CHAP. 20.—FISHES WHICH ARE NEVER FOUND IN THE EUXINE;
THOSE WHICH ENTER IT AND RETURN.
The Euxine, however, is never entered by any animal[1] that
is noxious to fish, with the exception of the sea-calf and the
small dolphin. On entering, the tunnies range along[2] the
shores to the right, and on departing, keep to those on the
left; this is supposed to arise from the fact that they have
better sight with the right eye, their powers of vision with
either being naturally very limited. In the channel of the
Thracian Bosporus, by which the Propontis is connected with
the Euxine, at the narrowest part of the Straits which separate
Europe from Asia, there is, near Chalcedon, on the Asiatic
side, a rock of remarkable Whiteness, the whole of which can
be seen from the bottom of the sea at the surface. Alarmed
at the sudden appearance of this rock, the tunnies always
hasten in great numbers, and with headlong impetuosity, towards the promontory of Byzantium, which stands exactly
opposite to it, and from this circumstance has received the
name of the Golden Horn.[3] Hence it is, that all the fishing
is at Byzantium, to the great loss of Chalcedon,[4] although it
is only separated from it by a channel a mile in width. They
wait, however, for the blowing of the north wind to leave the
Euxine with a favourable tide, and are never taken until
they have entered the harbour of Byzantium. These fish do
not move about in winter;[5] in whatever place they may happen to be surprised by it, there they pass the winter, till the
time of the equinox.
Manifesting a wonderful degree of delight, they will often
accompany a vessel in full sail, and may be seen from the
poop following it for hours, and a distance of several miles.
If a fish-spear even is thrown at them ever so many times,
they are not in the slightest degree alarmed at it. Some
writers call the tunnies which follow ships in this manner, by
the name of "pompili."[6]
Many fishes pass the summer in the Propontis, and do not
enter the Euxine; such, for instance, as the sole,[7] while on
the other hand, the turbot[8] enters it. The sepia[9] is not found
in this sea, although the lolig[10] is. Among the rock-fish, the
sea-thrush[11] and the sea-blackbird are wanting, as also purples,
though oysters abound here. All these, however, pass the
winter in the Ægean Sea; and of those which enter the Euxine,
the only ones that do not[12] return are the trichiæ.[13]—It will
be as well to use the Greek names which most of them bear,
seeing that to the same species different countries have given
different appellations.—These last, however, are the only ones
that enter the river Ister,[14] and passing along its subterraneous
passages, make their way from it to the Adriatic;[15] and this is
the reason why they are to be seen descending into the Euxine
Sea, but never in the act of returning from it. The time for
taking tunnies is, from the rising of the Vergiliæ[16] to the setting
of Arcturus:[17] throughout the rest of the winter season, they
lie concealed at the bottom of deep creeks, unless they are in-
duced to come out by the warmth of the weather or the full
moon. These fish fatten[18] to such an extraordinary degree as
to burst. The longest period of their life[19] is two years.
1. Aristotle, Hist. Anim. B. viii. c. 16, from whom Pliny has here
borrowed, makes a somewhat dissimilar statement. He says that "no
noxious animal enters the Euxine, except the phocena [or porpoise], and the
dolphin and little dolphin." Hardouin remarks, however, that Pliny is
right in his statement that seals are to be found in the Euxine, and that
Rondelet, B. xvi. c. 9, for that reason has suggested that the reading ought
to be altered in Aristotle, and not in Pliny.
2. Aristotle, B. viii. c. 6. Plutarch on the Instinct of Animals, and
Ælian, Hist. Anim. B. ix. c. 42, say the same.
3. Called "chrysoceras," in B. iv. c. 18, that being the Greek name for
"golden horn." He means, that in consequence of the lucrative nature of
this fishery, it thence obtained the name of the "golden" horn. Dalechamps is of opinion that some person has here substituted the Latin
"Aurei cornus," for the Greek name Chrysoceras.
