4-
*rf
I
**k.
/<
BR1TI SH ZOOIiO&X .
CliASS III. REPTILES
IV. FISH
jvr.
Printed for Beirj. "White,
MDCCLXXVI.
BRITISH ZOOLOGY.
t
VOL. Ill
Class III. REPTILES.
IV. F I S H.
WARRINGTON:
PRINTED BY WILLIAM EYRES,
FOR BENJAMIN WHITE, AT HORACE'S HEAP,
FLEET-STREET, LONDON.
MDCCLXXVI,
PLATES
T O
BRITISH ZOOLOGY,
VOL. III. OCTAVO.
Plates^
RO NT IS PIECE, Roach,
to face the Title
I. Coriaceous Tortoise - Page 7 C
II. Brown Lizard?
Scaly Lizard J
III. Warty Lizard - — 23
IV. Viper - *1
Blind Worm > - -26
Ringed Snake J
V. Explanation of Technical Terms 46
VI. Blunt-headed Cachalot - - 61
VII. Teeth of Cetaceous Fish - 62
VIII. Lam pries - - 7 6
IX. Skate - - - 82
X. Electric Ray - . - 89
XL Thornback - "93
XII. Thornback-Underside - ^3
* XII. Angel Shark - 98
XIII. Basking Shark - - 101
XIV. Long-tailed Shark - no
XV. Greater and Lesser Spotted
Sharks
XVI. Smooth Shark - II6
Vol. III. a XVIL
PL A T E S.
Plates.
XVII.
Beaumaris Shark
- Page
n8
XVIII.
Common Angler
-
I20
XIX.
Oblong DiodonI
Short Diodon /*
-
124
Sturgeon J
XX.
Globe Diodon
_
132
XXI.
Lump Sucker 7
Unctuous Sucker S
-
*33
XXII.
Bimaculated Suckef
} -
137
Jura Sucker
XXIII.
Pipe Fish
-
13B
XXIV.
Wolf Fish
I51
XXV.
Morris 7
Launce >
-
i56
XXVI.
Sword Fish
-
160
XXVII.
Dragonet
-
164
XXVIII.
Dragonet 7
Common Weever S
-
167
XXIX.
Greater Weever
_
171
XXX.
Poor i
Bib S
-
184
XXXI.
Forked Hake )
Coal Fish *
.
186
XXXII.
Trifurcated Hake
-
196
XXXIII.
Five-bearded Cod
} -
201
Three-bearded Cod
XXXIV.
Torsk
-
203
XXXV.
Gattorugine 1
Crested Blenny r
-
206
Spotted Blenny -J
XXXVL
PLATES.
Plates.
XXXVI.
XXXVII.
XXXVIII.
XXXIX.
XL,
XLI.
XLII.
XLIII.
XLIV.
XLV.
XLVI.
XLVII.
XLVIII.
XLIX.
L.
LL
LII
LIII.
LIV,
LV
LVI
Smooth Blenny - Page
Viviparous Blenny?
Spotted Goby S
Black Goby
Armed Bullhead -i
River B jllhead J
Father Lasher -
Smear Dab /
Doree i
Lunulated Gilt HeadI
Opah j
Toothed Gilt Head
Ballan
Striped Wrasse -
Gibbous Wrasse - 1
Trimaculated Wrasse)
Comber Wrasse
Antient Wrasse
GOLDSINNY
Perch - ">
Sea Perch \
Basse
Sticklebacks -
Scad - 7
Mackrel 3
Tunny
Striped Surmullet
, Grey Gurnard -
. Piper
. Sapphirine Gurnard
2o3
211
- 213
- 2l6
- 2l8
- 221
- 223
- 243
- 246
- 249
- 25O
■\
25I
254
257
26l
264
266
274
276
279
280
LVH.
PLATES.
Plates.
LVII. Red Gurnard 7
Streaked Gurnard $ Page *Sl
LVIII. Salmon 7
Loche S
LIX. Samlet
Trout
LX. Charr - ^ joe
LXL Grayling 7
Smelt £ ^
LXII. Gwiniad - - 316
!
- 282
- 297
} -
LXIIL Pike
Sea Pike
LXIV. Saury
LXV. Argentine
Atherine
LXVI. Mullet
Parr
LXVII. Flying Fish
Anchovy
LXVIII. Pilchard
Herring
LXIX. White Bait
Shad
LXX. Carp
Bream
LXXI. Bareel • - 357
LXXII. Crusian 7
Ruo { ' " ^
LXXIII. Chub ?
Bleak i ' " *6i
1
" 32°
- 3*5
- 327
- 329
- 333
• 335
- 348
" 353
CLASS III.
REPTILES.
All the works of the L^rd are good, and he
will give every needful thing in due feafon.
So that a man cannot fay tuis is worfe than
that, for in time they fhall all be well approved.
ECCLESIASTICUS XXXIX. ^ 34.
Vol. III. B
REPTILES
WE are now to confider the clafs of Reptiles,
which are, for the moil part, objects of
deteftation ; but however the opinion of the world
may be, if a writer undertakes a general hiftory
of animals, he mud include them : they form at
left one link in the chain of beings, and may
therefore be viewed with a degree of pleafure by a
philofophic eye.
But notwithftanding the prejudice againft this
clafs is almoft univerfal, is it founded on reafon ?
In fome it may be owned that the outward form is
difagreeable, while the noxious qualities of others
are juftly productive of terror : but are we on that
account to reject them ? The more fatal they
are, the more deeply we fhould enquire into their
effects, that we may be capable of relieving thofe
who are fufferers, and fecure ethers from the fame
misfortune. But if we duly weigh their noxious
qualities, we mall, with our moral poet, find
£ All partial evil univerfal good. "
B 2 The
4- REPTILES.
The teeth of wild beafts, and of ferpents, are
not only created as inftruments of vengeance, but
are falutary in leffening the numbers of thofe ani-
mals which are highly ufeful in the degree, and
only hurtful in their excefs ; but if therr bad qua-
lities are ferviceable, we are more indebted to their
good ones than we chufe to acknowlege.
But many of the animals that form this clafs are
of immediate benefit to mankind. The Turtle,
or Sea-Tortoife, fupplies the torrid zone with a
wholefome and delicious food, as the epicures of
our own country can atteft. Frogs are a food in
feveral parts, as Lizards and Serpents are in others.
The medicinal virtues of the Viper are partly
exploded by the moderns, but time, the over-
thrower of fyftems, as well as empires, may reftore
it to the rank it held with the antients. The La-
eerta Scincus is, however, yet efteemed in the Eaft
for its falubrious qualities, and even Toads have
contributed to the eafe of patients in the moil in-
veterate of all difeafes.
Had I followed Linnaus^ and included the Car-
tilaginous Fifti in this clafs, there would have
been ample room for panegyric, for it is very
doubtful whether any are pernicious*, but the ufe
of many, either as food or for mechanical pur-
pofes, were never queftioned.
But if the external figure of the reptile tribe is
difgufting, they have one general beauty, an apt
configuration of parts for their way of life, nor
arc
REPTILES.
are they deftitute of their peculiar graces : the fine
difpofition of plates in the fhell of the Tortoife,
with the elegant fymmetry of their colors, muft
ftrike even common obfervers, while the eye of
the defpifed Toad has a luftre denied to more
pleafing forms. The frolicfome agility of Lizards
enlivens the dried banks in hot climates ; and the
great affection which ibme of them ihew to man-
kind, mould farther engage our regard and
attention.
The wreathing of the fnake, with the vivid die
of its fkin, are certainly graceful, tho' from the
dread of fome particular fpecies which are venem-
ous, we have acquired an antipathy for the whole.
The antients, who confidered the Serpent as an
emblem of health, could afibciate pleafing ideas
with this animal. We therefore find it an orna-
ment at every entertainment, and in every fcene of
mirth, both in painting and in fculpture. Virgil
adopted this notion, and has accordingly defcribed
it with every beauty both of form and color,
Adytis cum lubricus anguis ab mis
Sept em ingens gyros, feptena volumina traxit ->
Amplexus placide tumulum, lapfufque per aras :
Ccerultea cm terga nota^ maculofus et auro
Squamam incendebat fulgor -, ceu nubibus arms
Milk trahit varios adverfo file color es.
V. 84.
B 3 From
6 REPTILES.
From the deep tomb, with many a mining fold,
An azure ferpent rofe, in fcales that flam'd with gold :
Like heaven's bright bow his varying beauties fhone
That draws a thoufand colors from the fun :
Pleas'd round the altars and the tomb to wind,
His glittering length of volumes trails behind.
Pitt.
But if after all fome lively writer mould pur-
fue the Naturalifts with more wit than argument,
and more humor than good-nature, it mould be
endured with patience. Ridicule is, however, not
the teft of truth, tho' when joined to fatyr, it fel-
dom fails of feducing the many who would rather
laugh than think. Should this prove the cafe in
the prefent inftance, let the author be allowed to
fkreen himfelf from cenfure, by faying he writes
not to the many, but the few ; to thofe alone who
tan examine the parts with a view to the whole %
and who fcorn to defpife even the moft deformed,
or the moft minute work of an all-wife Creator.
GENERA.
I. TORTOISE.
H. FRO G.
III. LIZARD.
IV. SERPENT.
El I
COHIATEOITS TORTOISE
III.
REPTILES.
Body covered either with a fhell or ftrono; hide, L '
7 to ' TORTOISE.
divided by futures.; four fin-like feet ; a fhort tail.
Teitudo coriacea five Mercu- ticis, tefta coriacea, cauda i. Coriace-
rii. Rondel. 450? Gefner angulis feptem exaratis. ous.
pifc. 946 ? Lin. fyfi. 350.
Teitudo coriacea ? Teftudo Turtle. Borlafe Cornwall,
pedibus pinniformibus mu- 285. Plate 27.
THIS fpecies is common to the Medi-
terranean, and to our fouthern feas,
and is not, as far as we know, dis-
covered in any other.
Two were taken on the coaft of Cornwall in the
mackrel nets, of a vail: fize, a little after Mid/urn-
mer 1756; the largeft weighed eight hundred
pounds, the ierTer near feven hundred. A third,
of equal weight with the firft, was caught on the
B 4 coaft
CORIACEOUS TORTOISE. Class III.
coaft of Dorfetjhire^ and depofited in the Leverian
Mufeum.
The length of the body is four feet ten inches y
of the head nine inches and a half j of the neck
three; or of the whole five feet twelve. The
upper jaw bifurcated at the end : the extremity
of the lower fharp, clafping into the fork of the up-
per. The noftrils fmall and round.
The breadth of the body in the largeft part is
three feet. The length of the fore fins two feet
feven : of the hind thirteen inches and a half: are
fmooth, grow pointed to the extremity, and are
deftitute of toes. Thefe fins are (tufted : perhaps
the bones might have been taken out ; for in the
figure given by Rondeletius, which agrees in all
other refpecls with this fpecies, there is appearance
of toes, and even nails. -
The body is covered with a ftrong hide, ex-
actly reiembling black leather, deftitute of fcales,
but marked with the appearance. The back is di-
vided into five longitudinal fiutings or grooves,
with as many fharp but fmooth rifings.
This fpecies is faid to be extremely fat : . but the
fiefh coarfe and bad *, according to the report made
by writers who had opportunity of tailing them in
the Mediterranean fea. I am informed that the
Carthifians will eat no other than this fpecies.
* Ronddetius, Bojfuet,
Body
Class III. COMMON FROG
Body naked. H.
PR Of
Four legs, the feet divided into toes.
No tail.
U«t^x®". Arift. Hiji. an. Waffer Frofche. Meyer an. I. 2. Common,
Lib. IV. c. 9.' Fab. 52-
La Grenoille. Belon poij/bns, Rana temporaria- R. dorfo
,g# planiufculo fubangulato.
Rana fiuviorum. Rondel. 21 7. Lin.fyft. 357.
Ranaaquaticainnoxia. G^/w*/* Groda, Fro, Klafla. F«o»*
2««^. e<z/z>. 46. ^^//7 $*»• No- 102.
g0-# Rana. Gronov. Zoopb. No.
Rana aquatica. Raiifyn. quad. 02.
447-
SO common and well-known an animal re-
quires no defcription ; but fome of its pro-
perties are fo fingular, that we cannot pafs them
unnoticed.
Its fpring or power of taking large leaps is re-
markably great, and it is the befl fwimmer of all
four-footed animals. Nature hath finely adapted
its parts for thofe ends, the fore members of the
body being very lightly made, the hind legs and
thighs very long, and furnifhed .with very itrong
mufcles.
While in a tadpole ftate, it is entirely a water
animal \ the work of generation is performed in
that element, as may be feen in every pond during
fpring 1
TION.
SO COMMON FROG. Class HE
fpring; when the female remains opprefled by
the male for a number of days.
^^ERA" The work of propagation is extremely fingular,
it being certain that the frog has not a penis intrans ;
there appears a ftrong analogy in this cafe between
a certain clafs of the vegetable kingdom and thofe
animals ; for it is well known, that when the
female frog depofits its fpawn, the male inftan-
taneouily impregnates it with what we may call
a farina fcecundans^ in the fame manner as the
male Palm tree conveys fructification to the flow-
ers of the female, which would othei'wife be bar-
ren*.
As foon as the frogs are releafed from their tad-
pole (late, they immediately take to land •, and if
the weather has been hot, and there fall any re-
freftiing mowers, you may fee the ground for a
confiderable fpace perfectly blackened by myriads
of thefe animalcules, feeking for fome fecure lurk-
ing places. Some philofophers -f- not giving them-
felves time to examine into this phenomenon, ima-
gined them to have been generated in the clouds,
and fhowered on the earth ; but had they, like our
Derham%> but traced them to the next pool, they
would have found a better folution of the difficulty.
As frogs adhere clofely to the backs of their own
fpecies, fo we know they will do the fame by fifh :
Walton § mentions a ftrange ftory of their deftroy-
* Shaw's Travels, 224. HaJJelquiJl Trav. Engl. Ed. 416.
f Rondtletius, 216. War mil Muf. 327.
X Ray1* Wifdom Great. 316. % Complete Angler, 161.
ing
Class III. COMMON FROG. n
ing pike ; but that they will injure, if not entirely
kill carp, is a fact indifputable, from the following
relation : a very few years ago, on fifliing a pond
belonging to Mr. P/V, of Encomb^ DorfetJhire9
great numbers of the carp were found each with
a frog mounted on it, the hind legs clinging to
the back, the fore legs fixed in the corner of eacli
eye of the fifh, which were thirs and greatly waited,
teized by carrying fo difagreeable a load. Thefe
frogs we imagine to have been males difappointed
of a mate.
The croaking of frogs is well known, and from
that in fenny countries they are diftinguifhed by
ludicrous titles, thus they are (tiled Dutch Nightin-
gales and B oft on IVaites ; even the Stygian frogs
have not efcaped notice, for Ariftophanes hath gone
farther, and formed a chorus of them.
AlfAVcilJt xgyvuv TSHVCC '
Brekekex, coax, coax,
Brekekex, coax, coax,
The offspring of the pools and fountains.
Yet there is a time of year when they be- Per iodic as
come mute, neither croaking nor opening their
mouths for a whole month : this happens in the
hot feafon, and that is in many places known
* Comedy of the Frogs,
to
IZ COMMON FROG. Class III.
to the country people by the name of the Paddock
Moon, I am informed that for that period, their
months are fo clofed, that no force (without kil-
ling the animal) will be capable of opening them.
Morton* endeavours to find a reafon for their
filence, but tho' his facts are true, he is unfortu-
nate in his philofophy. Frogs are certainly endued
(as he well obferv^d) with a power of living a
good while under water without refpiration, which
is owing to their lungs being compofed of a feries
of bladders: but he miftakes the nature of air, when
he affirms that they receive a quantity of cool air,
and dare not open their mouths for a month,
from a dread of admitting a warmer into their
lungs. It is hardly necefTary to fay, that in what-
ever ftate the air was received, it would affirftilate
itfelf to the external atmofphere in a fhort time.
We muft leave the fa£t to be accounted for by
farther experiments. But from what we do know,
we may partly vindicate 'Tbeophraftus, and other
antients, about the filence of the frogs at Seriphus.
That philofopher affirms it, but afcribes it to the
coldnefs of the waters in that ifland : Now when
Monfieur tfournefort was there, the waters were
lukewarm, and the frogs had recovered their
voices f. Is it not probable that Theophrajlus
might be at Seriphus at that feafon when the frogs
were mute, and having never obferved it elfewhere,
* Hijl, Northampt. 441.
f Tourneforfs voj, I. 142.
might
Class III. EDIBLE FROG. 13
might conclude their filence to be general as to
the time, but particular as to the place. JElzan*,
who quotes Theophraftus for the lad paflage,
afcribes the fame filence to, the frogs of the lake
Pier us in Tbejfaly, and about Cyrene in Africa : but
he is fo uncertain a writer, that we cannot affirm
whether the fpecies of the African frogs is the fame
with ours.
Thefe, as well as other reptiles, feed but a Food.
fmall fpace of the year. The food of this genus
is flies, infects, and fnails. Toads are faid to feed
alfo on bees, and to do great injury to thofe ufeful
infects.
During winter frogs and toads remain in a tor-
pid date : the laft of which will dig into the earth,
and cover themfelves with almoft the fame agility
as the mole.
Rana gibbofa. Gefner pifc. R. corpore angulato, dorfo 3* Edible,
809. tranfverfe gib bo, abdomine
Rana efculenta. Lin. fyfi. marginato. Ibid*
357. Faun. Suec. No. 279.
>T*HIS differs from the former in having a
•*• high protuberance in the middle of the back,
forming a very fharp angle. Its colors are allc*
more vivid, and its marks more diftinctj the ground
* MiM) lib, HI, cb, 35, 37.
color
14 TO A D. Class III.
color being a pale or yellowifh green, marked with
rows of black fpots from the head to the rump.
This and, we think, the former, are eaten.
We have feen in the markets at Paris whole ham-
pers full, which the venders were preparing for
the table, by fkinning and cutting off the fore-
parts, die loins and legs only being kept. Our
flrong diflike to thefe reptils, prevented a clofe ex-
amination into the fpecies.
Toad. 3>£w@r. Arifi. Hiji. an. lib. Bufo rubetaruai. Klein quad.
ix. c. I. 40. 122.
Bufo Virg. Georg. I. 184. Rana Bufo. R. corpore
Rubeta. Plin. lib. VIII. c, ventricofo, verrucofo lurido
31. fufcoque. Lin. fyfi. 354.
Rubeta. fc. Phrynum. Gefner Parida, TaiTa. Faun. J'uec.
pifc. 807. Rondel, 222. No. 275.
Bufo five Rtibeta. Rati fyn. Gronov. Zooph. No. 64.
quad. 252.
'"JpHE mod deformed and hideous of all ani-
•*> mals; the body broad, the back flat, and
covered with a pimply dufky hide \ the belly large,
fwagging, and fwelling out; the legs fhort, and
its pace labored and crawling : its retreat gloomy
and filthy : in fhort, its general appearance is fuch
as to ftrike one with difguft and horror \ yet we
have been told by thofe who have refolution to view
it with attention, that its eyes are fine : to this it
feems
Class III. TOAD. 15
ieems that Shake/pear alludes, when he makes his
Juliet remark,
Some fay the lark and loathed .toad change eyes.
As if they would have been better bellowed on fo
charming a fongfter than on this raucous reptile.
But the hideous appearance of the toad is fuch
as to make this one advantageous feature over-
looked, and to have rendered it in all ages an object
of horor, and the origin of moft tremendous inven-
tions. JElian * makes its venom fo potent, that
Bafilijk-Wk^ it conveyed death by its very look and
breath ; but Juvenal is content with making the
Roman ladies, who were weary of their hufbands,
form a potion from its intrails -f, in order to get
rid of the good man.
Occurrit Matrona potens, quae molle Calenum
Porrettura viro mifcet fitiente rubetara. Sat. I. 68.
To quench the hufband's parching thirft, is brought
By the great Dame, a moft deceitful draught ;
In rich Calenian wine fhe does infufe,
(To eafe his pains) the toad's envenom'd juice.
This .opinion begat others of a more dreadful
nature ; for in after-times fuperftition gave it pre-
ternatural powers, and made it a principal ingre-
dient in the incantations of nocturnal hags :
* Htji, an, lib. ix. c. II.
-f Sat, v\. 658, Vide Milan Uifl% an, lib, xvii. c. 12. and 15.
Toa4
*6 T O A t). Class III.
Toad that under the cold ftone,
Days and nights has, thirty-one,
Svvelter'd venom fleeping got,
Boil thou, firfi i'th' charmed pot.
We know by the poet that this charm was in-
tended for a defign of the firft confideration, that
of raifing the dead from their repofe, and bringing
before the eyes of Macbeth a hateful fecond-fight
of the profperity of Banquets line.
This fhews the mighty powers attributed to this
animal by the dealers in the magic art; but the
powers our poet indues it with, are far fuperior
to thofe that Gefner afcribes to it : Shake/pear's
witches ufed it to difturb the dead •, Gefner's^ only
to dill the living, Ut vim coeundi mfallor, in viris
toller ent *.
Toad- We may add here another fuperftition in refpect.
to this animal : it was believed by fome old writers
to have a ftone in its head, fraught with great
virtues medical and magical: it was diftinguifhed
by the name of the Reptile, and called the Toad-
Stone, Bufonites, Crapaudine, Krottenftein f ; but all
its fancied powers vanifhed on the difcovery of its
being nothing but the foflil tooth of the fea-wolf,
or of fome flat-toothed fifh, not unfrequent in our
ifland, as well as feveral other countries \ but we
may well excufe this tale, fince Shake/pear has ex-
traded from it a fimile of uncommon beauty :
* Hiji. quad, o-vip. J 2,
f Boet. de Boot, de Lap, et Gem, 301. 303.
Sweet
STONE,
Class III. TOAD. 17
Sv/eet are the ufes of adverfity,
Which, like the toad, ugly and venomous,
Wears yet a precious jewel in his head.
But thefe fables have been long exploded : we
fhall now return to the notion of its being a poi-
ibnous animal, and deliver, as our opinion, that its
excefiive deformity, joined to the faculty it has
of emitting a juice from its pimples, and a dufky
liquid from its hind parts, is the foundation of the
report.
That it has any noxious qualities we have been
unable to bring proofs in the fmallefl: degree fa-
tisfactory, though we have heard many ftrange re-
lations on that point.
On the contrary, we know feveral of our friends
who have taken them in their naked hands, and
held them long without receiving the left injury:
It is alio well known that quacks have eaten them, Not Poison.
and have befides fqueezed their juices into a glafs,
and drank them with impunity.
We may fay alfo, that thefe reptiles are a com-
mon food to many animals ; to buzzards, owls,
Norfolk plovers, ducks, and fnakes, who would not
touch them were they in any degree noxious.
So far from having venomous qualities, they have
of late been confidered as if they had beneficent
ones. We wifh, for the benefit of mankind, that
we could make a favorable report of the many at-
tempts of late to cure the moft terrible of difeafes
Vol. III. C the
ous.
TION.
TOAD. Class III.
the cancer, by the application of live toads ; but,
alas, they feem only to have rendered a horrible
complaint more loathfome. My enquiries on this
fubjecl:, and fome further particulars relating to the
hiftory of this animal, may be found in the Ap-
pendix.
In a word, we may confider the toad as an
animal that has neither good nor harm in. it ; that
being a defencelefs creature, nature had furnifhed
it, inftead of arms, with a mod difgufting defor-
mity, that ftrikes into almoft every being capable
of annoying it, a ftrong repugnancy to meddle
with fo hideous and threatening an appearance.
Genera- The time of their propagation is very early in
the fpring : at that feafon the females are feen
crawling about opprefTed by the males, who con-
tinue on them for fome hours, and adhere fo faft as
to tear the very fkin from the parts they (tick to.
They fpawn like frogs -, but what is fingular, the
male affords the female obftetrical aid, in a manner
that will be defcribed in the Appendix.
To conclude this account with the marvellous,
this animal is faid to have often been found in the
mid ft of folid rocks, and even in the centre of
growing trees, impriibned in a fmall hollow, to
which there was not the lead adit or entrance * :
how the animal breathed, or how it fubfifted (fup-
pofing the pofiibility of its confinement) is paft
* Plot's Hifi. Staff. 247.
our
Class III. NATTER JACK. 19
our comprehenfion. Plofs * folution of this phe-
nomenon is far from fatisfactory •, yet as we have
the great Bacon's f authority for the face, we do
not entirely deny our affent to it.
RanaRubeta? Lin. fyfl. 355. obtufo fubtus punftato. 5- Natter
Faun. Suec. No. 101. Ibid. JACK-
R. corpore verrucofo, ano
THIS fpecies frequents dry and fandy places:
it is found on Putney Common, and alfo
near Revejby Abby, LincGlnJIoire, where it is called
the Natter Jack. It never leaps, neither does it
crawl with the flow pace of a toad, but its motion
is liker to running. Several are found commonly-
together, and, like others of the genus, they ap-
pear in the evenings.
The upper part of the body is of a dirty yel-
low, clouded with brown, and covered with po-
rous pimples, of unequal fizes : on the back is a
yellow line.
The upper fide of the body is of a paler hue,
marked with black fpots, which are rather rough.
On the fore feet are four divided toes -9 on the
hind five, a little webbed.
The length of the body is two inches and a quar-
* P. 249.
f Nat. Hiji. Cent. vi. Exp. 570.
C 2 ter;
2C G R E A T F R O G. Class III.
ter ; the breadth, one and a quarter : the length of
the fore legs one inch one-fixth ; of the hind legs,
two inches.
We are indebted to Jofeph Banks, Efq; for this
account.
6. Great. TNHABITS the woods near Loch Ran/a, in the
A Ifle of Arran.
Is double the fize of the common frog: the
body fquare : belly great : legs fhort : four toes
on the fore-feet, four and a thumb to the hind ;
the fecond outmoft toe the longeft. The color
above, is a dirty olive, marked with great warty
fpots; the head alone plain. The color beneath
whitifh.
It leaped flowly.
Slender
1^
Class III. SCALY LIZARD.
zx
Slender naked body : four legs :
Divided toes on each :
Very long tail.
III.
LIZARD.
Lacertus terreftris lutea fqua-
mofa anglica. Rail fyn.
quad. 264.
Plott's Hifi. Staff. 252. tab.
22.
Lacerta agilis ? L. cauda ver-
ticillata longiufcula fquamis
acutis,collarifubtus fquamis
conftru&o. Lin, Jyft. 363.
Odla, Fyrfot. Faun. Suec. 7. Scaly.
No. 284.
Lacerta, Gronov. Zoopb. No.
60.
Little Brown Lizard. Edw.
225.
Padzher pou. Borlafe Corn-
wall, 284. tab. 28.
THOSE we have feen differ in color, but
agree in all other refpecls with the fpecies
defcribed by Doclor Plot. Their length from the
nofe to the hind-legs was three inches * from
thence to the end of the tail three and three quar-
ters.
Along the back was a black lift ; each fide of
that a brown one : then fucceeded a narrow ftripe,
fpotted alternately yellow and brown ; beneath that
a broad black one; thofe ended a little beyond
the hind-legs. The belly was yellow, and the
fcales large but even. The fcales on the back fmall ;
on the tail the ends projected : thofe on the latter
were varied with black and brown.
C3 The
2 SCALY LIZARD. Class III.
The legs and feet were dufky ; on each foot were
five toes, furnifhed with claws.
This fpecies is extremely nimble : in hot weather
it bafks on the fides of dry banks, or of old trees ;
but on being obferved immediately retreats to its
hole.
The food of this fpecies, as of all the other
Englijh lizards, is infects : they themfelves of birds
of prey. Each of our lizards are perfectly harm-
lefs ; yet their form is what ftrikes one with dif-
guit, and has occafioned great obfcurity in their
hillory.
Othfr Related to this fpecies is the Guernfey lizard,
which we are informed has been propagated in
England from fome originally brought from that
ifland. We have alfo heard of a green lizard
frequent near Farnham^ which probably may be of
that kind : but the mod uncommon fpecies we ever
met with any account of, is that which was killed
near F/ofcot^ in the parifh of Swinford, Worcefter-
Jhire, in 1741, which was two feet fix inches long,
and four inches in girth. The fore-legs were pla-
ced eight inches from the head ; the hind-legs five
inches beyond thofe: the legs two inches long:
the feet divided into four toes, each furnifhed with
a fharp claw. Another was killed at Penbury, in
the fame county. Whether thefe are not of exotic
defcent, and whether the breed continues, is what
we are at prefent uninformed of.
Lacertus
3H^.
I M
-:-.:
Class III. WARTY LIZARD. t$
Lacertus aquaticus. Gefner Lin. fyft. 370. S. Wart^
quad. o<vip. 31. Skrot-abborre, Gruffgrabbe.
Salamandra aquatica. Rati Faun. Suec. No. 281.
Jyn. quad. 273. Lacerta Americana. Seb. Mu/l
Lacerta paluftris. L. Cauda I. tab. 89. fig. 4, 5.
lanceolata mediocri, pedibus Salamandra alepidota vcrruco-
muticis palmis tetrada&ylis. fa. Gronoqj. Zoopb. No. 47.
THE length of this fpecies was fix inches and
an half, of which the tail was three and a
quarter.
The irides yellow : the head and beginning of
the back flat, and covered with fmall pimples or
warts, of a dark dulky color $ the fides with white
ones : the belly, and the fide of the tail, was of
a bright yellow ; the firft fpotted with black.
The tail was compreffed fideways, and very thin
towards the upper edge, and (lender towards the
end.
The fore-feet divided into four toes ; the hind
into five -, all without nails, duiky fpotted with
yellow.
Its pace is flow and crawling.
This fpecies we have frequently feen in the
(late we defcribe, but are uncertain whether we
ever met with it under the form of a larve. We
have more than once found under ftones and old
logs, fome very minute young lizards that had
rauch the appearance of this kind : they were
C 4 perfectly
24 BROWN LIZARD. Class III;
perfectly formed, and had not the lead veftiges
of fins; fo that circumftance, joined to their being
found in a dry place, remote from water, makes us
imagine them to have never been inhabitants of that
element, as it is certain many of our lizards are in
their firft ftate.
At that period they have a fin above and below
their tail ; that on the upper part extends along the
back as far as the head, but both drop off as foon
as the animal takes to the land, being then no
longer of any ufe.
Befides thefe circumftances that attend them in
form of a larve, Mr. Ellis * has remarked certain
pennated fins at the gills of one very common in
mod of our (lagnating waters, and which is fre-
quently obferved to take a bait like a fifh.
9. Brown. Lacertus vulg. terreftris ven- culatis, palmis tetrada&ylis,
tre tiigro maculate Rail dorfo linea duplici fufca.
Jyn. quad. 264. Lin. Jyfi. 370. Faun. Suec.
L. vulgaris. L. cauda tere- No. 283.
ti mediocri, pedibus ungui-
T HIS is three inches long: the body (lender;
the tail long, (lightly comprefTed, fmall and
taper-, that and the upper part of the body of a
pale brown, marked on each fide the back with a
* Phil Tran. Vol. LVI. P. 191.
narrow
Class III. ANGUINE LIZARD. 25
narrow black line reaching to the end of the tail :
the belly of a pale yellow, marked with fmall duf-
ky fpbts •, the toes formed like thofe of the prece-
ding.
Lacertus parvus terreftiis fufcus oppido rams. Raii Jyn. 10. Little.
quad. 264.
THIS fpecies is mentioned by Mr. Ray in his
lift of the Englijh lizards, without any other
defcription than is comprehended in the fynonym.
Lacertus terreilris anguiformis in ericetis. Raii Jyn. quad. 264. 11. An-
guine,
WE remain alfo in the iameobfcurity in refpect*
to this fpecies. It feems to be of that kind
which connecls the ferpent and lizard genus, hav-
ing a long and very (lender body, and very fmall
legs. Such are the Seps9 or Lacerta Chalcidica of
Raii Jyn. quad. 272, the Lacerta anguina of Linnaeus,
371, or that figured by Seba9 torn. ii. tab. 6$. un-
der the name of Vermis ferpentifofmis.
Long
Z6 VIPER. Class III.
,*Y.* Long and flender bodies, covered with fcaly plates
SERPENT. ^T *? ' J *
No feet.
12. Viper. "E%js. Ariji. Hifi, an. Mb. iii- tab. 28.
c. 1. Coluber Berus. Lin fyfi. 377.
Vipera. Virg. Georg. iii. 417. Huggorm Faun. Suec. No.
Plinii, lib. x. c. 42. 286. C. Berus fcutis ab-
Vipera. Gefner Serp. 71. dom. 146. fquamis caudse.
Viper, or Adder. ^*w7 Jyn. 39. /W.
^W. 285. Borl. Corn. 282. Amcen. Acad. I, 527.
VIPERS are found in many parts of this ifiand,
but the dry, ftony, and, in particular, the
chalky countries abound with them. They fwarm
in many of the Hebrides.
They are viviparous, not but that they are hatch-
ed from an internal egg \ being of that clafs of
animals, of whofe generation Ariftotle* fays,
Ev CtVTQl$ flEV &0OTOXEI TO T&MOV OJOV, E^CO 3s %<t)QT0KHf I- e. They
conceive a perfect egg within, but bring forth their
young alive.
Providence is extremely kind in making this fpe-
cies far from being prolific, we having never heard
of more than eleven eggs being found in one viper,
and thofe are as if chained together, and each about
the fize of a blackbird's egg.
» De Gen. an. Lib. III. f. 2.
two
Class HI. VIPER.
27
The viper grows feldom to a greater length than
two feet-, though once we faw a female (which is
nearly a third larger than the male) which was al-
moft three feet long.
The ground-color of this ferpent is a dirty yel- Descrip.
low ; that of the female deeper. Its back is marked
the whole length with a feries of rhomboid black
fpots, touching each other at the points ; the fides
with triangular ones ; the belly entirely black.
There is a variety wholly black -y but the rhom-
boid marks are very confpicuous even in this,
being of a deeper and more glofly hue than the
reft. Petiver calls it the Viper a Anglica Nigricans,
Pet. Muf. No. 204 *.
The head of the viper is inflated, which diftin-
guifhes it from the common fnake. The tongue
forked \ the teeth fmall ; the four canine teeth are Teeth
placed two on each fide the upper jaw : thefe in-
ftruments of poifon are long, crooked, and move-
able, and can be raifed and deprefTed at pleafure ;
they are hollow from near the point to their bale,
near which is a gland that fecretes, prepares, and
lodges the poifon ; and the fame action that gives
the wounds, forces from this gland, through the
tooth, the fatal juice into it.
Thefe iQands may be particularly thankful for
the bleiTing they enjoy, in being poiTelTed of only
* Coluber Preiler. Lin.fyft. 377. Bote. Faun. Suec, No. 287.
one
sS VIPER. Class III:
one venomous animal, and that of a kind which
encreafes fo little.
They copulate in May, and are fuppofed to
be about three months before they bring forth.
They are faid not to arrive at their full growth
in lefs than fix or feven years ; but that they are
capable of engendering at two or three.
We have been often afTured by intelligent people
of the truth of a fact mentioned by Sir 'Thomas
Brown*, who was far from a credulous writer,
that the young of the viper, when terrified, will
run down the throat of the parent, and feek fhel-
ter in its belly in the fame manner as the young of
the oppojfum retire into the ventral pouch of the old
one.
From this fome have imagined that the viper is
fo unnatural as to devour its own young-, we dif-
Food. believe the fact, it being well known that the food
of thefe ferpents is frogs, toads, lizards, mice, and,
according to Doctor Mead, even an animal fo large
as a mole. Thefe they fwallow entire-, which,
if we confider the narrownefs of their neck, fhews
it is capable of a diftenfion hardly credible, had
we not ocular proofs of the fact.
It is alfo faid, from good authority, that they will
prey on young birds -, whether on fuch as nettle
on the ground, or whether they climb up trees for
them as the Indian ferpents do, we are quite un-
* Vulgar errors, 114.
certain j
Class III. VIPER.
certain ; but we are well allured that this difco-
very is far from a recent one :
Ut ajjidens hnplumihus pullis avis
Set pentium allapfus timet *.
Thus, for its young the anxious bird
The gliding ferpent fears.
The viper is capable of fupporting very long
abftinence, it being known that fome have been
kept in a box fix months without food, yet did
not abate of their vivacity. They feed only a
fmall part of the year, but never during their con-
finement •, for if mice, their favorite diet, mould
at that time be thrown into their box, tho' they
will kill, yet they never will eat them.
The poifon decreafes in violence in proportion
to the length of their confinement : it muft be alfo
added, the virtues of its flefh (whatfoever they be)
are at the fame time confiderably leffened.
Thefe animals, when at liberty, remain torpid
throughout the winter ; yet when confined have
never been obferved to take their annual repofe.
The method of catching them is by putting a
cleft flick on or near their head \ after which they
are feized by the tail, and put infcantly into a bag.
The viper-catchers are very frequently bit by
them in the purfuit of their bufinefs, yet we very
9 Her. Epod. I.
rarely
29
p VIPER. Class III.
rarely hear of the bite being fatal. The remedy,
if applied in time, is very certain, and is nothing
elfe but fallad oil, which the viper- catchers feldom
go without. The axungia viperitia, or the fat
of vipers, is alfo another. Doctor Mead fufpects
the efficacy of this lad, and fubftitutes one of his
own in its place*-, but we had rather trull: to vul-
gar receipts which perpetual trials have fhewn to be
infallible.
The fymptoms of the venom, if the wound is
neglected, are very terrible : it firfl caufes an a-
cute pain in the place affected, attended with a
fwelling, firft red, afterwards livid, which by de-
grees fpreads to the neighboring parts ; great faint-
nefs, and a quick tho' low and interrupted pulfe
enfue ; great ficknefs at the ftomach, bilious
convulfive vomitings, cold fweats, and fometimes
pains about the navel; and in confequence of
thefe, death itfelf. But the violence of the fymp-
toms depends much on the feafon of the year, the
difference of the climate, the fize or rage of the
animal, or the depth or fituation of the wound.
Dreadful as the effects of its bite may be, yet its
ftefh has been long celebrated as a noble medi-
Uses. cine. Doctor Mead cites from Pliny, Galen, and
other antients, feveral proofs of its efficacy in the
cure of ulcers, the elephantiafis, and other bad com-
plaints. He even fays he has feen good effects
* JEJfay on Poi/ons, 47.
from
Class III. VIPER. 3!
from ft in an obftinate lepra : it is at prefent ufed
as a reftorative, tho' we think the modern phy-
ficians have no great dependence on its virtues.
The antients prefer ibed it boiled, and to be eaten
as fifh •, for when frefh, the medicine was much
more likely to take efFccl than when dried, and
given in form of a powder or troche. Mr. Kev/ler
relates that Sir Kenelm Digby ufed to feed his wife,
who was a molt beautiful woman, with capons fat-
tened with the flefh of vipers.
The antient Britons had a ftrange fuperftition in
refpect to tbefe animals, and of which there {till
remains in Wales a ftrong tradition. The account
Pliny gives of it is as follows: we mail not at-
tempt a tranflation, it being already done to our
hands in a fpirited manner by the ingenious Mr.
Mafon, which we (hall take the liberty of bor-
rowing.
Pr^terea eft ovorum genus in magna Galliarum
fama, omijjum G rase is. Angues innumeri reflate con-
volutin falivis faucium corporumque fpumis artifici
complexu glomeraniur ; anguinum appellatur. Dru-
id ae fibilis id dicunt in fublime jaffari, f ago que op or-
tere intercipi, ne tellurem atiingat : profugere rapto-
rem equo : ferpentes enim infequi, donee arceantur am-
nis alicujus interventu *.
* Lib. XXIX. <•. 3,
But
32 VIPER. Class III.
But tell me yet
From the grot of charms and fpells,
Where our matron filler dwells,
Brennusy has thy holy hand
Safely brought the Druid wand,
And the potent Adder --Jione,
Gender'd 'fore the autumnal moon ?
When in undulating twine,
The foaming fnakes prolific join ;
When they hifs, and when they bear
Their wond'rous egg aloof in air ;
Thence before to earth it fall,
The Druid in his hallow'd pall.
Receives the prize,
And inflant flies,
Follow'd by the envenom'd brood,
'Till he crofs the cryftal flood *.
This wondrous egg feems to be nothing more
than a bead of glafs, ufed by the Druids as a
charm to impofe on the vulgar, whom they taught
to believe, that the pofTeiTor would be fortunate
in all his attempts, and that it would gain him
the favor of the great.
Our modern Bruidejfes give much the fame ac-
count of the ovum anguinum> Glain Neidr, as the
Welch call it, or the Adder '-Gem, as the Roman
philofopher does, but feem not to have fo exalt-
ed an opinion of its powers, ufing it only to afiift
children in cutting their teeth, or to cure the chin-
cough, or to drive away an ague.
* Ma/on's Caraftacus. The perfon fpeafcing is a Druid.
We
Class III
SNAKE,
We have fome of thefe beads in our cabinet:
they are made of glafs, and of a very rich blue co-
lor -, fome are plain, others ftreaked : we fay no-
thing of the figure, as the annexed plate will con-
vey a ftronger idea of it than words.
33
EwSjj/j. Arijl. Hijl. an. I.
c. I.
Natrix torquata, Gefner Ser-
peni. 63.
Natrix torquata. Rati Jyn.
quad, 334.
Anguis vulgaris fufcus collo
flaveicente, ventre albis ma-
culis diftin&us. Pet. Muf. 13. Rince&>
XVII. No. 101.
Coluber natrix. Lin.fyft. 380*
Tomt-Orm, Snok, Ring-Orm.
Faun. Suec. No. 288.
C. natrix fcutis abdom. 170.
Squamis caudas, 60. Ibid,
THE fnake is the largeft of the Englijh fef-
pents, fometimes exceeding four feet in
length : the neck is flender -, the middle of the
Vol. III. D bodv
34 SNAKE. Class III.
body thickeft; the back and fides covered with
fmall fcales, the belly with oblong, narrow, tranf-
verfe plates. The firft Linnaus diftinguifhes by
the name of fquama, the laft he calls fcuta> and
from them forms his genera of ferpents.
Thofe that have bothfquam^e and fcuta he calls
Colubri\ thofe that have only fquama^ Angues.
The viper and fnake are comprehended in the firft
genus, the blind- worm under the fecond -, but we
chufe (to avoid multiplying our genera) to take in
the few ferpents we have by a fingle genus, their
marks being too evident to be confounded.
Descrip, The color of the back and fides of the fnake
are dufky or brown ; the middle of the back
marked with two rows of fmall black fpots run-
ning from head to tail ; and from them are multi-
tudes of lines of fpots croiTing the fides •, the plates
on the belly are duiky, the fcales on the fides of a
bluilli white.
On each fide the neck is a fpot of pale yellow,
and the bafe of each is a triangular black fpot, one
angle of which points towards the tail.
The teeth are fmall and ferrated, lying each fide
the jaw in two rows.
This fpecies is perfectly inoffenfive ; it frequents,
and lodges itfelf among bullies in moift places, and
will readily take the water, fwimming very well.
It preys on frogs, infects, worm?, and mice,
; and, considering the fmallnefs of the neck, it is a-
mazing how large an animal it wall fwallow. i
* The
Class III. BLIND- WO R M. 35
The fnake is oviparous: it lays its eggs in Eggs.
dung-hills, and in hot-beds, whofe heat, aided by
that of the fun, promotes the exclufion of the
young.
During winter it lies torpid in banks of hedges,
and under old trees.
Anguis Eryx. Lin. fyfi. 392. 14. Aber-
A new Snake. Tour in Scot/. 1769. App. deen.
LENGTH fifteen inches. Tongue broad and
forked. Noftrils fmall, round, and placed
near the tip of the nofe. Eyes lodged in oblong
fiflures above the angle of the mouth. Belly of
a bluifh lead color, marked with fmall white fpots
irregularly difpoled. The reft of the body of a
greyifli brown, with three longitudinal dufky lines,
one extending from the head along the back to
the point of the tail; the others broader, and
extending the whole length of the fides. It had
no fcuta ; but was entirely covered with fmall
fcales ; largeft on the upper part of the head.
Inhabits Aberdeen/hire. Communicated to me by
the late Doctor David Skene.
D 2 The
36 BLIND-WORM, Class III.
15. Blind- The Blind-worm, or flow- Long Cripple. Borlafe Cornw.
WORM. worm, Ca •cilia Typhline 284. tat. 28.
Gratis. Raii fyn. quad. Anguis fragilis. Lin. fyjl.
289. Grezv's Muf. 48. 392.
Caecilia anglica cinerea fqua- Ormfla, Koppar-Orm. Faun,
mis parvis mollibus, com- Suec. 289.
padtis. Pet. Muf. xvii. No. A. fragilis fquamis abdomi-
102. nis caudseque, 135. Ibid.
Descrip. rir^HE ufual length of this fpecies is eleven
-L inches : the irides are red -9 the head fmall ♦,
the neck flill more flender; from that part the
body grows fuddenly, and continues of an equal
bulk to the tail, which ends quite blunt.
The color of the back is cinereous, marked with
very fmall lines compofed of minute black fpecks ;
the fides are of a reddifh caft ; the belly dufky,
both marked like the back.
The tongue is broad and forky -, the teeth mi-
nute, but numerous ; the fcales fmall.
The motion of this ferpent is flow, from which,
and from the fmallnefs of the eyes, are derived its
names. Like Others of the genus, they lie torpid
during winter, and are fometimes found in vaft
numbers twitted together.
Like the former it is quite innocent. Doctor
Borlafe mentions a variety of this ferpent with a
pointed tail -, and adds, that he was informed that
a man loll his life by the bite of one in Oxford/hire.
We
Class III. BLIND-WORM.
We are inclined to think that his informant mif-
took the black or dufky viper for this kind ; for,
excepting the viper, we never could learn that
there was any fort of poifonous ferpent in thefe
kingdoms.
In Sweden is a fmall reddifh ferpent, called there
Afpingi the Coluber Cherfea of Linnaeus, whofe bite
is faid to be mortal. Is it poflible that this could
be the fpecies which has hitherto efcaped the no-
tice of our naturalifts ? I the rather fufpect it, as
I have been informed, that there is a fmall fnake
that lurks in the low grounds of Galloway y which
bites and often proves fatal to the inhabitants.
37
D 3 CLASS
CLASS IV.
FISH
Oh Beus ! ampla tu<e, quamfunt mir acuta dextr<e!
O quam folerti fingula mente regis!
Bivite tu gazd terras^ et mejfibus imples ;
Nee minus eft vafti fertilis unda maris :
Squammiger hunc peragrat populus^ prolefque parentum
Stipat) et ingentes turba minuta duces.
JONSTON. PSALMUS CIV.
r> +
I S H.
Div. I. CETACEOUS FISH.
NO gills ; an orifice on the top of the head,
thro' which they breathe, and eject water •, a
flat or horizontal tail ; exemplified in the explana-
tory plate, fig. i. by the Beaked Whale, bor-
rowed from Bale's Hijl. Harw. 411. Tab. 14.
GENERA.
I. WHALE.
II. CACHALOT.
III. DOLPHIN.
Div. II. CARTILAGINOUS FISH.
BREATHING thro' certain apertures, gene-
rally placed on each fide the neck, but in
fome inftances beneath, in fome above, and from
one to feven in number on each part, except in
the Pipe Fish, which has only one.
The mufcles fupported by cartilages, inftead of
bones.
Explan. PL fig. 2. the Picked Dog Fish.
a. The lateral apertures.
IV. LAM-
42
H.
IV.
LAMPREY.
V.
SKATE.
VI.
SHARK.
VII.
FISHING FROG
viii.
STURGEON.
IX.
SUN FISH.
X.
LUMP FISH.
XI.
PIPE FISH.
D i v. III. BONY FISH.
THIS divifion includes thofe whofe mufcles
are fupported by bones or fpines, which
breathe thro' gills covered or guarded by thin bony
plates, open on the fide, and dilatable by means
of a certain row of bones on their lower part
each feparated by a thin web, which bones are
called the Radii Branchiojlegi, or the Gillcovering
Rays.
The tails of all the fifti that form this divifi-
on, are placed in a fituation perpendicular to the
body, and this is an invariable character.
The later Idthyologifts have attempted to make
the number of the branchioftegous rays a character
of the genera ; but I found (yet too late in fome
inftances, where I yielded an implicit faith) that
•their rule was very fallible, and had induced me
into error j but as I borrowed other definitions, it
is to be hoped the explanation of the genera
will be intelligible. I fhould be very difmgenu-
ou s,
F IS H.
ous, if I did not own my obligations in this re-
fpect to the works of Artedi, Dr. Gronovius,
and Linn^us.
It is from the laft I have copied the great fe&ions
of the Bony Fish into
Apodal, Jugular,
Thoracic, Abdominal*.
He founds this fyftem on a comparifon of the
ventral fins to the feet of land animals or reptiles ;
and either from the want of them, or their particu-
lar fituation in refpedt to the other fins, eftablifhes
his fections.
In order to render them perfectly intelligible,
it is neceiTary to refer to thofe feveral organs of
movement, and fome other parts, in a perfect fifh,
or one taken out of the three laft fections.
The Hadock. Expl. PI. fig. 4.
a. The pectoral fins.
b. ventral fins.
c. anal fins.
d. caudal fin, or the tail.
e. e. e. dorfal fins.
/. bony plates that cover the gills.
g. branchioftegous rays, and their mem-
branes.
h. lateral, or fide line.
* Vide Syft. Nat. 422.
Sect.
43
44
H.
S e c t. I. APODAL.
THE mod imperfect, wanting the ventral
fins ; illuft rated by the Conger, fig. 3,
This alfo exprefTes the union of the dorfal and
anal fins with the tail, as is found in fome few fifh.
Xlf. EEL.
XIIL WOLF FISH.
XIV. LAUNCE.
XV. MORRIS.
XVI. SWORD FISH.
S e c t. II. JUGULAR.
T
HE ventral fins #, placed before the pecto-
ral fins a, as in the Hadock, fig* 4.
XVII. DRAGONET.
XVIII. W E E V E R.
XIX. CODFISH.
XX. B L E N N Y.
Sect.
H.
Sect. III. THORACIC.
THE ventral fins *, placed beneath the pecto-
ral fins b9 as in the Father Lasher,
fig- 5-
XXI. GOBY.
XXII. BULL-HEAD.
XXIII. DOREE.
XXIV. FLOUNDER.
XXV. GILT-HEAD.
XXVI. WRASSE.
XXVII. PERCH.
XXVIII. STICKLEBACK.
XXIX. M A C K R E L.
XXX. SURMULLET.
XXXI. GURNARD.
45
Sect.
46 F I S H.
S e c t. IV. ABDOMINAL.
THE ventral fins placed behind the pero-
ral fins, as in the Minow, fig. 6.
XXXII.
LOCHE.
XXXIII.
SALMON.
XXXIV.
PIKE.
XXXV.
ARGENTINE.
XXXVI.
ATHERINE.
XXXVII.
MULLET.
XXXVIII.
FLYING FISH.
XXXIX.
HERRING.
XL,
CARP.
Div
Class IV. CETACEOUS FISH. 47
D 1 v. I. CETACEOUS
FISH.
NATURE on this tribe hath beftowed an
internal ftru&ure in all reipecls agreeing
with that of quadrupeds ; and in a few other the
external parts in both are fimilar.
Cetaceous Fifh, like land animals, breathe by
means of lungs, being deftitute of gills. This
obliges them to rife frequently to the furface of
the water to refpire, to deep on the furface, as.
well as to perform feveral other functions.
They have the power of uttering founds, fuch
as bellowing and making other noifes, a faculty
denied to genuine rim *,
Like land animals they have warm blood, are
furnifhed with organs of generation, copulate, bring
forth, and fuckle their young, (hewing a ftrong at-
tachment to them.
Their bodies beneath the fkin are entirely fur-
rounded with a thick layer of fat (blubber) ana-
logous to the lard on hogs.
The number of their fins never exceeds three3
* Pontop, Hifi. Nor<w. II. 123. Blafius AnaU Animal, 288.
viz*
48
CETACEOUS FISH. Class IV,
viz. two peroral fins, and one back fin j but in
fome fpecies the laft is wanting.
Their tails are placed horizontally or fiat in re-
fpect to their bodies -9 contrary to the direction of
thole of all other fifh, which have them in a per-
pendicular fite. This fituation of the tail enables
them to force themfelves fuddenly to the furface of
the water to breathe, which they are fo frequently
conftrained to do.
Many of thefe circumftances induced Linnaus to
place this tribe among his Mammalia, or what other
writers ftyle quadrupeds.
To have preferved the chain ' of beings entire,
he mould in this cafe have made the genus of
Thoca, or Seals, and that of the Trichecus or
Manati, immediately precede the whale, thofe be-
ing the links that connect the Mammalia or qua-
drupeds with the fifh ; for the Seal is, in refpect
to its legs, the moft imperfect of the former clafs ;
and in the Manati the hind feet coalefce, aflum-
ing the form of a broad horizontal tail.
Notwithstanding the many parts and properties
which cetaceous fifh have in common with land
animals, yet there flill remain others, that in a
natural arrangement of the animal kingdom, mud
determine us after the example of the illuftrious
Ray *, to place them in the rank of fifh ; and for
* Who makes two divifions of filh.
1. Pulmone refpirantes.
2. Branchiis refpirantes,
the
Class IV. CETACEOUS FISH.
the fame reafons, that fir ft of fyftematic writers
afligns,
That the form of their bodies agrees with that
offifh.
They are entirely naked, or covered only with a
fmooth fkin.
They live entirely in the water, and have all the
a&ions of fifh.
Vol. III. E Cetaceous
49
5°
COMMON WHALE. Class IV.
I.
WHALE.
Cetaceous Fifh without teeth, with horny laminae
in their mouths.
16.C0MMON. MwWoj. drift, hift. an.
Lib. HI. c. 12.
Mufculus Plinii, Lib. XI. c.
37-
Balasna. Rondel. 475. G^/wr
P/>. 114.
BalcEna major, Jaminas cor-
neas in fuperiore maxiilas
habens, fiftula donata, bi-
pinnis. Sib. Pkalan. 28.
Balsena vulgaris edentula, dor-
io non pinnato. Rail fyit.
pifc. 6.
Baixna. Rondel. Wil.ltlh. 35.
The Whale. Martin's Spitz-
berg. 130. Crantz's Green/.
I. 107.
La Baleine ordinaire. BriJJbn
Get. 218.
Balscha fiitula in medio capite,
dorfb caudum verfus, acu-
minata. Arted. Jyn. 106.
Sp. ro6.
Balama myfticetus. Lin. fyji.
105. Gronlands Walfifk.
Faun. Suec. No. 49.
Balasna. Grono-v. Zoopb. 29.
Size.
THIS fpecies is the largefi: of all animals : it
is even at prefent ibmetimes found in the
northern feas ninety feet in length ; but formerly
they were taken of a much greater fize, when the
captures were, lefs frequent, and the fifh had time
to grow. Such is their bulk within the arftic cir-
cle, but in thofe of the torrid zone, where they are
unmolefled, whales are {till feen one hundred and
fixty feet long *.
The
* Adanforfs <voy. 174. From this account we find no rea-
fon to difbelieve the vaft fize of the Indian whales, of whofe
bones
CtASsIV. COMMON WHALE. 51
The head is very much difproportioned to the
fize of the body, being one-third the fize of the
fifh : the under lip is much broader than the up-
per. The tongue is corhpofed of a foft fpongy fat,
capable of yielding five .pr fix barrels of oil. The
gullet is very fmall for fo vaft a fifh, not exceeding
four inches in width. In the middle of the head
are two orifices, thro' which it fpouts water to a
vail height, and with a great noife, efpecialiy when
difturbed or wounded.
The eyes are no larger than thofe of an ox.
On the back there is no fin, but on the fideSj
beneath each eye, are two large ones.
The penis is eight feet in length, inclofed in
a ftrong fheath. The teats in the female are placed
in the lower^part of the belly.
The tail is broad and femilunar.
This whale varies in color : the back of fome
being red, the belly generally white. Others are
black, fome mottled, others quite white, according
to the obfervation of Marten, who fays, that their
colors in the water are extremely beautiful, and
that their ikin is very fmooth and flippery.
What is called whalebone adheres to the upper Whale.
jaw, and is formed of thin parallel lamina?, fome
bones and jaws, both Strabo, Lib. XV. and Pliny, Lib. IX.
c. 3. relate, that the natives made their houfes, ufing the
jaws for door-cafes. This method of building was formerly
pra&ifed by the inhabitants of Greenland, as we find from
Frebijher, in his fecond voyage, p. 18, publifhed in 1587.
E 2 of
BONE.
52 COMMON WHALE. Class IV.
of the longeft four yards in length •, of thefe there
are commonly 350 on each fide, but in very old
fifh more; of thefe about 500 are of a length fit
for ufe, the others being too fhort. They are fur-
rounded with long ftrong hair, not only that they
may not hurt the tongue, but as ftrainers to pre-
vent the return of their food when they difcharge
the water out of their mouths.
It is from thefe hairs that Arifiotle gave the name
of MvriKYpr<fs9 or the bearded whale, to this fpecies,
which he tells us had in its mouth hairs inftead of
teeth*; and Pliny defcrihes the fame under the
name of Mufculusf. Though the antients were
acquainted with this animal, yet as far as we re-
collect, they were ignorant of their ufes as well as
capture.
Aldrovand% indeed defcribes from Oppian, what
he miftakes for whale fifhing : he was deceived by
the word Hnro^ which is ufed not only to exprefs
whale in general, but any great fifh. The poet here
meant the Jhark, and (hews the way of taking it
in the very manner pracYifed at prefent, by a
ftrong hook baited with fkfh. He defcribes too
its three-fold row of teeth, a circumflance that at
once difproves its being a whale :
* sn 3s xai b (jLvrluYiTog q$ov%$ (aev £j/ toj rfaan nt£ sxeh
Tf/x«S 5e o^waj «e/«5. Hift. an. Lib. III. c. 12.
f Lib. XI. c 37.
% De Cetis. 261.
Aetvxc
Class IV. COMMON WHALE. 53
Awn; %«y?uo5bv7«$. avxioias hvr axovlag,
Halieut. V. lin. 526.
Whofe dreadful teeth in triple order ftand,
Like fpears out of his mouth.
The whale, though fo bulky an animal, fwims
with vaft fwiftnefs, and generally againft the wind.
It brings only two young at a time, as we be-
lieve is the cafe with all other whales.
Its food is a certain fort of fmall fnail, and as Foo®.
Linnaus fays, the medufa, or fea blubber.
The great refort of this fpecies is within the
arttic circle, but they fometimes vifit our coafts.
Whether this was the Britijh whale of the antients
we cannot pretend to fay, only we find, from a line
in Juvenal^ that it was of a very large fize \
Quanto Delphinis Balana Britannica major.
Sat. X,
As much as Britijh whales in fize furpafs
The dolphin race.
To view thefe animals in a commercial light, we
muft add, that the Englijh were late before they
engaged in the whale-fifhery : it appears by a fet of
queries, propofed by an honeft merchant in the
year 1575, in order to get information in the
bufinefs, that we were at that time totally igno-
E 3 rant
54
COMMON WHALE. Class IV.
rant of it, being obliged to fend to Bijkaie for men
Jkilful in the catching of the whale, and ordering of the
oil, and one cooler Jkilful to fet up the Jlaved cajk *.
This feems very ft range •, for by the account
Oclher gave of his travels to King Alfred, near
700 years f before that period, it is evident that
he made that monarch acquainted with the Nor-
wegians practifing the whale- fifhery ; but it feems
all memory of that gainful employ, as well as of
that able voyager Oclher, and all his important
difcoveries in the North were loft for near feven
centuries.
It was carried on by the Bifcayeners long before
we attempted the trade, and that for the fake not
only of the oil, but alfo of the whalebone, which
they feem to have long trafficked in. The
earlieft notice we find of that article in our trade
is by Hackluyt J, who fays it was brought from the
Bay of St, Laurence by an Englifh (hip that went
there for the barbes and fynnes of whales and train
oil, A. D. 1594, and who found there feven or
eight hundred whale fynnes, part of the cargo of
two great Bifiaine friips, that had been wrecked
there three years before. Previous to that, the
ladies ftays muft have been made of fplit cane, or
forne tough wood, as Mr. Anderfon obferves in his
* Hackluyt* s Col. <voy. I. 414,
f Idem.) 1. 4.
X Idem, III. 194.
Dictionary
Class IV. COMMON W HA L E. 55
Dictionary of Commerce*, it being certain that
the whale fifhery was carried on, for the fake of
the oil, long before the difcovery of the ufe of whale
bone.
The great refort of thefe animals was found to
be on the inhoipitable mores of Spitzbergen^ and
the European fnips made that place their principal
fifhery, and for numbers of years were very fuc-
cefsful : the Englijh commenced that bufinefs about
the year 1598, and the town of Hull had the honor
of firft attempting that profitable branch of trade.
At prefent it feems to be on the decline, the quan-
tity of fifti being greatly reduced by the conftant
capture for fucht a vaft length of time : fome re-
cent accounts inform us, that the fi fliers, from a
defect of whales? apply themfelves to feal fifhery,
from which animals they extract an oil. This
we fear will not be of any long continuance; for
thefe fhy and timid creatures will foon be induced
to quit thofe. fnores by being, perpetually harrarTed,
as the morfe or walrus has already in a great
meafure done. We are alfo told, that the poor
natives of Greenland begin even now to fuffer from
the decreafe of the feal in their feas, it being their
principal fubfiftence •, fo that fnould it totally de-
defert the coaft, the whole nation would be in dan-
ger of perifliing through want.
In old times the whale feems never to have been Royal
Fish.
* Vol. I. 442.
E 4 taken
56 PIKE-HEADED WHALE. Class IV.
taken on our coafts, but when it was accidentally
flung afhore : it was then deemed a royal fifti*,
and the king and queen divided the fpoil; the
king afferting his right to the head, her majefty to
the tail +.
17. Pike- Balaena tripinnis nares habens La Baleine a mufeau pointu.
headed. cum rollro acuto, et plicis Brijjbn Cet. 224.
in ventre. Sib. Phalain 29. Balcena fiftula duplici inroftro,
tab. 1 . dorfo extremo protuberantia
Idem. Raii fyn. pifc. 16. cornuiformi. Arted. fyn+
Pike-headed Whale. Dak 107.
Harwich, 410. No. 3. Balama Boops. Lin. Jyji. 106.
Size. f~T^HE length of that taken on the coaft of Scot-
JL land^ as remarked by Sir Robert Sibbald,
was forty- fix feet, and its greateft circumference
twenty.
Descrip. The head of an oblong form, floping down, and
growing narrower to the nofe; fix feet eight inches
from the end of which were two fpout-holes, fepa-
rated by a thin divifion : the eyes fmall.
The pectoral fins five feet long, and one and a
half broad : on the back, about eight feet and an
half from the tail, in lieu of a back fin, was a
hard horny protuberance : the tail was nine feet
and a half broad.
* Item habet warecrum maris per totum regnum Ballenas
et Slurgiofies captos, Sec. Eclvoardi II. anno ljmo.
f Blackflone 's Com, I. c. 4,
The
Class IV. F I N F I S H. 57
The belly was uneven, and formed into folds
running length-ways.
The fkin extremely fmooth and bright -9 that on
the back black •, that on the belly white.
This fpecies takes its name from the fhape of its
nofe, which is narrower and fharper pointed than
that of other whales.
Balasna edentula corpore ftric- Le Gibbar. Brijfon Cet. 222. 18. Fin fish.
tiore, dorfo pinnato. Rail Bala^na fiftula in medio ca-
fyn. pifc. 9. Dak Harwich, pite tubero penniformi in
410. No. 2. extremo dorfo. Arted.fyn.
Fin Fifh. Marten's Spitzherg. 107.
165. Balaena Phyfalus. Lin. Jyft*
Egede Greenl. 65. Crantz 106.
Greenh I no.
''T">HIS fpecies is diftinguifhed from the common
■*- whale by a fin on the back, placed very low
and near the tail.
The length is equal to that of the common Descrip.
kind, but much more (lender. It is furnifhed with
whale-bone in the upper jaw, mixed with hairs,
but fhort and knotty, and of little value. The
blubber alfo on the body of this kind is very in-
confiderable j thefe circumftances, added to its ex-
treme ;fiercenefs and agility, which renders the
capture very dangerous, caufe the rimers to neglect
it. The natives of Greenland though hold it in great
efteem, as it affords a quantity of flefh, which to
their palate is very agreeable,
The
5& ROUND-LIPPED WHALE. Class IV.
The lips are brown, and like a twilled rope:
the fpout hole is as it were fplit in the top of
its head, through which it blows water with
much more violence, and to a greater height, than
the common whale. The rimers are not very fond
of feeing it, for on its appearance the others retire
out of thofe leas.
Some writers conjecture this fpecies to have been
the <bu<ra*Qs9 and Phyfeter, or blowing whale of Op-
pan, Mlian^ and Pliny*, but fince thofe writers
' have not left the left defcription of it, it is im-
poflible to judge which kind they meant; for in
refpect to the faculty of fpouting out water, or
blowing, it is not peculiar to any one fpecies, but
common to all the whale kind.
19. Round- Balsna tripinnis maxillam in- Brijfon Cet. 222.
lipted. feriorem rotundam et fupe- B. fiitula duplici in fronte
riore multolatiorem habens. maxilla inferiore multo la-
Sib. Phalain. 33. tab. t. 3. tiore. Arted. fyn. 107.
Idem. Raii fyn. pifc. 16. Balaena mufculus. Lin, fyji.
La Baleine a mufeau rond. 106.
'TpHE character of this fpecies is to have the
A lower lip broader than the upper, and of a
femicircular form.
That taken in 1692 near Abercorn-Caftle, was
feventy-eight feet long, the circumference thirty-
* Oppian, Halieut, I. Lin. 368. JElian Hiji, an. ix. c.
