Has it ever fallen in your way to
notice the quality of the greetings that belong to
certain occupations?
There is something about these salutations
in kind which is singularly taking and grateful to
the ear. They are as much better than an ordinary
“good day” or a flat “how are you?”
as a folk-song of Scotland or the Tyrol is better
than the futile love-ditty of the drawing-room.
They have a spicy and rememberable flavour. They
speak to the imagination and point the way to treasure-trove.
There is a touch of dignity in them,
too, for all they are so free and easy - the
dignity of independence, the native spirit of one who
takes for granted that his mode of living has a right
to make its own forms of speech. I admire a man
who does not hesitate to salute the world in the dialect
of his calling.
How salty and stimulating, for example,
is the sailorman’s hail of “Ship ahoy!”
It is like a breeze laden with briny odours and a pleasant
dash of spray. The miners in some parts of Germany
have a good greeting for their dusky trade. They
cry to one who is going down the shaft, “Gluck
auf!” All the perils of an underground adventure
and all the joys of seeing the sun again are compressed
into a word. Even the trivial salutation which
the telephone has lately created and claimed for its
peculiar use - “Hello, hello” - seems
to me to have a kind of fitness and fascination.
It is like a thoroughbred bulldog, ugly enough to be
attractive. There is a lively, concentrated, electric
air about it. It makes courtesy wait upon dispatch,
and reminds us that we live in an age when it is necessary
to be wide awake.
I have often wished that every human
employment might evolve its own appropriate greeting.
Some of them would be queer, no doubt; but at least
they would be an improvement on the wearisome iteration
of “Good-evening” and “Good-morning,”
and the monotonous inquiry, “How do you do?” - a
question so meaningless that it seldom tarries for
an answer. Under the new and more natural system
of etiquette, when you passed the time of day with
a man you would know his business, and the salutations
of the market-place would be full of interest.
As for my chosen pursuit of angling
(which I follow with diligence when not interrupted
by less important concerns), I rejoice with every true
fisherman that it has a greeting all its own and of
a most honourable antiquity. There is no written
record of its origin. But it is quite certain
that since the days after the Flood, when Deucalion
“Did first this
art invent
Of angling, and
his people taught the same,”
two honest and good-natured anglers
have never met each other by the way without crying
out, “What luck?”
Here, indeed, is an epitome of the
gentle art. Here is the spirit of it embodied
in a word and paying its respects to you with its native
accent. Here you see its secret charms unconsciously
disclosed. The attraction of angling for all
the ages of man, from the cradle to the grave, lies
in its uncertainty. ’Tis an affair of luck.
No amount of preparation in the matter
of rods and lines and hooks and lures and nets and
creels can change its essential character. No
excellence of skill in casting the delusive fly or
adjusting the tempting bait upon the hook can make
the result secure. You may reduce the chances,
but you cannot eliminate them. There are a thousand
points at which fortune may intervene. The state
of the weather, the height of the water, the appetite
of the fish, the presence or absence of other anglers - all
these indeterminable elements enter into the reckoning
of your success. There is no combination of stars
in the firmament by which you can forecast the piscatorial
future. When you go a-fishing, you just take
your chances; you offer yourself as a candidate for
anything that may be going; you try your luck.
There are certain days that are favourites
among anglers, who regard them as propitious for the
sport. I know a man who believes that the fish
always rise better on Sunday than on any other day
in the week. He complains bitterly of this supposed
fact, because his religious scruples will not allow
him to take advantage of it. He confesses that
he has sometimes thought seriously of joining the
Seventh-Day Baptists.
Among the Pennsylvania Dutch, in the
Alleghany Mountains, I have found a curious tradition
that Ascension Day is the luckiest in the year for
fishing. On that morning the district school is
apt to be thinly attended, and you must be on the
stream very early if you do not wish to find wet footprints
on the stones ahead of you.
But in fact, all these superstitions
about fortunate days are idle and presumptuous.
If there were such days in the calendar, a kind and
firm Providence would never permit the race of man
to discover them. It would rob life of one of
its principal attractions, and make fishing altogether
too easy to be interesting.
