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The fourth day- continued
On the Luce or Pike
ChapterVIII
Piscator, Venator
Piscator. The mighty Luce or Pike is
taken to be the tyrant, as the Salmon is the
king, of the fresh water. 'Tis not to be doubted,
but that they are bred, some by generation,
and some not; as namely, of a weed called
pickerel-weed, unless learned Gesner be much
mistaken, for he says, this weed and other
glutinous matter, with the help of the sun's
heat, in some particular months, and some
ponds, apted for it by nature, do become Pikes.
But, doubtless, divers Pikes are bred after
this manner, or are brought into some ponds
some such Other ways as is past man's finding
out, of which we have daily testimonies.
Sir Francis Bacon, in his History of Life
and Death, observes the Pike to be the longest
lived of any fresh-water fish; and yet he
computes it to be not usually above forty
years; and others think it to be not above
ten years: and yet Gesner mentions a Pike
taken in Swedeland, in the year 1449, with
a ring about his neck, declaring he was put
into that pond by Frederick the Second, more
than two hundred years before he was last
taken, as by the inscription in that ring,
being Greek, was interpreted by the then Bishop
of Worms. But of this no more; but that it
is observed, that the old or very great Pikes
have in them more of state than goodness;
the smaller or middle-sized Pikes being, by
the most and choicest palates, observed to
be the best meat: and, contrary, the Eel is
observed to be the better for age and bigness.
All Pikes that live long prove chargeable
to their keepers, because their life is maintained
by the death of so many other fish, even those
of their own kind, which has made him by some
writers to be called the tyrant of the rivers,
or the fresh-water wolf, by reason of his
bold, greedy, devouring, disposition; which
is so keen, as Gesner relates, A man going
to a pond, where it seems a Pike had devoured
all the fish, to water his mule, had a Pike
bit his mule by the lips; to which the Pike
hung so fast, that the mule drew him out of
the water; and by that accident, the owner
of the mule angled out the Pike. And the same
Gesner observes, that a maid in Poland had
a Pike bit her by the foot, as she was washing
clothes in a pond. And I have heard the like
of a woman in Killingworth pond, not far from
Coventry. But I have been assured by my friend
Mr. Segrave, of whom I spake to you formerly,
that keeps tame Otters, that he hath known
a Pike, in extreme hunger, fight with one
of his Otters for a Carp that the Otter had
caught, and was then bringing out of the water.
I have told you who relate these things; and
tell you they are persons of credit; and shall
conclude this observation, by telling you,
what a wise man has observed, " It is a hard
thing to persuade the belly, because it has
no ears ".
But if these relations be disbelieved, it
is too evident to be doubted, that a Pike
will devour a fish of his own kind that shall
be bigger than his belly or throat will receive,
and swallow a part of him, and let the other
part remain in his mouth till the swallowed
part be digested, and then swallow that other
part that was in his mouth, and so put it
over by degrees; which is not unlike the Ox,
and some other beasts taking their meat, not
out of their mouth immediately into their
belly, but first into some place betwixt,
and then chew it, or digest it by degrees
after, which is called chewing the cud. And,
doubtless, Pikes will bite when they are not
hungry; but, as some think, even for very
anger, when a tempting bait comes near to
them.
And it is observed, that the Pike will eat
venomous things, as some kind of frogs are,
and yet live without being harmed by them;
for, as some say, he has in him a natural
balsam, or antidote against all poison. And
he has a strange heat, that though it appear
to us to be cold, can yet digest or put over
any fish-flesh, by degrees, without being
sick. And others observe, that he never eats
the venomous frog till he have first killed
her, and then as ducks are observed to do
to frogs in spawning- time, at which time
some frogs are observed to be venomous, so
thoroughly washed her, by tumbling her up
and down in the water, that he may devour
her without danger. And Gesner affirms, that
a Polonian gentleman did faithfully assure
him, he had seen two young geese at one time
in the belly of a Pike. And doubtless a Pike
in his height of hunger will bite at and devour
a dog that swims in a pond; and there have
been examples of it, or the like; for as I
told you, " The belly has no ears when hunger
comes upon it "
The Pike is also observed to be a solitary,
melancholy, and a bold fish; melancholy, because
he always swims or rests himself alone, and
never swims in shoals or with company, as
Roach and Dace, and most other fish do: and
bold, because he fears not a shadow, or to
see or be seen of anybody, as the Trout and
Chub, and all other fish do.