49. Flin. lib, ix. c, 5.
five;
Class IV, BEAKED WHALE. S9
five ; the riftus or gape very wide ; the tongue fif-
teen feet and a half long \ the mouth furnimed
with fhort whale-bone, about three feet in length.
On the forehead were two fpout holes of a pyrami-
dal form.
The eyes were placed thirteen feet from the
end of the nofe : the pectoral fins ten feet long :
the back fin about three feet high, placed near the
tail, which was eighteen feet broad : the belly was .
full of folds.
This fpecies is faid to feed on herrings.
Burikopf. Marten's Spztzherg. tab. 14. 20. Beaked.
1 24. Nebbe-haul, or beaked Whale,
Bottle-head, or Flounders- Pontop. Norway y I. 123.
head. Dale Harwich, 411.
'nr^HIS fpecies was taken near Maldon, i?ij>
•** and thus defcribed by Dale and Marten.
The length was fourteen feet, the circumference
feven and an half; the body very thick, the fore-
head high, the nofe deprefTed, and of the fame
thicknefs its whole length, not unlike the beak of
a bird : in the mouth were no teeth.
The eyes large, the eyelids fmall, and placed a
little above the line of the mouth. The fpout
hole was on the top of the head femi circular, with,
the corners pointed towards the tail.
The pectoral fins were feven teen inches long.
The
66 BEAKED WHALE. Class IV.
The back fin was placed rather nearer the tail than
the head, and was a foot long: the breadth of the
tail was three feet two inches.
Thefe fifh fometimes grow to the length of
twenty feet ; they make but little noife in blowing,
are very tame, come very near the fhips, and will
accompany them for a great way.
Belon defcribes and figures a fifh very much re-
fembling, if not the fame with this : he fays k
furnifhed whale- bone, Dont les Dames font au-
jourdhuy leurs buftes et arrondijfent leurs verdugades*9
by which it appears, that the commodity was but
newly known at that time in France. He adds,
that the tongue was very good eating, and both
that and the flefh ufed to be faked for provifion.
* Belon de lanat. l2c. des PoiJ/bns, 1 555, p. 6, by which
it appears that the French were acquainted with that article
3t left forty years before we were.
Cetaceous
%
Class IV. BLUNT-HEADED CACHALOT. 61
Cetaceous Fifh, with teeth in the lower jaws only. H. CACHA-
1 LOT.
Trumpa. Purchafs's Pzlgrimes Its. BriJJbn Cet. zig. 21. Blunt.
III. 471. The Parmacitty Whale, cr headed.
Balana major in infcriore Pot Wal Fifh. Dale Har-
tantum maxilla dentata den- 'vjich, 413.
tibus arcuatis falciformibus, Phyfeter microps. Lin. fyjl.
pinnam five fpinam in dorfo 107. Arted. fyn. 104.
habens. Sib. Phalian. 13. Cafhalot, Catodon, or Pot
tabs A. 1. Raii Jyn. pifc. Fifh. Crantz, Greenl. I,
15. 112.
Le cachalot a dents en faucil-
AFISH of this kind was cad afhore on CramonX
I/le, near Edinburgh, December 2 2d, 1769;
its length was fifty-four f^t9 the greateft: circum- Size,
ference, which was juft beyond the eyes, thirty :
the upper jaw was five feet longer than the lower,
whofe length was ten feet.
The head was of a mod enormous fize, very Descrhs
thick, and above one-third the fize of the fifh :' the
end of the upper jaw was quite blunt, and near
nine feet high : the fpout hole was placed near the
end of it.
The teeth were placed in the lower jaw, twenty- Teeth.
three on each fide, all pointing outwards ; in the
upper jaw, oppofite to them, were an equal num-
ber of cavities, in which the ends of the teeth
lodged when the mouth was clofed. The tooth,
figured
6% BLUNT-HEADED CACHALOT. Class IV.
figured in plate iii. No. 2. was eight inches long,
the greater! circumference the fame. It is hollow
within fide for the depth of three inches, and
the mouth of the cavity very wide : it is thickeft
at the bottom, and grows very fmall at the point,
bending very much ; but in fome the flexure is
more than in others. Thefe, as well as the teeth
of all other whales we have obferved, are very hard,
and cut like ivory.
The eyes very fmall, and remote from the nofe.
The pectoral fins placed near the corners of the
mouth, and were only three feet long: it had no
other fin, only a large protuberance on the mid-
dle of the back.
The tail a little forked, and fourteen feet from
tip to tip.
The penis {even feet and a half long.
The figure, plate ii. we borrowed from a print
in the LX. vol. of the Ph. Tr. p. where there
is a very good account of this fpecies by Mr.
James Robert/on, furgeon.
This is one of the fpecies which yield what is
Spermaceti improperly called fperma ceti •, that fubftance being
found lodged in the head of the fifh that form
this genus, which the French call Cachalot^ a name
we have adopted, having no general term for it in
our tongue.
Linn&us informs us, that this fpecies purfues
and terrifies the PorpefTes to fuch a degree as often
to drive them on fhore.
Belasna
PL.TE.
TEETH OF CETACEOUS FISH.
JSro 23
jyp 21
^'.'2,4^.
2VF22.
m™*
Class IV. ROUND-HEADED CACHALOT.
6S
Balaena minor in inferiore
maxilla tan turn dentata fine
fpina aut pinna in dorfo.
Sib. Pbalain. 9. Rati fyn.
pifc. 15.
X-e petit Cachalot. Brijfon
Cef. 228.
Phyfeter Catodon. Lin. jyji.
107.
Catodon filtula in roftro. Arted.
Jynon. 108.
22. Round-
HEADE9.
*T^ HIS fpecies was taken on one of the Orkney
**" Ifles, a hundred and two of different flzes
being caft afhore at one time, the largeft twenty-
four feet in length.
The head was round, the opening of the mouth
fmall : Sibhald fays it had no fpout hole, but only
noftrils. We rather think, that the former being
placed at the extremity of the nofe was miftaken
by him for the latter.
The teeth we have in our cabinet of this fpecies
(plate iii. No. 4.) are an inch and three-quarters
long, and in the largeft part, of the thicknefs of
one's thumb. The top is quite flat, and marked
with concentric lines •, the bottom is more {lender
than the top, and pierced with a fmall orifice.
The back fin was wanting ♦, inftead was a rough
fpace.
Betas
64 HIGH-FINNED CACHALOT. Class IV.
23. High- Balasna macrocephala tripin- nentes. Sib. Phalain. 18.
fiNNED. nis, quae in mandibula in- Raiifyn.pifc. 16.
■ , feriore dentes habet minus Le Cachalot a dents plattes.
inflexos et in planum deii- Brijfon Cet* 230.
O
NE of this fpecies was cafl: on the Orkney
Ifles in 1687. The fpout hole was placed
in front, and on the middle of the back was a
high fin, which Sibbald compares to the mizen
maft of a fhip. The head abounded with fperma
ceti of the beft fort.
Teeth. The teeth of this kind are very (lightly bent;
that which we have figured, plate iii. No, 1. is
feven inches three-quarters in length ; the greateft
circumference nine : it is much comprefTed on the
fides ; the point rather blunt than flat -, the bot-
tom thin, having a very narrow but long orifice,
or flit, hollowed to the depth of five inches and a
quarter, and the tooth was immerfed in the jaw
as far as that hollow.
Cetaceous
Class IV. DOLPHIN.
55
Cetaceous Fifli, with teeth in both jaws.
nr.
DOLPHIN,
AfiXpk 4™ft- Hi/, an. lib.
VI. c. 12. AsAp/v. JElian
lib. I. c. 18.
Delphinus Plinii, lib. IX.
£. 8. Le Daulphin, ou oye
de mer, Belon Poijf. 7.
Delphinus. Rondel. 459. Gef-
iter pifc. 319. Caii opufc.
113-
Delphinus Antiquorum. Wil.
Iclh. 28. Rail fyn. pifc.
12.
Delphinus corpore Longo fub-
teretf, roftro longo acuto.
Arted. fyn. 105.
Le Dauphin. Brijbn Cet. 233.
Delphinus Delphis. Lin. Jyft.
108.
Dolphin. Borlafe Cornwall,
264. /«£. 27. Cranio GreenL
I. 115. -
24. Dol-
phin.
TTISTORIANS and philofophers feem to
JL A have contended who fhould invent moft fa-
bles concerning this fifh. It was coniecrated to
the Gods, was celebrated in the earlier! time for
its foifdnefs of the human race, was honored with
the title of the Sacred Fijb*, and diftinguilhed by
thofe of Boy -loving, and Pbilantbropift. It gave rife
to a long train of inventions, proofs of the cre-
dulity and ignorance of the times.
Ariftotle fleers the cleared of all the antients
from thefe fables, and gives in general fo faithful a
natural hiftory of this animal, as^ evinces the fupe-
rior judgment of that great philolbpher, in compa-
rifon to thofe who fucceeded him. But the elder
Vol. III.
* Atbenceus, 281
F
Pliny,
£4 DOLPHIN. Class IV.
Pliny, JElian, and others, feem to preferve no
bounds in their belief of the tales related of this
fifh's attachment to mankind.
Pliny*- the younger, (apologizing for what he is
going to -fay) tells the flory of the enamoured dol-
phin of Hippo in a mod beautiful manner. It is
too long to be tranfcribed, and would be injur-
ed by an abridgement -, therefore we refer the read-
er to the original, or to Mr. Melmoth\ elegant
tranflation.
Scarce an accident could happen at fea but the
dolphin offered himfelf to convey to ihore the un-
fortunate. Avion, the mufician, when flung into
the ocean by the pyrates, is received and faved by
this benevolent filh.
Inde (fide majus) tergo Delphina recurvo,
Se memorant oneri fuppofuiffe novo.
Ule fedens citharamque tenens, pretiumque vehendi
Cantat, et sequoreas carmine mulcet aquas.
Ovid. Fajiiy lib. ii. it^.
But (pall belief) a Dolphin's arched back,
Preferved Jrion from his deftined wrack ;
Secure he fits, and with harmonious iirains*
Requites his bearer for his friendly pains.
We are at a lofs to account for the origin of
thofe fables, fince it does not appear that the dol-
phin fhews a greater attachment to mankind than
* Epift. lib. ix, ep, 33*
the
Class IV. D O L ? H I N. 67
the red of the cetaceous tribe. We know that
at prefent the appearance of this fifh, and the
porpefte, are far from being efteemed favorable
omens by the feamen ; for their boundings, fprings
and frolics in the water, are held to be fure figns
of an approaching gale.
It is from their leaps out of that element that
they aflame a temporary form that is not natural
to them, but which the old painters and fculp-
tors have almoft always given them. A dolphin
is fcarce ever exhibited by the antients in a ftrait
iliape, but almoft always incurvated : fuch are
thofe on the coin of Alexander the Greats which
is preferved by Belon, as well as on feveral other
pieces of antiquity. The poets defcribe them
much in the fame manner, and it is not impro-
bable but that the one had borrowed from the
other :
Tumidumque pando tranfilit dorfo mare
Tyrrhenus omni pifcis exfultat freto,
Agitatque gyros.
Senec. Frag. Again. 450.
Upon the fvvelling waves the dolphins fhew
Their bending backs, then fwiftly darting go,
And in a thoufand wreaths their bodies throw.
The natural fhape of the dolphin is almoft ftrait, De*cm»,
the back being very (lightly incurvated, and the
body flender : the nofe is long, narrow, and point-
F 2 ed
6S DOLPHIN. Class IV.
ed, not much unlike the beak of fome birds, for
which reafon the French call it L9 oye de mer.
Teeth. It has in all forty-two teeth, twenty-one in the
upper jaw, and nineteen in the lower, a little a-
bove * an inch long, conic at their upper end,
fliarp pointed*, bending a little in. They are
placed at fmall diftances from each other, fo that
when the mouth is fhut, the teeth of both jaws lock
into one another : a fingle one is figured plate iii.
No. 5-
The fpout hole is placed in the middle of
the head.
The back fin is high, triangular, and placed
rather nearer to the tail than to the head ; the pecto-
ral fins fituated low.
The tail is femilunar.
The fkin is frnooth, the color -of the back and
fides dufky -, the belly whitifh.
It fwims with great fwiftnefs : its prey is fifh.
It was formerly reckoned a great delicacy :
Doctor Caius fays, that one which was taken in his
time, was thought a prefent v/orthy the Duke of
Norfolk, who diftributed part of it among his
friends. It was roafted and dreffed with porpefle
fauce, made of crumbs of fine white bread, mixed
with vinegar and fugar.
This fpecies of dolphin muft not be confound-
ed with that to which feamen give the name, the
* Plate Iii. fig. 5.
latter
Class IV. PORPESSE.
latter being quite another kind of fifh, the Cory-
phtena, Hippuris of Linnaus^ p. 446. and the Do-
rado of the PGrtuguefe, defcribed by Wilfaghty* p.
213.
69
Quxaiva. Arifi. hijt. an. Lib. Le Marfouin. Briffbn Cet.
VI. c. 12. Turfio Flinii, 234.
Lib. IX. c. 9.
Le Marfouin. Belon.
Turfio. Rondel. 474. Gefncr
pifc. 711.
Porpeffe. Wil. lah. 31. Rail
fyn.pifc. 13. Cramps Greenl.
I. 114. Kolben's HiJ}. Cape,
II. 200.
Delphinus corpore fere coni-
formi, dorfo lato, roftro fu-
bacuto. Arted. fynon. 104.
Delphinus Phocxna. Lin. jyji.
108.
Marfwin, Tumblare. Faun*
Suec. No. ci.
25. PoR«
FESSE.
THESE fifh are found in vail multitudes in
all parts of the fea that wafh thefe iflands,
but in greater!: numbers at the time when fifh of
paflage appear, fuch as mackrel, herrings, and
falmon, which they purfue up the bays with the
fame eagernels as a pack of dogs does a hare. In
fome places they almoft darken the fea as they
rife above water to take breath : but porpeffes not
only feek for prey near the fnrface, but often
defcend to the bottom in fearch _of fand eels, and
fea worms, which they root out of the fand with
their nofes in the fame manner as hogs do in the
fields for their food.
Their bodies are very thick towards the head,
F 3 but
Descrip.
76 PORPESSE. Class IV.
but grows (lender towards the tail, forming the
figure of a cone.
The nofe projects a little, is much (liorter than
that of the dolphin, and is furnifhed with very
ftrong mufcles, which enables it the readier to turn
up the fand.
Teeth. jn eacn jaw are forty-eight teeth, fmall, fharp
pointed, and a little moveable : like thofe of the
dolphin, they are fo placed as that the teeth of
one jaw locks into thofe of the other when clofed.
The tongue is flat, pectinated at the edges, and
fattened down to the bottom of the mouth.
The eyes fmall •> the fpout hole on the top of the
head.
On the back is one fin placed rather below the
middle ^ on the bread are two fins. The tail fe-
milunar.
The color of the porpefife is generally black,
and the belly whitifh, not but they fometimes
vary ; for in the river St* Laurence there is a white
kind ; and Doctor Borlafe^ in his voyage to the
Scitty ifles, obferved a fmall fpecies of cetaceous
fifh, which he calls thornbacks^ from their broad
and fharp fin on the back, fome of thele were
brown, fome quite white, others fpotted : but
whether they were only a variety of this fifh, or
whether they were fmall grampufes, which are alfo
fpotted, we cannot determine.
Fat. The porpefife is remarkable for the vaft quanr
tity of the fat or lard that furrounds the body,
which
Class IV. P O R P E S S E. ft
which yields a great quantity of excellent oil : from
this lard, or from their rooting like fvvine, they
are called in many places fea hogs ; the Germans
call them meerfchwein •, the Swedes, marfuin \ and
the Englijb, porpejfe, from the Italian, porco pefce.
It would be curious to trace the revolutions of
fafhion in the article of eatables ; what epicure firft
rejected the Sea-Gull and Heron -, and what deli-
cate (lomach firil naufeated the greafy flefri of the
PorpeJTe. This latter was once a royal dim, even
fo late as the reign of Henry VIII. and from its
magnitude muft have held a very refpeclable ftation
at the table ; for in a houfhold book of that prince,
extracts of which are publilhed in the third volume
of the Archaelogia, it is ordered that if a PorpefTe
lhouid be too big for a horfe-load, allowance
fhould be made to the purveyor. I find that this
fifh continued in vogue even in the reign of Eliza-
ieth, for Doctor Cains * on mentioning a Dolphin
(that was taken at Shoreham, and brought to Thomas
Duke of Norfolk, who divided, and fent it as a pre-
fent to his friends) fays, that it eat belt with
Porpejje fauce, which was made of vinegar, crums
of fine bread, and fugar.
v * Opuftula, 1 1 &
F jl Orca
7* GRAMPUS. Class IV.
26. Gram- Orca Plinii, Lib. IX. c. 6. dentata. Sib. Phalan. 7, 8.
pus. L'oudre ou grand marfouin. Wil. Iclh. 40. Rati Jyn.
Belon, 13. pi/}. 15.
Orca. Rondel. 483. Gefner L'Epaulard. Brijfon Cet. 236.
///£. 635. Leper, Springer. Delphinus orca. Lin.Jyfi. 108.
Scbonevelde, 53. Lopare, Delphinus roftro fur-
Butfkopf. Marten's Sphzbcrg. fum repando, dentibus la-
124. tis ferratis. Arted. Jyn. 106.
Bafena minor utraque maxilla
THIS fpecies is found from the length of fif-
teen feet to that of twenty-five. It is re-
markably thick in proportion to its length, one of
eighteen feet being in the thicker!: place ten feec
diameter. With reafon then did Pliny call this
an immenfe heap of flefb, armed with dreadful
teeth *.
It is extremely voracious, and will not even
fpare the porpefTe, a congenerous fifh. It is laid
to be a great enemy to the whale, and that it will
fallen on it like a dog on a bull, till the animal
roars with pain.
The nofe is flat, and turns up at the end.
Teeth. There are thirty teeth in each jaw; thofe before
are blunt, round, and (lender ; the farther! (harp
and thick : between each is a fpace adapted to re-
ceive the teeth of the oppofite jaw when the mouth
is clofed.
* Cujus imago nulla reprefentatione exprimi poffit alia,
quam carnxs immenfe dentibus irucuientis. Lib. IX, c. 6.
The
Class IV. GRAMPUS. 73
The fpout hole is in the top of the neck. In
refpecl to the number and fite of the fins, it agrees
with the dolphin.
The color of the back is black, but on each Color.
fhoulder is a large white fpot, the fides marbled
with black and white, the belly of a fnowy white- -
nefs.
Thefe fometimes appear on our coafts, but are Place.
found in much greater numbers off the North Cape
in Norway 1 whence they are called the North
Capers, Thefe and all other whales are obferved
to fwim againft the wind, and to be much disturb-
ed, and tumble about with unufual violence at the
approach of a ftorm.
Linnaeus and Artedi fay, that this fpecies is fur-
nifhed with broad ferrated teeth, which as far as
we have obferved, is peculiar to the Jhark tribe.
We therefore fufpect that thofe naturalifts have
had recourfe to Rondektius* and copied his erro-
neous account of the teeth: Sir Robert Sibbald^
who had opportunity of examining and figuring
the teeth of this fifh, and from whom we take than
part of our defcription, giving a very different ac-
count of them.
It will be but juftice to fay, that no one of our
countrymen ever did fo much towards forming a
general natural hiftory of this kingdom as Sir Robert
Sibbald: he fketched out a fine outline of the
Zoology of Scotland^ which comprehends the great-
eft part of the Englljh animals, and, we are told,
had
74. GRAMPUS. Class IV.
had actually filled up a confiderable part of it :
he publifhed a particular hiftory of the county of
Fife, and has left us a mod excellent hiftory of the
whales which frequent the coaft of Scotland. Wc
acknowledge ourfelves much indebted to him for
information in refpe£t to many of thofe fifh, few
of which frequent the fouthern feas of thefe king-
doms, and thofe that are accidentally call afhore
on our coafts, are generally cut up by the country
people, before an opportunity can be had of exa-
mining them.
Div.
Class IV. CARTILAGINOUS FISH. 75
Div.IL CARTILAGINOUS
FISH.
JnrSHIS title is given to all nfh whofe mufcles
JL are fupported by cartilages inftead of bones,
and comprehends the fame genera of fifh to which
Linnaeus has given the name of amphibia nantes :
but the word amphibia, ought properly to be con-
fined to fuch animals who inhabit both elements,
and can live without any inconvenience for a con-
fiderable fpace, either in land or under water -,
fuch as tortoifes, frogs, and feveral fpecies of li-
zards-, and among the quadrupeds, hippopotami,
feals, &c. &c. This definition therefore excludes
all that form this divifion.
Many of the cartilaginous nfh are viviparous,
being excluded from an egg, which is hatched
within them. The egg confiftsofa white and a
yolk, and is lodged in a cafe, formed of a thick
tough fubftance, not unlike foftened horn: fuch
are the eggs of the Ray and Shark kinds.
Some again differ in this refpetft, and are ovi-
parous ; fuch is the Sturgeon, and others.
They breathe either through certain apertures
beneath, as in the Rays \ on their fides as in the
Sharks, &c. or on the top of the head, as in the
Pipe~fijh; for they have not covers to their gills
like the bony fifh.
Slender
y6 LAMPREY. Class IV.
IV. Slender Eel-ihaped body.
LAMPREY. IcA
Seven apertures on each fide ;
One on the top of the head.
No pectoral or ventral fins.
27. Sea. La Lamproye de mer. Belon, Petromyzon maculofusordini-
66. bus dentium circiter viginti.
Lampetra. Rondel. 398. Arted. fynon. 90.
Lampreda. Gcfncr. Parallp. Petromyzon marinus. P. ore
22. Fife 590. intus papillofo, pinna dor-
Lamprey, or Lamprey Eel. fali pofteriori a cauda dif-
Wil. I Sib. 105. tin&a. Lhi.fyfi. 394. Faun.
Lampetra. Rail fyn, pifc» 35. Suec, No. 292.
L
AMPREYS are found at certain feafons of
the year in feveral of our rivers, hut \h& Severn
is the moft noted for them *, They are fea fifh,
but like falmon, quit the fait waters, and afcend
Placi. the latter end of the winter, or beginning of fpring,
and after a (lay of a few months return again to the
ocean, a very few excepted. The bed feafon for
them is in the months of March, April, and May -9
for they are more firm when juft arrived out of
the fait water than they are afterwards, being ob-
ferved to be much wafted, and very flabby at the
approach of hot weather.
* They are alfo found in the moft confiderable of the Scotch
and Irijb rivers.
They
m
>
0 V* ■: "»,
'"I
CiASsIV. LAMPREY.
They are taken in nets along with falmon and
fhad, and fometimes in weels laid in the bottom of
the river.
It has been an old cuftom for the city of Glou-
cefter, annually, to prefent his majefty with a lam-
prey pye, covered with a large raifed cruft. As
the gift is made at Chriftmas, it is with great diffi-
culty the corporation can procure any frefh Jam-
preys at that time, though they give a guinea a-piece
for them, fo early in the feafon.
They are reckoned a great delicacy, either when
potted or ftewed, but are a furfeiting food, as one
of our monarchs fatally experienced, Henry the
Firft's death being occafioned by a too plentiful
meal of thefe fifh. It appears that notwithstanding
this accident, they continued in high efteem -9 for
Henry the Fourth granted protections to fuch mips
as brought over lampreys for the table of his royal
confort*. His fucceflbr iflues out a warrant to
William of Nantes^ for fupplying him and his army
with lampreys, wherefoever they happen to march f.
Directions are afterwards given that they mould be
taken between the mouth of the Seyne and Harfleur.
Lampreys are fometimes found fo large as to
weigh four or five pounds.
The mouth is round and placed rather obliquely
below the end of the nofe : the edges are jagged,
# Rymer, VIII. 429.
f Idem. IX. 544.
which
77
78 LAMPREY. Class IV.
which enables them to adhere the more ftrongly to
the ftones, as their cuflom is, and which they do
fo firmly as not to be drawn off without fome diffi-
culty.
We have heard of one weighing three pounds,
which was taken out of the EJk% adhering to a (lone
of twelve pounds weight, fufpended at its mouth,
from which it was forced with no fmall pains.
There are in the mouth twenty rows of fmall
teeth, difpofed in circular orders, and placed far
within.
The color is dufky, irregularly marked with dir-
ty yellow, which gives the fifh a difagreeable look.
Not the We believe that the ancients were unacquainted
with this fifh ; fo far is certain, that which Doclor
Arbuthnot^ and other learned men, render the word
lamprey, is a fpecies unknown in our feas, being
the murana of Ovid, Pliny, and others, for which
we want an Englijh name. This fifh, the Lupus
(our BafTe) and the Myxo* (a fpecies of mullet)
formed that pride of Roman banquets, the Tripa-
tinam f , fo called according to Arbuthnot, from
their being ferved up in a machine with three bot-
toms.
* Perhaps the fpecies called by Rondehtius* Muge% and
Maxon. de Pifc. P. 295.
f Atque ut luxu quoque aliqua contingat auttoritas figlinis,
Tripati?iam, inquit Fenejlella^ appellabatur, fumma casnarum
lautitia, una erat Muranarum, altera Luporum, tertia Myxonis
pifcis. Plinii Hift. Nat. lib. XXXV. c. 12.
The
Class IV. LESSER LAMPREY. 79
The words Lampetra and Petromyzon, are but of
modern date, invented from the nature of the
fifri \ the firft a Lambendo petras, the other from
niTfofc and Mucraco, becaufe they are fuppofed to lick,
or fuck the rocks.
La Lamproye d'eaue doulce. Petromyzon fluviatilis. Lin, 28. Lessir,
Belon, 6j. fyfi. 394.
Lampredae alterum genus. Nein-oga, natting. Faun.
Gefner pifc. 597. Suec. No. 290. Petromyzon
Lampetra medium genus. pinna dorfali poileriori an-
WiU Icth. 106. Raiijyn. gulata. Ibid.
pifc. 35. Gronov. Zoopb. No. 159-.
Neunaugen. Kram, 282.
THIS fpecies fometimes grows to the length of Bescrsf,
ten inches.
The mouth is formed like that of the prece-
ding. On the upper part is a large bifurcated
tooth ; on each fide are three rows of very minute
one's : on the lower part are feven teeth, the exte-
rior of which on each fide is the largeft.
The irides are yellow. As in all the other fpe-
cies, between the eyes, on the top of the head, is a
fmall orifice of great ufe to clear its mouth of the
water that remains on adhering to the Hones, for
through that orifice it ejects the water in the fame
manner as cetaceous fifh.
On the lower part of the back is a narrow fin,
beneath that rifes another, which at the beginning
is
go PRIDE/ Class IV.
is high and angular, then grows narrow, furrounds
the tail, and ends near the anus.
Color. The color of the back is brown or dufky, and
fometimes mixed with blue ; the whole under fide
iil very. Thefe are found in the 'Thames , Severn,
and Dee, are potted with the larger kind, and are
by fome preferred to it, as being milder tailed.
Vaft quantities are taken about Mortlake, and fold
to the Butch for bait for their cod fiihery. Above
450,000 have been fold in a feafon at forty mil-
lings per thoufand. Of late, about 100,000 have
been fent to Harwich for the fame purpofe. It is
faid that the Butch have the fecret of preierving
them till the Turbot fifhery.
Pride. Une Civelle, un Lamproyon. pifc 35.
Belon, 6y. Petromyzon branchialis. Lin.
Lampetra parva et fluviatiiis. fyfi. 394.
Rondel, pifc. fl. 202. Lin-ahl. Faun. Suec. No. 291.
Lampreda minima. Gefaer Petromyzon pinna dorfali pof-
pifc. 598. teriori lineari, labio oris
Pride. Plot, Oxf. 182. Plate latere poflico lobato. Ibid,
X. Uhlen. Kram. 384.
Lampern, or Pride of the IJis. Grono<v. Zoopb. No. 160.
Wil. Iclh. 104. Raii jyn.
WE have feen thefe of the length of eight
inches, and about the thicknefs of a fwan's
qui], but they are generally much fmaller.
They are frequent in the rivers near Oxford,
particularly the Jfis, but not peculiar to that coun-
ty*
Class IV. PRIDE. 81
ty, being found in others of the Englijh rivers,
where, inftead of concealing themfelv.s under the
Hones, they lodge themfelves in the mud, and ne-
ver are obferved to adhere to any thing like other
lampreys.
The body is marked with numbers of tranfverfe
lines, that pafs crofs the fides from the back to the
bottom of the belly, which is divided from the
mouth to the anus by a (trait line.
The back fin is not angular like that of the
former, but of an equal breadth. The tail is Ian-
ceolated, and fharp at the end.
Vol; IIL G Body
82 SKAT E. Class IV,
v- Body broad, flat, and thin.
RAY»
Five apertures on each fide placed beneath
Mouth fituated quite below.
With lharp teeth.
30. Skate. Bar); ? Arijl. Uft. an. Lib, Iftb. 69. Rati Jyn. pifc. 25.
I. c. 5. Lib. VI. c. 10. Raia Batis. Lin.fyji. 395.
Oppian Halieut. I. 103. Raia varia, dorfo medio gla-
Raia undulata five cinerea. bro, unico aculeorum or-
Rondel. 346. Ge/ner pifc. dine in Cauda. Arted. Jynon*
791. 102.
The Skate, or Flaire. Wil. Gronov. Zooph. No. 157.
Size. fTM-JXS fpecies is the thinnefl in proportion to
JL its bulk of any of the genus, and alfo the
largeft, fonie weighing near two hundred pounds.
D esc rip. The nofe, though not long, is fharp pointed;
above the eyes is a fet of fhort fpines : the whole
upper part of that we examined was of a pale
brown. Mr. Ray fays, fome he faw were ftreak-
ed with black : the lower part is white, marked
with great numbers of minute black fpots. The
jaws were covered with fmall granulated but fharp-
pointed teeth.
The tail is of a moderate length : near the
end are two fins : along the top of it is one row of
fpines, and on the edges are irregularly difperfed
a few
I. -IX.
jvrijf. i
SKJs. T E
TION
Class IV. SHARP-NOSED RAY. 83
a few others, which makes us imagine with Mr,
Ray, that in this refpecl thefe fifh vary, fome ha-
ving one, others more orders of fpines on the tail.
It is remarked that in the males of this fpecies the
fins are full of fpines.
Skates generate in March and April, at which Genera-
time they fwim near the iurface of the water, feve-
ral of the males purfuing one female. They ad-
here fo faft together in coition, that the iifhermen
frequently draw up both together, though only one
has taken the bait. The females begin to caft their
purfes, as the fifhermen call them (the bags in which
the young are included) in May, and continue
doing it till September. In Oftober they are ex-
ceedingly poor and thin ; but in November they be-
gin to improve, and grow gradually better till May,
when they are in the higheft perfection. The males
go fooner out of feafon than the females,
3i# Skarf<
NOSED,
Bsj? Arift.hijl. an. Lib. V. Wil lah. 7 1, Raiifyn.pifc. ^lt $h
c. 5. Oppian Halieut. II. 26.
141. Raiaoxynnchus.Z/«./J/?. 395,
Bos Q<vidii ? 94. Pliniiy Lib. Raia varia tuberculis decern
IX. c. 24. aculeatis in medio dorfo,
Raia oxyrhincus. Rondtl. 34;. Arted. fyno?i. 101,
Gefner pifc. 792,
I
N fifhing in the Menai (the ftrait that divides
Anglefea from Caernarvonfiire) July JjCS, we
G 2 took
H4 SHAR P-N O S E D RAY. Class IV.
took one of this fpecies whofe length was near feven
feet, and breadth five feet two inches -, when juft
brought on more, it made a remarkable fnorting
noife.
The nofe was very long, narrow, and fharp-point-
ed, not unlike the end of a fpontoon.
The body was fmooth, and very thin in pro-
portion to the fize-, the upper part afh, colored,
fpotted with numerous white fpots, and a few
black ones.
The tail was thick ; towards the end were two
fmall fins, on each fide was a row of fmall fpines,
with another row in the middle, which run fome
-way up the back.
The lower part of the fifli was quite white.
The mouth very large, and furnifhed with
numbers of fmall fharp teeth bending inwards.
On its body we found the hirudo muricata,
which adhered very (Irongly, and when taken off
left a black impreffion.
This fifh has been fuppofed to be the Bos of the
antients, which was certainly fome enormous fpecies
of Ray, though we cannot pretend to determine
the particular kind : Oppian ftyles it,
Ei/fVTar(§H <7ravTS<T(ri /ust' ixfiwiv,
Broadefl among fifties.
He adds an account of its fondnefs of human
flefh, and the method it takes of deftroving men,
by
PI. XL.
JST? 3J.
THOILN-BACK.
pi. xn.
THORNBACK.
Class IV. R O U GH R A Y. 85
by over-laying and keeping them down by its vaft
weight till they are drowned. Phile gives much
the fame relation *. We are inclined to give them
credit, fince a modern writer -f, of undoubted au-
thority, gives the very fame account of a fifh found
in the South Seas, the terror of thofe employed in
the pearl fifhery. It is a fpecies of ray, called
there Manta, or the §)uilt9 from its furrounding
and wrapping up the unhappy divers till they are
fuffocated ; therefore the negroes never go down,
without a fharp knife to defend themfelves againft
the afiaults of this terrible enemy.
Raia aiteria afpera. Rondel. 352." 32. Rough*
Gefnerpifc. 794. WiL Ifib. 78.
Raiifyn. pifc. 28.
I TOOK this fpecies in Loch Broom in the fhire
of
The length from the nofe to the tip of the tail
was two feet nine. The tail was almoft of the fame
length with the body.
Nofe very fhort. Before each eye a large hook-
ed fpine, and behind each another, befet with lefTer.
The upper part of the body of a cinereous brown
* De propriet. Anim. 85.
f Ulloa's *voy. I. 132. S-vo. edit.
G 3 mixed
86 FULLER RAY. Class IV.
mixed with white, and fpotted with black; and
entirely covered with fmall fpines. On the tail
were three rows of great fpines : all the reft of
the tail was irregularly befet with lelTer.
The fins, and under fide of the body were
equally rough with the upper.
The teeth were flat, and rhomboidal.
33, Fuller. Raia fullonica. Rondel. $$y. Raia dorfo toto acnleato, acu-
Gefner pifc. 797. leorum ordine iimplici ad
Raia afpera noftras, the white oculos, duplici in cauda.
horfe. fVil. Iclb. 78. Raii Arted. fyn. 101. Gronov,
fyn. pifc. 26. Zooph. No. 155.
P.aia fullonica. Lin. Jyft,
THIS fpecies derives its Latin name from
the inftruments fullers make ufe of in
fmoothing cloth, the back being rough and fpiney.
The nofe is ihort and fharp. At the corner of
each eye a few fpines. The membrane of nictita-
tion is fringed. Teeth fmall, and fharp.
On the upper part of the pectoral fins are three
rows of fpines pointing towards the back, crook-
ed, like thofe on a fuller's inftrument.
On the tail are three rows of ftrong fpines :
the middle row reaches up part of the back. The
fail is (lender, and rather longer than the body.
The color of the upper part of the body is
pnereous^ marked ufually with numerous black
fpots ;
Class IV. SHAGREEN RAY.
fpots : the lower part is white. This, as well as
molt other fpecies of Rays, vary a little in color,
according to age.
This grows to a fize equal to the Skate. It
is common at Scarborough, where it is called the
White Hans, or Gullet.
1MET with this fpecies at Scarborough, where 34. Shag.
it is called the French Ray. REEN'
It encreafes to the fize of the Skate *, is fond of
Launces, or Sandeels, which it takes greedily as a
bait.
The form is narrower than that of the common
kinds : the nofe long and very fharp : pupil of the
eye, fapphirine : on the nofe are two fhort rows of
fpines : on the corner of the eyes another of a
femicircular form : on the tail are two rows, con-
tinued a little up the back, fmall, (lender, and
very fharp : along the fides of the tail is a row of
minute fpines, intermixed with innumerable little
fpiculte. The upper part of the body is of a cine-
reous brown, covered clofely with minute fhagreen-
like tubercles, refembling the fkin of the dog-fifli :
the under fide of the body is white : from the nofe
to the beginning of the pedtoral fins is a tubercu-
Jated fpace.
The teeth (lender, and fharp as needles.
G 4 Iaberete ?
88 W H I P R A Y. Class IV.
j | . Whit. Iaberete ? Br a z i l : Marcgrave. 175.
MR. Travis, furgeon at Scarborough, had, in
the fummer of 1769, the tail of a Ray
brought to him by a fifherman of that town : he
had taken it in the fea off the coaft, but flung away
the body.
It was above three feet long, extremely flender
and taper, and deftitute of a fin at the end. I be-
lieve it to belong to the fpecies called by the Brafi-
lians Iaberete ; and that it is likewife found in
the Sicilian feas. I once received the tail of one
from that ifland, correfponding with the defcrip-
tion Mr. Travis gave: I muft alfo add, that it was
entirely covered with hard obtufe tubercles.
N«£K».
SLKCTKIO RAY
U
. m
A
Class IV. ELECTRIC RAY. $9
ftctoxn. Arijl. Hiji. an. lib. Torpedo. Cramp Fifli. Wit. 36. Elec
V. c 5. IX c. 37. Op- Ictb. 81. Raiijyn. pifc. 28. tric.
//«» Halieut. I. 104. II. Smith's Hiji. Wat erf or dy 271.
56. III. 149. Raia Torpedo. Lin. fyft.
Torpedo. Plinii lib. IX. c. 395.
42. Raia tota laevis. Arted. fynon.
La Tremble ou Torpille. 102. Grononj. Zooph. No.
Belon 78, 81. 153. tab. 9.
m Torpedo. Rondel. Gefner pifc. Ph. Tr. 1773, 1774.
THE narcotic or numbing quality of this fifli
has been taken notice of in all ages : it is fo
powerful when the fifh is alive, as inftantly to de-
prive the perfon who touches it of the ufe of his
arm, and even to affect him if he touches it with a
flick. Oppian goes fo far as to fay, that it will be-
numb the aftonifhed fifherman, even through the
whole length of line and rod.
O
Nat /xh hi NAPKH (tQeteooV voov m a7rotei7rst,
Il^yf? avioc^atrot. Tit<zivo(asvyi d'-oduvwtv
OpiMrj 7rft,yQva<; noocrTuovETO&i. Ai-^oc h x<z/-n*s
IWTTEIW doVOMO; T£ ^U^PafXEV, E$ (F OtXin®-
A£flT££»lV £<THY]^E $EPUVUjJLOV i%&V©" #*7@K
^o^^a«l Wek wofoaims «»*#/*©" tteo-ev, 6Va« t£ %%yi$
Tor©- yao K£i$raM©" evi£et<xi avTixa %£<f/.
The hook'd Torpedo ne'er forgets its art,
But foon as ftruck begins to play its part,
And to the line applies its magic fides,
Without delay the fubtile power glides
Along the pliant rod, and flender hairs,
Then
9o ELECTRIC RAY. Class IV.
Then to the rimer's hand as fwift repairs :
Amaz'd he Hands ; his arm's of fenfe bereft,
Down drops the idle rod ; his prey is left :
Not lefs benumb'd, than if he had felt the whole
Of froft's feverell rage beneath the arftic pole.
But great as its powers are when the fifh is in
vigor, they are impaired as it declines in ftrength,
and totally ceafe when it expires. They impart
no noxious qualities to it as a food, being com-
monly eaten by the French, who find them more
frequently on their coafts than we do on ours.
Galen affirms, that the meat of the torpedo is of
fervice to epileptic patients : and that the fhock of
the living fifh applied to the head is efficacious
in removing any pains in that part.
We may mention a double ufe in this flrange
power the torpedo is endued with; the one, when
it is exerted as a means of defence againft vora-
cious fifh, who are at a touch deprived of all poffi-
bility of feizing their prey.
The other is well explained by Pliny, who tells
us, it attains by the fame powers its end in refpect
to thofe fifh it wifhes to enfnare. Novit torpedo
vimfuam, ipfa non torpens-, merfaque in limo fe cc-
cultat pifciwn qui fecuri fupernatantes cbtorpuere,
corripiens *.
* " The torpedo is well acquainted with its own powers,
cc though itfelf never affe&ed by them. It conceals itfelf in
il the mud, and benumbing the fifh that are carelefsly fwim-
'■' ming about, makes a ready prey of them."
Bur
Class IV. ELECTRIC RAY.
But the acknowledgements of every naturalift
are due to John Walfh, Efquire, for his curious
and unwearied refearches into the nature of this
fifh ; and for the firft certainty we had of its being
a native of our feas. To him I am particularly-
bound, for being enabled to correct my errors in
the former account,,
Li
IT is frequently taken in Torbay, has been
once caught off Pembroke, and fometimes near
Water ford in Ireland. It is generally taken, like
other fiat fifh, with the trawl ; but there is an in-
flance of its taking a bait, which vindicates the
hne account that Oppian has left us of this fifh,
It commonly lies in water of about forty fa-
thoms depth y and in company with the congene-
rous Rays.
The torpedo brings forth its young at the autum-
nal equinox as affirmed by Ariftotle. A gentleman
of la Rochelle, on differing certain females of this
fpecies, the ioth of September, found in the ma-
trices, feveral of the fcetufes quite formed, and nine
eggs, in no (late of forwardnefs : fuperfcetation
feems therefore to be a property of this fifh.
The food of the torpedo is fifh •, a furmullet and
a plaife having been found in the flomach of
two of them. The furmullet as a fifh of that
fwiftnefs, that it was impoflible for the torpedo to
take it by purfuit. It is probable, that by their
ek&ric flroke, they flupify their prey \ yet the crab
and fea leech will venture to annoy them,
They
9*
92
ELECTRIC RAY. Class IV.
They will live four and twenty hours out of the
fea ; and but very little longer if placed in frefh
water.
They inhabit fandy places-, and will bury
themfelves fuperficially in it, by flinging the fand
over, by a quick flapping of all the extremities.
It is in this fituation that the torpedo gives his mod
forcible fliock, which throws down the aftonifhed
paflfenger, who inadvertently treads upon him.
In our feas it grows to a great fize, and above
eighty pounds weight.. My defcription was taken
from a fmaller, which I had the pleafure of doing
in company with Mr. JValfh.
Its length was eighteen inches from the head
to the tip of the tail -> the greateft breadth twelve
inches. I could not inform myfelf of the weight
of this ; but that of one, that meafured four feet
in length, and two and a half in breadth, was
fifty-three pounds, avoirdupoife.
The tail was fix inches long ; was pretty thick
and round : the caudal fin broad and abrupt.
The head and body, which were indiftincl:, were
nearly round ; about two inches thick in the mid-
dle, attenuating to extreme thinnefs on the edges :
below the body, the ventral fins formed on each
fide a quarter of a circle. The two dorfal fins
were placed on the trunk of the tail.
The eyes were fmall, placed near each other:
behind each was a round fpiracle, with fix fmall
cutaneous rags on their inner circumference.
Mouth
Class IV. T H O R N B A C K. 93
Mouth fmall: teeth minute, fpicular.
Five openings to the gills, as in others of this
genus.
The fkin every where fmooth : cinereous brown
above; white beneath.
** With blunt Teeth,
La Raye bouclee. Bekn 70. Raia clavata. Lin.JyJf. 297. 37* Thors-
Raia clavata. Rondel. 353. Gronov. Zoopb. No. 154. back.
Gefner pifc. 795. R. aculeata dentibus tubercu-
Steinroch. Sbone<veIdey 59. loiis, cartilagine tranfverfa
TJiornback. Wil. lab, 74. abdominali. Arted. Jynon.g^,
Rail fyn. pifc* 26. Racka. Faun. Suec. No. 293.
THIS common fifh is eafily diftinguiilied from
the others by the rows of ftrong fharp fpines,
difpofed along the back and tail. In a large one
we faw, were three rows on the back, and five on
the tail, all inclining rewards its end.
On the nofe, and on the inner fide of the fore-
head, near the eyes, were a few fpines, and others
were fcattered without any order on the upper part
of the pectoral fins.
The mouth was fmall, and filled with granulated
teeth.
The upper part of the body was of a pale afh
color, marked with fhort ftreaks of black, and the
{kin rough, with fmall tubercles like fhagreen.
The
94
THORNBACK. Class IV.
The belly white, crofTed with a ftrong femilu-
nar cartilage beneath the fkin : in general the lower
part was fmooth, having only a few fpines on each
fide.
The young fifh have very few fpines on them,
and their backs are often fpotted with white, and
each fpot is encircled with black.
Food. This fpecies frequents our fandy fhores, are very
voracious, and feed on all forts of flat fifh, and are
particularly fond of herrings and fand eels, and
fometimes eat cruftaceous animals, fuch, as crabs.
Thefe fometimes weigh fourteen or fifteen
pounds, but with us feldorn exceed that weight.
They begin to generate in June, and bring forth
their young in July and Auguft^ which (as well as
thofe of the fkate) before they are old enough to
breed, are c lied maids. The thornback begins to
be in feafon in November^ and continues fo later
than fkate, but the young of both are good at ail
times of the year.
Tfi/yw
Class IV.
STING RAY.
95
Tfuyccv. Ariil. Hifi. an. lib.
VIII. c. 13. IX. 37. Op-
pian. Halieut. I. 1 04. II.
462.
PafHnaca Plinii lib. IX. c. 42.
38.
La Paftenade de mer, Tour-
terelle, ou Tareronde. Be-
lon 83.
Paftinaca. Rondel. 33 J. Gef-
ner pifc. 679.
Wil.
Steckroche. Grone
Scbonevelde, 58.
Paftinaca marina lasvis
.pifc. 67.
Fire Flaire. Ration, pifc. 24.
Raia Paftinaca. Lin.fyfi. 396.
Raia corpore glabro, aculeo
longo anterius ferrato, cauda
apterygia . Arted. fy?ion.
1 00. Gronov. Zsopb. No,
158.
Tepel. 38. Sting.
THE weapon with which nature has armed this
fifh, hath fupplied the antients with many-
tremendous fables relating to it. Pliny, s£lian%
and Oppian, have given it a venom that .affects even
the inanimate creation : trees that are Crude by it
inftantly lofe their verdure and perim, and rocks
themfeives are incapable of refitting the potent poi-
fon.
The enchantrefs Circe, armed her fon with a
fpear headed with the fpine of the Trygon, as the
mod irrefiftible weapon me could furnim him with,
and with which he afterwards committed parri-
cide, unintentionally, on his father Ulyjfes.
That fpears and darts might, in very early
times, have been headed with this bone inflead of
iron, we have no kind of doubt: that of another
fpecies of this fifli being dill ufed to point the ar~
* Hi If. an. lib, II. c.
36,
rows
96 STINGRAY. Class IV.
rows of fome of the South American Indians, and is,
from its hardnefs, fharpnefs, and beards, a moil
dreadful weapon.
But in refped to its venemous qualities, there
is not the left credit to be given to the opinion,
though it was believed (as far as it affected the
animal world) by Rondeletius, Aldrovand, and
other?, and even to this day by the fifhermen in fe-
veral parts of the kingdom. It is in fact the wea-
pon of offence belonging to the fifh, capable of giv-
ing a very bad wound, and which is attended with
dangerous fymptoms, when it falls on a tendi-
nous part, or on a perfon in a bad habit of bo-
dy. As to any fifth having a fpine charged with
actual poifon, we mud deny our affent to it,
though the report is fanctified by the name of Lin-
naus *.
Descrip. This fpecies does not grow to the bulk of the o-
thers : that which we examined was two feet nine
inches from the tip of the nofe to the end of the
tail ; to the origin of the tail one foot three inches ;
the breadth one foot eight.
The body is quite fmooth, of a fhape almoft
round, and is of a much greater thicknefs, and
* Syfi. Nat. I. 34S. He inflances the Pajlinaca, the Tor*
'pedo, and the Tetrodon /meatus. The firft is incapable of coa»
veying a greater injury than what refults from the meer
wound. The fecond, from its electric effluvia : and the
third, by imparting a pungent pain like the fting of nettles,
occalioned by the minute fpines on its abdomen.
more
Class IV. STINGRAY. 97
more elevated form in the middle than any Other
Rays^ but grows very thin towards the edges.
The nofe is very fharp pointed, but mortj the
mouth fmall, and filled with granulated teeth.
The irides are of a gold color : behind each eye
the orifice is very large.
The tail is very thick at the beginning : the fpine Tail*
is placed about a third the length of the former
from the body, is about five inches long, flat on
the top and bottom, very hard, fharp pointed, and
the two fides thin, and clofely and iharply bearded
the whole way. The tail extends four inches be-
yond the end of this fpine, and grows very flender
at the extremity.
Thefe fifh are obferved to fhed their fpine, and
to renew them annually ; fometimes the new fpine
appears before the old one drops off, and the
Corni/h call this fpecies Cardinal Trilqft9 or three
tailed, when fo circumftanced.
The color of the upper part of the body is a
dirty yellow, the middle part of an obfcure blue :
the lower fide white, the tail and fpine dufky*
Vol. ML H Slender
9s
ANGEL FISH. Class IV,
VI.
SHARK.
Slender body growing lefs towards the tail.
Two fins on the back.
Rouo-h fkin.
»•
Five apertures on the fides of the neck.
Mouth generally placed far beneath the end of the
nofe.
The upper part of the tail longer than the lower.
* Without the anal fin.
39. Angel. P/wi. Arifl. Hijl. an. lib. V.
c. 5, &c. Atkenaus, lib. VII.
^.319.
Oppian Halieut. I. 388, 742.
Squatina Plin. lib. IX. c. 12.
' Rhina, fc. Squatus. lib.
XXXII. c. 11.
L'Ange, ou Angelot de mer.
Be Ion 69.
Squatina. Rondel, $6y. Gefner
pifc. 899. Wil, Icth. 79.
Monk, or Angel Fiih. Rail
fyn. pifc. 26.
Squalus fquatina. Lin. fyfi.
398. S. pinna ani nulla,
caudal duabus, ore termi-
nali, naribus cirrofis. Ibid.
Sq. pinna ani carens, ore in
apice capitis. Ar ted. fyn. 95.
Gronov. Zooph. Na. 151.
THIS is the fifti which connects the genus of
Rays and Sharks, partaking fomething of
the character of both ; yet in an exception to
each in the fituation of the mouth, which is pla-
ced at the extremity of the head.
It is a fifri not unfrequent on molt of our coafts,
where it prowls about for prey like others of the
kind,. It is extremely voracious, and* like the
Ray,
'%
Class IV, ANGEL FISH. 99
Ray, feeds on flounders and flat fi(h, which keep
at the bottom of the water, as we have often found
on opening them. It is extremely fierce and dan-
gerous to be approached. We knew an inftance Fierceness.
of a fifherman, whole leg was terribly tore by a
large one of this fpecies, which lay within his nets
in {hallow water, and which he went to lay hold
of incautioufly.
The afpe£t of thefe, as well as die reft of the
genus have much malignity in them : their eyes are
oblong, and placed lengthways in their head, funk
in it, and overhung by the fkin, and feem fuller
of malevolence than fire.
. Their fkin is very rough ; the antients made ufe
of it to polifh wood and ivory *, as we do at pre-
fent that of the greater dog-fifh. The fleih is now
but little efteemed on account of its coarfenefs and
ranknefs, yet Archeftratus (as quoted by Atbenaus%
p. 319.) (peaking of the filh of Miletus, gives this
the firft place in refpecl to its delicacy of the whole
cartilaginous tribe.
They grow to a great fize-, we have feen them Descrip,
of near an hundred weight.
The head is large, the teeth broad at their bafe,
but (lender and very iharp above, and difpofed in
five rows all round the jaws. Like thofe of all
Sharks, they are capable of being raifed or de-
prefied by means of mufcles uniting them to the
* Qua lignum et ebora poliuntu*. Pit nil Uh, IX. c. 12.
H 2 jaws
loo PICKED DOG FISH. Class IV.
jaws, not being lodged in fockets as the teeth of
cetaceous fifth are.
The tongue is large ; the eyes fmall ; the pupil
of a pale green ; the irides white, fpotted with
brown : behind each eye is a femilunar orifice.
The back is of a pale afti color, and very
rough j along the middle is a prickly tubeiculated.
line : the belly is white and fmooth.
The pectoral fins are very large, and extend
horizontally from the body to a great diftance •, they
have -fome refemblance to wings, fo writers have
given this the name it bears in this work.
The ventral fins are placed in the fame manner,
and the double penis is placed in them, which
forms another character of the males in this and
the laft genus.
The tail is ? bifurcated, the upper lobe rather
the loncreft : not very remote from the end on the
back are two fins.
40. Picked. 'AxavQfa ya^so;. Arift. Hijl. The picked dog, or hound
an. Lib. VI. c. 10. Oppi- fiih. Rail Jyn. pifc. 21.
an Halieut. I. 380. Squalus fpinax. Lin.Jyfi. 397.
YsmwritAthenai, Lib. VII. p. % Pinna ani nulla> dorla-
L' Efguillats. Belon, 61. libus fpinofis, corpore tere-
Galeusacanthias.^WJ. 373. tiufculo. Ibid.
Gefnerpifc. 607. % Pinna anl nulIa» corpore
Sperhaye, Dornhundt. 'Scho- fubrotundo. Arud. fynon.
nevelde, 29. 94*
Galeus acanthias five fpinax. Hai- Faun- Suef- No- 29S«
Wil. lab. 56. Gronov. Zooph. 149.
Name. fT^HE picked dog fifth takes its name from a
« X ftrong and Iharp fpine placed juft before each
of
Class IV. BASKING SHARK. lot
of the back fins, diftinguifhing it at once from the
reft of the Britifh fharks.
The nofe is long, and extends greatly beyond the Descrip.
mouth, but is blunt at the end.
The teeth are difpofed in two rows, are fmall
and fharp, and bend from the middle of each jaw
towards the corners of the mouth.
The firft back fin is placed nearer the head than
the tail •, the other is fituated very near the latter.
The tail is finned for a confiderable fpace be-
neath, and the upper part is much the longeft.
The back is of a brownifh am color \ the belly
white.
It grows to the weight of about twenty pounds.
This fpecies fwarms on the coafts of Scotland*
where it is taken, fplit and dried : and is a food
among the common people. It forms a fort of in-
ternal commerce, being carried on women's backs,
fourteen or fixteen miles up the country, and fold ;
or exchanged for neceflaries.
** With the anal fin.
S qu a lu s maximus. Sodden- Gunner Act. Nidros. III. 41. Bask INS.
tibus caninis, pinna dor- 33. Tab. II.
fali anteriore majore. Syft. Sun-fifh. Smith's hift. Corky
nat. 400. II. 292. Hift. Waterford,
Brugden. Squalus maximus. 271.
T
HIS fpecies has been long known to the
inhabitants of the fouth and weft of Ireland
H 3 and
io* BASKING SHARK. Class IV.
and Scotland, and thofe of Caernarvon/hire and
Anglefea ; but having never been confidered in any
other than a commercial view, has till this time
remained undeicribed by any Englijh writer ; and
what is worfe, miftaken for and confounded with
the luna of Rondeletius, the fame that our Englijh
writers call the fun-ffh.
The Irifh and Welch give it the fame name, from
its lying as if to fun itfelf on the furface of the wa*
ter; and for the fame reafon we have taken the
liberty of tailing it the bajking Jhark. It was
long taken for a fpecies of whale, till we pointed
out the branchial orifices on the fides, and the per-
pendicular fite of the tail.
Thefe are migratory fifh, or at left it is but in a
certain number of years that they are feen in multi-
tudes on the Welch feas, though in mod fummers
a tingle and perhaps ftrayed fifh appears. They
inhabit the Northern feas, even as high as the arclic
circle.
They vifited the bays of Caernarvon/hire and
Anglefea in vaft fhoals, in the fummers of 1756%
and a few fucceeding years, continuing there only
the hot months, for they quitted the coaft about
Michaelmas, as if cold weather was difagreeable to
them.
They appear in the Firth of Clyde •, and among
* Some old people fay they recoiled!: the fame fort offifli
vifiting thefe feas in vaft numbers about forty years ago.
the
Class IV. BASKING SHARK. 103
the Hebrides in the month of June, in fmall droves
of feven or eight ; but oftener in pairs. They
continue in thofe feas, till the latter end of Jufy9
when they difappear.
They had nothing of the fierce and voracious na-
ture of the (hark kind, and were fo tame as to fuf-
fer themfelves to be ftroked : they generally lay mo-
tionlefs on the furface, commonly on their bellies,
but fometimes, like tired fwimmers, on their backs.
Their food feemed to confift entirely of fea Foou.
plants, no remains of fifh being ever difcovered in
the ftomachs of numbers that were cut up, except
fome green ftuff, the half digefted parts of algay
and the like. Linnaus fays, it feeds on medufa. .
At certain times they were feen fporting on the
waves, and leaping with vaft agility feveral feet out
of the water. They fwim very deliberately, with the
dorfal fins above water.
Their length was from three to twelve yards*
and fometimes even longer.
Their form was rather (lender, like others of the
ftiark kind.
The upper jaw was much longer than the lower,
and blunt at the end. The mouth placed beneath,
and each jaw furnifhed with numbers of fmall
teeth : thofe before were much bent, thofe more
remote in the jaws were conic and fharp pointed.
On the fides of the neck were five, large tranf-
verfe apertures to the gills.
On the back were two fins \ the firft very large,
H 4 not;
104 BASKING SHARK. Class IV.
not dire&ly in the middle, but rather nearer the
head ; the other fmall, and fituated near the tail.
On the lower part were five others -, viz. two
pectoral fins; two ventral fins, placed juft beneath
the hind fin of the back ; and a fmall anal fin.
Near thefe, the male had two genitals, as in other
{harks *, and between thefe fins was fituated the
pudendum of the female.
The tail was very large, and the upper part
remarkably longer than the lower.
The color of the upper part of the body was a
deep leaden ; the belly white.
The ikin was rough, like fhagreen, but lefs fo
on the belly than the back.
Within fide the mouth, towards the throat, was
a very fhort fort of whalebone.
Liver, The liver was of a great fize, but that of the
female was the largefi: ; fome weighed above a
O i l. thoufand pounds, and yielded a great quantity of
pure and fweet oil, fit for lamps, and alfo much
ufed by the people who took them, to cure brui-
ksy burns, and rheumatic complaints. A large fifh
has afforded to the captors a profit of twenty
pounds. They were viviparous, a young one a-
bout a foot in length being found in the belly
of a fifh of this kind.
The meafurements of one, I found dead on
the fhore of Jj)ch Ranza in the ifie of Arran^ were
as follow. The whole length twenty feven feet,
four inches : firft dorfal fin, three feet -9 fecond,
one
ClassIV. BASKING SHARK. 105
one foot ; pectoral fin, four feet ; ventral, two
feet : the upper lobe of the tail, five feet -, the
lower, three.
They will permit a boat to follow them, with-
out accelerating their motion, till it comes almoft
within contact ; when a harpooneer ftrikes his wea-
pon into them, as near to the gills as pofilble.
But they are often fo infenfible, as not to move till
the united ftrength of two men have forced in the
harpoon deeper. As foon as they perceive them-
felves wounded, they fling up their tail and plunge
headlong to the bottom ; and frequently coil the
rope round them in their agonies, attempting to
difengage the harpoon from them by rolling on
the ground, for it is often found greatly bent.
As foon as they difcover that their efforts are in
vain, they fwim away with amazing rapidity, and
with fuch violence, that there has been an inftance
of a veffel of feventy tons having been towed away
againft a frefh. gale. They fometimes run oft with
two hundred fathoms of line, and with two har-
poons in them *, and will employ the fifhers for
twelve, and fometimes twenty four hours before
they are fubdued. When killed, they are either
hawled on more, or if at a difrance from land, to
the veffel's fide. The liver (the only ufeful part)
is taken out, and melted into, oil in kettles pro-
vided for that purpofe. A large fifh will yield
eight barrels of oil ; and two of worthlefs fedement.
The fifhers obferved on them a fort of leech of
a reddifh
I06 WHITE SHARK. Class IV.
a reddifh color, and about two feet long, but
which fell off when the fifti was brought to the
furface of the water, and left a white mark on the
fkin.
42. White, hun'ia*. Arifi. Hiji. an. Lib.
V. c. 5. IX. c. 37.
Aa(/.vv. Oppian Halieut, I.
370. V. 36.
Kaqxctfias Kvav. At ben. Lib.
VII. p. 310.
Lamia ? Plinii, Lib. IX. c. 24.
Le chien carcharien ou Perlz
fifch de Norvege. Belo?iy
52, S7.
Lamia. Tiburo. Rondel. 489,
39°-
Canis Carcharias. Gefner pifc.
173-
White Shark. Wil. Iah. 47.
Raiijyn. pifc. 18.
Squalus carcharias. Sq. dorfo
piano dentibus ferratis,
Lin.fyfi. 400.
Arted. Jynon. 89. Grono<v>
No. 143.
Size.
THIS grows to a very great bulk, Gillius fays,
to the weight of four thoufand pounds ; and
that in the belly of one was found a human corps
entire, which is far from incredible, confidering
their vaft greedinefs after human flefh.
They are the dread of the failors in all hot cli-
mates, where they conftantly attend the fnips iri
expectation of what may drop overboard; a man
that has that misfortune perifhes without redempti-
on : they have been feen to dart at him, like gud-
geons to a worm. A matter of a Guinea fhip in-
formed me, that a rage of fuicide prevailed among
his new bought flaves, from a notion the unhap-
py creatures had, that after death they fhould be
reftored
Class IV. WHITE SHARK, 107
reftored again to their families, friends, and conn-
try. To convince them at left that they mould
not re-animate their bodies, he ordered one of
their corpfes to be tied by the heels to a rope, and
lowered into the fea, and though it was drawn up
again as faft as the united force of the crew could
be exerted, yet in that fhort fpace the fharks had
devoured every part but the feet, which were fecu-
red at the end of the cord.
Swimmers very often perifh by them ; fome-
times they lofe an arm or leg, and fometimes are
bit quite afunder, ferving but for two morfels for
this ravenous animal : a melancholy tale of this
kind is related in a Weft India ballad, preferved in
Doctor Percy's Reliques of ancient Englijh Poetry *1
The mouth of this fifh is furnifhed with (fome-
times) a fixfold row of teeth, flat, triangular,
exceedingly fharp at their edges, and finely fer-
rated. We have one that is rather more than an
inch and an half long. Grew f fays, that thofe in
the jaws of a mark two yards in length, are not
half an inch, fo that the fifh to which mine belong-
ed muft have been fix yards long, provided the
teeth and body keep pace in their growth J.
This dreadful apparatus, when the Mm is in a
? Vol I. 331.
f Rarities y 91.
\ Fcflil teeth of this fifh are very frequent in Malta, Tome
of which are four inches long.
ftate
,oS WHITE SHARK. Class IV.
ftate of repofe, lie quite flat in the mouth, but
when he feizes his prey, he has power of erecting
them, by the help of a fet of mufcles that join
them to the jaw.
The mouth is placed far beneath, for which
reafon thefe, as well as the reft of the kind, are
faid to be obliged to turn on their backs to feize
their prey, which is an obfervation as antient as the
days of Pliny *.
The eyes are large •, the back broad, flat, and
fhorter than that of other fharks. The tail is of
a femilunar form, but the upper part is longer
than the lower. It has vaft ftrength in the tail,
and can ftrike with great force, fo that the fail-
ors inftantly cut it off with an axe as foon as they
draw one on board.
The pectoral fins are very large, which enables
it to fwim with great fwiftnefs.
The color of the whole body and fins is a light
afh.
The antients were acquainted with this fifli ; and
Oppian gives a long and entertaining account of its
capture. Their flefh is fometimes eaten, but is ef-
teemed both coarfe and rank.
* Omnia autem carnwora funt talia et fupina vefcantur.
lib. IX. c. 24.
Th<xvK&
Class IV. B L U E S H A R K. 409
Thaw.©-. JEUan an. Lib. I. Squalus fofTula triangular! in 43, Blui,
c' 16. extremo dorfo, foraminibus
Galeus gkucus. Rondel. 378. nullis ad oculos. Arted. fyn.
Gejner pifc. 609. 98.
Blew ihark Wil. Idh. 49. Squalus glaucus. Lin. fyjl.
Ran fyn. pifc. 20. 40 1.
JULIAN relates ftrange things of the affecti-
on this ipecies bears to its young: among
others, he fays, that it will permit the fmall
brood, when in danger, to fwim down its mouth,
and take fhelter in its belly. This faft has been
fmce confirmed by the obfervation of one of our
bed idthyologifts *, and is no more incredible, than
that the young of the OpcJJum mould feek an afy-
lum in the ventral pouch of its parent, a fact too
well known to be contefled. But this degree of
care is not peculiar to the blue mark, but we be-
lieve common to the whole genus.
This fpecies frequents many of our coafts, but
particularly thofe of Cornwall during the pilchard
feafon, and is at that time taken with great iron
hooks made on purpofe.
It is of an oblong form : the nofe extends far be- Descrip.
yond the mouth : it wants the orifices behind the
eyes, which are nfual in this genus : the nollrils
are long, and placely tranfverfely. Artedi remarks
a triangular dent in the lower part of the back.
* RondeUtiuSy 38$.
The
no LONG-TAILED SHARK. Class IV.
The fkin is fmoother than that of other fharks :
the back is of a fine blue color; the belly of a
filvery white.
Linnaeus fays, that its teeth are granulated \ for
our part we muft confefs it is a fifli that has not
come under our examination, therefore hope to
be favored with an accurate defcription from fome
naturalift, who lives on the coaft it haunts.
We may add, that Rondeletius fays he was an
eye-witnefs to its fondnefs for human fiefh: that
thefe fifti are lefs deftructive in our feas, is owing
to the coolnefs of the climate, which is well known
ro abate the flercenefs of fome, as well as the
venom of other animals.
