [_smear_] reports that in former time there haue been [otters
+_crossed out_] Beuers in the Riuer of Cardigan in wales. this wee are to
+sure of that the Riuers great Broads & carres afford great store of
+otters with us, a [des _crossed out_] great destroyer of fish as feeding
+butt from ye vent downewards. [a prey _crossed out_] not free from being
+a prey it self for their yong ones haue been found in Buzzards nests.
+they are accounted no bad dish by many are to bee made very tame and in
+some howses haue [semed _crossed out_] serued for turnespitts.
+
+[Blank space.]
+
+ NOTE.--Although Browne's account of the Fishes is doubtless
+ derived from his personal observation, I have found it very
+ difficult in some families, such as the Cods, Rays, Gurnards,
+ Flat-fishes, and Gobies to identify them with the species as at
+ present known; in fact, they were at that time very imperfectly
+ differentiated, and the figures in the old authors are generally
+ so inexact as not to be recognisable. Ray, in 1674 ("English
+ Words not generally known," p. 101), thus writes of the sea
+ fishes, "several of them, we judge, not yet described by any
+ Author extant in print: indeed the writers of Natural History of
+ Animals living far from the Ocean, and so having never had
+ opportunity of seeing these kind of fishes ... write very
+ confusedly and obscurely concerning them," a remark which I have
+ found abundantly verified.
+
+
+
+
+LETTERS TO MERRETT.
+
+[MS. SLOANE. 1833. FOL. 14.]
+
+No. 1.
+
+"_My father to Dr. Meret July 13, 1668._"
+
+
+ Most honourd Sir,
+
+[_Fol 14._] I take ye boldnesse to salute you as a person of singular
+worth & learning and whom I very much respect & honour. I presented my
+service to you by my sonne some months past, and had thought before this
+time to have done it by him again, but the time of his returne to London
+being yet uncertaine, I would not deferre these at present unto you. I
+should be very glad to serve you by any observations of mine against yr.
+second edition of your Pinax[99] which I cannot sufficiently commende. I
+have observed and taken notice of many animals in these parts whereof 3
+years agoe a learned gentleman of this country desired me to give him
+some account, which while I was doing ye gentleman my good friend died.
+I shall only at this time present and name some few unto you which I
+found not in your catalogue. A Trachurus [_see Note 61_] which yearly
+cometh before or in ye head of ye herrings called therefore an horse.
+Stella marina testacea [_see Note 87_] which I have often found upon the
+sea-shoare, an Astacus marinus pediculi marini facie [_see Note 81_]
+which is sometimes taken with the lobsters at Cromer in Norfolck. a
+pungitius marinus [_see Note 75_] wereof I have known many taken among
+weeds by fishers who drag by ye Sea-shoare on this coast. A Scarabaeus
+capricornus odoratus[100] which I take to be mentioned by Moufetus fol.
+150. I have taken some abroad one in my Seller which I now send he saith
+_nucem moschatam et cinamomum vere Spirat_ to me it smelt like roses
+santalum & Ambegris. I have thrice met with Mergus maximus Farensis
+Clusij, [_see Note 11_] and have a draught thereof. they were taken
+about the time of herring fishing at yarmouth one was taken upon the
+shoare not able to fly away about ten yeares agoe I sent one to Dr.
+Scarborough. Twice I have met with a Skua Hoyeri [_see Note 10_] the
+draught whereof I also have. one was shot in a marsh which I gave unto a
+gentleman which [_sic_] I can sende you another was killd feeding upon a
+dead horse neere a marsh ground. Perusing your catalogue of Plants. upon
+Acorus verus,[101] I find these wordes found by Dr. Browne neere Lin.
+wherein probably there may be some mistake, for I cannot affirme nor I
+doubt any other yt. is found thereabout. Some 25 yeares ago I gave an
+account of this plant unto [this _crossed out_] Mr. Goodyeere:[102] &
+more lately to Dr. How[103] unto whome I sent some notes and a box full
+of the fresh Juli. This elegant plant groweth very plentifully and
+beareth its Julus yearly by the bankes of Norwich river [fol. 13
+_verso_] chiefly about Claxton and Surlingham. & also between norwich &
+Hellsden bridge so that I have known Heigham Church in the suburbes of
+Norwich strowed all over with it, it hath been transplanted and set on
+the sides of Marish pondes in severall places of the country where it
+thrives and beareth ye Julus yearly.
+
+ [99] It is evident that Merrett was collecting a considerable
+ amount of materials for an enlarged edition of his _Pinax Rerum
+ Naturalium Britannicarum_, on behalf of which Browne seems, by this
+ introductory letter, to have tendered his assistance, but the
+ contemplated edition, probably for reasons which I have mentioned
+ elsewhere, never appeared; happily, these rough drafts have been
+ preserved, although it seems not unlikely that the letters
+ themselves, should they ever be found, would differ from them in
+ some respects.
+
+ [100] _Scarabaeus capricornus odoratus._ The Musk Beetle, _Aromia
+ moschata_, L.
+
+ [101] _Acorus calamus_, the Sweet Flag, is still found in plenty in
+ various localities in the county, but it does not appear to develop
+ its curious "julus" every year. It was very abundant at Heigham, a
+ suburb of Norwich, on the site now occupied by the goods yard of
+ the Midland and Great Northern Railway, and it was probably from
+ this spot that the supply was obtained for the purpose of littering
+ the floor of the old parish church. Mr. Vaux, in his "Church
+ Folk-Lore," p. 264, says that up to the passing of the Municipal
+ Reform Bill the Town Clerk of Norwich was accustomed to pay the
+ sub-sacrist of the cathedral an amount of one guinea for strewing
+ the floor with rushes on the Mayor's Day. The custom is said to
+ have been adopted "as well for coolness as for pleasant smell." The
+ pleasant cinnamon-like scent of the rush, on being trodden on, is
+ said to have perfumed the whole building. The root was also used as
+ a remedy in cases of ague, and formed the base of tooth and hair
+ powders.
+
+ [102] Towards the end of the Introductory Letter to Johnson's
+ (1636) Edition of Gerard's "Herball," he acknowledges the
+ assistance he received from Mr. John Goodyer, of Maple-Durham, in
+ Hampshire. Sir J. E. Smith ("Eng. Flora," iv., p. 34) speaks of him
+ as "one of the most deserving of our early English Botanists."
+ Robert Brown named a genus of plants (_Goodyera_) after Goodyer.
+
+ [103] William How, 1620-1656, was the author of "Phytologia
+ Britannica," Lond., 1650, "the earliest work on botany restricted
+ to the plants of this island" ("Dic. of Nat. Biog."). He practised
+ medicine in London.
+
+Sesamoides Salamanticum Magnum.[104] Why you omit Sesamoides
+Salamanticum parvum this groweth not far from Thetford and Brandon and
+plentifull in neighbour places where I found it and have it in my hortus
+hyemalis answering ye description in Gerard.
+
+ [104] _Sesamoides_ is stated in Ree's Encyclopaedia and in Eng. Fl.
+ to be a synonym of _Reseda_, therefore _Sesamoides magnum_ would
+ appear to be _R. luteola_ and _S. parvum_, _R. lutea_.
+
+Urtica Romana[105] which groweth with button seede bags is not in yr.
+catalogue I have founde it to grow wild at [Golston _crossed out_]
+Golston by Yarmouth, & transplanted it to other places.[P]
+
+ [105] _Urtica Romana_, which is again referred to as _U. mas_ near
+ the end of the third letter and as being found at Gorleston, is the
+ Roman Nettle, _U. pilulifera_. In 1834 the Pagets ("Nat. Hist. of
+ Great Yarmouth") reported it as still found under old walls at
+ Gorleston, "but rarer than formerly," and it is only in recent
+ years that it has been exterminated, owing to building operations
+ in that locality.
+
+ [P] This letter, evidently a copy as shown by the heading "My
+ father to Dr. Meret," is in the writing of Dr. Edwd. Browne.
+
+
+[MS. SLOANE 1830. FOL. 39-40.]
+
+No. II.
+
+_Fol. 39._]
+
+"_My second letter to Dr Meret Aug xiiii 1668._"
+
+Honord Sr I receiued your courteous letter & am sorry some diuersions
+have so long delayed this my second vnto you. You are very exact in the
+account of the fungi. I have met with two,[106] which I have not found
+in any Author, of which I have sent you a rude draught inclosed. The
+first an elegant fungus Ligneus found in an hollow sallowe I haue one of
+them by mee butt without a very good opportunitie dare not send it
+fearing it should bee broken vnto some it seemed to resemble some noble
+or princely ornament of the head & so might bee called fungus Regius
+vnto others a turret, top of a cupola or Lanterne of a building & so
+might bee named fungus pterygoides, pinnacularis or Lanterniformis you
+may name it as you please. The second fungus Ligneus teres Antliarum or
+fungus ligularis longissimus consisting [of _crossed out_] or made of
+many wooddy strings about the bignesse of round poynts or Laces some
+about half a yard long shooting in a bushie forme from the trees wch
+serue vnderground for pumpes. I have obserued diuers especially in
+norwich where wells are sunck deep for pumpes.
+
+ [106] Dr. Plowright informs me that "it is impossible to say with
+ certainty what the first named Fungus is; the description suggests
+ some form of Polyporus perhaps, _P. varius,_ which is a ligneous
+ species and occurs frequently on willows in Norfolk. The second is
+ the abortive form of _Polyporus squamosus_, which is well figured
+ by many of the older botanists, for instance under the name of
+ _Boletus rangiferinus_, by Bolton, t. 138, and _Boletus squamosus_,
+ var. _rangiferinus_, by Hooker, 'Flora Londinensis,' new series. In
+ many cases no pileus at all is formed and it used then to be
+ referred to Clavaria." The Phalloides is _Phallus impudicus_, L., a
+ very common species in this county and even occurring in some of
+ the city gardens where its exceedingly offensive odour renders it
+ very undesirable. Fungus rotundus is the well-known _Lycoperdon
+ giganteum_, Fr., which sometimes reaches a very large size.
+
+The fungus phalloides found not farre from norwich large & very fetid
+answering the description of Hadrianus junius I have a part of one dryed
+by mee.
+
+Fungus rotundus maior I haue found about x inches in Diameter & half
+[_sic_, have?] half a one dryed by mee.
+
+Another small paper containes the rude draughts of fibulae marinae
+pellucidae, [_see Note 90_] or sea buttons a kind of squalder & referring
+to vrtica marina which I haue obserued in great numbers by yarmouth
+after a flood & easterly winds. They resemble pure crystall buttons
+chamfered or welted on the sides with 2 small holes at the ends. They
+cannot bee sent for the included water or thinne gelly soon runneth from
+them.
+
+Vrtica marina minor jonstoni [_see Note 90_] I haue often found on this
+coast. [Continued on fol. 39 _verso_.]
+
+Physsalus [_see Note 89_] I haue often found also I haue one dryed but
+it hath lost its shape & colour.
+
+Galei & caniculae [_see Note 56_] are often found I haue a fish hanged up
+in my yard of 2 yards long taken among the Herrings at yarmouth which is
+the Canis carcharias alius Johnstoni. Tab. vi fig. 6.
+
+Lupus marinus you mention upon an handsome experiment butt I find it not
+in the catalogue. This Lupus marinus or Lycostomus is often taken by our
+seamen wch fish for cods I haue had diuers brought mee. they hang up in
+many howses in Yarmouth.
+
+Trutta marina is taken with us--a better dish than the Riuer trowt butt
+of the same bignesse.
+
+Loligo sepia a cuttle page 191 of your Pinax [_see Note 80_] I conceiue
+worthy Sr it were best to putt them in 2 distinct lines as distinct
+species of the Molles. The loligo, calamare or sleue I haue often found
+cast up on the seashoare & some haue been brought mee by fishermen of
+aboue [20 _crossed out_] twentie pound wayet.
+
+Among the fishes of our Norwich riuer wee scarce reckon salmons [_see
+Note 92_] yet some are yearly taken. butt all taken in the Riuer or
+coast haue the end of the lower jaw very much hooked which enters a
+great way into the upper jaw like a socket. you may find the same though
+not in figure if you please to read Johnstonus fol 101 I am not
+satisfied with the conceit of some authors there that is [it?] is a
+difference of male and female for all ours are thus formed. The fish is
+thicker than [oth _crossed out_] ordinarie salmons and very much & more
+largely spotted whether not rather Beccard gallorum or Anchorago
+Scaligeri I haue bothe draught & head of one dryed either of wch you may
+command.
+
+Scyllarus or cancellus in turbine tis probable you have [_see Note 84_].
+haue you cancellus in nerite a small testaceous found upon this coast.
+
+[_Fol. 40._] Haue you mullus ruber asper [_see Note 63_].
+
+Haue [you] piscis octangularis Bivormii?[Q] [_see Note 66_, also pp. 65
+and 87 _infra_].
+
+ [Q] Thus in the MS., but Browne seems to have intended to write
+ Bicornis Vormii, and accidentally to have run the two words
+ together [_see_ p. 41 _supra_].