And it is observed by Gesner, that the jaw-bones,
and hearts, and galls of Pikes, are very medicinable
for several diseases, or to stop blood, to
abate fevers, to cure agues, to oppose or
expel the infection of the plague, and to
be many ways medicinable and useful for the
good of mankind: but he observes, that the
biting of a Pike is venomous, and hard to
be cured.
And it is observed, that the Pike is a fish
that breeds but once a year; and that other
fish, as namely Loaches, do breed oftener:
as we are certain tame Pigeons do almost every
month; and yet the Hawk, a bird of prey, as
the Pike is a fish, breeds but once in twelve
months. And you are to note, that his time
of breeding, or spawning, is usually about
the end of February, or, somewhat later, in
March, as the weather proves colder or warmer:
and to note, that his manner of breeding is
thus: a he and a she Pike will usually go
together out of a river into some ditch or
creek; and that there the spawner casts her
eggs, and the melter hovers over her all that
time that she is casting her spawn, but touches
her not.
I might say more of this, but it might be
thought curiosity or worse, and shall therefore
forbear it; and take up so much of your attention
as to tell you that the best of Pikes are
noted to be in rivers; next, those in great
ponds or meres; and the worst, in small ponds.
But before I proceed further, I am to tell
you, that there is a great antipathy betwixt
the Pike and some frogs: and this may appear
to the reader of Dubravius, a bishop in Bohemia,
who, in his book Of Fish and Fish-ponds, relates
what he says he saw with his own eyes, and
could not forbear to tell the reader. Which
was:
"As he and the bishop Thurzo were walking
by a large pond in Bohemia, they saw a frog,
when the Pike lay very sleepily and quiet
by the shore side, leap upon his head; and
the frog having expressed malice or anger
by his sworn cheeks and staring eyes, did
stretch out his legs and embrace the Pike's
head, and presently reached them to his eyes,
tearing with them, and his teeth, those tender
parts: the Pike, moved with anguish, moves
up and down the water, and rubs himself against
weeds, and whatever he thought might quit
him of his enemy; but all in vain, for the
frog did continue to ride triumphantly, and
to bite and torment the Pike till his strength
failed; and then the frog sunk with the Pike
to the bottom of the water: then presently
the frog appeared again at the top, and croaked,
and seemed to rejoice like a conqueror, after
which he presently retired to his secret hole.
The bishop, that had beheld the battle, called
his fisherman to fetch his nets, and by all
means to get the Pike that they might declare
what had happened: and the Pike was drawn
forth, and both his eyes eaten out; at which
when they began to wonder, the fisherman wished
them to forbear, and assured them he was certain
that Pikes were often so served."
I told this, which is to be read in the sixth
chapter of the book of Dubravius, unto a friend,
who replied, " It was as improbable as to
have the mouse scratch out the cat's eyes".
But he did not consider, that there be Fishing
frogs, which the Dalmatians call the Water-devil,
of which I might tell you as wonderful a story:
but I shall tell you that 'tis not to be doubted
but that there be some frogs so fearful of
the water-snake, that when they swim in a
place in which they fear to meet with him
they then get a reed across into their mouths;
which if they two meet by accident, secures
the frog from the strength and malice of the
snake; and note, that the frog usually swims
the fastest of the two.
And let me tell you, that as there be water
and land frogs, so there be land and water
snakes. Concerning which take this observation,
that the land-snake breeds and hatches her
eggs, which become young snakes, in some old
dunghill, or a like hot place: but the water-snake,
which is not venomous, and as I have been
assured by a great observer of such secrets,
does not hatch, but breed her young alive,
which she does not then forsake, but bides
with them, and in case of danger will take
them all into her mouth and swim away from
any apprehended danger, and then let them
out again when she thinks all danger to be
past: these be accidents that we Anglers sometimes
see, and often talk of.
But whither am I going ? I had almost lost
myself, by remembering the discourse of Dubravius.
I will therefore stop here; and tell you,
according to my promise, how to catch this
Pike.