44. Long- AXw'zrfif ? Arift»HiJl. an. Lib. Cercus Caii opufc. no.
tailed. IX. c. 37. JElian Var. Sea Fox, or Ape. Wil. Iclb,
Hift. Lib. I. c. 5. 54. Rail fyn. pifc. 20.
Oppian Halieut, I. 381. III. Squalus Cauda longiore quam
144. ipfum corpus. Arted. fyn,
Vulpes Plinit Lib. IX. c. 43. 96.
Singe de mer. Belon, 88. Sea Fox. Threfher. Borla/e
Vulpes marina. Rondel. 337. Cornwall. 265.
Gefner pifc. 1 045.
Tail, 'TpHIS fifh is moft remarkable for the great
"*" length of the tail : the whole meafure of that
we had an opportunity of examining, was thirteen
feet> of which the tail alone was more than fix,
the
>\ • ftsi
a -.-,■•
Class IV. TOPE. ui
the upper lobe extending greatly beyond the
lower, almoft in a (trait line.
The body was round and fhort : the nofe fhort
but fharp pointed i the eyes large, and placed im-
mediately over the corners of the mouth, which was
fmall, and not very diftant from the end of the
nofe.
The teeth are triangular, and fmall for the fize
of the fifh, and placed in three rows.
The back afh color : the belly white : the
fkin univerfally fmooth.
The antients ftyled this fifh A^tteI, and Vulpes^
from its fuppofed cunning. They believed, that
when it had the misfortune to have taken a bait, it
fwallowed the hook till it got at the cord, which
it bit off, and fo efcaped.
They are fometimes taken in our feas, and have
been imagined to be the fifh called the ^Threjher,
from its attacking and beating the Grampus with
its long tail, whenever that fpecies of whale rifes
to the furface to breathe.
Ki/av? Ariji. Hift. an. Lib. The Tope. Wil. lab. 51. 45. Tope,
VI. c. II. Rail fyn, pifc. 20.
Canicula ? Plinii Lib. IX. c. Squalus naribus ori vicinis ;
46. foramittibus exiguis ad o-
Le chien ds mer, ou Cani- culos. Arted. fynon. 97.
cule. Belon, 65. Squalus galeus. Lin.Jyji. 399.
Canis galeus. Rondel. 377. Grono<v. Zoopb. No. 142.
Gefner pifc. 167.
O
NE that was taken on our coaft the lad year Size,
weighed twenty feven pounds, and its length
was
ii2 TOP E. Class IV.
was five feet-, but they grew to a greater fize,
fome, according to Artedius^ weighing an hundred
pounds.
The color of the upper part of the body and fins
was a light cinereous •, the belly white.
The nofe was very long, flat, and (harp point-
ed i beyond the noftrils femitraniparent. The nof-
trils were placed very near the mouth.
Behind each eye was a fmall orifice. The teeth
were numerous, difpofed in three rows, fmall, very
fharp, triangular, and ferrated on their inner edge.
The firft back fin was placed about eighteen
inches from the head ; the other very near the tail.
The tail finned beneath, the upper part ended in
a fharp angle.
This fpecies is faid by Rondeletius to be very
fierce and voracious, even to purfue its prey to the
edge of the more.
Its fkin and flefri has an offenfive rank fmell ;
therefore we fuppofe Mr. Bale gave it ironically
the title of Sweet William *.
Hift. Harwich, 420.
N£?ic%f
Class IV. SPOTTED DOG FISH.
u3
Arift. Hijl. an. Lib. V. c.
lO. VI. c. 10, II.
TIoiki'Kqc ? Oppian Halieut. I.
381.
La RoufTete commune. Belon.
65.
Canicula Arijiotelis. Rondel.
380. Gefner pifc. 168.
Catulus major vulgaris. #7/. Greater Cat fifh. £far. 289.
lab. 62.
Greater Cat Fifh : the Bounce. 46. Spotted
Rati fyn. pifc. 2 2 .
Squalus ex rufo varius, pinna
ani medio inter anum et
caudem pinnatum. Arted.
fyn. 97.
Squalus canicula, Lin. fyft.
399. Gronov. Zooph. No.
145.
*nplHIIS fpecies being remarkably fpotted, may
"** be the fame known to antients by the names
exprefTed in the fynonyms -, but they fo frequently
leave fuch flight notices of the animals they men-
tion, that we are often obliged to add a doubt-
ful mark (?) to numbers of them.
The weight of one we took was fix pounds three Descrif,
ounces, and yet it meafured three feet eight inches
in length ; fo light are the cartilaginous fifh in
refpedt to their fize.
The nofe was ftiort, and very blunt, not ex-
tending above an inch and an half beyond the
mouth. The noftrils were large, placed near the
mouth, and covered with a large angular flap :
the head very flat.
The eyes were oblong, behind each a large
orifice opening to the infide of the mouth.
The teeth fmall, fharp, fmooth at their fides?
ftrait, and difpofed in four rows.
Vol. III. I Both
ii4 SPOTTED DOG FISH. Class IV.
Both the back fins were placed much behind, and
nearer the tail than in common.
The tail was finned, and below extended into a
(harp angle.
The color of the whole upper part of the bo-
dy, and the fins, was brown, marked with numbers
of large diftincl black fpots : fome parts of the (kin
were tinged with red ; the belly was white.
The whole was moil remarkably round, and had
a ftrong fmell.
The tendrils that iiTue from each end of the purfe
of this fifh, are much more delicate and (lender
than thofe of any other % are as fine as Indian grafs,
and very much refemble it.
The female of this fpecies, and we believe of
other (harks, is greatly fuperior in fize to the male ;
fo that in this refpect there is an agreement be-
tween the fifh and the birds of prey*. They bring
about nineteen young at a time : the fiihermen
believe that they breed at all times of the year,
as they fcarce ever take any but what are with
young.
To this kind may be added, as a meer variety,
the
Catulus maximus. WiU Ittb. 63. Rait fyn. pifc. 22.
Squalus cinereus, pinnis ventralibus difcretis. Arted.Jyn, 97,
Squalus fleljaris. Lin.Jyft. 399.
No. 145. Grono<v. Zooph,
* Vide Britijb Zoology, Vol.l, 1 30.
The
V
Class IV. LESSER SPOTTED DOG FISH. 115
The chief difference feeming to be in the color
and the fize of the fpots ; the former being grey,
the latter fewer but larger than in the other.
Le mufcarol ? Belon, 64. ventralibusconcretis. Arted. 47- Lesser
Catulus minor. VVil. Idh.6\. fynon. 97. SPOTTED.
LefTer Rough Hound, or Mor- Squalus catulus. Lin.fyft. 400.
gay Rail fyn. pifc. 22. Grono<v. Zoopb. No. 144.
Squalus dorfo vario, pinnis
'TpHE weight of one that was brought to us by
A a fifherman was only one pound twelve
ounces ♦, the length two feet two inches : it is of a
(lender make in all parts.
The head was flat : the noftrils covered with
a long flap : the nofe blunt, and marked beneath
with numerous fmall punctures : behind each eye
was a fmall orifice: the back fins, like thofe of
the former, placed far behind.
The ventral fins are united, forming as if it were
but one, which is a fure mark of this fpecies.
The tail finned like that of the greater dog fifh.
The color is cinereous, (freaked in fome parts
with red, and generally marked with numbers of
fmall black fpots \ but we have obferved in fome
that they are very faint and obfcure.
The belly is white.
This fpecies breeds from nine to thirteen young
1 2 at
n5 SMOOTH HOUND. Class IV.
at a time, is very numerous on fome of our coafh,
and very injurious to the fifheries.
Smooth. Tata©- Ksio; ? Arift. Hift. an.
Lib. VI. c. 10. Oppi-
an, Lib. I. 380.
Galeus lsevis. Rondel. 37 '5.
Gefner pifc. 608.
Muftelus lsevis primus. j^7/.
i&&. 60.
Smooth or unprickly hound.
Raii fyn. pifc. 22.
Squalus dentibus obtufis feur
granulofis. Arted.fyn. 93.
Squalus muftelus. £/«. 2i/?°
400. Groncv. Zoopb. No.
14,2.
^TpHIS fpecies is. called fmooth, not that the
A fkin is really fo, but becaufe it wants the
fpines on the back, which are the character of the
iecond fpecies, the Picked Dog.
The nofe extends far beyond the mouth, and'
the end blunt : the holes behind the eyes are fmall -,
the back is lefs flat than that of others of this
genus.
The firft back fin is placed midway above the
pectoral and ventral fins: the pectoral fins are
fmall.
The tail forked, but the upper part is much the
longed.
The teeth refemble thofe of a Ray, rough and
fharp.
The color of the back and fides afh, and free
from fpots v the belly filvery.
The
05
0Q
Class IV. PORBEAGLE. 117
The Porbeagle. Borlafe Cornwall, 265. Tab. 26. 49- Po^ea
GLE,
^TpHE figure of this fifh, engraved after a draw-
ing by the Rev. Mr. J ago *, is preferved -in
Doctor Borlafe's Natural Hiftory of Cornwall
As it is not attended with any account farther
than that it is a Cornijh fifh, and a fmall fpecies
of (hark, we are obliged to form the beft defcrip-
tion we can from the print.
The nofe appears to be very long, (lender to-
wards the end, and fharp pointed. The mouth
placed far beneath \ the body very thick and
deep, but extremely (lender juit at the fetting on
of the tail.
The firft back fin is placed almoft in the mid-
dle, the other pretty near the tail,
The belly very deep : the ventral and anal fins
fmall.
The tail bifurcated ; the upper fork a little
longer than the lower.
* This gentleman was minifter of Loo, in Cornwall, and
appears to have been well acquainted with the Hiftory of
Fifh. He communicated figures of feveral of the Cornijh fifh,,
with a brief account of each to Petl-ver, at whofe in-
stance, as Doctor Derham tells us, in the preface to Mr. Ray's
Itineraries, p. 6g, he added them to the Synopfis Avium e:
pifcium, p. 162. A few others of his drawings are alfo pre-
ferved in the Natural Hiftory of Cornwall, and feem to be
executed with (kill and accuracy.
1 3 THIS
ill BEAUMARIS. Class IV.
|o. Beau- ^T^HIS fpecies was obferved by my friend the
Rev. Mr. Hugh Davies of Beaumaris, who
favored me with the defcription, and an accurate
drawing made from the fifh taken in a neighboring
wear.
The length was feven feet. The fnout and body
of a cylindrical form. The greateft circumference
four feet eight inches.
The nofe blunt. The noftrils fmall. The mouth
armed with three rows of (lender teeth*, flatted
on each fide, very (harp, and furni fined at the bafe
with two fharp proceffes. The teeth are fixed to
the jaws by certain mufcles, and are liable to be
raifed or depreffed at pleafure.
The firft dorfal fin was two feet eight inches
difcant from the fnout, of a triangular form : the
fecond very fmall, and placed near the tail.
The pectoral fins ftrong and large : the ventral
and anal fmall.
The fpace between the fecond dorfal fin and
the tail much depreffed ♦, the fides forming an acute
angle. Above and below was a tranfverfe foffule
or dent.
The tail was in the form of a crefcent, but the
* Thefe teeth are often found foffil, and are ftyled by
Lluyd Qmithoglofluniy from their refemblance to a bird's tongue.
horns
Class IV. BEAUMARIS. u9
horns of unequal lengths : the upper one foot ten
inches ; the lower one foot one.
The whole fifh was a lead color. The fkin com-
paratively fmooth, being far lefs rough than that of
the lefTer fpecies of this genus.
1 4 One
120
COMMON ANGLER. Class IV.
VII.
ANGLER,
One aperture behind each ventral fin.
Large, flat, and circular head and body.
Teeth numerous and fmall in the jaws, roof of the
mouth, and on the tongue.
Pectoral fins broad and thick.
51. Common. Bctrgaxo$- Arifi. Uift. an. Seheganfs, feheteuffel, fehe
Lib. IV. c. 37. Oppian tode. Schonevelde, 59.
Halieut. II. 86.
Rana pifcatrix. Ovid. Ha-
lieut. 126. Plinii Lib. IX.
c. 24.
La Grenouille de mer, ou
Toad-fifh, Fro^-fifh, or Sea-
Devil. Wil.^lah. 85. Rait
fyn.pifc. 29.
Lophius ore cirrofo* Arted.
Jyn. 87._
pefcheufe. Le Diable de Lophius pifcatorius. Lin. Jyji,
mer, Bauldroy & Pefche- 402.
teau. Belon, 77. L. p. depreffus capite rotun-
Rana pifcatrix. Rondel. 363. 4ato. Faun. Suec. No. 298.
Gefner pifc* 8 1 3. Grono<v. Zoopb. No. 207.
Namj» f 1 ^HIS lingular fifh was known to the an-
1 tients by the name of B«t^%©-5 and Rana3
and to us by that of the fifhing frog, for it is of a
figure refembling that animal in a tadpole ftate.
Pliny takes notice of the artifice ufed by it to
take its prey : Eminentia fub oculis cornicula turbato
limo exerit, ajfultantes pifciculos attrahens^ donee tarn
prope aecedant, ut qfliliat. " It puts forth the
" flender horns it has beneath its eyes, enticing
\\ by that means the little filli to play round, till
I! tney
HI
JV?6l.
COIMIJVKXSr jHJNXxLEIV
WJrW'&imj U
a I
Class IV. COMMON ANGLER, 121
" they come within reach, when it fprings on
them*."
The fifhing frog grows to a large fize, fome be- De3CRi*«
ing between four and five feet in length , and we
have heard of one fallen near Scarborough^ whofe
mouth was a yard wide. The fifhermen on that
coaft have a great regard for this fifh, from a fup-
pofition that it is a great enemy to the dog fifh -f-,
and whenever they take it with their lines fet it at
liberty.
It is a filh of very great deformity : the head
is much bigger than the whole body, is round at
the circumference, and flat above : the mouth of a
prodigious widenefs.
The under jaw is much longer than the upper :
the jaws are full of flender fharp teeth : in the roof
of the mouth are two or three rows of the fame :
at the root of the tongue, oppofite each other, are
two bones of an elliptical form, thick kt7 with
very (Irong fharp teeth.
The noftrils do not appear externally, but in
the upper part of the mouth are two large orifices
that ferve inftead of them.
* Cicero, in his fccond book ~De Natura Deqrum, gives
much {he fame account of this fifh : Ranee autem marina di-
cuntur obruere fefe arena fulere, et tnQveri prop} aquam, ad
quas, quaji ad efca?n, pijces cum accejferinty confici a ranis, at-
que confumi.
t The bodies of thefe fierce and voracious iiih are often
found in the ftomach of the Fijhing Frog,
On
COMMON ANGLER. Class IV.
On each fide the upper jaw are two fharp fpines,
and others are fcattered about the upper part of
the head.
Immediately above the nofe are two long tough
filaments, and on the back three others ; thefe are
what Pliny calls cornicula^ and fays it makes ufe of
to attract the little fifh. They feem to me like
lines flung out for that end: I therefore have
changed the old name of Fishing Frog for the
more fimple one of Angler.
Along the edges of the head and body are a
multitude of fhort fringed ikins, placed at equal
diftances.
The ventral fins are broad, thick, and flefhy,
are jointed like arms, and within fide divided into
fingers.
The aperture to the gills is placed behind, each
of thefe is very wide, fo that fome writers have
imagined it to be a receptacle for the young in
time of danger.
The back fin is placed very low near the begin-
ning of the tail : the anal ^.w is placed beneath, al-
moit oppofite the former.
The body grows (lender near the tail, the end of
which is quite even.
The color of the upper part of this fifh is duikvj
the lower part white \ the fkin fmooth.
Fifliing
Class IV. L O N G A N G L E R. 123
Fifning Frog of Mount's-Bay. Borla/e Cornwall, 266. Tab. C2. Long.
27.^.6. PM. ?>•*»/ Vol. LIU. 170.
THIS is a fpecies at prefent unknown to us, ex-
cept by defcription.
It is, fays Doctor Bcrlafe, of a longer form than
the common kind : the head more bony, rough,
and aculeated. It had no finlike appendages round
the head, but on each fide the thinner part of the
body, beginning beneath the dorfal fin, and reach-
ing within two inches of the tail, was a feries of
them, each three quarters of an inch in length.
At the end of the pectoral fins were fpines an
inch and three quarters in length ; at the end of the
tail others three quarters of an inch long.
One
124
STURGEON.
Class IV,
VIIL STUR- One narrow aperture on each fide.
GEON. ,
The mouth placed far below, tubular and without
teeth.
The body long, and often angular.
53. Stur-
geon.
Ovktko;. Athen. Lib. VIII.
315. A'tiJii7rn<nos ? Athen. p.
294-
Acipenfer? Plinii Lib. IX.
c. 17. Gvidii Halieut : ?
L' Efturgeon. Belon, 89.
Acipenfer. Rondel 410. Gef-
7ier pifc. 2.
Sturio. Gefner pifc.
Stoer. Schoncvelde, 9.
Sturgeon. Wil. Iclh. 239.
Rati fyn. pifc. 112.
Schirk. Kram 383.
Acipenfer corpore tuberculi?
fpinofis exafperato. Art ed. fyn.
V-
Acipenfer flurio. Lin. fyft*
403. Muf Ad. Fred. 54..
Tab. 18. /£. 2.
Stor. Faun. Suec. No. 299.
Seb. Muf. III. 101. Tab. 29.
No. 19.
THAT this is the 'Owo-zw; of Dorion, as quo-
ted by Atbenceus^ is very probable, as well
from the account he gives of its form, as of its na-
ture. He fays its mouth is always open, with
which it agrees with the Sturgeon, and that it con-
ceals itfelf in the hot months : this mews it to be a
fifli of a cold nature, which is confirmed by the
hiftory of the European filh of this fpecies, given
by Mr. Forfter*, in his Eflay on' the Volga, who
relates that they are fcarce ever found in that river
* Phil Tranf. LVII. 352,
I*
(
Class IV. STURGEON. 125
in fpring or fummer, but in vaft quantities in au-
tumn and winter, when they cr5wd from the fea
under the ice, and are then taken in great numbers.
Whether the acipenfer is the fturgeon of the
moderns, may be doubted, otherwife Ovid would
never have fpoke of it as a foreign fifh ;
Tuque peregrinis, Acipenfer , nobilis undis.
And, thou, a fifh in foreign feas renowned.
It being well known that it is not uncommon
in the Mediterranean, and even in the mouth of
the Tiber, at certain feafons; but this paffage leaves
us as much in the dark as to the particular fpe-
cies intended, by the word acipenfer, as the de-
fcription Pliny has given us ; for that philofopher
relates, that its fcales are placed in a contrary direc-
tion to thofe of other fifi^ being turned towards the
mouth* which difagrees with the character of all
that are known at prefent. Whatever Mi it might
be, it was certainly the fame with the Elops, or
Helops, as appears from Pliny, who makes it fyno-
nimous with the acipenfer*, and from another line
of the poet beforementioned :
Et pretiofus Helops nofiris inccgnitus undis.
The pretious Helops flranger to our feas.
A-
The fturgeon annually afcends our rivers, but in Migk
no great numbers, and is taken by accident in the
* Quidam eum Ehpem vocant. Lib. IX. c, 17.
falmon
126 STURGEON. Class IV,
falmon nets. It feems a fpiritlefs fifh, making
no manner of refiftance when entangled, but is
drawn out of the water like a lifelefs lump. It
is a fifh that is feldom taken far out at fea, but
frequents fuch parts as are not remote from the
seftuaries of great rivers. It is admired for the
delicacy and firmnefs of its ftefh, which is white as
veal, and extremely good when roafted. It is ge-
nerally pickled. The moil we receive comes either
from the Baltic rivers, or North America: thofe
cured at Pillau have been, till of late, in thegreateft
repute •, but through the encouragement given by
the fociety inftituted for promoting trade and ma-
nufactures, the fturgeon from our colonies begins
to rival thofe of the Baltic.
Great numbers are taken during fummer in
the lakes Frifcbebaff, and Curifcb- h aff near Pillau,
in large nets made of fmall cord. The adjacent
fhores are formed into diftricts, and farmed out
to companies of fifhermen, fome of which are rent-
ed for fix thoufand guilders, or near three hundred
pounds per annum.
They are found in vaft abundance in the American
rivers in May, June, and July, at which time they
leap fome yards out of the water, and falling on
their fides, make a noife to be heard in (till wea-
ther at fome miles diftance*.
Caviare is made of the roes of this, and alfo of
* Catejby Carol. App. 33.
all
Class IV. STURGEON. 127
all the other forts of fturgeons, dried, faked, and
packed up clofe. The beft is faid to be made of
thofe of the Sterlet *, a fmall fpeeies frequent in the
Talk and Volga. Icthyocolla f, or ifing-glafs, is alio
made of the found of our fifh, as well as that of the
others, but the Beluga affords the beft J.
The fturgeon grows to a great fize, to the rjESCRI?
length of eighteen hct, and to the weight of five
hundred pounds, but it is feldom taken in our
rivers of that bulk. The largeft we have known
caught in thofe of Great Britain weighed four
hundred and fixty pounds, which was taken about
two years ago in the E/k, where they are more fre-
quently found than in our fouthern waters.
* Strahlenberg's Hiji. Rnjjia, 337.
f Phil. Tranf. LVII. 354. A very fmall quantity is made
from this fpeeies, and that only defigned as prefents to great
men, as Mr. Forfler afTured me.
% The antients were acquainted with the fifh that afford-
ed this drug. Pliny lib. XXXII. c. 7. mentions it under the
name of Icthyocolla, and fays, that the glue that was produced
from it had the fame title ; and afterwards adds, that it was
made out of the belly of the fifh. The Mario, faid by Pliny
lib. IX. c. 15. to be found in the Danube and the Boryjlhenes,
was certainly of this genus, a cartilaginous fifh (nullis ojfibu;
fpinifve interfitis) refembling a fmall porpeffe (Porculo marino
Jimillimus ;) and very probably may be the fame with the Belu-
ga, which, according to Mr. Forfler, Phil. Tranf. LVII. 354.
has a fhort blunt nofe, agreeing in that refpect with the por-
peffe.
The
128 STDRG'EO N. Class IV.
The nofe is very long, (lender, and ends in a
point. The eyes are extremely fmall -, the noftrils
placed near them : on the lower part of the nofe
are four cirri or beards : the mouth is fituated far
beneath, is fmall, and unfupported by any jaw
bones ; neither has it any teeth. The mouth of a
dead fifh is always open. When alive it can clofe
or open it at pleafure, by means of certain mufcles.
The body is long, pentagonal, and covered with
five rows of large bony tubercles : one row of
which is placed on the back, and two on each
fide. The whole under fide of the fifh, from the
end of the nofe to the vents, is flat -, on the back,
not remote from the tail, is a fingle fin. It has
befides two pectoral fins, two ventral, and one anal
fin. The tail is bifurcated, but the upper part
much longer than the lower.
The upper part of the body is of a dirty olive
color ; the lower part filvery -9 the middle of the
tubercles white.
In the manner of breeding it is an exception a-
mong the cartilaginous fifh, being like the bony
fifh oviparous, fpawning in winter.
A very
Class IV. OBLONG DIODON, 129
A very deep body, and as if cue off in the middle. IX.
Mouth fmall. ' D10D0N-
Two teeth only in each jaw.
Sun-Fifli from Mount's-Bay. Oftracion lasvis. Gronov. 54- Oblong*
Borlafe Cornwall, 268. tab. Zooph. No. 185.
26. Jig. 7.
JjONDELETIUS has given this genus the fy-
-*■*- nonym of Ortkragorifcus, as if it was that
which Pliny * intended by the fame name ; but
the account left us by that naturalift is fo brief,
that we do not think ourfelves authorized to place
it as a fynonymous creature. He fays no more
than that it was the greateft of fifh, and that it
grunted when it was firft taken, from which pro-
bably role the name, for according to Athenaus,
c^ayo?™©- -f was that given to a young pig.
We are inclined to believe, that this fifh had
efcaped the notice of Pliny, otherwife he muft have
unavoidably made fome remark on its finking
figure.
This fifti grows to a great bulk : that which SliJS»
was examined by Sahianusf was above a hun-
* Lib. XXXII. c. 2.
f Lib. IV. p. 140.
X Hjft. Pifc. 155.
Vol. III. K dred
*3°:
OBLONG DIODON. Class IV,
dred pounds in weight : and Doctor Borlafe men-
tions another taken at Plymouth in 1734, that
weighed five hundred.
Dlscrip. jn forni it refembles a bream, or fome deep fifh
cut off in the middle. The mouth is very fmall,
and contains in each jaw two broad teeth, with
fharp edges.
The eyes are little •, before each is a fmall fe-
milunar aperture ; the pectoral Ens very fmall, and
placed behind them. The dorfal fin and the anal
fin are high, and placed at the extremity of the
body : the tail fin is narrow, and fills all the ab-
rupt fpace between thofe two fins.
The color of the back is dufky, and dappled ;
the belly filvery : between the eyes and the pectoral
fins are certain ftreaks pointing downwards. The
Hs:in is free from fcales.
When boiled, it has been obferved to turn into
a glutinous jelly, refembling boiled ftarch when
cold, and ferved the purpofes of glue, on being
tried on paper and leather. The meat of this fifli
is uncommonly rank : it feeds on (hell-fim.
There feems to be no fatisfactory reafon for
the old Englijh name. Care muft be taken not to
confound it with the fun-fifh of the MJb% which
differs in all refpects from this*
Orthragorifcus
Class IV. SHORT D I A D O N.
*3*
Orthragorifcus five Luna
pifcis. Rondel. 424.
Mola Salviani, the Sun-fifh.
TViL Icth. 151. Rati fyn,
pi/ciju
Oflracion cathetoplateus fub-
Tetraodon mola. T. lams,
compreirus, cauda truncata,
pinna breviffima dorfali a-
nalique annexa. Lin. fyft%
412. Gronov. 7Looph. No.
186.
rotundus inermis afper, Brunnich pifc. MaJ/il. No. 16.
pinnis pe&oralibus hori- Sun-fifh, from Loo. Borlafe
zontalibus,foraminibusqua- Cornwall, 267. tab* 26.
tuor in capite. Arted. fy- Jig. 6.
nox. 83.
55. Short,
THIS differs from the former, in being
much fhorter and deeper. The back and
the anal fins are higher, and the aperture to the
gills not femilunar, but oval. The fnuation of
the fins are the fame in both.
This fpecies was taken off Penzance, and is en-
graved in Doctor Borlafe's Natural Hiftory of
Cornwall, from one of Mr. Jago's drawings. Both
kinds are taken on the weftern coafts of this king-
dom, but in much greater numbers in the warmer
parts of Europe.
Mr. Brunnich informs us, that between Antibes
and Genoa, he faw one of this fpecies lie afleep on
the furface of the water : a fajlor jumped over-
board and caught it.
K2
Tetraodon
132 GLOBE DIODON, Class IV.
56. Globe. Tetraodon lasvigatus. Lin, fyfi. 411.
THIS fpecies is common to Europe and &?#/&
Carolina. As yet only a fingle fpecimen has
been difcovered in our feas \ taken at Penzance in
Cornwall.
The length was one foot feven : the length of
the belly, when di (tended, one foot -, the whole cir-
cumference in that fituation tv/o feet fix.
The form of the body is ufually oblong, but
when alarmed it has the power of inflating the bel-
ly to a globular fhape of great fize. This feems de-
figned as a means of defence againft fifh of prey :
as they have lefs means of laying hold of it -, and
are befides terrified by the numbers of fpines with
which that part is armed ; and which are capable of
being erected on every part.
The mouth is fmall : the irides white, tinged
with red : the back from head to tail almoft ftrair,
or at leaft very (lightly elevated •> of a rich deep
blue color. It has the pectoral, but wants the ven-
tral fins. The dorfal is placed low on the back -9
the anal is oppofite : the tail almoft even divided
by an angular projection in the middle : tail and
fins brown.
The belly and fides are white, friagreened or
wrinkled ; and befet with innumerable fmall lharp
fpines, adhering to the fkin by four procefies.
Thick
n.:xxx
2f? &]
LUMP SUOKEE
III
JP?S4
Class IV. LUMP SUCKER. 133
Thick body, arched back. X.
Ventral fins united. . SUCKER-
Four branchioftegous rays.
Lumpus anglorum. Gefner 87. Gronov. Zooph. No. 57 • Lump.
Paralip. 25. 197.
Seehaefs, HafFpodde. Scbo- Cyclopterus Lumpus. C. cor-
nevelde. 41. pore fquamis offeis angula-
Lump, or Sea-Owl, Scotis to. Lin, fyfi. 414.
Cock paddle. Wil. Ictb. Sjurygg-fifk, Stenbir, Quabb-
208. Raiijyn.pifc. Jj. fu. Faun, Suec. No. 320.
Cyclopterus. Arted. Jymn.
T
HIS (insular filh encreafes to the weight of
feven pounds, and the length of nineteen
inches : the lhape of the body is like that of the
bream, deep and very thick, and it fwims edge-
ways. The back is fharp and elevated, the belly
flat.
The irides are of a cherry color ; lips, mouth, Descrip,
and tongue, of a deeper red: the jaws lined
with innumerable fmall teeth •, the tongue very
thick ; along the ridge of the back is a row of
large bony tubercles \ from above the eye to with-
in a fmall fpace of the tail is another row ; beneath
that a third, commencing at the gills ; and on each
fide the belly a fourth row, confiding of five tu-
bercles like the other : the whole fkin is rough,
with fmall tubercles.
K 3 Qn
i34 LUMP SUCKER. Class IV.
On the upper part of the back is a thick ridge
improperly called a fin, being deftitute of fpines ;
beneath that is the dorfal fin, of a brownifh hue,
reaching within an inch of the tail : on the belly,
juft oppofite, is another of the fame form-. The
belly is of a bright crimfon color : the pectoral fins
are large and broad, almoft uniting at their bafe.
Beneath thefe is the part by which it adheres to
the rocks, &c. It confifts of an oval aperture, fur-
rounded with a flefhy mufcular and obtufe foft
fubftance, edged with fmall threaded appendages,
which concur as fo many clafpers : tail and vent
fins purple.
By means of this part it adheres with vaft force
to any thing it pleafes. As a proof of its tena-
city we have known, that on flinging a fifh of this
fpecies juft caught, into a pail t)f water, it fixed
itfelf fo firmly to the bottom, that on taking the
fiih by the tail, the whole pail by that means was
lifted, though it held fome gallons, and that with-
out removing the fifh from its hold.
Thefe fifh refort in multitudes during fpring
to the coaft of Sutherland, near the Ord of Caith-
nefs. The feals which fwarm beneath, prey great-
ly on them, leaving the fkins ; numbers of which
thus emptied float at that feafon afhore. It is eafy
to diftinguifh the place where feals are devouring
this or any unctuous fifh, by a fmoothnefs of the
water immediately above the fpot : this fact is
now eftablifhedj it being a tried property of oil to
ftil}
Class IV. UNCTUOUS SUCKER. ijj
ftill the agitation of the waves, and render them
fmooth *.
Great numbers of thefe filh are found in the
Greenland feas during the months of April and May,
when they refort near the fhore to fpawn. Their
roe is remarkably large, which the Greenlanders
boil to a pulp, and eat. They are extremely fat,
which recommends them the more to the natives*
who admire all oily food : they call them Nipifets,
or Cat-fijh, and take quantities of them during the
feafon -f.
This fifli is fometimes eaten in England, being
ftewed like carp, but is both flabby and infipid.
Liparis? Rondel. 272. Gefner Cyclopterus Liparis C. cor- r 8. Uwc-
pifc. 483. pore nudo, pinnis dorfali tuous^
Liparis noflras Dunelm et Ebo- anali caudalique unitis. Lin.
rac. Sea Snail. Wil Icth. fyji. 414.
App. 17. Rati fyn. pifc. 74. Cyclogafler. Gronov. Zoopl\
Pet. Gaz. tab. 51. fig. 5. No.. 198.
Liparis. Arted. fynon. 177.
^TpHIS fifh takes the name of fea fnail from the
-^ foft and unctuous texture of its body, reiem-
bling that of the land fnail. It is almoft transpa-
rent, and foon dilTolves and melts away.
It is found in the fea near the mouths of great
rivers. We have feen it in January full of fpawn,
* Philof. Tranf. 1774. p. 445.
f Crant^s Hill. Greenland z I. 96.
K 4 The
J36 UNCTUOUS SUCKER. Class IV.
Descrip. The length is five inches : the color when frefh
taken a pale brown, fometimes finely (creaked with
a darker ; the fliape of the body round, but near
the tail comprefTed Tideways: the belly is white
and very protuberant.
The head is large, thick, and round. There are
no teeth in the mouth, butthejaws are very rough :
the tongue very large : the eyes very fmall.
The orifice to the gills is very fmall. It has fix
branchioftegous rays.
The pectoral fins are very broad, thin, and
tranfparent, and almofi unite under the throat.
The fir ft ray next the throat is very long, extends
far beyond the reft, and is as fine as a hair. Over
the bafe of each is a fort of operculum, or lid,
ending in a point : this is capable of being raifed
or deprefTed at pleafure.
Behind the head begins the dorfal fin, which
extends quite to the end of the tail : the ventral
fin begins at the anus, and unites with the other at
the tail.
Beneath the throat is a round deprefiion of a
whitifh color, like the impreftion of a feal, fur-
rounded with twelve fmall pale yellow tubera, by
which it is probable it adheres to the ftones like
the' other fpecies.
Lefler
BIMAC FLATTED SUCKER.
4rp
JURA STICKER .
Class IV. J U R A S U C K E R. itf
LefTer Sucking Fifh. Borlafe Lepadogafter. Le Barbier ou 59. Jura.
Nat. Hiji. Corneal, 269. Porteecuelle. Gouan pifc.
Tab. xxv. Jig. 28. 177. Tab. 1. Jig. 6, 7.
rr^HIS fpecies is found in CornwaL I alfo dif-
■*• covered it in the Sound of Jura.
Its length is about four inches. The Ikin
without fcales, flippery, and of a duiky color.
The body taper. The nofe grows (lenderer from
the head, and ends round.
The teeth fmall. Before each eye is a fmall fi-.
lament. Behind the eyes are two femilunar marks.
In the middle of the back an oval mark form-
ed by fmall dots, of a whitifti color. The dorfai
fin lies near the tail, and confifts of eleven rays ;
the anal is placed oppofite, and has nine rays.
The tail is rounded. The ventral have four rays,
are joined by an intervening membrane with an
oval deprefllon in the middle. Beyond that is a-
nother ftrong membrane with a fimilar depreffion.
By means of thefe inftruments it adheres to (tones
or rocks.
Nofc
i*8 XONGER PIPE. Class IV.
XI. Nofe long and tubular.
PIPE
" No orifice to the gills :
The breathing aperture on the hind part of the head.
No ventral fins.
The body covered with a ftrong cruft.
60. Longer. Acqs Arifiotdis cauda fer- gulo, pinna cauda? carens ?
pentina. Sib. Scot. 24. Tab. Artcd. Spec, 3.
19. Syngnathus barbarus. S. pin-
Typhle altera. Ge/ker fife. nis caudse anique nullis,
1025. corpore fexangulato ? Lin.
Syngnathus cotpore quadran- fyji. 417.
THIS fpecies, defcribed by Sir Robert Sib-
bald, was two feet in length ; that we ex-
amined only Oxteen inches.
The nofe was an inch long, comprefTed tideways,
and the end of the lower mandible turned up : the
aperture of the mouth was very fmall.
The irides were red; behind each eye was a deep
brown line.
The body, in the thickeft part, was about equaj
to a fwan's quil, hexangular from the end of the
dorfal fin -9 from thence to the tail quadrangular.
The belly was (lightly carinated, and marked along
she middle with a dufky line. Under the tail com-
mencing at the anus is a fulcus or groove, fix
inches
Si
&
H
Class IV. LONGER PIPE. 139
inches and a half long, covered by tv/o longitudi-
nal valves which concealed a multitude of young
fifh. On crufhing this part, hundreds may be
o.bferved to crawl out.
The general color of the fifh was an olive brown :
the fides marked with numbers of bluifh lines point-
ing from the back to the belly, which, in dried fifh,
feemed like the figns of fo many joints. Thofe in
a frefli fubject ceafed beyond the vent; all beyond
that was fpotted with brown.
The dorfal fin was narrow and thin, confiding
of forty rays, was two inches long, and placed ra-
ther nearer to the head than the tail.
The vent was feven inches from the tip of the
nofe -, the body to that orifice was of an equal
thicknefs, but from thence tapered to a very fmall
point, having no mark of a fin.
The pectoral fins had twelve rays ; the anal three.
When this fifh and the next fpecies are dried,
they appear covered with numbers of angular crufls,
finely radiated from their centre.
As we waat a generical name in our language
for this genus, we call it the Pipe Fifi, from its,
(lender bodv.
L?Oruei}l
,4o SHORTER PIPE. Class IV.
&. Shorter. L' Orueul marin. Belon, 4.4.6. heptagono, cauda pinnata.
Acus fecunda fpecies, five, Arted. fynon. 2.
acus Ariflotelis. Rondel. 229. Syngnathus acus. S. pinnis
Typhle. Gefner fife. 1025. caudae ani pectoralibufque
Trummeter, Meherfchlange. radiatis, corpore feptem-
Schone<velde, II. angulato. Lin.fyjl. 416.
Acus Ariftotelis feu fecunda. Kantnahl. i^/z. Suec.No. 376.
JF/7. /*?£. 158. Rait Jyn. Syngnathus cauda pinnata,
fife. 47. Grono<v. Zoofh. No. 172.
Syngnathus corpore medio Sea-adder. B 'or lafeComw. 267.
THIS is (hotter and thicker than the former,
yet I have ieen one of the length of fixteen
inches. The middle of the body in fome is hexan-
gular, in others heptangular. Linnaus conftitutes
two fpecies of them, his Syngnathus Typble, and
his Syngnathus Acus ; but we join with Doctor
Gronovius, in thinking them only varieties of the
fame fifli.
The mouth is formed like that of the former :
the irides are yellow : clofe behind the head are the
pectoral fins, which are fmall and fhort.
On the lower part of the back is one narrow
fin ; beyond the vent the tail commences, which is
long and quadrangular.
At the extremity is a fin round and radiated.
The body is covered with a ftrong cruft, ele-
gantly divided into fmall compartments.
The belly is white ; the other parts brown.
Befides thefe fpecies of hard-fkinned Pipe fifli,
we
Class IV. LITTLE PIPE. 141
we have been informed, that the Syngathus Hippo-
campus of Linnaeus, or what the Englijh improperly
call the fea horfe, has been found on the fouthem
fhores of this kingdom.
Acui Ariftotelis congener pif- toralibus caudaque carens. 62. Little,
ciculus, pueris Cornubien- Arted. fynon. 2.
fibus Sea Adder, Acus Lum- Syngnathusophidion. Lin.fyji,
briciformis, aut Serpenti- 4*7«
num. Wil. Itth. 160. Rati Hafsnahl, Tangfnipa. Fauu,
Jyn. pifc. Suec, No. 375.
Syngnathus teres, pinnis pec-
THE little pipe fifh feldom exceeds five inches
in length, is very (lender, and tapers off to
a point. It wants both the pectoral and tail fins ;
is covered with a fmooth fkin, not with a crufl: as
the two former kinds are.
The nofe is fhort and turns a little up ; the eyes
prominent.
On the back is one narrow fin.
This fpecies is not viviparous : on the belly of
the female is a long hollow, to which adhere the
eggs, difpofed in two or three rows. They are
large, and not numerous.
The fynonym of Serpent is ufed in feveral lan-
guages to exprefs thefe fifh : the French call one
fpecies Orueul, from a fort of fnake not unlike the
blindworm : the Germans call it Meherfchlange •>
and the Cornijh^ the fea adder.
D 1 v.
J4* E E Lc Class IV.
Div. III. BONY FISH.
S e c t. I. APODAL.
XII. Body long, fiender, and flippery.
Noftrils tubular.
Back, ventral, and tail fins, united.
Aperture to the gills fmall, and placed behind the
pectoral fins.
Ten branchioftegous rays.
53. Common. Ey%^ ^ fJ.^ ^ ^ The Eel# mL pifi% Raii
IV. c. 11. VI. 14. 16. fyn.pifc. 37.
Oppian Halieut. I. 516. IV. Murama unicolor maxilla in-
45-°- feriore longiore. Arttd. fyn.
Angtiilla Plinii Lib, IX. c . 2 1 . 39.
L'Anguille. Belon, 291. Obf. Murama anguilla. Lin. fyjl.
55' 426. Grotiov. Zaoph. No.
Anguilla. Rondel, fwv. 198. 166.
Gefner pifc. 40. Ahl. /V*«*. &^r. N0< 3QI>
Ael. Schonevelde, 14. Aal. jKtvww. 387.
THE eel is a very lingular iilh in feveral
things that relate to its natural hiftory,
and in ibme refpe&s borders on the nature of the
reptile tribe.
It is known to quit its element, and during
night to wander along the meadows, not only for
change
Class IV. E E
M3
change of habitation, but alfo for the fake of prey,
feeding on the fnails it finds in its paflage.
During winter it beds itfelf deep in the mud,
and continues in a (late of reft like the ferpent
kind. It is very impatient of cold, and will ea-
gerly take fhelter in a whifp of ftraw flung into a
pond in fevere weather, which has fometimes been
praclifed as a method of taking them. Albertus*
goes fo far as to fay, that he has known eels to
fhelter in a hay- rick, yet all perifhed through ex-
cefs of cold.
It has been obferved, that in the river Nynej^
there ;s a variety of fmall eel, with a leffer head and
narrower mouth than the common kind, that it is
found in cluflers in the bottom of the river, and is
called the Bed- eel : thefe are fometimes roufed up by
violent floods, and are never found at that time with
meat in their flomachs. This bears fuch an analogy
with the cluttering of biindworms in their quief-
cent (late, that we cannot but confider it as a fur<-
ther proof of a partial agreement in the nature of
the two genera.
The ancients adopted a moft wild opinion about Gekbra*
the generation of thefe fifli, believing them to be
either created from the mud, or that the fcrapings
* Gefncr pifc. 45.
f Morton's Hijl, Northampt. 419. Pliny obfervesr that the
eels of the lake Benacus coiled: together in the fame manner in
the month of Odober, poffibly to retreat from the winter's
eold, Lib, ix* c. zz,
Of
TION*
144 EEL. Class IV.
of their bodies which they left on the ftones,
-- were animated and became young eels. Some mo-
derns gave into thefe opinions, and into others" that
were equally extravagant. They could not account
for the appearance of thefe flfh in ponds that never
were flocked with them, and that were even fo
remote as to make their being met with in fuch
places a phenomenon that they could not folve.
But there is much reafon to believe, that many
waters are fupplied with thefe fifh by the aquatic
fowl of prey, in the fame manner as vegetation is
fpread by many of the land birds, either by being
dropped as they carry them to feed their young, or
by palling quick thro' their bodies, as is the cafe
with herons ; and fuch may be occafion of the
appearance of thefe fifh in places where they were
never feen before. As to their immediate genera-
Vivipa- tion, it has been fufficiently proved to be effe&ed
in the ordinary courfe of nature, and that they are
viviparous.
They are extremely voracious, and very deftruc-
tive to the fry of fill).
No lifh lives fo long out of water as the eel : it
is extremely tenacious of life, as its parts will move
a confiderable time after they are flayed and cut in-
to pieces.
Descrip. The eel is placed by Linnaus in the genus of
Murana^ his firft of the apodal fifh, or fuch which
want the ventral fins.
The eyes are placed not remote from the end of
the
Class IV. E E L. J45
the nofe : the irides are tinged with red : the un-
der jaw is longer than the upper: the teeth are
fmall, (harp, and numerous : beneath each eye is
a minute orifice : at the end of the nofe two o-
thers, fmall and tubular.
The fifh is furniflied with a pair of pectoral
fins, rounded at their ends. Another narrow fin
on the back, uniting with that of the tail y and the
anal fin joins it in the fame manner beneath.
Behind the pectoral fins is the orifice to the gills,
which are concealed in the fkin.
Eels vary much in their colors, from a footy hue Silver
to a light olive green -, and thofe which are called
filver eels, have their bellies white, and a remark-
able clearnefs throughout.
Befides thefe there is another variety of this fifh
known in the Thames by the name of Grigs, and Grigs
about Oxford by that of Grigs or Gluts. Thefe
are fcarce ever {ten near Oxford in the winter,
but appear in fpring, and bite readily at the hook,
which common eels in that neighbourhood will not.
They have a larger head, a blunter nofe, thicker
fkin, and lefs fat than the common fort ; neither
are they fo much efteemed, nor do they often ex-
ceed three or four pounds in weight.
Common eels grow to a large fize, fometimes
fo great as to weigh fifteen or twenty pounds, but
that is extremely rare. As to inftances brought
by Dale and others, of thefe fifh encreafing to a
fuperior magnitude, we have much reafon to fufped
Vol. III. I. them
146 EEL. Class IV.
them to have been congers, fince the enormous fifh
they defcribe, have all been taken at the mouths
of the Thames or Medway,
The eel is the mod univerfal of fifh, yet is fcarce
ever found in the Danube, tho' it is very common
in the lakes and rivers of Upper Aufiria.
The Romans held this fifh very cheap, probably
from its likenefs to a fnake.
Vos anguilla manet longae cognatacolubrx*,
Vernula riparum pinguis torrente cloaca.
For you, is kept a fink-fed fnake-like eel.
On the contrary, the luxurious Sybarites were fo
fond of thefe fifh, as to exempt from every kind
of tribute the perfons who fold them f.
* Juvenal. Sat. v. 10 3.
f Athenaus. Lib. xii. t. C21.
17
A,\*
Kcyyfoi.
Class IV.
CONGER.
'47
Kfrfyfoc. Arift. Hijl. an. lib.
I. &c.
Toyypog Oppian Halieut. I.
113. 521.
Conger. O-vidii Halieut. 115.
Plinii lib. IX. c. 16. 20.
Le Congre. Belon 159.
Conger. Rondel. 394. Gefner
pifc. 290.
The Conger, or Conger Eel.
Wil Icth. III. Rail fyn. °4* Conger,
f*F- 37-
Murasnafupremo margine pin-
nae dorfalis nigro. Arted.
fynon. 40.
Murasna Conger. M. roftio
tentaculis duobus, linea la-
terali ex pundtis albida.
Lin. Jyft. 426.
>*TpHE conger grows to a vaft fize. Doctor Size*
■*; Bcrlafe, to whom we are obliged for feveral
informations relating to this fpecies, aftures us,
that they are fometimes taken near Mounts-Bay of
one hundred pounds weight *.
. They differ from the common eel in the follow- Descrip.
ing particulars : i. Their color in general is more
dark. 2. Their eyes much larger in proportion.
3. The irides of a bright filvery color. 4. The
lower jaw is rather fhorter than the upper. 5.
The fide line is broad, whitilh, and marked with
a row of fmall fpots ; Mr. Ray fays a double row,
but we did not obferve it in the fifli we examined.
6. The edges of the dorfal and anal fins are black.
7. They have more bones than the common eel,
* We have heard of fome taken near Scarborough that were
ten feet and a half long, and eighteen inches in circumference
in the thickeit part.
L 2 efpecially
143 CONGER. Class IV.
especially along the back quite to the head. 8.
They grow to a much larger fize.
As to the diftinftion that Mr. Ray, and other
writers, make of the fmall beards at the end of the
nofe, we think it not to be depended on, being
fometimes found in both kinds, and fometimes
entirely wanting.
We believe they generate like the frefh-water
fpecies : innumerable quantities, of what are fup-
pofed to be their fry, come up the Severn about the
month of April, preceding the Shads, which it is
conjectured migrate into that river to feed on them :
Eeverj* they are called Elvers. They quite fwarm during
their feafon, and are taken in a kind of fieve made
of hair-cloth, fixed to a long pole ; the fifher-
man (landing on the edge of the water during the
tide, puts in his net as far as he can reach, and
drawing it out again takes multitudes at every
fweep, and will take as many during one tide as
will fill a bufhel. They are drefled, and reckoned
very delicate.
Congers are extremely voracious, preying on
other fifh, and on crabs at the time they have loft
their ihell, and are in a foft ftate. They and eels
in general are alfo particularly fond of carcaflfes of
any kind, being frequently found lodged in fuch
that are accidentally taken up.
Thefe ififh. are an article of commerce in Corn-
wall; numbers are taken on that coaft, and ex-
ported to Spain and Portugal^ particularly to Bar-
celona*
Class IV. CONGER. 149
celona. The quantities that were fent from Mount's-
Bay for five years, were as follow :
Cwt.
qr.
Ih
1756
46
0
13
1757
164
0
21
1758
164
I
3
*759
213
0
3
1760
7*
3
0
Some are taken by a fingle hook and line, but Capture*
(becaufe that way is tedious, and does not anfwer
the expence of time and labour) they are chiefly
caught by Butters, which are flrong lines five hun-
dred feet long, with fixty hooks, each eight feet
afunder, baited with pilchards or mackrel: the
Butters are funk to the ground by a (tone fattened
to them : fometimes fuch a number of thefe are tied
together as to reach a mile.
We have been told that the fifhermen are very
fearful of a large conger, lead it fhould endanger
their legs by clinging round them ; they therefore
kill them as foon as pofllble by ftriking them on
the navel.
They are afterwards cured in this manner: they C*i
are flit, and hung on a frame till they dry, hav-
ing a confiderable quantity of fat, which it is ne-
ceifary fhould exude before they are fit for ufe.
It is remarkable that a conger of a hundred weight
will wafte by drying to twenty-four pounds -, the
h 3 P€0Ple
«-5°
CONGER. Class IV.
people therefore prefer the fmalleft, pofnbly be-
caufe they are fooneft cured. During the procefs
there is a confiderable flench ; and it is laid that
in the fifbing villages the poultry are fed with the
maggots that drop from the fifh.
The Portuguefe and Spaniards ufe thofe dried
congers after they have been ground into a powder,
to thicken and give a reliiri to their foups. We
think they are fold for about forty (billings the
quintal, which weighs one hundred and twenty-fix
pounds.
A fifhery of congers would be of great advan-
tage to the inhabitants of the Hebrides. Perhaps
they would at firit undertake it with repugnancy,
from their abfurd averiion to the eel kind.
Blunt
$
*
si
Class IV.
WOLF FISH.
151
Blunt head : lone; body. XIII.
WOLF
One dorfal fin reaching almoft from the head to FISH.
the tail.
Fore teeth conic and large.
Grinders flat and round.
Seven branchioftegous rays.
Anarrhicas. Gefner Paralip. 4.
Lupus marinus Caii cpu/c.
Lupus marinus noftras, quern
incolte Wolff. Scbcne-velde,
45. Tab. 5.
Cat-Fiih. Sib. Scot. III. 25.
Tab. 16.
Wolf Fifh, Sea Wolf, or
Woof. Wil. lab. 1 30. Rail
fyn.pifc. 40.
Steen-bider. Pontop. Norway,
II. 151.
Kigutihk i. e. dentatus.
Crantz's Greenl. I. 96.
Anarhichas. Arted. fynon. 39.
Anarhichas Lupus. Lin.fyji.
43°-
Zee Wolf. Gronov. Muf. No.
44. Zooph. No. 400.
6$. Rave-
nous.
THIS fifh. feems to be confined to the
northern parts of the globe. We find it
in the feas of Greenland, in thofe of Iceland * and
Norway, on the coafts of Scotland, and of York-
Jhire, and laftly, in that part of the German ocean,
which wafhes the fhores of Holland, the moft
fouthern of its haunts we can with any certainty
mention.
Place,
* Where it is called Steinbeijfer. Scbonevelde, 45.
L4
it
i$2 WOLF FIS H. Glass IV.
It is a mod ravenous and fierce fifh, and when
taken fattens on any thing within its reach : the
fimermen dreading its bite, endeavor as foon as
poftible to beat out its fore teeth, and then kill it
by (hiking it behind the head. Schonevelde relates,
that its bite is fo hard that it will feize on an an-
chor, and leave the marks of its teeth in it -, and
the Danifh and German names of Steenbider and
Steinbeijfer, exprefs the fenfe of its great flrength,
as if it was capable of crufhing even (tones with its
jaws.
Fooc It feeds almoft entirely on cruftaceous animals,
and (hell fi(h, fuch as crabs, lobfters, prawns,
mufcles, fcollops, large whelks, &c. thefe it grinds
to pieces with its teeth, and fwallows with the
iefTer fheils. It does not appear they are di.ftblved
in the (lomach, but are voided with the foeces, for
which purpofe the aperture of the anus is wider
than in other fifa of the fame fize.
It is full of roe in February, March, and April,
and fpawns in May and June.
This fiih has fo difagreeable and horrid an ap-
pearance, that nobody at Scarborough except the
fimermen will eat it, and they prefer it to holibut.
They always before dreffing take off the head and
(kin.
Sizs. xhe fea wolf grows to a large fize: thofe on the
York/hire coaft are fometimes found of the length
of four fctty and, according to Doctor Gronovius,
have been taken near Shetland kven feet long, and
even
Class IV. WOLF FISH,
even more. That which we examined was three
feet two inches and an half from the tip of the
nofe to the end of the tail : the length of the head
was eight inches, from the gills to the vent, ten ;
from thence to the tip of the tail, twenty and one
half
The circumference of the head was feventeen
inches, at the moulders twenty, but near the tail
Only four and a half.
Its weight was twenty pounds and a quarter.
The "head is a little flatted on the top : the nofe
blunt ; the nofrrils very fmall ; the eyes fmall, and
placed near the end of the nofe. Irides pale yellow.
The teeth are very remarkable, and finely a- Teeth,
dapLed to its way of life, The fore teeth are flrong,
conical, diverging a little from each other, (land
far out of the jaws, and are commonly fix above,
and the fame below, though fometimes there are
only five in each jaw : theie are fupporred within*
fide by a row of lelfer teeth, which makes the num-
ber in the upper jaw feventeen or eighteen, in the
lower eleven or twelve.
The fides of the under jaw are convex inward?,
which greatly adds to their flrength, and at the
fame time allows room for the large mufcles with
which the head of this fiiTi is furnifhed.
The denies molar es, or grinding teeth of the under
jaw, are higher on the outer than the inner edges,
which inclines their furfaces inward : they join to
the
Hi
,54 WOLF FISH, Class IV.
the canine teeth in that jaw, but in the upper are
feparate from them.
In the centre are two rows of flat ftrong teeth,
fixed on an oblong bafis upon the bones of the pa-
late and nofe.
Bufonites. Thefe and the other grinding teeth are often
found foffil, and in that ftate called Bufonites? or
Toad-ftones : they were formerly much efteemed for
their imaginary virtues, and were fet in gold, and
worn as rings.
The two bones that form the under jaw are
united before by a loofe cartilage, which mecha-
nifm admitting of a motion from fide to fide, mod
evidently contributes to the defign of the whole,
viz. a facility of breaking, grinding, and commi-
nuting its teftaceous and cruftaceous food. At the
entrance of the gullet, above and below, are two
echinated bones : thefe are very fmall, being the
lefs necefiary, as the food is in a great meafure
comminuted in the mouth by aid of the grinders.
The body is long, and a little comprefifed fide-
ways ; the fkin fmooth and flippery : it wants the
lateral line.
The pectoral fins confift of eighteen rays, are
five inches long, and feven and a quarter broad.
The dorfal fin extends from the hind part of the
head almoft to the tail ; the rays in the frefh fifii
are not vifible.
The anal fin extends as far as the dorfal fin.
The
Class IV. W O L F F I S H. 155
The tail is round at its end, and confifts of thir-
teen rays.
The fides, back, and fins, are of a livid lead Color.
color ; the two firft marked downwards with irre-
gular obfcure dufky lines : thefe in different fifh
have different appearances. The young are of a
greenifh cad, refembling the fea wrack, which they
refide amongft for fome time after their birth.
We think ourfelves much indebted to Mr.
Travis, Surgeon, at Scarborough, for his ingenious
remarks on this nfh, as well as on feveral others
that frequent that coaft, being a gentleman much
/killed in icthyology, and extremely liberal in com-
municating his knowlege.
Head
56 L A U N C E. Class IV.
XIV. Head (lender.
LAUNCE.
Body long and fquare.
Upper lip doubled in.
Dorfal and anal fin reaching almoft to the tail.
Seven branchioftegous rays.
66* Sand. Ammodytes pifcis, ut nos Sand Eels, or Launces. Rati
vocavimus pro anglico San- fyn. pifc. 38, 165.
dilz. Gefner paralip. 3. Ammodytes. Arted, fynon 29.
Tobian, vel Tobias Sandtfpir- Ammodytes Tobianus. Lin.
ing. Schone-velde, 76. fyfi. 430.
Ammodytes Gefneri, Wil. Ictb* Tobis. Faun. Suec. 302. Gro-
113. #o<v. Zoopb. No. 404.
THE launce is found on moft of our fandy
fhores during fome of the furnmer months :
it conceals itfelf on the recefs of the tides beneath
the fand, in fuch places where the water is left, at
the depth of about a foot, and are in fome places dug
out, in others drawn up by means of a hook con-
trived for that purpofe. They are commonly ufed
for baits for other fim, but they are alfo very
delicate eating.
Thefe fifh are found in the (lomachs of the Por-
pejfe, an argument that the lad roots up the fand
with its nofe as hogs do the ground.
Sijbe. They grow fometimes the length of nine or ten
inches i
tfl
H
c
2
Class IV. L A U N C E.
inches : the females are longer and tenderer than
the males.
The form of the body is fquare, the fides are
rounded, and the angles not (harp : it is neverthe-
lefs long and (lender.
The head is fmall and taper; the under jaw
much longer than the upper : the upper jaw is
moveable, capable of being protruded, fo that
when open the gape is very wide.
The irides are filvery.
The dorfal fin runs almoft the whole length of
the back, is very narrow, and confifts of fifty-
eight rays : the pectoral fins fmall, and have twelve :
the anus is placed much nearer the tail than the
head, is narrow, and extends almoft to the former.
The tail is forked, but the lobes rounded at their
extremities.
The color of the back is blue, varying with
green : on each fide the back is a narrow dufky line
or two. The fides and belly are filvery •, the late-
ral line flrait.
*57
Small
158 MORRIS. Class IV.
XV. Small head
MORRIS.
Body extremely thin, comprefTed Tideways,
No pectoral fins.
6y. Angle- Leptocephalus. Gronov. Zoopb, No. 409. tab, 13. fig, 3.
SEA.
/nr^HIS fpecies was difcovered in the fea near
A Holyhead by the late Mr. William Morris,
and, in memory of our worthy friend, we have
given it his name. On receiving it from Mr. Mor-
ris, we communicated it to that accurate Icthyo-
logift, Doctor Laurence Theodore Gronovius, of Ley-
den, who has defcribed it in his Zoophylacium,
under the title of Leptocephalus, or fmall head.
Descrip. The length was four inches ; the head very fmall ;
the body comprefTed Tideways, extremely thin, and
almoft tranTparent, about the tenth of an inch thick,
and in the deepefl part about one-third of an inch;
towards the tail it grew more flender, and ended
in a point ; towards the head it floped down, the
head lying far beneath the level of the back.
The eyes large ; the teeth in both jaws very
fmall.
The lateral line ftrait : the Tides marked with
oblique ftrokes, that met at the lateral line.
The
Class IV, MORRIS. 153
The aperture to the gills large.
It wanted the pectoral, ventral, and caudal fins :
the dorfal fin was extremely low, and thin, extend-
ing the whole length of the back very near the
tail. The anal fin was of the fame delicacy, and
extended to the fame diftance from the anus.
The
i6o
SWORD FISH. Class IV.
XVI.
SWORD
FISH.
The upper jaw extending to a great length,
hard, (lender, and pointed.
No teeth.
Eight branchioftegous rays.
Slender body.
68 . S I c I L I A n S if lag. Ariji. Hifl. an. lib.
II. c.lj. VIII. c. 19. Op-
pi an Halieut. lib. II, 462.
in. 442.
Xiphias. Ovid Halieut. 97.
Xiphi-as, i. e Gladius Plinii
lib. XXXII. c. 2 *.
L'Heron de mer, ou grand
Efpadaz. Belon, 102.
Xiphias. Rondel. 251.
Xiphias, i. e. Gladius pif-
cis. Gefner fife. 1049.
Caii of ufc. 104.
Schwert fiiche. Scbonevelde,
35. Sword Fifh. Wil Icth.
161. Rait fyn. fife, 52.
Xiphias. Arted. fynon. 47.
Xiphias Gladius. Lin. fyfl.
432-
Swerd-fifk. Faun. Suec. No.
3°3-
THIS fifh fometimes frequents our coafts, but
is much more common in the Mediterra-
Place. man fea, efpecially in the part that feparates Italy
from Sicily, which has been long celebrated for
it: the promontory Peforus*, now Capo di Faro,
was a place noted for the refort of the Xiphias, and
poflibly theftation of the fpeculatores, or the perfons
who watched and gave notice of the approach of
the fifh.
* Athena us, 314.
The
Class IV. S W O R D F I S H. 161
The antient method of taking them is particu- Captv**.
larly defcribed by Strabo*, and agrees exactly
with that pnacYifed by the moderns.
A man afcends one of the cliffs that overhangs
the fea: as foon as he fpies the fifh, he gives
notice either by his voice, or by figns, of the courfe
it takes. Another, that is Rationed in a boar,
climbs up the maft, and on feeing the fword fifh,
directs the rowers towards it. As foon as he thinks
they are got within reach, he defcends, and tak-
ing a fpear in his hand, flrikes it into the fifh,
which, after wearying itfelf with its agitation, is
feized and drawn into the boat. It is much efleem-
ed by the Sicilians, who buy it up eagerly, and at
its firft coming into feafon give about fix-pence
Englijh per pound. . The feafon lafts from May till
Auguft\. The antients ufed to cut this fifh into
pieces, and fait it, whence it was called Tomus
Thurianus J, from Thurii, a town in the bay of Ta-
rentum, where it was taken and cured,
Kircher, in his Mufurgia, has preferved a ftrange
incantation ufed by the Sicilian fifhermen, at the
capture of the Pefce Spada, as they call it, which
is exprefifed in the following unintelligible jargon :
* LiL I. /. 16.
f Ray's Travels, I. 27 J.
J Tomus Thurianus, quern alii Xiphiam <vocant. PHnii lib*
XXXII. r. j i.
Vol, III. M Mamafli*
%6x SWORD FISH. Class IT*
Mamaffu di pajanu,
Paletta di pajanu,
Majuffu di ftignela,
Palettu di paenu pale,
Pale la ftagnetta,
Mancuta lligneta.
Pro naftu, vardu, preflu da
Vifu & da terra*
But this ufe of charmed words is not confined to
Sicily -, the Irijh have their fong at the taking of
the razor mell*, and the Cornijh theirs, at the
taking of the whittle fifli.
The fword fifh is faid to be very voracious, and
that it is a great enemy to the Tunny, who (ac-
cording to Belon) are as much terrified with it as
fheep are at the fight of a wolf.
Ac durus Xiphias, iftu non mitior enfts ;
Et pavidi magno fugientes agmine Thunni.
Ovid. Halieut. 97.
Sharp as a fword the Xiphias does appear ;
And crowds of flying Tunnies ftruck with fear.
Si as. It grows to a very large fize ; the head of one,
with the pectoral fins, found on the more near
Laugharn, in Caermarthenjhire^ alone weighing fe-
venty-five pounds : the fnout was three feet long,
rough, and hard, but not hard enough to pene-
trate fhips and fink them, as Pliny pretends *
* Xiphiam, id eft, Gladium, roftro mucronato ejfe, ah hoc
■naves psrfojfas mergi inocea.no, Plin, Lib, xxxn. c, 11.
The
Class IV. SWORD FISH, 163
The fnout is the upper jaw, produced to a Snout,
great length, and has fome refemblance to a fword,
from whence the name It is comprefTed at the
top and bottom, and fharp at the point. The
under jaw is four times as more as the upper, but
likewife fharp pointed. The mouth is defticute of
teeth.
The body is (lender, thickeft near the head,
and growing lefs and lefs as it approaches the
tail.
The fkin is rough, but very thin : the color
of the back is dufky, of the belly filvery.
The dorfal fin begins a little above the gills, and
extends almoft to the tail : it is higheft at the be-
ginning and the end, but very low in the middle :
a little above the tail, on each fide, the fkin rifes
and forms two triangular protuberances, not unlike
the fpurious fins of the tunny.
The pectoral fins are long, and of a fey the- like
form, and their firft rays the longeft.
The anus is placed at the diftance of one-third
part of the body from the tail ; beneath are two
anal fins.
The tail is exactly of the fhape of a crefcent.
M 2 Ssct
1 64
GEMMEOUS DRAGONET. Class IV.
E C T,
II.
JUGULAR.
XVII.
DRAGO-
NET.
Upper lip doubled.
Eyes near each other.
Two breathing apertures on the hind part of the
head.
Firft rays of the dorfal fin very long.
6g. Gem me- La tierce efpece de Exocetus ?
OUS. JBelon, 218.
Dracunculus. Rondel. 304.
Dracunculus, aranei fpecies
altera. Gefner pifc. 80.
Dragon fifh. Marten's Spitz-
berg, 123.
Yellow Gurnard. Phil. Tranf.
No. 293.
Lyra Harvicenfis. Pet. Gax,
Tab. 22. Dale Harwich,
431.
Callionymus Lyra. C. dor-
falis prioris radiis longitu-
dine corporis. Lin.Jyfi. 433.
Faun. Suec. No. 110.
Uranofcopus. Grononj. Zooph.
No. 206.
