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Chapter 18. OF THE
MINNOW OR PENK, OF THE LOACH, AND OF THE BULL-HEAD, OR MILLER'S-THUMB
PISCATOR. There be also three or four other little fish that I had almost forgot, that all are without scales; and may, for excellency of meat, be compared to any fish of greatest value and largest size. They be usually full of eggs or spawn all the months of sum mer; for they breed often, as 'tis observed mice and many of the smaller four-footed creatures of the earth do; and as those, so these come quickly to their full growth and perfection. And it is needful that they breed both often and numerously; for they be, besides other accidents of ruin, both a prey and baits for other fish. And first I shall tell you of the Minnow or Penk. The Minnow
hath,
when he is in perfect season and not sick, which is only presently
after
spawning, — a kind of dappled or waved color, like to a panther, on his
sides,
inclining to a greenish and sky-color, his belly being milk-white, and
his back
almost black or blackish. He is a sharp biter at a small worm, and in
hot
weather makes excellent sport for young Anglers, or boys, or women that
love
that recreation. And in the spring they make of them excellent
Minnow-Tansies;
for, being washed well in salt, and their heads and tails cut off, and
their
guts taken out, and not washed after, — they prove excellent for that
use; that
is, being fried with yolks of eggs, the flowers of cowslips, and of
prim
roses, and a little tansy; thus used they make a dainty dish of meat. The Loach
is, as I
told you, a most dainty fish: he breeds and feeds in little and clear
swift
brooks, or rills, and lives there upon the gravel, and in the sharpest
streams:
he grows not to be above a finger long, and no thicker than is suitable
to that
length. This Loach is not unlike the shape of the Eel: he has a beard
or
wattles like a Barbel. He has two fins at his sides, four at his belly,
and one
at his tail; he is dappled with many black or brown spots; his mouth is
Barbel-like under his nose. This fish is usually full of eggs or spawn,
and is
by Gesner, and other learned physicians, com mended for great
nourishment, and
to be very grateful both to the palate and stomach of sick persons. He
is to be
fished for with a very small worm at the bottom; for he very seldom or
never
rises above the gravel, on which, I told you, he usually gets his
living. The
Miller's-Thumb
or Bull-Head, is a fish of no pleasing shape. He is by Gesner compared
to the
Sea-toad-fish, for his similitude and shape. It has a head, big and
flat, much
greater than suitable to his body; a mouth very wide and usually
gaping. He is
without teeth, but his lips are very rough, much like to a file. He
hath two
fins near to his gills, which be roundish or crested; two fins also
under the
belly; two on the back; one below the vent; and the fin of his tail is
round.
Nature hath painted the body of this fish with whitish, blackish,
brownish
spots. They be usually full of eggs or spawn all the summer, I mean the
females; and those eggs swell their vents almost into the form of a
dug. They
begin to spawn about April, and, as I told you, spawn several months in
the
summer. And in the winter, the Minnow, and Loach, and Bull-Head dwell
in the
mud, as the Eel doth, or we know not where; no more than we know where
the
cuckoo and swallow, and other half-year birds, which first appear to us
in
April, spend their six cold, winter, melancholy months. This Bull-Head
does
usually dwell and hide himself in holes, or amongst stones, in clear
water: and
in very hot days will lie a long time very still, and sun himself, and
will be
easy to be seen upon any flat stone, or any gravel; at which time he
will
suffer an Angler to put a hook baited with a small worm very near unto
his very
mouth: and he never refuses to bite, nor indeed to be caught with the
worst of
Anglers. Matthiolus commends him much more for his taste and
nourishment than
for his shape or beauty. There is
also a
little fish called a Sticklebag: a fish without scales, but hath his
body
fenced with several prickles. I know not where he dwells in winter, nor
what he
is good for in summer, but only to make sport for boys and
women-anglers, and
to feed other fish that be fish of prey, as Trouts in particular, who
will bite
at him as at a Penk; and better, if your hook be rightly baited with
him: for
he may be so baited as, his tail turning like the sail of a windmill,
will make
him turn more quick than any Penk or Min now can. For note, that the
nimble
turning of that, or the Minnow, is the perfection of Minnow fishing. To
which
end, if you put your hook into his mouth, and out at his tail; and
then, having
first tied him with white thread a little above his tail, and placed
him after
such a manner on your hook as he is like to turn, then sew up his mouth
to your
line, and he is like to turn quick, and tempt any Trout: but if he does
not
turn quick, then turn his tail a little more or less towards the inner
part, or
towards the side of the hook; or put the Minnow or Sticklebag a little
more
crooked or more straight on your hook, until it will turn both true and
fast:
and then doubt not but to tempt any great Trout that lies in a swift
stream.
And the Loach that I told you of will do the like: no bait is more
tempting,
provided the Loach be not too big. And now,
Scholar,
with the help of this fine morning, and your patient attention, I have
said all
that my present memory will afford me concerning most of the several
fish that
are usually fished for in fresh waters. VEN. But,
Master,
you have, by your former civility, made me hope that you will make good
your
promise, and say something of the several rivers that be of most note
in this
nation; and also of fish-ponds, and the ordering of them: and do it, I
pray,
good Master, for I love any discourse of rivers, and fish and fishing:
the time
spent in such discourse passes away very pleasantly. |