Fisherman’s luck is so notorious
that it has passed into a proverb. But the fault
with that familiar saying is that it is too short and
too narrow to cover half the variations of the angler’s
possible experience. For if his luck should be
bad, there is no portion of his anatomy, from the
crown of his head to the soles of his feet, that may
not be thoroughly wet. But if it should be good,
he may receive an unearned blessing of abundance not
only in his basket, but also in his head and his heart,
his memory and his fancy. He may come home from
some obscure, ill-named, lovely stream - some
Dry Brook, or Southwest Branch of Smith’s Run - with a creel full of
trout, and a mind full of grateful recollections of flowers that seemed to bloom
for his sake, and birds that sang a new, sweet, friendly message to his tired
soul. He may climb down to Tommys Rock below the cliffs at Newport (as
I have done many a day with my lady Greygown), and, all unnoticed by the idle,
weary promenaders in the path of fashion, haul in a basketful of blackfish, and
at the same time look out across the shining sapphire waters and inherit a
wondrous good fortune of dreams -
“Have glimpses
that will make him less forlorn;
Have sight of
Proteus rising from the sea,
Or hear old Triton
blow his wreathed horn.”
But all this, you must remember, depends
upon something secret and incalculable, something
that we can neither command nor predict. It is
an affair of gift, not of wages. Fish (and the
other good things which are like sauce to the catching
of them) cast no shadow before. Water is the
emblem of instability. No one can tell what he
shall draw out of it until he has taken in his line.
Herein are found the true charm and profit of angling
for all persons of a pure and childlike mind.
Look at those two venerable gentlemen
floating in a skiff upon the clear waters of Lake
George. One of them is a successful statesman,
an ex-President of the United States, a lawyer versed
in all the curious eccentricities of the “lawless
science of the law.” The other is a learned
doctor of medicine, able to give a name to all diseases
from which men have imagined that they suffered, and
to invent new ones for those who are tired of vulgar
maladies. But all their learning is forgotten,
their cares and controversies are laid aside, in “innocuous
desuetude.” The Summer School of Sociology
is assembled. The Medical Congress is in session.
But they care not - no, not
so much as the value of a single live bait. The
sun shines upon them with a fervent heat, but it irks
them not. The rain descends, and the winds blow
and beat upon them, but they are unmoved. They
are securely anchored here in the lee of Sabbath-Day
Point.
What enchantment binds them to that
inconsiderable spot? What magic fixes their eyes
upon the point of a fishing-rod, as if it were the
finger of destiny? It is the enchantment of uncertainty:
the same natural magic that draws the little suburban
boys in the spring of the year, with their strings
and pin-hooks, around the shallow ponds where dace
and redfins hide; the same irresistible charm that
fixes a row of city gamins, like ragged and disreputable
fish-crows, on the end of a pier where blear-eyed
flounders sometimes lurk in the muddy water. Let
the philosopher explain it as he will. Let the
moralist reprehend it as he chooses. There is
nothing that attracts human nature more powerfully
than the sport of tempting the unknown with a fishing-line.
Those ancient anglers have set out
upon an exodus from the tedious realm of the definite,
the fixed, the must-certainly-come-to-pass. They
are on a holiday in the free country of peradventure.
They do not know at this moment whether the next turn
of Fortune’s reel will bring up a perch or a
pickerel, a sunfish or a black bass. It may be
a hideous catfish or a squirming eel, or it may be
a lake-trout, the grand prize in the Lake George lottery.
There they sit, those gray-haired lads, full of hope,
yet equally prepared for resignation; taking no thought
for the morrow, and ready to make the best of to-day;
harmless and happy players at the best of all games
of chance.
“In other words,” I hear
some severe and sour-complexioned reader say, “in
plain language, they are a pair of old gamblers.”
Yes, if it pleases you to call honest
men by a bad name. But they risk nothing that
is not their own; and if they lose, they are not impoverished.
They desire nothing that belongs to other men; and
if they win, no one is robbed. If all gambling
were like that, it would be difficult to see the harm
in it. Indeed, a daring moralist might even assert,
and prove by argument, that so innocent a delight in
the taking of chances is an aid to virtue.
Do you remember Martin Luther’s
reasoning on the subject of “excellent large
pike”? He maintains that God would never
have created them so good to the taste, if He had
not meant them to be eaten. And for the same
reason I conclude that this world would never have
been left so full of uncertainties, nor human nature
framed so as to find a peculiar joy and exhilaration
in meeting them bravely and cheerfully, if it had not
been divinely intended that most of our amusement
and much of our education should come from this source.