Floy-fifke. Po?itop. Norway,
II. III.
Dracunculus marinus. Borlafe
Cornwall, 270. Seb. Muf,
III. 92. Tab. 30. fig. 7.
Name,
T INNsEUS has given this genus the name of
m*-4 Callionymus, a fifh mentioned by feveral of
the antients •, but the notices they have left of it
are fo very flight, as to render it difficult to deter-
mine what fpecies they intended. * Pliny makes it
a fynonym to the Uranofcopus, a fifh frequent in the
Italian feas, but very different from our Dragonet, a
Lib.
XXXII. C. II
name
Class IV. GEMMEOUS DRAGONET. 165
name we have taken the liberty of forming, from
the diminutive Dracunculus, a title given it by
Rondeletius, and other authors. The Englijh wri-
ters have called it the Yellow Gurnard, which
having no one character of the Gurnard genus,
we think ourfelves obliged to drop that name.
It is found as far north as Norway* and Spitz- Place.
bergen, and as far fouth as the Mediterranean fea,
and is not unfrequent on the Scarborough coafts,
where it is taken by the hook in thirty or forty fa-
thoms water. It is often found in the ftomach of
the Cod-fifh.
This fpecies grows to the length of ten or twelve Descrif.
inches : the body is (lender, rounds and fmooth.
The head is large, and flat at the top ; in the
hind part are two orifices, thro' which it breathes,
and alfo forces out the water it takes in at the
mouth, in the fame manner as the cetaceous fifh.
The apertures to the gills are doled : on the
end of the bones that cover them is a very fingular
trifurcated fpine.
The eyes are large, and placed very near each
other on the upper part of the head, fo that they
look upwards ^ for which reafonithas been ranked
* We have received it, with other curiofities, from that
well-meaning prelate, Erich Pontoppidan, Bifhop of Bergen.
He was alfo Vice-Chancellor of the Univerfity of Copenhagen,
in which ftation he died, December 20th. 1764, aged 66,
much refpetted by his countrymen.
M 3 among
l66 GEMMEOUS DRAGONET. Class IV.
among the Uranofcopi : the pupils are of a rich fap-
pharine bine, the irides of a fine fiery carbuncle.
The upper jaw projects much farther than the
lower : the mouth is very wide : the teeth are fmall.
The pectoral fins are round, and of a light-
brown color ; the ventral placed before them, are
very broad, and confift of five branched rays.
The firft dorfal fin is very lingular, the firft ray
being fetaceous, and fo long as to extend almoft
to the tail : thofe of the fecond dorfal fins are of a
moderate length, except the laft, which is produ-
ced far beyond the others.
The anus is placed about the middle of the belly ;
the anal fin is broad, and the lalt ray the longeft.
Pontoppidan calls this fpecies the flying fifh : whe-
ther it makes ufe of any of its fins to raife itfelf out
of the water, as he was informed they did, we can-
not pretend to fay.
The tail is rounded and long, and confifls of ten
rays.
Coitus. The fide line is flrait: the colors are yellow,
blue, and white, and make a beautiful appearance
when the fifh has been juft taken. The blue is of
an inexprefiible fplendor, the richeft cerulean
glowing with a gemmeous brilliancy. The throat
is black. The membranes of all the fins extreme-
ly thin and delicate.
Dracunculous
^
Class IV. SORDID DRAGONET. i6y
Draamculus. Wil. Ictb. 136. Caliionymus Dracunculus. C. 70. SoftBii
Rati fyn. pifc. 79. dorfalis prioris radiis cor-
Cottus pinna fecunda dorfi al- pore brevioribus. Lin. fyft.
ba dried. Jynon. 77. 434.
THIS fpecies we received from Mr. Travis*
Its length was only fix inches and an half.
The head was compreffed \ the forehead Hoped
down to the nofe, being not fo level as that of the
preceding.
The eyes large, and almoft contiguous.
The mouth fmall; the teeth very minute.
Over the gills was a ftrong trifurcated broad fpine.
The fird dorfal fin had four rays ; the fird feta-
ceous, extending a little higher than the others, the
lad very fhort : the two firft rays and webs were
yellow, the others black.
The fecond had ten foft rays, their ends extend-
ing beyond the webs, which were pellucid.
The pectoral fins confided of twenty rays, and
were ferruginous, fpotted with a deeper cad of the
fame : the ventral fins confided of five broad and
much branched rays, like thofe of the fird fpecies.
The anal fin was white, and- had ten rays ; the
tail had ten rays. In both fpecies they are bifur-
cated at their ends, and the ray next the anal fin in
both is very fhort.
M 4 In
iG8 SORDID DRAGONET. Class IV.
In colors this is far inferior to the former, be-
ing of a dirty yellow, mixed with white and dufky
fpots j the belly is entirely white.
Lower
Class IV.
W E E V E R.
i£,
Lower jaw Hoping down.
Gill covers aculeated.
Six branchioilegous rays.
Two dorfal fins.
Anus near the breaft.
XVIII.
WEEVER.
Aoaxuv ? Arifi. Hif. an. Lib.
V11I. c. 13. jElian. Hift.
an. Lib. II. c. 50. Oppian
Halieut. II. 459.
Draco rnarinus Plinii Lib. IX.
c. 27. Draco, Dracunculus.
Lib. XXXII. irj 11. Ara-
neus. Lib. IX. r. 48.
La vive. Belon. 209.
Draco. Rondel. 300. Gefner
pifc. 77, 78.
Peter-manniken, Schwertfif- 71. Common,
che. Schonevelde 16. *
The Weever. Wil. Icth. 238.
ifo// fyn. pifc. 91.
Trachinus maxilla inferiore
longiore, cirris dellituta.
Ar ted. fyn. 71.
Trachinus Draco. Lin. fyft*
453. Grono'v. Zooph. No.
274'
Fariing, Fiaffing. Faun. Suec*
No. 305.
THE qualities of this fifli were well known
to the antients, who take notice of them
without any exaggeration : the wounds inflicted
by its fpines are exceedingly painful, attended
with a violent burning, and moft pungent (hooting,
and fometimes with an inflammation that will ex-
tend from the arm to the moulder. *
It is a common notion that thefe fymptoms pro-
* It is probable that the malignity of the fymptoms arifes
from the habit of body the perfon is in, or the part in which
the wound is given,
ceed
4r7o W E E V E R. Class IV,
ceed from fomething more than the fmall wound
this fifti is capable of infli&ing •, and that there is
a venom infufed into it, at leaft fuch as is made
by the fpines that form the firft dorfal fin, which is
dyed with black, and has a mod fufpicious afpecl:.
The remedy ufed by a fifherman in our neighbour-
hood is the fea fand, with which he rubs the place
affected for a confiderable time. * At Scarborough,
ftale urine, warmed, is ufed with fuccefs.
This fifh buries itfelf in the fands, leaving only
its nofe out, and if trod on immediately ftrikes with
great force; and we have feen them direct their
blows with as much judgment as fighting cocks.
Notwithstanding this noxious property of the fpines,
it is exceeding good meat.
Nam 2* The Englijh name feems to have no meaning,
being corrupted from the French, la vive, fo called
as being capable of living long out of the water,
according to the interpretation of Belon.
Descrip. It grows to the length of twelve inches, but is
commonly found much lefs.
The irides are yellow : the under jaw is longer
than the upper, and (lopes very much towards the
belly : the teeth are fmall.
The back is ftrait, the fides flat, the belly pro-
* In the Umverfal Mufewn for November 1765, is an inftance
of a perfon who was reduced to great danger by a wound
from this fifh, and who was cured by the application of fwee;
p\\f and taking opium and Venice treacle,
minenf,
8.
'
Class IV. GREAT WEEVER, 171
minent, the lateral line ftrait: the covers of the
gills are armed with a very ftrong fpine.
The firft dorfal fin confifts of five very ftrong
fpines, which, as well as the intervening mem-
branes are tinged with black ; this fin, when qui-
efcenr, is lodged in a fmall hollow.
The fecond confifts of feveral foft rays, com-
mences jufl at the end of the firft, and continues
almoft to the tail. The pectoral fins are broad
and angular *, the ventral fins fmall
The vent is placed remarkably forward, very
near the throat : the anal fin extends to a fmall
diftance from the tail, is a little hollowed in the
middle, but not fo much as to be called forked.
The fides are marked lengthways with two or
three dirty yellow lines, and tranfverfely by num-
bers of fmall ones : the belly filvery.
Draco major feu araneus. Safoian. 70. 7*. Great(
Greater Weever. lour Scotland, 1769, oclavo.
THE length eleven inches : greater* depth one and three
quarters : head fiat : eyes large : edges of the jaws
rough with minute teeth : lower jaw the longeft : head co~
vered with minute tubercles : cheeks and gills with minute
fcales : on the gills is a iharp fpine.
Firlt dorfal fin black-, with five fpines : the fecond reaches
almoft to the tail : in the pectoral fins are thirteen branched
rays : in the ventral, fix : the anal extends oppofite to the
fecond dorfal fin : tail large, triangular, even at the end.
The fcales run in oblique lines from the back to the belly,
with a divifion between each row.
Inhabits the fe'a near Scarborough.
Head
i72 COMMON COD FISH. Class IV.
XIX. Head fmooth.
Seven flender branchioftegous rays.
Body oblong ; fcales deciduous.
All the fins covered with a common fkin,
Ventral fins flender, and ending in a point.
Teeth in the jaws ; and in the palate, a feries of
minute teeth clofely let together.
* With three dorfal fins ; the chin bearded.
73. Common. La Morue. Belony 121. fyn. pifc. 53.
Molva. Rondel 280. Gadus dorfo tripterygio, ore
Molva five morhua altera. cirrato, cauda asquali fere
Gefner pifc. 88. cum radio primo fpinofo.
Kablauw. Schoncvelde, 18. Arted, fynon. 35.
Afellus major vulgaris. Wil. Gadus morhua. Lin.fyji. 436.
Icth. 165, Gronov. Zoopb. No. 319.
Cod-fiih, or Keeling. Rati Cabblia. Faun.Suec. No. 398.
THIS fifti is found only in the northern part
of the world ; it is, as Rondeletius calls it,
an ocean fifh, and never met with in the Mediter-
ranean fez*. It arFedls cold climates, and feems
confined between the latitudes 66 and 50 : what:
are caught north and fouth of thofe degrees being
* None (fays Captain Armftrong in his hiftory of Minorca)
$f the Afelli or cod fifh kind, frequent our fhores. /. 163.
either
Class IV. COMMON COD FISH. 173
either few in quantity, or bad in quality. The
Greenland fifh are fmall and emaciated through want
of food, being very voracious, and having in thofe
feas a dearth of provifion.
This locality of fituation is common to many
other fpecies of this genus, moil of them being in-
habitants of the cold feas, or fuch that lie within
zones that can juft clame the title of temperate.
There are neverthelefs certain fpecies found near the
Canary I/lands, called Cherny *, of which we know
no more than the name j but according to the un-
fortunate Captain Glafs, are better tailed than the
Newfoundland kind.
The great rendezvouz of the cod fifh is on the
Banks of Newfoundland, and the other land banks
that lie off the coafts of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia,
and New England. They prefer thofe fituations,
by reafon of the quantity of worms produced in
thofe fandy bottoms, which tempt them to refort
there for food : but another caufe of the particular
attachment the fifh have to thefe fpots, is their vi-
cinity to the polar feas, where they return to fpawn ;
there they depofe their roes in full fecurity, but
want of food forces them, as foon as the firft more
fouthern feas are open, to repair thither for fub-
fiftence.
Few are taken north of Iceland, but on the fouth
and weft coafts they abound : they are again found
* Hift. Canary IJlands, 198.
to
374 COMMON COD FISH. Class IV.
to fwarm on the coafts of Norway, in the Baltic,
off the Orkney and the Weftern IJles ; after which
their numbers decreafe, in proportion as they ad-
vance towards the fouth, when they feem quite to
ceafe before they reach the mouth of the Straits of
Gibraltar.
Before the difcovery of Newfoundland, the greater
fifheries of cod were on the feas of Iceland, and
of? our Weftern IJles, which were the grand refort of
mips of all the commercial nations ; but it feems
that the greateft plenty was met with near Ice-
land. The Englijh reforted thither before the year
1415: for we find that Henry V. was difpofed to
give the King of Denmark fatisfaction for certain
irregularities committed on thofe feas by his fub-
jects. In the reign of Edward the IV. the Englijh
were excluded from the fifhery by treaty ; and for-
bidden to refort there under pain of forfeiture of life
and goods. Notwithftanding this, our monarch
afterwards gave licence to a fhip of Hull to fail to
Iceland, and there relade fifh and other goods, with-
out regard to any reftridtions to the contrary.
Our right in later times was far from being con-
firmed, for we find Queen Elizabeth condefcending
to afk permiflion to fifh in thofe feas from Chrifti*
an the IV. of Denmark, yet afterwards fhe fo far
repented her requeft, as to inftrucl: her embafiadors
to that court, to infill on the right of a free and
univerfal filhery *. How far fhe fucceeded, I do
* Rymer's Feed. XVI. 275, 425.
not
Class IV. COMMON COD FISH. 17$
not know : but it appears, that in the reign of her
fuccefTor, our countrymen had not fewer than a
hundred and fifty mips employed in the Iceland
fifhery. I fuppofe this indulgence might arife
from the marriage of James with a Princefs of
Denmark.
But the Spanijh, the French, and the Bretons, had
much the advantage of us in all fifheries at the
beginning, as appears by the (late of that in the
feas of Newfoundland in the year 1578*, when
the number of mips belonging to each nation flood
thus :
Spaniards, 100, befides 20 or 30 that came from
Bifcaie, to take whale for train, being about
five or fix thoufand tons.
Portuguefe, 50, or three thoufand tons.
French and Bretons, 150, or feven thoufand tons.
Englijh, from 30 to 50.
But Mr. Anderfon, in his Dictionary of Com-
merce, I. 363, fays, that the French began to fifh
there fo early as 1536% and we think we have
fomewhere read, that their firfl pretence for fiili-
ing for cod in thofe feas, was only to fupply an
Englijh convent with that article.
The encreafe of fhipping that refort to thofe
fertile banks, are now unfpeakable : our own coun-
try fl'ill enjoys the greateft fhare, which ought to
be efteemed our chiefeft treafure, as it brings
wealth to individuals, and ftrength to the ftate.
* Hadhyi's Coll. Voy, III. 132.
All
i76 COMMON COD FISH. Class IV.
All this immenfe fifhery is carried on by the hook
and line only * •, the bait is herring, a fmall fifti
called a Capelin, a fhell filh called Clams, and bits
of fea fowl 5 and with thefe are caught fifh fuffi-
cient to find employ for near fifteen thoufand Bri-
tijh feamen, and to afford fubfiftence to a much
more numerous body of people at home, who are
engaged in the various manufactures which fo vaft
a fifhery demands.
Food. The food of the cod is either fmall fifh, worms,
teftaceous, or cruftaceous animals, fuch as crabs,
large whelks, &c. and their digeftion is fo power-
ful, as to diffolve the greateft part of the fhells they
fwallow. They are very voracious, and catch at
any fmall body they perceive moved by the water,
even ftones and pebbles, which are often found in
their ftomachs.
The Sounds. Fifhermen are well acquainted with the ufe of
the air-bladder or found of the cod, and are very
dexterous in perforating this part of a live fifh with
a needle, in order to difengage the inclofed air;
for without this operation it could not be kept un-
der water in the well-boats, and brought frefh to
market. The founds of the cod faked is a delica-
* We have been informed that they fifh from the depth of
fifteen to fixty fathoms, according to the inequality of the
Bank, which is reprefented as a vaft mountain, under water,
above five hundred miles long, and near three hundred broad,
and that feamen knew when they approach it by the great fwell
of the fea, and the thick milts that impend over it.
<7
Class IV. COMMON COD FISH. 177
cy often brought from Newfoundland. Ifinglafs is Isinglass.
alfo made of this part by the Iceland fifhermen : as
the procefs may be of fervice to inftrudt the natives
of the North of Scotland where thefe fiu\ are plen-
tiful, I beg leave to give it in the Appendix,
extracted from a ufeful paper on the fubjedt, in
the Ph. Tr. of 1773, by Humphrey Jack/on, Efq.
Providence hath kindly ordained, that this fifh, Vastly
Prolific*
fo ufeful to mankind, fhould be fo very prolific as
to fupply more than the deficiencies of the mul-
titudes annually taken. Leuwenhoek counted nine
millions three hundred and eighty-four thoufand
eggs in a cod fifh of a middling fize, a number fure
that will baffle all the efforts of man, or the vora-
city of the inhabitants of the ocean to exterminate,
and which will fecure to all ages an inexhauftible
fupply of grateful provifion.
In our feas they begin to fpawn in January^ and
depofite their eggs in rough ground, among rocks.
Some continue in roe till the beginning of' April.
The cod fifh in general recover quicker after
fpawning than any other fifh, therefore it is com-
mon to take fome good ones all the fummer. When
they are out of feafon they are thin tailed and
loufy, and the lice chiefly fix themfelves on the in-
(ide of their mouths.
The fifh of a middling fize are mod efteemed
for the table, and are chofen by their plumpnefs
and roundnefs, efpecially near the tail, by the
depth of the fulcus or pit behind the head, and by
Vol. Ill N the
;i7* COMMON COD FISH Class IV.
the regular undulated appearance of the fides, as
if they were ribbed. The glutinous parts about
the head lofe their delicate flavor after it has been
twenty-four hours out of the water, even in winter,
in which thefe and other fi(h of this genus are in
higheft feafon.
Sjsm. xhe largefl that we ever heard of taken on our
coafts, weighed feventy-eight pounds, the length
was five feet eight inches ; and the girth round
the moulders five feet. It was taken at Scarborough
in 1755J and was fold for one (hilling. But the
general weight of thefe fxfh in the Torkjhire feas,
is from fourteen to forty pounds.
Pescrip. This fpeeies is (hort in proportion to its bulk,
the belly being very large and prominent.
The jaws are of an equal length, at the end of
the lower is a fmall beard -, the teeth are difpofed
in the palate as well as jaws.
The eyes are large.
On the back are three foft fins -, the firft has
fourteen, the two laft nineteen rays a-piece. The
ventral fins are very (lender, and confift but of fix
rays; the two firft extending far beyond the
other. It has two anal fins ; the firft confiding of
twenty, the laft of fixteen rays.
The tail is almoft even at the end : the firft ray
on each fide is (hort, and compofed of a ftrong
bone.
The color of this fifti is cinereous on the back
and fides, and commonly fpotted with yellow : the
belly
Class IV. H A D O C K. 173
belly is white, but they vary much, not only in
color* but in fhape, particularly that of the head.
The fide line is white and broad, (trait, till it Side Line.
reaches oppofite the vent, when it bends towards
the tail.
Aigrefin, ou aiglefin. Behn.
118.
Tertia afellorum fpecies. Ron-
del. 277.
Tertia afel. Sp. Eglefinus.
Gefner pifc. 86.
Onos five aiinus veterum.
Turner epifi. ad. Gefner.
Afellus minor, Schelfifch.
Scbonevelde. 18.
Hadock. Wil, Ictb, 170.
Rail Jyn. pifc. 55.
Gadus dorfo tripterygio, ore
cirrato, max. fup. longiore,
corpore albicante, cauda
parum bifurca. Arted. fynon,
36.
Gadus ^Eglefinus. G. tripte-
rygius cirratus albicans,
cauda biloba. Lin.fyjl. 435.
Kolja. Faun. Suec. No. 306.
Grono-v. Zoopb. No. 321.
74. Hadock;
OUR countryman Turner conjectured this fpe-
cies to have been the Ov©-, or Afinus, of the
antients, and Belon that it was the Kfiof, and the
U§6€otT0i of Oppian, We have carefully confulted
molt of the antient naturalifts, but cannot difcover
any marks by which we can determine the fpecies
they intended. The words f Ok©-, J Afinus^
Name.
* Codlings are often taken of a yellow, orange, and even
red color, while they remain among the rocks, but on changing
their place affume the color of other cod fifh
f Arift, Hift, an. Lib.Vhl. c. 15. Oppian Halieut. I. 151,
III. 191.
X Ovidii Halieut, Lin, 131. Plinii Lib, IX. r. 16. 17.
N 2
Afelks,
80 H A D O C K. Class IV.
Afellus, * Callarias, and Bacchus ', are familiarly
applied to feveral of our fpecies of cod fifh by the
more modern writers ; yet the antients from whom
they are borrowed, have not authorized the appli-
cation to any particular kind, either by defcription
or any other method.
Different reafons have been affigned for giving
the name of Ov®-9 or Afinus to this genus, fome i-
magining it to be from the color of the fifh, others
becaufe it ufed to be carried on the backs of aflfes
to market ; but we fhall drop this uncertain fub-
jecl, and proceed to what we have fuller afTurance
of.
Season. Large hadocks begin to be in roe the middle of
November, and continue fo till the end of January *,
from that time till May they are very thin tailed,
and much out of feafon. In May they begin to
recover, and fome of the middling-fized fifh are
then very good, and continue improving till the
time of their greatefl: perfection. The fmall ones
are extremely good from May till February, and
fome even in February, March, and April, viz. thbfe
which are not old enough to breed.
The fifhermen affert, that in rough weather ha-
docks fink down into the fand and ooze in the
bottom of the fea, and fhelter themfelves there till
the ftorm is over, becaufe in ftormy weather they
take none, and thofe that are taken immediately
* Lib, c. 17.
fmall
AST
Shoals.
Class. IV H A D O C K. 1S1
after a ftorm are covered with mud on their backs.
In fummer they live on young herrings and other Food.
fmall fiih; in winter on the (lone-coated worms*,
which the fifhermen call hadock meat.
The grand fhoal of hadocks comes periodically V
on the Yorkfhire coafts. It is remarkable that they
appeared in 1766 on the 10th of December, and
exactly on the fame day in 1767 : thefe fhoals ex-
tended from the fhore near three miles in breadth,
and in length from Flamborough head to Tin-mouth
caftle, and perhaps much farther northwards. An
idea may be given of their numbers by the follow-
ing fact : three fifhermen, within the diftance of a
mile from Scarborough harbour, frequently loaded
their coble or boat with them twice a-day, taking
each time about a ton of fifb : when they put down
their lines beyond the diftance of three miles from
the fhore, they caught nothing but dog fifh, which
fhows how exactly thefe fifh keep their limits.
The belt hadocks were fold from eightpence to
a milling per fcore, and the poor had the fmaller
fort at a penny, and fometimes a halfpenny per
fcore f .
The large hadocks quit the coaft as foon as they
* A fpecies of Serpula.
f Here Mr. Travis, to whom I am much obliged for a moll
accurate account of the Torkjbire fiih, with great humanity
projects an inland navigation, to convey at a cheap and eafy
method, thofe gifts of Providence to the thoufands of poor
manufacturers who inhabit the diftant parts of that vail county.
N 3 go
tU H A D O C K. Class VI.
go out of feafon, and leave behind great plenty of
fmall ones. It is faid that the large ones vifit the
coafts of Hamburgh and Jutland in the fummer.
It is no lefs remarkable than providential, that
all kinds of fifh (except mackrel) which frequent
the Torkjhire coaft, approach the more, and as if it
were offer themfelves to us, generally remaining
there as long as they are in high feafon, and retire
from us when they become unfit for ufe.
It is the commoneft fpecies in the London markets.
Pescrip. They do not grow to a great bulk, one of four-
teen pounds being of an uncommon fize, but thofe
are extremely coarfe ; the bed for the table weigh-
ing from two to three pounds.
The body is long, and rather more (lender than
thofe of the preceding kinds : the head flopes down
to the nofe : the fpace between the hind part of
the firft dorfal fin is ridged : on the chin is a fhort
beard.
On the back are three fins refembling thofe of
the common cod-fifh. : on each fide beyond the
gills is a large black fpot. Superftition afligns
this mark to the impreflion St. Peter left with
his finder and thumb when he took the tribute out
of the mouth of a fiih of this fpecies, which has
been continued to the whole race of hadocks ever
fince that miracle.
The lateral line is black : the tail is forked.
The color of the upper part of this fpecies is
dtifkv-
Class IV. WHITING POUT,
dufky or brown-, the belly and lower part of the
fides filvery.
Irides filvery : pupil large and black.
**Z
Afelliss mollis latus. Mr.
Lifter apud WiL Icth. App.
22.
Whiting Pout, Londi?ienJibus,
Raii fyn.pifc.^ 55.
Gad us dorfo tripterygio, ore
cirrato, longitudine ad la-
titudiaem tripla, pinna ani
prima officulorum triginta.
Arted. fynon. 37.
Gadus barbatus. G. triptery-
gius cirratus maxilla inferi-
ore pundiis utrinque fep-
tem Lin.fyft. 437. Grono<v.
Zoopb. No. 320.
Sma-Torfk. Faun. Suec. No,
an.
75-
Pour,
THIS fpecies never grows to a large fize, fei-
dom exceeding a foot in length.
It is diftinguifhed from all others by its great
depth ; one of the fize abovementioned being near
four inches deep in the broadeft part.
The back is very much arched, and carinated.
The fcales larger than thofe of the cod fifh. The
mouth fmall ; the beard fhort. On each fide of
the lower jaw are feven or eight punctures.
The firft dorfal fin is triangular, and terminates
in a long fibre : the color of the fins and tail black :
at the bottom of the pectoral fins is a black fpot.
The lateral line is white, broad, and crooked.
The tail is even at the end, and of a dufky
color.
N4
The
1 84 BIB. Class IV.
The color of the body is white, but more ob~
fcure on the back than the belly, and tinged with
yellow.
It is called at Scarborough a Kkg* It is a very
delicate fifh.
jpo* Bib. Afellus Darius, Dwergdorfch, Gadus dorfo tripterygio, orft
Krumftert? Scbonevelde, 20. cirrato, officulo pinnarum
Bib & Blinds Cornubienjibus. ventralium primo in longam
WiL Icth. 169. fetam produ&o. Arted.fynon.
Afellus lufcus. Raiijyn. pifc. 35.
54. Gadus lufcus. Lin.fyft, 437.
THIS fpecies grows to the length of one foot.
The greateft depth three inches and a half.
The fcales are large, and fo far from adhering to
the fkin, as is afTerted by naturalifts, are extreme-
ly deciduous.
The body is deep, the fides compreffed. The
eyes covered with a loofe membrane, which it can
blow up at pleafure, like a bladder. The mouth
is fmall : beneath the chin a beard, an inch long.
In the firft dorfal fin twelve rays : in the fecond,
which is longed, twenty-three: in the third, twenty.
The pectoral fins about fixteen : the ventral fix
or feven, of which the firft ray is long, and feta-
ceous :
XT
Class IV,
POOR.
ceous : the firft anal fin has twenty-feven ; the
laft twenty-one rays.
The back is of a light olive : the fides finely
tinged with gold : the belly white : the anal fins
dufky, edged with pure white.; the tail with black.
185
Color,
Le Merlan ? Belon, 1 20.
Anthice iecunda fpecies. Ron-
del. 191, Gefner pifc. 56.
Afellus mollis minor, feu
afellus omnium minimus.
Mo L L o Venetiis. Capelan
Mafiilia:. Wil. Icth. 1 7 I .
Poor or Power Cornub.
Mr. J ago. Rail fyn. pifc. 77- pO°R«
161. Jig. 6.'
Gadus dorfo tripterygio, ore
cirrato, corpore fefcunciali,
ano in medio corporis.
Arted. fynon. 36.
Gadus minutus. Lin fyjl. 438.
THIS is the only fpecies of cod fifli with three
dorfal fins that we (at this time) are aflured
is found in the Mediterranean fea. It is taken near
Marfeilles, and fometimes in fuch quantities as to
become a nufance -, for no other kinds of fi(h are
taken during their feafon *. It is efteemed good,
but incapable of being faked or dried : Belon fays,
that when it is dried in the fun, it grows as hard
as horn; Ceft dela que les Anglois font nomme
Bouclzs horn.
It is the final left fpecies yet dlfcovered, being
little more than fix inches long.
On the chin is a fmall beard : the eyes are co-
Descrip,
Rondel. 19
vered
iS6 C O A L F I S H. Class IV.
vered with a ldofe membrane : on the gill- covers,
and the jaws are on each fide, nine pun&ures.
The firft dorfal fin has twelve rays •, the fecond
nineteen -, the third feventeen.
The pe&oral fins thirteen ; the ventral fins fix :
the firft anal fin twenty-feven ; the fecond feven-
teen.
The color on the back is a light brown i on
the belly a dirty white.
We owe the difcovery of this kind in our feas to
the Rev. Mr. J ago.
** Three dorfal fins : chin beardlefs,
78. Coal. Colfifch. Belon, 128. 168. Raiijyti.pifc.^.
Colfifch Anglorum. Gefnerpifc. Gadus dorfo tripterygio, ore
89. imberbi, maxilla inferiore
Afellus niger. Kolfifch. Koler. longiore et linea lateral!
Schonevelde, 19. re&a. Arted. fynon 34.
Cole fifti Septentrionalium Gadus carbonarius. Lin. fyfi.
anglorum. Ravvlin Pollack 438. Gronov. Zooph. No*
Cornubienftujn. Wil. pi/c. 317.
THE coal fifti takes its name from the black
color that it fometimes afTumes. Belon calls
it the Colfifch, imagining it was fo named by the
Englifh, from its producing the Ictbyocolla, but
Qejner gives the true etymology,
Thefe
Class IV. C O A L F I S H. 187
Thefe fifli are common on mod of our rocky
and deep coafts, but particularly thofe of the north
of Great Britain, They fwarm about the Orknies,
where the fry are the great fupport of the poor.
The young begin to appear on the Torkjhire coaft Young.
the beginning of July in vaft fhoals, and are at that
time about an inch and an half long. In Auguft
they are from three to rive inches in length, and
are taken in great numbers with the angling
rod, and are then efteemed a very delicate filh, but
grow fo coarfe when they are a year old that few-
people will eat them. Filh of that age are from
eight to fifteen inches loner, and beg-in to have a
little blacknefs near the gills, and on the back,
and the blacknefs encreafes as they grow older.
The fry is known by different names in diffe-
rent places : they are called at Scarborough Parrs,
and when a year old, Billets, About nine or ten
years ago fuch a glut of Parrs vifited that part,
that for feveral weeks it was impofllble to dip a
pail into the fea without taking fome.
Tho' this fifh is fo little efteemed when frefti,
yet it is falted and dried for fale; a perfon laft year
having cured above a thoufand at Scarborough.
The coal filh is of more elegant form than the D?»crib.
cod fiih : they generally grow to the length of two
feet and an half, and weigh abdut twenty-eight
or thirty pounds at mod, The head is finally
the under jaw a little longer than the upper :
the
i88
POLLACK.
Class IV.
the irides filvery, marked on one fide with a black
fpot.
It has three dorfal fins, the firft confifts of four-
teen, the next of twenty, the lad of twenty-two
rays.
The pectoral fins of eighteen; the ventral of
fix : the firft anal fin of twenty-two, the fecond of
nineteen.
The tail is broad and forked.
Thefe fifh vary in color. We have feen fome
whofe back, nofe, dorfal fins and tail were of a
deep black : the gill covers filver and black : the
ventral and anal fins white ; the belly of the fame
color.
We have feen others dufky, others brown, but
in all the lateral line was ftrait and white, and the
lower part of the ventral and anal fins white.
79. Pollack. Afellus virefcens, Schwartres
Kolmulen. Schonevelde, 20.
Afellus flavefcens ; Gelbe
Kolmulen. Ibid.
Afellus Huitingo-Pollachius.
mi.ictb. 167.
Whiting Pollack. Rait fyn.
pifc. 53.
Gadus dorfo tripterygio, ore
imberbi, max. inf. longiore,
linea laterali curva. Arted.
Jynon. 35.
Gadus Pollachius. Lin, fyjl.
439. Gronov. Zoopb. JNo.
318.
Nortvegis Scy. Bahuftis Gra-
lik ? Faun. Suec, No. 309.
T
HIS fpecies is common on many of our
rocky coafts : during fummer they are ken
in
Class IV. POLLACK.
in great fhoals frolicking on the furface of the
water, and flinging themfelves into a thoufand
forms. They are at that time fo wanton as to bite
at any thing that appears on the top of the waves,
and are often taken with a goofe's feather fixed to
the hook. They are a very ftrong fifh, being ob-
ferved to keep their ftation at the feet of the rocks
in the mod turbulent and rapid fea.
They are a good eating fifh : they do not grow
to a very large fize^ at left the biggefl we have
feen did not exceed fix or feven pounds: but we
have heard of fome that were taken in the fea near
Scarborough, which they frequent during winter,
that weighed near twenty-eight pounds. They are
there called Leets.
The under jaw is longer than the upper j the
head and body rifes pretty high, as far as the firft
dorfal fin.
The fide line is incurvated, riling towards the
middle of the back, then finking and running
ftrait to the tail; it is broad, and of a brown color.
The firfl dorfal fin has eleven rays, the mid-
dle nineteen, the laft fixteen : the tail is a little
forked.
The color of the back is dufky, of fome in-
clining to green : the fides beneath the lateral line
marked with lines of yellow ; the belly white.
Sccunda
190
WHITING. Class IV.
80. Whi- Secunda afellorum fpecies.
ting. Rondel. 276.
Merlanus. Rondel. Gefner pifc.
Afellus candidus primus,
Witling. Schonevelde, 17.
Afellus mollis major, feu al-
bus. Wil. Iclh. 170.
Whiting. Rail fyn. pifc. 55.
Gadus dorfo tripterygio, ore
imberbi corpore albo, max-
illa fuperiore longiore. Ar-
ced, fynon. 34.
Gadus merlangus. Lin. Jyft.
438. Gronou. Xooph. No.
3l6:
Hwitling, Widding. Faun.
Suec. No. 310.
WHITINGS appear in vaft Ihoals in our
feas in the ipring, keeping at the diftance
of about half a mile to that of three from the
ihore. They are caught in vaft numbers by the
line, and afford excellent diverfion.
They are the mod delicate, as well as the mod
wholefome of any of the genus, but do not grow to
a large fize; the biggeft we ever faw* not ex-
ceeding twenty inches, but that is very uncom-
mon, the ufual length being ten or twelve.
It is a fifh of an elegant make : the upper jaw
is the longeft ; the eyes large, the nofe fharp, the
teeth of the upper jaw long, and appear above the
lower when doled.
The firil dorfal fin has fifteen rays, the fecond
eighteen, the laft twenty.
* We have been informed that whitings, from four to eight
pounds in weight, have been taken in the deep water at the
edge of the Dogger-Bank,
The
Class IV.
H A K
The color of the head and back is a pale brown *,
the lateral line white, and is crooked •, the belly and
fides filyery ; the laft ftreaked lengthways with yel-
low.
*9*
With only two dorfal fins.
Le Merluz. Belon, ir^.
Afellus, ovog, ovktjco^. Rondel.
' 272. m
Merlucius. Gefner pifc. 84.
Afellus primus five Merlu-
cius. Wil. Icth. 174.
The Hake. Raiifyn. pifc.
Gadus dorfo dipterygio, max-
illa inferiore longiore. Ar-
ted.fynon 36.
Gadus Merlucius. Lin, fyft.
439. Faun. Suec. No. 314.
Gronov. Zcopb, No. 315.
Si. Hake,
A FISH that is found in vaft abundance on ma-
ny of our coafts, and of thofe of Ireland.
There was formerly a vaft ftationary fifhery of Hake
on the Nymph Bank off the coaft of Waterford, im-
menfe quantities appearing there twice a year; the
fir ft fhoal coming in June^ during the Mackrel fea-
fon, the other in September, at the beginning of
the Herring feafon, probably in purfuit of thofe
fim : it was no unufu-al thing for fix men with
hooks and lines to take a thoufand Hake in one
night, befides a confiderable quantity of other fifh.
Thefe were falted and fent to Spain, particularly
to
i^i H A K E. Class IV.
to Bilboa. * We are at this time uninformed of
the ftate of this fifhery, but find that Mr. Smithy
who wrote the hiftory of the county of Waterforft^
complains even in his time (1746) of its decline.
Many of the gregarious fifh are fubjecl: to change
their fituations, and defert their haunts for num-
bers of years, and then return again. We fee,
p. 102, how unfettled the Bajking Shark appears to
be: Mr. Smith inftances the lofs of the Hadock on
the Waterford fhores, where they ufed to fwarm ;
and to our knowlege we can bring the capriciouf-
nefs of the herrings, which fo frequently quit their
ftations, as another example.
Sometimes the irregular migration of fifh is
owing to their being followed and haraffed by an
unufual number of fifh of prey, fuch as the fhark
kind.
Sometimes to deficiency of the fmaller fifh, which
ferved them as food.
And laftly, in many places to the cuftom of
trawling, which not only demolifhes a quantity of
their fpawn, which is depofited in the fand, but
alfo deftroys or drives into deeper waters number-
lefs worms and infects, the repaft of many fifh.
The hake is in England efteemed a very coarfe
fifh, and is feldom admitted to table either frefh or
faked f.
* Smith's Htft. Waterford, 261.
f When cured it is known by the name of Poor John,
The
Class IV. FORKED HAKE.
*93
Thefe fifh are from a foot and an half to near Descri*.
twice that length : they are of a {lender make, of
a pale afh color on their backs, and of a dirty
white on their bellies.
Their head is flat and broad ; the mouth very
wide ; the teeth very long and fharp, particularly
thofe of the lower jaw.
The firft dorfal fin is fmall, confiding of nine
rays ; the fecond reaches from the bafe of the
former almoft to the tail, and is compofed of forty
rays, of which the laft are the higheft : the pecto-
ral fins have about twelve, the ventral feven : the
anal thirty-nine.
The tail is almoft even at the end.
Galee, claria marina. Belon, Ictb. 205. Raii fyn. pifc, 82. Fork e*4
126. 75.
Phycis. Rondel. 186. Ge/ner Phycis. Arted.fynon. App. 1IL
pifc. 718. Blennius Phycis. Lin. fyft.
Tinea marina. Aldr, WiL 442.
THIS is the fifh to which Rondektius gives the
name of Phycis, borrowing it from Ariftotlq
and Pliny, who have not fo fufficiently characterized
it, as to enable us to judge what fpecies they in-
tended. It is found in the Mediterranean more fre-
quently than in" our feas, and we believe is the fifh
mentioned by Mr. Armftrong, and Doctor Clegborn*?
* drmftrcng, 161. C leghorn, 43,
Vol. III. O in
i94 FORKED HAKE. Class IV.
in their hiftories of Minorca, under the name of
Molioy Mollera, and Molle. It is known on the
coaft of Cornwall by the name of the great forked
beard *, where it was firft difcovered by Mr. Jago.
]We place it in this genus, as it has more the ap-
pearance of the cod fiih kind, the hake efpecially,
than of the Blenny, into which genus Linnaeus has
flung- it ; we therefore have given this fpecies the
name of the Forked Hake.
. The length of one that was taken on the Flint-
Jhire mores was eleven inches and an half, its
greateft depth three inches -, but according to
Doctor Borlafe, fome grow to be above eighteen
inches long.
The head floped down to the nofe in the fame
eafy manner with others of this genus : the mouth
large : beiides the teeth in the jaws was a triangular
congeries of fmall teeth in the roof of the mouth.
At the end of the lower jaw was a fmall beard.
The firft dorfal fin was triangular; the firft ray
extended far beyond the reft, and was very (len-
der: the fecond fin began juft behind the firft, and
extended almoft to the tail : the ventral fins were
three inches long, and confided of only two rays,
joined at the bottom, and feparated or bifurcated
towards the end : the vent was in the middle of
the body : the anal fin extended from thence juft
* Bar bus major Cornubienfis cirri s bifurcatis : the great
forked beard, Mr. Jago. Raii fyn, pi/c. 163./^. 7.
to
Class IV. L E S T H A K E.
to the tail : the lateral line was incurvated : the tail
was rounded.
The color was a cinereous brown.
J95
Barbus minor Cornubienjts cirris bifurcis. The Leffer Forked 83. Lest,
Beard. Mr. J ago. Rail fyn. pifc. 164. Jig. 8.
WE never faw this fpecies, and having but
very imperfect defcriptions of it, cannot
with any certainty pronounce it to be of this ge-
nus, but are unwilling to feparate them, as we
found them united by that judicious Icthyologift
Mr. Jago.
It is faid not to exceed five inches in length :
the firft dorial fin (in the print) is fhorter than
that of the preceding; the fecond refembles that
of the other kind : the ventral fins bifurcated. It
has a fmall beard, and a rounded tail, but the
head is fhorter and more fteep \ the color black,
the fkin fmooth, and the appearance difagreeable.
O 2 THfS
i96 TRIFURCATED HAKE. Class IV.
$$. TaiFOR- >T*HIS new fpecies was communicated to me
gated I
■* by the Reverend Mr. Hugh Davies of Beau-
maris, and was taken near that place.
Its length was twelve inches : the color a deep
brown ; excepting the folding of the lips, which
were fnow white, giving it a flrange appearance.
The head deprelTed and very broad : eyes large :
irides yellowifh : mouth very wide, with irregular
rows of incurvated teeth. In the roof of the mouth
a femilunar congeries of teeth. No tongue.
From the fetting on of the pectoral fins the body
was CQmprefTed, but remarkably fo, as it approach-
ed the tail, growing very (lender near that part.
On the beginning of the back was a /ulcus, in
which was the rudiment of a firft dorfal fin ; the
fecond reached almofl to the tail, and the anal cor-
refponded. Above the pectoral fins, on each fide,
was a row of tubercles from which commenced
the lateral line, which was (midway) incurvated.
The ventral fins were trifurcated : the tail rounded.
In a prone fituation this fifh made a ftrange ap-
pearance,, fo is reprefented in that as well as another
attitude^
Ling
-
J:^:-1
Class IV. LIN
197
Ling, Lingfifche. Belon, 130. Jy*kp\fc. 56. 85. L-iti<G«
Gefner pifc 95. Gadus dorfo dipterygo, ere
Molva major Charhton ex. pifc. ferrato, maxilla fuperiore
3. longiore. Arted. Jynon, 36.
Afellus longus, eine Lengc. Gadus molva. Lin. Jyjl. 439.
Schonevelde, 18. Langa. Faiut> Suec. No. 313.
Ling. Wil. Icth. 175. Rail
THE ling takes 4ts name from its length,
being corrupted from the word long, k
abounds about the Stilly Ifles, on the coafts of Scar-
borough^ and thofe of Scotland and Ireland, and
forms a confiderable article of commerce *
In the Fork/hire feas they are in perfection from
the beginning of February to the beginning of
May, and fome till the end of that month. Ir
June they fpawn, depofiting their eggs in the foft
opzy ground of the mouth of the Tees : at that
time the males feparate from the females, and refort
to fome rocky ground near Flamborough Head,
where the fifhermen take great numbers without
ever finding any of the female or roed fifti among
them.
While a ling is in feafon its liver is very white, °;l-<
and abounds with a fine flavored oil ; but as foon
* This branch of trads-was cpnfiderable fo long ago as
fhe reign of Edward III. an act for regulating the price of
Lob9 Ling> tnd Qod9 being made in his 31ft year.
O 3 as
t98 LIN G. Class IV,
as the fifh goes out of feafon, the liver becomes
red as that of a bullock, and affords no oil. The
fame happens to the cod and other fifh in a certain
degree, but not fo remarkably as in the ling.
When the fifh is in perfection, a very large quan-
tity of oil may be melted out of the liver by a flow
fire, but if a* violent fudden heat be ufed for that
purpofe, they yield very little. This oil, which
nature hoards up in the cellular membranes of
filhes, returns into their blood, and fupports them
in the engendring feafon, when they purfue the bu-
finefs of generation with fo much eagernefs as to
neglect their food.
Vaft quantities of ling are faked for exportation,
as well as for home confumption. When it is cut
or fplit for curing, it mutt meafure twenty-fix
inches or upwards from the moulder to the tail ;
if lefs than that it is not reckoned a fizeable fifh,
v and confequently not entitled to the bounty on ex-
portation -, fuch are called Drizzles^ and are in
feafon all fummer.
Descrip. The ufual fize of a ling is from three to four
feet -, but we have heard of one that was ^ven feet
long.
The body is very flender ; the head flat; the
upper jaw the longeft-, the teeth in that jaw fmall
and very numerous ; in the lower, few, flender,
and fharp : on the chin is a fmall beard.
The firfl dorfal fin is fmall, placed near the head,
and confifts of fifteen rays : the fecond is very long,
reaching
Class IV.
BURBOT.
reaching almoft to the tail, and confifts of fixty-
five rays : the pectoral fins have fifteen radiated
rays -, the ventral fins fix ; the anal fixty-two : the
tail is rounded at the end.
Thefe fifh vary in color, fome being of an olive
hue on the fides and back, others cinereous •, the
belly white. The ventral fins white: the dorfal
and anal edged with white. The tail marked near
the end with a tranfverfe black bar, and tipt with
white.
199
Strinfias, ou BotatrilTa. Belon,
300.
Lota. RcndeL fiu-vlat. 165.
Gefner pifc. 599.
Quappen, Elff-quappen, Ti-
der-quappen, Trufchen ?
Scbonevelde, 49.
Burbot, or Bird-bolt. Plot
Staff. 241. Tab. 22. fig. 4.
Muftela fluviatilis noitratibus
Eel-pout. Wil. Ictb. 125. &6. Burbot,
Raii fyn. pijc. 6j.
Aal-rutte, Rutte. Kram. 388.
Gadus dorfo dipterygio, ore
cirrato, maxillis asqualibus.
Arted. fynon. 38.
Gadus Lota, Lin. fyjl. 440.
Grono<v. Zooph. No. 97.
Lake. Faun. Suec. No. 113.
THIS fifli is found in the Trent, but in great-
er plenty in the river Witham, and in the
great Eaft Fen in Lincoln/hire. It is a very deli-
cate fifh for the table, Though of a difgufting ap-
pearance when alive. It is very voracious, and
preys on the fry and lefTer fifh. It does not often
take a bait, but is generally caught in weels.
It abounds in the lake of Geneva, where it is call-
O 4 ed
Place,
200 BURBOT. Class. IV
ed Lota, and it is alfo met with in the Lago Mag-
giore, and Lugano.
Descrip. The largeft that we ever heard was taken in our
waters weighed between two and three pounds,
but abroad they are fometimes found of double
that weight.
Their body has fome refemblance to that of an
eel, only fhorter and thicker, and its motions alfo
refemble thofe of that fifli : they are befides very
fmooth, flippery, and (limy.
The head is very ugly, being flat, and fhaped like
that of a toad: the teeth are very fmall, but nume-
rous : the irides yellow.
On the end of the nofe are two fmall beards ♦,
on the chin another ; the number of its branchi-
oftegous rays are feven.
The firft dorfal fin is fhort : the fecond is placed
immediately behind it, and extends almoft to the
tail : the pectoral fins are rounded : the ventral
fins confift of fix rays, of which the two firft are
divided near their ends from each other : the vent
is placed in the middle of the belly, and the anal
fin reaches almoft to the tail : the tail is rounded
at the end.
Color. The color of this fpecies varies % fome are dufky,
others of a dirty green, fpotted with black, and
oftentimes with yellow, and the belly in fome is
white; but the real colors are frequently concealed
by the flime,
Muflella
^
121. Rati fyn. pifc. 67.
87. Three
Rockling, Mr. Jago. Rati
BEARDED.
fyn. pifc. 164. fig. 9.
Class IV. THREE BEARDED COD, 201
Muftella vulgaris. Rondel.
281- Gefner pifc. 89.
Sea Loche Ceftria, Whittle
iifli Cornubia. Wil. Ictb.
THIS fpecies commonlv frequents the rocky
fhores of thefe iflands, and is fometimes
taken with a bait.
It grows to the length of nineteen inches ; the
weight two pounds two ounces : the head is large
and fiat : the eyes not remote from the end of
the nofe : the body is long, flender, and compref-
fed tideways, efpecially towards the tail: at the end
of the upper jaw are two beards -9 on the chin one.
The teeth are numerous and fmall, difpofed
along the jaws in form of a broad plate : in the
roof of the mouth is a fee of fmall teeth, difpofed
in a triangular form.
The number of branchioftegous rays is feven.
The firft dorfal fin is lodged in a deep furrow
juft beyond the head, and confifts of a number of
fhort unconnected rays : the fecond rifes juft be-
hind it, ancl reaches very near the tail : the pero-
ral fins are broad and round ; the ventral fins fmall -,
the fecond ray the longed : the anal fin reaches al-
moft to the tail : the tail rounded at the end.
The fcales are very fmall : the color of the body
and head a reddim yellow, marked above the lateral
line
202 FIVE BEARDED COD. Class IV.
line with large black fpots : the back fin and tail
are darker ; the vent fin of a brighter red, but all
are fpotted. The lateral line bends in the middle,
then pafifes ftrait to the tail.
88. Five Gadus dorfo dipterygio, ful- gius cirris 5, pinna dorfali
Bearded. co magno ad pinnam dorii priore exoleta. Lin. fyft.
primam, ore cirrato? Arted. 440. Grono<v. Zooph. No.
fynon. 37. ' _ 314.
Gadus nuiftela. G. diptery-
MR. Willugbby makes this fpecies with five
beards, a variety only of the former ; but
having opportunity of examining feveral fpeci-
mens, we muft diffent from his opinion, having
always obferved the number of the beards in the
fpotted kind not to exceed three, nor the number
in the brown kind to be lefs than five. The
rirft ray of the dorfal fin is very long. There is
alfo fome difference in the form as well as color, this
fpecies being rather thicker in proportion than the
former.
Excepting thefe particulars, and the number of
beards, there is a general agreement in the parts of
both. The beards on the upper jaw are four, viz.
two at the very end of the nofe, and two a little
above them : on the end of the lower jaw is a fingle
one.
Thefe fiQi are of a deep olive brown, their belly
whitifh.
Class IV. T O R S K. 203
whitifb. They grow to the fame fize as the for-
mer.
The Cornijb flmermen are faid to whittle, and
make ufe of the words Bod, Bod, vean, when they
are defirous of taking this fifh, as if by that they
facilitated the capture. In the fame manner the
Sicilian fifhermen repeat their Mamajfu di pajanu,
&c. when they are in purfuit of the Sword Fijh *.
With only one dorfal fin.
THIS fifli has been hitherto fuppofed to be of ^' ToRSK<
the fection of this genus, which has three
dorfal fins. The fpecies known in Sweden by that
name is included in that divifion 5 and as fuch I
defcribed it in the former edition from the account
Linnaeus has given us. But from the information of
the Rev. Mr. Low, minifter of Birfa, Orkney, who
in 1774, made (at my requeft) the voyage of the
Shetland iflands, I find the Britijh Torfk to be to-
tally different -, and will occafion the addition of a
fourth divifion in this genus.
The Torjk is defcribed and engraven in Mr,
Strom's hiflory of Sondmoer, under the fame name.-f
* Vide f>. 162 ,
t Eller Torjky p. 272. tab. I. fig, 19. and when dried,
Klip-jijk.
The
204
TORS K. Class IV.
The figure agrees with that Mr. Low favoured mc
with.
The Torjk, or as it is called in the Shetlands,
"Tujk and Brifmak is a northern fifti ; and as yet
undifcovered lower than about the Orknies^ and
even there it is rather fcarce. In the feas about
Shetland^ it fwarms, and forms (barrelled or dried)
a confiderable article of commerce.
The length of the fpecimen, Mr. Low defcribed
for me, was twenty inches, the greateft depth four
and a half.
The head final], the upper jaw a little longer
than the lower : both jaws furnifhed with multitudes
of fmall teeth : on the chin was a fmall fingle beard :
from the head to the dorfal fin was a deep furrow.
The dorfal fin began within fix inches from the tip
of the nofe, and extended almoft to the tail.
The pectoral, fins fmall, and rounded *, the ven-
tral fhort, thick and fleihy, ending in four cirrhu
The belly from the throat grows very promi-
nent: the anal fin was long, and reached almoft
clofe to the tail, which is fmall and circular. The
number of rays could not be counted with accuracy
by reafon of their foftnefs, and the thicknefs of the
fkin : the fide line fcarcely difcernible.
The color of the head dufky : the back and fides
yellow : belly white : edges of the dorfal, anal, and
caudal fins white ; the other parts dufky : the pecto-
ral fins brown.
1 flatter myfelf, that in a fmall time, the pub-
li?
Class IV. T O R S K. 205
lie will receive from Mr. Low, a fuller account of
this important fifh, in a comprehenfive hiftory of
the idands of Orkney, and Shetland,
Head
2o6 CRESTED B LENNY. ClassIV.
PTFNNY* **eac* k*Unt at thC Cn^' ^^ Vet^ ^ee^'
Body fmooth and flippery.
Teeth (lender.
Body comprefTed Tideways.
Ventral fins confiding generally of only two
united rays.
One dorlal fin.
Six branchioflegous rays.
* With a crefted head.
90. Crested. Adonis, ou exocetus. Belcn, fyn. pifi. 73.
219. Blennius crifta capitis tranf-
Galerita. Rondel. 204. Gef- veria cutacea. Arted. fynon.
ner pifc. 14, 17, 18. 44. ^
Alauda criftata, five Galeri- Blennius Galerita. Lin. Jyft.
ta. JVil. Icth. 134. Raii 441.
THIS fpecies is found, though not frequently,
on our rocky fhores, and is commonly about
four or five inches long.
On the head is a fmall creft-like fin, which it
* There being no EngUJh name for this genus, Blenny is
given it, derived from the word Blennius, the generical term
ufed by Artedius, who forms it from Btivva mucus, it being of
a flimy nature.
caa
PL
jst?$i.
GAT TOBXTGUSTE
CRE S TED BLEN'STY
Jfpgo.
^^^^JfM^m^^¥WM^
SPOT TED BLE K"NY.
JV?&3.
Aja/UM
Class IV. G A T T O R U G I N. 207
can erect or deprefs at pleafure. On the top of the
head, between the eyes, is a triangular lump point-
ing backwards, and red about its edges.
The fkin at the corner of the upper jaw is loofe,
and projects.
From the hind part of the head, almoft to the
tail, extends the dorfal fin : the ventral fin is fmall :
the vent is placed under the ends of the pectoral
fins.
The body is fmooth and flippery : the color
brown, and fpotted.
Scorpioides. Rondel. 204. oculos, pinna ani officulo- 91. Gatto-
Gefner pifc. 847. rum viginti trium. Arted. rugin.
Gattorugine Venetiis. Wil. fynon. 44.
Icth. 132. Raii fyn. pifc. 72. Blennius Gattorugine. Lin.
Blennius pinnulis duabus ad fyjl. 442.
THIS curious kind was difcovered to be a Bri- Place,
tijh fifh on the Anglefea coaft.
Its length was feven inches and an half: the body Descrif.
was fmooth, and comprefTed on the fides : the belly
a little prominent : the vent fituated as in the pre-
ceding fifh.
The teeth (lender, almoft fetaceous, and very
clofe fet : between the eyes was a fmall hollow, and
above each, juft on the fummit, was a narrow
loofe membrane, trifurcated at the top, which dif-
tinguifhes this from all other fpecies.
The
2o3 SMOOTH BLENNY. Class IV.
The pe&oral fins broad and rounded, confiding
of fourteen rays, which extend beyond the webs,
making the edges appear fcalloped.
The ventral fins like thofe of others of the genus :
the dorfal fin confided of fourteen ftrong fpiny
rays, and nineteen fofc rays; the lad of which
were higher than the fpiny rays.
The anal fin had twenty-one rays : the ends in
every fin extending beyond their webs.
The tail was rounded at the end, and confided
of twelve rays, divided towards their extremities.
This fi(h in general was of a dufky hue, mark-
ed acrofs with wavy lines : the belly of a light afh
color.
The lower part of the pectoral fins, and the ends
of the. ventral fins, of an orange color.
** With a fmooth head.
az Smooth. ^a ^erce e*Pece de Exoce- />, Smooth Shan. Mr. Jago
tus? Belon, 219. apud Rail fyn. pifc. 164.
Alauda non criftata. Rondel. fig. 10.
205, Gefner pifc. 18. Blennius maxilla fuperiore
Mulgranoc, & Bulcard CW- lorigiore, capite fummo
nubia. Wil. Icth. 133. Rail acuminata. Arled.fynon. 45.
fyn. pifc. 73. Blennius Pholis. Lin.fyfi 443.
Cataphra&us lsevis Comubien- Groncv. Zooph. No. 259.
^lace. TX7^ difcovered this fpecies in plenty lying
under the ftones among the tang on the
rocky
ClassIV. SMOOTH BLENNY. ?.e9
rocky coafts of Anglefea^ at the lower water-mark.
It was very active and vivacious, and would by
the help of its ventral fins creep up between the
ftones with great facility. It bit extremely hard,
and would hang at ones finger for a confiderable
time. It was very tenacious of life, and would
live for near a day out of water.
It feeds on lliells arid fmall crabs, whofe remains
we found in its ftomach.
The length in general was five inches : the head Bzscrs?*
large, and doping fuddenly to the mouth : the
irides red. '
The teeth flender, very fharp, and clofe feti
there were twenty-four in the upper, and nineteen
in the lower jaw.
The pectoral fins .broad and rounded, confiding
of thirteen rays : the ventral fins of only two thick
rays, feparated near their ends.
The dorfal fin confided of thirty-two foft rays,
and reached from the hind part of the head almoft
to the tail.
The vent was in the middle of the body: the
anal fin extended almoft to the tail, and confided
of nineteen rays, tipt with white.
The tail rounded at the end, and compofed of
twelve branched rays.
The color varied, fome were quite black, but
generally they were of a deep olive, prettily mar-
bled with a deeper color -, others fpotted with whites
Vol. III. P - the
2IO
SPOTTED BLENNY. Class IV.
the laft often difpofed in rows above and beneath
the lateral line.
93. Spotted. Gunnellus Comubienjlum, non-
nullis Butter-fijhy q. d. Li-
paris. Wil. l£lh. 115. Rati
fyn.pifc 144.^
Blennius maculis circiter de-
cern nigris limbo albicante
utrinque ad pinnam dorfa-
lem. Arted.fynon. 45.
Blennius Gunnellus. B. pinna
dorfali ocellis X nigris. Lin.
fyft. 443. Faun. Suec. No.
318.
Seb. Muf. III. p. 91. Tab.
30. fig.6. ^ '
Pholis maculis annulatis ad
pinnam dorfalem, pinnis
ventralibus obfoletis. Gro-
no<v. Zoopb. No. 267.
THIS fpecies is found in the fame place with
the preceding, lurking like it under ftones,
is equally vivacious, and is ufed as a bait for
larger fifh.
Its length is fix inches : the depth only half an
inch : the fides very much compreffed, and ex-
tremely thin.
The head and mouth is fmall; the laft points
upwards, and the lower jaw (lopes conliderably to-
wards the throat.
The teeth are very fmall ; the irides whitifh.
The pedoral fins rounded, and of a yellow color :
inftead of the ventral fins are two minute fpines.
The dorfal fin confifts of feventy-eight fhort fpiny
rays, and runs the length of the back almoft to the
tail : on the top of the back are eleven round fpots?
which
t
m
IP '>>>
-1
w
Class IV. VIVIPAROUS BLENNY.
211
which reach the lower half of the dorfal fin ; they
are black, half encircled with white.
The vent is in the middle of the body j the anal
fin extends from it almoft to the tail.
The tail is rounded, and of a yellow color.
The back and fides are of a deep olive: the
belly whitifh.
Muftela marina vivipara, Acl-
. quappe, Ael-puet, Ael-
moder. Scho/ievelde, 50.
Tab. 4.
Guffer, Eelpout. Sib. Scot.
III. 25.
Muftela vivipara Scbone-ueldii.
Wil lah. 122. Rati fyn.
fife. 69.
Blennius capite dorfoque fufco
flavefcente lituris nigris, pin-
na ani flava. Arted.fynon. 45.
Blennius viviparus, B. ore 94. Vivipa*
tentaculis duobus. Lin.fyft. Rous.
443-
Tanglake. Faun. Suec. No.
317. Muf. Ad. Fr. I. 69.
Tab. 32.
Enchelyopus corpore lituris
variegato; pinna dorfi ad
caudam finuata. Gronov*
Zoopk. No. 265.
nCHONEFELDE firft difcovered this fpecies;
, Sir Robert Sibbald afterwards found it on the
Scotch coafts *9 and Linnxus has defcribed it in his
account of his Swedijh Majefty's Mufeum.
They are viviparous, bringing forth two or three
hundred young at a time. Their feafon of partu-
rition is a little after the depth of winter. Before
Midfummer they quit the bays and mores, and re-
tire into the deep, where they are commonly tak-
P 2 en.
-i2 VIVIPAROUS BLENNY. Class IV.
en. They are a very coarfe fifti, and eat only by
the poor.
They are common in the mouth of the river
EJk) at Whitby ', Torkjhire-, where they are taken
frequently from off the bridge.
They fometimes grow to the length of a foot.
Their form (lender : their fkin fmooth and frippe-
ry. The teeth very minute and fharp : the upper
lip thin and fkinny.
The dorfal fin commences juft behind the head,
and joins with that of the tail; but near the tail, the
reft are lhort, fo as to form the appearance of a
divifion. The pectoral fins rounded : the ventral
confift of only four fhort rays : the anal extends
far, and unites with the tail. The tail round.
The dorfal fin, back, and fides are of a yellowifh
brown, flained with dufky fpots and lines. The
end of the tongue, the chin, throat, and anal fin
of a fine yellow.
The back-bone is green, as that of a fea-needle.
Sec t.
85
Glass IV. BLACK GOBY. 213
Sect. III. THORACIC FISH.
Eyes placed near each other. XXI.
T7 u w a GOBY*.
rour branchioitegous rays,
Ventral fins united.
Gobio niger. Rondel, 200. pinna dorfi fecunda oflicu- 95* Black,
Ge/ner pifc. 395. lorum quatuordecim. Ar-
Schwartzer Goeb. Schone- ted.fynon. 46.
<velde9 36. Gobius niger. Lin.Jyft. 449.
Sea Gudgeon. Rock-fifh. Wil. Eleotris capite cathetoplateo,
lilb. 206. Raiijyn.pifc j6, pinnis ventralibus concretis0
Gobius ex nigricante varius, Gronov. Zoopb. No. 281.
IT is to this fifh that Naturalifts have givera
the fynonym of K«ft^, and Gobio, names of cer-
tain fpecies mentioned by Arifioik, Pliny, and
Oppian. The two firft have not left any charac-
ters for us to diftinguifh them by; and Oppian at
once fhews that he never intended this kind, as he
has placed it among thofe which are armed with
a poifonous fpine. Arifiotk was acquainted with
two fpecies ; one a fea fifh that frequented the
rocks, another thai; was gregarious, and an inha*
* Formed from Gobius, the generic name bellowed by Na*
turalifls on $hefe fifh.
P 3 blunt
214 B L A C K G O B Y. Class IV.
bitant of rivers, which lad feems to have been our
common gudgeon.
PtscRip. 'p^jg fpecies grows to the length of fix inches :
the body is foft, flippery, and of a {lender form :
the head is rather large •, the cheeks inflated ; the
teeth fmall, and difpofed in two rows : from the
head to the firft dorfal fin is a fmall fulcus.
The firft dorfal fin confifts of fix rays •, the fe-
cond of fourteen ; the pectoral fins of fixteen or
feventeen, clofely fet together, and the middlemoft
the longed -, the others on each fide gradually
fhorter.
The ventral fins coalefce and form a fort of
funnel, by which thefe fifh affix themfelves im-
moveably to the rocks, for which reafon they are
called Rock-fijh.
The tail is rounded at the end.
The color is brown, or deep olive, mixed with
dark ftreaks, and fpotted with black : the dorfal
and anal fins are of a pale blue, the rays marked
with minute black fpots.
K<pvul
Class IV. SPOTTED GOBY. 215
A$ua} Atben. Lib. VII. p. Gobius Aphya et Marfio 96. Spot-
284. di&us. Arted. fynon. 47. ted.
Aphia. Be/on, 207. Gobius Aphya. G. fafciis
Aphya cobites. Rondel. 210. etiam pinnarum fufcis. Lin.
Gefner pifc. 67. Wil. pifc. fyfi. 450.
207. Raii Jy?t. pifc. 76.
WE faw feveraT of this fpecies taken lafl: fum-
mer on our fandy fhores in the fhrimp nets.
The length of the largeft was not three inches :
the nofe was blunt : the eyes large and prominent,
ftanding far out of the head: the irides fappha-
rine ; the head flat ; the tongue large •, teeth in
both jaws.
The firft dorfal fin confided of fix rays; the
iecond of eleven, and placed at fome diftance from
the other.
The ventral fins are united : the anal confift of
eleven rays : the tail is even at the end.
The body is of a whitifh color, obfcurely fpot-
ted with ferruginous : the rays of the dorfal fins,
and the tail, barred with the fame color.
P 4 Large
6
BULL HEAD.
Class IV.
XXII. BULL-
HEAD.
Large fiat head, armed with fharp (pines.
Six branchioftegous rays.
97. River. Boiroc. Arlji. Hlfl. an. Lib* Cottus alepedotus glaber, ca~
IV. c. 8. pite diacantho. Arted.fynon.
Chabot. Belon, 213. 76.
Cottus. Rondel Flwviat. 202. Cottus Gobio. C. lsvis, ca-
Gobio capitatus. Gefner pifc. pite fpinis duabus. Lin.
401. fyfi. 452,
Een Miiller. Schwenckfelt Sten-fimpa, Slagg-fimpa.
Sites, 431. Faun Suec. No. 323.
Bull-head, Miller's Thumb. Koppe. Kram. 384. Gromv*
Wil. Icth. 137. Raii Jyn. Zooph. No. 270.
fife. 76,
THIS fpecies is very common in all our clear
brooks -, it lies almoft always at the bottom,
either on the gravel or under a (tone : it depofits
its fpawn in a hole it forms in the gravel, and
quits it with great reluctance. It feeds on water
infecls \ and we found in the ftomach of one the
remains of the frefh water fhrimp, the pulex aqua-
tilis of Ray.