+
+vermes marini larger than earthwormes [_see Note 91_] digged out of the
+sea sand about 2 foot deepe at an ebbe water for bayte they are
+discouered by a little hole or sinking of the sand at the top aboue
+them.
+
+Haue you that handsome colourd [bird _crossed out_] jay [_see Note 49_]
+answering the description of Garrulus Argentoratensis & may be called
+the parret jay I haue one that was killed upon a tree about 5 yeares
+ago.
+
+Haue you a may chitt a small dark gray bird [_see Note 29_] about the
+bignesse of a stint wch cometh about may & stayeth butt a moneth. a bird
+of exceeding fattnesse and accounted a daintie dish. they are
+plentifully taken in marshland and about wisbich.
+
+Haue you a [caprimulgus or _written above_] dorhawke a bird as bigge as
+[a] pigeon [_see Note 42_] with a wide throat bill as little as a
+titmous & white fethers in the tayle & paned like an hawke.
+
+Succinum raro occurrit[107] pag 291 of yours. [Should be p. 219] not so
+rarely on the coast of norfolk. tis usually found in small peeces [butt
+_crossed out_] sometimes in peeces of a pound wayght. I haue one by mee
+fat & fayre of x ounces wayght--jet more often found I haue an handsom
+peece of xii ounces in wayet.
+
+ [107] Amber, writes Mr. Clement Reid, in a paper contributed by him
+ to the "Trans. Norf. and Nor. Nat. Soc." (iii., p. 601), "is found
+ on the Norfolk coast, usually mixed with the seaweed thrown up by
+ the Spring gales," but is very rarely found in place; as much as
+ three or four pounds are annually gathered near Cromer. The
+ quality, Mr. Rein says, is very good, but the dark transparent
+ lumps are most generally found. In a subsequent paper (_op. cit._,
+ iv., p. 248) he enumerates seven species of insects which have been
+ found enclosed, and in a third communication mentions an eighth.
+ Mr. A. S. Ford, as the result of an examination of a collection of
+ East-coast Amber made at Yarmouth (_op. cit._, v., p. 92), adds one
+ species of Hymenoptera, three of Coleoptera, two of Orthoptera,
+ with some Araneida, and remains of vegetable substances which had
+ not been identified.
+
+ The Jet found on the Norfolk coast differs considerably from the
+ Whitby Jet, and Mr. Reid, "Geology of the Country Round Cromer" (p.
+ 133), believes that in all probability it was originally derived
+ from Lower Tertiary beds under the North Sea, a few miles from the
+ present coast. Mr. Savin estimates the average annual find of Jet
+ near Cromer at from ten to twenty pounds.
+
+ The doctor does not display his usual acumen when he rejects the
+ "ancient" opinion as to the vegetable origin of Amber, see
+ _Pseudodoxia_, book ii., chap. iv.; also letter from Earl of
+ Yarmouth to T. B. (Wilkin Edit. i., p. 411).
+
+
+No. III.
+
+[FOL. 40 _verso_.]
+
+"_My third letter Sept xiii._"
+
+Sr I receaued your courteous Letter and with all respects I now agayne
+salute you.
+
+The mola piscis is almost yearely taken on our coast [_see Note 58_]
+this [last _crossed out_] year one was taken of about 2 hundred pounds
+wayght diuers of them I haue opened & haue found many lyce sticking
+close vnto thier gills whereof I send you some.
+
+In your pinax I find onocrotalus or pellican [_see Note 25_] whether you
+meane those at St. James or others brought ouer or such as haue been
+taken or killed heere I knowe not. I haue one hangd up in my howse wch
+was shott in a fenne ten miles of about 4 yeares ago and because it was
+so rare some conjectured it might bee one of those which belonged vnto
+the King & flewe away.
+
+Ciconia raro hue aduolat. I haue seen two [_see Note 14_] one in a
+watery marsh 8 miles of, another shott whose case is yet to bee seen.
+[See Appendix D.]
+
+Vitulus marinus. _In tractibus borealibus et Scotia_ [_see Note 53_]. no
+raritie upon the coast of Norfolk at a lowe water I haue knowne them
+taken asleep vnder the cliffes. diuers haue been brought vnto mee. our
+seale is different from the Mediterranean seale. as hauing a rounder
+head a shorter and stronger body.
+
+Rana piscatrix I haue often known taken on our coast & some very large
+[_see Note 59_].
+
+Xiphias or gladius piscis or sword fish wee haue in our seas [_see Note
+55_]. I haue the head of one which was taken not long ago entangled in
+the Herring netts the sword aboue 2 foot in length.
+
+Among the whales you may very well putt in the spermacetus [_see Note
+51_] or that remarkably peculiar whale which so aboundeth in spermaceti.
+about twelve years ago wee had one cast up on our shoare neer welles wch
+I discribed in a peculiar chapter in the last edition of [_Fol. 41_] my
+pseudodoxia epidemica. another was diuers yeares before cast up at
+Hunstanton. both whose heads are yet to bee seen.
+
+Ophidion or at least ophidion nostras [_see Note 69_] co[=m]only called
+a sting fish hauing a small prickley finne running all along the back, &
+another a good way on the belly, with little black spotts at the bottom
+of the back finne if the fishermens hands bee touched or scrached with
+this venemous fish they grow paynfull and swell the figure hereof I send
+you in colours they are co[=m]on about cromer see Schoneveldeus de
+Ophidiis.
+
+Piscis octogonius or octangularis answering the discription of
+Cataphractus Schoneveldei [_see Note 66_] only his is discribed with the
+finnes spread & when it was fresh taken & a large one howeuer this may
+bee nostras I send you one butt I haue seen much larger which fishermen
+haue brought mee.
+
+Physsalus [_see Note 89_]. I send one which hath been long opened &
+shrunck & lost the colour when I tooke it upon the sea shoare it was
+full & plump answering the figure & discription of Rondeletius. there is
+also a like figure at the end of [Rondeletius _crossed out_] muffetus I
+haue kept them aliue butt obserued no motion [butt _crossed out_] except
+of contraction and dilation when it is fresh the prickles or brisles are
+of a brisk green & Amethest colours--some call it a sea mous.
+
+Our mullet is white & imberbis [_see Note 63_] butt wee haue also a
+mullis barbatus ruber miniaceus or cinnaberinus somewhat rough & butt
+drye meat. there is of them maior & minor resembling the figures in
+Johnstonus tab xvii Rotbart.
+
+Of the Acus marinus or needle fishes [_see Note 64_] I haue obserued 3
+sorts. The Acus Aristotelis called heere an Addercock Acus maior or
+Garfish with a green verdigris backbone the other saurus Acui similis
+Acus sauroides or sauriformis as it may be called much answering to the
+discription of saurus Rondeletij in the hinder part much resembling a
+makerell opening one I found not the backbone green Johnstonus writes
+nearest to it in his Acus minor. I send you the head of one dryed butt
+the bill is broken I haue the whole draught in picture. this kind is
+more rare then the other wch are co[=m]on & is a rounder fish.
+
+[_Fol. 41 verso._] Vermes marini are large wormes [_see Note 91_] found
+2 foot deep in the sea sands & are digged out at an ebbe for bayt.
+
+The Avicula Maialis or may chitt [_see Note 29_] is a litle dark gray
+bird somewhat bigger then a stint which co[=m]eth in may or the later
+end of April & stayeth about a moneth. A marsh bird the legges & feet
+black without an heele the bill black about 3 quarters of an inch long
+they grow very fatt & are accounted a dayntie dish.
+
+A Dorhawke a bird not full so bigge as a pigeon [_see Note 42_] somewhat
+of a woodcock colour & paned somewhat like an hawke with a bill not much
+bigger then that of a Titmouse [& very wide throat _added above_] known
+by the name of a dorhawke or prayer upon beetles, as though it were some
+kind of accipiter muscarius. in brief this accipiter cantharophagus or
+dorhawke [_a word smeared out_] is _Avis Rostratula gutturosa_, _quasi
+coaxans_, _scarabaeis vescens_, _sub vesperam volans_, _ouum
+speciosissim[=u]_ [_word smeared_] _excludens_. I haue had many of them &
+am sorry I have not one to send you I spoake to a friend to shoote one
+butt I doubt they are gone ouer.
+
+of the vpupa [_see Note 35_] diuers have been brought mee & some I haue
+obserued in these parts as I trauuyled about.
+
+The Aquila Gesneri I sent [aliue _added above_] to Dr. Scarburg [_see
+Note 3_] who told mee it was kept in the colledge it was brought mee out
+of Ireland. I kept it 2 yeares in my howse I am sorry I haue only one
+fether of it to send you.
+
+A shooing horn or Barker from the figure of the bill & barking note
+[_see Note 38_] a long made bird of white & blakish colour finne footed,
+a marsh bird & not rare some times of the yeare in marshland. it may
+upon vewe bee called Recuruirostra nostras or Auoseta much resembling
+the Auosettae [species _crossed out_] species in Johnstonus tab (54). I
+send you the head in picture
+
+[A _smeared out_] stone curliews I haue kept in large cages [_see Note
+37_] the[y] haue a prettie shrill note, not hard to bee got in some
+parts of norfolk.
+
+[_Fol. 42_] Haue you Scorpius marinus Schoneueldei [_see Note 68_]
+
+haue you putt in the musca Tulipar[=u] muscata[108]
+
+ [108] It seems impossible to identify this insect; _Merodon
+ narcissi_ has been suggested, but Mr. Verrall, whom I consulted
+ says, "certainly not _Merodon_, which probably was not known in
+ Britain until about 1870," and suggests the small fly _Nemopoda_.
+ Mr. Bloomfield writes that the only fly of which he has seen any
+ mention as having a musky or "excellent fragrant odour" is _Sepsis
+ cynipsea_, which Kirby and Spence state on the authority of De
+ Geer, "emits a fragrant odour of beaum" (balm); this species is
+ very nearly allied to Nemopoda. Several Bees, for instance the
+ Genus _Prosopis_, emit a strong scent of balm, and it is possible
+ that Browne may have used the term "fly" in what is even now a
+ popular sense, and that really some species of Bee may have called
+ forth his remarks. It will be noticed that at p. 74 he speaks of it
+ as a "small beelike flye."
+
+That bird which I sayd much answered the discription of Garrulus
+Argentoratensis [_see Note 49_] I send you it was shott on a tree x
+miles of 4 yeares ago. it may well bee called the Parret Jay or Garrulus
+psittacoides speciosus. the colours are much faded. if you haue it
+before I should bee content to haue it agayne otherwise you may please
+to keep it.
+
+Garrulus Bohemicus[109] probably you haue a prettie handsome bird with
+the fine cinnaberin tipps of the wings some wch I haue seen heere haue
+the tayle tipt with yellowe wch is not in the discription.
+
+ [109] Mr. Stevenson, whom very little relating to Norfolk
+ Ornithology escaped, was well acquainted with Sir Thomas Browne's
+ works, yet has in his "Birds of Norfolk" unaccountably overlooked
+ this passage, and remarks that Browne does not appear to have
+ noticed this species; he however not only refers to it as above,
+ but evidently describes it from his personal observation. It is a
+ very uncertain winter visitor to this county, but on rare occasions
+ makes its appearance in considerable flocks. A remarkable instance
+ of this occurred in the winter of 1866-7, when Mr. Stevenson, as
+ the result of the examination of a very large series, contributed
+ an exhaustive paper on the plumage of this handsome bird to the
+ "Transactions of the Norf. and Nor. Nat. Soc.," iii., pp. 326-344.
+
+I haue also sent you urtica mas [_see Note 105_] which I lately gathered
+at Golston by yarmouth where I found it to growe also 25 yeares ago. of
+the stella marina Testacea which I sent you [_see Note 87_] I do not
+find the figure in any booke.
+
+I send you a few flies[110] which some unhealthful yeares about the
+first part of september I haue obserued so numerous upon plashes in the
+marshes & marish diches that in a small compasse it were no hard matter
+to gather a peck of them I brought some what my box would hold butt the
+greatest part are scatterd lost or giuen away for memorie sake I writ on
+my box muscae palustres Autumnales [See Appendix D.]
+
+ [110] Mr. Verrall assures me that even in the present day it is
+ quite impossible to recognise the species of Diptera described by
+ persons unacquainted with the particular group, and that Browne's
+ remarks would apply to hundreds of species. It is possible that an
+ _Ephydra_ may be meant. This genus of small flies, says Mr.
+ Verrall, abounds in such places as Browne describes, but it is
+ likely that other species were with them.
+
+worthy Sr I shall be euer redie to serue you who am Sr your humble
+Seruant
+
+ THO BROWNE.
+
+ _Norwich, Sep 16. 1668._
+
+
+No. IV.
+
+"_The fourth Letter to Dr. Merrett Decemb xxix._" [1668]
+
+[_Fol. 42 verso._] Sr I am very joyfull that you haue recouered your
+health whereof I heartily wish the continuation for your own and the
+publick good. And I humbly thank you for the courteous present of your
+booke.[111] with much delight and satisfaction I had read the same not
+once in English I must needs acknowledge your co[=m]ent more acceptable
+to me then the text which I am sure is an hard obscure peice without it.