His feeding is usually of fish or frogs; and
sometimes a weed of his own, called pickerel-weed,
of which I told you some think Pikes are bred;
for they have observed, that where none have
been put into ponds, yet they have there found
many; and that there has been plenty of that
weed in those ponds, and that that weed both
breeds and feeds them: but whether those Pikes,
so bred, will ever breed by generation as
the others do, I shall leave to the disquisitions
of men of more curiosity and leisure than
I profess myself to have: and shall proceed
to tell you, that you may fish for a Pike,
either with a ledger or a walking-bait; and
you are to note, that I call that a Ledger-bait,
which is fixed or made to rest in one certain
place when you shall be absent from it; and
I call that a Walking-bait, which you take
with you, and have ever in motion. Concerning
which two, I shall give you this direction;
that your ledger- bait is best to be a living
bait (though a dead one may catch), whether
it be a fish or a frog: and that you may make
them live the longer, you may, or indeed you
must, take this course:
First, for your LIVE-BAIT. Of fish, a roach
or dace is, I think, best and most tempting;
and a perch is the longest lived on a hook,
and having cut off his fin on his back, which
may be done without hurting him, you must
take your knife, which cannot be too sharp,
and betwixt the head and the fin on the back,
cut or make an incision, or such a scar, as
you may put the arming-wire of your hook into
it, with as little bruising or hurting the
fish as art and diligence will enable you
to do; and so carrying your arming-wire along
his back, unto or near the tail of your fish,
betwixt the skin and the body of it, draw
out that wire or arming of your hook at another
scar near to his : the then tie him about
it with thread, but no harder than of necessity,
to prevent hurting the fish; and the better
to avoid hurting the fish, some have a kind
of probe to open the way for the more easy
entrance and passage of your wire or arming:
but as for these, time and a little experience
will teach you better than I can by words.
Therefore I will for the present say no more
of this; but come next to give you some directions
how to bait your hook with a frog.
Venator. But, good master, did you
not say even now, that some frogs were venomous;
and is it not dangerous to touch them ?
Piscator. Yes, but I will give you
some rules or cautions concerning them. And
first you are to note, that there are two
kinds of frogs, that is to say, if I may so
express myself, a flesh and fish frog. By
flesh-frogs, I mean frogs that breed and live
on the land; and of these there be several
sorts also, and of several colours, some being
speckled, some greenish, some blackish, or
brown: the green frog, which is a small one,
is, by Topsel, taken to be venomous; and so
is the paddock, or frog-paddock, which usually
keeps or breeds on the land, and is very large
and bony, and big, especially the she-frog
of that kind: yet these will sometimes come
into the water, but it is not often: and the
land-frogs are some of them observed by him,
to breed by laying eggs; and others to breed
of the slime and dust of the earth, and that
in winter they turn to slime again, and that
the next summer that very slime returns to
be a living creature, this is the opinion
of Pliny. And Cardanus undertakes to give
a reason for the raining of frogs: but if
it were in my power, it should rain none but
water-frogs; for those I think are not venomous,
especially the right water-frog, which, about
February or March, breeds in ditches, by slime,
and blackish eggs in that slime: about which
time of breeding, the he and she frogs are
observed to use divers summersaults, and to
croak and make a noise, which the land-frog,
or paddock-frog, never does.
Now of these water-frogs, if you intend to
fish with a frog for a Pike, you are to choose
the yellowest that you can get, for that the
Pike ever likes best. And thus use your frog,
that he may continue long alive:
Put your hook into his mouth, which you may
easily do from the middle of April till August;
and then the frog's mouth grows up, and he
continues so for at least six months without
eating, but is sustained, none but He whose
name is Wonderful knows how: I say, put your
hook, I mean the arming-wire, through his
mouth, and out at his gills; and then with
a fine needle and silk sew the upper part
of his leg, with only one stitch, to the arming-wire
of your hook; or tie the frog's leg, above
the upper joint, to the armed-wire; and, in
so doing, use him as though you loved him,
that is, harm him as little as you may possibly,
that he may live the longer.
And now, having given you this direction for
the baiting your ledger- hook with a live
fish or frog, my next must be to tell you,
how your hook thus baited must or may be used;
and it is thus: having fastened your hook
to a line, which if it be not fourteen yards
long should not be less than twelve, you are
to fasten that line to any bough near to a
hole where a Pike is, or is likely to lie,
or to have a haunt; and then wind your line
on any forked stick, all your line, except
half a yard of it or rather more; and split
that forked stick, with such a nick or notch
at one end of it as may keep the line from
any more of it ravelling from about the stick
than so much of it as you intend. And choose
your forked stick to be of that bigness as
may keep the fish or frog from pulling the
forked stick under the water till the Pike
bites; and then the Pike having pulled the
line forth of the cleft or nick of that stick
in which it was gently fastened, he will have
line enough to go to his hold and pouch the
bait And if you would have this ledger-bait
to keep at a fixt place undisturbed by wind
or other accidents which may drive it to the
shore- side, for you are to note, that it
is likeliest to catch a Pike in the midst
of the water, then hang a small plummet of
lead, a stone, or piece of tile, or a turf,
in a string, and cast it into the water with
the forked stick to hang upon the ground,
to be a kind of anchor to keep the forked
stick from moving out of your intended place
till the Pike come: this I take to be a very
good way to use so many ledger-baits as you
intend to make trial o£
Or if you bait your hooks thus with live fish
or frogs, and in a windy day, fasten them
thus to a bough or bundle of straw, and by
the help of that wind can get them to move
across a pond or mere, you are like to stand
still on the shore and see sport presently,
if there be any store of Pikes. Or these live
baits may make sport, being tied about the
body or wings of a goose or duck, and she
chased over a pond. And the like may be done
with turning three or four live baits, thus
fastened to bladders, or boughs, or bottles
of hay or flags, to swim down a river, whilst
you walk quietly a]one on the shore, and are
still in expectaion of sport. The rest must
be taught you by practice; for time will not
allow me to say more of this kind of fishing
with live baits.