“Chance” is a disreputable
word, I know. It is supposed by many pious persons
to be improper and almost blasphemous to use it.
But I am not one of those who share this verbal prejudice.
I am inclined rather to believe that it is a good
word to which a bad reputation has been given.
I feel grateful to that admirable “psychologist
who writes like a novelist,” Mr. William James,
for his brilliant defence of it. For what does
it mean, after all, but that some things happen in
a certain way which might have happened in another
way? Where is the immorality, the irreverence,
the atheism in such a supposition? Certainly God
must be competent to govern a world in which there
are possibilities of various kinds, just as well as
one in which every event is inevitably determined
beforehand. St. Peter and the other fishermen-disciples
on the Lake of Galilee were perfectly free to cast
their net on either side of the ship. So far
as they could see, so far as any one could see, it
was a matter of chance where they chose to cast it.
But it was not until they let it down, at the Master’s
word, on the right side that they had good luck.
And not the least element of their joy in the draft
of fishes was that it brought a change of fortune.
Leave the metaphysics of the question
on the table for the present. As a matter of
fact, it is plain that our human nature is adapted
to conditions variable, undetermined, and hidden from
our view. We are not fitted to live in a world
where a + b always equals c, and there is nothing
more to follow. The interest of life’s equation
arrives with the appearance of x, the unknown quantity.
A settled, unchangeable, clearly foreseeable order
of things does not suit our constitution. It tends
to melancholy and a fatty heart. Creatures of
habit we are undoubtedly; but it is one of our most
fixed habits to be fond of variety. The man who
is never surprised does not know the taste of happiness,
and unless the unexpected sometimes happens to us,
we are most grievously disappointed.
Much of the tediousness of highly
civilized life comes from its smoothness and regularity.
To-day is like yesterday, and we think that we can
predict to-morrow. Of course we cannot really
do so. The chances are still there. But
we have covered them up so deeply with the artificialities
of life that we lose sight of them. It seems as
if everything in our neat little world were arranged,
and provided for, and reasonably sure to come to pass.
The best way of escape from this taedium vitae
is through a recreation like angling, not only because
it is so evidently a matter of luck, but also because
it tempts us into a wilder, freer life. It leads
almost inevitably to camping out, which is a wholesome
and sanitary imprudence.
It is curious and pleasant, to my
apprehension, to observe how many people in New England,
one of whose States is called “the land of Steady
Habits,” are sensible of the joy of changing
them, - out of doors. These good folk
turn out from their comfortable farm-houses and their
snug suburban cottages to go a-gypsying for a fortnight
among the mountains or beside the sea. You see
their white tents gleaming from the pine-groves around
the little lakes, and catch glimpses of their bathing-clothes
drying in the sun on the wiry grass that fringes the
sand-dunes. Happy fugitives from the bondage of
routine! They have found out that a long journey
is not necessary to a good vacation. You may
reach the Forest of Arden in a buckboard. The
Fortunate Isles are within sailing distance in a dory.
And a voyage on the river Pactolus is open to any
one who can paddle a canoe.
I was talking - or rather
listening - with a barber, the other day,
in the sleepy old town of Rivermouth. He told
me, in one of those easy confidences which seem to
make the razor run more smoothly, that it had been
the custom of his family, for some twenty years past,
to forsake their commodious dwelling on Anchor Street
every summer, and emigrate six miles, in a wagon to
Wallis Sands, where they spent the month of August
very merrily under canvas. Here was a sensible
household for you! They did not feel bound to
waste a year’s income on a four weeks’
holiday. They were not of those foolish folk who
run across the sea, carefully carrying with them the
same tiresome mind that worried them at home.
They got a change of air by making an alteration of
life. They escaped from the land of Egypt by
stepping out into the wilderness and going a-fishing.
The people who always live in houses,
and sleep on beds, and walk on pavements, and buy
their food from butchers and bakers and grocers, are
not the most blessed inhabitants of this wide and various
earth. The circumstances of their existence are
too mathematical and secure for perfect contentment.
They live at second or third hand. They are boarders
in the world. Everything is done for them by somebody
else.
