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MULLUS

Volume 12 · 385 words · 1797 Edition

Sarmullus, in ichthyology, a genus of fishes belonging to the order of thoracici. See Plate CCCXV. This fish was highly esteemed by the Romans, and bore an exceeding high price. The capricious epicures of Horace's days valued it in proportion to its size; not that the larger were more delicious, but that they were more difficult to be got. The price that was given for one in the time of Juvenal. venal and Pliny is a striking evidence of the luxury and extravagance of the age:

M. P. m. fex milibus eum Aquantum sane paribus sferetis libris e. Juv. Sat. IV.

The lavish slave Six thousand pieces for a mullet gave, A solerice for each pound.

DRYDEN.

But Asinius Celer, a man of consular dignity, gave a still more unconceivable sum; for he did not scruple bestowing 8000 nummi, or 64l. 11s. 8d. for a fish of so small a size as the mullet; for, according to Horace, a mulius triliris, or one of three lb. was a great rarity; so that Juvenal's spark must have had a great bargain in comparison of what Celer had. But Seneca says, that it was not worth a farthing except it died in the very hand of your guest; that such was the luxury of the times, that there were flews even in the eating-rooms, so that the fish could at once be brought from under the table, and placed on it; and that they put the mullets in transparent vases, that they might be entertained with the various changes of its rich colour while it lay expiring. Apicius, a wonderful genius for luxurious inventions, first hit upon the method of fulfilling them in the exquisite Carthaginian pickle, and afterwards procured a rich sauce from their livers—This is the same gentleman whom Pliny, in another place, honours with the title of Neoptomum adiftimus gurges; an expression too forcible to be rendered in our language. The body of this fish is very thick, and covered with large scales; beneath them the colour is a most beautiful rosy red, the changes of which under the thin scales gave that entertainment to the Roman epicures as above-mentioned: the scales on the back and sides are of a dirty orange; those on the nose a bright yellow; the tail a reddish yellow.