+though I haue not been a stranger unto the vitriarie Art both in England
+and abroad.
+
+ [111] This evidently refers to the gift of a copy of Merrett's
+ Latin translation of Antonio Neri's _L'Arte Vetraria_ (Firenze,
+ 1612, 4to), published under the title of "The Art of Glass,
+ translated into English with some observations on the Author," &c.,
+ in 1662, and a Latin edition in 1668.
+
+I perceiue you haue proceeded farre in your Pinax. These few at present
+I am bold to propose & hint unto you intending God willing to salute you
+agayne.
+
+A paragraph might probably be annexed unto Quercus. Though wee haue not
+all the exotick oakes, nor their excretions yet these and probably more
+supercrescences productions or excretions may bee obserued in England.
+
+ Viscum--polypodium--Juli pilulae--
+ Gemmae foraminatae [formicatae?] folior[=u]--
+ excrement[=u] fungosum verticibus scatens--
+ Excrementum Lanatum--
+ Capitula squamosa jacaeae aemula.
+ Nodi--melleus Liquor--Tubera radicum
+ vermibus scatentia--Muscus--Lichen--
+ Fungus--varae quercinae.[112]
+
+ [112] The Rev. E. N. Bloomfield has most kindly assisted me in
+ attempting to identify the Parasitic products of the Oak mentioned
+ above:
+
+ _Viscum_, is doubtless the Mistletoe.
+
+ _Polypodium_, the Common Polypody Fern.
+
+ _Juli pilulae_: "little balls on the flower catkins." The Currant
+ Gall, _Neurosterus baccarum_, which is the spring form of _N.
+ lenticularis_; Oliv.
+
+ _Gemmae foraminatae [formicatae?] foliorum_: "pimple-like buds on the
+ leaves." Leaf-galls, such as the Silky Button, _N. numismatis_,
+ Oliv., and the common Spangle, _N. lenticularus_, Oliv.
+
+ _Excrementum fungosum verticibus scatens_: "a spongy secretion
+ bursting out from the ends of the shoots." The Oak Apple, _Biorhiza
+ terminalis_, Fab.
+
+ _Excrementum lanatum_: the Woolly Gall, _Andricus ramuli_, L., a
+ somewhat rare Gall, resembling a ball of cotton-wool.
+
+ _Capitula squamosa jacaeae aemula_: "little scaley (or imbricated)
+ heads resembling the heads of Jacea" (Black Knapweed). The
+ Artichoke Gall. _Andricus fecundatrix_; Htg.
+
+ _Nodi_: probably swellings of any sort, whether caused by insects
+ or not.
+
+ _Melleus liquor_: Honey-dew, a secretion of Aphides.
+
+ _Tubera radicum vermibus scatentia_: "swollen tubers on the roots
+ containing grubs;" without doubt the Root-Gall, _Andricus radicis_,
+ Fab. Polythalamous Galls, often very large at the roots or on the
+ trunk near the ground.
+
+ Mosses, Lichens, and Fungi, all "genuine products of the Oak," need
+ no comment, but Mr. Bloomfield remarks, "How wonderfully observant
+ Sir Thomas Browne must have been thus to distinguish the various
+ galls, &c., and to point them out so distinctly."
+
+ Browne's contemporary, Dean Wren, seems sadly to have misunderstood
+ the fructification of the Oak. In a note on Browne's remarks on the
+ "Miseltoe" (_Pseudodoxia_, book ii., chap. vi.), he says,
+ "Arboreous excrescences of the Oak are soe many as may raise the
+ greatest wonder. Besides the gall, which is his proper fruite, hee
+ shootes out oakerns, i.e., _ut nunc vocamus_ (acornes), and oakes
+ apples, and polypodye, and moss; five several sorts of
+ excrescences." See also letter to his son, Dr. Edward Browne, in
+ which Sir Thomas Browne says that "wee haue little or none of
+ _viscus quercinus_, or miselto of the oake, in this country; butt I
+ beleeve they have in the woods and parks of Oxfordshyre."--Wilkin,
+ i, p. 279.
+
+[_Fol. 43._] Capillaris marina sparsa fucus capillaris marinus sparsus
+sive capillitius marinus or sea periwigge.[113] strings of this are
+often found on the sea shoare. but this is the full figure I haue seen 3
+times as large.
+
+ [113] In Sir Thomas Browne's time the Hydrozoa were not
+ distinguished from the Corallines, and both were regarded as
+ vegetable growths. It is almost impossible to determine from his
+ vague descriptions even to which section those mentioned belong,
+ but although our exposed coast-line is not favourable to such
+ growths, there are a few common species of Hydroid Zoophytes which
+ abound here, and to these, fortunately, Browne's specimens appear
+ to belong. What he calls the "Sea-perriwig" is doubtless
+ _Sertularia operculata_, Lin., sometimes known as "Sea-hair," a
+ very common and widely dispersed species.
+
+I send you also [_several words smeared out_] a little elegant sea
+plant[114] which I pulled from a greater bush thereof which I haue
+resembling the back bone of a fish. Fucus marinus vertebratus pisciculi
+spinum referens Icthyorachius or what you thinck fitt.
+
+ [114] The little "Fucus," which he compares to the backbone of a
+ fish, is probably _Halecium halecinum_, Lin., the "Herring-bone
+ Coral" of Ellis, one of the most common Zoophytes on our coast. The
+ "Abies," of which he suggests at p. 75 that this may be a
+ "difference," is most likely _Sertularia abietina_, Lin., which
+ this species resembles, but is less regularly pinnate; this may
+ have led him to suppose that the "sprouts, wings, or leaves" may
+ have fallen off. The _Fucus marinus_ is most likely _Fucus
+ serratus_.
+
+And though perhaps it bee not worth the taking notice of formicae
+arenariae marinae or at least muscus formicarius marinus[115] yet I
+obserue great numbers by the seashoare and at yarmouth an open sandy
+coast, in a sunny day many large and winged ones may bee obserued upon &
+rising out of the [shoare _crossed out_] wet sands when the tide falls
+away.
+
+ [115] Swarms of Ants and Flies are no uncommon sight along the
+ seashore at certain seasons of the year, and under the conditions
+ which Browne describes. The Pagets ("Nat. Hist. of Great Yarmouth")
+ mention that the fly, _Actora aestuum_, is common on the beach at
+ high-water mark; but Mr. Verrall writes me that there are many
+ others likely to be thus met with, such as _Orygma luctuosa_ and
+ _Limosina zosterae_, widely divergent species. In his "Journal of a
+ Tour" into Derbyshire, Dr. Edward Browne, in crossing the sands of
+ the Wash, mentions his satisfaction at the absence of the swarms of
+ flies "with which all the fenne countrys are extremely pestered."
+ _See also Note 110 supra._
+
+Notonecton an insect that swimmeth on its back [_see Note 98_] &
+mentioned by Muffettus may be obserued with us.
+
+I send you a white Reed chock[116] by name some kind of Junco or litle
+sort thereof I haue had another very white when fresh.
+
+ [116] It is impossible to form an idea as to what is here intended.
+ I know of no _Juncus_ which would answer the description. Professor
+ Newton reminds me__ that "Junco" was a common name for "a bird that
+ inhabited reeds," and was loosely applied, some old authors taking
+ it to be the Reed Thrush (_i.e._, the Great Reed-Warbler of these
+ days), and others, the Reed-Sparrow or Bunting. But bearing in mind
+ Browne's practice of referring to Jonston, it seems possible that
+ the latter's _Junco_ may be here intended, and that, as the figure
+ (pl. 53) shows, is a small Sandpiper, almost certainly the Dunlin.
+ It is lettered "Junco Bellonii," but this he must have taken
+ second-hand from Aldrovandus, since Belon never used the word
+ "Junco" in this connexion, but called it "Schoeniclus" or
+ "Alouette-de-mer"--terms rendered _Junco_ by Aldrovandus (iii. p.
+ 487). Charleton took the same view in his "Onomasticon" (p. 108),
+ published in 1668 (the year assigned as that of this letter),
+ stating that it was so-called because "in juncis libenter degat,"
+ and identifying it with the _Alouette-de-mer_ of the French, and
+ the English "Stint, or Sparr, or Perr." Gilbert White appears to
+ have thus applied the term (_cf._ "Life" by Rashleigh Holt-White,
+ i. pp. 186, 194, 250). In one place he says, "No. five is Ray's
+ _Junco_ and the _Turdus arundinaceus_ of Linn." That "Junco" is the
+ name of a bird is absolutely certain, but the context, "very white
+ when fresh," does not seem to admit of explanation.
+
+Also the draught of a sea fowle called a sherewater [_see Note 17_]
+billed like a cormorant, feirce & snapping like it upon any touch. I
+kept 2 of them aliue 5 weekes cramming them with fish refusing of
+themselues to feed on anything & wearied with cramming them they liued
+17 dayes without food. They often fly about fishing [ves _crossed out_]
+shipps when they cleans their fish & throwe away the offell. so that it
+may bee referred to the Lari as Larus niger gutture albido rostro
+adunco.
+
+Gossander videtur esse puphini species [_Pinax_, p. 184]. worthy Sr that
+wch we call a gossander [_see Note 19_] & is no rare fowle among us is a
+large well colourd & marked diuing fowle most answering the [mer
+_crossed out_] Merganser. it may bee like the puffin in fattnesse and
+[Ranknesse _crossed out_] Ranknesse butt no fowle is I think like the
+puffin differenced from all others by a peculiar kind of bill
+
+[_Fol 43 verso._] Barganders [_see Note 18_] not so rare as Turn
+[Turner] makes them co[=m]on in Norfolk so abounding in vast & spatious
+warrens.
+
+If you haue not yet putt in Larus minor or a sterne [_see Note 13_] it
+would not bee omitted, co[=m]on about broad waters and plashes not
+farre from the sea.
+
+Haue you a Yarwhelp, Barker, or Latrator [_see Note 39_] a marsh bird
+about the bignesse of a Godwitt
+
+Haue you Dentalia [_see Note 83_] which are small vniualue testacea
+whereof sometimes wee find some on the seashoare
+
+Haue you putt in nerites another little Testaceum which wee haue [_see
+Note 83_].
+
+Haue you an Apiaster a small bird calld a Beebird.[117]
+
+ [117] Probably the Spotted Flycatcher is here referred to, the
+ prefix not being used in a technical sense; it is known here as the
+ Beam-bird, either of which names may be a corruption of the other.
+ Another Norfolk name for this bird is the Wall-bird.
+
+Haue you morinellus marinus or the sea Dotterell better colourd then the
+other & somewhat lesse [_see Note 28_].
+
+I send you a draught of 2 small birds the bigger called a Chipper or
+Betulae Carptor [_see Note 48_] cropping the first sproutings of the
+Birch trees & comes early in the spring. The other a very small bird
+lesse than the certhya or ox eyecreeper called a whinne bird
+
+I send you the draught of a fish taken sometimes in our seas [_see Note
+69_]. pray compare it with Draco minor Johnstoni. this draught was taken
+from the fish dried & so the prickly finnes less discernible.
+
+There is a very small kind of smelt [_see Note 71_] butt in shape &
+smell like the other taken in good plenty about [wh _crossed out_] Lynne
+& called Primmes.
+
+Though Scombri Or Makerells [_see Note 73_] bee a co[=m]on fish yet [in
+_crossed out_] our seas afford sometimes strange & large ones as I haue
+heard from fishermen & others. & this yeare 1668 one was taken at
+Lestoffe an ell long by measure & presented to a Gentleman a friend of
+myne.
+
+Musca Tuliparum moschata is a small beelike flye [_see Note 108_] of an
+excellent fragrant odour which I haue often found at the bottom of the
+flowers of Tuleps.
+
+[_Fol. 44._] In the little box I send a peece of vesicaria or seminaria
+marina [yo _crossed out_] cutt of from a good full one found on the sea
+shoare [_see Note 91_].
+
+Wee haue [_two or three words smeared out here_] also an eiectment of
+the sea very co[=m]on which is fanago [_see Note 91_] whereof some very
+large.
+
+I thank you for communicating the account of Thunder & lightening some
+strange effects thereof I haue found heere butt this last yeere wee had
+litle or no Thunder & lightening. [_No signature._]
+
+
+No. V.
+
+DR. BROWNE TO MERRETT.
+
+ [This letter which was originally printed in the "Posthumous
+ Works," will be found in MS. Sloane 1911-13, fol. 106, where it
+ is headed in pencil as addressed to Sir Wm. Dugdale, but it was
+ restored to its proper place by Wilkin in the 1836 Edition of
+ the Works, i., p. 404.]