This fifti feldom exceeds the length of three
inches and an half: the head large, broad, flat,
and thin at its circumference, being well adapted
for infingating itfelf under ftones : on the middle
p< rt of the covers of the gills is a fmall crooked
fpine turning inwards.
The
Class IV. ARMED BULL-HEAD. 217
The eyes are very fmall : the irides yellow : the
teeth very minute, placed in the jaws and the roof
of the mouth.
The body grows (lender towards the tail, and is
very fmooth.
The firft dorfal fin confifts of fix rays, the fecond
of feventeen : the pectoral fins are round, and
prettily fcallcped at their edges, and are compofed
of thirteen rays ; the ventral of only four ; the
anal of thirteen ; the tail of twelve, and is rounded
at the end.
The color of this fifh is as difagreeable as its
form, being duiky, mixed with a dirty yellow :
ihe belly whit.ifh.
Cataphra&us, Stein-bicker, Gottus Cataphrattus. C. lori- gg. Armed,
Miiller, Turfs-bull. Scbone- catus, rollro verrucofo 2
<veUe, 30. Tab. 3. bifidis, capite fubtus cir-
Cataphra&us Schoneveldii Sep- rofo. Lin.fyft. 451.
tentr. Anglis a Pogge. Wil. Botn-mus. Faun. Suec. No.
Ictb. 211. Rail Jyn.pifc. 77. 324.
Cottus cirris plurimis corpore Seb. Muf. III. Tab. 28. Gro-
octagono. Arted,fynon. 77. nov, Zooph. No. 271.
^TpHE pogge is very common on mod of the
•^ Britijh coafts.
It feldom exceeds five inches and an half in
length, and even feldom arrives at that fize.
The head is large, bony, and very rugged : the
end of , the nofe is armed with four fhorc upright
fpines :
218
FATHER-LASHER. Class IV.
fpines : on the throat are a number of fhort white
beards.
The teeth are very minute, fituated in the jaws.
The body is octagonal, arid covered with a
number of ftrong bony crufts, divided into feveral
compartments, the ends of which project into a
fharp point, and form feveral echinated lines along
the back and fides from the head to the tail.
The firft dorfal fin confifts of fix fpiny rays : the
fecond is placed juft behind the firft, and confifts
of feven foft rays.
The pectoral fins are broad and rounded, and
are compofed of fifteen rays.
99. Father-
lasher.
Scorpios. 0<vid. Halieut. 116.
La Scorpene. Belon, 242.
Scorpius marinus, Waelkuke,
Buloffe, Schorp-fifche.
$chone<velde> 67. tab, 6.
Scorpaenae Belonii fimilis Cor-
nub. Father-lafher. Wil.
Jcth. 158. Rati Jyn. pifc.
145. Scorpius Virginian us.
Idem. 142. Wil. Ictb,
App, 25.
Cottus fcorpius. C. capite
fpinis pluribus, maxilla fu-
periore paulo longiore. Lin,
fyjl, 452.^
Rot-iimpa, Skrabba; Skialry-
ta. Faun. Suec. No. 323.
Ulke. Crantz. Greenl. I. 95.
Gronov. Zoopb. No. 268.
Sea Scorpion. Edw. 284.
THIS fifh is not uncommon on the rocky coafts
of this ifland : it lurks under (tones, and will
take a bait.
Descrip. It does not grow to a large fize, feldom exceed-
ing (as far as we have feen in the, fpecimens that
are taken on our fhores) eight or nine inches.
The
Class IV. FATUER-LASHER. 219
The head is very large, and has a mod formi-
dable appearance, being armed with vaft fpines,
which it can oppofe to any enemy that attacks
it, by fwelling out its cheeks and gill covers to a
large iize.
Et capitis duro nociturus Scorpios iSlu.
The hurtful Scorpion wounding with its head.
The nofe, and fpace contiguous to the eyes, are Spines,
furniflied with fhort fharp fpines: the covers of the
gills are terminated by exceeding long ones, which
are both (Irong and very fharp pointed.
The mouth is large: the jaws covered with rows
of very fmall teeth : the roof of the mouth is fur-
niiried with a triangular fpot of minute teeth.
The back is more elevated than that of others
of this genus : the belly prominent : the fide-line
rough, the reft of the body very fmooth, and
grows (lender towards the tail. •
The flrft dorfal fin confifts of eight fpiny rays ;
the fecond of eleven high foft rays : the pectoral
fins are large, and have fixteen ; the ventral three ;
the anal eight: the tail is rounded at the end,
and is compofed of twelve bifurcated rays.
The color of the body is brown, or dufky and
white marbled, and fometimes is found alio ftained
with red : the fins and tail are tranfparent, fome-
times clouded, but the rays barred regularly with
brown: the belly is of a filvery white.
This kind is very frequent in the Newfoundland American,
feas,
220 FATHER-LASHER. Class IV.
feas, where it is called Scolping : it is alfo as com-
mon on the coaft of Greenland in deep water near
more. It is a principal food of the natives, and
the foup made of it is faid to be agreeable as yvell as
wholefome.
Body
PL.TTTYT.
51tEAR DAB.
Jrp-iot
DOR EE
JV?300.
Class IV. D O R E E
221
Body very deep, and comprefTed fideways.
Very long filaments iffuingfrom the firft dorfal fin. DOREE,
Seven branchioftegous rays.
Xa^Jthq. Athen. lib.VU. 328. Zeus ventre acnleato, cauda 100. Dores,
Oppian Halieut. I. 133. in extremo circinato. Arted.
Faber? Ovid Halieut. no. fynon. 78.
Zeus idem Faber Gadibus. Zeus Faber. Z. cauda rotun-
Plin. lib. IX. c. 18. data, lateribus mediis ocello
La Doree. Belon, 146.^ fufco, pinnis analibus dua-
Faber five Gallus marinus. bus. Lin. fyfi. 454. Gro-
Rondel. 328. Gejher pifc. 369. no<v. Zoopb. No. 311.
A Doree. Wil. Icth. 294. Zeus fpinofus. Muf. Fred.
Raii fyn. pifc. 99. Ad. 67. tab. XXXI.
SUPERSTITION hath made the Doree rival
to the Hadock, for the honor of having been
the fifh out of whofe mouth St. Peter took the tri-
bute-money, leaving on its fides thofe incontefti-
ble proofs of the identity of the fifh, the marks of
his finger and thumb.
It is rather difficult at this time to determine on
which part to decide the diipute^ for the Doree
like wife afTerts an origin of its fpots of a fi milar
nature, but of a much earlier date than the for-
mer. St. Chriftopher *, in wading through an arm
of
* Relet/, Rondel, alfo Aldrovand de pifc. 40. St. Chrijlophcr
mm of a C'ljTal ffoture, as 16 erident from his image in the
church
222 D O R E E. Class IV.
of the fea, having caught a fifh of this kind en paf-
fant9 as an eternal memorial of the fact, left the
impreflions on its fides to be tranfmitted to all
pofterity.
In our own country it was very long before this
fifh attracted our notice, at left as an edible one.
We are indebted to that judicious actor and
vivant the late Mr. §htin9 for adding a moft deli-
cious fifh to our table, who overcoming all the
vulgar prejudices on account of its deformity, has
effectually eftablifhed its reputation.
Place. This fifh was fuppofed to be found only in the
fouthern feas of this kingdom, but it has been dis-
covered laft year on the coaft of Anglefea. Thofe
of the greateft fize are taken in the Bay of Bifcay^
off the French coafts : they are alfo very common
in the Mediterranean -, Ovid rnuft therefore have
ftyled it rams Faber, on account of its excellency,
not its fcarcity.
Descrit. yhe form 0f tnis fifh is hideous: its body is
oval, and greatly compreffed on the fides : the head
large : the fnout vaftly projecting : the mouth very-
wide : the teeth very fmall.
The eyes great : the irides yellow.
The lateral line oddly diftorted, finking at each
end, and rifing near the back in the middle : be-
neath it on each fide is a round black fpot.
church of Notre Dame at Paris, and a flill larger at Auxerre :
the laft we think is near feventy feet high. His hiftory is in
his name, xprofogos, being faid to have carried our Saviour*
when a child, over an arm of the fea.
The
P1JXXJX.
JSTP112
LUNULATED
GILT HEAD.
ireiai.
MM'j\
Class IV. O P A H. 223
The firft dorfal fin confifts of ten ftrong fpiny
rays, with long filaments, reaching far beyond their
ends : the fecond is placed near the tail, and con-
fifts of twenty-four foft rays, the middlemoft of
which are the longeft.
The pectoral fins have fourteen fays, the ventral
feven ; the firft fpiny, the others foft : it has two
anal fins ; the firit confifts of four fharp fpines,
the fecond of twenty-two foft ones, and reaches
very near the tail.
The tail is round at the end, and confifts of
fifteen branched rays.
The color of the fides is olive, varied with light
blue and white, and while living is very refplen-
dent, and as if gilt, for which reafon it is called
the Doree.
The largeft fifti we have heard of, weighed
twelve pounds.
Opah, or King-fifii. Ph. argenteo purpureo fplen- I0I. Opah.
Trans, abr. XI. 879. Tab. dens. Strom. Sondmor. 323,
V. 325. Tab. i* Jig* 20.
Zeus cauda bifurca, colore
WE have only five inftances of this fifh being
taken in our feas, four of them in the Norths
viz, twice off Scotland*, once off Northumberland,
* The iifli engraved by Sir Robert Sibbald. Hi/?. Scot. Tab, 6.
,and thus defcribed, is of this kind. Pijcis maculis aureis afperfus
mnjcriptusy pollices 42 longus.
one
iH
O P A H. Class IV,
one in Filey-Bay \ 2'orkJ/jire -, and a fifth was caught
at Brixbam, in for bay, in 1772.
The lad weighed a hundred and forty pounds.
The length was four feet and an half: the breadth
two feet and a quarter : the greateft thicknefs,
only four inches. Its general color was a vivid
tranfparent fcarlet varnifh, over burnifried gold,
befpangled with oval filver fpots of various fizes :
the bread was an hard bone, refembling the keel
of a fliip : the flefh looked, and tailed like beef *.
I find a more ample defcription of another, by
Mr. Robert Harrifon, of Newcaftle.
Newcaftle, Sept. 12. 1769; On Saturday lafl was
thrown upon the fands at Blytb, a. very rare and
beautiful fifh, weighing between fe verity and eighty
pounds, fhaped like the fea bream. The length
was three feet and an half; the breadth from back
to belly almoft two feet ; but the thicknefs from
fide to fide not above fix inches.
The mouth fmall for the fizeof the fifli, forming
a fquare opening, and without any teeth in the jaws.
The tongue thick, refembling that of a man, but
rough and thick fet with beards or prickles, pointing
backwards, fo that any thing might eafily pafs
down, but could not eafily return back, therefore
thefe might ferve inftead of teeth to retain its prey.
The eyes remarkably large, covered with a mem-
brane, and fhining with a glare of gold. The cover
of the gills like the falmon.
f This defcription was fent to me by a gentleman, who
faw the fifh Toon after it wa* taken.
The
Class IV. O P A H. 125
The body diminilhes very fmall to the tail,
which is forked, and expands twelve inches : the
gill fins are broad, about eight inches long, and
play horizontally : a little behind their infertion
the back fin takes its original, where it is about fe-
ven inches high, but dopes away very fuddenly,
running down very near the tail, and at its ter-
mination becomes a little broader : the belly fins
are very ftrong, and placed near the middle of
the body : a narrow fin alfo runs from the anus to
the tail.
All the fins, and alfo the tail, are of a fine fear-
let ; but the colors and beauty of the reft of the
body, which is fmooth and covered with aimoft
imperceptible fcales, beggars all defcription; the
upper part being a kind of bright green, variega-
ted with whitifh fpots, and enriched with a mi-
ning golden hue, like the fplendor of a peacock's
feather. This by degrees, vanifhes in a bright fil-
very, and near the belly the gold again predo-
minates in a lighter ground than on the back,
Vol; III. Q Body
26 H d L I B U T. Class IV,
XXIV. Body quite flat, and very thin,
DER " Eyes, both- on the fame fide the head.
Branchioftegous rays from four to feven,
* With the eyes on the right fide.
102. Ho Li- Hippogloffus. Rondel. 325. totus glaber. Arted. fynon.
BUT. Gefner pifc, 669. 31.
Heglbutte, Hilligbutte. Pleurone&es Hippogloffus.
Schonevelde, 6z. Lin. fyfi. 456.
Holibut, Septentr. Anglis Tur- Halg-flundra. Faun. Suec.
bot. Wil. Iftb. 99. Raii No, 329. Gronov. Zoopb.
fyn.pifc. 33. > No. 247.
Pleurone&es oculis a dextris,
Size. rr^HIS is the largeft of the genus; fome have
X been taken in our feas weighing from one
to three hundred pounds; but much larger are
found in thofe of Newfoundland, Greenland, and
Iceland, where they are taken with a hook and
line in very deep water. They are part of the
food of the Greenlanders*, who cut them into large
flips, and dry them in the fun.
They are common in the London markets, where
they are expofed to fale cut into large pieces,
They are very coarfe eating, excepting the part
* Crantz. Hift. GreenU I. 98.
which
Class IV. H O L I B U T. 217
which adheres to the fide fins, which is extreme-
ly fat and delicious, but furfeiting.
They are the moft voracious of all flat fifh.
The lad year there were two inftances of their fwal-
lowing the lead weight at the end of a line, with
which the feamen were founding the bottom from
on board a ftiip, one off Flamborough Head> the
other going into Tinmoutb Haven : the latter was
taken, the other difengaged itfelf.
The holibut, in refpect to its length, is the nar- Descrip.
roweft of any of this genus except the fole.
It is perfectly fmooth, and free from fpines ei-
ther above or below. The color of the upper
part is dufky •, beneath of a pure white. We do
not count the rays of the fins in this genus, not
only becaufe they are fo numerous, but becaufe
nature hath given to each fpecies characters fuffi-
cient to diftinguifh them by.
Thefe flat fifh fwim fideways ; for which reafon
Linnaeus hath ftyled them Pkitronefiss.
Q - Pteteffa
?28
P L A I S E,
Class IV,
303. Plajse. Plateffa? Aufonii Epiji, ad.
Theon. 62,
he Quarlet. Belon, 139.
Quadratulus. Rondel, 318*
Ge/ner pifc. 66$,
Scholle, Pladife. Schonevelde,
61,
Pleurone&es oculis et tuber-
culis fex a dextra capitis,
lateribus glabris, fpina ad
anum. Arted. Jynon. 30.
Pleurone&es Plateffa. Lin,
fyfi. 456. Grono-v, Zooph,
No, 246.
Plaife. Wil, Ictb, 96. Raii Skalla, Rodfputta. Faun, Suec.
Jyn. pifc, 31. No. 328.
THESE fifh are very common on moft of
our coafts, and fometimes taken of the weight
of fifteen pounds; but they feldom reach that fize,
one of eight or nine pounds being reckoned a large
fifh.
The beft and largefl: are taken off Rye, on the
coaft of Sufex, and alfo off the Butch coafts. They
ipawn on the beginning of February,
They are very flat, and much more fquare than the
preceding. Behind the left eye is a row of fix tu-
bercles, that reaches to the commencement of the
lateral line.
The upper part of the body and fins is of a clear
brown, marked with large bright orange- colored
fpots : the belly is white.
U
Class IV. FLOUNDER. 229
Le Flez. Belon, 141. nulis lupine ad radices pin- 104. Floun-
PafTeris tertia fpecics. Rondel, narum, dentibus obtufis. der.
319. Gefner pifc. 666, 670. Arted.fynon. 31.
Struff-butte Schonevelde, 6z. Plueronecles Flefus. Lin*
Flounder, Fluke, or But. fyft. 457. Groxo-v. Zooph.
ml. Icth. 980. Rail fyn. No. 248.
pifc. 32. Flundra, Slatt-fkadda. Faun*
Pleurone&es oculis a dextris, Suec. No. 327,
linea lateral! afpera, fpi-
THE flounder inhabits every part of the Britijh
fea, and even frequents our rivers at a great
diftance from the fait waters ; and for this reafon
fome writers call it the Paffer fluviatilis. It never
grows large in our rivers, but is reckoned fweeter
than thofe that live in the fea. It is inferior in fize
to the plaife, for we never heard of any that weigh-
ed more than fix pounds.
It may very eafily be diftinguimed from the Descrip*
plaife, or any other fifh of this genus, by a row
of fharp fmall fpines that furround its upper fides,
and are placed juft at the junction of the fins with
the body. Another row marks the fide-line, and
runs half way down the back.
The color of the upper part of the body is a pale
brown, fometimes marked with a few obfcure fpots
of dirty yellow . the belly is white.
We have. met with a variety of this fifh with the
eyes and lateral line on the left fide. Linnaeus
makes a diftinft fpecies of it under the name of
QJ Pleuro-
«3o S M E A R-D A B- Class IV.
Pleuroneftes PaJJer, p. 459 •, but fince it differs in
no other refpect from the common kind, we agree
with Doctor Gronovius in not feparating them.
10^. Dab. La Limande. Belon, 142. anum, dentibus obtufis.
Paffer afper, five fquamofus. Arted. fynon. 33.
Rondel. 319. Gefnerpifc. 665. Pleuronettes Limanda. Pi. o-
Dab. Wil. Jet/?. 79. Raii fyn. culisdextris, fquamis cilia-
pifc. 32. tis, fpinulis ad radicem pin-
! [Pleurone&es oculis a dextra, narum dorli, anique. Lin.
fquamis afperis, fpina ad fyft. 457.
rp]
OHE dab is found with the other fpecies, but
is lefs common. It is in bed feafon during
February \ March, and April : they fpawn in May
and June, and become flabby and watery the reft
of fummer. They are fuperior in goodnefs to the
plaife and flounder, but far inferior in fize.
Descrip. It is generally of an uniform brown color on the
upper fide, tho' fometimes clouded with a darker.
The fcales are fmall and rough, which is a character
of this fpecies. The lateral line is extremely in-
curvated at the beginning, then goes quite ftrait to
the tail. The lower part of the body is white.
106. Smear- Rhombus lams Cornubienjis maculis nigris, a Kit. Mr.
Dab. Jago. Raii Jyn. pifc, 162. jig. I.
WE found one of this fpecies at a fifh mon-
ger's in London, where it is known by the
name of the Smear-dak
It
Class IV. SO L E.
It was a foot and a half long, and eleven inches
broad between fin and fin on the wideft part.
The head appeared very fmall, as the dorfal fin
began very near its mouth, and extended very near
to the tail. It confifted of fcventy nine rays.
The eyes were pretty near each other. The
mouth full of fmall teeth.
The lateral line was much incurvated for the
firft two inches from its origin, then continued
ftrait to the tail.
The back was covered with fmall fmooth fcales,
was of a light brown color, fpotted obfeurely with
yellow. The belly white, and marked with five
large dufky fpots.
It was a fifh of goodnefs equal to the common
dab.
*3*
J5ay*a<r<70$. Athen. lib. viii. p. fuperiore longiore, fquamis
288. Oppian Halieut, I. 99. utrinque afperis. Arted.Jyn.
La Sole. Belon, 142. 32.
Bugloffus. Rondel. 320. Gefner Pleurone&es Solea Lin. fyjl.
pifc. 666. 457. Gronov. Zoopb. No.
Tungen. Scbonevelde, 63. 251. Tunga, Sola. Faun,
Pleurone&es oculis a finiftra Suec. No. 326.
corpore oblongo, maxilla.
107. Sole,
THE fole is found on all our^coafts, but thofe
on the weftern mores are much fuperior in
fize to thofe of the north. On the former they
are fometimes taken of the weight of fix or feven
Q^4 pounds.
i32 SMOOTH SOLE. Class IV.
pounds, but towards Scarborough they rarely exceed
one pounds if they reach two, it is extremely un-
common.
They are ufually taken in the trawlnet : they
keep much at the bottom, and feed on fmall fhell
fifh.
Descrip. It is of a form much more narrow and oblong
than any other of the genus. The irides are yel-
low ; the pupils of a bright fappharine color : the
fcales are fmall, and very rough : the upper part
of the body is of a deep brown : the tip of one of
the pectoral fins black : the under part of the body
is white : the lateral line ftrait : the tail rounded at
the end.
It is a fifh of a very delicate flavour ; but ths
fmall foles are much iuperior in goodnefs to large
ones *. The chief fifhery for them is at Brixham
in Torbay.
io8. Smooth Solea ? -Ovid. Halieut. 124.
Sole. ArnoglofTus feu Solea lasvis. Wil. Icth. 102. Raiijyn.pifc, 34.
HIS, as defcribed by Mr. Ray, (for we have
not feen it) is extremely thin, pellucid, and
* By the antient laws of the Cinque ports, no one was to
take foles from the ill of November to the 15th of March ;
neither was any body to fifh from fun fetting to fun-rifing,
that the filh might enjoy their night-food.
white,
Class IV. T U R B O T.
white, and covered with fuch minute fcales, and
thofe inftantly deciduous, as to merit the epi-
thet fmooth.
It is a fcarce fpecies, but is found in Cornwall^
where, from ks tranfparency, it is called the Lan-
tern Fijh.
It is probable that Ovid intended this fpecies, by
his Solea ; for the common kind does by no means
merit his defcription.
Fulgent es SolejE candor e.
And Safes with white refplendent.
*33
#*
With the eyes on the left fide.
Rhombus. Ovid Halieut. fquamofus. Rati fyn. pifc. 109. Tu:
Le Turbot.*^/<j#, 134. 31. bot.
Rhombus aculeatus. Rondel. Pleurone&es oculis a finiftra,
3 1 o. Gefner pi/c. 661 . corpore afpero. Arted.fynon.
Steinbutt, Torbutt, Treen- 32.
butt, Dornbutt. Schonevel- Pleurone&e's maximus. Lin,
de, 60. Jyjl. 459. Grono'V. Zoopb*
Turbot, in the north a Bret. No. 254.
Wil. Icth. 94. Butta. Faun. Suec. No. 325.
Rhombus maximus afper non
fT^URBOTS grow to a very large fize; we Size,
JL have feen them of three and twenty pounds
weight, but have heard of fome that weighed
thirty. They are taken -chiefly off the north coaft of
England,
234 T U R B O T. Class IV.
England^ and others off the Dutch coaft ; but we
believe the laft has, in many inftances, more credit
than it deferves for the abundance of its fifh.
Fishery. The large Turbots, and feveral other kinds of
flat fifh, are taken by the hook and line, for they
lye in deep water : the method of taking them in
wares, or ftaked nets, is too precarious to be de-
pended on for the fupply of our great markets,
becaufe it is by meer accident that the great fifh
ftray into them,
It is a misfortune to the inhabitants of many of
our fifhing coafts, efpecially thofe of the north part
of North Walts, that they are unacquainted with
the moft fuccefsful means of capture: for their
benefit, and perhaps that of other parts of our
ifland, we fhall lay before them the method prac-
tifed by the fifhermen of Scarborough, as it wa$
communicated to us by Mr. Travis.
When they go out to fifh, each perfon is pro-
Ll^i^s. vided with three lines. Each man's lines are fair-
ly coiled upon a flat oblong piece of wicker-work \
the hooks being baited, and placed very regularly
in the centre of the coil. Each line is furnifhcd
with 14 fcore of hooks, at the diflance of fix feet
two inches from each other. The hooks are fatt-
ened to the lines upon fneads of twifted horfe-hair,
27 inches in length.
When fifhing there are always three men in
each coble, and confequently nine of thefe lines
are fattened together, and ufed as one line, extend-
ing
Class IV, T U R B O T.
*35
ing in length near three miles, and furnifhed with
2520 hooks. An anchor and a buoy are fixed at
the firft end of the line, and one more of each at
the end of each man's lines ; in all four anchors,
which are commonly perforated ftones, and four
buoys made of leather or cork. The line is al-
ways laid acrofs the current. The tides of flood and
ebb continue an equal time upon our coaft, and
when undifturbed by winds run each way about fix
hours. They are fo rapid that the fiftiermen can
only moot and haul their lines at the turn of tide ;
and therefore the lines always remain upon the
ground about fix hours *■ The fame rapidity of
tide prevents their ufing hand-lines ; and therefore
two of the people commonly wrap themfelves in the
fail, and fleep while the other keeps a ftri6b look-
out, for fear of being run down by fhips, and
to obferve the weather. For ftorms often rife {o
fuddenly, that it is with extreme difficulty they can
fometimes efcape to the fhore, leaving their lines
behind.
The coble is 20 feet 6 inches long, and 5 feet Coble,
extreme breadth. It is about one ton burthen,
rowed with three pair of oars, and admirably con-
ftru&ed for the purpofe of encountering a moun-
tanous fea : they hoift fail when the wind fuits.
* In this fpace the myxine glutinofa of Linnaeus, will fre-
quently penetrate the fifli that are on the hooks, and entire-
ly devour them, leaving only the fkin and bones.
The
ne T U R B O T. Class IV.
The five-men boat is 40 feet long and 15 broad,
and of 25 tons burthen: it is fo called, tho' navi-
gated by fix men and a boy, beeaufe one of
the men is commonly hired to cook, &c. and does
not (hare in the profits with the other five. All
our able fifhermen go in thefe boats to the herring
fifhery at Yarmouth the latter end of September, and
return about the middle of November. The boats
are then laid up until the beginning of Lent, at
which time they go off in them to the edge of the
Dogger, and other places, to fifh for turbot, cod,
ling, fkates, &c. They always take two cobles
on board, and when they come upon their ground,
anchor the boat, throw out the cobles, and fifh in
the fame manner as thofe do who go from the more
in a coble -, with this difference only, that here
each man is provided with double the quantity of
lines, and inftead of waiting the return of tide in
the coble, return to the boat and bait their other
lines ; thus hawling one fet, and (hooting another
every turn of tide. They commonly run into har*-
■\ bour twice a week to deliver their fifh. The five-
' men boat is decked at each end, but open in the
middle, and has two large lug-fails.
Bait. The bed bait for all kinds of fi(h is frefh herring
cut in pieces of a proper fize \ and notwithstanding
what has been faid to the contrary, they are taken
here at any time in the winter, and all the fpring,
whenever the fimermen put down their nets for
Jthat purpofe. The five- men boats always take
fome
Class IV, T U R B O T.
fome nets for that end. Next to herrings are the
lefTer lampreys *, which come all winter by land-
carriage from Tadcafter. The next baits in efteem
are fmall hadocks cut in pieces* fand worms, muf-
cles, and limpets (called here Flidders\) and laftly,
when none of theie can be had they ufe bullock's
liver. The hooks ufed here are much fmaller than
thole employed at Iceland and Newfoundland.
Experience has fhewn that the larger fifh will take
a living fmall one upon the hook, fooner than any
bait that can be put on ; therefore they ufe fuch
as the fmall fifh can fwallow. The hooks are two
inches and an half long in the fhank, near an inch
wide between the fhank and the point. The line
is made of fmall cording, and is always tanned
before it is ufed.
Turbots, and all the rays, are extremely delicate
in their choice of baits. If a piece of herring or
hadock has been twelve hours out of the fea, and
then ufed as bait, they will not touch it.
This and the pearl are of a remarkable fquare
form : the color of the upper part of the body is
cinereous, marked with numbers of black fpots of
different fizes: the belly is white : the fkin is
without fcales, but greatly wrinkled, and mixed
with fmall fhort fpines, difperfed without any order.
* The Dutch alfo ufe thefe fifh as baits in the turbot fifhery,
and purchafe annually from the Thames fi mermen as much
as amounts to 700/. worth, for that purpofe.
PafTer
237
238 WHIFF. Class IV.
no. Pearl. La Barbue. Belon, 137. Pleurone&es oculis a finiftris,
Rhombus laevis. Rondel. 312. corpore glabro. Arted. fyn,
Gefner pifc. 662. 31.
Schlichtbutt. Schonevelde, 60. Pleuronettes Rhombus. Lin,
Rhombus non aculeatus fqu- fyfi 458* Grono<v, Zooph.
amofus the Pearl. Londinens. No. 149.
Cornub. Lug-aleaf. Wil, Pigghvarf. //. W, Goth, 178.
Icth. 95. Rati Jyn. pifc. 31.
IT is frequently found in the London market?,
but is inferior to the turbot in goodnefs as well
as fize.
The irides are yellow : the fkin is covered with
fmall fcales, but is quite free from any fpines or
inequalities.
The upper fide of the body is of a deep brown,
marked with fpots of dirty yellow : the under fide
is of a pure white.
in. Whiff. Pafler Cornubienjis afper, magno oris hiatu. Mr. J ago. Rail
fyn. pifc, 163. Jig, 2,
THIS bears fome refemblance to the Holibut.
One was brought to me by my fiflierman,
October 31, 1775. Its length was eighteen inches:
the greateft breadth not feven, exclufive of the
fins.
The
Class IV. WHIFF.
The mouth extremely large : teeth very fmall :
the under jaw hooks over the upper: the eves
large ; and placed on the fide.
The fcales great, and rough : the fide-line un-
commonly incurvated at the beginning. After
making a fharp angle, goes ftrait to the tail, find
is tuberculated : the tail is rounded.
The color of the upper part of the body is
cinereous brown, clouded in parts, and obfcure-
ly fpotted : the under fide white, tinged with
red.
2J9
Covers
240
Class IV.
GILT-HEAP.
XXV.
GILT-
HEAD.
Covers of the gills fcaty.
Five branchioftegous rays.
Fore teeth fharp.
Grinders flat.
One dorfal fin, reaching the whole length of the
back,
Forked tail.
112. LUNU-
LATED.
Xgv<ro<p%u$. Oppian Halieut,
I. 169.
Chryfophrys. Ovid Halieut.
III.
Aurata Plinii, Lib. IX. c. 16.
La Dorade. Belon, 186.
Chryfophry Caii opufc. 112.
Aurata. Rondel. 115. Gefner
pifc. 110. 112.
Gilt-head or Gilt-poll. WiL
Icth. 307. Rati fyn. pifc. 131.
Spams dorfo acutiflimo, linea
arcuata inter oculos. Arted.
fynon. 63.
Sparus lunula aurea inter ocu-
los. Lin. fyfl. 467. Gro-
7io<v. Zoopb. No. 220.
THIS is one of the pifces faxatiles, or fifh
that haunt deep waters on bold rocky
fhores : thofe that form this genus, as well as the
following, feed chiefly on Ihell fifh, which they
comminute with their teeth before they fwallow;
the teeth of this genus in particular being extreme-
ly well adapted for that purpofe, the grinders be-
ing flat and ftrong, like thofe of certain quadru-
peds : belides thofe are certain bones in the low-
er part of the mouth, which affift in grinding their
food.
They
Class IV. G I L T - H E A D. *4*
They are but a coarfe fifh ; nor did the Ro-
mans hold them in any efteem, except they had fed
on the Lucrine oyfter.
Non omnis laudem pretiumque Aurata meretur^
Scd cui/olus erit concha Lucrina cibus *.
No praife, no price a GHt+head e'er will take,
Unfed with oyflers of the Lucrine lake.
They grow to the weight of ten pounds: the Bescrip,
form of the body is deep, not unlike that of a
bream : the back is very iharp, and of a dufky
green color : the irides of a filvery hue : between
the eyes is a femilunar gold colored fpot, the horns
of which point towards the head : on the upper
part of the gills is a black fpot, beneath that a-
nother of purple.
Thedorfaifin extends almoft the whole length
of the back, and confifts of twenty-four rays, the
eleven firft fpiny, the others foft : the pe&oral fins
confift of feventeen foft rays ; the ventral of fix
rays, the firft of which is very ftrong and fpiny:
the anal fin of fourteen ; the three firft fpiny.
The tail is much forked.
It takes its name from its predominant color; Color*
that of the forehead and fides being as if gilt, but
the laft is tinged with brown.
* Martial. Lib. XIII. Ep. 90.
R Pagur*
242
RED GILT-HEAD. Class IV.
113. Red. Fagur ? Ovid Halieut. 107.
Le Pagrus. Be/on, 245.
Pagrus. Rondel. 142. Gefner
pifc. 656.
Sea Bream. Wil. Icth, 312.
Rati fyn. pifc. 131.
Sparus rubefcens, cute ad ra-
dicem pinnarum dorfi et ani
in finum produ&a. Arted.
fynpn. 64.
Sparus Pagrus. Lin.Jyft. /^6g.
Descri;
Color.
THIS fpecies grows to a fize equal with that
of the former : its fhape and the figure of the
teeth are much the fame.
The irides are filvery 1 the infide of the covers
of the gills, the mouth, and the tongue, are of a
line red.
At the bafe of the pectoral fins is a ferruginous
fpot.
What is peculiar to this fpecies is, that the fkin
at the end of the dorfal and anal fins is gathered
up, and hides the laft rays.
The fcales are large : the tail forked.
The color of the whole body is red.
"Brama
Class IV. TOOTHED GILT-HEAD. 243
Brama marina cauda forcipata D. Jonjlon. Rati Jyn. pifc. 115. 114, Tootf =
eq,
npHIS fpecies was communicated to Mr. Ray
-*- by his friend Mr. Jonfton, a York/hire gen-
tleman, who informed him it was found on the
fands near the mouth of the Tees, Sept. 18, 1681.
It was a deep fifh, formed like a roch, twenty-
fix inches long, ten broad, and grew very (lender
towards the tail.
The eyes large, like thofe of quadrupeds. In
the lower jaws were two rows of teeth, flender and
fharp as needles ; and on each fide a flender canine
tooth : in the upper only a fingle row of teeth.
The aperture of the gills very large. The body
fcaly.
In the middle of the back was one fin extending
almoft to the tail ; the feven firft rays high, the reft
low : behind the vent is another, correfponding :
both are entirely covered with fcales flated over
each other.
The back black ; the fides of a brighter color 1
the belly quite of a filvery brightnefs.
R 2 Covers
244
WRASSE,
Class IV,
XXVI.
WRASSE,
Covers of the gills fcaly.
Branchioftegous rays unequal in number *.
Teeth conic, long and blunt at their ends. One
tuberculated bone in the bottom of the throat :
two above oppofite to the other.
One dorfal fin reaching the whole length of the
back : a (lender fkin extending beyond the end of
each ray.
Rounded tail.
115. An- Vieille, Poule de mer, Gal-
tient. lot, une RoiTe. Belony
248.
Turdorum undecimum genus.
Rondel. 179. Gefner pifc.
1019.
Turdus vulgatiflimus. Wil.
Icth. 319.
Wraffe, or Old Wife. Rail
fyn. pifc. 136.
Labrus roftro furfum reflexo
cauda in extremo circular!.
Arted. fynon. 56.
Labrus Tinea. Lin. Jyft.
477.-
THIS fpecies is found in deep water adja-
cent to the rocks. It will take a tbait,
though its ufual food is fhell-fifh, and fmall cru-
ftacea.
* Linnaus fays fix : this fpecies had only four ; the fecond,
fix ; the third and fourth, fiye. We alfo find the fame vari-
ation in the rays of the fins, the numbers being different
in fifii of the fame fpecies, not only of this but of other ge-
fiera.
it
Class IV. WRASSE. 245
ft grows to the weight of four or five pounds :
it bears fome refemblance to a carp in the form
of the body, and is covered with large feales.
The nofe projects ; the lips are large and flefhy, Teeth.
and the one turns up, the other hangs down : the
mouth is capable of being drawn in or protrud-
ed.
The irides are red : the teeth are difpofed in two
rows ; the firft are conic, the fecond very minute,
and as if fupporters to the others : in the throat
juft before the gullet are three bones, two above
of an oblong form, and one below of a triangular
lhape; the furface of each rifing into roundifh pro-
tuberances: thefe are of fingular ufe to the fifh, to
grind its fhelly food before it arrives at the
(lomach.
The dorfal fin confifts of fixteen (harp and fpiny
rays, and nine foft ones, which are much longer
than the others.
The pectoral fins large and round, and are com-
pofed of fifteen rays.
The ventral of fix; the firft fharp and ftrong:
the anal of three fharp fpines, and nine flexible.
The tail is rounded at the end, and is formed
of fourteen foft branching rays.
The lateral line much incurvated near the tail.
Thefe fifh vary infinitely in color : we have feen ' £0LOR,
them of a dirty red, mixed with a certain dufkinefs ;
others moil beautifully ftriped, efpecially about
R 3 the
246 BALLAN WRASSE. Class IV.
the head, with the richeft colors, fuch as blue,
red, and yellow. Moft of this genus arc fubject
to vary -, therefore care mull be taken not to mul-
tiply the fpecies from thefe accidental teints, but to
attend to the form which never alters.
The Welch call this fifti Gwracb, or the old
woman \ the Fernch, la Vieille \ and the Englijh give
it the name of Old Wife,
LAN.
n6. Bal- /TpHIS is a kind of JVraJfe, fent from Scar-
"*' borough by Mr. 'Travis, differing from the
other fpecies. They appear during fummer in
great fhoals off Filey- Bridge : the Iargeft weigh
about five pounds.
It was of the form of the common wratfe, only
between the dorfal fin and the tail was a confider-
able finking : above the nofe was a deep fulcus :
on the fartheft cover of the gills was a depreflion
radiated from the center.
It had only four branchioftegous rays.
The dorfal fin had thirty-one rays, twenty fpiny,
eleven foft; the laft branched, and much longer
than the fpiny rays.
The pectoral fins had fourteen ; the ventral
fix ; the firft of which was fhort and fpiny : the
anal twelve; the three firft fpiny, the nine others
branched and foft,
The
:0**r-
^
Class IV. BIMACULATED WRASSE. 24?
The tail was rounded at the end ; at the bot-
tom, for about a third part of the way, between
each ray was a row of fcales.
The color in general was yellow, fpotted with
orange.
Labrus bimaculata. L. pinna Sciama bimaculata. Mus. Ad. 117-^IMA"
dorfali ramentacea, macula Fred. I. 66. tab. XXXI. culatejd.
fufca in latere medio, et Jig. 66.
ad caudam. Lin. fyft. 477.
MR. Brunnkh obferved this fpecias at Pen-
zance9 and referred me to Linnaus's defcrip-
tion of it in the Mufeum Ad. Fred, where it is de-
fcribed under the name of Sciana Bimaculata.
The body is pretty deep, and of a light color, Descri:
marked in the middle on each fide with a round
brown fpot; on the upper part of the bafe of the
tail is another : the lateral line is incurvated.
The branchioftegous rays are fix in number*:
the firft fifteen rays of the dorfal fin are fpiny 9 the
* Linnaus, in his laft edition, has removed this fpecies
from the genus of Sciana, to that of Labrus, though it does
not agree with the laft in his number of branchioftegous
rays.
R 4 other
248 TRIMACULATED WRASSE. Class IV.
other eleven fofr, and lengthened by a fkinny ap-
pendage : the pectoral fins confift of fifteen rays ;
the ventral of fix ; the firft fpiny ; the fecond and
third ending in a (lender bridle: the anal fin is
pointed ; the four firft rays being Ihort and fpiny ;
the reft long and foft.
118. Trima- ^TpHE fpecies we examined was taken on the
culated. X coaft 0f Anglefea\ its length was eight inches.
It was of an oblong form ; the nofe long ; the
teeth (lender ; the fore teeth much longer than the
others.
The eyes large : branchioftegous rays, five.
The back fin confiding of feventeen fpiny rays$
and thirteen foft ones; beyond each extended a long
nerve.
The pectoral fins were round, and confided of
fifteen branched rays.
The ventral fins confifted of fix rays ; the firft
fpiny.
The anal fin of twelve; the three firft fhort,
very ftrong, and fpiny ; the others foft and branch-
1 ed.
The tail was" rounded.
The lateral line was ftrait at the beginning of the
back, but grew incurvated towards the tail.
The
IP
Class IV. STRIPED WRASSE. 249
The body covered with large red fcales \ the co-
vers of the gills with fmall ones.
On each fide of the lower part of the back fin
were two large fpots, and between the fin and the
tail another.
THIS was taken off the Skerry IJles, on the 119. Strip-
coaft of Angle fea\ its length was ten inches.
The form was oblong, but the beginning of Descrip.
the back a little arched: the lips large, double,
and much turned up : the teeth like thofe of the
preceding : branchioftegous rays, five.
The number of rays in the back, pectoral, and
ventral fins, the fame as in thofe of the former.
In the anal fin were fifteen rays \ the three firft
ftrong and fpiny.
The tail almoft even at the end, being very little
rounded : the covers of the gills cinereous, ftriped
with fine yellow.
The fides marked with four parallel lines of Color,
greenifh olive, and the fame of mod elegant blue.
The back and belly red -, but the laft of a much
paler hue, and under the throat almoft yellow.
Along the beginning of the back fin was a
broad bed of rich blue; the middle part white j
the reft red.
At
250 GIBBOUS WRASSE. Class IV.
At the bafe of the pectoral fins was a dark olive
fpot.
The ends of the anal fin, and ventral fins, a fine
blue.
The upper half of the tail blue ; the lower part
of its rays yellow.
1 20. Gib- atta HIS fpecies was taken off Anglejea : its length
•** was eight inches ; the greateft depth three :
it was of a very deep and elevated form, the back
being vaftly arched, and very fharp or ridged.
From the beginning of the head to the nofe, was
a fteep declivity.
The teeth like thofe of the others.
The eyes of a middling fize \ above each a dufky
femilunar fpot.
The neareft cover of the gills finely ferrated.
The fixteen firft rays of the back ftrong and
fpiny ; the other nine foft and branched.
The pectoral fins confided of thirteen, the ven-
tral of fix rays •, the firft ray of the ventral fin
was ftrong and fharp.
The anal fin confided of fourteen rays, of which
the three firft were ftrongly aculeated.
The tail was large, rounded at the end, and the
rays
la.xcvir.
COMBER WRASSE .
JWJV2.
A^T I E^T WRJV SSE?
jstojis.
GOLDSIU-NY
jsr.°j2i.
MUfcti U
Class IV. G O L D S I N N Y. 25I
rays branched ; the ends of the rays extending be-
yond the webs.
The lateral line was incurvated towards the tail.
The gill covers and body covered with large
fcales.
The firft were moft elegantly fpotted, and ftriped Color.
with blue and orange, and the fides fpotted in the
fame manner ; but neareft the back the orange was
diipofed in {tripes : the back fin and anal fin were
of a fea green, fpotted with black.
The ventral fins and tail a fine pea green.
The pectoral fins yellow, marked at their bafe
with tranfverfe ftripes of red.
Goldiinny Cornubienjlum, Mr. jf ago. Raiifyn. pifc. 163. 121. Gold*
fig- 3'
^Tp HIS and the two following fpecies were dif-
•*■ covered by Mr. J ago on the coaft of Corn-
wall we never had an opportunity of examining
them, therefore are obliged to have recourfe to his
defcriptions, retaining their local names.
In the whole form of the body, lips, teeth, and
fins, it refembles the Wraffe: it is faid never to
exceed a palm in length : near the tail is a remark-
able
SINNY
252 COMBER. Class IV.
able black fpot : the firft rays of the dorfal fin are
tinged with black.
The Melanurus of Rondeletius (adds he) takes its
name from the black fpot near the tail; but in
many inftances it differs widely from this fpecies,
the tail of the firft is forked, that of the Goldfinny
is even at the end.
I fufpect that this fpecies was fent to me from
Cornwal Befides the fpot near the tail, there was
another near the vent.
In the dorfal fin were fixteen fpiny, and nine
foft rays : in the pectoral fourteen : in the anal
three fpiny, eleven foft : in the ventral fix. The
tail almoft even at the end.
BER,
Comber Cornub. Raiijyn. pifc. 163. jig. 5 ?
T RECEIVED this fpecies from Cornwall and
"*■ fuppofe it to be the Comber ©f Mr. Jago.
It was of a flender form. The dorfal fin had
twenty fpiny, eleven foft rays : the pectoral four-
teen : the ventral five : the anal three fpiny, kvcn
foft. The tail round.
The color of the back, fins, and tail, red : the
belly yellow : beneath the lateral line ran parallel
a fmooth,
Class IV. COOK. z53
a fmooth, even ftripe from gills to tail, of a filvery
color,
Cook (i.e. Coquus) Cornubienfium. Rait fyn. pifc» 163. 123. C0OK0
fig* 4-
^TpHIS fpecies, Mr. J ago fays, is fometimes
■*■ taken in great plenty on the Cornifh coafts.
It is a fcaly fifh, and does not grow to any great
fize. The back is purple and dark blue; the
belly yellow. By the figure it feems of the fame
ftiape as the Comber, and the tail rounded.
Befides thefe fpecies we recoiled feeing taken
at the Giant's Caufeway in Ireland, a moft beautiful
kind of a vivid green, fpotted with fcarlet; and
others at Bandooran, in the county of Slzgo, of a
pale green. We were at that time inattentive to
this branch of natural hiftory, and can only fay
they were of a fpecies we have never fince feen.
The
254
PERCH.
Class IV.
XXVI.
PERCH,
The edges of the gill-covers ferrated.
Seven branchioftegous rays.
Body covered with rough fcales.
Firfl dorfal fin fpiny j the fecond foft *.
124. Com-
mon.
U^ftvi Arift. Hift. an. Lib.
VI. c. 14.
Perca Aufonii Mofella, 115.
Une Perche de riviere. Belon,
291.
Perca fluviatilis. Rondel, fiu-
<viat. 196. Gefner pifc. 698.
Ein Barfs. Schonevelde, 55.
A Perch. Wil lab. 291. Rait
fyn.pifc. 97.
Perca Hneis utrinque fex
pinms
Arted.
pinnis
fecun-
tranfverfis nigris,
ventralibus rubris.
Jynon. 66.
Perca fluviatilis. P.
dorfalibus diftinclis,
da radiis fedecim. Lin.fyfi,
481. Gronov. Zooph. No.
301.
Abboree. Faun. Suec. No. 332.
Perfchling, Barfchieger. Kram.
384. WulffBorufs. No. 27.
THE perch of Arifiotle and Aufonius is the
fame with that of the moderns. That men-
tioned by Oppian, Pliny, and Athenaus-\, is a
fea-fim probably of the Labrus or Sparus kind,
being enumerated by them among fome congene-
* The Rujfe is an exception, having only one dorfal fin,
but the fourteen firft rays of it are fpiny.
f Oppian Halieut, I. 124, Plinii Lib* IX, c. 16. Athenaus
Lib. VII. p. 319.
rous
>£
PERCH.
JVP J24.
A
SEA PERCH,
JTP126.
4^nfjitlu I
Class IV, PERCH. 355
rous fpecies. Our perch was much efteemed by
the Romans : „
Nee te delict as men/arum Perca, Jilebo
Amnigenos inter pi fees dignande marinis, Ausonius.
It is not lefs admired at prefent as a firm and de-
licate fifh; and the Dutch are particularly fond of
it when made into a dim called Water Souchy.
It is a gregarious fifh, and loves deep holes and
gentle ftreams. It is a mod voracious fifh, and
eager biter : if the angler meets with a fhoal of
them, he is fure of taking every one.
It is a common notion that the pike will not
attack this fifh, being fearful of the fpiny fins
which the perch erects on the approach of the
former. This may be true in refpecl: to large fifh ;
but it is well known the fmall ones are the mofl
tempting bait that can be laid for the pike.
The perch is a fifh very tenacious of life : we
have known them carried near fixty miles in dry
ftraw, and yet furvive the journey.
Thefe fifh feldom grow to a large fize : we once Size.
heard of one that was taken in the Serpentine
river, Hyde-Park, that weighed nine pounds, but
that it is very uncommon.
The body is deep : the fcales very rough: the Descrip.
back much arched : fide-line near the back.
The irides golden : the teeth fmall, difpofed in
the jaws and on the roof of the mouth: the edges
of
2s6 PERCH. Class l\\
of the covers of the gills ferrated: on the lower end
of the largeft is a (harp fpine;
The firft dorfal fin con fids of fourteen flrong
fpiny rays : the fecond of fixteen foft ones : the
pectoral fins are tranfparent, and confifl of fourteen
rays ; the ventral of fix ; the anal of eleven.
The tail is a little forked.
Color. The colors are beautiful : the back and part of
the fides being of a deep green, marked with five
broad black bars pointing downwards : the belly is
white, tinged with red : the ventral fins of a rich
fcarlet ; the anal fins and tail of the fame color, but
rather paler.
Crooked In a lake called Llyn Raithlyn, in Merioneth/hire^
Perch. js a yery fingUiar variety of perch: the back is
quite hunched, and the lower part of the back
bone, next the tail, ftrangely di (tor ted : in color,
and in other refpecls, it refembles the common
kind, which are as numerous in the lake as thefe
deformed fifh. They are not peculiar to this water,
for Linnaeus takes notice of a fimilar variety found
at Fablun, in his own country. I have alfo heard
that it is to be met with in the Thames near Mar-
low.
Aatyai
Glass IV. BASSE, 257
Aa£?a|? Arift. Hijl. an. lib. Rati fyn. fife. 83. 125.
IV. c. 10. &c. Perca radiis pinnae dorfalis fe-
Lupus ? Ovid. Halieut. 1 12. cundas tredecim, ani qua-
Le Bar, le Loup. Belon, 113. tuordecim. Arted. fyhon. 69.
Lupus. Rondel. 268. Gefner Perca Labrax. Lin. fyft. 482.
///?. 506. Grono<v. Zoopb. No. 300.
A Baffe. /F/7. irf£. 271.
^TpHE baffe is a ftrong, active, and voracious
** fifh : Owi calls them rapidi lupi9 a name con-
tinued to them by after-writers.
That which we had an opportunity of examining Sizt<
was fmall •, but they are faid to grow to the weight
of fifteen pounds.
The irides are filvery : the mouth large : the teeth
are fituated in the jaws, and are very fmall : in the
roof of the mouth is a triangular rough fpace, and
juft at the gullet are two others of a roundilh form.
The fcales are of a middling fize, are very thick
fet, and adhere clofely.
The firft dorfal fin has nine ftrong fpiny rays,
of which the firft is the fhortefl, the middlemoft
the higheft •, the fecond dorfal fin con fills of thir-
teen rays, the firfl fpiny, the others foft.
The pectoral fins have fifteen Jbft rays ; the ven-
tral fix rays, the firft fpiny : the anal fourteen rays,
the three firft fpiny, the others foft : the tail is a
little forked.
Vol. Ill, S The
SEA PERCH. Class IV.
The body is formed fomewhat like that of a fal-
mon.
The color of the back is dufky, tinged with blu£.
The belly white. In young fifh the fpace above
the fide line is marked with fmall black fpots.
It is efteemed a very delicate fifh.
126. Sea. Une Perche de mer. Belon, Perca marina. P. pinnis dor*
163. falibus unitis XV. fpinofis,
Perca marina. Salvia* , 225. XIV. muticis, corpore litu-
Rondel. 182. Wil. Icth. 327. ris variegato, Lin, Jyft. 483.
Raii fyn. pifc* 140.
*np HIS fpecies is about afoot long: the head
•*• large and deformed : eyes great : teeth fmall
and numerous. On the head and covers of the
gills are ftrong fpines. The dorfal fin is furnifh-
ed with fifteen ftrong fpiny rays, and fourteen
foft : the pedtoral with eighteen : the ventral with
one fpiny, and five foft : the anal with three fpiny,
and eight foft: the tail, even at the end : the
lateral line parallel to the back. The color red,
with a black fpot on the covers of the gills, and
fome tranfverfe dufky lines on the fides.
It is a fifh held in fome efteem at the table.
Cernua
Class IV.
R U
V E.
«59
Cernua. Be/on, 186.
Percae fluviatilis genus minus.
Gefner pifc. 701.
Afpredo. Caii opufc. 107.
Ein ftuer, ftuer barfs. S clone-
<velde, 56.
Cernua fluviatilis. Wil. Icth.
334-
Ruire. Rail fin. pifc. 143.
Perca dorfo monopterygio, ca-
pitecavernofo. Arted.fyn.6%.
Perca cernua. P. pinnis dor-
falibus unitis radiis 27.
ipinis 15. cauda bifida.
L;n- fyft' 48^. Grono-v.
Zooph. No.
Giers, Snorgers. Faun. Suec,
No. 119.
Schroll, PfafFenlaus. Scbaeff.
pifc. 37. Tab. II. Wulff
Borufs. No. 35.
127.
Ruffe,
^TpHIS fifh is found in feveral of the Englijh
ftreams : it is gregarious, aflembling in large
ihoals, and keeping in the deepeft part of the water.
It is of a much more (lender form than the perch,
and feldom exceeds fix inches in length.
The teeth are very fmall, and dilpofed in rows.
It has only one dorfal fin extending along the
greateft part of the back : the firft rays, like thofe
of the perch, are ftrong, iharp, and fpiny, the
others foft.
The pectoral fins confift of fifteen rays ; the
ventral of fix ; the anal of eight ; the two firft
ftrong and fpiny : the tail a little bifurcated.
The body is covered with rough compact fcales.
The back and fides are of a dirty green, the
laft inclining to yellow, but both fpotted with
black.
The dorfal fin is fpotted with black : the tail
marked with tranfverfe bars.
S3 The
*€» BLACK RUFF E. Class W*
h2$. Black. The Black Fifh. Mr. J ago. Borlafe Cornwall, 27 u
Tab. XXV. Jig. 8.
MR. Jago has left fo brief a defcription of
this fiJhj that we find difficulty in giving it
a proper clafs : it agrees with the Ruffe in the form
of the body, and the fmallhefs of the teeth, in
having a fingle extenfive fin on the back, a forked
tail, and being of that fection of bony fifh, termed
Thoracic.-' thele appear by the figure, the teeth
excepted. The other characters muft be borrowed
from the defcription.
" It is fmooth, with very fmall thin fcales, fif-
" teen inches long, three quarters of an inch
" broad ; head and nofe like a peal or trout ;
" little mouth ; very fmall teeth, beginning from
" the nofe four inches and three quarters, near
" fix inches long •, a forked tail ; a large double
" noftril. Two taken at Loo, May 26, 1721, in
" the Sean, near the more, in fandy ground with
" fmall ore weed,"
Three
If
Class IV. THREE SPINED S. BACK.
?6i
Three branchioftegous rays.
The belly covered with bony plates.
One dorfal fin, with feveral fharp fpines between it
and the head.
XXVIII.
STICKLE
BACK.
La Grande Efpinoche, un
Epinard, une Artiere. Be-
lon, 328.
Pifciculi aculeati prius genus.
Rondel, jlwviat. 206. Ge/ner
pifc. 8.
Stickleback, Banftickle, or
Sharpling. Wil. Icth. 341.
Raiifyn. pifc. 145.
Gafterofteus aculeis in dorfo
tribus. Arted. fynon. 80.
Gafterofteus aculeatus. Lin.
fyft. 489. Grono^v. Zooph.
No. 406.
Spigg, Horn-fifk. Faun. Suec.
No. 336.
Stichling, Stachel-fifch. Wulff
Bcrufs. No. 37.
I29. 1 HREI
Spin ei?.
THESE are common in many of our rivers,
but no where in greater quantities than in
the Fens of Lincoln/hire^ and fome of the rivers
that creep out of them. At Spalding there are,
once in feven or eight years, amazing (hoals thac
appear in the Welland^ and come up the river in
form of a vaft column. They are fuppofed to be
the multitudes that have been warned out of the
fens by the floods of feveral years, and collected in
fome deep hole, till overcharged with numbers,
they are periodically obliged to attempt a change
of place. The quantity is fo great, that they are
V^kd to manure the land, and trials have been made
S3 to
262 TEN SPINED S. BACK. Class IV.
to get oil from them. A notion may be had of
this vaft fhoal, by faying that a man employed by
the farmer to take them, has got for a confiderable
time four millings a day by felling them at a half-
penny per bufhel.
Descrip. This fpecies feldorn reaches the length of two
inches : the eyes are large : the belly prominent :
the body near the tail fquare : the fides are covered
with large bony plates, placed tranfverfely.
On the back are three fharp fpines, that can be
raifed or depreffed at pleafure : the dorfal fin is
placed near the tail : the pectoral fins are broad :
the ventral fins confift each of one fpine, or rather
plate, of unequal lengths, one being large, the
other fmall ; between both is a flat bony plate,
reaching; almoft to the vent : beneath the vent is a
fliort fpine, and then fucceeds the anal fin.
The tail confiits of twelve rays, and is even ac
the end.
The color of the back and fides is an olive
green ; the belly white ; but in fome the lower jaws
and belly are of a bright crimfon.
130. Ten La petite Efpinoche. Belon, Gafterofteus aculeis in dorfo
Spin ED. 328. decern. Arted. fynon. 80.
Piiciculi aculeati alterum ge- Gafterofleus pungitius. Lin.
nus. Rondel, fiwviat. 206. fyft. 491. Grono<v. Zoopb.
Gefner pifc. 8. No. 405.
Leffer Stickleback. WiL Icth. Benunge, Gaddfur, Gorquad.
342. Rati fyn. pifc. 145. Faun. Suec. No. 337.
T
HIS fpecies is much fmaller than the former,
and of a more (lender make.
The
Class IV. FIFTEEN SPINED S. BACK.
The back is armed with ten fhort fharp fpines,
which do not incline the fame way, but crofs each
other.
The fides are fmooth, not plated like thofe of
the preceding : in other particulars it refembles the
former.
The color of the back is olive : the belly filvery
Aculeatus, five Pungitius ma- fyn. pifc. 145^ 13 *'•
rinus longus, Stein-bicker, Gailerofteus aculeis in dorfo Fifteen
Ers&ruper. Schone-velde, 10. quindecim. Arted.fynon. 81. Spined.
Tab. IV. Sib. Scot. III. Gaiterofteus fpinachia. Lin.
24. Tab. 19. fyft. 492. Grono-v. Xcopb.
Aculeatus marinus major. Wil. No. 407. Faun. Suec. No,
Icth. 340. App. 23. Rati 338.
T
HIS fpecies inhabits the fea, and is never
found in frefh water.
Its length is above fix inches : the nofe is long
and fiender : the mouth tubular : teeth fmall.
The fore part of the body is covered on each
fide with a row of bony plates, forming a ridge ;
the body afterwards grows very fiender, and is
quadrangular.
Between the head and the dorfal fin are fifteen
fmall fpines : the dorfal fin is placed oppofite the
anal fin : the ventral fins are wanting.
The tail is even at the end.
The color of the upper part is a deep brown :
the belly white,
S jl Seven
z6$
U A C K R E L.
Class IV.
XXIX.
MACKREL,
Seven branchioftegous rays.
Several fmall fins between the dorfal fin and
the tail
?32. Com-
mon*
2>i6(ji,£go$. Ariji. Hiji. an. Lib.
VI. c. 17. IX. c. 2. Jthe-
naus, Lib. III. 121. Mil.
32 1. Oppian Halieut.l. 142.
Scomber. 0<vid Halieut. 94.
PliniiLib.lX.c15.XXXl.
c. 8.
Macarello, Scombro. Salvia??.
241 .
Le Macreau. Belon, 197.
Scomber. Rondel. 233. Gef-
ner pifc. 841. (pro 861.)
Makerel. Schone<velde, 66.
Mackrell, or Macarel. Wil.
Icth. 181. Raiifyn.pifc. 58.
Scomber pinnulis quinque in
extremo dorfo, polyptery-
gio, aculeo brevi ad anum.
Arted. fynon. 48.
Scomber Scomber. Lin. fyjl.
492. Grono-j. Zoopb. No.
3°4-
Mackrill. Faun. Suec. No.
339-
Oa^uh.
THE mackrel is a fummer nfh of pafTage that
vifits our fhores in vaft fhoals. It is lefs
ufeful than other fpecies of gregarious fifh, being
very tender, and unfit for carriage •, not but that
it may be preferved by pickling and faking, a
method, we believe, praetifed only in Cornwall f9
where it proves a great relief to the poor during
winter.
It was a fifh greatly efteemed by the Romans,
'* This is the firfl opportunity we have had of looking
into Sahianus, whofe Italian fynonyms we make ufe of.
f Borlafi Cornwall, 269.
becaufe
Class IV. M A C K R E L. 265
becaufe it furnifhed the pretious Garum, a fort of
pickle that gave a high relifh to their fauces, and
was befides ufed medicinally. It was drawn from
different kinds of fifh, but that made from the
mackrel had the preference : the beft was made
at Carthagena^ vaft quantities of mackrel being
taken near an adjacent ifle, called from that cir-
cumstance, Scombraria * ; and the Garum, prepar-
ed by a certain company in that city, bore a high
price, and was diftinguifhed by the title of Garam
S odor urn .-f\
This fifh is eafily taken by a bait, but the bed
time is during a frefh gale of wind, which is thence
called a mackrel gale.
In the fpring the eyes of mackrel are almoft cover-
ed with a white film -, during which period they are
half blind. This film grows in winter, and is cad
the beo;innino; of fummer.
It is not often that it exceeds two pounds in Size
weight, yet we heard that there was one fold lad
fummer in London that weighed five and a quarter.
The nofe is taper and fharp-pointed : the eyes Descrip.
large : the jaws of an equal length : the teeth fmall3
but numerous.
The form of this* fifh is very elegant.
The body is a little compreiTed on the fides ?
towards the tail it grows very flender, and a little
angular.
* Strabo Lib. III. 109.
f Plimi lib. XXXI. c. 8,
The
266 TUNNY. Class IV.
The firft dorfal fin is placed a little behind the
pectoral fin, is triangular, and confifts of nine or
ten ft iff rays ; the fecond lies at a diftance from
the other, and has twelve fofc rays ; the pectoral
twenty ; the ventral fix : at the bafe of the anal fin
is a ftrong fpine.
Between the laft dorfal fin and the tail, are five
fmall fins, and the fame number between the anal
fin and the tail.
Color. The tail is broad and femilunar : the color of the
back and fides above the lateral line, is a fine
green, varied with blue, marked with black lines,
pointing downwards ; beneath the line the fides
and belly are of a filvery color.
It is a mod beautiful fim when alive \ for nothing
can equal the brilliancy of its color, which death
impairs, but does not wholly obliterate.
133-TuNNr. Qbvvog. Arifi. Hiji. an. Lib. Tunny fifh, or Spanifh Mack-
II. c. 13. &c. Atbentfus, rell. Wil. Ictb. 176. Rail
Lib. VII. 301. Oppian Ha- fyn. pifc. $7. Sibbald Scot,
lieut. III. 620. Scomber pinnulis otto vel
Thunnus. Ovid Halieut. 95. novem in extremo dorfo, ex
Plinii Lib. IX. c. 15. fulco ad pinnas ventrales.
Tonno. Salvian. 123. Arted. fynon. 49.
Le Thon. Belen, 99. Scomber Thunnus. Sc. pin-
Thunnus. Rondel. 241. Gef- nulis utrinque oclo. Lin,
ner pifc. 957. fyfi. 493. GroHov. Zooph.
Thunnus vel orcynus. Schone- No. 305.
*ve/de9 75.
THE tunny was a fifh well known to the an-
tients, it made a confiderable branch of com-
merce ;
Class IV. TUNNY, 267
merce -, the time of its arrival into the Mediterra-
nean from the ocean was obferved, and (lations for
taking them eftablifhed in places it molt frequent-
ed ; the eminencies above the fifhery were flyled
®uvvQcrKQ7rEiu*9 and the watchmen that gave notice to
thofe below of the motions of the fifh, Gtuwoo-Kowoi -f.
From one of the former the lover in Theocritus
threatened to take a defperate leap, on account of
his miftrefs's cruelty.
Tav Galrav aTrodvg e~$ HUfiara tyivcc atev/xai
X2tt£ j> rag 0TNNIX2 (moma&Tcu *0?.t^ 0 ygmEug.
Do you not hear ? then, rue your Goat-herd's fate,
For, from the rock where Olpis doth defcry
The numerous Thunny, I will plunge and die.
The very fame ftation, in all probability, is at
this time made ufe of, as there are very confider-
able thunny fifheries on the coaft of Sicily y as well
as feveral other parts of the Mediterranean^ , where
they are cured, and make a great article of pro-
vifion in the adjacent kingdoms. They are caught
* Strabo Lib. V. 156.
f Oppian Halieut. III. 638. This perfon anfwers to what
the Cornijb call a Huer, who watches the arrival of the pil-
chards.
X Many of them are the fame that were ufed by the antients,
as we learn from Oppian and others.
in
263 TUNNY. Class IV..
in nets, and amazing quantities are taken, for they
come in vaft fhoals, keeping along the fhores.
They frequent our coafts, but not in fhoals like
the Tunnies of the Mediterranean. They are not
uncommon in the Lochs on the weftern coaft of
Scotland -, where they come in purfuit of herrings ;
and, often during night, ftrike into the nets, and
do confiderable damage. When the fifhermen draw
them up in the morning, the Tunny rifes at the
fame time towards the furface, ready to catch the
fifh that drop out. On perceiving it, a ftrong
hook baited with a herring, and fattened to a rope,
is inftantly flung out, which the Tunny feldom
fails to take. As foon as hooked, it lofes all fpi-
rit ; and after a very little reflflance, fubmits to its
fate. It is dragged to the fhore and cut up,
either to be fold frefh to people who carry it to
the country markets, or is preferved faked in large
calks.
The pieces, when frefh, look exactly like raw
beef; but when boiled turn pale, and have fome-
thing of the flavor of falmon.
One, which was taken when I was at Invera-
ray in 1769, and was weighed for my information,
weighed .<\6o pounds.
The fi(h, I examined, was feven feet ten inches
long ; the greateft circumference five feet feven ;
the left near the tail one foot fix. The body was
round and thick, and grew fuddenly very flender
pvvards the tail \ and near that part was angular,
The
Class IV. S C A D. 269
The hides were of a pale green : the teeth very mi-
nute.