It is almost impossible for anything
very interesting to happen to them. They must
get their excitement out of the newspapers, reading
of the hairbreadth escapes and moving accidents that
befall people in real life. What do these tame
ducks really know of the adventure of living?
If the weather is bad, they are snugly housed.
If it is cold, there is a furnace in the cellar.
If they are hungry, the shops are near at hand.
It is all as dull, flat, stale, and unprofitable as
adding up a column of figures. They might as
well be brought up in an incubator.
But when man abides in tents, after
the manner of the early patriarchs, the face of the
world is renewed. The vagaries of the clouds become
significant. You watch the sky with a lover’s
look, eager to know whether it will smile or frown.
When you lie at night upon your bed of boughs and
hear the rain pattering on the canvas close above your
head, you wonder whether it is a long storm or only
a shower.
The rising wind shakes the tent-flaps.
Are the pegs well driven down and the cords firmly
fastened? You fall asleep again and wake later,
to hear the rain drumming still more loudly on the
tight cloth, and the big breeze snoring through the
forest, and the waves plunging along the beach.
A stormy day? Well, you must cut plenty of wood
and keep the camp-fire glowing, for it will be hard
to start it up again, if you let it get too low.
There is little use in fishing or hunting in such a
storm. But there is plenty to do in the camp:
guns to be cleaned, tackle to be put in order, clothes
to be mended, a good story of adventure to be read,
a belated letter to be written to some poor wretch
in a summer hotel, a game of hearts or cribbage to
be played, or a hunting-trip to be planned for the
return of fair weather. The tent is perfectly
dry. A little trench dug around it carries off
the surplus water, and luckily it is pitched with
the side to the lake, so that you get the pleasant
heat of the fire without the unendurable smoke.
Cooking in the rain has its disadvantages. But
how good the supper tastes when it is served up on
a tin plate, with an empty box for a table and a roll
of blankets at the foot of the bed for a seat!
A day, two days, three days, the storm
may continue, according to your luck. I have
been out in the woods for a fortnight without a drop
of rain or a sign of dust. Again, I have tented
on the shore of a big lake for a week, waiting for
an obstinate tempest to pass by.
Look now, just at nightfall:
is there not a little lifting and breaking of the
clouds in the west, a little shifting of the wind toward
a better quarter? You go to bed with cheerful
hopes. A dozen times in the darkness you are
half awake, and listening drowsily to the sounds of
the storm. Are they waxing or waning? Is
that louder pattering a new burst of rain, or is it
only the plumping of the big drops as they are shaken
from the trees? See, the dawn has come, and the
gray light glimmers through the canvas. In a
little while you will know your fate.
Look! There is a patch of bright
yellow radiance on the peak of the tent. The
shadow of a leaf dances over it. The sun must
be shining. Good luck! and up with you, for it
is a glorious morning.
The woods are glistening as fresh
and fair as if they had been new-created overnight.
The water sparkles, and tiny waves are dancing and
splashing all along the shore. Scarlet berries
of the mountain-ash hang around the lake. A pair
of kingfishers dart back and forth across the bay,
in flashes of living blue. A black eagle swings
silently around his circle, far up in the cloudless
sky. The air is full of pleasant sounds, but
there is no noise. The world is full of joyful
life, but there is no crowd and no confusion.
There is no factory chimney to darken the day with
its smoke, no trolley-car to split the silence with
its shriek and smite the indignant ear with the clanging
of its impudent bell. No lumberman’s axe
has robbed the encircling forests of their glory of
great trees. No fires have swept over the hills
and left behind them the desolation of a bristly landscape.
All is fresh and sweet, calm and clear and bright.
’Twas rather a rude jest of
Nature, that tempest of yesterday. But if you
have taken it in good part, you are all the more ready
for her caressing mood to-day. And now you must
be off to get your dinner - not to order
it at a shop, but to look for it in the woods and waters.
You are ready to do your best with rod or gun.
You will use all the skill you have as hunter or fisherman.
But what you shall find, and whether you shall subsist
on bacon and biscuit, or feast on trout and partridges,
is, after all, a matter of luck.
I profess that it appears to me not
only pleasant, but also salutary, to be in this condition.