+
+ Honoured Sir
+
+[_Fol. 106._] I am sorry I have had [diuersions _above_] of such
+necessitie, as to hinder my more sudden salute since I receiued your
+last. I thank you for the sight of the _Sperma Ceti_, and such kind of
+effects from [Lightning & Thunder _written above_] I have known and
+about 4 yeares ago about this towne when I with many others saw
+fire-balls fly & go of when they met with resistance, and one carried
+away the tiles and boards of a leucomb Window of my owne howse, being
+higher then the neighbour howses & breaking agaynst it with a report
+like a good canon. I set downe that occurrence in this citty & country,
+& haue it somewhere [in _crossed out_] amongst my papers, and fragments
+of a woman's hat that was shiuered into pieces of the bignesse of a
+groat. I haue still by mee a little of the spermaceti of our whale, as
+also the oyle & balsome wch I made with the oyle & spermaceti. Our whale
+was worth 500 lib. my Apothecarie got about fiftie pounds in one sale of
+a quantitie of sperm [_see Note 51_].
+
+I made enumeration of the excretions of the oake which might bee
+obserued in england [_see Note 112_], because I conceived they would bee
+most obseruable if you set them downe together, not minding whether
+there were any addition by excrementum fungosum vermiculis scatens I
+only meant an vsuall excretion, soft & fungous at first & pale &
+sometimes couered in part with a fresh red growing close vnto the
+sprouts. first full of maggots in little woodden cells which afterwards
+turne into little reddish browne or bay flies. of the tubera indica
+vermiculis scatentia I send you a peece, they are as bigg as good
+Tennis-balls & ligneous.
+
+The little elegant fucus [_see Note 114_] may come in as a difference of
+the abies, being somewhat like it, as also unto the 4 corrallium in
+Gerard of the sprouts whereof I could never find any sprouts wings Or
+leaves as in the abies whether fallen of I knowe not, though I call'd it
+icthyorachius or pisciculi spinam referens yet pray do you call it how
+you please I send you now the figure of a quercus mar. [inus] or alga
+which I found by the seashoare differing from the co[=m]on [_see Note
+114_] as being denticulated & in one place there seemes to bee the
+beginning of some flower pod or seedvessell.
+
+[_Fol 106. verso._] A draught of the morinellus marinus or sea doterell I
+now send you. the bill should not have been so black & the leggs more
+red, [_see Note 28_] & [the _crossed out_] a greater eye of dark red in
+the feathers of wing and back: it is lesse & differently colourd from
+the co[=m]on dotterell, wch [wee haue _crossed out_] cometh to us about
+March & September. these sea-dotterells are often shot near the sea.
+
+A yarewhelp or barker [_some words smeared out_] [_see Note 39_] a
+marsh-bird the bill 2 inches long the legges about that length the bird
+of a brown or russet colour.
+
+That which is knowne by the name of a bee-bird [_see Note 117_] is a
+litle dark gray bird I hope to get one for you.
+
+That whch I call'd a betulae carptor & should rather have calld it Alni
+carptor [_see Note 48_] whereof I sent a rude draught. it feeds upon
+alder [budds mucaments or _written above_] seeds which grow plentifully
+heere & they fly in little flocks.
+
+That [calld by some a _written above_] whin-bird is a kind of ox eye
+butt the shining yellow spot on the back of the head [_see Note 48_] is
+scarce to bee well imitated by a pensill.
+
+I confess for such litle birds I am much unsatisfied on the names giuen
+to many by countrymen, and vncertaine what to giue them myself, or to
+what classes of authors cleerly to reduce them. surely there are many
+found among us whch are not described; & therefore such whch you cannot
+well reduce may (if at all) bee set downe after the exacter nomination
+of small birds as yet of uncertain classe or knowledge.
+
+I present you with a draught of a water-fowl not co[=m]on & none of our
+fowlers can name it [_see_ p. 79 _infra_] the bill could not bee exactly
+expressed by a coale or black chalk, whereby the litle incuruitie [at
+the end _written above_] of the upper bill & small recurvitie of the
+lower is not discerned. the wings are very short, & it is finne footed.
+the bill is strong & sharp, if you name it not I am uncertaine what to
+call it pray consider this Anatula or mergulus melanoleucus rostro
+acuto.
+
+[_Fol. 107._] I send you also the heads of mustela or mergus mustelaris
+mas. et faemina [_see Note 21_] called a wesel from some resemblance in
+the head especially of the female wch is brown or russet not black &
+white like the male. & from their praying quality upon small fish. I
+have found small eeles small perches & small muscles in their stomacks.
+Have you a sea phaysant [_see Note 22_] so co[=m]only calld from
+resemblance of an hen phaisant in the head & eyes & spotted marks on the
+wings & back. & wth a small bluish flat bill, tayle longer than other
+ducks, long winges crossing over the tayle like those of a long winged
+hawke.
+
+Have you taken notice of a breed of porci solidi pedes.[118] I first
+obserued them above xx yeares ago & they are still among us. [See also
+p. 80 _infra_.]
+
+ [118] Mr. Darwin writes ("Anim. and Plants under Domestication,"
+ i., p. 78), that from the time of Aristotle to the present day,
+ Solid-hoofed Swine have been occasionally observed in various parts
+ of the world. Dr. Coues also says that this variety seems to be
+ persistent in a Texas breed. See also Professor Struthers in the
+ "Edin. New Phil. Journal," April, 1863. The two distal phalanges of
+ the two great toes, both front and back, in the examples described
+ by Professor Struthers, were joined together, forming a single
+ hoof-bearing bone. The next two phalanges were separate, and
+ sometimes kept widely apart from each other by the introduction of
+ a special ossicle. I have been told that about the year 1827, a
+ breed of solid-footed swine existed at or near Upwell. By some it
+ was thought that their flesh was not good for food because they
+ were "uncloven." Dr. Wren, in a note to Browne's _Pseudodoxia_
+ (book vi., chap. x.), says, "About Aug., 1625, at a farm 4 miles
+ from Winchester, I beheld with wonder a great heard of swine,
+ whole-footed, and taller than any other that ever I sawe."
+
+Our nerites or neritae are litle ones [_see Note 83_].
+
+I queried whether you had dentalia [_see Note 83_] becaus probably you
+might haue met with them in england. I neuer found any on our shoare
+butt one brought mee a few small ones with smooth with [_sic_] small
+shells from the shoare. I shall inquire further after them.
+
+Urtica marina minor Johnst. tab. xviii. [_see Note 90_] haue found more
+than once by the sea side.
+
+The hobby and the merlin would not bee omitted among hawkes the first
+coming to us in the spring the other about the autumn. Beside the ospray
+wee have a larger kind of agle, calld an erne [_see Note 3_]. I haue had
+many of them.
+
+Worthy deare Sr, if I can do anything farther wch may bee seruiceable
+unto you you shall ever readily co[=m]and my endeauours; who am, Sr,
+Your humble & very respectfull seruant,
+
+ THO. BROWNE.
+
+ _Febr 6 [1668-9.]_
+ _Norwich._
+
+
+No. VI.
+
+[MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS. MS. SLOANE 1847, FOL. 198.]
+
+ [This volume contains a Miscellaneous collection, mostly letters
+ to his son Edward, and some to "Tom." The following (as all in
+ the volume) is on letter-sized paper, 7-1/2 x 6 in.]
+
+ Worthy Sr
+
+[_Fol. 198._] Though I writ vnto you last monday. yet hauing omitted
+some few things wch I thought to have mentioned I am bold to giue you
+this trouble so soone agayne haue you putt in a sea fish calld a bleak
+[_see Note 74_] a fish like an herring often taken with us and eat butt
+a more lanck & thinne & drye fish.
+
+The wild swanne or elk [_see Note 8_] would not bee omitted, [here
+_crossed out_] being co[=m]on in hard winters & differenced from [the
+_crossed out_] our River swanns by the Aspera Arteria. [See also pp. 80
+and 83 _infra_.]
+
+Fulica and cotta Anglorum [_see Note 23_] are different birds though
+good resemblance between them, so some doubt may bee made whether it bee
+to bee made a coote except you set it downe fulica nostras. & cotta
+Anglorum I pray consider whether that waterbird whose draught I sent in
+the last box & thought it might bee named Anatula or mergulus
+melanoleucos may not bee some gallinula. it hath some resemblance with
+gallina hypoleucos of Johnst Tab 32 [31] butt myne hath shorter wings by
+much & the bill not so long [_Fol. 198 verso_] & slender & shorter leggs
+& lesser & so may ether be calld gallina Aquatica hypoleucos nostras or
+hypoleucos or melanoleucos Anatula or mergulus nostras.[119]
+
+ [119] The "draught" of this bird sent to Merrett is not
+ forthcoming. Professor Newton has been kind enough to send me the
+ following note on this puzzling passage. "Jonston's figure (tab.
+ 31) of _Gallina hypoleucos_, to which Browne says it bore some
+ resemblance, undoubtedly represents what we know as the Common
+ Sandpiper, _Totanus hypoleucus_ or _Actitis hypoleuca_, the
+ _Fysterlin_ of the Germans of Jonston's time (p. 160), and
+ _Fisterlein_ or _Pfisterlein_ of modern days. But there seems to be
+ some strange confusion that cannot now be cleared, between this
+ bird and Browne's _Anatula_ or _Mergulus melanoleucos_ [_see_ p. 76
+ _ante_], of which some years later, he sent a drawing, under the
+ latter name, to Willughby, in whose work it is described and
+ figured (Lat. Ed. p. 261, Engl. 343, tab. lix.), for this most
+ certainly is the Rotche or Little Auk, _Mergulus alle_ of modern
+ ornithology." In the next letter (p. 81), Browne mentions that he
+ encloses the draft of "Ralla aquatica" here referred to.
+
+Tis much there should be no Icon of Rallus or Ralla Aquatica I haue a
+draught of one & they are found among us
+
+ Feb xii 1668.
+
+The vesicaria I sent is like that you mention [_see Note 91_] if not the
+same the co[=m]on fanago resembleth the husk of peas this of [Part
+_crossed out_] Barly when the flower is mouldred away. [See also p. 89
+_infra_, where Merrett aptly compares the latter to the flowers of the
+Grape Hyacinth.]
+
+
+No. VII.
+
+[BIBLIOTHECA BODLEIANA. MS. RAWLINSON D. cviii. SR THO BROWN TO DR.
+MERRETT.]
+
+[_Fol. 105._] Sr I craue your pardon for this delayed returne unto your
+last, whose courteus acceptance & worthy entertaynment [?] deserued [a
+speed _blotted out_] even a speedier reply. The small plant may fitly
+come in among the corallines upon the [diff _crossed out_] account of
+articulation Icthyorachius [_see Note 114_] I think will bee a good
+Diference [?]. whether you will subexpand [?] the word I referre it to
+yourself. certhia may best bee vertice aureo [_word blotted out_] or
+vertice aureo penicello vix imitando. morinellus marinus [_see Note 28_]
+I think rather then Aquaticus becuse it is seen most about the sea
+coast. Anas alis oculatis[120] rather then Anser for it is not
+altogether so longe as a wild duck. of porci solidipedes [_see Note
+118_] there are still in this country in some places. and I am promised
+a pigge by a Gentleman that hath still a boar and sow of that kind. I
+tooke notice of them 26 years ago & having not lately [met with _crossed
+out_] met with any thought the race had been worne out butt I perceue it
+is not--they are whole footed in the forfeet & have [only _crossed out_]
+a seame only in the hinder. so they are animalia duplici nomine
+i[=m]unda. The wild swans or elk [_see Note 8_] in [very _crossed out_]
+lasting cold winters are most plentifull. It is larger then the River
+swan somewhat gray & of a lowder note & [differenced call _crossed
+out_] a recuruation of the Aspera arteria in the sternon as I noted in
+the margin long agoe in vulgar errors. the blicca marina [_see Note 74_]
+may well be named Harengiformis. [_several words smeared out_] I have
+the draught of that an Herring & a pilcher in one paper upon that
+account [Fol. 104 _verso_] I belieue [?] you were well informd of the
+cotta [_see_ p. 79] & fulica of our Ralla Aquatica I enclose a draught.
+
+ [120] Possibly the Pintail, _Dafila acuta_ (Linn.), _see_ p. 77.
+
+Of porci solidipedes there are diuers still in the country in some
+places I am promised a pigge by a friend who cherisheth that [new
+_crossed out_] breed. I tooke notice of them 26 yeares ago, & hauing not
+lately minded them thought they had been worn out butt I perceiue they
+are not--some are more plainly wholefooted then others & especially in
+the fore feet & in the rest there is no thorough fissure butt at most a
+superficiall seame, so they are [No. 3 cap 27 _above_] Quadrupedia
+duplici nomine i[=m]unda.
+
+[This last paragraph seems to have been written by way of emendation of
+what appears above on the same subject. A photograph of a portion of the
+above letter will, by the courtesy of the Bodleian Librarian, be found
+as a frontispiece to this volume. Mr. Jenkinson, the Librarian of the
+University of Cambridge, and through him, Mr. G. F. Warner and Mr.
+Kenyon, of the Department of Manuscripts of the British Museum, have
+kindly interested themselves in the transcript of this letter, which was
+very difficult to decipher.]
