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The third day-continued
How to fish for, and to dress, the Chavender
of Chub
Chapter III
Piscator and Venator
Piscator. The Chub, though he eat well,
thus dressed, yet as he is usually dressed,
he does not. He is objected against, not only
for being full of small forked bones, dispersed
through all his body, but that he eats waterish,
and that the flesh of him is not firm, but short
and tasteless. The French esteem him so mean,
as to call him Un Villain; nevertheless he may
be so dressed as to make him very good meat;
as, namely, if he be a large Chub, then dress
him thus:
First, scale him, and then wash him clean, and
then take out his guts; and to that end make
the hole as little, and near to his gills, as
you may conveniently, and especially make clean
his throat from the grass and weeds that are
usually in it; for if that be not very clean,
it will make him to taste very sour. Having
so done, put some sweet herbs into his belly;
and then tie him with two or three splinters
to a spit, and roast him, basted often with
vinegar, or rather verjuice and butter, with
good store of salt mixed with it.
Being thus dressed, you will find him a much
better dish of meat than you, or most folk,
even than anglers themselves, do imagine: for
this dries up the fluid watery humour with which
all Chubs do abound. But take this rule with
you, That a Chub newly taken and newly dressed,
is so much better than a Chub of a day's keeping
after he is dead, that L can compare him to
nothing so fitly as to cherries newly gathered
from a tree, and others that have been bruised
and lain a day or two in water. But the Chub
being thus used, and dressed presently; and
not washed after he is gutted, for note, that
lying long in water, and washing the blood out
of any fish after they be gutted, abates much
of their sweetness; you will find the Chub,
being dressed in the blood, and quickly, to
be such meat as will recompense your labour,
and disabuse your opinion.
Or you may dress the Chavender or Chub thus:
When you have scaled him, and cut off his tail
and fins, and washed him very clean, then chine
or slit him through the middle, as a salt-fish
is usually cut; then give him three or four
cuts or scotches on the back with your knife,
and broil him on charcoal, or wood coal, that
are free from smoke; and all the time he is
a-broiling, baste him with the best sweet butter,
and good store of salt mixed with it. And, to
this, add a little thyme cut exceedingly small,
or bruised into the butter. The Cheven thus
dressed hath the watery taste taken away, for
which so many except against him. Thus was the
Cheven dressed that you now liked so well, and
commended so much But note again, that if this
Chub that you eat of had been kept till to-morrow,
he had not been worth a rush. And remember,
that his throat be washed very clean, I say
very clean, and his body not washed after he
is gutted, as indeed no fish should be.
Well, scholar, you see what pains I have taken
to recover the lost credit of the poor despised
Chub. And now I will give you some rules how
to catch him: and I am glad to enter you into
the art of fishing by catching a Chub, for there
is no fish better to enter a young Angler, he
is so easily caught, but then it must be this
particular way:
Go to the same hole in which I caught my Chub,
where, in most hot days, you will find a dozen
or twenty Chevens floating near the top of the
water. Get two or three grasshoppers, as you
go over the meadow: and get secretly behind
the tree, and stand as free from motion as is
possible. Then put a grasshopper on your hook,
and let your hook hang a quarter of a yard short
of the water, to which end you must rest your
rod on some bough of the tree. But it is likely
the Chubs will sink down towards the bottom
of the water, at the first shadow of your rod
(for Chub is the fearfullest of fishes), and
will do so if but a bird flies over him and
makes the least shadow on the water; but they
will presently rise up to the top again, and
there lie soaring till some shadow affrights
them again. I say, when they lie upon the top
of the water, look out the best Chub, which
you, setting yourself in a fit place, may very
easily see, and move your rod, as softly as
a snail moves, to that Chub you intend to catch;
let your bait fall gently upon the water three
or four inches before him, and he will infallibly
take the bait. And you will be as sure to catch
him; for he is one of the leather-mouthed fishes,
of which a hook does scarce ever lose its hold;
and therefore give him play enough before you
offer to take him out of the water. Go your
way presently; take my rod, and do as I bid
you; and I will sit down and mend my tackling
till you return back.
Venator. Truly, my loving master, you
have offered me as fair as I could wish. I'll
go and observe your directions.
Look you, master, what I have done, that which
joys my heart, caught just such another Chub
as yours was.
Piscator. Marry, and I am glad of it:
I am like to have a towardly scholar of you.