It brings us home to the plain realities of life;
it teaches us that a man ought to work before he eats;
it reminds us that, after he has done all he can,
he must still rely upon a mysterious bounty for his
daily bread. It says to us, in homely and familiar
words, that life was meant to be uncertain, that no
man can tell what a day will bring forth, and that
it is the part of wisdom to be prepared for disappointments
and grateful for all kinds of small mercies.
There is a story in that fragrant
book, the little flowers of st.
Francis, which I wish to transcribe here, without
tying a moral to it, lest any one should accuse me
of preaching.
“Hence [says the quaint old
chronicler], having assigned to his companions the
other parts of the world, St. Francis, taking Brother
Maximus as his comrade, set forth toward the province
of France. And coming one day to a certain town,
and being very hungry, they begged their bread as
they went, according to the rule of their order, for
the love of God. And St. Francis went through
one quarter of the town, and Brother Maximus through
another. But forasmuch as St. Francis was a man
mean and low of stature, and hence was reputed a vile
beggar by such as knew him not, he only received a
few scanty crusts and mouthfuls of dry bread.
But to Brother Maximus, who was large and well favoured,
were given good pieces and big, and an abundance of
bread, yea, whole loaves. Having thus begged,
they met together without the town to eat, at a place
where there was a clear spring and a fair large stone,
upon which each spread forth the gifts that he had
received. And St. Francis, seeing that the pieces
of bread begged by Brother Maximus were bigger and
better than his own, rejoiced greatly, saying, ’Oh,
Brother Maximus, we are not worthy of so great a treasure.’
As he repeated these words many times, Brother Maximus
made answer: ’Father, how can you talk of
treasures when there is such great poverty and such
lack of all things needful? Here is neither napkin
nor knife, neither board nor trencher, neither house
nor table, neither man-servant nor maid-servant.’
St. Francis replied: ’And this is what
I reckon a great treasure, where naught is made ready
by human industry, but all that is here is prepared
by Divine Providence, as is plainly set forth in the
bread which we have begged, in the table of fair stone,
and in the spring of clear water. And therefore
I would that we should pray to God that He teach us
with all our hearts to love the treasure of holy poverty,
which is so noble a thing, and whose servant is God
the Lord.’”
I know of but one fairer description
of a repast in the open air; and that is where we
are told how certain poor fishermen, coming in very
weary after a night of toil (and one of them very wet
after swimming ashore), found their Master standing
on the bank of the lake waiting for them. But
it seems that he must have been busy in their behalf
while he was waiting; for there was a bright fire
of coals burning on the shore, and a goodly fish broiling
thereon, and bread to eat with it. And when the
Master had asked them about their fishing, he said,
“Come, now, and get your breakfast.”
So they sat down around the fire, and with his own
hands he served them with the bread and the fish.
Of all the banquets that have ever
been given upon earth, that is the one in which I
would rather have had a share.
But it is now time that we should
return to our fishing. And let us observe with
gratitude that almost all of the pleasures that are
connected with this pursuit - its accompaniments
and variations, which run along with the tune and
weave an embroidery of delight around it - have
an accidental and gratuitous quality about them.
They are not to be counted upon beforehand. They
are like something that is thrown into a purchase
by a generous and open-handed dealer, to make us pleased
with our bargain and inclined to come back to the same
shop.
If I knew, for example, before setting
out for a day on the brook, precisely what birds I
should see, and what pretty little scenes in the drama
of woodland life were to be enacted before my eyes,
the expedition would lose more than half its charm.
But, in fact, it is almost entirely a matter of luck,
and that is why it never grows tiresome.
The ornithologist knows pretty well
where to look for the birds, and he goes directly
to the places where he can find them, and proceeds
to study them intelligently and systematically.
But the angler who idles down the stream takes them
as they come, and all his observations have a flavour
of surprise in them.
He hears a familiar song, - one
that he has often heard at a distance, but never identified, - a
loud, cheery, rustic cadence sounding from a low pine-tree
close beside him. He looks up carefully through
the needles and discovers a hooded warbler, a tiny,
restless creature, dressed in green and yellow, with
two white feathers in its tail, like the ends of a
sash, and a glossy little black bonnet drawn closely
about its golden head. He will never forget that
song again. It will make the woods seem homelike
to him, many a time, as he hears it ringing through
the afternoon, like the call of a small country girl
playing at hide-and-seek: “See me;
here I be.”
Another day he sits down on a mossy
log beside a cold, trickling spring to eat his lunch.
