32 BOOK OF THE BLACK BASS. 



imposed upon it (unless, as before, it be for one reason or another 

 ineligible), and the proper name of any species must be made by 

 combining the above-mentioned specific and generic names. 



This is the law on the subject, and, as elsewhere, the law is usually, 

 though not always, simply right. We accept many meaningless or 

 even objectionable names to avoid the confusion attendant upon 

 arbitrary changes. Were it not for these rules science would ever 

 suffer, as it has much suffered in the past, from the efforts of the 

 improvers of nomenclature men who invent new names for old 

 objects for the purpose of seeing their own personal designations : 

 Smith, Jones, Brehm, Eeichenow, or what not, after them. In the 

 words of "a right Sagamann," John Cassin : "There is not, evi- 

 dently, any other course consistent with justice and the plainest 

 principles of right and morality, and, in fact, no alternative, unless, 

 indeed, an operator is disposed to set himself up for the first of all 

 history, as is said of an early Chinese emperor. The latter course, 

 in a degree, singular as it may appear, is not entirely unknown to 

 naturalists, especially to those who regard science as a milch cow 

 rather than as a transcendent goddess, a distinction in classification 

 first made by the great poet Schiller." 



Now, as to the names of our species of bass, I take it for granted 

 that the reader knows () what a Black Bass is and what it is not (6); 

 that there are two species of Black Bass, the large-mouthed and the 

 small-mouthed, the latter being with most anglers the Black Bass^ar 

 excellence, the other the off horse, and (c)what the difference between 

 them is*. In any event you will find it all written in Professor Gill's 

 most excellent paper, "On the Species of the Genus Micropterus," 

 in the " Proceedings of the American Association for the Advance- 

 ment of Science in 1873." 



TJje earliest published notice of a Black Bass with a scientific name 

 was of one of the small-mouthed kind, sent to Lacepede from South 

 Carolina. This specimen bore with it the name of " trout," after 

 the abominable, contemptible, pernicious and otherwise detestable 

 custom of our erring Southern brethren of calling a Black Bass in 

 the river, or a weak fish in the sea, a "trout." Now, we may pre- 

 sume that the great French naturalist was puzzled by this name, 

 and put on his spectacles to see what in the world could be " trout- 

 like " about such a fish, with its coarse scales and spinous fins. To 



