<h2>THE CATCHING OF UNSHELLED FISH</h2>
<p class="indent">
"First catch your hare," the old cookery books used to say, and
hence it is proper, in a treatise devoted entirely to the cooking
of Unshelled Fish, to pay passing attention to the Catching, or
what the Head of the House terms the Masculine Division of the
Subject. As it is evident that the catching must, in every case
precede the cooking—but not too far—the preface is
the place to begin.</p>
<p class="indent">
Shell-fish are, comparatively, slow of movement, without guile,
pitifully trusting, and very easily caught. Observe the difference
between the chunk of mutton and four feet of string with which one
goes crabbing, and the complicated hooks, rods, flies, and reels
devoted to the capture of unshelled fish.</p>
<p class="indent">
An unshelled fish is lively and elusive past the power of words to
portray, and in this, undoubtedly, lies its desirability. People will
travel for two nights and a day to some spot <SPAN name="page_2"><span class="page"></span></SPAN> where all unshelled fish has once
been seen, taking $59.99 worth of fishing tackle, "marked down from
$60.00 for to-day only," rent a canoe, hire a guide at more than
human life is worth in courts of law, and work with dogged patience
from gray dawn till sunset. And for what? For one small bass which
could have been bought at any trustworthy market for sixty-five
cents, or, possibly, some poor little kitten-fish-offspring of a
catfish—whose mother's milk is not yet dry upon its lips.</p>
<p class="indent">
Other fish who have just been weaned and are beginning to notice
solid food will repeatedly take a hook too large to swallow, and
be dragged into the boat, literally, by the skin of the teeth.
Note the cheerful little sunfish, four inches long, which is caught
first on one side of the boat and then on the other, by the patient
fisherman angling off a rocky, weedy point for bass.</p>
<p class="indent">
But, as Grover Cleveland said: "He is no true fisherman who is
willing to fish only when fish are biting." The real angler will
sit all day in a boat in a pouring rain, eagerly watching the point
of the rod, which never for an instant swerves a half inch from
the horizontal. The real angler will troll for miles with a hand
line and a spinner, winding in the thirty-five dripping feet of
the lure <SPAN name="page_3"><span class="page"></span></SPAN>
every ten minutes, to remove a weed, or "to see if she's still
a-spinnin'." Vainly he hopes for the muskellunge who has just gone
somewhere else, but, by the same token, the sure-enough angler
is ready to go out next morning, rain or shine, at sunrise.</p>
<p class="indent">
It is a habit of Unshelled Fish to be in other places, or, possibly,
at your place, but at another time. The guide can never understand
what is wrong. Five days ago, he himself caught more bass than
he could carry home, at that identical rocky point. A man from
La Porte, Indiana, whom he took out the week before, landed a
thirty-eight pound "muskie" in trolling through that same narrow
channel. In the forty years that the guide has lived in the place,
man and boy, he has never known the fishing to be as poor as it
is now. Why, even "ol' Pop Somers" has ceased to fish!</p>
<p class="indent">
But the real angler continues, regardless of the local sage. He
who has heard the line sing suddenly out of his reel, and, after a
hard-fought hour, scooped a six-pound black bass into the landing
net, weary, but still "game," is not dismayed by bad luck. He who
can cast a fly a hundred feet or more finds pleasure in that, if
not in fishing. Whoever has taken in a muskellunge of any size
will ever after troll patiently, even through masses of weed. <SPAN name="page_4"><span class="page"></span></SPAN> Whoever has
leaned over the side of a sailboat, peering down into the green,
crystalline waters of the Gulf, and seen, twenty feet down, the
shimmering sides of a fifteen-pound red grouper, firmly hooked
and coming, will never turn over sleepily, for a last nap, when
his door is almost broken in at 5 A.M.</p>
<p class="indent">
And, fish or no fish, there are compensations. Into a day of
heart-breaking and soul-sickening toil, when all the world goes
wrong, must sometimes come the vision of a wooded shore, with tiny
dark wavelets singing softly on the rocks and a robin piping cheerily
on the topmost bough of a maple. Tired eyes look past the musty ledger
and the letter files to a tiny sapphire lake, set in hills, with
the late afternoon light streaming in glory from the far mountains
beyond.</p>
<p class="indent">
It may be cold up North, but down in the Gulf they are
fishing—scudding among the Florida Keys in a little white
sailboat, landing for lunch on a strand as snowy as the northern
streets, where the shimmering distances of white sand are paved
with shell and pearl, and the tide thrums out its old song under
the palms. And fish? Two-hundred and fifty pounds is the average
day's catch for a small sailboat cruising among the Florida Keys.</p>
<p class="indent">
Yet, when all is said and done, the catching of fish is a matter of
luck—a gambler's chance, <SPAN name="page_5"><span class="page">Page
5</span></SPAN> if you will have it so. The cooking, in unskilled
hands, is also a lottery, but, by following the appended recipes,
becomes an art to which scientific principles have been faithfully
applied.</p>
<p class="indent">
Having caught your fish, you may cook him in a thousand ways, but
it is doubtful whether, even with the finest sauce, a pompano will
taste half as good as the infantile muskellunge, several pounds under
the legal weight, fried unskilfully in pork fat by a horny-handed
woodsman, kneeling before an open fire, eighteen minutes after you
had given up all hope of having fish for dinner, and had resigned
yourself to the dubious prospect of salt pork, eggs, and coffee
which any self-respecting coffee-mill would fail to recognize.</p>
<p class="indent">
All of which is respectfully submitted by</p>
<p class="indent">
O.G.</p>
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