+
+
+No. VIII.
+
+BIBLIOTHECA BODLEIANA (MS. RAWL. D. cviii.)
+
+ [Draft of a letter from Sir Thomas Browne, described in the
+ Catalogue of the Rawlinson MSS. as to the Secretary of the Royal
+ Society, but from its contents evidently written to Merrett,
+ whose letter, dated 8th May, 1669, is in part a reply to it.]
+
+[_Fol 58._] Honord Sr I humbly thank you for your care of my sonnes
+paper & the Royll Societie for their acceptance of it. If hee bee in
+health I knowe hee is mindfull of their co[=m]ands receiued aboue 2
+months ago by a letter from Mr. Oldenburg.[121] I haue not heard from
+him of late the last I receiued was from Komorn[R] in Lower Hungary and
+hee was then going to the mine countryes. I think the Rowd may bee calld
+Rutilus ventre magis compresso[122] w^{ch} is the first discoverable
+difference to the eye. The weazelling [_see Note 60_] is as you see in
+the draught a long fish figura ad teretem vergente. somewhat of the
+shape butt differing in the head from the _mustela viuipara_ of
+Schoneueld. butt not lozenged on the back though the back bee much
+darker then the other parts. I send you the figure of the head of a
+cristated wild duck. it is black blackish [_sic_] in the greater part of
+the body some white on the brest & wings blewish legges & bill & seems
+to bee of the Latirostrous tribe perhaps you haue it not. it may bee
+called _Anas macrolophos_ [Fol. 59] as excelling in that kind.[123]
+there is also a draught of one sort of _mergus cristatus_ resembling
+that of Aldrovandus or Johnstonus where there is only the figure of the
+head only this is also ruffus butt the head sad red.[124] wee haue a
+kind of teale which some fowlers call crackling teale from the noyse it
+maketh[125] it is almost of the bignesse of a duck coming late of the
+yeare & latest going away hath a russet head & neck with a dark yellow
+stroak about a quarter of an inch broad from the crowne to the bill
+winged like a teale a white streake through the middle of the wings and
+edges thereof the tale blackish. it may be calld Querquedula maior
+serotina. I send you the figure in litle of a pristis[126] w^{ch} I
+receaued from a yarmouth seaman. you may please to compare it w^{th}
+yours. the asper you mention is much like our Rough or Aspredo.
+
+ [121] Henry Oldenburg (1615-1677) was born at Bremen. Came to
+ England about 1640, where he remained eight years. In 1653 he was
+ sent to England from Bremen on a diplomatic mission to Cromwell. He
+ returned to England a third time in 1660. He was an original Member
+ of the Royal Society, and became one of its first Secretaries. A
+ half-length portrait is in the possession of the Royal Society.
+
+ [R] A well-known town on the Danube, forty-seven miles west of
+ Buda-Pesth, probably the Comorra of E. Browne's letter to his
+ father, _cf._ Wilkin, i., p. 159.
+
+ [122] The Rudd (_Leuciscus erythrophthalmus_, Will.) is known in
+ Norfolk as the Roud. Browne seems to treat it as a variety of the
+ Roach (_Rutilus_, Willugh.), and Merrett in his second letter
+ remarks with approval "you have very well named the Rutilus."
+
+ [123] _Fuligula cristata_ (Linnaeus), the Tufted Duck.
+
+ [124] Professor Newton suggests that Browne intended to write
+ _Mergus cirratus_. Aldrovandus figures the head, iii., p. 283, and
+ that of _M. longirostris_ in the preceding page. This last is
+ copied by Jonston (fol. 47). Both birds seem to be female or
+ immature Goosanders. Neither author has a _M. cristatus_.
+
+ [125] The above description certainly applies to the Common Teal,
+ which was well-known to Browne (_vide supra_, p. 14), and that
+ species is with us all the year; I cannot help thinking, however,
+ that he had in his mind the Garganey, or Summer Teal, so called
+ from the season of its visit to us. This species is known to the
+ Norfolk gunners as the "Cricket Teal," and being slightly larger
+ than the common species it might well be called by him
+ "_Querquedula major serotina_."
+
+ [126] _See Note 55_, p. 36. It will be noticed that both this and
+ the _Centriscus_ mentioned at p. 41 were given to Browne by a
+ "seaman of these seas," but may possibly have been brought home as
+ curiosities from a foreign voyage; the Saw-fish, however, mentioned
+ at p. 36, is distinctly stated to have been "taken about Lynn." It
+ is a matter of intense regret that the numerous drawings mentioned
+ in these letters should have been lost.
+
+I forgot in my last to signifie that an oter [an other?] Elk or wild
+swan was headed like a goose that is without any knobb at the bottome of
+the bill. [_See_ p. 80 and _Note 8_.]
+
+Haue you had the duck called Clangula in Ald. [drovandus] & Johnst.[127]
+wee haue one heere w^{ch} answereth their descriptions exactly butt
+[_i.e._, except] only in the colour of their leggs & feet.
+
+ [127] Aldrovandus's figure of "Clangula" (head only, iii., p. 224)
+ is too indefinite for determination. He says the feet are yellow,
+ but Jonston, who refers to it under the name of _Anas platyrhincus_
+ describes it fairly well (p. 145). _Clangula ab alarum clangore_,
+ Aldrov., _i.e._, "Rattlewings," an old name by which the Golden-eye
+ was known to the Norfolk gunners.
+
+Haue you a willock a sea fowl like a rook or crowe.[128]
+
+ [128] A local name for the Guillemot. Merrett says, in a letter
+ dated 8th May, 1669, "The Clangula I know no more of than reading
+ hath informed mee; [_see Note 127_] a willock I have seen brought
+ from Greenland,[S] where they are said exceedingly to abound, but
+ never thought either of them was found in England, and having not
+ taken sufficient notice of the latter, crave your description of
+ both."
+
+ [S] The Greenland of those days was Spitsbergen, where they would
+ be met with by the Whalers, but in that case the bird would be
+ Bruennich's Guillemot, a species not then differentiated.
+
+
+No. IX.
+
+[MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS. MS. SLOANE 1847, FOL. 182.]
+
+[_Fol. 182._] Sr I craue your pardon that I haue no sooner sent unto
+you. I shall be very reddie to do you service in order to your desires
+And shall endeavour to procure you such animalls as I haue formerly met
+with & any other not ordinary wch [shall _crossed out_] are to bee
+acquired. though many of my old assistants are dead. & sometimes they
+fell upon animalls, [not to bee _crossed out_] scarce to bee met with
+agayne. I wish I had been acquainted with your desires 3 yeares ago. for
+I had about fortie hanging up in my howse. wch the plague being at the
+next doores the person intrusted in my howse, burnt or threw away. The
+figure of the weasell Cray [_see Note 60_ and p. 82] was in a long paper
+pasted together at the ends & I make no question you will find it
+otherwise I would send another [the willick wee in _crossed out_] that
+fowl wch some call willick, [_see Note 128_] wee meet with sometimes.
+The last I met with was taken on the sea shoare. the head and body black
+the brest inclining to black headed and billd like a crowe, leggs set
+very backward wings short leggs set very backward (_sic_) that it move
+overland very badly only. it may bee a kind of cornix marina. [The
+latter portion very badly written and difficult to decipher.]
+
+[_Fol. 184 verso._] That litle plant upon oyster shells [_see Note 91_]
+I remember I haue seen & surely is some kind of vescaria or calicularia
+
+of what that other [was _crossed out_] electricall body was Mr.
+Boyle[129] showed [_smear_] by this time more tryall hath probably been
+made, something of jet it might consist of.
+
+ [129] The Hon. Robert Boyle (1627-1691), although deeply learned in
+ many branches of science, was chiefly distinguished as a chemist.
+ He took a leading part in the founding of the Royal Society, and
+ was elected President in 1680, but from some conscientious scruple
+ did not accept the office. Naturalists are deeply indebted to him,
+ as he was "the first that made trial of preserving animals" in
+ spirit (see Grew's "Musaeum Regalis Societatis" (London, 1681), p.
+ 58).
+
+
+I thank you that you were pleased to enquire of those German gentlemen
+concerning my sonne I receiued a letter lately from him he hath not
+been unmindfull of the R. Society's co[=m]ds & hath been in Hungaria in
+the mines of Gold, sylver & copper at Schemets, Cremitz & Neusol &
+desired mee to signifie so much to Mr. Oldenberg.
+
+[The above is hastily scrawled; it was evidently indited to Merrett, as
+indicated by the reference to the German gentlemen, &c.; the date would
+therefore be some time in the year 1669. Wilkin prints it in the 1836
+Edition, Vol. i., p. 408, but it is not in Bohn's reprint.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A.
+
+[TWO LETTERS FROM DOCTOR CHRISTOPHER MERRETT TO SIR THOMAS BROWNE, MS.
+SLOANE 1830, FOL. 1 TO 3. THEY ARE BOUND UP IN INVERSE ORDER OF DATE.]
+
+
+[Reply to No. 2 in the above Series.]
+
+[_Fol. 3._] WORTHY SR,--y^{rs} of y^e 14^{th} instant I recaeved as full
+off learning in discovering so many very great curiosities as kindness
+in communicating them to mee & promising y^r farther assistance. ffor
+which I shall always proclame by my tongue as well as by my pen, my due
+resentment & thanks.
+
+The 2 funguses [guses _crossed out and_ i _inserted_] y^w sent y^e
+figures off [_see Note 106_] are y^e finest & rarest as to their figure
+I have ever seen or read of, & soe is y^r fibula marina, far surpassing
+one I reacived from Cornwall much of y^e same bigness, neither of which
+I find anywhere mentioned. The urtica marina minor Jonst. & physalus I
+never met with, nor have bin informed off y^e canis charcharius alius
+Jonst. Many of y^e Lupus piscis I have seen, & have bin informed by y^e
+Kings fish monger they are taken on our coast, but was not satisfyed for
+some reasons off his relation soe as to enter it into my pinax, though
+tis said to bee peculiar to y^e river Albis [= Elbe] yet I thought they
+might come sometimes thence to y^r coasts. Trutta marina I haue and y^e
+loligo, sepia, & polypus y^e 3 sorts off y^e molles have bin found on
+our western coasts which shall bee exactly distinguished--As for y^e
+Salmons taken a bove London towards Richmond & nearer, & y^t in great
+quantity some years they have all off them their lower jaw as y^w
+observ, [_see Note 92_] & our fishermen [men _crossed out_] say they
+usually wear off some part off it on y^e banks or els y^e lower would
+grow into y^e upper & soe starve them as they have sometimes seen--y^w
+ask whether I haue y^e mullus ruber asper, or y^e piscis Octangularis
+Wormii. or y^e sea worm longer than y^e earth worms, or y^e garrulus
+Argentor. or y^e duck cal'd a May chit or y^e Dor hawke. The 4 first I
+haue noe account off y^e 2 later I know not especially by those names,
+wee have noe hawk by y^t name [_see Note 42_] y^r account of succinum as
+all y^e rest will bee registered. As for y^e Aquila Gesneri I never saw
+nor heard off any such in y^e Collidge for [_fol. 3 verso_] this 25
+years last past. Sr y^w are pleased to say y^w shall write more if y^w
+know how not to bee surpurfluous--certainly what y^w have hitherto done
+hath bin all curiosities, & I doubt not but y^w have many more by you--I
+can direct y^w noe further than y^r own reason dictates to y^w. Besides
+those mentioned in y^e pinax I have 100 to add, & cannot give y^w a
+particular off them--whatever y^w write is either confirmative or
+additional. I doe entreat this favour off y^w to inform mee fuller off
+those unknown things mentioned herein, & to add y^e name page &c of y^e
+Author if mentioned by any or else to give them such a latin name for
+them as y^w have done by y^e fungi which may bee descriptive &
+differencing off them. Sr I hope y^e publigs [_sic_] interest & y^r own
+good genius will plead y^r pardon desired by
+
+ y^r humble servant
+
+ CHR. MERRETT.
+
+ _London Aug. 29. 68._
+
+
+[Reply to No. 8 of the above Series.]
+
+[_Fol. 1._] WORTHY SR,--my due thanks premised I at present acquaint y^w
+y^t y^w have very well named y^e Rutilus & expressed fully y^e cours to
+bee taken in y^e imposition of names viz y^e most obvious & most
+peculiar difference to y^e ey or any other sens. I am farther to say y^t
+y^e icon of y^e weazeling came not to my hands, pray bee pleas'd to look
+amongst y^r papers perhaps it might bee laid by through some accident or
+other [I have _added above_] y^e figures of y^r anas macrolophos, & of
+y^e mergi cristati [_see Note 124_] & of y^e pristis y^t which came from
+Cornwall was of y^e gladius, y^e name of sword fish being applied to
+both of them by our nation. It seemeth by y^w y^t y^e Norwich aspredo is
+not y^e Ceruna fluviatilis contrary to what Camden affirms, for y^e
+rutilus mentioned in mine to y^w differs toto coelo from y^e
+ceruna--The difference of y^e Elks bill by y^w signified is remarkable
+to distinguish it from others of its own kind. [_See_ p. 83 _supra_.]
