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came we found her just at it; but we were here very early, we were here an hour before sun-rise, and have given her no rest since we came; sure, she will hardly escape all these dogs and men. I am to have the skin, if we kill her.

VEN. Why, Sir, what's the skin worth?

HUNT. 'Tis worth ten shillings to make gloves; the gloves of an Otter are the best fortification for your hands that can be thought on against wet weather.

PISC. I pray, honest Huntsman, let me ask you a pleasant question; do you hunt a beast or a fish?

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HUNT. Sir, it is not in my power to resolve you; I leave it to be resolved by the College of Carthusians, who have made vows never to eat flesh. But, I have heard, the question hath been debated among many great clerks, and they seem to differ about it: yet most agree that her tail is fish; and if her body be

fish too, then I may say that a fish will walk upon land, for an Otter does so sometimes five or six or ten miles in a night, to catch for her young ones, or to glut herself with fish; and I can tell you that Pigeons will fly forty miles for a breakfast; but, Sir, I am sure the Otter devours much fish, and kills and spoils much more than he eats and I can tell you that this Dog-fisher, for so the Latins call him, can smell a fish in the water an hundred yards from him,-Gesner says much farther; and that his stones are good against the falling-sickness; and that there is an herb, Benione, which being hung in a linen cloth near a fish-pond, or any haunt that he uses, makes him to avoid the place; which proves he smells both by water and land: and I can tell you there is brave hunting this Water-dog in Cornwall, where there have been so many, that our learned Camden says there is a river called Ottersey, which was so named by reason of the abundance of Otters that bred and fed in it.

And thus much for my knowledge of the Otter, which you may now see above water at vent, and the dogs close with him; I now see he will not last long: follow therefore, my masters, follow; for Sweetlips was like to have him at this last vent.

VEN. Oh me! all the horse are got over the river; what shall we do now? shall we follow them over the water?

HUNT. No, Sir, no; be not so eager; stay a little and follow me, for both they and the dogs will be suddenly on this side again, I warrant you; and the

Otter too, it may be: now have at him with Kilbuck, for he vents again.

VEN. Marry, so he does; for look, he vents in that corner. Now, now Ringwood has him: now he's gone again, and has bit the poor dog. Now Sweetlips has her; hold her, Sweetlips! now all the dogs have her, some above and some under water; but now, now she's tired, and past losing: come, bring her to me, Sweetlips. Look, 'tis a bitch Otter, and she has lately whelped: let's go to the place where she was put down, and not far from it you will find all her young ones, I dare warrant you, and kill them all too.

HUNT. Come, gentlemen, come all; let's go to the place where we put down the Otter. Look you, hereabout it was that she kennelled; look you, here it was indeed, for here's her young ones, no less than five; come, let's kill them all.

PISC. No; I pray, Sir, save me one, and I'll try if I can make her tame, as I know an ingenious gentleman in Leicestershire, Mr. Nich. Seagrave, has done; who hath not only made her tame, but to catch fish, and do many other things of much pleasure.

HUNT. Take one with all my heart, but let us kill the rest. And now let's go to an honest ale-house, where we may have a cup of good barley-wine, and sing Old Rose, and all of us rejoice together.

VEN. Come, my friend Piscator, let me invite you along with us. I'll bear your charges this night, and you shall bear mine to-morrow; for my intention is to accompany you a day or two in fishing.

Pisc. Sir, your request is granted; and I shall be right glad, both to exchange such a courtesy, and also enjoy your company.

VEN. Well, now let's go to your sport of Angling. PISC. Let's be going with all my heart. God keep you all, Gentlemen, and send you meet this day with another bitch Otter, and kill her merrily, and all her young ones too.

VEN. Now, Piscator, where will you begin to fish? PISC. We are not yet come to a likely place; I must walk a mile further yet, before I begin.

VEN. Well then, I pray, as we walk tell me freely, how do you like your lodging, and mine host, and the company? Is not mine host a witty man?

Pisc. Sir, I will tell you presently what I think of your host; but first I will tell you, I am glad these Otters were killed, and I am sorry that there are no more Otter-killers: for I know that the want of Otterkillers, and the not keeping the fence-months for the preservation of fish, will in time prove the destruction of all rivers; and those very few that are left, that make conscience of the laws of the nation, and of keeping days of abstinence, will be forced to eat flesh, or suffer more inconveniences than are yet foreseen.

VEN. Why, Sir, what be those that you call the fence-months?

PISC. Sir, they be principally three, namely, March,

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April, and May, for these be the usual months that Salmon come out of the sea to spawn in most fresh rivers; and their fry would, about a certain time, return back to the salt water, if they were not hindered by wears and unlawful gins, which the greedy fishermen set and so destroy them by thousands, as they would, being so taught by nature, change the fresh for salt water. He that shall view the wise statutes made in the 13th of Edward I., and the like in Richard II., may see several provisions made against the destruction of fish and though I profess no knowledge of the law, yet I am sure the regulation of these defects might be easily mended. But I remember that a wise friend of mine did usually say, That which is every body's business, is no body's business." If it were otherwise, there could not be so many nets and fish, that are under the statute-size, sold daily amongst us, and of which the conservators of the waters should be ashamed.

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But above all, the taking fish in spawning-time may be said to be against nature; it is like the taking the dam on the nest when she hatches her young: a sin so against nature, that Almighty God hath in the Levitical law made a law against it.

But the poor fish have enemies enough beside such unnatural fishermen; as namely, the Otters that I spake of, the Cormorant, the Bittern, the Osprey, the Sea-gull, the Heron, the King-fisher, the Gorara, the Puet, the Swan, Goose, Duck, and the Craber, which some call the Water-rat: against all which any honest

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