I now see, that with advice and practice, you
will make an Angler in a short time. Have but
a love to it; and I'll warrant you.
Venator. But, master! what if I could
not have found a grasshopper?
Piscator. Then I may tell you, That a
black snail, with his belly slit, to show his
white, or a piece of soft cheese, will usually
do as well. Nay, sometimes a worm, or any kind
of fly, as the ant-fly, the flesh-fly, or wall-fly;
or the dor or beetle which you may find under
cow-dung; or a bob which you will find in the
same place, and in time will be a beetle; it
is a short white worm, like to and bigger than
a gentle; or a cod- worm; or a case-worm; any
of these will do very well to fish in such a
manner.
And after this manner you may catch a Trout
in a hot evening: when, as you walk by a brook,
and shall see or hear him leap at flies, then,
if you get a grasshopper, put it on your hook,
with your line about two yards long; standing
behind a bush or tree where his hole is: and
make your bait stir up and down on the top of
the water. You may, if you stand close, be sure
of a bite, but not sure to catch him, for he
is not a leather- mouthed fish. And after this
manner you may fish for him with almost any
kind of live fly, but especially with a grasshopper.
Venator. But before you go further,
I pray, good master, what mean you by a leather-mouthed
fish ?
Piscator. By a leather-mouthed fish,
I mean such as have their teeth in their throat,
as the Chub or Cheven: and so the Barbel, the
Gudgeon, and Carp, and divers others have. And
the hook being stuck into the leather, or skin,
of the mouth of such fish, does very seldom
or never lose its hold: but on the contrary,
a Pike, a Perch, or Trout, and so some other
fish, which have not their teeth in their throats,
but in their mouths, which you shall observe
to be very full of bones, and the skin very
thin, and little of it. I say, of these fish
the hook never takes so sure hold but you often
lose your fish, unless he have gorged it.
Venator. I thank you, good master, for
this observation. But now what shall be done
with my Chub or Cheven that I have caught ?
Piscator. Marry, Sir, it shall be given
away to some poor body; for I'll warrant you
I'll give you a Trout for your supper: and it
is a good beginning of your art to offer your
first-fruits to the poor, who will both thank
you and God for it, which I see by your silence
you seem to consent to. And for your willingness
to part with it so charitably, I will also teach
more concerning Chub-fishing. You are to note,
that in March and April he is usually taken
with worms; in May, June, and July, he will
bite at any fly, or at cherries, or at beetles
with their legs and wings cut off, or at any
kind of snail, or at the black bee that breeds
in clay walls. And he never refuses a grasshopper,
on the top of a swift stream, nor, at the bottom,
the young humble bee that breeds in long grass,
and is ordinarily found by the mower of it.
In August, and in the cooler months, a yellow
paste, made of the strongest cheese, and pounded
in a mortar, with a little butter and saffron,
so much of it as, being beaten small, will turn
it to a lemon colour. And some make a paste
for the winter months, at which time the Chub
is accounted best, for then it is observed,
that the forked bones are lost, or turned into
a kind of gristle, especially if he be baked,
of cheese and turpentine. He will bite also
at a minnow, or peek, as a Trout will: of which
I shall tell you more hereafter, and of divers
other baits. But take this for a rule, that,
in hot weather, he is to be fished for towards
the mid-water, or near the top; and in colder
weather, nearer the bottom; and if you fish
for him on the top, with a beetle, or any fly,
then be sure to let your line be very long,
and to keep out of sight. And having told you,
that his spawn is excellent meat, and that the
head of a large Cheven, the throat being well
washed, is the best part of him, I will say
no more of this fish at the present, but wish
you may catch the next you fish for.
But, lest you may judge me too nice in urging
to have the Chub dressed so presently after
he is taken, I will commend to your consideration
how curious former times have been in the like
kind.
You shall read in Seneca, his Natural Questions,
that the ancients were so curious in the newness
of their fish, that that semed not new enough
that was not put alive into the guest's hand;
and he says, that to that end they did usually
keep them living in glass bottles in their dining-rooms,
and they did glory much in their entertaining
of friends, to have that fish taken from under
their table alive that was instantly to be fed
upon; and he says, they took great pleasure
to see their Mullets change to several colours
when they were dying. But enough of this; for
I doubt I have staid too long from giving you
some Observations of the Trout, and how to fish
for him, which shall take up the next of my
spare time.
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