The firfb dorfal fin confided of thirteen ftrong
fpines •, which, when deprefied, were fo concealed
in a deep (lit in the back, as to be quite invifible
till very clofely infpected. Immediately behind this
fin was another, tall and falciform : almoft oppofite
to it, was the anal fin, of the fame form. The
fpurious fins were of a rich yellow color : of thefe
there were eleven above, and ten below.
The tail was in form of a crefcent \ and two
feet feven inches between tip and tip.
The ikin on the back was fmooth, very thick,
and black. On the belly the fcales were vifible.
The color of the fides and belly filvery, tinged with
casrulean and pale purple : near the tail mar-
bled with grey.
They are known on the coaft of Scotland by the
name of Mackrelfture : Mackrel, from being of that
genus ; and fture, from the Dani/h, ftor^ great.
Sauro. Salvia?!. 79. Ictb. zqo. Raiijyn. pifc. gz. j,^# Scad
Un Sou, Macreau baftard. Scomber linea laterali acule-
Belon, 186. ata, pinna ani oiljculorum
Trachurus. Rondel. 233. 30. Arted. fynon. 50.
Lacertus Bellonii. Gefner pife. Scomber Trachurus. Sc. pin-
467. nis unitis, fpina dorfali re-
Mufeken, Stocker. Scbone- cumbente, linea laterali lo-
<velde> 75. ricata. Lin.fyft. 494. Gro-
Scad, Horfe-mackrell. WiL no-v. Zoopb. No. 308.
T
HAT which we examined was llxteen inches
long : the nofe (harp \ the eyes very large ;
the
270 S C A D. Class IV.
the irides filvery : the lower jaw a little longer
than the upper : the edges of the jaws were
rough, but without teeth.
On the upper part of the covers of the gills
was a large black fpot.
The fcales were large and very thin : the low-
er half of the body quadrangular, and marked
each fide with a row of thick ftrong fcales, pro-
minent in the middle, extending to the tail
The firft dorfal fin confided of eight firong
fpines : the fecond lay juft behind it, and con-
fided of thirty-four foft rays, and reached almoft
to the tail. The pectoral fins narrow and long,
and compofed of twenty rays : the ventral of fix
branched rays.
The vent was in the middle of the belly ; the
anal fin extended from it to the tail, which was
greatly forked.
The head and upper part of the body varied
with green and blue : the belly filvery.
This fifh was taken in the month of Ottober ;
was very firm and well tailed, having the flavor of
mackrel.
Head
Class IV. RED SURMULLET,
271
Head compreffed, flecD, and covered with fcales. XXX.
_ . \. n r SURMUI^
1 wo branchioltegous rays. LET.
Body covered with large fcales, eafily dropping off.
TfrAv > Arijl. Hift. an. Lib.
11. Oppian Halieut. I. 590.
Tf/y^v; Zapguv. Athenausy
Lib. VII. 325.
Mulius. Ovid Halieut. 123.
Plinii Lib. IX. c. 17.
Triglia. Salvian. 235.
Le Rouget barbe, Surmurlet.
Belon, 170.
Mulius barbatus. Rondel 290.
Gefner pifc. 565.
Petermanneken , Goldeken.
Schone-velde, 47 .
Mulius Bellonii. Wil. Icth.
285. Raii fyn. pifc. 90.
TrigJa capite glabro, cirris
geminis in maxillainferiore.
Arted.fynon. 71.
Mulius cirris geminis, corpore
rubro. Lin.fyft. 495. Gro-
7iov. Zoopb. No. 286.
*35
Red.
THIS fifh was highly efteemed by the Romans,
and bore an exceeding high price. The
capricious epicures of Horace's* days, valued it in
proportion to its fize ; not that the larger were
more delicious, but that they were more difficult
to be got. The price that was given for one in the
time of Juvenal, and Pliny ^ is a ftriking evidence
of the luxury and extravagance of the age :
Mullum/IvY mil/ibus emit
JE quant em fane paribus fejiertia libris f.
* Sat. Lib. II. / II. 33.
f Juvenal Sat. IV. 48 1, $s. o.d.
The
272 RED SURMULLET. Class IV.
The lavifh flave
Six thoufand pieces for a Mullet gave,
A feiterce for each pound. Dryden,
But Afinius Celer *, a man of confular dignity,
/ gave a (till more nnconfcionable fum, for he did
not fcruple bellowing eight thoufand nummi, or
lixty-four pounds eleven millings and eight-pence,
for a fifti of fo fmall a fize as the mullet-, for ao,
cording to Horace^ a Mullus trilibris^ or one of three
pounds, was a great rarity -, fo that Juvenal's fpark
muft have had a great bargain in comparifon of
what Celer had.
But Seneca fays that it was not worth a farthing,
except it died in the very hand of your gueft :
that fuch was the luxury of the times, that there
were (lews even in the eating rooms, fo that the
fifh could at once be brought from under the table,
and placed on it: that they put the mullets in
tranfparent vafes, that they might be entertained
with the various changes of its rich color while
it lay expiring f. Apicius^ a wonderful genius
* Plin. Lib. IX. c. 17.
f In cubili natant pifces ; ei fub ipfa ?nenfa capitur, qui
Jlatim transferitur in me?ifam : parum <videtur recens mullus
niji qui in con<vi!v<£ manu moritur. Vitreis ollis incluji ojferuntur,
et obfer<vatur morienttum color, quern in mult as mutationes lu&ante
fpiritu vertit. Seneca Nat. Quaeft. Lib* III. c. 16,
X Ad omne luxus ingenium mirus.
for
Class IV.. RED SURMULLET,
for luxurious inventions, firft hit upon the method
of fuffocating them in the exquifue Carthaginian *
pickle, and afterwards procured a rich fauce from
their liver6. This is the fame gentleman whom
Pliny, in another place, honors with the title of
Nepotum omnium altiffimus gurges -f , an exprefTior*
too forcible to be{ rendered in our language.
We have heard of this fpeci.es being taken on
the coaft of Scotland, but had no opportunity of
examining it; and whether it is found in the weft
of England with the other fpecies, or variety, we
are not at this time informed. Salvianus makes
<
it a diftincl fpecies, and fays, that it is of a purple
color, ftriped with golden lines, and that it did not
commonly exceed a palm in length : no wonder
then that fuch a prodigy as one of fix pounds
fhould fo captivate the fancy of the Roman epicure,
Mr. Ray eftablifhes feme other diftin£tions, fuch
as the nrft dorfal fin having nine rays, and the color
of that fin, the tail, and the pectoral fins, being of
a very pale purple.
On thefe authorities we form different fpecies of
thefe fifh, having only examined what Salvianus
and Mr. Ray call the Mullus major ^ which w§
defcribe under the title of
# Garum Sociorum, vide p. 222,
f Lib, X. c, 48.
Vol. in, ? MOim
274 STRIPED SURMULLET. Class IV.
136. Strip- Mullus major. Salvian. 236. utrinque quatuor luteis,
ed. Mullus major nofter et Sal- longitudinalibus, parallelis.
'viani. 95. Cornubienjibus. Arted. fynon. 72.
A Surmullet. Wil. Icth. 285. Mullus cirris geminis lineis
Rait fyn. pifc. 91. luteis longitudinalibus. Lin.
Trigla capite glabro, lineis fyjl. 496.
*~T">HIS ipecies was communicated to us by Mr.
*** Pitfield of Exeter : its weight was two pounds
and an half \ its length was fourteen inches j the
thickeli circumference eleven. It appears on the
coaft of Devonjhire in May, and retires about No*
member.
The head fteep : the nofe blunt : the body thick :
the mouth fmall : the lower jaw furnifhed with
very fmall teeth: in the roof of the mouth is a rough
hard fpace : at the entrance of the gullet above is
a fingle bone, and beneath are a pair, each with
echinated furfaces, that help to comminute the food
before it pafTes down.
From the chin hung two beards, two inches and
a half long.
The eyes large : the irides purple : the head atid
covers of the gills very fcaly.
The firft dorfal fin was lodged in a deep fur-
row, and confided of fix ftrong, but flexible rays;
the fecond of eight ; the pectoral fins of fixteen \
the ventral of fix branched rays -9 the anal of fe-
ven : the tail is much forked.
The
*
Class IV. STRIPED SURMULLET. 275
The body very thick, and covered with large
fcales ; beneath them the color was a molt beau-
tiful rofy red * ; the changes of which, under the
thin fcales, gave that entertainment to the Roman
epicures as above mentioned : the fcales on the
back and fides were of a dirty orange; thofe on
the nofe a bright yellow : the tail a reddifh yellow.
The fides .were marked lengthways with two
lines of a light yellow color : thefe, with the red
color of the dorfal fins, and the number of their
rays, Mr. Ray makes the character of the Cornijh
Surmullet : thefe are notes fo liable to vary by acci-
dent, that till we receive further information from
the inhabitants of our wejiern coafts, where thefe
iim are found, we (hall remain doubtful whether
we have done right in feparating this from the
former, efpecially as DoElor Gronovius has pronoun-
ced them to be only varieties.
* This color is mod vivid during fummer.
T 2 Nofe
*j6
GREY GURNARD. Class IV.
XXXI.
GURNARD,
Nofe Hoping.
Head covered with flrong bony plates.
Seven branchioftegous rays.
Three (lender appendages at the bafe of the pectoral
fins.
37. Grey. Gurnatus feu Gurnardus gri-
feus, the Grey Gurnard.
WiL Icth. 279. Rail fyn.
fife. 88.
Trigla vario roftro diacantho,
aculeis geminis ad utrum-
que oculura. Arted. fynon,
Trigla Gurnardus, Tr. digitis
ternis dorfo maculis nigris
rubrifque. Lin* fyfi. 497.
Grono'v. Zooph. No. 283.
'"TpHE nofe pretty long, and Hoping: the end
■*■ bifurcated, and each fide armed with three
fhort fpines.
The eyes very large •, above each were two fliort
fpines : the forehead and ^covers of the gills fil-
very \ the laft finely radiated.
The teeth fmall, placed in the lower and upper
jaws, in the roof of the mouth, and bale of the
tongue.
Noftrils minute, and placed on the fides of the
nofe.
On the extremity of the gill covers was a ftrong,
tharp, and long fpine : beneath that, juft above the
pectoral fins, another.
The
f
9
st
Class IV. GREY GURNARD. ijy
The firft dorfal fin confided of eight fpiny rays ;
the fides of the three firft tuberculated.
The ftcond dorfal fin of nineteen foft rays : both
fins lodged in a groove, rough on each fide, but
not ferrated.
The pectoral fins do not extend as far as the
anal fins, are tranfpa-rent, and fupported by ten
rays, bifurcated from their middle : the three beards
at their bafe as ufual.
The ventral fins had fix rays, the firft fpiny, and
the morteft of all.
The anal fin nineteen, each foft.
The tail bifurcated.
The lateral line very prominent, ftrongly ferrat-
ed, and of a filvery color.*
The back, tail, and a fmall fpace beneath the
fide line, were of a deep grey, covered with fmall
fcales, and in parts fpotted with white and yel-
low •, the belly filvery.
Thefe fim are ufually taken with the hook in
deep water, bite eagerly even at a red rag ; and
fometimes are fond of fporting near the furface.
They are often found of the length of two feet and
a half.
T 3 Kcaw I \
2?8
RED GURNARD. Class IV,
138. Red. KokhuZ ? Arift. Bijl. an. lib. Scboncvelde, yz.
IV. c. 9 Oppian Halieut.l. Red Gurnard, or Rotchet.
WtL lab. 281. Raii fyn.
pifc. 89.
Trigla tota rubens, roflro pa-
rum bicorni, operculis bran-
chiarum flriatis. Arted fy-
non. 74,
K.cxhv% tqufyc;, Athenaus lib.
VII. 309.
Pefce capone, Cocco, Orga-
no. Sal<vian. 191.
Le Rouget. Belon, 199
Cuculus. Rondel. 287. Gefner Trigla cuculus. Tr. digitis
pifc. 305. ternis, linea laterali mutica.
Smiedecknecht, Kurre-fifche. Lin. Jyft. 497.
'TpHIS fpecies agrees in its general appearance
with the tub fifh -, but in thefe particulars
differs.
The covers of the gills are radiated : the fpines
are longer and flenderer in thofe of the red
gurnard. The nofe armed on each fide with two
fliarp fpines.
The fins and body are of a fuller red: the
fcales are larger : head lefs and narrower : the
pedoral fins are edged with purple, not with
blue: are much fhorter, for when extended they
do not reach to the anal fin. The fide line is
ftrongly ferrated : the top of the back lefs fo than
that of the tub fifh. The tail red and almoft even
at the end.
Avoot?
e-
Class IV. PIP E R.
79
Ayp« ? Arijl. Hifr. an. lib. Trigla roftro longo diacantho, 139. Piper
IV. c. 9. naribus tubulofis. Arted,
Lyra. Rondel. 298. Gefner fyn. 74.
pifc. 516. Trigla Lyra. Tr. digitis ter-
Th'e Piper. Wil. Icth. 282. nis, naribus tubulofis. Lin,
Raii fyn. pifc. 89. fyft, 496.
>"TpHIS fpecies is frequently taken on the weftern
"** coafts of this kingdom, and efteemed an
excellent fifh. It is aifo found off Anglefea.
The weight of one which was communicated to
us by Mr. Pitfield*^ was three pounds and aft
half; the thicker!: circumference thirteen inches,
the left, which was next the tail, only three : the
length near two feet.
The head was very large, and that part of the
body next to it very thick : the nofe divided into
two broad plates, each terminated with three fpines:
on the inner corner of each eye is a ftrong fpine:
the bony plates of the head terminate on each fide
with another.
The covers of the gills are armed with one very
iharp and ftrong fpine, and are prettily ftriated :
immediately over the pectoral fin is another fpine
very large and fharp pointed.
* We have been informed, that this fifh is found at all times
of the year on the weftern coafts, and is taken in nets,
T4 The
■ftlo SAPPH1RINE GURNARD. Class IV,
The noftrils very minute : the eyes large.
The lower jaw much fhorter than the upper:
the teeth in both very minute.
The firft dorfal fin confifted of nine Very ftrdng
fharp fpines^ the fecond of which is the longeft; the
fecond fin begins juft behind the firft, and confifts
of eighteen foft rays : the pectoral fins Were long,
and had twelve branched rays •, the ventral fins
fix, very ftrong and thick : the anal eighteen, the
firft fpiny.fc the tail fmall, in proportion to the fize
of the fifh, and forked.
The back on each fide the dorfal fin. was armed
With a fet of ftrong and very large fpines, pointing
towards the tail like the teeth of a faw.
The fcales were finally but very hard and rough t
the lateral line bent a little at its beginning, that
went ftrait to the tail, and was almoft fmooth.
jloo SAfrfrHi- T-iirundo Aldrov. The Tub- Trigla hirundo. Tr. digitis
rine, £&> Cornub. Wil, Icth.zSd. ternis, linea laterali acii*
Rati fyn. pifc. 88. leata. Lin. fyft. 497.
Trigla capite aculeato, ap* Knorrhane, Knoding, Knot,
pendicibus utriftque tribus Smed. Faun, Suec. No.
ad pinnas pe&orales. Arted. 340.
fynon. 73.
T
HIS fpecies is of a more flender form than
the preceding.
The pupil of the eye is green : on the inner Cor^
ner
Class IV. STREAKED GURNARD. a$i
ner of each are two (mail fpines. But what at once
diftinguiflies this from the other fpecies is the
breadth and colors of the pectoral .fins, which are
very broad and long, of a pale green, mod beau-
tifully edged, and fpotted with rich deep blue.
The dorfal fins are lodged between two rows of
fpines, of a ferrated form: the back is of a greenifh
call: : the fide line is rough : the fides are tinged
with red ; the belly white.
Thefe fifh are found on the coaft of Cornwall.
We have alfo taken them off Anglefea.
ED,
Cuculus lineatusi the Streaked Gurnard. Raiifyn.pifc. 165. I4I-^T^EAK*
fg. 11.
THIS is one of the Gornifu fifh communicated
to Mr. Petvver by Mr. J ago. He fays the
head is large, and diftinguifhed with ftellated marks;
the eyes great •, the covering of the gills thorny \
the mouth fmall, and without teeth. By* the
figure the nofe feems not to be bifurcated. The
perioral fins large, and fpotted, beneath them
three filaments; the color of the body red: the bel-
ly white* marked with many ftreaks, pointing
downwards, from the back.
Mr. J ago imagines it to be the Mullis hnb tr-
ite of Rondektius. Wil. Icth. 27S.
Sect*
2 H
LOCHE,
Class IV.
Sect. IV. ABDOMINAL,
XXXII.
L O C H E.
Eyes in the upper part of the head.
Aperture to the gills clofed below.
Several beards on the end of the upper jaw
Body of almoft an equal thicknefs.
One dorfal fin.
142. Beard- La Loche franche. Bclon, 321. Cobitis tota glabra maculofa,
corpore fubtereti. Arted.
fyhon. 2,
E»,
Cobitis barbatula. Rondel,
fiwviat, 204
Cobitis fluviatilis barbatula. Cobitis Barbatula. C. cirri
Gejher pifc. 404.
Smerling, Smerle. Schone-
<vclde, 31.
-Loche, or Groundling. WiU
Icth. 265. Rail Jyn\ pifc.
124.
fex capite inermi compreffo.
Lin. fyjl. 499. Gronov.
Zooph. No. 202.
■ Gronling. Faun. Suec. No. 341 .
Grundel. Kram. 396. Wulff*
Borufs. No. 40.
THE loche is found in feveral of our fmall
rivers, keeping at the bottom on the gra-
vel, and is on that account, in fome places, called
the Groundling : it is frequent on the ftream near
dme/bury, in Wiltjhire^ where the fportfmen, through
frolick, fwallow it down alive in a glafs of white
wine.
The largeft we ever heard of was four inches
and three quarters in length, but they feldom arrive
to that fize.
The
ts
-r^
Class IV. L G C H E. *83
The mouth is fmall, placed beneath, and has no
teeth : on the upper mandible are fix fmall beards,
one at each Corner of the mouth, and four at the
end of the nofe.
The dorfal fin confifts of eight rays ; the pec-
toral of eleven ; the ventral of feven ; the anal of
fix : the tail is broad, and has fixteen or feventeen
rays.
The body is fmooth and flippery, and almoft of Colo*.
the fame thicknefs : the color of the head, back,
and fides, is in fome white, in others of a dirty
yellow, very elegantly marked with large fpots,
confiding of numberlefs minute black fpecks : the
pectoral, dorfal, and caudal fins are alfo fpotted :
the belly and ventral fins of a pure white : the tail
broad, and a little rounded.
Branchi-
fc84
SALMON. Class IV:
XXXIII. Branchioftegous rays unequal in number.
SALMON. tw0 dorfal fins; the fecond thick, and without rays.
* With teeth.
14.3. Salmon* Salmo Plinii Lib. IX. c, 18.
Aufonias Mo/el. 97.
Salmone. Salvian. 100.
Le Saulmon. Belon, 271.
Salmo. Rondel, flwviat. 167.
Gefner pifc. 824. Sebone-
velde, 64.
Salmon. Wit. lab. 189. Rati
fyn.fifc.6i.
Salmo roftro ultra inferio-
rem maxillam faepe pro-
minente. Arted. fynon. 22.
Salmo Salar. Lin. fyji. 509.
Gronov. 'Zooph. No. 369.
Lax. Faun. Suec. No. 122.
Lachfs. Wulff. Boru/s. No.
42.
THE falmon is a northern fifti, being un-
known in the Mediterranean fea, and o-
ther warm climates: it is found in France in fome
of the rivers that empty themfelves into the ocean *,
and north as far as Greenland-, they are alfo very
common in Newfoundland, and the northern parts
of North America. Salmons are taken in the rivers
of Kamtfchatkaf, but whether they are of the
* Rondel, flwviat. 167.
f Hiji. Kamt/ch. 143.
fame
Class IV. SALMON. 285
fame fpecies with the European kind is not very
certain.
They are in feveral countries a great article of
commerce, being cured different ways, by faking,
pickling, and drying : there are ftationary fiiheries
in Iceland^ Norway *, and the Baltic, but we be-
lieve no where greater than thofe at Colraine in
Ireland > and in Great Britain at Berwick^ and in
fpme of the rivers of Scotland.
The falmon was known to the Romans, but not
to the Greeks t: Pliny fpeaks of it as a fifh found in
the rivers of Aquitaine : Aufonius enumerates it ar
mong thofe of the Mo/el.
Nee te puniceo rutilantem <vifcere Salmo
Franjierem, lata cujus <vaga <verbera caudte
Gurgite de medio fummas referuntur in undas,
Occultus placido cum proditur aquore pulfus,
Tu loricato fquamofus peclore, front em
Lubricus, et dubia faclurus fercula canee,
Tempord longarum /err incorrupt a morarum,
Pr&Jignis maculis capitis f cui prodiga nutal
Al<vusf opimatoque fluens abdomine water.
Nor I thy fcarlet belly will omit,
O Salmon, whofe broad tail with whifking flrokes
Bears thee up from the bottom of the ftream
Quick to the iurface ; and the fecret lafh
Below, betrays thee in the placid deep.
Arm'd in thy flaky mail, thy glofly fnout
* There was, about the year 1578, a pretty confiderable
falmon fifhery at Cola9 in Ruffian Laplan4* Hackluyt. <voy*
I. 4i&
Slippery
286 S A L M O N. Class IV.
Slippery efcapes the rimer's fingers ; elfe
Thou raakefl a fealt for niceil judging palates :
And yet long uncorrupted thou remained :
With fpotted head remarked, and wavy fpread,
Of paunch immenfe o'erftovving wide with fat.
Anonymous,
Ascends
The falmon is a fifh that lives both in the fait
Rivers. anc| fefa Waters, quitting the fea at certain feafons
for the fake of depofiting its fpawn in fecurity, in the
gravelly beds of rivers remote from their mouths.
There are fcarce any difficulties but what they
•will overcome, in order to arrive at places fit for
their purpofe : they will afcend rivers hundreds of
^ miles, force themfelves againft the mod rapid
ftreams, and fpring with amazing agility over ca-
taracts of feveral feet in height. Salmon are fre-
quently taken in the Rhine as high up as Bafil\
Salmon they gain the fources of the Lapland rivers* in
fpite of their torrent-like currents, and furpafs the
perpendicular falls of Leixfiipf> Kennerth^, and
Pont aberglafiyn%\ thefe lait feats we have been
witnefs to, and feen the efforts of fcores of rifh, fome
of which fucceeded, others mifcarried during the
time of our (lay.
* Scheff. Lap. 139.
f Near Dublin.
\ On the Ti<vy in South Wales y which Michael Drayton cele-
brates in his Polyolbion on this account.
§ Amidft Snowdon hills, a wildfcene in the ftyle of Sahator
Rofa.
It
Class IV. S A L M O N. 287
Ic may here be proper to contradict the vulvar
error of their taking their tail in their mouth when
they attempt to leap -5 fuch as we faw, fprung up
quite ftraight, and with a drong tremulous motion.
Other particulars relating to the natural hidory
of this fifh, we fhall relate in our accounts of the
fifheries, either from our own obfervations, or from
fuch as have been communicated to us from dif-
nt places : the fulled we have been favoured
with, is from the late Mr. Potts, of Berwick, to
whom the public is indebted for the following very
curious hidory of the falmon fifhery on the Tweed.
At the latter end of the year, or in the month of Spawning*
November, the falmon begin to prefs up the rivers
as far as they can reach, in order to fpawn ; when
*hat time approaches they fearch for a place fin
for the purpofe: the male and female unite in form-
ing a proper receptacle for it in the fand or gravel,
about the depth of eighteen inches ; in this the fe-
male depofits her fpawn, the male his milt, which
they cover carefully, as it is faid, with their tails,
for after fpawning they are obferved to have no fkin
on that part.
The fpawn lies buried till fpring, if not dif-
turbed by violent floods •, but the falmon haden
to lea as foon as they are able, to purify andcleanfe
themfelves, a:id to recover their ftrerigth •, for af-
ter fpawning they become very poor and lean, anj
then are called Kipper.
When the falmon firft enter the frelh water, they
are *
«8S
SALMON. Class IV.
are obferved to have abundance of infefts adherj
inc to them, efpecially above the gills : tnefe are
the Lenue* Salmons of Linntus, and are figns that
the filh are in high feafon- Thefe animals die and|
drop off, foon after the falmon have left the fea.
' About the latter end of March the fpawn begins;
to exclude the young, which gradually increafe t<£
the length of four or five inches, and are then term.
cA Smelts oxSumts: about the beginning of May.
the river is full of them •, it feems to be all ahvel
there is no having an idea of the numbers without
feeing them; but a feafonable flood then burn*
thenTall to the fea, fcare any or very few bem|
left in the river.
About the middle of June the earlieft of the frj
begin to drop, as it were, into the river agai»
from the fea, at that time about twelve, fourteen;
or fwteen inches, and by a gradual progrefs, in».
creafe in number and flze till about the end of
July, which is at Berwick termed the height of
Gilfeums, the name given to the filh at that age;
the end of July*, or beginning of Augufi they lef-
fen in number, but increafe in fize, fome being fix,
feven, eight, or nine pounds in weight-, this ap-
Qyict pears to be a furprifing quick growth, yet we have
Growth. received from a gentleman at Warrington, an in*
fiance ftill more fo: a kipper falmon weighing n%
three quarters, taken on the 7th of February, I
ing marked with a fciffars, on the back, fin,
and tail, and turned into the river, was 3g»'»
taker
Class IV. SALMON. 289
taken on the 17th of March following, and then
was found to weigh 171b. and a half.
All fifhermen agree, that they never find any food food
in the ftomach of this fifh. It is likely they may uncertain,
neglect their food entirely during the time of fpawn-
ing, as fea lions and fea bears are known to do
for months together during their breeding feafon :
and it may be obferved, that like thofe animals,
the falmons return to the fea lank and lean, and
come from the fait water in good condition. It is
evident that at times their food is both fifh and
worms, for the angler ufes both with good fuccefs ;
as well as a large, gaudy, artificial fly, which pro-
bably the fifh miftakes for a gay libellula or dragon
fly.
The Capture in the Tweed, about the month of Capture*
July, is prodigious ; in a good fifhery, often a boat
load, and fometimes near two, are taken in a tide :
fome few years ago there were above feven hun-
dred fifh taken at one hawl, but from fifty to a
hundred is very frequent : the coopers in Berwick
then begin to fait both Salmon and Gilfes in pipes,
and other large vefTels, and afterwards barrel*
them to fend abroad, having then far more than
the London markets can take off their hands.
Mod of the falmon taken before April, or to the
fetting in of the warm weather, is fent frefh to Lon-
* The falmon barrel holds above forty-two gallons, wine
meafure.
U . don
29*>
SALMON. Class IV.
don in balkets, nnlefs now and then the veffel is
difappointed by contrary winds, of failing imme-
diately, in that cafe the fiih is brought alhore again
to the coopers offices, and boiled, pickled, and
kitted, and fent to the London markets by the
fame (hip, and frefh faknon put in the bafkets in
lieu of the ftale ones. At the beginning of the fea-
P*jce. fon, when a fhip is on the point of failings a freih
clean falmon will fell from a milling to eighteen
pence a pound, and mod of the time that this part
of the trade is carried on, the prices are from five
to nine millings per ftone *, the value rifing and
falling according to the plenty of fiih, or the pro-
fpect of a fair or foul wind. Some fifh are fent in
this manner to London the latter end of September?
when the weather grows cool, but then the fifh are
full of large roes> grow very thin bellied, and are
not efleemed either palatable or wholefome.
The price of frefh fifh in the month of July^
when they are moft plentiful, has been known to
be as low as 8 d. per ftone, but lad year never
lefs than i6d. and from that to is. 6d.
Season. The feafon for fifhing in the Tweed begins No-
vember 30th, but the fiihermen work very little till
after Cbriftmas-, it ends on Michaelmas-Day, yet
the corporation of Berwick (who are confervators
* A ftone of falmon weighs 18 lb. 10 oz. and half, or in
other terms, four Hones, or fifty-fix pounds avoirdupoife, is
only three Hones, or forty-two pounds, fifh weight at Berwick
of
Class IV. SALMON. 29 "
of the river) indulge the fifhermen with a fortnight
pad that time, on account of the change of the
ftyle.
There are on the river forty-one confiderable
fifheries extending upwards, about fourteen miles
from the mouth (the others above being of no
great value) which are rented for near 5400/. per
annum. The expence attending the fervants wages,
nets, boats, &c. amount to 5000/. more, which
together makes up the fum 10400/. Now in con-
fequence the produce muft defray all, and no lefs
than twenty times that fum of fifh will efFecl: it, fo
that 208000 falmon muft be caught there one year
with another.
There is a misfortune attending the river Tweedy
which is worthy a parlementary remedy -, for there
is no law for preferving the fifh in it during the
fence months, as there is in the cafe of many
other Britifh rivers. This being the boundary be-
tween the two kingdoms, part of it belongs to the
city of Berwick, and the whole north fide (begin-
ning about two miles from the town) is entirely
Scotch property. From ibme difagreement between
the parties they will not unite for the prefervation
of the fifh, fo that in fome fifheries on the north
fide they continue killing falmon the whole win-
ter, when the death of one fifh is the definition of
thoufands *.
* I think that this grievance is now removed,
Uz The
2$Z
SALMON. Class IV.
The legiflature began very early to pay attention
to this important article: by the 13th Edward I.
there is an ac"t which prohibits the capture of the
falmon from the Nativity of our Lady to St.
Martinis Day, in the waters of the Humber, Owfe,
"Trent, Done, Arre> Derwent, Wharf e, Nid, Tore,
Swale, and Tees-, and other monarchs in after-
times, provided in like manner for the fecurity
of the fidi in other rivers.
Scotland. Scotland pofTeffes great numbers of fine fimeries
on both fides of that kingdom. The Scotch in ear,ly
times had mod fevere laws againft the killing of
this fifh; for the third offence was made capital,
by a law of James IV. Before that, the offender
had power to redeem his life *. They were thought
in the time of Henry VI. a prefent worthy of a
crowned head, for in that reign the Queen of Scot-
land (ent to the Dutchefs of Clarence, ten caflcs of
fa! ted falmon; which Henry di reeled to pafs duty-
free. The falmon are cured in the fame manner
as at Berwick, and a great quantity is fent to Lon-
don in the fpring ; but after that time the adven-
turers begin to barrel and export them to foreign
countries : but we believe that commerce is far lefs
lucrative than it was in former times, partly owing
to the great encreafe of the Newfoundland fifhery,
and partly to the general relaxation of the disci-
pline of abftinence in the Romijh church.
* Region Majejlatem* Stat. Rob. III. c. 7. SAene's A&$.
James IV. Pari. VI.
Ireland
Class IV. SALMON. 293
Ireland (particularly the north) abounds with this Ireland*
fifh: the mod confiderable fifhery is at Cramia,
on the river Ban, about a mile and an half from
Coleraine. When I made the tour of that hofpi-
table kingdom in 1754, it was rented by a neigh-
boring gentleman for 620/. a year, who allured me
that the tenant, his predecefTor, gave 1600/. per
ann. and was a much greater gainer by the bargain
for the reafons before- mentioned, and on account
of the number of poachers who deftroy the filh in
the fence months.
The mouth of this river faces the north, and is
finely ficuated to receive the fifh that roam along
the coaft, in fearch of an inlet into fome frefh water,
as they do all along that end of the kingdom which
oppofes itfelf the northern ocean. We have feen
near Ballkaftle, nets placed in the fea at the foot
of the promontories that jut into it, which the fal-
mon (hike into as they are wandering clofe to fhore,
and numbers are taken by that method.
In the Ban they fifh with nets eighteen fcore
yards long, and are continually drawing night and
day the whole feafon, which we think lafts about
four months, two fets of fixteen men each alter-
nately relieving one another. The bed drawing is
when the tide is coming in: we were told that at a
(ingle draught there were once eight hundred and
forty fifh taken.
A few miles higher up the river is a ware, where
a confiderable number of fifh that efcape the nets
U 3 are
294 SALMON. Class IV.
are taken. We were lately informed, that in the
year 1760 about 320 tons were taken in the Cr an-
na fifhery.
The falmon are cured in this manner : they are
firft fplit, and rubbed with fine fait ; and after ly-
ing in pickle in great tubs, or refervoirs, for fix
weeks, are packed up with layers of coarfe brown
Spanifh fait in cafks, fix of which make a ton. Thefe
are exported to Leghorn and Venice at the price of
twelve or thirteen pounds per ton, but formerly
from fixteen to twenty-four pounds each.
Pcscrip. The falmon is a fifh fo generally known, that a
very brief defcription will ferve. The largeft we
ever heard of weighed feventy four pounds. The
color of the back and fides are grey, fometimes
fpotted with black, fometimes plain : the covers
of the gills are fubject to the fame variety : the
belly filvery : the nofe fharp pointed : the end of
jhe under jaw in the males often turns up in form
of a hook ; fometimes this curvature is very confi-
derable : it is faid that they lofe this hook when
they return to the fea.
The teeth are lodged in the jaws and on the
tongue, and are ilender, but very fharp.
The tail is a little forked.
The
Class IV. G R E Y. 295
The Grey, i. e. cinereous Salmo .eriox. Lig. fyft. 509. 144. Grev,
feu Grifeus. Wil. Icth. 193. Gralax. Faun. Suec. No. 346.
Raiifyn. pifc. 63. Lachfs-forelJen mit Schwartz-
Salmo maculis cinereis, caudae grauen flecken oder punkt-
extremo sequali. Arted. fy~ chens. Wulff. Borufs. No.
non, 23. 43.
WE are uncertain whether this is not a meer
variety of the falmon ; but on the autho-
rity of Mr. Ray, we defcribe them feparate. He
fays it is a very ftrong fifh, that it does not afcend
the frefh waters till Anguft, when it rufhes up
with great violence, that it is rarely taken, and noc
much known.
The inhabitants of the North of England and
of South Wales feem extremely well affured, that
it is a diftincl: fpecies from the falmon. They ap-
pear in the EJk in Cumberland from July to Sep-
tember, and are then in fpavvn. The lower jaw
■ grows hooked, when they are out of feafon. I was
informed they never exceeded thirteen pounds in
weight*.
The head is larger in proportion than that of
the falmon. In the jaws are four rows of teeth :
and on the tongue are eight teeth. The back and
fides, above the lateral line, of a deep grey, fpotted
* I met with a fifh (I fufpetted to be a Grey) taken in the
fea near Conivay. It weighed twenty- two pounds,
U 4 with
z96 S E A T R O U T. Class IV.
with number of purplifh fpots. The belly filvery.
The tail even at the end.
THIS we believe to be the Sewin, or Shewin
of South Wales. The defcription above, was com-
municated to us by Doctor Roberts of Hereford-
Jhire,
145. Sea* Trutta taurina, apud nos in Arted. fynon. 24.
Nortbumbria a Bull-trout. Saimo trutta. S. ocellis ni-
Charlton ex. pifc. 36. gris, iridibus brunneis, pin-
Trutta Salmonata, the Sal- _ na peclorali punctis fex.
mon-trout, Bull-trout, or Lin.fyfi.^o^.Grono'v.Zoopb.
Scurf. Raii fyn. pifc. 63. No. 367.
Wil. lab. 193. Orlax, Boning. Faun. Suec.
Salmo latus, maculis rubris No. 347.
Jiigrifque, cauda aequali.
THIS fpecies migrates like the falmon up feve-
ral of our rivers ; fpawns, and returns to the
fea. That, which I defcribe, was taken in the
Tweed below Berwick^ June 1769.
The fhape was more thick than the common
trout. The weight three pounds two ounces. The
irides filvery : the head thick, fmooth, and duiky,
with a glofs of blue and green : the back of the
fame color, which grows fainter towards the fide
line. The back is plain, but the fides as far as
the lateral line marked with large, diftinct, irregu-
larly ihaped fpots of black : the lateral line ftrait :
the
Class IV. TROUT.
the fides beneath the line, and the belly are white.
Tail broad, and even at the end.
The dorfal fin had twelve rays: the pectoral four-
teen : the ventral nine : the anal ten.
The flefh when bailed is of a pale red, but well
flavored.
Mr. IVillughbfs account of the Salmon, Bull,
or Scurf Trout obfcure. Whether the fame with
this ?
297
Salar. Aufonius Mo/el. 88.
Salar et varius, Trotta. Sal-
<vian. 96.
La Truitte. Be/on, 274.
Trutta fluviatilis. Rondel, flu-
wiat. \6g.Gefner pifc. 1002.
Foren, Forellen. Scbcncvelde,
77-
A Tr&tit. Wil Ictb. 199. Rail
fyn.pifc.6z,.
S. maculis rubris, maxilla
inferiore longiore. Arted.
fymn 2 3 •
Salmo Fario. Lin.Jyf. 509.
Laxorrng, Forell, Stenbit.
Faun. Suec. No. 348.
46. Trout.
IT is matter of furprize that this common fifli
has efcaped the notice of all the antients, ex-
cept Aufonius : it is alfo Angular, that lb delicate a
fpecies fhould be neglected at a time when the
folly of the table was at its height ; and that the
epicures mould overlook a fifh that is found in
fuch quantities in the lakes of their neighborhood,
when they ranfacked the univerfe for dainties. The
milts of Mur<en<e were brought from one place;
the
V)Z T R O U T. Class IV.
the livers of Scari from another * ; and Oyfters even
from fo remote a fpot as our Sandwich f : but there
was, and is a falhion in the article of good
living. The Romans feem to have defpifed the
trout, the piper, and the doreej and we believe
Mr. Quin himfelf would have refigned the rich
paps of a pregnant fowj, the heels of camels §,
and the tongues of Flamingos || , though drefTed
by Heliogabalus's cooks, for a good jowl of falmon
with lobfter lauce.
When Aufonius fpeaks of this fifh, he makes
no euloge on its goodnefs, but celebrates it only
for its beauty.
Purpureifque S a l a r jlellatus Tergore guttis.
With purple fpots the Salar's back is ltained.
Thefe marks point out the fpecies he intended :
what he meant by his Fario is not fo eafy to de-
termine : whether any fpecies of trout, of a fize be-
tween the falar and the falmon; or whether the
falmon itfelf, at a certain age, is not very evident,
* Suetonius, vita Vitellii.
-j* Juvenal Sat. IV. 141.
% Martial, Lib. XIII. Epig. 44.
§ Lamprid. <vit. Heliogab.
|| Martial, Lib. XII. Epig. 7I0
Teque
Class IV. TROUT. 299
*Teque inter geminos /pedes, neutrumque et utrumque,
Qui nee dum Salmo, nee Salar ambiguu/que.
Atnbormn medio Fa rio inter cepte fub tevo.
Salmon or /alar, I'll pronounce thoe neither;
A doubtful kind, that may be none, or either,
Fario, when ftopt in middle growth.
In fact the colors of the trout, and its fpots,
vary greatly in different waters, and in different
fealbns ; yet each may be reduced to one fpecies.
In Llyndivi, a lake in South Wales, are trouts
called Coch y dail, marked with red and black fpots
as big as fix-pences ; others unfpotted, and of a
reddifh hue, that fometimes weigh near ten pounds,
but are bad tailed.
In Lough Neagh in Ireland, are trouts called
there Buddaghs, which I was told fometimes weigh-
ed thirty pounds, but it was not my fortune to fee
any during my (lay in the neighborhood of that vail
water.
Trouts (probably of the fame fpecies) are alfo
taken in Hulfe-water, a lake in Cumberland, of a
much fuperior fize to thofe of Lough Neaglj. Thefe
are fuppofed to be the fame with the trout of the
lake of Geneva, a fifh I have eaten more than
once, and think but a very indifferent one.
In the river Eynion, not far from Machyntleth, Crooked
in Merioneth/hire, and in one of the Snowdon lakes,
are found a variety of trout, which are naturally
deformed, having a ftrange crookednefs near the
tail,
Trouts.
3°o
ROUT. Class IV.
tail, refembling that of the perch before defcribecL
We dwell the lefs on thefe monftrous productions,
as our friend the Hon. Dairies Barrington, has al-
ready given an account of them in an ingenious
difTertation on fome of the Cambrian fifh, publifhed
in the Philofophical Tranj "anions of the year 1767.
Gillaroo The ftomachs of the common trouts are uncom-
monly thick, and mufcular. They feed on the
fhell-fifh of lakes and rivers, as well as on fmall
£fh. They likewife take into their ftomachs gravel,
or fmall ftones, to affift in comminuting the teftace-
ous parts of their food. The trouts of certain lakes
in Ireland, fuch as thofe of the province of Galway,
and fome others, are remarkable for the great
thicknefs of their flomachs, which, from fome
flight refemblance to the organs of digeftion in
Name. birds, have been called gizzards : the Irijh name
the fpecies that has them, Gillaroo trouts. Thefe
ftomachs are fometimes ferved up to table, under
the former appellation. It does not appear to me,
that the extraordinary ftrength of ftomach in the
Irijh fifh, mould give any fufpicion, that it is a
diftincl fpecies : the nature of the waters might in-
creafe the thicknefs; or the fuperior quantity of
fhell-fifh, which may more frequently call for the
life of its comminuting powers than thofe of our
trouts, might occafion this difference. I had op-
portunity of comparing the ftomach of a great
* Hihfiph. Tranfafi. Vol. LXIV. p. 116. 310.
Gillaroo
Class IV. TROUT. 301
Gillaroo trout, with a large one from the Uxbridge
river. The lad, if I recollect, was fmaller, and
out of feafon ; and its ftomach (notwithstanding it
was very thick) was much inferior in flrength to
that of the former : but on the whole, there was
not the left fpecific difference between the two
fubje&s.
Trouts are moll voracious fifh, and afford ex-
cellent diverfion to the angler : the paffion for the
fport of angling is fo great in the neighborhood of
London, that the liberty of fifhing in fome of the
dreams in the adjacent counties, is purchafed at
the rate of ten pounds per annum.
Thefe fifti fhift their quarters to fpawn, and, like
falmon, make up towards the heads of rivers to
depofit their roes. The under jaw of the trout is
fubjed, at certain times, to the fame curvature as
that of the falmon.
A trout taken in Llynallet, in Denbigh/hire, Descrsp.
which is famous for an excellent kind, meafured
feventeen inches, its depth three and three quarters,
its weight one pound ten ounces : the head thick -,
the nofe rather (harp : the upper jaw a little longer
than the- lower \ both jaws, as well as the head,
were of a pale brown, blotched with black : the
teeth (harp and ftrong, difpofed in the jaws, roof
of the mouth and tongue, as is the cafe with the
whole genus, except the Gwyniad, which is tooth-
lefs, and the Grayling, which has none on its
tongue.
The
302
WHITE. Class IV.
The back was dufky ; the fides tinged with a
purplifh bloom, marked with deep purple fpots,
mixed with black, above and below the fide line
which was ftrait : the belly white.
The firfh dorfal fin was fpotted ; the fpurious fin
brown, tipped with red ; the pectoral, ventral, and
anal fins, of a pale brown; the edges of the anal
fin white : the tail very little forked when extend-
ed.
147. White. fT^HIS fpecies migrates out of the fea into the
A river Ejk in Cumberland from July to Sep-
tember^ and is called from its color the Whiting.
When dreffed, their flefh is red, and mod delicious
eating. They have, on their firft appearance from
the fait water, the lernaa falmonea, or falmon loufe,
adhering to them. They have both melt and
fpawn ; but no fry has as yet been obferved. This
is the fifli called by the Scots, Phinocs.
They never exceed a foot in length. The up-
per jaw is a little longer than the lower: in the
firft are two rows of teeth ; in the laft, one : on
the tongue are fix teeth.
The back is ftrait : the whole body of an ele-
gant form : the lateral line is ftrait ; color, be-
tween that and the top of the back, duiky and
filvery intermixed ; beneath the line cf an exqui-
fite
Class IV. SAMLET. s°3
fite filvefy whitenefs : firft dorfal fin fpotted with
black : tail black, and much forked.
The firft dorfal fin has eleven rays ; pectoral*
thirteen ; ventral, nine ; anal, nine.
LET,
LeTacon? Belon. 275. gerin Eboracetifibus. Rait H8* Sam°
Salmulus, Herefordia Samlet Jyn. pifc. 63.
di&us. Wil. Ictb. 192. Salmoneta, a Branlin. Ray's
Salmulus, the Samlet Here- Letters, 199.
fordienjibusy Branlin et Fin-
THE famlet is the left of the trout kind, is
frequent in the Wye, in the upper part of the
Severn, and the rivers that run into it, in the north
of England, and in Wales, It is by feveral ima-
gined to be the fry of the falmon; but our reafons
for diffenting from that opinion are thefe :
Firft, It is well known that the falmon fry ne-
ver continue in frelh water the whole year -, but as
numerous as they appear on their firft efcape from
the fpawn, all vanifh on the firft vernal flood that
happens, which fweeps them into the fea, and
leaves fcarce one behind.
Secondly, The growth of the falmon fry is fo
quick and fo confiderable, as fuddenly to exceed
the bulk of the largeft famlet : for example, the
fry that have quitted the frefh water in the fpringr
not larger than gudgeons, return into it again a
foot or more in length.
Thirdly,
3°4
S A M L E T. Class IV.
Thirdly, The falmon attain a confiderable bulk
before they begin to breed : the famlets, on the
contrary, are found male and female*, (diftinguifh-
ed by the milt and roe) of their common fize.
Fourthly, They are found in the frefh waters in
all times of the year, and even at feafons when
the falmon fry have gained a confiderable fize.
It is well known, that near Shrewjbury (where the
are called Samfons) they are found in fuch quanti-
ties in the month of September, that a fkilful
angler, in a coracle, will take with a fly from
twelve to fixteen dozen in a day.
They fpawn in November and December, at which
time thofe of the Severn pufh up towards the head
of that fair river, quitting the lefTer brooks, and re-
turn into them again when they have done.
They have a general refemblance to the trout,
therefore muft be defcribed comparatively.
Firft, The head is proportionably narrower, ancl
the mouth lefs than that of the trout.
Secondly, Their body is deeper.
Thirdly, They feldom exceed fix or feven in-
ches in length : at moil, eight and a half.
Fourthly, The pectoral fins have generally but
one large black fpot, though fometimes a fingle
fmall one attends it ; whereas the pectoral fins of
the trout are more numeroufly marked.
Fifthly, The fpurious or fat fin on the back is
* It has been vulgarly imagined, that there were no other
than males of this fpecies.
never
^
"S
cd
^
*-*>
Class IV. C H A R R.
never tipped with red -, nor is the edge of the anal
fin white.
Sixthly, The fpots on the body are fewer, and
not fo bright.
It is alfo marked from the back to the fides
with fix or feven large bluifh bars; but this is
not a certain character, as the fame is fometimes
found in young trouts.
Seventhly, The tail of 'the famlet is much more
forked than that of the trout.
Thefe fifli are very frequent in the rivers of Scot-
land, where they are called Pars. They are alfo
common in the Wye, where they are known by
the name of Skirtings, or Lafprings.
305
L'Omble, ou Humble. Belou,
281.
Umbla feu Humble Belonii
Gefner pifc. 1005.
Umbla minor. Gefner pifc.
[013.
Salmovix pedalis, pinnis ven- *49* Charr.
tralibus rubris, maxilla in-
fericre longiore. Afted.fyn.
2K,
Salmo alpinus. Lin.fyfi. 510.
Groncv. Zoopb. No. 372.
Torgoch Wallis. Weftmor- Roding, Lapponibus Raud,
landis Red Charre Lacus Faun. Suec. No. 124.
Winander mere. Wil. Icth. Charr-fifh. Phil. Tranf 1755.
196. Raiifyn. pifc. 65. 210.
>TpHE charr is an inhabitant of the lakes of
•*■ the north, and of thofe of the mountanous
parts of Europe. It affects clear and pure waters,
and is very rarely known to wander into running
Vol, III. X ftreams,
3°6 C H A R R. Class IV.
ftreams, except into fuch whofe bottom is fimilar
to the neighboring lake.
It is found in vaft abundance in the cold lakes
on the fummits of the Lapland Alps, and is almoft
the only fifh that is met with in any plenty in
thofe regions ; where it would be wonderful how
they fubfifted, had not Providence fupplied thenr
with innumerable larva of the Gnat kind*: thefe
are food to the Mm, who in their turn are a fup-
port to the migratory Laplanders in their fummer
voyages to the diftant lakes.
In fuch excurfions thofe vacant people find a
luxurious and ready repaft in thefe fim, which
they drefs and eat without the addition f of fauces;
for exercife and temperance render ufelefs the in-
ventions of epicurifm.
* A pupil of Linnaeus remarks in the fourth volume of the
Aman. Acad. p. 156, that the fame infers which are fuch a
pell to the rein deer, afford fuftenance to the fifh of the valt
lakes and rivers of Lapland. But at the fame time that we
wonder at Ltnn<eus's inattention to the food of the birds and
nih of that country, which abound even to a noxious degree,
we muft, in juftice to that Gentleman, acknowledge an over-
fight of our own in the fecond volume of the Britijh Zoology >,
p. 522, edition the fecond, where we give the Lapland waters
only one fpecies of water plant ; for on a more careful review
of that elaborate performance, the Flora Lappomca, we dis-
cover three other fpecies, viz. Scirfus, No. 18, Alopecurus,
No. 38, Ranunculus, No. 234; but thofe fo thinly fcattered over
the Lapland lakes, as ftill to vindicate our affertion, as to the
fcarcenefs of plants in the waters of alpine countries.
f Arted. Sp. fife, 52.
There
Class IV. C H A R R. 3°7
There are but few lakes in our ifland that pro-
duce this fifh, and even thofe not in any abundance.
It is found in Winander Mere in Wejlmorland -, in
Llyn Quellyn, near the foot of Snowdon ; and be-
fore the difcovery of the copper-mines, in thofe
of Llynberris, but the mineral ftreams have entirely
deftroyed the fifli in the laft lakes *. Whether
the waters in Ireland afford the charr, we are
uncertain, but imagine not, except it has been
overlooked by their writers on the natural hiftory
of that kingdom. In Scotland it is found in Loch
Inch, and other neighboring lakes, and is faid to
go into the Spey to fpawn.
The largeft and mod beautiful we ever received
were taken in Winander Mere, and were commu-
nicated to us by the Rev. Mr. Farrijh of Carlijle,
with an account of their natural hiftory. He
favored me with five fpecimens, two under the
name of the Cafe Charr, male and female ; another
he called the Gelt Charr, i. e. a charr which had
not fpawned the preceding leafon, and on that ac-
count is reckoned to be in the greateft perfection.
The two others were infcribed, the Red Charr, the
Silver or Gilt Charr, the Carpio Lacus Benaci,
Raii Jyn. pifc. 66, which laft are in Wefimorland
diftingu idied by the epithet red, by reafon of the
flefh affuming a higher color than the other when
drefied.
They are alfo found in certain lakes in Mgrionetbjbire,
X 2 On
3o$ C H A R R. Class IV.
Varieties. On the clofeft examination, we could not dis-
cover any fpecific differences in thefe fpecimens,
therefore mud defcribe them as the fame fifh, fub-
ject only to a flight variation in their form, here-
after to be noted. But there is in another refpect
an eflential difference, we mean in their ceconomy,
which is in all beings invariable -, the particulars
we fhall deliver in the very words of our obliging
informant.
df the case The Umbla minor, or cafe charr, fpawns about
charr. Michaelmas, and chiefly in the river Brathy, which
uniting with another called the Rowthay, about a
quarter of a mile above the lake, they both fall
into it together. The Brathy has a black rocky
bottom j the bottom of the Rowthay is a bright
fand, and into this the charr are never obferved'
to enter. Some of them however fpawn in the lake,
but always in fuch parts of it which are ftony, and
refemble the channel of the Bralhy. They are fup-
pofed to be in the higheft perfection about May,
and continue fo all the fummer, yet are rarely
caught after April. When they are fpawning in
the river they will take a bait, but at no other
time, being commonly taken, as well as the other
fpecies, in what they call hreafi nets, which are in
length about twenty-four fathoms, and about five,
where broaden:.
Gilt The feafon which the other fpecies fpawns in is
from the beginning of January to the end of
March. They are never known to afcend the
rivers,
Class IV. C H A R R. 309
rivers, but always in thofe parts of the lake which
are fpringy, where the bottom is fmooth and fandy,
and the water warmed. The fimermen judge of
this warmth, by obferving that the water feldom
freezes in the places where they fpawn, except
in intenfe frofts, and then the ice is thinner than in
other parts of the lake. They are taken in great-
eft plenty from the end of September to the end of
November : at other times they are hardly to be
met with. This fpecies is much more efteemed
for the table than the other, and is very delicate
when potted.
We mud obferve, that this account of the fpawn-
ing feafon of the Wefimorland charrs, agrees very
nearly with that of thofe of Wales, the lad appear-
ing about a month later, keep moving from fide to
fide of the pool, and then retire into the deep
water, where they are fometimes but rarely taken.
This remarkable circumftanee of the different
feafon of fpawning in fifh, apparently the fame (for
the red charr of IVinander, is certainly not the
Carpio Lacus Benaci) puzzles us greatly, and
makes us wifh that the curious, who border on
that lake, would pay farther attention to the na-
tural hiftory of thefe fifh, and favor us with fome
further lights on the fubject..
We {hall now defcribe the varieties bv the names
afcribed to them in the north.
The length of the red charr to the divifion in its Rei> Char.?.,
tail, was twelve inches •, its biggeft circumference
X 3 almofi:
3io C H A R R. Class IV.
almoft feven. The firft dorfal fin five inches and
three quarters from the tip of its nofe, and confift-
ed of twelve branched rays : the firft of which was
fhort, the fifth the longed: : the fat fin was very
fmall.
Each of the five fifh had double noftrils, and
fmall teeth in the jaws, roof of the mouth, and
on the tongue.
The head, back, dorfal fin, and tail of each,
was of a dufky blue ; the fides rather paler, mark-
ed with numbers of bright red fpots : the bellies
of the Red Cbarr were of a full and rich red ;
thofe of the Cafe Cbarr rather paler; from this par-
ticular the Wekb call thefe fifh Torgocb, or red
belly.
The firft rays of the anal and ventral fins of each,
were of a pure white; the reft of each fin on the
lower part of the body, tinged with red.
The lateral line (I rait, dividing the fifh in two
equal parts, or nearly fo.
The jaws of the Cafe Cbarr are perfectly even ;
on the contrary, thole the Red Cbarr were unequal,
the upper jaw being the broadeft, and the teeth
hung over the lower, as might be perceived on,
parTing the finger over them.
The branchioftegons rays were, on different fides
of the fame fifh, unequal in number, viz. 12,-11,
11,-10, 10-9, except in one, where they were
ji,--u.
Gelt f he Gelt, or Barren Cbarr, was rather more
****** flender
H
3
Class IV.
GRAYLING.
flender than the others, as being without fpawn.
The back of a gloffy duiky blue: the fides filvery,
mixed with blue, fpotted with pale red : the fides
of the belly were of a pale red, the bottom white.
The tails of each bifurcated.
The charrs we have feen, brought from Snow-
don lakes, were rather fmaller than thofe of Weft-
morland, their colors paler. The fuppofed males
very much refemble the Gelt Charr\ but that is
not a] certain diftinftion of fex, for the Rev. Mr.
Farrington *, has told me that the rimer men do not
make that diftinction.
311
®u{AaX\o$ ^Elian. de an. lib.
xiv. C. 2 2.
Umbra Aufonii Mofella. 90.
Thymalus, Thymus. Sal-uian.
81. Belon> 276.
Thymus, Umbra fluviatilis.
Rondel, fiwv. 187, 172. Gef-
* ner pifc. 132.
A Grayling, or Umber. Wil.
Icth. 187. Rail fyn. pifc.
62. Coregonus maxilla fu-
periore longiore, pinna dor-
fiofficulorum viginti trium.
Arted. fynon. 20.
Salmo Thymallus. Lin. fyjl.
512. Gronwv. 'Zjooph. No.
375. Afch. Kram. 390.
150. Gr
I N 1
THE grayling haunts clear and rapid dreams,
and particularly fuch that flow through
mountanous countries. It is found in the rivers
of Derby/hire \ in fome of thofe of the north ; in
* Who favored the Royal Society with a paper on the Welch
charr. Vide Phil, Tranf. 1755.
X
the
3i2 GRAYLING. Class IV.
the Tame near Ludlow, in the Lug, and other
dreams near Leominfter; and in the river near
Chriftchurch, Hampjhire. It is alfo very common
in Lapland-, the inhabitants make ufe of the guts
of this fifh inftead of rennet, to make the cheefe
which they get from the milk of the rein deer*.
It is a voracious fifh, rifes freely to the fly, and
will very eagerly take a bait. It is a very fwift
fwimmer, and difappears like the- tranfient paffage
of a fhadow, from whence we believe is derived
the name of Umbra.
Effugienfque oculos cehri levis Umbra natatu f .
The Umbra fwift efcapes the quickeft eye.
Thymalus and Thymus, are names bellowed on it
on account of the imaginary fcent, compared by
fome to that of thyme ; but we never could per-
ceive any particular fmell.
Descrip. It is a fifh of an elegant form; lefs deep than
that of a trout : the largefl we ever heard of was
taken near Ludlow, which was above half a yard
long, and weighed four pounds fix ounces, but
this was a very rare inftance.
The irides are filvery, tinged with yellow: the
teeth very minute, feated in the jaws and the roof
of the mouth, but none on the tongue : the head
is dufky : the covers of the gills of a gloffy green :
* Flora Lap. 109. Aman Acad, IV. 159.
•{• Aufonii Mofel. 90.
the
Class IV.
S M E L T
the back and fides of a fine filvery grey, but when
the fifth is juft taken, varied (lightly with blue and
gold : the fide-line is ftrait.
The fcales large, and the lower edges dufky,
forming ftrait rows from head to tail.
The firft dorfal fin has twenty-one rays; the
three or four firft are the fhorteft, the others almoft
of equal lengths •, this fin is fpotted, all the others
are plain.
The tail is much forked.
31,
Epelan demer. Belcn, 282.
Eperlanus. Rondel. Jtwviat.
196. Gefner pifc. 362.
Spirincus et Stincus. Gefner
Paralip. 29.
A Spyrling a Sprote. Turner
epiji. ad. Gefn.
Stindt, et Stinckfifch. Scho-
nevelde, 70-
A Smelt, Wil. Icth. 202.
Rail fyn. pifc. 66.
Ofmerus radiis pinnae ani fep-
tendecim. Arted. fynon. 21.
Salmo eperlanus. S. capite
diaphano, radiis pinnae ani
feptendecim. Lin. fyfl. 511.
Grono'v. Zooph. No.
Nors, Slom. Faun. fuec. No.
35°-
ici. Smelt,
THE fmelt inhabits the feas of the northern
parts of Europe^ and we believe never is
found as far fouth as the Mediterranean : the Seine
is one of the French rivers which receive it, but
whether it is found fouth of that, we have not at
prefent authority to fay. If we Can depend on the
obfervations of navigators, who generally have too
much to think of to attend to the minutiae of na-
tural hiftory, thefe fifli are taken in the ftraits of
Magellan^
3*4
S M E L T. Class IV.
Magellan*, and of a mod furprifing fize, fome
meafuring twenty inches in length, and eight in cir-
cumference.
They inhabit the feas that warn thefe iflands the
whole year, and never go very remote from more,
except when they afcend the rivers. It is remark-
ed in certain rivers that they appear a long time
before they fpawn, being taken in great abundance
in Nov ember ) December, and January, in the Thames
and Bee, but in others not till February, and in
March and April they fpawn ; after which f they all
return to the fair water, and are not feen in the
rivers till the next feafon. It has been obferved,
that they never come into .the Merfey as long as
there is any ihow water in the river.
Thefe fifh vary greatly in lize, but the largeft
we ever heard of was thirteen inches long, and
weighed half a pound.
They have a very particular fcent, ,from whence
is derived one of their Englijh names Smelt, i. e.
fmell it. That of Sparling, which is ufed in Wales
and the north of England, is taken from the French
Eperlan. There is a wonderful difagreement in the
opinion of people in refpecl to the fcent of this
filh; fome alfert it flavors of the violet-, the Ger*
* Narborough's Voy* 123.
f In the river Conway, near Llanrivft, and in the Merfey
they never continue above three or four weeks.
mans
Class IV. SMELT. $15
mans, for a very different reafon, diftinguifli it by
the elegant title of Stinckfifch *.
Smelts are often fold in the ftreets of London
fplit and dried. They are called dried Sparlings,
and are recommended as a relifli to a glafs of wine
in the morning.
It is a fifh of a very beautiful form and colour :
the head is tranfparent, and the fkin in general fo
thin, that with a good microfcope the blood may
be obferved to circulate.
The irides are filvery : the pupil of a full black : Descrip,
the under jaw is the longed : in the front of the
upper jaw are four large teeth ; thofe in the fides
of both are fmall; in the roof of the mouth are
two rows of teeth ; on the tongue two others of
large teeth.
The firft dorfal fin has eleven rays ; the pectoral
fins the fame number ; the#ventral eight -9 the anal
fourteen.
The fcales are fmall, and readily drop off: the
tail confifts of nineteen rays, and is forked.
The color of the back is whitifh, with a caft of
green, beneath which it is varied with blue, and
then fucceeds a beautiful glofs of a filvery hue.
* And not without reafon, if we may .depend on Linnaus,
who fays there are in the Baltic two varieties, the one, which
is called Nors, fcetidijfimus, Jierccris inftar, which in the early
fpring, when the peafants corne to buy it, fills all the ftreets
of Vpfal with the fmell. He adds, that at this feafon agues
reign there. Faun. fuec. /, 125,
Without
3i6 G W I N I A D. Class IV.
** Without Teeth.
152. Gwi- Le Lavaret. Belon, 278. 183. Rati fyn. pifc. 61.
niad. Lavaretus ; Pifcis Lemani la- Albula csrulea. Scbeucbzer it.
cus Bezola vulgo nuncupa- ^/^. H. 481.
tus. Alius Pifcis proprius Coregonus maxilla fuperiore
Lemani lacus. Rondel, flu- longiore plana, pinna dorfi
<viat. 162, 163, 164. Gef~ oificulorum 14. Arted.Jynon.
ner pifc. 29, 30, 31. 19.
Albula nobilis,Snepel, Helte? Salmo Lavaretus. Lin. fyfl.
Schonevelde, 12. 512.
Vandefius et Gevandeiius. Sib. Sijk, Stor-fijk. Faun. Suec,
Scot. 26. No.^ 352.
Guiniad Wallis pifcis lacus Gwiniad. Phil, Tranf. 1767,
Balenfls, Ferra (ut puto) 211.
idem. Wil Icth. 183. Rail Adeliifch, Gangfifch, Weifs-
Jyn. pifc. 61. fifch, Weifler Blauling,
Lavaretus Allobrogum, Schel- Schnapel. Wuljf Borufs. 37.
ley Cumbcrlandis. Wil. Icth. Reinankl. Kram. 389.
THIS fifli is an inhabitant of feveral of the
lakes of the Alpine parts of Europe. It is
found in thofe of Switzerland, Savoy, and Italy ;
of Norway, Sueden, Lapland*, and Scotland', in
* Schaffer, in his hifcory of Lapland, p. 140. fays, that
thefe fifh are caught there of the weight of ten or twelve
pounds. We wifh Linnaus had executed his intention of fa-
voring the world with his Lacbefis Lapponica, in which he pro-
mifed a complete hiftory of that country. I once reminded
him of it, and it is with true regret, that I give his anfwer :
Nunc nimis ferb inciperem,
Me quoque deb Hit at feries immenfa lab or urn,
Ante meum tempus cogor et effe fenem :
Firmafit ilia licet folvetur in aquore na-vis,
Qua nunquam l/quidis flee a care bit aquis.
thole
i
' /
Class IV. G W I N I A D.
thofe of Ireland, and of Cumberland; and in Wales,
in that of Llyntegid, near Bala, in Merioneth/hire,
It is the fame with the Ferra of the lake of Ge-
neva, the Schelly*, of Hulfe-water\ the Pollen of
Lough Neagh, and the Vangis and Juvdngis of
£<?<:£ Mabon. The Sf0/a& have a tradition that it
was firft introduced there by the beauteous queen,
their unhappy Mary Stuart-, and as in her time the
Scotch court was much frenchified, it feems likely
that the name was derived from the French, vendoifs,
a dace ; to which a flight obferver might be tempt-
ed to compare it from the whitenefs of its fcales.
The Britijh name Gwiniad, or whitings was beftow-
ed on it for the fame reafon. -
It is a gregarious fifh, and approaches the mores
in vaft fnoals in fpring and in fummer, which
prove in many places a blefied relief to the poor of
inland countriesj in the fame degree as the an-
nual return of the herring is to thofe who inhabit
the coafts. The Rev. Mr. Farrijh, of Carlijle,
wrote me word, that he was afTured by a Hulfe-
water fifherman, that laft fummer he took between
kvcn and eight thoufand at one draught. I muft
not pafs by that gentleman without acknowledg-
ing my obligations to him for an account of the
Charrs and the Schelly -, he being one of the valuable
embellifhers of this work, for whom 1 am indebted
to the friendftiip of his late worthy prelate.
* The inhabitants of Cumberland give this name alfo to
the chub, from its being a fcaly fiih.
The
3*7
318 G W I N I A D. Class I
The Gwiniad is a fifti of an infipid tafte, and
mufl be eaten foon, for it will not keep long ; thofe
that choofe to preferve them do it with fait. They
die very foon after they are taken. Their fpawn-
ing feafon in Llyntegid is in December.
It has long ago been obferved in Cambden*, that
thefe fifh never wander into the Dee, nor the fal- 1
mon never ventures into the lake : this muft be
allowed to be generally the cafe j but by accident
the firft have been known to ftray as far as Lhn-
drillo, fix miles down the river, and a falmon has
now and then been found trefpafiing in the lakef.