4. Hence, according to Strabo, Chalcedon obtained the name of the
"City of the Blind," the people having neglected to choose the opposite
shore for the site of their city. Still, however, a kind of pelamis, or young
tunny, from this place, had the name of "Chalcedonia," and is spoken
of as a most exquisite dainty by Aulus Gellius, B. vii c. 16.
5. Aristotle, Hist. Anim. B. viii. c. 16; Ælian, Hist. Anim. B. ix.; and
Plutarch, in his Treatise on the Instincts of Animals, state to a similar
effect.
6. Cuvier remarks that the "pompilos" of the ancients, which accompanied
ships and left them on nearing the land, was the pilot-fish of the moderns,
the Gasterosteus ductor of Linnæus. He thinks, however, that the name
may have also been given to other fish as well, of similar habits.
7. Pleuronectes solea of Linnæns.
8. Pleuronectes maximus of Linnæus.
9. The cuttle-fish. The Sepia officinalis of Linnæus.
10. The ink-fish. The Sepia loligo of Linnæus.
11. Cuvier suggests that the turdus, or sea-thrush, and the merula, or sea-blackbird, were both fishes of the labrus tribe, usually known as "breams."
Hippolytus Salvianus, in his book on the Water Animals, states, that in his
day—both these fish were extremely well known, and that they still
retained the names of tordo and merlo. Rondelet, B. vi., says, that the
fish anciently called turdus, was in his time known by the name of
"vielle," among the French. The dictionaries give "merling, or
whiting," as the synonyme of "merula."
12. Aristotle, Hist. Anim. B. viii. c. 16, says, that on going into the
Euxine, the trichiæ are either taken or else devoured by the other fishes,
for that they are never seen to return.
13. The trichias, according to Cuvier, is a fish belonging to the family of
herrings. A scholiast on Aristophanes attributes the origin of the name
to the fine fish bones like hairs (qri\c), with which the flesh is filled, which
is a characteristic peculiar to the herring kind. Aristotle, Hist. Anim.
B. vi. c. 15, represents the membras, the trichis, and the trichias, as different ages of the same fish. The trichis was little, and very common. In
Aristophanes, Knights, 1. 662, we find an obol mentioned as the price of a
hundred. From the Acharnæ of the same author, we learn that it was
salted as provision for the fleets. Cuvier thinks that everything combines
to point out the sardine, the Clupea sprattus of Linnæus, as the trichis or
else a similar kind of fish, the melette of the African coast, the Clupea
meletta of the naturalists. In this latter case the trichias, he thinks, may
have been the sardine, or, perhaps, the Clupea ficta of Lacépede, which is
called the "sardine" in some places, and at Lake Garda, in Lombardy,
more especially.
14. The Danube. Cuvier says, that this passage probably bears reference
to the clupea ficta or finte, which, as well as the shad, is in the habit of
passing up streams. As for the story of the fish finding their way to the
Adriatic, it is utterly without foundation. Cuvier adds, that the main
difference between the finte and the clupea alosa, or shad, is, that the
former has very fine teeth, the latter none at all.
15. Pliny has already remarked, B. iii. c. 18, in reference to the supposed descent of the Argonauts from the Ister into the Adriatic, that such a
passage by water was totally impossible; hence, as Hardouin says, he is
obliged here to have recourse to subterraneous passages.
16. The Pleiades. See B. ii. c. 47. The rising of the Pleiades was considered the beginning of summer, being the forty-eighth day after the
vernal equinox. See also B. xviii. c. 59.
17. The evening setting, namely. This took place on the fourth day before
the nones of November. See B. xviii. c. 74.
18. Aristotle, Hist. Anim, B. vi. c. 16.
19. Aristotle, Hist. Anim. B. vi. c. 16. Hardouin remarks, that the
tunny which Pliny mentions in c. 17, as weighing so many hundreds of
pounds, must certainly have been older than this.