I should like to have met Izaak Walton.
He is one of the few authors whom I know I should
like to have met. For he was a wise man, and
he had understanding. I should like to have
gone angling with him, for I doubt not that like myself
he was more of an angler theoretically than practically.
My bookseller is a famous fisherman, as, indeed,
booksellers generally are, since the methods employed
by fishermen to deceive and to catch their finny prey
are very similar to those employed by booksellers
to attract and to entrap buyers.
As for myself, I regard angling as
one of the best of avocations, and although I have
pursued it but little, I concede that doubtless had
I practised it oftener I should have been a better
man. How truly has Dame Juliana Berners said
that “at the least the angler hath his wholesome
walk and merry at his ease, and a sweet air of the
sweet savour of the mead flowers that maketh him hungry;
he heareth the melodious harmony of fowls; he seeth
the young swans, herons, ducks, côtés, and many
other fowls with their broods, which meseemeth better
than all the noise of hounds, the blasts of horns,
and the cry of fowls that hunters, falconers, and
fowlers can make. And if the angler take
fish surely then is there no man merrier
than he is in his spirit!”
My bookseller cannot understand how
it is that, being so enthusiastic a fisherman theoretically,
I should at the same time indulge so seldom in the
practice of fishing, as if, forsooth, a man should
be expected to engage continually and actively in
every art and practice of which he may happen to approve.
My young friend Edward Ayer has a noble collection
of books relating to the history of American aboriginals
and to the wars waged between those Indians and the
settlers in this country; my other young friend Luther
Mills has gathered together a multitude of books treating
of the Napoleonic wars; yet neither Ayer nor Mills
hath ever slain a man or fought a battle, albeit both
find delectation in recitals of warlike prowess and
personal valor. I love the night and all the
poetic influences of that quiet time, but I do not
sit up all night in order to hear the nightingale or
to contemplate the astounding glories of the heavens.
For similar reasons, much as I appreciate
and marvel at the beauties of early morning, I do
not make a practice of early rising, and sensible
as I am to the charms of the babbling brook and of
the crystal lake, I am not addicted to the practice
of wading about in either to the danger either to
my own health or to the health of the finny denizens
in those places.
The best anglers in the world are
those who do not catch fish; the mere slaughter of
fish is simply brutal, and it was with a view to keeping
her excellent treatise out of the hands of the idle
and the inappreciative that Dame Berners incorporated
that treatise in a compendious book whose cost was
so large that only “gentyll and noble men”
could possess it. What mind has he who loveth
fishing merely for the killing it involves what
mind has such a one to the beauty of the ever-changing
panorama which nature unfolds to the appreciative eye,
or what communion has he with those sweet and uplifting
influences in which the meadows, the hillsides, the
glades, the dells, the forests, and the marshes abound?
Out upon these vandals, I say out
upon the barbarians who would rob angling of its poesy,
and reduce it to the level of the butcher’s
trade! It becomes a base and vicious avocation,
does angling, when it ceases to be what Sir Henry
Wotton loved to call it “an employment
for his idle time, which was then not idly spent;
a rest to his mind, a cheerer of his spirits, a diverter
of sadness, a calmer of unquiet thoughts, a moderator
of passions, a procurer of contentedness, and a begetter
of habits of peace and patience in those that professed
and practised it!”
There was another man I should like
to have met Sir Henry Wotton; for he was
an ideal angler. Christopher North, too ("an
excellent angler and now with God"!) how
I should love to have explored the Yarrow with him,
for he was a man of vast soul, vast learning, and vast
wit.
“Would you believe it, my dear
Shepherd,” said he, “that my piscatory
passions are almost dead within me, and I like now
to saunter along the banks and braes, eying the younkers
angling, or to lay me down on some sunny spot, and
with my face up to heaven, watch the slow-changing
clouds!”
There was the angling genius
with whom I would fain go angling!
“Angling,” says our revered
St. Izaak, “angling is somewhat like poetry men
are to be born so.”
Doubtless there are poets who are
not anglers, but doubtless there never was an angler
who was not also a poet. Christopher North was
a famous fisherman; he began his career as such when
he was a child of three years. With his thread
line and bent-pin hook the wee tot set out to make
his first cast in “a wee burnie” he had
discovered near his home. He caught his fish,
too, and for the rest of the day he carried the miserable
little specimen about on a plate, exhibiting it triumphantly.
With that first experience began a life which I am
fain to regard as one glorious song in praise of the
beauty and the beneficence of nature.
My bookseller once took me angling
with him in a Wisconsin lake which was the property
of a club of anglers to which my friend belonged.
As we were to be absent several days I carried along
a box of books, for I esteem appropriate reading to
be a most important adjunct to an angling expedition.