The largeft Gwiniad we ever heard of weighed
between three and four pounds : we have a Ferra
we brought with us out of Switzerland, that is
fifteen inches long ; but thefe are unco .imon fizes :
the fifh which we defcribe was eleven inches long,
its greateft depth three.
The head fmall, fmooth, and of a dufky hue:
the eyes very large : the pupil of a deep blue :
the nofe blunt at the end : the jaws of equal
length : the mouth fmall and toothlefs : the bran-
chioftegous rays nine : the covers of the gills fil-
very, powdered with black.
The back is a little arched, and (lightly carinat-
ed : the color, as far as the lateral line, glofTed with
deep blue and purple, but towards the lines afiumes
* Vol II. 790.
t Hon, D, Barrington'j Letter to Dr. Watfon. Phil. Tranf.
1767.
a filvery
lass IV. G W I N I A D. 319
a filvery call, tinged with gold, beneath which
thofe colors entirely prevale.
The fide line is quite ftrait, and confifls of a
feries of diftinct fpots of a dufky hue : the belly is
a little prominent, and quite flat on the bottom.
The firft dorfal fin is placed almoft in the mid-
dle, and confifls of fourteen branched rays ; the
fecond is thin, tranfparent, and not diflant from
the tail.
The pectoral fins had eighteen rays, the firft the
longeft, the others gradually fhortening •, the ven-
tral fins were compofed of twelve, and the anal of
fifteen, all branched at their ends ; the ventral fins
in fome are of a fine fky blue, in others as if pow-
dered with blue fpecks -y the ends of the other lower
fins are tiwged with the fame color.
The tail is very much forked : the fcales large,
and adhere clofe to the body.
Upper
320 PIKE. Class IV.
XXXIV. Upper jaw fhorter than the lower.
PIKE. Body long, {lender, compreffed Tideways.
One dorfal fin placed near the tail.
153. Pike. luc;us# Jufonii Mofella, 122. Pike, or Pickerel. Wil Icth*
Luccio. Salvian. 94. 236. Rait Jyn pifc. II 2.
Le Brochet. Belon, 292. Itin. Efox roftro plagioplateo. Art*
104. fynon. 26.
Lucius. Rondel, fluvial. 188. Efox Lucius Lin. fyfi. 516*
Gefner pifc. 50Q. Grozo'v Zccpb. No. 361.
Heket, Hecht. Scboneveldet Gjadda. Faun. Suec. No. 355.
44. Hecht. Kram. 388.
THE pike is common in mod of the lakes of
Europe but the largefl are thofe taken in Lap-
land, which, according to Sch<effer, are fometimes
eight feet long. They are taken there in great abun-
dance, dried, and exported for fale. The largefl fifh
or this kind which we ever heard of in England^
weighed thirty-five pounds.
According to the common faying, thefe fifh were
introduced into England in the reign of Henry VIII.
in 1537. They were fo rare, that a pike was fold
for double the price of a houfe-lamb in February, and.
a pickerel for more than a fat capon. How far this
may be depended on, I cannot fay, for this fifh is
mentioned in the Boke of St. Albons, printed in the
year 1496, and is not there fpoke of as a fcarce fifh*
as was then the cafe with refpecl to the carp. Great
numbers of this fifh were drefTed in the year 14.66,
at the great feafl given by George Nevil, Arch-
bimop of Tork.
All writers who treat of this fpecies bring in-
flances of its vafl voracioufnefs. We have known
one that was choaked by attempting to fwallow
one
Class IV. PIKE. 32 1
one of its own fpecies that proved too large a mor-
fel. Yet its jaws are very loofely connected -, and
have on each fide an additional bone like the jaw
of a viper, which renders them capable of greater
diftenfion when it fwallows its prey. It does not
confine itfelf to feed on fifh and frogs •, it will
devour the water rat, and draw down the young
ducks as they are fwimming about. In a manu*
fcript note which we found, p. 244, of our copy
of Plott's Hiftory of Stafford/hire, is the following
extraordinary fact : " At Lord Gower's canal ac
" Trentbaw, a pike feized the head of a fwan as
" fhe was feeding under water, and gorged fo
" much of it as killed them both. The fervants
" perceiving the fwan with its head under water
" for a longer time than ufual, took the boat3
" and found both fwan and pike dead *."
But there are inftances of its fiercenefs Rill more
furprizing, and which indeed border a little on the
marvellous. Gefnerf relates, that a famifhed pike
in the Rhone feized on the lips of a mule that was
brought to water, and that the beaft drew the fi(h
out before it could difengage itfelf. That people
have been bit by thefe voracious creatures while
they were wafhing their legs, and that they will
* This note we afterwards difcovered was wrote by Mr.
Plott, of Oxford, who allured me he inferted it on good au^
thority.
f Gefner pifc. 503,
Vol. III. T even
322 PIKE. Class IV.
even contend with the otter for its prey, and endea-
vour to force it out of its mouth *.
Small fifh fhew the fame uneafinefs and detefla-
tion at the prefence of this tyrant, as the little birds
do at the fight of the hawk or owl. When the
pike lies dormant near the furface (as is fre-
quently the cafe) the leffer fifh are often obferved
to fwim around it in vaft numbers, and in great
anxiety. Pike are often haltered in a noofe, and
taken while they lie thus afleep, as they are often
found in the ditches near the Thames in the month
of May.
In the fhallow water of the LincolnJJoire fens they
are frequently taken in a manner peculiar, we be-
lieve, to that county, and the ifle of Ceylon -f\
The fifhermen make ufe of what is called a crown-
net, which is no more than a hemifpherical bafker,
open at top and bottom. He (lands at the end
of one of the little fenboats, and frequently puts
his bafket down to the bottom of the water, then
poking a flick into it, difcovers whether he has
any booty by the ftriking of the fifh ; and vaft
numbers of pike are taken in this manner.
Longevity. The longevity of this fifh is very remarkable, if
we may credit the accounts given of it. Rzaczyn-
Jki\ tells us of one that was ninety years old*,
* Walton* 157.
f Knox's Hi ft, Ceylon, 28.
\ Hi ft* Nat. Pclonia?, 152.
but
Class IV. PIKE. 323
but Gefner* relates, that in the year 1497, a P^e
was taken near Hailbrun, in Suabia, with a brazen
ring affixed to it, on which were thefe words in
Greek characters : I am the fijh which was firft of all
put into this lake by the hands of the governor of the
univerfe,- Frederick the Second, the $th 0/ October,
1230 : fo that the former rnuft have been an infant
to this Methufalem of a fifh.
Pikes fpavvn in March or April, according to
the coldnefs or warmth of the weather. When
they are in high leafon their colors are very fine,
being green, fpotted with bright yellow ; and the
gills are of a mod vivid and full red. When out
of feafon, the green changes to grey, and the yel-
low fpots turn pale.
The head is very flat ; the upper jaw broad, and Descrif,
is fhorter than the lower: the under jaw turns up a
little at the end, and is marked with minute punc~
tures.
The teeth are very fharp, difpofed only in the
front of the upper jaw, but in both fides of the
lower, in the roof of the mouth, and often the
tongue. The flit of the mouth, or the gape, is
very wide ; the eyes fmall.
The dorfal fin is placed very low on the back,
and confifts of twenty-one rays •, the pectoral of
fifteen \ the ventral of eleven j the anal of eighteen.
The tail is bifurcated.
* Jconts pifcium, 316, where a print of the ring is given.
Y 2 Bitivrf.
pH
GAR PIKE. Class IV,
35.4. Gar. BfiXow. Arijh Hi/?, an. II.
c. 15. &c.
BeXo'w, Pa<pi$? Atbenaus lib.
VII. 319.
Acus, five Belone P/r/wV Ztf.
IX. <r. 51.
Acuchia. Safoian, 68.
L'Aguille, ou Orphie. Belott,
161.
Acus prima fpecies. Rondel.
227. Gefner fife. 9.
Horn-fifck. Sebone<veldef 11.
Horn-fifh,. or Gar-fiih. ^>7.
/rt£. 231. Raii fy?i, pifc*
109.
Efox roftro cufpidato graciii
fubtereti, et fpithamali.
Arted. fynon. 27.
Efox Belone. E. roftro utra-
que maxilla dentata. Lin.
fyji. 517. Grono-v. Zoopb.
No. 362.
Nabbgjadda, Horngiall. Faun*
Suec. No. 156.
See-naadel, Sack-nadel. Wulff
Borufs. No. 70.
THIS fifh which is found in many places, is
known by the name of the Sea Needle. It
comes in fhoals on our coafts in the beginning of
fummer, and precedes the mackrel: it has a re-
femblance to it in tafte, but the light green, which
(tains the back bone of this fifti when boiled, gives
many people a difguft to it.
Descrip. The common fea pike, or fea needle, fometimes
grows to the length of three feet, or more.
The jaws are very long, (lender, and fharp
pointed ; the under extends much farther than the
upper, and the edges of both are armed with
numbers of fhort flender teeth : the infide of the
mouth is purple : the tongue fmall : the eyes large :
the irides filvery : the noftrils wide and round.
The body is (lender : the belly quite fiat, bounded
on both fides by a rough line.
The
Class IV. SAURY PIKE, fij
The pectoral fins confift of fourteen rays ; the
ventral fin fmall, and placed very remote from the
head, confifts of fcven rays, the firft fpiny.
The dorfal fin lies on the very lowed part of the
back, confifts of fixteen rays ; the firft are high,
the others lower as they approach the tail; the
anal fin is of the fame form, and placed oppofite
to the other ; and has twenty-one rays. The tail
is much forked.
The colors are extremely beautiful when the fifli
is in the water : the back of a fine green, beneath
that appears a rich changeable blue and purple :
the fides and belly are of a fine filvery hue.
Saurus, RondeL pifc. 232. fyn. pifc. 169. 155. Saury,
Skipper, Cornubienfium. Rail The Saury. Tour Scotland 1769.
THE length is eleven inches : the nofe (lender :
the jaws produced like thofe of the fea needle,
but of equal length. The upper mandible a little
incurvated. Their length one inch.
The eyes large; the body anguilliform : but
towards the tail grows fuddenly fmaller, and tapers
to a very inconfiderable girth. On the lower part
of the back is a fmall fin, and between it and the
tail fix fpurious like thofe of the mackrel. Cor-
refpondent to thefe, below are the anal fin and fix
fpurious. The pectoral and ventral fins very fmall :
Y 3 the
326 SAURY PIKE. Class IV.
the tail much forked. The back dufky : the belly
bright and filvery.
Great numbers of thefe fifh were thrown afhore
on the fands of Leitb9 near Edinburgh, after a
great ftorm in November 1768. Rondeletius de-
icribes this fpecies among the fifh of the Mediter-
ranean ; but fpeaks of it as a rare kind.
Teeth
XXV
JSr<?25t
ARGENTINE
ATHERINE
27? 15*].
Class IV. ARGENTINE. 327
Teeth in the laws and tongue. XXXV.
T7U.U ua ARGEN-
Eight branch loilegous rays. TINE.
Vent near the tail.
The ventral fins compofed of many rays.
Sphyraenaparva,u>efphyraena2 Argentina. Arted. fynon. 17. it6.Sheppy.
fecunda fpecies. Rondel, zzj. Argentina Sp by r ana. Lin.
Ge/ner pi/c.SS^} fyfi. 518. Gronov. Zooph.
Pifciculus Roma, Argentina No. 349 ?
diftuSc Wil. Icth. 229. Rail
fyn. pifc. 108 ?
A LITTLE fifh, which I believe to be of
this fpecies, was brought to me in 1769,
taken in the fea near Downing.
The length was two inches one-fourth: the
eyes large; and irides filvery. The lower jaw
doped much : the teeth fmall.
The body compreffed, and of an equal depth
almoft to the anal fin. The tail forked.
The back was of a dufky green : the fides and
covers of the gills as if plated with filver. The la-
teral line was in the middle and quite flrait.
On each fide of the belly was a row of circular
punctures : above them another, which ceafed near
the vent.
Mr. Wtllughhy fays, that the outfide of the air
bladder of this fifh confifts of a foliaceous filvery
fkin, which was made ufe of in the manufacture
of artificial pearl,
Y 4 The
&*
A T P E R I N E,
Class IV.
XXXVI.
ATHE-
RINE,
The upper jaw a little flat.
Six branchioftegous rays.
A filvery ft ripe along the fidet
I57. Athe- Epfetus? Beton, 209.
P-ine, E^vjto^, Atherina. Rondel.
215, 216. Boffuet Epig.
66, 67. Ge/ner pi/c. 71,
Pifciculus Anguella Venetiis
di&us ; forte Hepfetus Ron-
deletii, vel Atherina ejuf-
209.
dem. Wil. Icth.
Raii fyn. pi/c. 79.
Atherina. Arted. Jynon. App.
116.
Atherina Hepfetus. A. pinna
ani radiis fere duodecim.
Lin. fyji. 5 1 9. Grono<u,
Zooph. No. 399.
THIS fpecies is very common in the fea near
Southampton, where it is called a Smelt. [ The
higheft feafon is from March to the latter end of
May, or beginning of June; in which month it
fpawns. It never deferts the place ^ and is con-
ftantly taken except in hard froft. It is alfo found
on other coafts of our ifland.
The length is above four inches one-fourth.
The back ftrait: the belly a little protuberant.
On the back are two fins. I neglected to count
the rays. The tail is much forked.
The fifh is femipeiiucid, covered with fcales :
the color filvery, tinged with yellow : the fide line
ftrait ; beneath it is a row of fmall black fpots.
Body
''-.
Class IV, M U L L E T- 329
Body and covers of the gills clothed with large ™™L
fcales.
Six incurvated branchioftegous rays.
Teeth on the tongue and in the palate only.
Kspatos, Ksrosug. Arifi. Hift. Cephalus. Rondel. 260. Gefner 158. Mul-
an. lib. V. c. 11, &c. P'A 549- , LEI.
Tr , . rr 7 TTT Mullet, Wil. Ictb. 274. Rail
Kzrosu;. 0#«w £&&**/. III. jyn% pij-Ct g4.
98. Athenaus lib. VII. 306. Mugil# Amd% fynm% ^
Mugil 0<vid Halieut. 37. Pli- Mugil cephalus. M. pinna
nil lib. IX. c. 8. 17. dorfali anteriore quinque
Cephalo. Salvian, 75. radiate. Lin. fyft. 520.
jLe Mulet. Be/on, 205. Gronov. Zoopb. No. 397.
npHE mullet is juftly ranked by Ariftotk
■ among the P if ess Littorales^ or thofe that
prefer the fhores to the full fea : they are found
in great plenty on feveral of the fandy coafts of
our ifland, and haunt in particular thofe fmall bays
that have influxes of frefh water. They come in
great fhoals, and keep rooting like hogs in the
fand or mud, leaving their traces in form of large
round holes. They are very cunning, and when
furrounded with a^net, the whole fhoal frequently
efcap.es by leaping over it, for when one takes the
lead, the others are fure to follow : this circum-
flance is taken notice of by Ogpian\ whether the
latter part of his obfervation is true, is what we
are uncertain,
330 M U L L E T. Class IV.
Ket^ tv; [X£v Trtexlycriv h aymvmvi klvoio,
Emo/iev©- dobov xti WEgiogofAov vyvolmEV.
T"4>i y ava§ga<rxEi tehwiAEvc; udaro$ ajcgx,
OgQc; aw (TTTEvduv ocrcrov ct9evo<; aX/xtzn xk(pa
Of(Jt$<rai' (3sXns 3e <ra6$govo$ &k e/juztykts.
Hotowu yap ptTTrjcri hou vrarca WEto-fActTa <pE\hiov
Vy'ityu; uTTEgxXTO, kcu E%iiku£z pogoio.
Ei 3s" oy o.vo$im\Qe\$ TXforw rohov, cumg 6hi<r§yi
E? @fOXov$ *K ^ EtSEVZO. @ta£ETCU, &£' UVOfiiEt,
Axvvpzvos' 'KEigYi Se (juxQuv a7ro7rccuETai ofjtw$.
The Mullet*, when encircling feines inclofe,
The fatal threads and treach'rous bofom knows.
Inftant he rallies all his vig'rous powers,
And faithful aid of every nerve implores ;
O'er battlements of cork up-darted flies,
And finds from air th' efcape that fea denies.
But mould the firft attempt his hopes deceive,
And fatal fpace th' imprifon'd fall receive,
Exhaufted ftrength. no fecond leap fupplies ;
Self-doom 'd to death the proilrate viftim lies,
Refign'd with painful expectation waits,
'Till thinner elements compleat his fates. Jones.
Of plan had good opportunity of examining thefe
fifli, for they fwarm during fome feafons on the
coafts of the Mediterranean. Near Martegues, in
the fouth of France^ abundance of mullets are ta-
ken in weres made of reeds placed in the (hallows.
Of the milts of the males, which are there called
* Mr. Jones, by miftake, translates it the Barbel.
Alletants^
Class IV. M U L L E T. 331
Alktanhi and of the roes of the females, which
are called Botar^ is made Botargo. The materials
are taken out entire, covered with fait for four or
five hours, then prerTed a little between two boards
or flones, warned, and at laft dried in the fun for
thirteen or fourteen days*.
This filh was fometimes made the inftrument
of a horrible punifhment for unfortunate gallants.
It was in ufe both at Athens f and at Rome-, but we
doubt much whether it was a legal one: for we ra-
ther fufpect it was inflicted inflantaneoufly by the
injured and enraged hufband, at a feafon when
Furor arma miniftrat.
Juvenal feems to fpeak of it in that light as well
as Horace : the former, relating the revenge taken
by the exafperated fpoufe, defcribes it as very va-
rious j
Necat hie f err o, fecat ilk cruentis
Verb eri bus, quo/dam machos et Mugilis intrat J.
The paflage in Horace feems not to have been
attended to by the critics ; but when he mentions
* Mr. Willugbhfs notes during his travels. Vide Harris's
CoL Voy. II. 721.
f Legibus Athenienfium adulteri gj> %qy& deprehenfi ptena fuit
eaqtavo^acrig. Raphani loco utebantnr nonntinquam tnugile pifce,
interdum fcorpicne. Caufauboni animadvert, in Athenaeum,
lib. I.
% Satyr. X. 316
the
53* M U L L E T. Class IV.
the diftrefies that the invader of another's bed un-
derwent, he mod certainly alludes to this penalty :
DifcincJd tunica fugiendum eft, ac pede nudo ;
Ne nummi pereant, aut Pyga, aut denique fama**
The mullet is an excellent fifh for the table,
but at prefent not a fafhionable one.
The head is almoft fquare, and is flat on the
top : the nofe blunt : lips thick. It has no teeth,
only in the upper lip is a fmall roughnefs : between
the eyes and the mouth is a hard callus.
The pupil of the eye is black, encircled with a
fmall filvery line : the upper part of the iris is
hazel ; the lower filvery.
The form of the body is pretty thick, but the
back not greatly elevated. The fcales are large
and deciduous.
The firft dorfal fin is placed near the middle of
the back, and confifts of four ftrong fpines ; the
fecond of nine foft branching rays; the pectoral
has fixteen, the ventral fix ; the firft a ftrong
fpine, the others foft.
The tail is much forked.
The color of the back is dufky, varied with
blue and green : the fides filvery, marked with
broad dufky parallel lines, reaching from head to
tail : the belly is filvery.
* Satyr. II. lib. I. 132..
Head
pi. i*xsm.
v
%
FLYTISr(T FLSH.
1
^
ANCHOVY.
Class IV.
FLYING FISH.
333
Head covered with fcales.
Pectoral fins almoft as long as the body.
XXXVIII.
FLYING
FISH.
Hirundo Plinii lib. IX. c. 26.
* H%oKono$ kou "A$covi$ ? Athe-
n&us lib. VIII. 332. Op-
pi an Halieut. I. 157.
%E7u3»v i Oppian II. 459.
Rondine. Salvian, 186.
Hirondelle de mer. Belon, 1 89.
Mugil alatus. Rondel. 267.
Gefner pifc. 553. Wil. Icth, 1 59. Winc»
233-
Exocsetus. Arted. fynon. 18.
Exocaetus volitans. E. abdo-
mine utrinque carinato.
Lin.fyft. 520. Am<zn. Acad.
I. 603. Gronov. Zoopb.
No. 359.
ED,
TT7E can produce but a Tingle inftance of this
V V fpecies -f being taken on the Britijh coafts.
In June 1765, one was caught at a fmall diftance
below Caermarthen, in the river Towy, being
brought up by the tide which flows as far as the
town. It is a fifh frequent enough in the Medi-
terranean, and alfo in the ocean, where it leads a
moft miierable life. In its own element it is per-
petually haraffed by the Dorados, and other fifh of
prey. If it endeavors to avoid them by having re-
courfe to the air, it either meets its fate from the
* Pliny mentions it under the fame name, lib. IX. c. 19.
f This fiih was feen by John Strange, Efq; at Caermarthen,
who was fo obliging as to communicate to me the account of
Gulls,
S34 F L Y I N G F I S H. Glass IV.
Gulls, or the Albatrofs, or is forced down again
into the mouth of the inhabitants of water, who
below keep pace with its aerial excurfion. Neither
is it unfrequent that whole fhoals of them fall on
board of fhips that navigate the leas of warm cli-
mates : it is therefore apparent, that nature in this
creature hath fupplied it with inftruments that fre-
quently bring it into that deftruction it ftrives to
avoid, by having recourfe to an element unnatural
to it.
The antients were acquainted with this fpecies :
Pliny mentions it under the name of Hirundo, and
fpeaks of its flying faculty. It is probable that
Oppian intended the fame by his Hheim x^oveg, or
the fwift fw allow fifli. What Athenaus and the
laft cited author mean by the EImmitoj and ASwwj,
is not fo evident : they affert it quitted the water
and ftept on the rocks, from whence it tumbled
with precipitation when disturbed by the unfriendly
birds : on thefe accounts Icthyologiits leem to have
made it fynonymous with the flying fijh.
p esc rip. It refembles the herring in form of the body,
but the back is flat : the leaks large and filvery :
the dorfal fin is fmall, and placed near the tail :
the pecToral fins, the inftruments of flight, are
almolt as long as the body : the tail is bifurcated,
Eight
H
4r
es
Class IV. H E R R I N G.
335
Eight branchioftegous rays.
The belly extremely (harp, and often ferrated.
XXXIX.
HERRING,
Aringha ex cimbricis littori-
bus. Jo<vius9 143.
Hareng, efpece de Chalcis.
Belon, 169.
Harengus. Rondel. 222. Gef-
ner pifc. 410.
Heringk. Scbonevelde, 37.
Herring. Wil. Icth. 219.
Raii fyn. pifc. 103.
Clupea maxilla inferiore lon-
giore maculis carens. Arted.
Jynon. 14. a. $.
Clupea Harengus. CI. im-
maculata, maxilla inferiore
longiore. Lin. fyft. 522.
> Gronov. Zooph. No. 348.
Sill. Faun. Suec. No. 357. a.
Stroioming. Faun. Suec.
No- 357. 0.
Stromling*. Wulff. Borufs.
No. 50.
160. Bri-
tish
'"TpHE herring was unknown to the antienrs, Name,
A notwithftanding the words x*tw$ and poems,
are by tranflators rendered Hakcf, the characters
given of thofe fifh are common to fuch numbers
of different fpecies, as render it impoflible to fay
which they intended.
Herrings are found from the higheft northern Place.
latitudes yet known, as low as the northern coafh
of France ; and excepting one inftance brought by
* The herring of the Baltic, in all refpe&s is like ours, but
fmaller.
f Which word, in fpke of all lexicographers, never iignified
any thing but the garum or pickle. Fide p. 221.
Dod3
TIOICS
336 H E R R I N p. Class IV.
Dod*, of a few being once tatyfcn in the Bay of
Tangier, are never found more f^utherly.
They are met with in vaft fhc>als on the coaft of
America, as low as Carolina. In Chef apeak Bay is
an annual inundation of tho& fifh, which cover
the fhores in fuch quantities as to become a nu-
fance-f. We find them again in the feas of
Kamtzchatka, and poffibjy they reach Japan -, for
Kampfer mentions, in >iis account of the fifh of
that country, fome thai: are congenerous.
The great winter rendezvous of the herring is
within the Arclic circle : there they continue for
many months in order to recruit themfelves after
the fatigue of fpawning, the feas within that fpace
fwarming with infect food, in a degree far greater
than ir our warmer latitudes.
Micra- This mighty army begins to put itfelf in motion
in the fpring ; we diftinguifh this vaft body by
that name, for the word herring is derived from
the German, Heer, an army, to exprefs their num-
bers.
They begin to appear off the Shetland ifles in
April and May ; thefe are only forerunners of the
grand fhoal which comes in June, and their appear-
ance is marked by certain figns by the numbers of
birds, fuch as gannets, and others which follow
to prey on them-: but when the main body ap-
proaches, its breadth and its depth is fuch as to
* Natural Hzjr. of the Herring, p. Tfl
f Catejby Carol II. XXXIII.
alter
TION.
Class IV. HERRING. 337
alter the appearance of the very ocean. It is di-
vided into diftinct columns of five or fix miles in
length, and three or four in breadth, and they
drive the water before them with a kind of rip-
pling : fometimes they fink for the fpace of ten
or fifteen minutes, then rife again to the furface,
and in bright weather reflect a variety of fplendid
colors, like a field of the mod precious gems, in
which, or rather in a much more valuable 'light,
mould this ftupendous gift of Providence be con-
fidered by the inhabitants of the Britijh ifles.
The firft check this army meets in its march Separa=
fouthward, is from the Shetland ifles, which divide it
into two parts ; one wing takes to the eaft, the
other to the weftern fhores of Great Britain, and
fill every bay and creek with their numbers -?
others pafs on towards Yarmouth, the great and an-
tient mart of herrings ; they then pafs through the
Britijh channel, and after that in a manner difap-
pear. Thofe which take to the weft, after offering
themfelves to the Hebrides, where the great ftati-
onary fifhery is, proceed towards the north of
Ireland, where they meet with a fecond inter-
ruption, and are obliged to make a fecond divifi-
on; the one takes to the weftern fide, and is fcarce
perceived, being foon loft in the immenfuy of the
Atlantic", but the other, which paffes into the
Irijh fea, rejoices and feeds the inhabitants of nioft
of the coafts that border on it.
Thefe brigades, as we may call them, which are
Vol. HI. Z thus
TIAL IN-
STINCT.
338 HERRING. Class IV.
thus feparated from the greater columns, are of-
ten capricious in their motions, and do not mew
an invariable attachment to their haunts. We
have had in our time inftances of their entirely quit-
ting the coafts of Cardigan/hire^ and vifiting thofe
of Caernarvon/hire and Flint/hire, where they conti-
nued for a few years, but in the prefent year have
quite deferted our fea, and returned to their old
feats. The feafon of their appearance among us
was very late, never before the latter end of No-
vember j their continuance till February.
Providen- Were we inclined to confider this partial migra-
tion of the herring in a moral light, we might re-
flect with veneration and awe on the mighty Pow-
er which originally impreiTed on this moft ufeful
body of his creatures, the inftinct that directs and
points out the courfe, that blefTes and enriches thefe
iflands, which caufes them at certain and invaria-
ble times to quit the vaft polar deeps, and offer
themfelves to our expecting fleets. That benevo-
lent Being has never, from the earlieft records, been
once known to withdraw this blefllng from the
whole, though he often thinks proper to deny it
to particulars ; yet this partial failure (for which
we fee no natural reafon) mould fill us with the
moft exalted and grateful fenfe of his Providence,
for imprefiing fo invariable and general inftincl:
on thefe nfh towards a fouthward migration, when
the whole is to be benefited, and to withdraw it
only when a minute part is to fuffer.
This
Class IV. HERRING. 339
This inftinft was given them, that they might Spawning.
remove for the fake of depofiting their fpawn in
warmer feas, that would mature and vivify it more
affuredly than thofe of the frigid zone. It is not
from defect of food that they fet themfelves in mo-
tion, for they come to us full of fat, and on their
return are almoft univerfally obferved to be lean
and miferable. What their food is near the pole,
we are not yet informed ; but in our feas they feed Food.
much on the Onifcus Marinus, a cruftaceous infect,
and fometimes on their own fry. The herring
will rife to a fly. Mr. Low of Birfa in the Orknies
afTures me, that he has caught many thoufands with
a common trout fly, in a deep hole in a rivulet, into
which the tide flows. He commonly went at the
fall of the tide. They were young fifh, from fix
to eight inches in length.
They are in full roe the end of June, and con-
tinue in perfection till the beginning of winter,
when they begin to depofit their fpawn. The young
herrings begin to approach the fhores in July and
Augufty and are then from half an inch to two
inches long : thofe in Torkjhire are called Herring
Sile*. Though we have no particular authority Return.
for it, yet as very few young herrings are found in
our feas during winter, it feems mod certain that
they mud return to their parental haunts beneath.
* The Suedes and Danes call the old herring 02'//; but the
people of Slefnx'Ukf from whence the Anglo-Saxoili came3 call
She fry Sjkn,
Z a the
340
HERRING. Class IV.
the ice, to repair the vafb deftrucYion of their race
during fummer, by men, fowl, and fifh. Some
of the old herrings continue on our coafts the
whole year: the Scarborough fifhermen never put
down their nets but they catch a few -, but the
numbers that remain are not worth mention in
comparifon to the numbers that return.
Bescrip. Herrings vary greatly in fize. Mr. Travis com-
municated to me the information of an experienced
fiiher, who informed him that there is fometimes
taken near Tarmouth, a herring diftinguifhed by a
black fpot above the nofe , and that he once faw
one that was twenty-one inches and an half long.
He infilled that it was a different fpecies, and varied
as much from the common herring as that does
from the pilchard. This we mention in order to
incite fome curious perfon on that coaft to a farther
enquiry.
The eye is very large : the edges of the upper jaw
and the tongue are very rough, but the whole
mouth is void of teeth : the gill covers are very
loofe, and open very wide ; which occafions the
almoft inftant death of the herring when taken
out of the water, which is well known, even to a
proverb.
The dorfal fin confifts of about feventeen rays,
and is placed beyond the centre of gravity, fo that
when the fifti is-iufpended by it, the head imme-
diately dips down : the two ventral fins have nine
rays;,
Class IV. HERRING. 3¥
rays ; the pecloral feventeen \ the anal fourteen :
the tail is much forked.
The lateral line is not apparent, unlefs the fcales
are taken off: the fides are compreffed : the belly
fharply carinated, but the ridge quite fmooth, and
not in the left ferrated.
The fcales are large, thin, and fall off with a
flight touch.
The color of the back and fides green, varied Color,
with blue : the belly filvery.
The herring fifhery is of great antiquity : the Fi«*E*r«
induflrious Dutch firft engaged ia it about the year
1 1 64: they wei-e in poffeffion of it for feveraj
centuries, but at length its value became fo juftly
to be known, that it gave rife to molt obflinate
and well-difputed wars between the Englijh and
them -, but ftill their diligence and fkill gives them
a fuperiority over us in that branch of trade.
Our great ftations are off the Shetland and Wef-
tern JJIes, and off the coaft of Norfolk, in which the
Dutch alfo fhare. Yarmouth has long been famous
for its herring fair * ; that town is obliged, by its
charter, to fend to the fheriffs of Norwich one
hundred herrings, to be made into twenty-four pies,
by them to be delivered to the lord of the manor
of Eaft Carleton, who is to convey them to the
* This fair was regulated by an acl, commonly called the
Statute of Herrings t in the 31ft year of Edward III.
Z 3 kinr
9
342 HERRING. Class IV,
king *. The facetious Doctor Fuller f takes
notice of the great repute the county qf Norfolk
was in for this fifh, and, with his ufual archnefs,
calls a red herring, a Norfolk Capon.
In 1195, Bunwich in Suffolk accounted to the
king for their yearly fee farm rent, £120, 1 mark,
and 24000 herrings, 12000 for the monks of Eye7
and 12000 for thofe of Ely.
The Dutch are mod extravagantly fond of this
n(h when it is pickled. A premium is given to
the firft bufs that arrives in Holland with a lading
of this their ambrofia^ and a vaft price given
for each keg. We have been in the country at that
happy minute, and obferved as much joy among
the inhabitants on its arrival, as the ^Egyptians
fhew on the firft overflowing of the Nile. Flanders
had the honor of inventing the art of pickling
herrings. One William Beukeleny of Biervlet, near
Sluys, hit on this ufef ul expedient : from him was
derived the name pickle, which we borrow from
the Dutch and German. Beukelen died in 1397.
The emperor Charles V. held his memory in fuch
veneration for the fervice he did mankind, as to
do his tomb the honor of a vifit. It is very fingu-
lgr that mod nations give the name of their fa-
vorite difh to the facetious attendant on every
mountebank. Thus the Dutch call him Pickle
* Cambden Britan. I. 458,
f Britijh Worthies, 238.
Herring;
Class IV. PILCHARD. 343
Herring ; the Italians, Macaroni ; the French? ,
Jean Pottage; the Germans, Hans Wurst*;
and we dignify him with the title of Jack Pud-
ding.
Pilchard . Fuller's Brit . Wor- 223. Rati fyn. pifc. 104. 161. P 1 L -
tbies, 194. Clupea J. Arted, fynon. 16. CHARD.
Peltzer. Schonevelde, 40. Pilchard, Borlafe Cornwall,
The Pilchard. WiL Icth. 272.
npHE pilchard appears in vafl: fhoals off the
* Cornijh coafts about the middle of July, dis-
appearing the beginning of winter, yet fometimes a
few return again after Chrifimas. Their winter re-
treat is the fame with that of the herring, and their
motives for migrating the fame. They affect, du-
ring fummer, a warmer latitude, for they are not
found in any quantities on any of our coafts except
thofe of Cornwall, that is to fay, from Fowey har-
bor to the Stilly ifles, between which places the
Ihoals keep fhifting for fome weeks.
The approach of the pilchard is known by much
the fame figns as thofe that indicate the arrival of
the herring, Perfons, called in Cornwall Fitters*
are placed on the cliffs, to point to the boats fta-
tioned off the land the courfe of the fifh. By the
ift of James I. c. 23, filhermen are empowered to
* That is, Jack Saufage.
Z 4 go
344
PILCHARD. Class IV.
go on the grounds of others to hue, without being
liable to actions of trefpafs, which before occafioned
frequent lawfuits.
The emoluments that accrue to the inhabitants
of that county are great, and are beft expreffed in
the words of Doctor W. Borlafe, in his account of
the Pilchard fifhery.
" It employs a great number of men on the fea,
*c training tnem thereby to naval affairs; employs
6t men, women, and children, at land, in falting,
■ c preffing, walhing, and cleaning, in making
*6 boats, nets, ropes, cafks, and all the trades de-
<c pending on their conft ruction and fale. The
" poor is fed with the offals of the captures, the
" land with the refule of the fifh and fait, the mer-
*c chant finds the gains of commiffion and honeft
" commerce, the fifherman the gains of the fifh.
" Ships are often freighted hither with fait, and
ff into foreign countries with the fifh, carrying off
** at the fame time part of our tin. The ufual pro-
" duce of the number of hogfheads exported each
cc- year, for ten years, from 1747 to 1756 inclufive,
" from the four ports of Fawy, Falmouth, Penzance,
6i and St. Ives, it appears that Fawy has exported
"yearly 1732 hogfheads; Falmouth, 14631 h'bgf-
" heads and two- thirds; Penzance and Mounts- Bay ■,
" 1 2 149 hogfheads and one-third; St. Ives, 1282
" hogfheads: in all amounting to 29795 hogfheads.
V Every hogfhead for ten years laft pa ft, together
f! with the bounty allowed for -each hogfhead ex-
cc ported,
Class IV, PILCHARD. 34$
" ported, and the oil made out of each hogfhead,
" has amounted, one year with another at an a-
" verage, to the price of one pound thirteen fhil-
" lings and three-pence-, fo that the cam paid for
"pilchards exported has, at a medium, annually
" amounted to the fum of forty-nine thoufand five
" hundred and thirty-two pounds ten millings."
The numbers that are taken at one mooting; out
of the nets, is amazingly great. Dr. Borlafe afTured
me, that on the 5th of Offober, 1767, there were
at one time inclofed in St. Ives's Bay 7000 hogf-
heads, each hogfhead containing 35000 fifh, in all
245000000.
This fifn has a general likenefs to the herring, but Descrip,
differs in fome particulars very eiTentially ; we there-
fore defcribe it comparatively with the other, hav-
ing one of each fpecies before us, both of them of
the fame length, viz. nine inches and an half.
The body of the pilchard is lefs comprefied than
that of the herring, being thicker and rounder: the
nofe is fhorter in proportion, and turns up : the
under jaw is fhorter.
The back is more elevated : the belly lefs fharp :
the dorfal fin of the pilchard is placed exactly in
the centre of gravity, fo that when taken up by
it, the body preferves an equilibrium, whereas that
of the herring dips at the head : the dorfal fin of
the pilchard we examined, being placed only three
inches eight tenths from the tip of the nofe 5 that
of the herring four inches one tenth.
The
346 S P R A T. Class IV.
The fcales of the pilchard adhere very clofely,
whereas thofe of the herring very eafily drop off.
The pilchard is in general lefs than the herring ;
the fpecimen we defcribe being a very large one.
The pilchard is fatter, or more full of oil.
162. Sprat. Spratti. Wil. Icth 221. Raii* Clupea Sprattus. CI. pinna
fyn. fife. 105. dorfali radiis tredecim. Lin.
Clupea quadriuncialis, max- fyji. 523.
ilia inferiore, longiore, ven- Hwufsbuk. Faun. Suec. No.
tre acutiffimo. Arted. fynon. 358.
*7-
MR. Willughby and Mr. Ray were of opinion,
that thele fim were the fry of the herring :
we are induced to difTent from them, not only be-
caufe on comparing a fprat and young herring
of equal fize, we difcovered fome fpecific diffe-
rences, but likewife for another reafon : the former
vifit our coafts, and continue with us in fhoals in-
numerable, when the others in general have retired
to the great northern deeps.
They come into the river Thames, below bridge,
the beginning of November* and leave it in March,
and are, during their feafon, a great relief to the
poor of the capital.
At Grave/end, and at Yarmouth, they are cured
like red herrings-, they are fometimes pickled, and
are little inferior in flavor to the Anchovy, but the
bones
Class IV. ANCHOVY.
bones will not difiblve like thofe of the latter.
Mr. Forfter tells me, that in the Baltic they pre-
ferve them in the fame manner, and call them
Breitlingy i. e. the little deep fifh, as being deeper
than the Stromling, or Baltic herring.
The fprat grows to about the length of five in-
ches : the body is much deeper than that of a young
herring of equal length : the back fin is placed
more remote from the nofe than that of the herring,
and we think had fixteen rays. But one great dif-
tin&ion between this fifh, the herring and pilchard,
is the belly : that of the two firft being quite
fmooth, that of the laft mod ftrongly ferrated.
Another is, that the herring has fifty fix vertebrae ^
this only forty eight.
347
Descrip,
VY,
^Lwoav'Ko; ? Arift. Hift. an. Lycoftomus, fehe mareneken? 163. Ancho-
Lib. VI. c 15. Schonevelde, 46. Tab. 5.
t- '.>//.; t l Anchovy. Wil. Icth. 22c.
Vn c 2$~ Rmifyn.pi/c. io7._
" * )# Clupea maxilla fuperiore lon-
L'Anchoy? Belon, 165. gi0re. Arted./ynon. 17.
Encraficholus ? Rondel. 211. Clupea encraficolus. Lin./y/t.
Qe/ner pi/c. 63. 523.
THE true anchovies are takerf in vaft quanti-
ties in the Mediterranean^ and are brought
over here pickled. The great fifhery is at Gorgona^
a fmall ifle weft of Leghorn.
Mr. Ray dilcovered this fpecies in the eftuary of
the
34$ S H A D. Class IV.
the Bee above a century ago *. Since that time no
notice has been taken of it, till a few were taken
near my houfe in 1769.
The length of the largeft was fix inches and an
half: the body (lender, but thicker in proportion
than the herring.
The eyes were large : the irides white, with a
call: of yellow : the under jaw much fhorter than
the tipper: the teeth fmall; a row in each jaw,
and another on the middle of the tongue. The
tongue doubly ciliated on both fides. The dorfal
fin confifted of twelve rays, was tranfparent, and
placed nearer the nofe than the tail.
The fcales large and deciduous : back green
and femipellucid : fides and belly filvery and
opake : edge of the belly fmooth : the tail forked.
164. Shad, ®furaa> Arift, Hi/?, an. lib. Shad, or Mother of Herrings.
IX. c. 37. Strabo lib. XV. Wil. Icth. 227. Raii fyn.
486. XVIT. 566. Athenteiis, pifc. 105.
lib. IV. 131. VII. 328. Clupea apice maxilla fupe-
Oppian Halieut. I. 244. riore bifido, maculis nigris
Alaufa ? Aufonii Mofella, 128. utrinque. Arted. Jynon.
Laccia, chiepa. Safoian, 104. 15.
I/Alofe. Belon, 307. Clupea alofa. CI. lateribus
Thrifla. Rondel. 220. Gefner nigro maculatis, roftro bi-
pifc. 20. £do. Lin.JyJl. 523. Grono<v.
Bayckc,Meyfifch. Schonevelde, Zooph. No.^tf.
*3-
NEITHER Ariftotky Athen<eus^ nor Oppian,
have defcribed their ®^<ra with fuch pre-
* ftafj Letters, 47.
cifiori,
Class IV. SHAD. 349
cifion, as to induce ns .to tranflate it the Shad,
without affixing to it our fceptic mark. Aufonius
has been equally negligent in refpecl to his Alaufa :
all he tells us is, that it was a very bad fifh :
StrUente/que focis obfonia pie bis Alausaj.
i
Alaufa crackling on the embers are
Of wretched poverty, th' infipid fare.
But commentators have agreed to render the
Bpecra of the firft, and the Alaufa of the laft, by
the word Shad. Perhaps they were directed by the
authority of Strabo, who mentions the ®?i<r<ra the
fuppofed Shady and the Kzt^v;, or Mullet, as fifh
that afcend the Nile at certain feafons, which, with
the Dolphin* of that river, he fays, are the only
kinds that venture up from the fea for fear of the
crocodile. That the two firft are fifh of paffage
in the Nik, is confirmed to us by Beloniusf, and
by Ha£elquift%. The laft fays it is found in the
Mediterranean near Smyrna, and on the coaft of
A&gypt, near Rofetto, and that in the months Decern-
her and January it afcends the Nile, as high as
Cairo : that it is fluffed with pot marjoram, and
* This is the Dolphin of the Nile, a fiuVuow unknown to
ks. Pliny lib, VIH. c. 25. fays, it had a fliarp fin on its back,
with which it deftroyed the crocodile, by thrufting it into the
belly of that animal, the only penetrable place,
f Belon. It in. 98.
• X &• 385, 38S, Smdijb edition,
m\tn
350
SHAD. Class IV.
when drefied in that manner will very nearly intox-
icate the eater.
In Great Britain the Severn affords this fifh in
higher perfection than any other river. It makes
its firft appearance there in May, but in very
warm feafons in April; for its arrival, fooner or
later, depends much on the temper of the air. It
continues in the river about two months, and then
is fucceeded by a variety which we fhall have oc-
cafion to mention hereafter.
The Severn fhad is efteemed a very delicate fifh
about the time of its firft appearance, efpecially in
that part of the river that flows by Gloucefter, where
they are taken in nets, and ufually fell dearer than
falmon : fome are fent to London, where the fifh-
mongers diftinguifh them from thofe of the Thames,
by the French name of Alofe.
Whether they fpawn in this river and the Wye is
not determined, for their fry has not yet been afcer-
tained. The old fiih come from the fea into the
river in full roe. In the months of July and Augufi,
multitudes of bleak frequent the river near Glou-
cefter-y fome of them are as big as a fmall herring,
and thefe the fifhermen erroneoufly fufpect to be
the fry of the fhad. Numbers of thefe are taken
near Gloucefier in thofe months only, but none of
the emaciated fhad are ever caught in their re-
turn *•
* Belon alfo obferves, that none are taken in their return, on
Us trend en montant contre Us rivieres, et jamais en defendant.
The
Class IV.
SHAD.
"35*
The "Thames fli ad does not frequent that river till Twaiti,
the latter end of May or beginning of June, and
is efleemed a very infipid coarfe fifh. The Severn
fhad is fometimes caught in the Thames^ though
rarely, and called Allis (no doubt Alofe, the French
name) by the fimermen^ in that river. About the
fame time, and rather earlier, the variety called
near Gloucefter the Twaite, makes its appearance,
and is taken in great numbers in the Severn, and is
held in as great difrepute as the mad of the Thames.
The differences between each variety are as fol-
low:
The true Shad weighs fometimes eight pounds,
but their general fize is from four to five.
The Twaite^ on the contrary, weighs from half
a pound to two pounds, which it never exceeds.
The twaite differs from a fmall fhad only in hav-
ing one or more round black fpots on the fides ; if
only one, it is always near the gill, but commonly
there are three or four, placed one under the
other *.
The other particulars agree in each fo exactly, Bbscrip.
that the fame defcription will ferve for both.
The head flopes down confiderably from the
back, which at the beginning is very convex, and
rather fharp : the body from thence grows gradu-
ally lefs to the tail.
* I muft here acknowledge my obligations to Do&or Lyfens,
of Gloucejier, for his communications relating to this fifh, as.
well as to feveral other articles relating to thofe of the Severn.
The
W S H A D. Class IV.
The under jaw is rather longer than the upper :
the teeth very minute.
The dorfal fin is placed very near the centre, is
fmall, and the middle rays are the longer! : the
peroral and ventral fins are fmall : the Tail vaflly
forked : the belly extremely fliarp, and moll ftrong-
ly ferrated.
The back is of a dufky blue : above the giljs
begins a line of dark fpots, which mark the upper
part of the back on each fide j the number of thefe
fpots is uncertain in different fifh3 from four tQ
ten.
Ti
Pl.IXX.
jsrpjfo.
C^ItP.
BitEj^^r
2sr?i6g
Class IV. CAR P. 353
The mouth without teeth. ^L# CARP,
Three branchioftegous rays.
One dorial fin.
* With bearded mouths.
Kvwpivot? drift. Hift. an. lib. Cyprinus cirris quatuor, ofli- 165, Carp,
IV. 8. VI. 40. VIII. zo. H. 30. culo tertio pinnarum doiTi,
Oppian Halieut. I. 101. 592. ac ani uncinulis armato.
Raina Burbara. Sal<vian. 92. Arted. Jynon. 3.
La Carpe. Belon, z6j. Cyprinus carpio. C. pinna ani
Cyprinus. Rondel, flwviat. 150. radiis 9. cirris 4, pinna dor-
Gefner pifc. 309. falis radio fecundo poftice
Cyprinus nobilis, edle Karpe, ferrato. Lin. Jyp. 525. &•<?*
KarpfFe. Schonevelde, 32. nov. Zooph. No. 330.
Carp. WiL Ictb. 245. Raii Jyn. Karp. Faun. Suae No. 359.
pifc 115.
THIS is one of the naturalized fifh of our coun-
try, having been introduced by Leonard
Mafcbal, about the year 1514*, to whom we were
alfo indebted for that excellent apple xhepepin. The
many good things that our ifland wanted before
that period, are enumerated in this old diftich :
Turkies, carps, hops, pickerel, and beer,
Came into England all in one year, f
As
• Fuller's Britijb Worthies, Sufex. 113.
f I infert this note to fhew that it was known here before.
The extract was made from the Boke of St. Alborfs printed at
Weftminfier, by Wynkyn de Worde, in the year 1496. I think
jmyfelf much obliged to Mr. Haworth, in Chancery -la?ie, not
only for this but feveral other curious remarks.
' The carpe is a dayntous fifshe, but there ben but fewe in
* Englonde9 and therfore I wry te the cafle of rum. For he is
* too ftronge enarmyd in the mouthe that there may noo weke
* harnays hold hym. And as touchyne his baytes, I have but
* Jytyll knoolege of it, and we were loth to wryte more than
Voj,,III. A a • I know
354 CAR P. Class IV.
RuJJta wants thefe fifh at this day, Sweden has
them only in the ponds of the people of fafhion j
Polijh Pruffia is the chief feat of the carp •, they
abound in the rivers and lakes of that country,
particularly in the Frifch and Curifch-haff, where they
are taken of a vaft fize. They are there a great
article of commerce, and fent in well-boats to
Sweden and Rujfia. The merchants purchafe them
out of the waters of the noblejfe of the country, who
draw a good revenue from this article. Neither
are there wanting among our gentry, infiances of
fome who make good profit of their ponds.
The antients do not feparate the carp from the fea
fifti. We are credibly informed that they are fome-
times found in the harbor of Dantzick, between the
town and a fmall place called Hela.
Carp are very long-lived. Gefner* brings an irt-
ftance of one that was an hundred years old. They
alfo grow to a very great fize. On our own know-
ledge we can fpeak of none that exceeded twenty
pounds in weight : but Jovius^ fays, that they were
fometimes taken in the Lactts Larius (the Lago di
Como) of two hundred pounds weight : and Rzac-
zynfki X mentions others taken in the Dniefter that
were five feet in length.
4 1 know and have provyd. But well I wote that the redde
4 worm , and the menow ben good baytyn for him at all
4 tymes, as I have herd faye of perfones credyble, and alfo
4 founde wryten in bekes of credence.
* Gffner pifc. 312. i De pi/cibm Romanis, 1 3 1 .
X Hifi* Nat. Poloni*, 1 42.
They
TY,
Class IV. CARP. 355
They are alio extremely tenacious of life, and
will live for a mod remarkable time out of water.
An experiment has been made by placing a carp in
a net, well wrapped up in wet mofs, the mouth
only remaining out, and then hung up in a cel-
lar, or fome cool place : the fifh is frequently fed
with white bread and milk, and is befides often
plunged into water. Carp thus managed have been
known, not only to have lived above a fortnight,
but to grow exceedingly fat, and far fuperior in
tafte to thofe that are immediately killed from the
pond *.
The carp is a prodigious breeder: its quantity Foecundx.-
of roe has been fometimes found fo great, that
when taken out and weighed againlt the fifh itfelf,
the former has been found to preponderate. From
the fpawn of this fifh Caviare is made for the
Jews, who hold this ilurgeon in abhorrence. We
have forbore in this work to enter into minute cal-
culations of the numbers each fifh may produce.
It has already been mod fkilfully performed by
Mr. Harmer, and printed in the Pbilofophical Tran-
faffions of the year 1767. We fhall, in our Ap-
pendix, take the liberty of borrowing fuch part of
his tables of the fcecundity of fifh, as will deriion-
ftrate the kind attention of Providence, towards the
* This was told me by a gentleman of the utmoft vera-
city, who had twice made the experiment. The fame fad
is related by that pious Philofopher Doctor Derbam, in his
Pkjjiio -Theology, edit. 9th. 1737, c&* *• /• 7- *• e-
A a 2 preferving
35°
R P. Class IV.
preferring fo ufeful a clafs of animals for the fer-
vice of its other creatures.
Thefe fifh are extremely cunning, and on that
account are by fome ftyled the river fox. They
will fometimes leap over the nets, and efcape that
way ; at others, will immerfe themfelves fo deep
in the mud, as to let the net pafs over them.
They are alfo very fhy of taking a bait ; yet at the
fpawning time they are fo fimple, as to fuffer them-
felves to be tickled, handled, and caught by any
body that will attempt it.
This fifh is apt to mix its milt with the roe of
other fi(h, from which is produced a fpurious breed :
we have feen the offspring of the carp and tench,
which bore the greater!; refemblance to the firft:
have alfo heard of the fame mixture between ths
carp and bream.
Bescrip. The carp is of a thick fhape : the fcales very-
large, and when in beft feafon of a fine gilded hue.
The jaws are of equal length; there are two
teeth in the jaws, or on the tongue; but at the en-
trance of the gullet, above and below, are certain
bones that act on each other, and comminute the
food before it pafTes down,
On each fide of the mouth is a fingle beard ;
above thofe on each fide another, but fhorter : the
dorfal fin extends far towards the tail, which is a
little bifurcated; the third ray of the dorfal fin
is very ftrong, and armed with fliarp teeth, point-
ing
C&assIV. BARBEL.
\ng downwards ; the third ray of the anal fin is
conftrufted in the fame manner.
257
Bafbus. Aufonius Mofella, 94.
Barbeau. Belon, 299.
Barbus, Barbo. Salvian, 86.
Barbus. Rondel, jiiwiat* 194.
Ge/ner pifc. 123.
Barbe, Barbie. Scbone-velde,
Barbel. Wil. Ictb. 259.
Rail fyn. pifc. 1 2 1 .
Cyprinus oblongus, maxilla
iuperiore longiore, cirris
quatuoi-p pinna ani officu- 166. Bare ei<
lor urn feptem. Arted. Jj-
non. 8.
Cyprinus Barbus. C. pinna
aniradiis 7. cirris 4. pinnse
dorfi radio fecundo utrin-
q ue ferrato. Lin. fyft. 525.
Gronov. Zoopb. No. 331.
Barbe, Barbie. Wulff Boruft.
No. 52.
THIS fifh was' fo extremely coarfe, as to be
overlooked by the antients till the time of
Aufonius, and what he fays is no panegyric on it %
for he lets us know it loves deep waters,, and that
when it grows old it was not abfolutely bad.
Laxos exerces Barbe natatus,
Tu melior pejore <evo9 tibi contigit uni
Spirantum ex numero non inlaudaia feneftus.
It frequents the (till and deep parts of rivers,
and lives in fociety, rooting like-fwine with their
nofes in the foft banks. It is fo tame as to fuffer
itfelf to be taken with the hand; and people have
been known to take numbers by diving for them.
In fummer they move about during night in fearch
A a 3 of
358 B A R B E L. Class IV.
of food, but towards autumn* and during winter*
confine themfelves to the deeped holes.
They are the word and coarfeft of frefh water
filh, and feldom eat but by the poorer fort of peo-
ple, who fometime boil them with a bit of bacon
to give them a relifh. The roe is very noxious,
affecting thofe who unwarily eat of it with a nau-
fea, vomiting, purging, and a (light fwelling.
Des crip. It is fometimes found of the length of three
feet, and eighteen pounds in weight : it is of a
long and rounded form : the fcales not large.
Its head is fmooth : the noftrils placed near the
eyes : the mouth is placed below : on each corner
is a fingle beard, and another on each fide the
nofe.
The dorfal fin is armed with a remarkable
ftrong fpine, fharply ferrated, with which it can
inflict a very fevere wound on the incautious han-
dler, and even do much damage to the nets.
The pectoral fins are of a pale brown color;
the ventral and anal tipped with yellow : the tail a
little bifurcated, and of a deep purple : the fide
line is (trait.
The fcales are of a pale gold color, edged with
black : the belly is white.
Tinea,
Class IV.
TENCH.
359
Tinea. Aufonius Mofella, 123.
Tinea. Jo-vius, 1 24.
Tinea, Tenca. Salwan, 90.
La Tanche. Be/on, 325.
Tinea. Rondel, jliwiat. 157.
Gefner pifc, 984.
Schley, Slye. Scbcwvelds, 76.
Tench. WiL IctL 251, i?*«
fyn.pfc. 117.
Cyprinus mucofus totus ni-
grefcens, extremitate caudae
sequali. Arted. fynon. 5.
Cyprinus pinna ani radiis 25,
cauda integra, corpore mu-
cofo, cirris 2. L/«. Jyft.
526. Grono^v. Zoopb. No.
328.
Suture, Linnare, Skomakare.
Faun. Suec. No. 363.
Schleihe, Schlegen. Wulff Bo-
rufs. No. 55.
167. Tench.
THE tench underwent the fame fate with the
barbel, in refpect to the .notice taken of it
by the early writers ; and even Aufonius y who firft
mentions it, treats it with fuch difrefpeel, as evin-
ces the great capricioufntfs of tafte -, for that fifh,
which at prefent is held in fuch good repute, was
in his days the repaft only of the Canaille. .
Quis non et virides vulgi folatia Tineas
Norit ?
It has been by fome called the Phyfician of the
fifh, and that the flime is fo healing, that the
wounded apply it as a {lyptic^ The ingenious
Mr. Diaper ', in his pif calory ecloges, fays, that
even the voracious pike will fpare the tench on
account of us healing powers :
A a 4
The
36o TENCH. Class IV.
The Tench he fpares a medicinal kind :
For when by wounds diftreft, or fore difeafe.
He courts the falutary fifh for eafe ;
Clofe to his fcales the kind phyfician glides,
And fweats a healing balfam from his fides *.
Whatever virtue its flime may have to the in-
habitants of the water, we will not vouch for, but
its flefh is a wholefome and delicious food to thofe
of the earth. The Germans are of a different opi-
nion. By way of contempt, they call it Shoemaker.
Gefner even fays, that it is infipid and(unwhole-
fome.
It does not commonly exceed four or five pounds
in weight, but we have heard of one that weighed
ten pounds ; Salvianus fpeaks of fome that arrived
at twenty pounds.
They love ftill waters, and are rarely found ini
rivers : they are very fooli(h, and eafily caught.
D£scrip. The tench is thick and fhort in proportion to
its length : the fcales are very fmall, and covered
with dime.
The irides are red : there is fometimes, but not
always, a fmall beard at each corner of the mouth.
The color of the back is dufky ; the dorfal and
ventral fins of the fame color : the head, fides, and
belly, of a greenilh call:, moil: beautifully mixed
with gold, which is in its greateft fplendor when
the fifh is in the highefl feafon.
* Ed. II.
The
Class IV. GUDGEON. 361
The tail is quite even at the end, and very
broad.
Gobio. Aufonius Mofella, 132. Raiifyn.pifc. 123. 168. Gup-
Gobio fluviatilis. Salvian, Cyprinus quincuncialis macu- geon.
214. lofus, maxilla fuperiore lon-
Goujon de riviere. Belon, giore cirris duobus ad os.
322. Arted. fynon. 2.'
Gobio fluviatilis. Rondel, flu- Cyprinus pinna ani radiis 2.
njiat. 206. Gefner fife. 399. Lin. Syji. Nat. 526. Gro-
Gudgeon. Wil. Icth. 264. nov. Zooph. No. 329/.
sfRISTOTLE mentions the gudgeon in two
-** places ; once as a river fi{h, and again as a
fpecies that was gregarious : in a third place he
defcribes it as a fea fifh -, we muft therefore confi-
der the Kw£w$ he mentions, lib. IX. c. 2. and lib.
VIII. c. 19. as the fame with our fpecies*.
This fifh is generally found in gentle ftreams,
and is of a fmall fize : thofe few, however, that
are caught in the Rennet, and Cole, are three times
the weight of thofe taken elfewhere. The large ft
we ever heard of was taken near Uxbridge, and
weighed half a pound.
They bite eagerly, and are afiembled by raking
the bed of the river ; to this fpotthey immediately
crowd in fhoals, expecting food from this dif-
turbance.
* The gudgeon is enumerated among the Syrian fifh, by
Vr.RuJTel, p.7S,
The
362
Descrip.
BREAM.
Class IV.
. The fhape of the body is thick and round : the
irides tinged with red : the gill covers with green
and filver : the lower jaw is fliorter than the up-
per : at each corner of the mouth is a fingle beard :
the back olive, fpotted with black: the fide line
(trait ; the fides beneath that filvery : the belly
white.
The tail is forked -9 that, as well as the dorfal
fin, is fpotted with black.
** Without Beards.
169. Bream. La Bremme. Bclon, 318.
Cyprinus latus five Brama.
Rondel, fiwviat. 154. Ge/ner
pijc. 316, 317.
BrafTem, Brachfem. Schone-
velde, 33.
Bream. Wil. Icth. 248. Rail
fyn. fife \\6.
Cyprinus pinnis omnibus ni-
grefcentibus, pinna ani
officulorum viginti feptera.
Arted. fynon. 4.
Cyprinus Brama. Lin, fyft.
531. Grononj. Zoopb. No.
345-
Braxen. Faun. Suec. No. 360.
Gareikl. Kram. 391. Brek-
meu. Wulff
Borufs. No. 66.
THE bream is an inhabitant of lakes, or the
deep parts of (till rivers. It is a fifh that is
very little efteemed, being extremely infipid.
It is extremely deep, and thin in proportion to
its length. The back rifes very much, and is very
fnarp at the top. The head and mouth are fmall:
on
PL. idcxh.
JST91J2.
CBXTSIAN.
RUD.
nrfJjO.
Class IV.
R U D.
on fome we examined in the fpring, were abun-
dance of minute whitilh tubercles 5 an accidenc
which Pliny feems to have obferved befals the fifh
of the Lago Maggiore, and Lago di Como *. The
fcales are very large : the fides flat and thin.
The dorfal fin has eleven rays, the fecond of
which is the longed: that fin, as well as all the red,
are of a dufky color ; the back of the fame hue :
the fides yellowifh.
The tail is very large, and of the form of a
crefcent.
3%
XaoaZ ? Athenans, lib. VIII. Cyprinus. Arted. jynon. 6.
355. Oppian Halient. I. 174.. No. 8.
La Pleftia? Bekn, 309. La Cyprinus erythropthalmus.
Rofi'e, 319. Cyprinus pinna ani radiis
Finfcale. Plot's Oxf. 184. 15. pinnis rubris. Lin.Jyft.
Rutilus latior, feu Rubellio Nat. 530.
fluviatilis a Rud, Roud, Sarf. Ifarf. Faun. Suec, No,
or Finfcale. Wil.
252. Rati Jyn. pifc.
Icth.
118.
\66.
170. Rud.
THIS fifh is found in the CharwelU near
Oxford> in the Witham in Lincoln/hire^ and
in the fens in Holdernefs,
* Duo Lacus Italije in radtcibus Alpium, Larius et
Verb anus appellantur> in quibus pifces omnibus annis Ver-
C ilia RUM or.tu exiftunt, fquamis conjpicui crebris at que pra-
acutis, clavorum call gar ium effigie : nee amplius quam circa eum
men/em, wifuntur. lib. IX. r. 18.
Its
3.64 CRUCIAN. Class IV.
Its body is extremely deep, like that of the
bream, but much thicker.
Pes crip. The head is fmall : the irides yellow, varying in
fome almoft to rednefs : the noftrils large : the
back vaftly arched, and Hoping off fuddenly to the
head and tail : the fcales very large : the fide line
very (lightly incurvated.
The dorfal fin confifts of eleven rays ; the firft
very lhort, the fecond very ftrong, and ferrated
on each fide. The pectoral fins confift of feven-
teen -y the ventral of nine ; the anal of thirteen
rays.
The back is of an olive color : the fides and
belly of a gold color, with certain marks of red ;
the ventral and anal fins, and the tail, generally
of a deep red : the tail forked.
We believe this to be the fame with the Shal-
low of the Cam •, which grows to the length of thir-
teen inches. It fpawns in April.
S7I.Cr.uci- Cyprinus Caraffius. Lin.fyfi. Karaufchen. Meyer an. XI. 58.
an. Ruda, et CarufTa. Faun.Suec. Karafs. Gefner pifc. Paralip.
N. 364. 16.
THIS fpecies is common in many of the fifh
ponds about London, and other parts of the
fouth of England-, but I believe is not a native fifh.
It
Class IV,
R O A C Ho
It is very deep and thick : the back is much
arched : the dorfal fin confifts of nineteen rays ;
the two firft ftrong and ferrated. The pefloral fins
have (each) thirteen rays-, the ventral nine-, the
anal kvcn or eight : the lateral line parallel with
the belly : the tail almoft even at the end.
The color of the fifh in general is a deep yel-
low : the meat is coarfe, and little efteemed.
3%
La Gardon, Rofchie 2. en
Angleterre. Belon, 316.
Leucifcus. Rondel, fiwviat.
191.
Rutilus five Rubellus fluvia-
tilis. Gefner pifc. 820.
Rottauge. Schonevelds, 63.
Roche. Wil. Icth. 262.
Leucifcus prior. Rondel.
260. Raiifyn. pifc. 122,
121,
Cyprinus fargus di^lus. Cyp. 172. Roach,
iride pinnis ventralibus ac
ani plerumque rubentibu?.
Arted. fynon. 9, 10.
Cyprinus Rutilus. Cyp. pinna
ani radiis 12. rubicunda,
Lin. fyft. 529.
Mort. Faun. Sitec. No. 372.
Zert. WulffBorufs. No. 59.
Altl. Kram. 395.
frOUND as a Roach, is a proverb that appears
*-* to be but indifferently founded, that fifn be-
ing not more diftinguimed for its vivacity than
many others ; yet it is ufed by the French as well
as us, who compare people of ftrong health to
their Gardon^ our roach.
It is a common fifh, found in many of our deep
ftill rivers, affe&ing, like the others of this genus,
quiet waters. It is gregarious, keeping in large
ihoals. We have never fcen them very large.
Old
366
D
E.
Class IV.
Old Walton fpeaks of fome that weighed two
pounds. In a lift of fifh fold in the London mar-
kets, with the greateft weight of each, communi-
cated to us by an intelligent fifhmonger, is men-
tion of one whofe weight was five pounds.
The roach is deep, but thin, and the back is
much elevated, and iharply ridged: the fcales
large, and fall off very eafily. Side line bends
much in the middle towards the belly.
173. Dace. Une vandoife, on Dard. Be*
Ion, 313.
Leucifci fecunda fpecies.
Rondel. 192. Gefnerpifc. 26.
Dace, or Dare. , Wil. Icth.
260. Rait Jyn. pifc. 121.
Cyprinus decern digitorum,
rutilo longior, et angufti-
or, pinna ani radiorum de»
cem. Arted. fynon. 9.
Cyprinus leucifcus. Cyp. pin-
na ani radiis 10. dorfali 9.
tin. fyfl. 528.
Laugele. Meyer's An. II. tab,
97-
THIS, like the roach, is gregarious, haunts
the fame places, is a great breeder, very
lively, and during fummer is very fond of frolick-
ing near the furface of the water. This fifh and the
roach are coarfe and infipid meat.
