. American fishes [microform] : a popular treatise upon the game and food fishes of North America, with especial reference to habits and methods of capture. Fishes; Fishing; Poissons; Pêche sportive. I i 'â \ ' â '. i i' I * 1 â 1 i - '.; iii 1 i f â. THE STRIPED BASS. Rocciis lineatus. The stately Bass, old Neptune's fleeting Post That tides it out and in from sea to coast. Wood, Sew Englancts Prospect: 1634, "DY the Greeks, it was so highly esteemed that Archetratus termed it, or â ^one of the two other closely allied species taken near Miletus, "the off- spring of the gods:"


. American fishes [microform] : a popular treatise upon the game and food fishes of North America, with especial reference to habits and methods of capture. Fishes; Fishing; Poissons; Pêche sportive. I i 'â \ ' â '. i i' I * 1 â 1 i - '.; iii 1 i f â. THE STRIPED BASS. Rocciis lineatus. The stately Bass, old Neptune's fleeting Post That tides it out and in from sea to coast. Wood, Sew Englancts Prospect: 1634, "DY the Greeks, it was so highly esteemed that Archetratus termed it, or â ^one of the two other closely allied species taken near Miletus, "the off- spring of the gods:" So writes Giinther, concerning the Bass of Europe, the Aafina^ and the Lupus of classical literature, which ascended the Ti- ber, and entered the Acherusian marshes, and gladdened the palates of the gourmets of Rome and Athens. The European Bass, Roccus lal>rax* is found from the Mediterranean, to Tromsoe in Norway; the American species ranges from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the Gulf of Mexico. The two species are similar in form, but very unlike in color; ours being conspicuously striped, while that of Europe is silvery grey. The American form is the largest, most active, and on account of its greater abundance, by far the more important. In the North it is called the "Striped Bass," in the South the "Rock Fish," or the "; The neutral territory where both these names are in use appears to be New Jersey. The fisherman of the Delaware use the latter name, those of the sea-coast the former. Large sea-going individ- uals are sometimes known in New England by the names "Squid-hound" * Bass, Sea-Perch, White Salmon, SaliiioH Dace and Se7tiin, in England, Gape-mouth in Scotland, Z'r(j(^H()g'in Wales, ( This means hedgehog. Compare with the Hroton Dreiiiee.)/iVo and/>'(iri- inl'Vance, i'an and Dreince in Brittany, See-Barsch in Germany, llav-Bars and Bars in Denmark, S/<ino/a,Sfiigola, Bran- zine, Varola, Baciola, Ragtts a


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectfishes, booksubjectfishing, bookyear1