My bookseller had with him enough machinery to stock
a whaling expedition, and I could not help wondering
what my old Walton would think, could he drop down
into our company with his modest equipment of hooks,
flies, and gentles.
The lake whither we went was a large
and beautiful expanse, girt by a landscape which to
my fancy was the embodiment of poetic delicacy and
suggestion. I began to inquire about the chub,
dace, and trouts, but my bookseller lost no time in
telling me that the lake had been rid of all cheap
fry, and had been stocked with game fish, such as bass
and pike.
I did not at all relish this covert
sneer at traditions which I have always reverenced,
and the better acquainted I became with my bookseller’s
modern art of angling the less I liked it. I
have little love for that kind of angling which does
not admit of a simultaneous enjoyment of the surrounding
beauties of nature. My bookseller enjoined silence
upon me, but I did not heed the injunction, for I must,
indeed, have been a mere wooden effigy to hold my
peace amid that picturesque environment of hill, valley,
wood, meadow, and arching sky of clear blue.
It was fortunate for me that I had
my “Noctes Ambrosianae” along, for when
I had exhausted my praise of the surrounding glories
of nature, my bookseller would not converse with me;
so I opened my book and read to him that famous passage
between Kit North and the Ettrick Shepherd, wherein
the shepherd discourses boastfully of his prowess as
a piscator of sawmon.
As the sun approached midheaven and
its heat became insupportable, I raised my umbrella;
to this sensible proceeding my bookseller objected in
fact, there was hardly any reasonable suggestion I
had to make for beguiling the time that my bookseller
did not protest against it, and when finally I produced
my “Newcastle Fisher’s Garlands”
from my basket, and began to troll those spirited
lines beginning
Away wi’ carking
care and gloom
That make life’s
pathway weedy O!
A cheerful glass makes flowers to bloom
And lightsome
hours fly speedy O!
he gathered in his rod and tackle,
and declared that it was no use trying to catch fish
while Bedlam ran riot.
As for me, I had a delightful time
of it; I caught no fish, to be sure: but what
of that? I could have caught fish had I
so desired, but, as I have already intimated to you
and as I have always maintained and always shall,
the mere catching of fish is the least of the many
enjoyments comprehended in the broad, gracious art
of angling.
Even my bookseller was compelled to
admit ultimately that I was a worthy disciple of Walton,
for when we had returned to the club house and had
partaken of our supper I regaled the company with many
a cheery tale and merry song which I had gathered
from my books. Indeed, before I returned to
the city I was elected an honorary member of the club
by acclamation not for the number of fish
I had expiscated (for I did not catch one), but for
that mastery of the science of angling and the literature
and the traditions and the religion and the philosophy
thereof which, by the grace of the companionship of
books, I had achieved.
It is said that, with his feet over
the fender, Macaulay could discourse learnedly of
French poetry, art, and philosophy. Yet he never
visited Paris that he did not experience the most exasperating
difficulties in making himself understood by the French
customs officers.
In like manner I am a fender-fisherman.
With my shins toasting before a roaring fire, and
with Judge Methuen at my side, I love to exploit the
joys and the glories of angling. The Judge is
“a brother of the angle,” as all will
allow who have heard him tell Father Prout’s
story of the bishop and the turbots or heard him sing
With angle rod and lightsome heart,
Our conscience clear, we gay depart
To pebbly brooks and purling streams,
And ne’er a care to vex our dreams.
And how could the lot of the fender-fisherman
be happier? No colds, quinsies or asthmas follow
his incursions into the realms of fancy where in cool
streams and peaceful lakes a legion of chubs and trouts
and sawmon await him; in fancy he can hie away to the
far-off Yalrow and once more share the benefits of
the companionship of Kit North, the Shepherd, and
that noble Edinburgh band; in fancy he can trudge the
banks of the Blackwater with the sage of Watergrasshill;
in fancy he can hear the music of the Tyne and feel
the wind sweep cool and fresh o’er Coquetdale;
in fancy, too, he knows the friendships which only
he can know the friendships of the immortals
whose spirits hover where human love and sympathy
attract them.
How well I love ye, O my precious
books my Prout, my Wilson, my Phillips,
my Berners, my Doubleday, my Roxby, my Chatto, my Thompson,
my Crawhall! For ye are full of joyousness and
cheer, and your songs uplift me and make me young
and strong again.
And thou, homely little brown thing
with worn leaves, yet more precious to me than all
jewels of the earth come, let me take thee
from thy shelf and hold thee lovingly in my hands
and press thee tenderly to this aged and slow-pulsing
heart of mine! Dost thou remember how I found
thee half a century ago all tumbled in a lot of paltry
trash? Did I not joyously possess thee for a
sixpence, and have I not cherished thee full sweetly
all these years? My Walton, soon must we part
forever; when I am gone say unto him who next shall
have thee to his own that with his latest breath an
old man blessed thee!