Its head is fmall : the irides of a pale yellow :
the body long and (lender : its length feldom above
ten inches, though in the abovementioned lift is an
account of one that weighed a pound and an half:
the fcales fmaller than thofe of the roach,
The
Class IV. GRAINING. 367
The back is varied with dufky, with a caft of
yellowifli green : the fides and belly filvery : the
dorfal fin dufky : the ventral, anal, and caudal fins
red, but lefs fo than thofe of the former : the tail
is very much forked.
The Graining. Fey. fo the Hebrides, u. 174. Grain-
ing.
>TpHE Graining is found in the Merfey near
■*■ Warrington : has much the refemblance of a
dace, but is more flender, and the back ftraiter.
The ufual length about feven inches and a half.
The depth to the length of this is as one to five, of
the dace as one to four. The color of the back
is filvery, with a bluifh caft. The eyes, ventral,
and anal fins are red, but paler than thofe of the
dace. The pectoral fin redder.
Capito*
36S
HUB.
Class IV.
175. Chub. Capito. Au/on. Mo/ella, 85.
Squalus, Squaglio. Safoian,
84.
Le chevefne, Teftard, Vi-
lain. Belon, 315.
Cephalus fluviatilis. Ron-
del, fiwviat. 1 90.
Capito five Cephalus fluvia-
tilis. Gefner pi/c. 182.
Chub, or Chevin. Wil. Ictk.
255. Rait Jyn. pi/c. 119.
Cyprinus oblongus macrolepi-
dotus, pinna ani officulorum
. undecim. Arted. Jynon, 7.
Cyprinus cephalus. Cyp.
pinna ani radiis undecim,
cauda Integra, corpore fub-
cylindrico. Lin. fyft. 527.
Gronov. Zooph. No. 339.
Alte. Mayer's An. II. tab. 92.
Rapen. Wulff Boru/s. No. 56,
ViALVIANUS imagines this fifh to have been
^ the Squalus * of the antients, and grounds his
opinion on a fuppofed error in a certain pafTage
in Columella and Varro^ where he would fubftitute
the word Squalus inftead of Scar us : Columella fays
no more than that the old Romans payed much
attention to their flews, and kept even the fea fifh
in frefli water, paying as much refpect to the
Mullet and Scarus as thofe of his days did to the
Murana and Bafs.
That the Scarus was not our Chub, is very evi-
dent i not only becaufe the Chub is entirely an in-
habitant of frefli waters, but likewife it feems im-
probable that the Romans would give themfelves
* A cartilaginous fifh, a mark. Vide Plin. lib. IX. c. 24.
Ovid alfo ranks his Squalus with the fea fifh.
^"/Squalus, et tenui fuffufus /anguine M u l l u s . Hdlieut,
147.
any
fc/
^il'
i
1>
Class IV. G H U B, 369
any trouble about the word of river fifh, when
they neglected the moil delicious kinds 5 all their
attention was directed towards thole of the fea:
the difficulty of procuring them feems to have
been the criterion of their value, as is ever the cafe
with effete luxury.
The chub is a very coarfe ftfti and full of bones :
it frequents the deep holes of rivers, and during
fummer commonly lies on the furface, beneath the
fhade of fame tree or bufh. It is a very timid fifh,
finking to the bottom on the left alarm, even at
the palling of a fhadow, but they will foon refume
their fituation. It feeds on worms, caterpillars,
grafshoppers, beetles, and other coleopterous in-
fects that happen to fall into the water \ and it will
even feed on cray-fifh. This fifli will rife to a fly.
This fifh takes its name from its head, not only
in our own, but in other languages : we call it
Chub, according to Skinner, from the old Englijh,
Cop, a heads the French, Tejiard-, the Italians,
Capitone.
It does not grow to a large fize •, we have
known fome that weighed above five pounds, but
Salvianus fpeaks of others that were eight or nine
pounds in weight.
The body is oblong, rather round, and of a
pretty equal thicknefs the greateft part of the way :
the fcales are large.
The irides filvery ; the cheeks of the fame color :
the head and back of a deep dufky green : the
Vol. III. B b fides
37°
BLEAK.
Class IV.
fides filvery, but in the fummer yellow : the belly
white : the pectoral fins of a pale yellow : the
ventral and anal fins red : the tail a little forked,
of a brownilh hue, but tinged with blue at the end.
176. Bleak. Alburnus. Aufon. Mofeila,
126.
Able ou Ablette. Be/on, 319.
Alburnus. Rondel, jluviat.
208. Ge/ner pifc. 23.
Albula minor. Witinck,
Witek and Blike. Scbone-
velde, II. Tab. I.
Bleak. Wil. Icth. 263. Rati
fyn. pifc. 123.
Cyprinus quincuncialis, pinna
aniofficulorum viginti. Ar-
te d.fynon. 10.
Cyprinus alburnus. Lin.fyji.
531. Grotiov, Zooph. No*
336-
Loja. Faun. Suec. No. 373.
Spitflauben, fchneiderfifchl.
Kram. 395.
Ukeleyen. WulJBorufs. No,
64.
THE taking of thefe, Aujonius lets us know,
was the fport of children,
Alburn os pr<edam puerilibus hamis.
They are very common in many of our rivers,
and keep together in large fhoals. Thefe fifh feem
at certain feafons to be in great agonies •, they
tumble about near the furface of the water, and
are incapable of fwimming far from the place,
but in about two hours recover, and difappear.
Fifh thus affected the Thames fifhermen call mad
bleaks, They feem to be troubled with a fpecies
of Qordius or hair-worm, of the fame kind with
thofe
Class IV. BLEAK. 37*
thofe which Ariftotk* fays that the Ballerus and
Tillo are infefled with, which torments them fo that
they rife to the furface of the water and then die.
Artificial pearls are made with the fcales of this Artificial
rim, and we think of the dace. They are beat in-
to a fine powder, then diluted with water, and in-
troduced into a thin glafs bubble, which is af-
terwards filled with wax. The French were the
inventors of this art. Doctor Lifter f tells us, that
when he was at Paris, a certain artift ufed in one
winter thirty hampers full of fifTi in this manu-
facture.
The bleak feldom exceeds five or fix inches Descrip*
in length : their body is (lender, greatly comprefT-
ed fideways, not unlike that of the fprat.
The eyes are large : the irides of a pale yellow :
the under jaw the longed : the lateral line crooked]:
the gills filvery : the back green : the fides and
belly filvery : the fins pellucid : the fcales fall off
very eafily : the tail much forked.
During the month of July there appear in the White
Thames, near Blackwatt and Greenwich, innumer-
able multitudes of fmall fim, which are known
to the Londoners by the name of White Bait. They
are efteemed very delicious when fried with fine
flour, and occafion, during the feafon, a vaft refort
of the lower order of epicures to the taverns con-
tiguous to the places they are taken at.
* Hijl. an. lib. VIII. c. 20.
f Journey to Paris, 142.
B b 2 There
21* BLEAK. Class IV.
There are various conjectures about this fpecies,
but all terminate in a fuppofition that they are the
fry of fome fifh, but few agree to which kind they
owe their origin. Some attribute it to the (had,
others to the fprat, the fmelt, and the bleak. That
they neither belong to the fhad, nor the fprat, is
evident from the number of branchioftegous rays,
which in thofe are eight, in this only three'. That
they are not the young of fmelts is as clear, be-
caufe they want the pinna adipofay or raylefs fin *,
and that they are not the offspring of the bleak
is extremely probable, fince we never heard of the
white bait being found in any other river, not-
withstanding the bleak is very common in feveral
of the Britijh ftreams : but as the white bait bears a
greater fimilarity to this fifh than to any other we
have mentioned, we give it a place here as an ap-
pendage to the bleak, rather than form a diftinct
article of a fifh which it is impofllble to clafs with
certainty.
It is evident that it is of the carp or Cyprinus
genus : it has only three branchioftegous rays, and
only one dorfal fin ; and in refpect to the form of
»■ the body is compreffed like that of the bleak.
Its ufual length is two inches : the under jaw is
the longed : the irides filvery, the pupil black : the
dorfal fin is placed nearer to the head than to the
tail, and confifts of about fourteen rays : the fide
line is ftrait : the tail forked, the tips black.
The
Class IV.
M I N O W.
The head, fides, and belly are filvery ; the back
tinged with green.
373
«&q|<v©-? Arift. Hift. an. VI.
c. 13.
Le Veron. Belon, ,324.
Pifciculus varius. Rondel. Jlu-
<viat. 205.
Phofcium qui vulgo <veronus
(quafi varius) dicitur, Bel-
lonius. Ge/ner fife. 715.
Elritze, Elderitze. Schone-
velde, 57.
Pink, Minim, or Minow.
Wil. Icth. 268. Rati fyn. 177. Ml now,
pifc. 125.
Cyprinus trida&ylus varius
oblongus teretiyfculus, pin-
na ani officulorutn oclo.
Arted. Jynon. 12.
Cyprinus Phoxinus. Cyp.
pinna ani radiis 8., macula.
fufca ad caudam, corpore
pellucido. Lin.j'yft. 528.
*TpHIS beautiful fim is frequent in many of our
■*■' fmall gravelly dreams, where they keep in
fhoals.
The body is (lender and frnooth, the fcales
being extremely fmall. It feldom exceeds three in-
ches in length.
The lateral line is of a golden color : the back
flat, and of a deep olive : the fides and belly vary
greatly in different fifh ; in .a few are of a rich
crimfon, in others bluifh, in others white. The
tail is forked, and marked near the bafe with a
dufky fpot,
Bb3
J{ino.Q
374
GOLD FISH. Class IV.
178. Gold- Kingo, the Gold Fi/h. K*m- tranfverfa bifurca. Lin.fyft.
en. pfer Hift. Japan, I. 137 525. Faun. Suec. tab 2.
Kin-yu. Du Halde Hiji, Grononj. Zoopb. No. 342,
China. I. 19. 315. Gold Fiih. £^w. 209.
Cyprinus auratus. Cyp. pin- Kin-yu, five carpio auratus,
na ani gemina, cauda Bajier fuhfec. II. 78.
THESE fifti are now quite" naturalized in this
country, and breed as freely in the open
waters as the common carp.
They were firft introduced into England about
the year 1691, but were not generally known till
1 72 8, when a great number were brought over, and
prefented firft to Sir Mathew Dekker, and by him
circulated round the neighborhood of London, from
whence they have been diftributed to mod parts of
the country.
In China the mod beautiful kinds are taken in a
fmall lake in the province of Che-Kyang. Every
perfon of fafhion keeps them for amufement,
either in porcellane vefTels, or in the fmall bafons
that decorate the courts of the Chinefe houfes. The
beauty of their colors, and their lively motions,
give great entertainment, efpecially to the ladies,
whofe pleafures, by reafon of the cruel policy of
that country, are extremely limited.
In form of the body they bear a great refem-
Wance to a carp. They have been known in this
ifland
Class IV. GOLDFISH. 375
ifland to arrive at the length of eight inches ; in their
native place they are faid * to grow to the fize of
our largeft herring.
The noftrils are tubular, and form fort of appen-
dages above the nofe : the dorfal fin and the tail
vary greatly in fhape : the tail is naturally bifid,
but in many is trifid, and in fome even quadrifid :
the anal fins are the ftrongeft characters of this fpe-
cies, being placed not behind one another like thofe
of other fifh, but oppofite each other like the ven-
tral fins.
The colors vary greatly; fome are marked with
a fine blue, with brown, with bright filver; but the
general predominant color is gold of a moil amazing
fplendor ; but their colors and form need not be
dwelt on, fince thofe who want opportunity of
feeing the living fifh, may furvey them exprefTed
in the mod animated manner, in the works of our
ingenious and honeft friend Mr. George Edwards.
Du Halde, 316,
Bb4 APPEN-
APPENDIX,
APPENDIX.
THE late Bifhop of Carlijle informed me Tortoise,
that a tortoife was taken off the coaft of PAGE/*
Scarborough in 1748 or 1749. It was pur-
chafed by a family at that time there, and a good
deal of company invited to partake of it. A gen-
tleman, who was one of the guefts, told them it
was a Mediterranean turtle, and not wholefome :
only one of the company eat of it, and it almofc
killed him, being feized with a dreadful vomiting
and purging.
Since the printing of that article I have been fa- Toad, 13.
vored with fome very curious accounts of this rep-
tile, which will give greater light into its natural
hiftory than I am capable of, from a mod unphi-
lofophical but invincible averfion to the whole ge-
nus. The facts that will appear in the following
lines ferve to confirm my opinion of its being an
innoxious animal, and, I hope, will ferve to free
numbers
s8o APPENDIX.
numbers from a panic that is carried to a degree of
infelicity, and alfo to redeem it from a perfecution
which the unmerited ill-opinion the world has con-
ceived, perpetually expofes it to.
The gentlemen I am principally indebted to for
my informations are J. Arfcott, Efq; of 'Tebott, in
Dewnfhire> and Mr. Pitfield, of Exeter. Some of
thefe accounts were addrefTed to Doctor Milles>
Dean of Exeter ; others to the worthy Prelate
above-mentioned, to whom I owe thefe and many
other agreeable correfpondencies 5 others again to
myfelf.
Mr. Arfcotfs letters give a very ample hiflory of
the nature of the toad : they were both addrefTed
to Doctor Milles, and both were the refult of cer-
tain queries I propofed, which the former was fo
obliging as to give himfelf the trouble of anfwering
in a mod fatisfaclory manner.
I mail firft take the liberty of citing Mr. ArfcMt\
Jetter of September the 23d, 1768, which mentions
fome very curious particulars of this innocent rep-
tile, which, for fuch a number of years, found an
afylum from the good fenfe of a family which foar-
ed above all vulgar prejudices.
" It would give me the greater!: pleafure to be
?< able to inform you of any particulars worthy Mr.
" Pennant's notice, concerning the toad who lived
" fo many years with us, and was fo great a favo-
<ft rite. The greateft curiofity in it was its becom-
V ing fo remarkably tame. It had frequented fome
« ftepq
APPENDIX. 381
" fleps before the hall-door fome years before my
" acquaintance commenced with it, and had been
" admired by my father for its fize (which was of
" the largeft I ever met with) who conftantly payed
" it a vifit every evening. I knew it myfelf above
" thirty years, and by conftantly feeding it, brought
" it to be fo tame that it always came to the can-
" die, and looked up as if expecting to be taken
" up and brought upon the table, where I always
" fed it with infects of all forts ; it was fondeft of
" flefh maggots, which I kept in bran ; it would
*c follow them, and when within a proper diftance,
" would fix its eye, and remain motionlefs for near
" a quarter of a minute, as if preparing for the
'< ftroke, which was an inftantaneous throwing its
" tongue at a great diftance upon the infect, which
" ftuck to the tip by a glutinous matter : the mo*
*c tion is quicker than the eye can follow*.
" I always imagined that the root of its tongue
" was placed in the fore part of its under jaw, and
" the tip towards its throat, by which the motion
" muft be a half circle -, by which, when its tongue
" recovered its fituation, the infect at the tip would
" be brought to the place of deglutition. I was
" confirmed in this by never obferving any internal
u motion in its mouth, excepting one fwallow the
" inftant its tongue returned. Poffibly I might be
* This rapid capture of its prey might give occafion to the
report of its fafcinating powers, Linnaus fays, Infefta in fauces
fafchio re-UQcat,
" miftaken
332 APPENDIX.
" miftaken, for I never difTected one, but content-
" ed myfelf with opening its mouth, and (lightly
*e infpe&ing it.
" You may imagine that a toad generally detefted
cc (altho' one of the mod inoffenfive of all animals)
" fo much taken notice of and befriended, excited
" the curiofity of all comers to the houfe, who all
" deli red to fee it fed, fo that even ladies fo far
" conquered the horrors inftilled into them by
ct nuries, as to defire to fee it. This produced in-
" numerable and improbable reports, making it
u as large as the crown of a hat, &c. &c. This I
" hope will account for my not giving you parti-
*6 culars more worth your notice. When I firft
" read the account in the papers of toads fucking
" cancerous breafls, I did not believe a word of it,
" not thinking it poffible for them to fuck, having
" no lips to embrace the parr, and a tongue fo
" oddly formed ; but as the fact is thoroughly ve-
" rified, I mod impatiently long to be fully in-
" formed of all particulars relating to it,"
Notwkhftanding thefe accounts will ferve to point
out fome errors I had adopted, in refpect to this
reptile id my firit fheet, yet it is* with much plea-
fure I lay before the public a more authentic hifto-
ry, collected from Mr. Arfcotfs fecond favor ; the
anfwer points out my queries, which it is needlefs
to repeat.
tt&offi
APPENDIX. 383
Tebott, Nov. 1, 1768.
" In refpecl to the queries, I fliall here give the
" mod fatisfaclory anfwers I am capable of.
" Firft, I cannot fay how long my father had
" been acquainted with the toad before I knew it ;
* but when I firft was acquainted with it, he nfed
" to mention it as the old toad I've known fo many
" years j I can anfwer for thirty- fix years.
" Secondly, No toads that I ever faw appear-
" ed in the winter feafon. The old toad made
" its appearance as foon as the warm weather came,
" and I always concluded it retired to fome dry
" bank to repofe till the fpring. When we new-
" iay'd the fteps I had two holes made in the
" third ftep on each, with a hollow of more than a
" yard long for it, in which I imagine it flept, as
" it came from thence at its firft appearance.
" Thirdly, It was feldom provoked : neither
" that toad (nor the multitudes I have feen tor-
" mented with great cruelty) ever fhewed the. left
" defire of revenge, by lpitting or emitting any
"juice from their pimples. Sometimes upon tak-
" ing it up it would let out a great quantity of clear
" water, which, as I have often ktn it do the fame
" upon the fteps when quite quiet, was certainly its
" urine, and no more than a natural evacuation.
" Fourthly, A toad has no particular enmity
" for the fpider; he ufed to eat five or fix with his
millepedes (whkh I take to be its chief food) that
I generally provided for it, before I found out
" that
cc
384 APPENDIX.
" that flefh maggots, by their continual motion,
" was the moft tempting bait ; but when offered it
" eat blowing flies and humble bees that come from
" the rat-tailed maggot in gutters, or in fhort any
" infect that moved. I imagine if a bee was to be
" put before a toad, it would certainly eat it to its
" cofl ; but as bees are feldom ftirring at the fame
" time that toads are, they can feldom come in
" their way, as they feldom appear after fun-rifing,
" or before fun-fet. In the heat of the day they
" will come to the mouth of their hole, I believe,
" for air. I once from my parlour window obferved
" a large toad I had in the bank of a bowling-
" green, about twelve at noon, a very hot day, ve-
ct ry bufy and active upon the grafs; fo uncommon
" an appearance made me go out to fee what it
" was, when I found an innumerable fwarm of
" winged ants had dropped round his hole, which
" temptation was as irrefiftible as a turtle would
" be to a luxurious alderman.
" Fifthly, Whether our toad ever propagated its
" fpecies I know not, rather think not, as it al-
" ways appeared well, and not leffened in bulk,
" which it mufl have done, I mould think, if it
" had difcharged fo large a quantity of fpawn as
" toads generally do. The females that are to
" propagate in the fpring, I imagine, in (lead of
" retiring to dry holes, go into the bottom of
" ponds, and lay torpid among the weeds j for to
" niy great furprize in the middle of the winter,
2 having
APPENDIX. 385
" having for amufement put a long pole into my
" pond, and twilled it till it had gathered a large
" volume of weed, on taking it off 1 found many
" toads, and having cut fome afunder with my
" knife, by accident, to get off the weed, found
" them full of fpawn not thoroughly formed. I
" am not pofitive, but think there were a few
" males in March: I know there are thirty males*
" to one female, twelve or fourteen of whom I have
" feen clinging round a female : I have often dif-
" engaged her, and put her to a folitary male, to
" fee with what eagernefs he would feize her.
" They impregnate the fpawn as it is drawn 7 out in
" long
* Mr. John Hunter has affured me, that during his resi-
dence at Belkijle, he differed fome hundreds of toads, yet
never met with a^fmgle female among them.
f I was incredulous as to the objletrical offices of the male
toad, but fince the end is fo well accounted for, and the fact
eftablifhei by fuch good authority, belief mull take place.
Mr. Demours, in the Memoirs of the French Academy, as
traiiflated by Dr. Templeman, <voL I. 371. has been very par-
ticular in refpect to the male toad, as acting the part of an
Accoucheur ; his account is curious, and clames a place here :
" In the evening of one of the long days in fummer, Mr.
*' Demours being in the King's garden perceived two toads
" coupled together -'at the edge of an hole, which was formed
4t in part by a great Hone at the top.
" Curiofity drew him td fee what was the occafion of the
* ' motions he obferved, when two facts equally new furprized
** him ; the firji was the extreme difficulty the female had in
M laying her eggs, infomuch that flie did not feem capable
Vol. III. C c " of
3*6 APPENDIX.
" long firings, like a necklace, many yards long,
" not in a large qaantity of jelly, like frogs fpawn.
" N. B. After having held a female fome time in
" my hand, I have, to try if there was any fmell,
" put my finger a foot under water to a male,
" who has immediately feized it, and (luck to it as
" firmly as if it was a female, ^ue're, Would they
" feize a finger or rag that had touched a can-
" cerous ulcer ?
" Sixthly,
** of being delivered of them without fome affiftance. The
" fecond was, that the male was mounted on the back of
" the female, and exerted all his ftrength with his hinder
" feet in pulling out the eggs, whilH his fore-feet embraced
" her breaft.
" In order to apprehend the manner of his working in the
" delivery of the female, the reader muil obferve, that the
" paws of thefe animals, as well thofe of the fore-feet as of
** the hinder, are divided into feveral toes, which can per-
" form the office of fingers.
" It muil be femarked likewife, that the eggs of this fpe-
'* cies of toads are included each in a membranous coat that
" is very firm, in which is contained the embryo ; and that
" thefe eggs, which are oblong and about two lines in
" length, being fattened one to another by a ihort but very
H ftrong cord, form a kind of chaplet, the beads of which
" are dillant from each other about the half of their length.
" It is by drawing this cord with his paw that the male
'* performs the function of a midwife, and acquits himfelf
" in it with a dexterity that one would not expect from fo
" lumpilh an animal.
" The prefence of the obferver did not a little difcompofe
"the male ; for fome time he Hopped ihort, and threw on
" the
APPENDIX. 387
" Sixthly, Infects being their food, I never faw
'* any toad mew any liking or diflike to any plant*.
" Seventhly, I hardly remember any perfons ta-
" king it up except my father and myfelf : I do
" not know whether it had any particular attach-
" ment to us.
" Eighthly, In refpect to its end, I anfwer this
u laft qucre. Had it not been for a tame raven, I
" make no doubt but it would have been now liv-
" ing; who one day feeing it at the mouth of its
" hole, pulled it out, and although I refcued ir,
" pulled out one eye, and hurt it fo, that notwith-
*? {landing its living a twelvemonth it never enjoyed
" itfflfi
" the curious impertinent a fixed look that marked his dif-
" quietnefs and fear; but he foon returned to his work with
" more precipitation than before, and a moment after he
" appeared undetermined whether he mould continue it or
" not. The female likewife difcovered her uneafinefs at the
«* fight of the ftranger, by motions that interrupted fome-
** times the male in his operation. At length, whether the
" filence and Heady poflure of the fpeclator had dimpated
" their fear, or that the cafe was urgent, the male relumed
" his work with the fame vigour, and fuccefsfully performed
" his function."
* This quellion arofe from an afTertion of Litmaus, that
the toad delighted in filthy herbs. Deled at ur Cotula, Aclaa,
Stachyde fcetidi. The unhappy deformity of the animal
feems to be the only ground of this as well as another mifre-
prefentation, of its conveying a poifon with its pimples, its
touch, and even its breath. Verruca laclefcentes venenata
infufc tacitly anhelitu,
CC 2
"388 APPENDIX.
" itfelf, and had a difficulty of taking its food,
" miffing the mark for want of its eye : before
" that accident had all the appearance of perfect
" health."
What Mr. Thficld communicated to me ferves
farther to evince the patient and pacific difpofition
of this poor animal. If I am thought to dwell too
long on the fubject, let it be confidered, that thofe
who have moft unprovoked enemies, and feweft
friends, clame the greateft pity, and warmeft vin-
dication. This reptile has undergone all forts of
fcandal $ one author makes it the companion of an
atheift*; and Milton f makes the devil itfelf its
inmate •, in a word, all kind of evil paffions have
been bellowed on it: It is but juftice therefore to
fay fomething in behalf of an animal that has of
late had fo many trials of its temper, from expe-
riments occafioned by the new difcovery of its
cancer-fucking qualities. It has born all the han-
dling, teizing, bagging, &c. &c. without the left
fign of a vindictive difpofition -, but has even made
itfelf a facrifice to the difcharge of its office : this
I know from the refult of much enquiry -, would I
could contradict what; is aflerted, of the inefficacy
of the tryals made of them in the mod horrible of
difeafes -, for at this time I myfelf cannot bring one
proof of the fuccefs. But I would not have any
one
* A great toad was faid to have been found in the
lodgings of Vanini^ at Touloufe% Vide John/oris Shakefpear,
f Faradife LoJ}.
APPENDIX. 3S9
one difcouraged from the purfuit of the remedy.
Heaven opens to us gradually its favors : the
loadjlone was for ages a meer matter of ignorant
amaze at its attractive qualities : mercury was a
fuppofed poifon, and the terror of phyficians : we
now wonder at the powers of electricity, and are
dill but partially acquainted with its ufes : the
toad, the object of horror even in the mod en-
lightened times, is found to be perfectly innocent ;
it has certainly contributed to the eafe (and as has
been faid to the cure) of the unhappy cancered ;
let the following facts fpeak for themfelves ; they
come from perfons of undoubted veracity, and
will fufficiently edablifh the truth of the beneficent
qualities of this animal.
The firft paper relating to it is very ingeni-
oufly drawn up by Mr. PitfieJd, for the informa-
tion of Doctor Littleton, Bifhop of Carlifle (now
happy) who immediately honored me with the
copy.
Exon9 Augufi 29, 1768.
" Your lordfhip mud have taken notice of a
cc paragraph in the papers, with regard to the ap-
" plication of toads to a cancered bread. A pa-
" tient of mine -has fent to the neighborhood of
" Hunger ford, and brought down the very woman
" on whom the cure was done. I have, with all
" the attention I am capable of, attended the
C c 3 " operation
390 APPENDIX.
*c operation for eighteen or twenty days, and am
. . " furprized at the phenomenon. I am in no ex-
" pectation of any great fervice from the applica-
" tion : the age, conftitution, and thoroughly can-
" cerous condition of the perfon, being uncon-
" querable barriers to it. How an ail of that
" kind, abfolutely local, in an otherwife found
" habit, and of a likely age, might be relieved, I
u cannot fay. But as to the operation, thus
" much I can afTert, that there is neither pain nor
". naufeoufnefs in it. The animal is put into a
" linen bag, all but its head, and that is held to
" the part. It has generally inftantly laid hold of
" the fouleft part of the fore, and fucked with
" greedinefs until it dropped off dead. It has
" frequently happened that the creature has fwolen
" immenfdy, and from its agonies appeared to be
" in great pain. I have weighed them for feveral
" days together, before and after the application,
" and found their increafe of weight,, in the dif-
*c ferent degrees, from a drachm to near an ounce.
" They frequently fweat exceedingly, and turn
cc quite pale: fometimes they difgorge, recover, and
'c become lively again. I think the whole fcene
" is furprifing, and a very remarkable piece of na-
" tural hiftory. From the conftant inoffenfivenefs
u which I have obferved in them, I almoft queflion
u the truth of their poifonous fpitting. Many peo-
" pie here expect no great good from the applica-
^6 tion of toads to cancers 5 and where the diforder
is
APPENDIX. 391
" is not abfolutely local, none is to be expected ;
"where it is, and feated in any part, not to be
" well come at for extirpation, I think it is hardly
" to be imagined, but that the having it fucked.
" clean as often as you pleafe, muft give great
" relief. Every body knows, that dogs licking of
" fores cures them, which is, I fuppofe, chiefly by
" keeping them clean. If there is any credit to be
" given to hiftory, poifons have been fucked out,
Palkntia Vulnera lambit
Ore Venena trahens.
" are the words of Lucan on the occafion : if the
" people to whom thefe words are applied, did
" their cure by immediately following the injection
" of the poifon, the local confinement of another
" poifon brings the cafe -to a great degree of fimi-
" larky.
" I hope I have not tired your lordfhip with my
" long tale, as it is a true one, and in my appre-
" henfion a curious piece of natural hiftory, I could
" not forbear communicating it to you. I own I
"thought the ilory in the p.apers to be an inven-
" tion, and when I confidered the inftinclive prin-
" cipie in all animals of felf preiervation, I was
" confirmed in my difbelief ; but what I have re-
*' lated I faw, and all theory mud yield to fact.
" It is only the Rubeta^ the land toad, which has
" the property of fucking 5 I cannot find any the
C c 4 « left
392 A P P E N D I X.
" left mention of the property in any one of the
old naturalifts. My patient can bear to have
but one applied in twenty-four hours : the wo-
man who was cured had them on day and
nighr, without intermiffion, for five weeks. Their
" time of h angina; at the bread has been from one
" to fix hours."
The other is of a woman who made the ex-
periment, which I give, as delivered to me from
f* undoubted authority.
About fix years * ago a poor woman received a
crufh on her breaft by the fall of a pail ; a com-
plaint in that part was the refult.
Laft year her diforder increafed to an alarming
degree j fhe had five wounds on her breafts, one
exceeding large, from which fragments of bone
worked out, giving her vaft pain-, and at the fame
time there was 3, great difcharge of thin yellow
matter : (he was likewife reduced to a meer fkele-
ton.
AH her left fide and flomach was much fwel-
led ; her fingers doughy and difcolored.
On the 25th of September, 1768, the firft toad
was applied -, between that and the 29th fhe ufed
feven, and had that night better reft. She fwal-
lowed with greater eafe, for before that time there
was fome appearance of tumor in her neck, and
a difficulty of getting any thing down.
* f, e, from 1769,
Oftober
APPENDIX. 393
Oclober 16th, the patient better. It was thought
proper as winter was coming on, and of courfe it
would be very difficult to procure a number of
toads, to apply more at a time, fo three were put
on at once. The fwelling in the arm abated, and
the woman's reft was good.
During thefe tryals lhe took an infufion of Wa-
fer Parfnep with Pulvis CornacchinL
December 18th, continued to look ill, but finds
herfelf better : two of the wounds were now healed.
She was always mod eafy when the toads were
fucking, of which me killed vaft numbers in the
operation.
January 1769. The lad account that was re-
ceived, informing that the patient was better.
The remarks made on the animals are thefe :
Some toads died very foon after they had fuck-
ed \ others lived about a quarter of an hour,
but fome lived much longer: for example, one
that was applied about feven o'clock fucked till
ten, and died as foon as it was taken from the
bread •, another that immediately fucceeded conti-
nued till three o'clock, but dropped dead from the
wound, each fwelled exceedingly, and turned of
a pale color.
Thefe toads did not feem to fuck greedily, and
would often turn their heads away; but during the
time of fucking were heard to fmack their lips
like a yoqng child.
As thofe reptiles are apt by their ftruggles to get
out
394
APPENDIX.
out of the bag, the open end ought to be made
with an open hem, that the firing may run the
more readily, and fatten tightly about the neck.
It would be improper to quit the fubjecl: with-
out mentioning the origin of this flrange difco-
very, which was owing to a woman near Hunger-
ford, who labored under a cancerous complaint
in her bread, which had long baffled all applica-
tions.
The account me gives of the manner in which
fhe came by her knowledge is fingular, and I may
fay apocryphal. She fays of herfelf, that in the
height of her diforder fhe went to fome church
where there was a vaft crowd : on going into a
pew, fhe was accofted by a flrange clergyman, who,
after exprefflng companion for her fituation, told
her that if fhe would make fuch an application
of living toads * as abovementioned, fhe would be
well.
This dark flory is all we can collect relating to
the affair. It is our opinion that fhe Humbled up-
on the difcovery by accident, and that having fet
up for a cancer do&refs, fhe thought it necefTary to
* I have been told that fhe not only made ufe of living
toads, but permitted the dead ones to remain at her breaft,
by way of cataplafms, for fome weeks,
I have been informed that the relation of this flrange
method of cure was brought over a few years ago by one
of our foreign minifters ; and that there is alfo notice taken
of it in Wheeler's Travels.
amufe
APPENDIX. 395
amufe the world with this myfterious relation*;
For it feems very unaccountable, that this un-
known gentleman fhould exprefs fo much ten-
derneis for this fingle fufferer, and not feel any
for the many thoufands that daily languifh under
this terrible diforder: would he not have made
ufe of this invaluable noftrum for his own emo-
lument, or at left, by fome other means have
found a method of making it public for the good
of mankind ?
Here I take leave of the fubjecl, which I could
not do without exprefiing my doubts, as to the
method of the woman's obtaining her information ;
but in refpect to the authenticity of this new-
difcovered property of the toad, facts eftablifh it
beyond difpute. Let the humane wifh for fpeedy
proofs of the efficacy -, and for the fatisfaction of
the world, let thofe who are capable of giving in-
difputable proofs of the fuccefs, take the earlieft
opportunity of making the public acquainted with
fo interefting an affair.
' I have now given without alteration the whole
' of the facts as dated in my former edition. They
* are too curious to be loft ; as they may ferve to
* Mr. Valentine Greatraks, who about the year 1664, per-
fuaded himfelf that he could cure difeafes,- by ftroking them
out "of the parts affected with his hand ; and the famous
Bridget BoJlock> of Chejhire, who worked cures by virtue of
her falling fpittle, both came by their art in a manner fu-
pernatural, but by faith many were made whole.
% give
396 A P P E N D I X.
* give to after-times a proof of the belief of the
c age, and the fair tryal made of a mod diftaft-
* ful remedy in the mod dreadful of complaints.'
Glain This reminds me of another Welch word that is
Naidr, 30. explanatory of the cuftoms of the antients, mewing
their intent in the ufe of the plant Vervaine in
their luftrations ; and why it was called by Diofco-
rides Hierobotane, or the facred plant, and e-
fleemed proper to be hung up in their rooms.
The BritiJJo name Cas gan Cythrawl, or the
Devil's averfion, may be a modern appellation,
but is likewife called T Dderwen fendigaid, the
holy oak, which evidently refers to the Druids
groves.
Pliny informs us, that the Gauls ufed it in their
incantations, as the Romans and Greeks did in
their luftrations. Terence, in his Andria, fhews us
the Verbena was placed on altars before the doors
of private houfes in Athens ; and from the fame
paffage in Pliny *, we find the Magi were guilty
of the mod extravagant fuperflition about this
herb. Strange it is that fuch a veneration fhould
arife for a plant endued with no perceptible quali-
ties •, and ftranger dill it fhould fpread from the
fartheft north to the boundaries of India. So ge-
neral a confent, however, proves the cuftom arofe
before the different nations had loft all communi-
cation with each other.
* Lib. XXV. cap. 9.
Her
APPENDIX.
Her Grace the Dutchefs Dowager of Port-
land did me the honor of communicating the
following fpecies.
Thus is a new kind of Sucker found near
Weymouth, which ought to be placed after No. 59.
and may be called the
T
The body taper.
The pectoral fins placed unufually high. It
has only one dorsal fin ^ placed low5 or near the
tail.
The tail is even at the end.
The color of the head and body is of a fine
pink : of the fins whitiih. On each fide of the
engine of adherence on the belly, is a round black
fpot.
It is figured in Plate XXII. of the natural fize,
Another will add a new genus to the Britifi
fifh, being of that which Linnaus calls Ophidium.
It muft find a place after the Launce, Sand Eel
or AmmodyteS) under the trivial name of
297
HE head is flat and tumid on each fide. Bimacu.
LATED.
Be
APB-
39S APPENDIX,
Beardless. Ophidium imberbe. Lin. Syft. 431. Faun. Suec. No 319.
Ophidium fiavum et imberbe. Schonevelde> 53? Wil. Icth.
113. Rail fyn. fife. 39.
THIS was taken at the fame place with the
former. I have not at this time had op-
portunity of defcribing it, therefore am obliged to
refer the reader to the writers above cited for the
defcription.
No,
APPENDIX.
m-
No. II.
Of "the PROLIFICNESS of FISH.
Fifti. Weight. Weight of Spawn. Faecundity. Time,
oz. dr. grains.
203109. April 4.
3686760. Dec. 23.
1357400. March 14.
g6g6o. Oct. 25.
546681. June 18.
28323. April 5.
49304. April 25.
81586. May 2.
38278. March 2i,
100362. June 13.
383252*. May 28.
Carp
25-
5-
2571-
Codfifli
12540.
Flounder
24.'
4.
2200.
Herring
5-
10.
480.
Mackrel
18.
0.
12234..
Perch
8.
9-
7t5i.
Pike
56.
4-
5100I.
Roach
10.
6f
361.
Smelt
2.
0.
I49i.
Sole
14.
8.
542i<
Tench
40.
0.
* Some part of the fpavvn of this fifh was by accident loft,
fo that the account here is below the reality. Vide Phil, Tranf*
1767.
No.
4oa APPENDIX.
No. III.
Of the method of making ISINGLASS
in ICELAND, from the SOUNDS of
COD and LING.
THE founds of cod and iing bear general like-
nefs to thofe of the Sturgeon kind of Lin-
nans and Artedi, and are in general fo well known,
as to require no particular defcription. The New-
found land and Iceland fifhermen fplit open the filh
as foon as taken, and throw the back-bones, with
the founds annexed, in a heap-, but previous to
putrefaction, the founds are cut out, wafhed from
their (limes, and faked for ufe. In cutting out
the founds, the parts between the ribs are left be-
hind, which are much the beft ; the Iceland fifh-
ermen are fo fenfible of this, that they beat the
bones upon a block with a thick flick, till the
Pockets, as they term them, come out eafily, and
thus preferve the found entire. If the founds have
been cured with fait, that muft be diffolved by
ileeping them in water, before they are prepared
for Ifwglafs. The frefh found mult then be laid
upon a block of wood, whofe furface is a little
elliptical, to the end of which a fmall hair brum is
nailed,
APPENDIX.
nailed, and with a faw-knife, the membranes on
each fide of the found muft be fc raped off. The
knife is rubbed upon the brum occafionally, to
clear its teeth, the pockets are cut open with fcii-
fars, and perfectly cleanfed of the mucous matter
with a coarfe cloth : the founds are afterwards
warned a few minutes in lime-water, in order to
abforb their oily principle; and laftly, in clear
water. They are then laid upon nets, to dry in
the air ; but, if intended to refemble foreign IJin-
glafs, the founds of cod will only admit of that
called book, but thofe of ling both fhapes. The
thicker the founds are, the better the Ifinglafs^ co-
lor excepted •, but that is immaterial to the brew-
er* who is its chief confumer.
40*
Vo*,. HI. D d No.
402
APPENDIX.
No. IV.
CATALOGUE of the ANIMALS
DESCRIBED IN THIS VOLUME, WITH
their BRITISH NAMES.
REPTILES.
i. CORIACEOUS
\-^ Tortoife,
Melwioges.
2. Common Frog,
Llyffant melyn.
g. Edible Frog,
Llyffant melyn cefn grwm.
4. Toad,
LlyfTant dn, Llyffant daf-
adenog.
5. Natter Jack.
6. Great Frog.
7. Scaly Lizard.
8. Warty Lizard,
Genau goeg ddafadenog.
9. Brown Lizard,
frech.
10. Little Lizard,
leiaf.
11. Anguine Lizard,
naredig.
12. Viper,
Neidr, Neidr du, Gwiber.
13. Snake,
Neidr fraith, Neidr y to-
menydd.
It is to Richard Morris , Efq.
that the public is indebted for
the Britijb names.
14. Aber-
APPENDIX.
14. Aberdeen Snake.
15. Blind- worm, or Slow-
worm, Pwl dall. Neidr y defaid.
403
F I
H.
16. /^Ommon Whale,
17. \~A Pike -headed
Morfil CyfTredin.
Whale,
Penhwyad.
18. Fin fifh,
Barfog.
19. Round-lipped Whale
, Trwngrwn.
20. Beaked Whale.
21. Blunt-headed Cachalot.
22. Round-headed,
Pengrwn.
23. High-finned,
Uchel aden.
24. Dolphin,
DohTyn.
25. Porpeffe,
Llamhydydd.
26. Grampus,
Morfochyn.'
27. Lamprey, Sea,
Llyfowen bendol, Llam-
prai.
28. Lefler Lamprey, '
Llepftg.
29. Pride.
30. Skate,
Cath for, morcath, Rhaicrl
31. Sharp-nofed Ray,
Morcath drwynfain.
32. Rough Ray.
33. Fuller Ray.
-
34. Shagreen Ray.
2$* Whip Ray.
Dd 2
36. Electric
404
APPENDIX.
$6. Electric Ray,
Swithbyfg.
37. Thornback,
Morcath bigog.
38. Sting Ray,
Morcath cefn.
39. Angel fifh,
Maelgi.
40. Picked Dog fifh,
Ci Pegod, Picewd.
41. Bafking Shark.
42. White Shark,
Morgi gwin.
43. Blue Shark,
Morgi glas, y Sierc.
44. Long-tailed Shark,
Llwynog mor.
45. Tope,
Ci glas.
46. Spotted Dog fifh,
Ci yfgarmes, morgi mawr.
47. LefTer Dog fifh.
48. Smooth Hound,
Ci Llyfn.
49. Porbeagle.
50. Beaumaris Shark.
51. Angler, common,
MorlyrTant.
52. Long Angler,
Morlyffant hir.
S$. Sturgeon,
Iftwrfion.
54. Oblong Diodon,
Heulbyfg.
55. Short Diodon.
56, Globe Diodon.
57. Lump Sucker,
Jar-for.
58. Unctuous Sucker,
Mor falwen.
59. Jura Sucker.
60. Longer Pipe fifh.
61. Shorter.
62. Little,
Mor Neidr.
63- Eel>
Llyfowen.
64. Conger,
Mor Llyfowen, Cyngyren.
65. Wolf
A P P E
66.
67.
68,
69.
70.
7*-
72.
73-
74-
75-
76.
77-
78.
79-
80.
81.
82.
84.
85.
86.
87.
88.
89.
90.
91.
92.
Wolffifii,
Launce,
Morris,
Sword fifh,
Dragonet, gemmeous.
Dragonet, fordid.
Weever,
Great Weever.
Common Cod fifh,
Hadock,.
Whiting Pont,
Bib,
Poor,
Coal fifli,
Pollack,
Whiting,
Hake,
Forked Hake.
Left Hake.
Trifurcated Hake.
Ling,
Burbot,
Three bearded Cod.
Five bearded Cod.
Torfk.
Crefted Blenny.
Gattorngine.
Smooth Blenny,
D
N D I X.
Morflaidd.
Llamrhiaid, Pyfgod by-
chain.
Morys.
405
Cleddyfbyfo
Mor wiber, Pigyn aftrus.
Codfyn.
Hadoc.
Cod lwyd.
Deillion.
Cwdyn ebiill.
Chwetlyn glas.
Morlas.
Chwitlyn gwyn.
Cegdclu,
Hones.
Llefen, Llefeaan.
d3
93, Spotted
4o6
APPENDIX.
93. Spotted Blenny.
94. Viviparous Blenny,
gS> Black Goby.
96. Spotted Goby.
9 j. Bull Head, River,
98. Armed Bull Head,
99. Father Lafher.
100. Doree,
101. Opah.
102. Holibut,
103. Plaife,
104. Flounder,
105. Dab,
106. Smear Dab*
107. Sole,
108. Smooth Sole.
109. Turbot,
1 10. Pearl,
in. Whiff.
U2, Gilt Head,
113. Red Gilt Head,
114. Toothed Gilt Head.
115. Wraffe, antient,
j 1 6. Ballan.
117. Bimaculated.
118. Trimaculated*
119. Striped.
Pentarw, Bawd y melinydd.
Penbwl.
Sion dori.
Lleden ffreinig*
Lleden frech.
Lleden 'ddu.
Lleden gennog, Lleden
dwfr croyw.
Tafod yr hydd> Tafod yr
ych.
Lleden chwith, Torbwt*
Perl.
Peneuryn, Eurben.
Brom y mor.
Qwrach.
J20. Gibbous*
120.
121.
122.
123.
I24.
I25.
126.
I27.
128.
I29.
130.
132.
*33-
*34-
*35-
136.
i37-
13S.
*39-
140.
141.
142.
144.
145-
Perc.
Draenog, Gannog.
APPENDIX.
Gibbous.
Goldfinny.
Comber.
Cook.
Perch, common,
Baffe,
Sea Perch. ■
Ruffe.
Black Ruffe.
Three fpined Stickle-
back, Sil y dom, Pyfgod y gath,
Ten fpined, Pigowgbyfg.
Fifteen fpined, Silod y mor.
Mackrel, common, Macrell.
Tunny,
Scad.
Red Surmullet,
Striped Surmullet.
Penhaiarn llwyd, Penhai-
ernyn.
Penhaiarn coch.
Pibyd.
Sapphirine Gurnard, Yfgyfarnog y mor.
Streaked Gurnard.
Loche, bearded^ Crothell yr afon.
Salmon, Gleifiedyn, Eog, Marah
'Taliefin,
Grey, Penllwyd, Adfwlch.
Sea Trout,
D d 4 146. Trout,
407
Macrell Sopaen.
Hyrddyn coch.
Grey Gurnard,
Red Gurnard,
Piper,
4o8 A P P
146. Trout.
147. White Trout.
148. Samlet,
149. Charr,
150. Grayling,
tgu Smelt,
152. Gwiniad,
153. Pike,
154. Gar Pike,
155. Saury Pike.
156. Argentine.
157. Atherine.
158. Mullet,
159. Flying Fifh.
160. Herring,
161. Pilchard,
162. Sprat,
163. Anchovy.
164. Shad,
165. Carp,
1 66. Barbel,
167. Tench,
168. Gudgeon,,
169. Bream,
170. Rud,
171. Crucian.
172. Roach,
173. Dace,
E N D I X.
Brithyll.
Brith y gro.
Torgoch.
Brithyll rheftrog, Qlafgan-
gen.
Brwyniaid.
Gwiniedyn.
Penhwyad.
Mor nodwydd, Corn big.
Hyrddyn, Mingrwn,
Pennog, yfgaden.
Pennog mair.
Coeg Bennog.
Herlyn, Herling.
Carp, Cerpyn.
Barf byfg, y Barfog.
Gwrachen, Ifgretten.
Crothel.
Brem.
Rhuddgoch.
Rhyfell.
Darfen, Goknbyfg.
174. Graining.
APPENDIX.
174. Graining.
175. Chub,
176. Bleak,
177. Minow,
178. GoldFifh,
Penci, Cochgangen.
Gorwynbyfg.
Crothel y dom, Bychan
byfc
409
APPENDIX.
579. Bimaculated Sucker.
180. BeardleTs Ophidium,
INDEX.
INDEX.
Page
ABDOMINAL fifli, I . 46,28*.
Adder, fea, - . . 123#
Adder, vide Viper,
Adder-gems, their fuppofed virtues, - - 32.
A^wTrtf of Arijlotle, a fpecies of Shark, - no.
Anchovy, - - . 347,
Angel-fifh, - - - - 98.
» its flercene fs, -m no.
Angler, common, - I2o.
1 long? - - - 123.
Apicius, the chief of epicures, - - 272.
Apodal fiih, - - - ' ' j 44, 142.
'Ape, fea, - >. V - no.
Argentine, - 327,
Arijiophanesy his chorus of frogs, - - 1 1 ,
Afinius Celery the vaft price he gave for a Surmullet, 272.
AtHerine, - - - 328.
B.
412
INDEX.
Page
Mian, »..'■»*- 246.
Barbel, * . . 357.
•- . its roe noxious, - ,- - 358.
Balking Shark, the largefc fpecies, - - 101.
— — migratory, - - 102.
. yields great plenty of oil, * 104.
BafTe, - . - - - 257.
Bib, or Blinds, a kind of Cod filh, - 184.
Billets, young Coal filh, - - 187.
Birdbolt, - - - ■ 199.
Bifcayeners, early engaged in the whale fifhery, - 54.
Bleak, - 37°-
Blenny, the crefted, - 206.
. fmooth, - - - 208.
1 fpotted, - - - 210.
. ■ — ■ viviparous, - - - 211.
Blind-worm, or Slow-worm, - - 36.
.. a harmlefs ferpent, * - ibid.
Boat, the five-men, what, - - 235.
Bony filh, 42, 142.
Botargoy what, - - - 331.
Bottle-head, a fort of Wlaale, * - 59.
Branlines, midt Samlet.
Bream, » ' «* ...* :< ., * 362.
■■ fea, * , * - 242,
Bret, * . - - 233*
Britijb names, « - •■ 402.
Bufonites, what, - * - 16, 154.
Bulcard, - - . - * 208.
Bull-head, liver, *'.»•>■ 216.
_-, armed, ^ - - 217.
Bull-
INDEX. 413
Page
Bull-trout, - . - 296.
Burbot, - - - - 4 " 199.
Butterfifh, ... 210.
But, a name for the Flounder, - ' - 329,
Cachalot, genus of Whales producing fperma>ceti, 61.
— — — the blunt-headed, - - ibid.
— — round-headed, - - 63.
— — — high-finned, - - 64.
Cancers attempts to cure by the application of toads, 17.
Carp, .... 35>
its longevity, - - - 354.
— very tenacious of life, - - 35c.
— - golden, .... 374,
Cartilaginous fifh, their characters, - 41, 75.
Cetaceous fifti, their characters, » 41,47.
Char, - - - - 305*
~— - gilt and red, probably the fame £fh, - 308.
Chub, - ' 368.
Coal-fifh, - - - 186.
Coble, a fort of boat, - - 235.
Cod-fish, the common, - - 172.
fifh affecting cold climates, - ibid,
.— vail filhery off New foundland, - 173.
— — — — very prolific, - - 177.
— « three bearded, - - 201.
> ■ live bearded, - h 202.
Conger, how differing from the eel, - 147.
— — -- an article of commerce in Cornwall, - 148.
Comber, - « * ■ 252.
Cook,
414 INDEX.
Page
Cook, - 253.
Crucian, * - - 364,
D.
Dab, - 230*
— fmear, - ibid.
Dace, or Dare, - 366.
Digby, Sir Kenelm-, lingular experiment of, - 31.
Piodon, oblong, ... 129.
., fhort, - • - - - 131.
■■ globe, ... 132.
Dog-fifh, the picked, - - 100.
, greater, - - - 113.
\ lefTer, - - - 115.
Dolphin, - - - 65.
— . venerated by the ancients, - - 66.
— — — - falfely reprefented by painters, - 6j.
- a difh at great tables, . » - 62.
DOREE, - 221.
Dragonet, gemmeous, ... 264.
. — the fordid, - - 167.
Drizzles, what, - - - 198.
E.
Eel, common, will quit its element, * 142.
impatient of cold, - - - 143.
■ generation of, - - ibid*
•— - mod univerfal of fifh, * - 146.
■■ ii * defpifed by the Romans, * -* ibid.
Eel*
INDEX. 415
Page
Eel-pout, - - - 199.
■ viviparous, - - - 211.
Eft, vide Lizard,
Elvers, - - - - 14S.
Father-lamer, - - - 218.
Fin-filh, a fpecies of whale, - - 57.
Finfcale, vide rud.
Fire-flaire, vide fling-ray.
Fish, the fourth clafs of animals, - - 39.
Fifhir.g-frog, vide angler.
Flounder, r 226,
or fluke, - - 229.
Flying-fifh, - - - 333-
Forked beard, greater, - - - 193.
lefler, - - - 195,
Fox, fea, - - - ll0.
Frog, common, - - 9.
—— generation of the, - - 10.
periodical filence, - - it.
edible, 13.
— ■■ great, 20,
Garum, a fort of pfckle much efteemed byjthe antients, 265.
Gattorugin, - - - 207.
Gilt-head, lunulated, or gilt-poll, - 240.
'■ red, * 242.'
' - toothed, «* 243.
Clain
4i 6
IN D E X.
Page
Chin Neidr, in high efteem with the old Britons, 32.
Gloucejier city> prefents the King annually with a lam-
prey pye. 77.
Goby, the black, - - - 213.
■ fpotted, « * - 215.
Goldfifh, - - - 374.
Goldfinny, - - - 251.
Graining, - 367.
Grampus, - - - - 72.
Grayling, - - - - 311.
Grey, - - - - 295.
Grigs, - - - - 145.
Groundling, vide Loche.
Gudgeon, - - - - 361.
•' — fea, ... - 213.
Guffer, - - *■ - 211.
Gurnard, grey, - 276.
— red, ... 278.
■ fapphirine, - * 280,
— — — ftreaked, - - - 281.
■ — yellow, vide Dragonet.
Gwiniad, - - - - 316.
H.
Hadock,
vaft fhoals of, -
faid to be the fifli out of whofe mouth St. Peter
took the tribute-money
Hake,
lefTer, or forked-beard,
left, or lefTer forked-beard,
trifurca^d. - *
179.
181.
182.
191.
m*
1-95 .
196.
Henry
INDEX. 417
Page-
Henry I. killed by a furfeit of lampreys, - 77.
Herring, - 335.
■ its migrations, - - 336.
fiftiery, ... 34! .
Hierobotane, account of that plant, - - 396.
Hippo, the dolphin, of, - -. 66.
Holibut, its vail fize, - - 226.
■ voracioufnefs, - - 227.
Hull, the town of, early in the whale fiftiery, -. 55.
I.
Icbtbyocolla, or Ifinglafs, - - 127.
method of making, - - 400.
Jugular fifh, - - 44, 164.
King-fifli, - - - - 223,
Kit, a fort of dab, - - - . 230,
L.
Lamprey, - 76.
not the murana of the antients, - 78.
its vaft tenacioufnefs, - - ibid.
the leffer, - - - 79'
Lampern, 'vide Pride.
Lantern-fifh, or fmooth fole, - - 232.
Launce, - J5^'
beardlefs, - - - 39s-
Vol. III. E e Ling,
418 I N D E X.
Page
Ling, - - - - 197.
a great article of commerce, - - ibid.
Lizard, fcaly, * - - 21.
warty," - - - 23.
' brown, - - 24.
little, - - - - 25.
• anguine, - - ibid.
< green, - 22.
1 a large k-ind, probably exotic, - ibid.
——— larves of lizards, moflly inhabitants of water, 24.
Loche, bearded, - 282.
— — - fea, - - - 201.
Lump-nfh, or fucker, - - - 133.
much admired by the Greenlanders, - 135.
M.
Mackrel, - 264.
■ horfe, - - -' 269.
Mafon, Mr. his fpirited tranflation of Pliny's account
of t\\Q vvum anguitium, - - - 32.
Miller's thumb, - - r 216.
Minow, - 373.
Morris, - 158.
Mulgranock, ... - 208.
Mullet, - - - 329.
the punifhment of adulterers, - 331.
Murana, not our lamprey, -. - - 78.
MutIxyitgc of Ariftotle, our whale, - - 50.
Muf cuius of Pliny i the fame, - - 52.
Myxine, - - 235.
N.
I N D E
N.
419
Page
Natter-jack, a fpecies of toad, » - \g.
Newt, vide Lizard.
Newfoundland, its bank, - - m 173.
North-capers, fide Grampus.
O.
Ociher, an able navigator in K. Alfred's days, - 54.
Opah, - 223.
Otter-pike, or letter Weever, - - 171.
Ovum anguihum, a druidical bead, - - 32.
P.
Paddock-mcon, what, *- - - 12.
Parrs, or young coal-fifh, - - 187.
Pearl, - 23%.
Pearls, artificial, what made of, - - 371.
Perch, much admired by the antients, - 254.
— — - a crooked variety found in Wales, - 256.
■ fea, - - - 258.
Phyfeter, or blowing whale, - - 58.
Pike, - - - 320.
— its longevity, - - - 322.
— gar, or fea-needle, - 324.
— — faury, - . 325.
Pilchard, - - - - 343.
• its important fifhery, - - 344.
E e 2 Pipe-
420 INDEX.
Page
Pipe-fish, longer, . 138.
" fhorter, - - 140.
little, or fea- adder, - - 141.
Piper, - 279.
Plaife, .... 228.
Pliny, his account of the Ovum anguinum, - 31.
Pogge, .... 217.
Pollack, the whiting, - - 188.
Poor, or power, a kind of codfifh, - - 185.
Porbeagle, a fpecies of lhark, - - 117.
Porpefe> - - - - 69.
a royal difh, - - - 71.
Pout, a fpecies of codfifh, - - 183.
•Pride, - - 80.
CL
Quin, Mr. the a&or, firft recommended the eating of
the Doree in England ', - - 22:
R,
Ray,
82.
— fnarp nofed,
S3.
rough,
85.
fuller,
86.
— fhagreen,
87.
■'< ' whip,
88.
~— electric, its numbing quality,
89.
— — fting,
95.
— - the Trygon of the antients,
ibid.
— — fables relating to it,
ibid.
Reptiles, the third clafs of animals,
1, 7«
Roach,
INDEX. 42t
Page
Roach, .... 365.
Rockling, - - «. 201.
Rud, - 363.
Ruffe, - 259.
' the black, or black fifh of Mr, Jago, - 260.
Salmon, - - - 284.
leaps, - - - 286.
. fifhery, ... 287.
■ trout, vide bull-trout,
Samlet, * 303.
Sand-eel, vide LaunCe,
Scad, - - - - 269.
Schelly, vide Gwiniad.
Scombraria, an ifle, why fo called, - - 265.
Scorpion, fea, - - - 218.
Seneca, his account of the luxury of the Romans in refpeft
to fifh, _ _ - 272.
Serpent, - - 26.
— ringed, or fnake, - - 33.
■ Aberdeen, - - - 35.
Shad, .... 348,
Shake/pear, his fine comparifon of adverfity to a toad-
flone, - - '- 17.
Shark, - 98.
» picked, - 100.
■ bafking, - 101.
— i __- its vaft fize, - - - 103.
white, its voracioufne fs, . - - 106.
blue, * 109*
■ long-tailed, - - - no.
— — fpotted, - - - 113-
E c 3 Shark,
422 I N iD E X.
Page
Shark, lefler.fpotted, . . • 115.
fmooth, • . . 116.
1 Beaumares, . . . 118.
Skate, . . . . .82.
*—- its method of engendering, . . 83.
Slaw-worm, a harmlefs ferpent, - . . 36.
Smelt, , . - . 313^
Smear-dab, . . . 230.
Smooth-man, . . . 208.
ggail, fea, . . . . 135.
Snake, inoffenlive, , . . 34.
Sole, . . . . 231.
— — fmooth, . . . 232.
Sparling, <vidt Smelt.
Sprat, » » , . , 346.
Spenna ceti, what, . . . 62.
Sperma ceti, whale, vide Cachalot.
Stickle-back, three fpined, . . 262.
■ vaft fhoals in the Wetland', . ibid.
— ten fpined, . . 262.
i fifteen fpined, . . 263,
Sting-ray, its dangerous fpine, . . 95.
Sturgeon, . . . 124.
Sucker, lump, . . . 133.
un&uous, ♦ . « 135.
— Jura, . , . 137.
bimaculated, „ . 397.
Sun filh, » 129.
Surmullet, the red, . . 272.
«__. extravagantly prized by the Romans, ibid,
j the flriped, . . 274.
Sword-fish, , . ♦ 160.
— manner of taking, < . 161.
fifhermen's fong previous to the capture, 162.
■ Xipbias of Ovid, , , ibid*
N D E X. 423
Page
Tench, . . . . 359.
the phyfician of the fifh, . . ibid.
Thoracic fifh, . . . 45, 213.
Thornback, . . . CJ3.
Threfher, its combat with the Grampus, - j 11.
Toad, its deformity, . , . 14.
ufed in incantations, . . 15.
■ • - its poifon a vulgar error, . . . 17.
. attempts to cure cancers by means of it, ibid,
• faid to be found in the midfi of trees and rocks, 18.
— . a farther account of this animal, . 379.
Toad-ftone, what, . . . 16.
Tomus Thurianus, what, . • 161.
Tope, . . . . in.
yorgocb, <vide Charr.
Torfk, or Tufk, . . * 203.
Tortoise, coriaceous, . 7.
. farther account of, . . ^^.
Trout, . . . • 297.
— fea, . . . 296.
. crooked, . . . 299.
gillaroo, , . . 300.
> white, . . . 302.
Tub-fifh, .... 280.
Tunny, . . . 266.
— the fifhery very antient, . . 267-
. — taken notice of by Theocritus, .. . . ibid.
Turbot, .... 233.
fifhery, . . . 234.
Twaite, a variety cffhad, . . 351.
*
U.
424
I N
X.
XI.
Page
Ulyffes, faid to have been killed with the fpine of
the Trygon, or Sting-ray, « . 95.
V.
Viper, not prolific, •
■ its teeth, •
■ effects of the bite, and its cure,
" ufes, , •
— 1 — the black,
26.
27.
ibid*
27.
W.
Weever, . . ' .
■ its ftroke fuppofed to be poifonous,
the great,
Whale, the common,
vail fize, •
— . place,
— — fifhery,
■ the EngUJh engaged late in it,
* pike-headed, »
■ round-lipped, •
• beaked, . »
Whalebone, what, . •
Whiff, a fort of flounder, •
White-bait, $ t . i
169.
170.
171.
50.
ibid.
55-
54-
53-
56.
58.
59-
5>-
238.
Whiting,
INDEX.
Page
Whiting, . . • • 190.
Whiting-pout, . . • 183.
WThiting-pollack, vide Pollack.
Whiftle-fifti, . • * 201.
White-horfe, . • • 86.
Wolf-fish, . . • 15^
, curious flruclure of its teeth, . 153.
Wtrasse, or old wife, . . . 244.
. — bimaculated, , . 247.
— trimaculated, . . » 248.
. ilriped, . . • 249.
gibbous, • • * 250.
THE END.
A.
Page 5, line 25, for Ceerulaa read Ccerulea. P. 6, 1. 8, for naturalifts
read naturalift. - P. 8, I. 5, for twelve read eleven* P. 15, 1. 9, for horor
read horror. Ibid. 1. 14, for intrails read entrails. P. 57, 1. 10, for penni-
formi read pinniformi. P. 78, note, for tripatinam read tripatinum. Ibid,
for appellabatur, fumma &c. read appellabatur fumma &c. P. 79, 1. 10, for
Lampetra read Lampetrae. P. 85, 1. 17, for /hire of read fhire of Rofs.
P. 86, 1. 16, for fpiney read fpiny. P. 87, 1. 9, ( and pajfim ) for encreafes
read increafes. P. 89, 1. 18, for Kl read Hoci. P. 91, 1. I} for acknow-
ledgements read acknowlegements. P. 98, ]. 21, for in read is. P. 105,
1. 29, fur fedement read fediment. P. 114, note, for 130 read 176. P.
329, 1. 16, for 0$fyayOgCT)t@- read ofyxyoftTK©-. P. 131, for Di adon
read Diodon. P. 141, 1. 8, for ferpentinum read ferpentinus. P. 185,
1. 18, for nufance read nuifance. P. 204, 1. 1, for favoured read favored.
P. 212, 1. 12, for reft read rays. P. 215, 1. 11, and 230, 1. 9, for fappharine
read fapphirine. P. 216, 1. 3, for alepedotus read alepidotus. P. 217,
1. 16, for verrucofo read verrucis. Ibid. 1. 17. for bifidis read bifido.
P. 239, 1. 3, for on the fide read on the left fide. P. 254, margin, for
XXVI read XXVII. P. 273, note*, for p. 222 read 265. P. 276, 1. 10, for
vario read varia. P. 281, 1. 24, for Mullis read MuIIus. P. 286, 1. 21, for
Aberglajlyn read Aberglafyn. P. 288, 1. 29, for back, fin read back-fin.
P. 295, 1. 1, for cinereous read cinereus. P. 329, 1. 12, for radiate read
radiata. P. 353,1. 9, for Cyyrinus read Cyprinus. Ibid. 1. jo, for pinna
read pinnae. Ibid. 1. 15, for 162 read 245. P. 355, k 18, for this read the.
P. 387, 1. 28, forfatidi read fatida.
ADDITIONAL ERRATA,
Vol. I. P. [xxvi] i. 10, for two read three. Ibid. 1. 12, for three read
two. P. 210, 1. 9, for frefh meat read frefh mice. P. 212, 1. 2, /or papw
color read paler color. P. 217, 1. 26, a/>i«r middle feathers, add of the tail*
P. 231, 1. 7, fl/hr prodigious height, add of the fingle {tones of. P. 311,
1. 14, after difle&ion, add in April. P. 350, 1. 23, yir rife, read rifing.
P. 354, 1. ia, after Wood-lark, add and Tit- lark. P. 408, 1. 18, for
Handing, read ftunted. P. 411, 1. 19, for nook read noon. Vol. III.
^* 359> !• a4' ./^r Mi* Diaper, read Mofes Browne.
CANCELS.
Vol. I. E 3 - - Pages $z, 54;
M3 - - *57, 158;
P 3 - - 205, 206.
0^4 - - - 223> 224-'
C c 3 • - 381, 382.
Vol. III. M6 - - I7X> *72-'
X 8 - - 3I(9> 32°-
Z 8 : - 35i» 352-
A a « 2 S 353, 354-'
In May next will he publijbed,
BRITISH ZOOLOGY,
CLASS V.
By THOMAS PENNANT, Efq;
CONTAINING ASOUT
NINETY ELEGANT PLATES
or T H %
Shell and Cruflaceous Animals of Great Britain
WITH DESCRIPTIONS.
X. & This Work will be published both in Quart* and Octavo.
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