It has been a barren day for birds. Perhaps he
has fallen into the fault of pursuing his sport too
intensely, and tramped along the stream looking for
nothing but fish. Perhaps this part of the grove
has really been deserted by its feathered inhabitants,
scared away by a prowling hawk or driven out by nest-hunters.
But now, without notice, the luck changes. A
surprise-party of redstarts breaks into full play
around him. All through the dark-green shadow
of the hemlocks they flash like little candles - CANDELITAS,
the Cubans call them. Their brilliant markings
of orange and black, and their fluttering, airy, graceful
movements, make them most welcome visitors. There
is no bird in the bush easier to recognize or pleasanter
to watch. They run along the branches and dart
and tumble through the air in fearless chase of invisible
flies and moths. All the time they keep unfolding
and furling their rounded tails, spreading them out
and waving them and closing them suddenly, just as
the Cuban girls manage their fans. In fact, the
redstarts are the tiny fantail pigeons of the forest.
There are other things about the birds,
besides their musical talents and their good looks,
that the fisherman has a chance to observe on his
lucky days. He may sea something of their courage
and their devotion to their young.
I suppose a bird is the bravest creature
that lives, in spite of its natural timidity.
From which we may learn that true courage is not incompatible
with nervousness, and that heroism does not mean the
absence of fear, but the conquest of it. Who does
not remember the first time that he ever came upon
a hen-partridge with her brood, as he was strolling
through the woods in June? How splendidly the
old bird forgets herself in her efforts to defend
and hide her young!
Smaller birds are no less daring.
One evening last summer I was walking up the Ristigouche
from Camp Harmony to fish for salmon at Mowett’s
Rock, where my canoe was waiting for me. As I
stepped out from a thicket on to the shingly bank
of the river, a spotted sandpiper teetered along before
me, followed by three young ones. Frightened at
first, the mother flew out a few feet over the water.
But the piperlings could not fly, having no feathers;
and they crept under a crooked log. I rolled the
log over very gently and took one of the cowering
creatures into my hand - a tiny, palpitating
scrap of life, covered with soft gray down, and peeping
shrilly, like a Liliputian chicken. And now the
mother was transformed. Her fear was changed
into fury. She was a bully, a fighter, an Amazon
in feathers. She flew at me with loud cries, dashing
herself almost into my face. I was a tyrant,
a robber, a kidnapper, and she called heaven to witness
that she would never give up her offspring without
a struggle. Then she changed her tactics and appealed
to my baser passions. She fell to the ground
and fluttered around me as if her wing were broken.
“Look!” she seemed to say, “I am
bigger than that poor little baby. If you must
eat something, eat me! My wing is lame. I
can’t fly. You can easily catch me.
Let that little bird go!” And so I did; and
the whole family disappeared in the bushes as if by
magic. I wondered whether the mother was saying
to herself, after the manner of her sex, that men
are stupid things, after all, and no match for the
cleverness of a female who stoops to deception in a
righteous cause.
Now, that trivial experience was what
I call a piece of good luck - for me, and,
in the event, for the sandpiper. But it is doubtful
whether it would be quite so fresh and pleasant in
the remembrance, if it had not also fallen to my lot
to take two uncommonly good salmon on that same evening,
in a dry season.
Never believe a fisherman when he
tells you that he does not care about the fish he
catches. He may say that he angles only for the
pleasure of being out-of-doors, and that he is just
as well contented when he takes nothing as when he
makes a good catch. He may think so, but it is
not true. He is not telling a deliberate falsehood.
He is only assuming an unconscious pose, and indulging
in a delicate bit of self-flattery. Even if it
were true, it would not be at all to his credit.
Watch him on that lucky day when he
comes home with a full basket of trout on his shoulder,
or a quartette of silver salmon covered with green
branches in the bottom of the canoe. His face
is broader than it was when he went out, and there
is a sparkle of triumph in his eye. “It
is naught, it is naught,” he says, in modest
depreciation of his triumph. But you shall see
that he lingers fondly about the place where the fish
are displayed upon the grass, and does not fail to
look carefully at the scales when they are weighed,
and has an attentive ear for the comments of admiring
spectators. You shall find, moreover, that he
is not unwilling to narrate the story of the capture - how
the big fish rose short, four times, to four different
flies, and finally took a small Black Dose, and played
all over the pool, and ran down a terribly stiff rapid
to the next pool below, and sulked for twenty minutes,
and had to be stirred up with stones, and made such
a long fight that, when he came in at last, the hold
of the hook was almost worn through, and it fell out
of his mouth as he touched the shore. Listen to
this tale as it is told, with endless variations,
by every man who has brought home a fine fish, and
you will perceive that the fisherman does care for
his luck, after all.
