CARP, DA CE AND MINNO W. 423 



source of satisfaction to the angler. The flesh of this and other small 

 Cyprinidse is very palatable when fried crisp soon after being taken from 

 the water. Toward the northwest another Chub, Platygobio gracilis, takes 

 the place of the preceding, and reaches a somewhat larger size. 

 The English Chub is also closely allied to its American namesake. 



/#• 







TH1-; EXGLISH CHCB. 



The English Chub, " Chevin " or Chavender, Sgualiiis cephalus, the 

 Chevaine or Dobule of France, the Altel or Dobel of Germany is widely 

 distributed over Europe and Asia Minor. 



Frank Buckland compares it to the Yorkshireman's horse — very bad to 

 catch and no good when he is caught — but many old-school anglers will 

 not ratify his judgment. 



Pennell says of the Chub that, though not so mettlesome or gamesome 

 as the Dace, it grows to far greater size, and has the merit of taking the 

 artificial fly kindly. 



The Chub is believed by many etymologists to have derived its Eng- 

 lish name from an old Saxon word meaning "head," and its French 

 name also from chef, a word of similar significance. It is also often called 

 the " Eoggerhead," and in Germany the "Dickkopf," and in France the 

 "Cabot." 



The word "chubby" we owe, perhaps, to this plump little Lcuciscm. 

 Marston, in 1602, in his play called "Antonio's Revenge," used this 

 simile : 



" I never saw a fool lean ; the cJiub-faced fop 

 Shines sleek with full-cramm'd fat of happiness." 



It attains a length of two feet and a weight of eight or ten pounds, lives 

 in clear, swift waters, and is found in the mountains of Central Europe to 

 a height of 3,000 feet or more, as well as in the brackish waters of North 