+The crackling teal seems [clearly _crossed out_] to bee y^e same which
+Dr Charleton[130] mentions in his Onomasticon under y^e name of y^e
+cracker,& showing him y^r description hee acknowledged to bee y^e same,
+y^e clangula I know noe more of than reading hath informed mee, a
+willock I have seen brought from Greenland where they are said
+exceedingly to abound, but never y^t [thought?] either of them was found
+in England, & having [not _added above_] taken sufficient notice of it
+y^e later, crave y^r description off both.
+
+ [130] In Charleton's "Onomasticon," at p. 99, the Cracker is called
+ by him, _Anas caudacuta_, and is said to be the "Gaddel" of the
+ London dealers in fowl. [_See Note 125._]
+
+And now Sr since my last only 2 things remarkable haue come to my
+knowledge. The one was a cake off black amber 1/6 off an inch thick &
+neer a palm each way. Mr. Boyle brought it to y^e R. society to whom it
+was sent from y^e Sussex shore, hee had only tryed it to its electricity
+& found it answer his expectation, farther tryals will be made of it.
+The second is a small plant found on oyster shells which when fresh did
+perfectly represent y^e flowers off Hyacinthus botryoides, [_see Note
+91_] but y^t was somewhat longer & not so much sweld out towards its
+pedunculus, some of them are here inclosed. Tis doubtless a sort off
+vesicaria, though much different from what y^w sent mee. Most off them
+are now shrunk & y^e sides constituting y^e cavity come together &
+appear only a transparent husk. One thing more I had to add (but
+scarcely dare speak it out) y^t is if it would please [you _added
+above_] to let it bee done without y^r charge & 2ly if it might be done
+without y^r trouble, then I would beg off y^w to set some a work to
+procure mee some of those rare animals &c y^w have mentioned in your
+seueral Letters. My intention therein is double: first to take their
+descriptions & furnish our colledge with them as curiosities, all being
+lost by y^e fire this is onely wished but must not bee proposed without
+y^e former limitation by y^r too much allready obliged friend & servant
+
+ _8th May '69._
+
+ CHR. MERRETT.
+
+I met this week with some persons off quality high Germans who lately
+saw y^r son & record all good things off him.
+
+ ffor Dr Browne off Norwich.
+
+[The reply to this letter is No. IX of the above Series.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B.
+
+[MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS. MS. SLOANE 1847, FOL. 56-57.]
+
+[_See Note 51_, p. 32 _supra_.]
+
+
+Praye Request Mr. Johnson to obtayne this fauor of Mr. Bacon who is
+unknown to mee, to afford mee his resolution to these few queries
+concerning the whale [wch _crossed out_] whereof I understand he had the
+cutting up and disposure whether there were any spermacetie found, or
+made out of other parts beside the head; if soe, of what parts & out of
+what most: and whether any out of the meere fleshie parts whether that
+wch runne from it about the shoare came out of the mouth.
+
+ [_Not signed or dated._]
+
+
+REPLY.
+
+Sr in Answer to your questions conserninge the whale, I founde noe
+Sper[=m]e but in his heade and that after I had taken off his scalpe one
+tonn weight [or more _written above_] of a nexuous substance, we found
+in the circumference as large as a small coach wheele in the middle part
+certain round pieces of Sperm as bigge as a mans fist some as large as
+eggs and on the out side of the said rounds, flakes as large as a mans
+head in forme like hony combs being very white and full of oyle. And
+that Sp. wch was cast upon the shore I doe conceive came out of his
+nostrells. thus much ffrom him who doth remayne Sir your humble Servant,
+Arthur Bacon Yarmouth 10th May 1652.
+
+
+BROWNE TO DUGDALE ON CERTAIN FOSSIL BONES.
+
+["EASTERN COUNTIES COLLECTANEA," pp. 193-195].
+
+ The letter referred to in the foot-note on page 33, written by
+ Sir Thomas Browne to Dugdale, and formerly in the possession of
+ the late Mr. Arthur Preston of Norwich, whose collection of
+ manuscripts was dispersed by auction in August, 1888, was
+ printed in a brief-lived and little-known local publication,
+ entitled the "Eastern Counties Collectanea" (1872-3), at page
+ 193. In this letter occurs a passage which confirms the doubt
+ expressed as to the Whales which had young ones after coming on
+ shore at Hunstanton being Sperm Whales. They are expressly said
+ to have been of that sort "which seamen call a Grampus," and as
+ Sir Nicholas le Strange, in a MS. preserved in the Muniment room
+ at Hunstanton, applies the name "Grampus" to an undoubted
+ specimen of _Hyperoodon rostratus_ (as shown both by his
+ description and outline sketch) which came ashore there in the
+ year 1700, I have little doubt that the Cetaceans in question
+ belonged to that species and not to _Physeter macrocephalus_.
+
+ This letter is interesting also as filling a gap in Wilkin's
+ series and I therefore reproduce it, omitting only occasional
+ learned digressions which do not affect the subject. The
+ original not being available, I have used the copy in the
+ "Collectanea" before mentioned.
+
+ Dugdale, in November, 1658, and again later, had written to
+ Browne, sending him a bone of a "fish which was taken up by Sir
+ Robert Cotton, in digging a pond at the skirt of Conington
+ downe," and asking his opinion thereof. (Wilkin, i., pp. 385 and
+ 390.)
+
+ To the first of these letters Browne replied, under date of the
+ 6th December, 1658, "I receaued the bone of the fish, and shall
+ giue you some account of it when I have compared it with
+ another bone which is not by mee" (op. cit. p. 387). The letter
+ which follows and which was unknown to Wilkin supplies this
+ information.
+
+[p. 193.] "Sr I cannot sufficiently admire the ingenious industry of Sr
+Robert Cotton in preserving so many things of rarity and observation nor
+commend your own enquiries for the satisfaction of such particulars. The
+petrified bone you sent me, which with divers others was found
+underground, near Cunnington, seems to be the vertebra, spondyle or
+rackbone of some large fish, and no terrestrious animal as some upon
+sight conceived, as either of Camel, rhinoceros, or elephant, for it is
+not perforated and hollow but solid according to the spine of fishes in
+whom the spinal marrow runs in a channel above these solid racks, or
+spondiles.
+
+"It seems much too big for the largest Dolphins, porpoises, or sword
+fishes, and too little for a true or grown whale, but may be the bone of
+some big cetaceous animal, as particularly of that which seamen call a
+Grampus; a kind of small whale, whereof some come short, some exceed
+twenty foot. And not only whales but Grampusses have been taken in this
+Estuarie or mouth of the fenland rivers. And about twenty years ago four
+were run ashore near Hunstanton and two had young ones after they came
+to land. But whether this fish were of the longitude of twenty foot (as
+is conceived) some doubt may be made for this bone containeth little
+more than an inch in thickness, and not three inches in breadth so that
+it might have a greater number thereof than is easily allowable to make
+out that longitude. For of the whale which was cast upon our coast about
+six years ago a vertebra or rackbone still preserved, containeth a foot
+in breadth and nine inches in depth, yet the whale with all advantages
+but sixty-two foot in length. [p, 194.] We are not ready to believe
+that, wherever such relics of fish or sea animals are found, the sea
+hath had its course. And Goropius Becanus[131] long ago could not digest
+that conceit when he found great numbers of shells upon the highest
+Alps. For many may be brought unto places where they were not first
+found.
+
+ [131] This seems to refer to the "De Gigantibus eorumque reliquiis"
+ of J. van Gorp, Jean Becan, or Joannes Goropius (as the name is
+ variously given in the "Biographie Universelle" (b. 1518, d. 1572),
+ and apparently published after the Author's death by Jean
+ Chassanion, 8vo, Basileae, 1580, and another edition in 1587. See
+ Brit. Mus. Cat.; but I have not seen the book.
+
+"Some bones of our whale were left in several fields which when the
+earth hath obscured them, may deceive some hereafter, that the sea hath
+come so high. In northern nations where men live in houses of fishbones
+and in the land of the Icthiophagi near the Red sea where mortars were
+made of the backbones of whales, doors of their jaws, and arches of
+their ribs, when time hath covered them they might confound after
+discoverers....
+
+"For many years great doubt was made concerning those large bones found
+in some parts of England, and named Giants' bones till men [p. 195]
+considered they might be the bones of elephants brought into this island
+by Claudius, and perhaps also by some succeeding emperors [then follow
+other ancient examples of the finding 'elephants bones' in various
+countries attributed to similar modes of introduction]. But many things
+prove obscure in subterraneous discovery....
+
+"In some chalk pits about Norwich many stag's horns are found of large
+beams and branches, the solid parts converted into a chalky and fragile
+substance, the pithy part sometimes hollow and full of brittle earth and
+clay. In a churchyard of this city an oaken billet was found in a
+coffin. About five years ago an humourous man of this country after his
+death and according to his own desire was wrap't up in a horned hide of
+an ox and so buried.[T] Now when the memory hereof is past how this may
+hereafter confound the discoverers and what connjectures will arise
+thereof it is not easy to conjecture.
+
+ [T] Richard Ferrer, of Thurne, by his will, proved about 1654,
+ directed that his "dead body be handsomely trussed up in a black
+ bullock's hide, and be decently buried in the Churchyard of
+ Thurne."--"Norfolk Archaeology," v., p. 212.
+
+ Sr Your servant to my power,
+
+ THO. BROWNE."
+
+This is endorsed "Sr Thomas Browne's discourse about the Fish bone found
+at Conington Com. Hunt, Shown, Dr. Tanner."
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX C.
+
+[SLOANE MS. ADDITIONAL 5233, LARGE FOLIO, IS A VOLUME LABELLED "DR. EDW.
+BROWN'S DRAWINGS."]
+
+ "Some original drawing of Towns, Castles, Antiquities, Medals
+ &c. by Dr. Edward Browne in his Travels & presented by his
+ Father Sir Thomas Browne. Who hath write upon sev^{ll} of them
+ what they are."
+
+
+The above is the inscription written on the fly-leaf of this volume,
+which I hoped might have contained some drawings of birds or fishes by
+Sir Thomas Browne, but there is nothing in it of interest from a Natural
+History point of view. In Wilkin's Catalogue of the MSS. (Vol. iv., p.
+476) it is described as "a collection of very curious drawings (some
+coloured) of public buildings, habits, _fishes_, mines, rocks, tombs,
+and other antiquities, observed by Sir Thos. and Dr. Edward Browne in
+their travels," but there are no fishes, birds, or other animals in the
+volume.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX D.
+
+
+ Draft of a letter from Sir Thomas Browne to his daughter
+ Elizabeth, enclosing two pictures of a Stork. This and the next
+ letter are in the Bodleian Library (MS. Rawl. D. cviii.)
+
+[_Fol. 70._] This is a picture of the stork [_see Note 14_] I mentiond
+in my last. butt it is different from the co[=m]on stork by red lead
+colourd leggs and bill[132] and the feet hath not vsuall sharp poynted
+clawes butt resembling a mans nayle, such as Herodotus discribeth the
+white Ibis of AEgypt to haue. The ends of the wings are black & when shee
+doth not spred them they make all the lower part of the back looke
+black, butt the fethers on the back vnder them are white as also the
+tayle. it fed upon snayles & froggs butt a toad being offered it would
+not touch it. the tongue is about half an inch long. the quills of the
+wing are as bigge or bigger then a swans quills. it was shott by the
+seaside & the wing broake. Some there were who tooke it for an euell
+omen saying If storks come ouer into England, god send that a
+co[=m]onwealth doth not come after.[U]
+
+ [132] Browne evidently was not very familiar with the Stork, which
+ is not surprising, seeing that it is a very rare bird in Britain;
+ it may be that he had only seen the bird in its immature stage, for
+ the "red-lead" hue of the legs is very characteristic of the adult
+ bird. [_See also Note 14_, p. 10.]
+
+ [U] In reference to the Dutch fable of those days that Storks would
+ only inhabit republican countries.
+
+That picture with the lesser head is the better.
+
+
+MS. RAWL. D. cviii.
+
+ Draft of a letter containing further particulars with regard to
+ the Stork. There is nothing to indicate to whom it was
+ addressed.
+
+[_Fol. 77._] A kind of stork was shott in the wing by the sea neere
+Hasburrowe & brought aliue vnto mee. it was about a yard high red lead
+coloard leggs and bill. the clawes resembling human nayles such as
+Herodotus describeth in the white Ibis of AEgypt The lower parts of the
+wings are black which gathered up makes the lower part of back looke
+black butt the tayle vnder them is white as the other part of the body.
+it fed readily upon snayles & froggs, butt a toad being offered it would
+not touch it: the tongue very short [not _crossed out_] an inch long. it
+makes a clattering noyse by flapping one bill agaynst the other somewhat
+like the platea or shouelard.[V] the quills [about _crossed out_] of the
+biggnesse of swans bills [_sic_ quills?] when it swallowed a frogge it
+was sent downe into the stomak by the back side of the neck as was
+perceaued upon swallowing. I could not butt take notice of the conceitt
+of some who looked upon it as an ill omen saying if storks come ouer
+into England, pray god a co[=m]on wealth do not come after.
