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The fourth day - continued
On the Luce or Pike
Chapter VIII
Piscator and 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 ".
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