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atherina." And in another part, giving a list of the names of fishes, he says—"The ozæna, the osmylnion, are names used by the Thurians; the iopes, the eritimi, are names used by the Athenians." And Nicander mentions the iopes in his Bœotian,—

But as when round a shoal of newly born Iopes, phagri, or fierce scopes roam, Or the large orphus.

And Aristophanes, in his Ships of Burden, says—

O wretched fish, the first of trichides To be immersed in pickle.

For they used to steep in pickle all the fish which were proper to be dressed on the coals. And they called pickle, Thasian brine; as also the same poet says in his Wasps,—

For before that it twice drank in the brine.

138. There is also a fish called the thratta. And since we have brought the discussion to this point, and have also discussed the thrissa; let us now examine what the thrattæ are, which are mentioned by Archippus, in his play called the Fishes. For in that play, in the treaty between the Fishes and the Athenians, he introduces the following sentences—

And it is agreed on further That both the high contracting parties Shall restore all they now do hold Of each other's property. We shall give up thus the Thrattæ, And the flute-playing Atherina, And Thyrsus's daughter Sepia, And the mullet, and Euclides, Who was archon t'other day, And the coraciontes too, Who from Anagyrus come; And the offspring of the tench, Who swims round sacred Salamis; And the frog who's seated near, From the marshes of Oreum.

Now in these lines, perhaps a man may ask what sort of thrattæ among the fishes are meant here, which the fish agree to give up to the men. And since I have got some private things written out on this subject, I will now recite to you that portion of them which bears most on the subject.

The thratta, then, is really a genuine sea-fish; and Mnesimachus, in his Horse-breeder, mentions it; and Mnesimachus is a poet of the middle comedy. And he speaks thus—