Chap. 33.] riSHES. 405 



CHAP. 33. GILLS AND SCALES. 



Some fishes have numerous gills, others again single^® ones, 

 others double ; it is by means of these that they discharge the 

 water that has entered the mouth. A sign of old age"^ is the 

 hardness of the scales, which are not alike in all. There are 

 two lakes'"' of Italy at the foot of the Alps, called Larius and 

 Yerbanus, in which there are to be seen every year, at the 

 rising of the Vergiliaa/^ fish remarkable for the number of their 

 scales, and the exceeding sharpness^'- of them, strongly resem- 

 bling hob-nails ^^ in appearance; these fish, however, are only 

 to be seen during that month, ^^ and no longer. 



2^ He must mean single ones, on each side of the head. Cuvier remarks, 

 that the present passage is from a longer one lq Aristotle, Hist. Anim. B. 

 ii. c. 13, which, however, has come down to us in such a corrupt and fra.s:- 

 mentary state, that it is totally unintelligible, or, at all events, does not cor- 

 respond with modern experience. No fish, he says, is known to us that 

 has one or two gills only. The Lophii of the system of Linnajus have three 

 gills on each side, and the greater number of tish four, with a half one at- 

 tached to the opercule. Some cartilaginous fish, again, have five or six, 

 and the lampreys seven. 



29 Aristotle, Hist. Anim. B. iii. c. 10. 



*o The modern Lago di Como, and Lago Maggiore. See B. iii. c. 23. 

 *i See c. 20, as to the Yergilice. 



^' Cuvier says, that in various species of the cyprinus, and more especially 

 the rubellio, the Cj'prinus rutilus of Linnaeus, the roach, the Cyprinus jeses 

 of Linnaeus, and the bream, the Cyprinus brama of Linnaeus, the male has, 

 dui-ing the spawning season, little warts adhering to the skin and scales. 

 This appearance has been remarked in especial on a species found in the 

 lakes of Lombardy, known there as the " pigo," and similar to the roach 

 of other countries. It is most probable that it is to this appearance that 

 Pliny alludes. Rondelet, in his book on Fishes, gives a representation of 

 it, and calls it " pigus,"or " cyprinus clavatus ;" but he wongly, like Pliny, 

 takes it to be a peculiar genus of fish. 



*'^ " Clavorum caligarium " — " nails for the caliga." This was a strong, 

 heav)' sandal, worn by the Roman soldiers. It was worn by the centurions, 

 but not by the superior officers ; and from the use of it, the common sol- 

 diers, including the centurions, were distinguished by the name of " cali- 

 gati." The Emperor Caligula received that cognomen when a boy, in con- 

 sequence of wearing the " caliga," and being inured to the life of a common 

 soldier. The hob-nails with which the "caliga" was studded are men- 

 tioned again in E. xxii. c. 46, and B. xxxiv. c. 41. Josephus tells us of 

 the death of a Roman centurion, which was occasioned by these nails. As 

 he was running over the marble pavement of the temple of Jerusalem, his 

 foot slipped, and he was unable to rise, upon which he was overpowered 

 by the Jews, and slain. After the decline of the Roman empire, the caliga 

 was no longer worn by the soldiers, but was assumed by the monks and re- 

 cluses. 



** Dalechamps says, that in a similar manner, in the lake known by the 