And for your DEAD-BAIT for a Pike: for that
you may be taught by one day's going a-fishing
with me, or any other body that fishes for
him; for the baiting your hook with a dead
gudgeon or a roach, and moving it up and down
the water, is too easy a thing to take up
any time to direct you to do it. And yet,
because I cut you short in that, I will commute
for it by telling you that that was told me
for a secret: it is this: Dissolve gum of
ivy in oil of spike, and therewith anoint
your dead bait for a Pike; and then cast it
into a likely place; and when it has lain
a short time at the bottom, draw it towards
the top of the water, and so up the stream;
and it is more than likely that you have a
Pike follow with more than common eagerness.
And some affirm, that any bait anointed with
the marrow of the thigh-bone of a heron is
a great temptation to any fish.
These have not been tried by me, but told
me by a friend of note, that pretended to
do me a courtesy. But if this direction to
catch a Pike thus do you no good, yet I am
certain this direction how to roast him when
he is caught is choicely good; for I have
tried it, and it is somewhat the better for
not being common. But with my direction you
must take this caution, that your Pike must
not be a small one, that is, it must be more
than half a yard, and should be bigger.
"First, open your Pike at the gills, and if
need be, cut also a little slit towards the
belly. Out of these, take his guts; and keep
his liver, which you are to shred very small,
with thyme, sweet marjoram, and a little winter-savoury;
to these put some pickled oysters, and some
anchovies, two or three; both these last whole,
for the anchovies will melt, and the oysters
should not; to these, you must add also a
pound of sweet butter, which you are to mix
with the herbs that are shred, and let them
all be well salted. If the Pike be more than
a yard long, then you may put into these herbs
more than a pound, or if he be less, then
less butter will suffice: These, being thus
mixt, with a blade or two of mace, must be
put into the Pike's belly; and then his belly
so sewed up as to keep all the butter in his
belly if it be possible; if not, then as much
of it as you possibly can. But take not off
the scales. Then you are to thrust the spit
through his mouth, out at his tail. And then
take four or five or six split sticks, or
very thin laths, and a convenient quantity
of tape or filleting; these laths are to be
tied round about the Pike's body, from his
head to his tail, and the tape tied somewhat
thick, to prevent his breaking or falling
off from the spit. Let him be roasted very
leisurely; and often basted with claret wine,
and anchovies, and butter, mixt together;
and also with what moisture falls from him
into the pan. When you have roasted him sufficiently,
you are to hold under him, when you unwind
or cut the tape that ties him, such a dish
as you purpose to eat him out of; and let
him fall into it with the sauce that is roasted
in his belly; and by this means the Pike will
be kept unbroken and complete. Then, to the
sauce which was within, and also that sauce
in the pan, you are to add a fit quantity
of the best butter, and to squeeze the juice
of three or four oranges. Lastly, you may
either put it into the Pike, with the oysters,
two cloves of garlick, and take it whole out,
when the Pike is cut off the spit; or, to
give the sauce a haut goût, let the dish into
which you let the Pike fall be rubbed with
it: The using or not using of this garlick
is left to your discretion.
M. B."
This dish of meat is too good for any but
anglers, or very honest men; and I trust you
will prove both, and therefore I have trusted
you with this secret.
Let me next tell you, that Gesner tells us,
there are no Pikes in Spain, and that the
largest are in the lake Thrasymene in Italy;
and the next, if not equal to them, are the
Pikes of England; and that in England, Lincolnshire
boasteth to have the biggest. Just so doth
Sussex boast of four sorts of fish, namely,
an Arundel Mullet, a Chichester Lobster, a
Shelsey Cockle, and an Amerly Trout.
But I will take up no more of your time with
this relation, but proceed to give you some
Observations of the Carp, and how to angle
for him; and to dress him but not till he
is caught.
Chapter
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