+
+ [V] The Spoonbill.
+
+ In addition to these letters there are in the Bodleian Library a
+ letter from Elizabeth Browne to her brother, describing the
+ above-mentioned Stork, and desiring him to keep one of the two
+ pictures himself, and to give the other to his sister Fairfax
+ (MS. Rawl. D. 108, fol. 71), and a draft of a letter from Sir
+ Thomas Browne about a remarkable fly (_see ante_ p. 68 _and Note
+ 110_), which offended the cattle extraordinarily, found at
+ Horsey Marshes (MS. Rawl. D. 108, fol. 103). There is also (MS.
+ Rawl. D. 391, fol. 55) a letter from Sir Hamon le Strange to Sir
+ T. B., dated Jan. 16, 1653. About half this letter is printed by
+ Wilkin, i., pp. 369-70. He mentions towards the end that he
+ sends certain observations on T. B.'s "Enquiries into Common
+ Errors," at page "27 thereof I write of a whale cast upon my
+ shoare." This criticism is now separated from the letter, which
+ originally covered it, but happily is preserved in the British
+ Museum, MS. Sloane, 1839. fols. 104-145.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ A.
+
+ Acorus verus, 58
+
+ Acus, Needlefish, 40, 41, 66
+
+ Adders, 55
+
+ Addercock, 66
+
+ Alcedo ispida, 21
+
+ Allis Shad, 42 (note)
+
+ Alni carptor, 76
+
+ Amber, 63, 88
+
+ Alosa, 42
+
+ Anas arctica, 17, 73
+
+ Anas macrolophos, 82, 88
+
+ Anas alis oculatis, 80
+
+ Anatula, 76, 79
+
+ Anglorum, Sand Eel, 44
+
+ Apiaster, 73
+
+ Aphia cobites, 42
+
+ Appendix A., 86
+
+ Appendix B., 90
+
+ Appendix C., 95
+
+ Appendix D., 96
+
+ Aquila Gesneri, 3, 67, 87
+
+ Ardea stellaris, 17
+
+ Arcuata, 23
+
+ Armed Bull-head, 41 (note), 62, 65, 87
+
+ Avicula Maialis, 19, 66
+
+ Ascidians, 50 (note)
+
+ Aselli, 43
+
+ Asprage, 45
+
+ Aspredo, 53, 83, 88
+
+ Astacus, 46, 57
+
+ Atherine?, 42 (note), 73
+
+ Auk, Little?, 79 (note)
+
+ Avis pugnax, 20
+
+ Avis trogloditica, 26
+
+ Avocet, 24, 67
+
+
+ B.
+
+ Balani, 48
+
+ Banstickle 44
+
+ Barbel, 53
+
+ Barker, 24, 67, 73, 76
+
+ Barnacle shell, 48
+
+ Barnacle Goose, 12
+
+ Bargander, 13, 73
+
+ Bass, 43
+
+ Bearded Tit, 26 (note)
+
+ Bee-bird, 73, 76
+
+ Betulae Carptor, 29, 73, 76
+
+ Birdcatcher, 25
+
+ Birds found in Norfolk, 1
+
+ Birds number of species, 32
+
+ Bittern, 17
+
+ Black Grouse, 28
+
+ Black Heron, 21
+
+ Black-tailed Godwit, 24 (note)
+
+ Bleak, 43, 53, 78, 81
+
+ Bones, Fossil, 91
+
+ Boyle, Robert, 85
+
+ Bream, 52
+
+ Brent Goose, 12
+
+ Brill, Bret, 45
+
+ Brittle Stars, 49
+
+ Browne, Sir Thomas--
+
+ Attitude towards witchcraft, xi. (note)
+
+ Collection of Eggs, 10 (note)
+
+ Correspondents, viii.
+
+ Drawings lost, xxv.
+
+ Editions of his Collected Works, xviii.
+
+ Estimation in which he was held, xvii.
+
+ Letters to Merrett, xxii., 57
+
+ Letters to Dugdale, 91
+
+ Notes on Certain Birds, xx., 1
+
+ Notes on Certain Fishes, xx., 31
+
+ Observations on Migration, xvi., 2 (note)
+
+ Originality, xi., xvi.
+
+ Purpose for which written, xxi., 2
+
+ State of Natural Science in his day, x., xiv.
+
+ Bull-head, Armed, 41 (note), 62, 65, 87
+
+ Burbot, 54
+
+ Bustard, 18
+
+ Butcher bird, 25
+
+ Butt, 45
+
+ Buzzard, Bald, 4, 56
+
+ Buzzard, Gray, 4
+
+
+ C.
+
+ Canis (Dog-fish), 36
+
+ Canis carcharias, 37 (note), 61, 86
+
+ Caprimulgus, 26, 63, 66, 87
+
+ Cancellus, 48, 62
+
+ Carcinus maenas, 46
+
+ Carp, 55
+
+ Certhia, 80
+
+ Ceruna, 53, 88
+
+ Chad, 42
+
+ Chipper, 29, 73
+
+ Chock, 26
+
+ Chough, 27
+
+ Chub, 53
+
+ Churre, 19 (note), 20
+
+ Ciconia, 10, 64, 96
+
+ Cirripeds, 48
+
+ Clams, 47
+
+ Clangula, 83, 88
+
+ Coal-fish, 43
+
+ Coble bird, 25
+
+ Cockles, 47
+
+ Cods, 43
+
+ Conger, 44
+
+ Coot, 15
+
+ Corculum, 55, 56
+
+ Cormorant, 11
+
+ Cormorant, Rock, 11
+
+ Corallines, 80
+
+ Cotta Anglorum, 79, 81
+
+ Cottus scorpius, 42
+
+ Corvus marinus, 11
+
+ Crabs, 46
+
+ Crane, 5
+
+ Crawfish, 53
+
+ Crossbill, 25
+
+ Crow, 27
+
+ Crow, Hooded, 25
+
+ Cuckoo, 20
+
+ Cuckoo Mate, 22 (note)
+
+ Culex marinus, 99
+
+ Curlew, 23
+
+ Curlew, Stone, 24
+
+ Cuttle fish, 45, 62
+
+ Cyclas, 55 (note)
+
+
+ D.
+
+ Dab, 45 (note)
+
+ Dabchick, 13
+
+ Dace, 52
+
+ Dentalia, 47, 73, 77
+
+ Divers, 8 (note)
+
+ Dog-fish, 37
+
+ Dog-Whelk, 47 (note)
+
+ Dolphin, 34
+
+ Dorhawk, 26, 63, 66, 87
+
+ Dory, 41
+
+ Dotterel, Land, 19
+
+ Dotterel, Sea, 19, 73, 76, 80
+
+ Draco minor, 42 (note), 73
+
+ Dragon fly, 55 (note)
+
+ Draw Water, 28
+
+ Ducks, Wild, 13, 13 (note), 88
+
+ Duck, Golden-eye, 83
+
+ Duck, Tufted, 82
+
+ Dunlin, 19
+
+
+ E.
+
+ Eagles, 3, 67, 78, 87
+
+ Echinus, 48
+
+ Eels, 54
+
+ Eels, Conger, 44
+
+ Eels, Sand, 44
+
+ Eelpout, 54
+
+ Elke, 7, 78, 80, 83, 88
+
+ Erythropus, 19
+
+
+ F.
+
+ Faber marinus, 41
+
+ Fanago, 51, 74
+
+ Father Lasher, 42 (note)
+
+ Fen Cricket, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Fibula marina, 50, 61, 86
+
+ Finches, 29
+
+ Fishing Frog, 38, 64
+
+ Fishes found in Norfolk, 31
+
+ Fishes number of species, 32
+
+ Flat-fish, 45
+
+ Flies, 67, 71, 97
+
+ Fly-catcher, 73 (note), 76
+
+ Forficula, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Fucus marinus, 71, 75
+
+ Fulica Cotta, 14
+
+ Fungi, various, 60, 61, 86
+
+ Funduli fluviatiles, 54
+
+ Funduli marini, 42
+
+
+ G.
+
+ Gallinula aquatica, 15
+
+ Gannet, 7, 13
+
+ Gammarus, 53
+
+ Garfish, 40, 66
+
+ Garrulus Bohemicus, 68
+
+ Garrulus Argentoratensis, 30, 63, 67, 87
+
+ Geese, 12, 13
+
+ Gladius, 36, 64, 88
+
+ Glot, Eel, 54
+
+ Gnatts or Knots, 19
+
+ Goatsucker, 26, 63, 66, 87
+
+ Gobies, 42 (note)
+
+ Godwit, 19, 24
+
+ Gold-crested Wren, 29 (note), 76
+
+ Golden Eagle, 3 (note), 67
+
+ Golden-eye Duck, 84 (note), 88
+
+ Goldfinch, 29
+
+ Goosander, 13, 72, 83 (note)
+
+ Goodyer, John, 59
+
+ Grampus, 33, 92
+
+ Great Northern Diver, 8
+
+ Green Plover, 19 (note), 20
+
+ Grey Plover, 20
+
+ Grebe, G. Crested, 13
+
+ Grebe, Little, 13
+
+ Grouse, Black, 28
+
+ Gryllotalpa, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Gudgeon, 54
+
+ Guillemot, 84 (note), 88
+
+ Gulls, 8, 9, 10
+
+ Gurnards, 39
+
+ Gurney, Anna, xx.
+
+
+ H.
+
+ Haddock, 43
+
+ Hard-worm, 55, 56
+
+ Harriers, 4, 5 (note)
+
+ Hawfinch, 25
+
+ Hermit Crabs, 48
+
+ Herons, 17
+
+ Heron, Black, 22
+
+ Heron, Purple, 22 (note)
+
+ Heathpoult, 28
+
+ Herring, 39
+
+ Hippolyte varians, 53
+
+ Hirundo marina, Sea Swallow, 10
+
+ Hirudines marini, Sea Leeches, 50
+
+ Horse-leeches, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Horse Mackerel, 39
+
+ Hobby, 78
+
+ Hobby-bird, 22
+
+ Hoopoe, 23, 67
+
+ Hooded Crow, 26
+
+ How, Dr. William, 59 (note)
+
+ Hydrocantharus, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Hydrozoa, 70
+
+
+ J.
+
+ Jackdaw, 27
+
+ Jelly-fish, 50, 61, 78
+
+ Jet, 63 (note), 64, 85
+
+ Junco, 72
+
+
+ K.
+
+ Kingfisher, 22
+
+ Kite, 4, 15, 27
+
+ Knots, 19
+
+
+ L.
+
+ Lampern, 54
+
+ Lamprey, 54
+
+ Lanius, 25
+
+ Lapwing, 20
+
+ Lari, many sorts of, 8, 9
+
+ Larks, 28
+
+ Larus minor, 9, 73
+
+ Leeches, 50
+
+ Lesser Butcher Bird, 26 (note)
+
+ Letters to Dugdale, 91
+
+ Letters to Merrett, 57
+
+ Letters from Merrett, 86
+
+ Limpets, 47
+
+ Lingula, 45
+
+ Little Auk?, 79 (note)
+
+ Littorina, 47
+
+ Lizard, 55
+
+ Loach, 54
+
+ Lobster, 46
+
+ Lolego, 46, 62, 86
+
+ Loon, 13
+
+ Loxia, 25
+
+ Lug Worm, 50 (note)
+
+ Lump-fish, 39
+
+ Lupus marinus, 38, 61, 86
+
+
+ M.
+
+ Mackerel, 43, 74
+
+ Mackerel, Horse, 39
+
+ Marine Worms, 50
+
+ May-chit, 19, 63, 66, 87
+
+ Medusae, 49 (note)
+
+ Merganser, 13, 72
+
+ Mergus acutirostris, 13
+
+ Mergus cristatus, 82, 88
+
+ Mergus major, 8, 57
+
+ Mergus minor, 13
+
+ Mergus mustelaris, 77
+
+ Mergus serratus, 18, 83
+
+ Mergulus, 77, 79
+
+ Merlin, 78
+
+ Merrett, Christopher, xxii., 57
+
+ Mistletoe, 70
+
+ Migration, xvi., 2 (note)
+
+ Miller's Thumb, 54
+
+ Minnow, 53
+
+ Mole Cricket, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Moon-fish (Mola), 38, 64
+
+ Moor Hen, 15
+
+ Morinellus, 19, 73, 76, 80
+
+ Musca tuliparum, 67, 74
+
+ Mullet, 40, 65
+
+ Mullet, Red, 40, 62, 65, 87
+
+ Mussels, 47
+
+ Musk Beetle, 58
+
+ Mustela fluviatilis, 54
+
+ Mustela marina, 39
+
+ Mustela variegata, 14
+
+
+ N.
