[Fol 43 verso.] Barganders [[see Note 18]] not so rare as Turn [Turner] makes them comm̄on 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, comm̄on 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 Betulæ 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.