+
+ Needle-fish, 40 (note), 41, 66
+
+ Nerites, 47, 73, 77
+
+ Night-jar, 26, 63, 66, 87
+
+ Norway Lobster, 46 (note)
+
+ Notonacton, 55 (note), 56, 71
+
+ Nuthatch, 21
+
+
+ O.
+
+ Oak Galls, 69, 70, 75
+
+ Octopus?, 46 (note), 86
+
+ Oldenburg, Henry, 82
+
+ Onocrotalus, 16, 64
+
+ Ophidian, 65
+
+ Osprey, 4, 78
+
+ Otters, 56
+
+ Oysters, 46
+
+ Oyster Catcher, 8 (note)
+
+
+ P.
+
+ Parrot Jay, 30, 63, 67, 87
+
+ Partridge, 27
+
+ Partridge, Red-legged, 28
+
+ Pectines, 47
+
+ Pediculus marinus, 49
+
+ Pelican, 16, 64
+
+ Perch, 52
+
+ Periwinkle, 47, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Peter-fish, 41
+
+ Physalus, 49, 65
+
+ Pica marina, 8
+
+ Picus martius, 21
+
+ Pigs, Solid-footed, 77, 80, 81
+
+ Pike, 52
+
+ Pilchard, 44, 81
+
+ Pinax, 57, 87
+
+ Pintail Duck, 14, 77, 80
+
+ Piscis octangularis, 41, 62, 65, 87
+
+ Pisidium?, 55 (note)
+
+ Place, 45
+
+ Plot, Dr. Robert, xxiv. (note)
+
+ Plover, Green, 19 (note), 20
+
+ Plover, Grey, 20
+
+ Plover, Ring, 23
+
+ Pogge, 41 (note)
+
+ Polypus, 46, 86
+
+ Porbeagle, 57 (note), 61, 86
+
+ Porpoise, 34
+
+ Porci solidi pedes, 77, 80, 81
+
+ Primmes, 42, 73
+
+ Pristis serra, 36, 83, 88
+
+ Puets, 10
+
+ Puffin, 17, 73
+
+ Pungitius, 44, 58
+
+
+ Q.
+
+ Quail, 28
+
+ Quercus Galls, 69, 70
+
+ Quercus marinus, 75
+
+ Querquedula, 14, 83
+
+
+ R.
+
+ Rail, Land, 28
+
+ Rail, Water, 15, 79, 81
+
+ Rana piscatrix, 38, 64
+
+ Raven, 27
+
+ Rays, 45
+
+ Razor shells, 47
+
+ Red-backed Shrike, 25 (note)
+
+ Red-legged Partridge, 28
+
+ Red Mullet, 40, 62, 65, 87
+
+ Redshank, 19
+
+ Reed-chock, 72
+
+ Reseda, 59
+
+ Ringlestones, 23
+
+ Ring Plover, 23
+
+ Roach, 52
+
+ Rochet, 39
+
+ Rock Cormorant, 11
+
+ Rockling, 39 (note)
+
+ Roller, 30, 63, 67, 87
+
+ Roman Nettle, 59, 68
+
+ Rook, 27
+
+ Rudd, Roud, 52, 82
+
+ Ruff (fish), 53, 83, 88
+
+ Ruff (Reeve), 20
+
+ Rubelliones, 39
+
+ Rutilus, 82, 88
+
+
+ S.
+
+ Salmon, 51, 62, 87
+
+ Sand Eel, 44
+
+ Sanderling, 19 (note), 63, 66, 87
+
+ Saurus, 40, 66
+
+ Sawfish, 36, 83, 88
+
+ Sandpiper, Common, 79
+
+ Scad, 39
+
+ Scallop, 47
+
+ Scarabaeus, 58
+
+ Scarburgh, Sir C., 3 (note)
+
+ Scolopax, 41
+
+ Scolopendra, 35
+
+ Scombri, 43, 74
+
+ Scorpius, 42, 67
+
+ Scotch Goose, 12
+
+ Sea Buttons, 50, 61
+
+ Sea Dotterel, 19, 73, 76, 80
+
+ Sea Dugge, 50 (note), 51
+
+ Sea Gudgeon, 42
+
+ Sea Leach, 50
+
+ Sea Loach, 42
+
+ Sea Louse, 49
+
+ Sea Miller's Thumb, 42
+
+ Sea Mouse, 49, 65
+
+ Sea Perriwig, 70
+
+ Sea Pheasant, 14, 77
+
+ Sea Pie, 8
+
+ Sea Stars, 49, 57
+
+ Sea Trout, 62, 86
+
+ Sea Wolf, 38, 61, 86
+
+ Sea Woodcock, 40
+
+ Seal, 35, 64
+
+ Seaweeds, 70
+
+ Sepia, 45, 86
+
+ Sesamoides, 59
+
+ Shad, 42 (note)
+
+ Shag, 11
+
+ Shagreen Ray, 45
+
+ Shearwater, 12, 72
+
+ Sheld-drake, 12 (note), 13, 73
+
+ Shoeing-horn, 24
+
+ Shore Crab, 46 (note)
+
+ Shovelard, 10
+
+ Shoveller Duck, 14
+
+ Shrike, 25
+
+ Shrimp, Freshwater, 55 (note)
+
+ Silerella, 26 (note)
+
+ Siskin, 29 (note), 73, 76
+
+ Skate, 45
+
+ Skipper (Saury), 40 (note)
+
+ Skua, 8, 58
+
+ Smelt, 42
+
+ Smew, 14, 77
+
+ Snakes, 55
+
+ Sole, 45
+
+ Solens, 47
+
+ Solid-footed Swine, 77, 80, 81
+
+ Sperm Whale, 32, 65, 75, 80, 91, 98
+
+ Spermologous, 27
+
+ Spoonbill, 10
+
+ Sported Flycatcher, 73, 76
+
+ Sported Ray, 45
+
+ Sprat, 43
+
+ Squalders, 49, 50 (note), 61
+
+ Squid, 45 (note)
+
+ Squllae, 56
+
+ Starling, 28
+
+ Stella marina, 49, 57
+
+ Stern, 10, 73
+
+ Sting-fish, 42, 65
+
+ Sting Ray, 45
+
+ Stint, 19 (note), 20
+
+ Stickleback, 44 (note), 58
+
+ Stone Curlew, 24, 67
+
+ Stork, 10, 64, 96
+
+ Sturgeon, 37
+
+ Succinum, 63
+
+ Sun-fish, 38, 64
+
+ Surmullet, 40
+
+ Swan, Wild, 7, 78, 80, 83, 88
+
+ Sweet Flag, 57
+
+ Swift, 55
+
+ Sword Fish, 36, 64, 88
+
+
+ T.
+
+ Teal, 14, 83, 88
+
+ Tench, 52
+
+ Tenison, Archbishop, ix.
+
+ Terns, 10, 73
+
+ Tethya, 50 (note), 51
+
+ Thornback, 45
+
+ Tope, 37 (note)
+
+ Trachurus, 39, 58
+
+ Trout, 53
+
+ Trout, Sea, 66, 82
+
+ Tufted Duck, 82
+
+ Tunny?, 43 (note), 74
+
+ Turbines, 47
+
+ Turbot, 45
+
+
+ U.
+
+ Upupa, 23, 67
+
+ Urtica marina, 49, 61, 78, 86
+
+ Urtica mas, 68
+
+ Urtica pilulifera, 59 (note)
+
+ Urtica Romana, 59
+
+
+ V.
+
+ Vermes marinus, 50, 62, 66, 87
+
+ Vermes setacei, 56
+
+ Vesicaria, 50 (note), 51, 74, 79, 85, 89
+
+ Vipers, 55
+
+ Vitulus marinus, 35, 64
+
+
+ W.
+
+ Water Beetle, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Water Boatman, 55 (note), 56
+
+ Water Hen, 15
+
+ Water Rail, 15, 79, 81
+
+ Waxwing, 68
+
+ Weasel Cray, 84
+
+ Weasel ling, 39, 82, 88
+
+ Weever-fish, 42 (note), 65, 67
+
+ Wesell, 14, 77
+
+ Whale, Sperm, 32, 65, 75, 90, 91, 98
+
+ Wheatear, 26 (note)
+
+ Whelk, 47
+
+ White-tailed Eagle, 3
+
+ Whiting, 43
+
+ Whinne Bird, 29, 76
+
+ Wild Duck, 14
+
+ Wild Goose, 12, 13
+
+ Wild Swan, 7, 78, 80, 83, 88
+
+ Wilkin, Simon, xviii. (note)
+
+ Willick, 84, 88
+
+ Wolf-fish, 38, 61, 86
+
+ Woodcock (fish), 41
+
+ Woodpecker, 21
+
+ Wren, Dr. Christopher, xx.
+
+ Wren, Gold-crested, 29, 76
+
+ Wryneck, 22 (note)
+
+
+ X.
+
+ Xiphias, 36
+
+
+ Y.
+
+ Yarwhelp, 24, 73, 76
+
+
+
+
+ERRATA.
+
+
+ Page 8, note 10, last line, _delete_ us.
+
+ Page 8, note, first line, after Great Northern Diver, insert
+ _Colymbus glacialis_; line three, _delete Colymbus glacialis_,
+ and after _Mergus maximus_ insert Farrensis.
+
+ Page 12, note 17, line 8, for "English Birds" read "English
+ words."
+
+ Page 12, note 18, line 4 from bottom, for "near the centre" read
+ "near the south-west border."
+
+ Page 14, note 22, line 9, after "(Hunt)" insert ";."
+
+ Page 20, note 31, line 5, transfer the words "for the last few
+ years" to line 4, after "has bred."
+
+ Page 23, note 36, line 3, for "Eringo" read "Eryngo."
+
+ Page 34, note 52, line 1, for "hat" read "that."
+
+ Page 35, note 54, line 5, for "Neridiform" read "Nereidiform."
+
+ Page 36, note 55, line 7, for _pristis antiquoram_ read _pristis
+ antiquorum_.
+
+ Page 46, note 82, line 1, for _Cancer_ read _Carsinus_
+ (corrected in Index).
+
+ Page 47, note 83, lines 9 and 19, for _litoria_, read
+ _littorea_.
+
+ Page 50, note 90, line 2 from bottom, after "and" insert
+ "which."
+
+ Page 53, note 93, line 5 from bottom, for _Pandalus varius_,
+ read _Hippolyte varians_ (corrected in Index).
+
+
+_Jarrold & Sons, The Empire Press, Norwich and London._
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+ Spelling and punctuation are retained as in the original.
+
+ Footnotes were kept as close to the referring paragraph as
+ practicable. They are essentially part of the text.
+
+ The errata section was moved to the end of the book and its changes
+ are entered.
+
+ The following words appear both with and without hyphens.
+
+ Bee-bird
+ Fly-catcher
+ fresh-water
+ Gar-fish
+ Goat-sucker
+ marsh-bird
+ Needle-fish
+ north-west
+ Saw-fish
+ sea-shoare
+ sea-shore
+ whole-footed
+
+ [=m] indicates a double m; e.g. co[=m]on.
+ [=u] indicates a letter u with macron above.
+ w^{ch} indicates multiple letters are superscripted.
+ y^r indicates a single superscripted letter.
+
+
+ Footnote 98
+
+ 'Both Vipers (or Adders) and Snakes, the latter in particular,'
+
+ 'latte ' included a following space, so made the assumption that
+ the word here is 'latter'.
+
+ Changed.
+
+
+ Page 13
+
+ 'Mergus acutarostris cinereus'
+
+ 'acutarostris' may be 'acutirostris' as used elsewhere.
+
+ Spelled as in original.
+
+
+ Page 39
+
+ 'sprdding the finnes into a liuely posture do hang them'
+
+ 'sprdding' is an odd spelling for spreading.
+
+ Spelled as in original.
+
+
+ Page 45
+
+ 'with a long & strong aculeus in the tayle conceuud of'
+
+ 'conceuud' is an odd spelling.
+
+ Unchanged.
+
+
+ Page 76
+
+ 'A yarewhelp or barker [some words smeared out]'
+
+ Closing bracket added.
+
+
+ Page 91
+
+ 'came out of his nostrells. thus much ffrom him who doth'
+
+ 'ffrom' matches original.
+
+ Double 'ff' occurs several places in the book.
+
+
+ Page 93
+
+ 'or Joannes Goropius (as the name is variously given in the
+ "Biographie Universelle" (b. 1518, d. 1572),'
+
+ Missing closed parenthesis.
+
+ Unchanged.
+
+
+ Index 'Notonacton'
+
+ 'Notonacton'
+
+ Refers to 'Notonecton' in all cases.
+
+ Unchanged.
+
+
+ Index 'Porbeagle'
+
+ 'Porbeagle'
+
+ '57' may be a typo for '37'
+
+ Porbeagle is also known as 'Canis carcharius alius' or 'canis
+ charcharius alius Jonst.' or 'Lamna cornubica'.
+
+ Unchanged.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Letters on the Natural
+History of Norfolk, by Thomas Browne
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NATURAL HISTORY OF NORFOLK ***
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