And why not? I am no friend to
the people who receive the bounties of Providence
without visible gratitude. When the sixpence falls
into your hat, you may laugh. When the messenger
of an unexpected blessing takes you by the hand and
lifts you up and bids you walk, you may leap and run
and sing for joy, even as the lame man, whom St. Peter
healed, skipped piously and rejoiced aloud as he passed
through the Beautiful Gate of the Temple. There
is no virtue in solemn indifference. Joy is just
as much a duty as beneficence is. Thankfulness
is the other side of mercy.
When you have good luck in anything,
you ought to be glad. Indeed, if you are not
glad, you are not really lucky.
But boasting and self-glorification
I would have excluded, and most of all from the behaviour
of the angler. He, more than other men, is dependent
for his success upon the favour of an unseen benefactor.
Let his skill and industry be never so great, he can
do nothing unless La Bonne chance comes
to him.
I was once fishing on a fair little
river, the P’tit Saguenay, with two excellent
anglers and pleasant companions, H. E. G -
and C. S. D . They had done all
that was humanly possible to secure good sport.
The stream had been well preserved. They had
boxes full of beautiful flies, and casting-lines imported
from England, and a rod for every fish in the river.
But the weather was “dour,” and the water
“drumly,” and every day the lumbermen
sent a “drive” of ten thousand spruce logs
rushing down the flooded stream. For three days
we had not seen a salmon, and on the fourth, despairing,
we went down to angle for sea-trout in the tide of
the greater Saguenay. There, in the salt water,
where men say the salmon never take the fly, H. E.
G - , fishing with a small trout-rod,
a poor, short line, and an ancient red ibis of the
common kind, rose and hooked a lordly salmon of at
least five-and-thirty pounds. Was not this pure
luck?
Pride is surely the most unbecoming
of all vices in a fisherman. For though intelligence
and practice and patience and genius, and many other
noble things which modesty forbids him to mention,
enter into his pastime, so that it is, as Izaak Walton
has firmly maintained, an art; yet, because fortune
still plays a controlling hand in the game, its net
results should never be spoken of with a haughty and
vain spirit. Let not the angler imitate Timoleon,
who boasted of his luck and lost it. It is tempting
Providence to print the record of your wonderful catches
in the sporting newspapers; or at least, if it must
be done, there should stand at the head of the column
some humble, thankful motto, like “Non
Nobis, Domine.” Even Father Izaak,
when he has a fish on his line, says, with a due sense
of human limitations, “There is a trout now,
and a good one too, if I can but hold
him!”
This reminds me that we left H. E.
G - , a few sentences back, playing
his unexpected salmon, on a trout-rod, in the Saguenay.
Four times that great fish leaped into the air; twice
he suffered the pliant reed to guide him toward the
shore, and twice ran out again to deeper water.
Then his spirit awoke within him: he bent the
rod like a willow wand, dashed toward the middle of
the river, broke the line as if it had been pack-thread,
and sailed triumphantly away to join the white porpoises
that were tumbling in the tide. “WHE-E-EW,”
they said, “WHE-E-EW! PSHA-A-Aw!”
blowing out their breath in long, soft sighs as they
rolled about like huge snowballs in the black water.
But what did H. E. G - say?
He sat him quietly down upon a rock and reeled in the
remnant of his line, uttering these remarkable and
Christian words: “Those porpoises,”
said he, “describe the situation rather mildly.
But it was good fun while it lasted.”
Again I remembered a saying of Walton:
“Well, Scholar, you must endure worse luck sometimes,
or you will never make a good angler.”
Or a good man, either, I am sure.
For he who knows only how to enjoy, and not to endure,
is ill-fitted to go down the stream of life through
such a world as this.
I would not have you to suppose, gentle
reader, that in discoursing of fisherman’s luck
I have in mind only those things which may be taken
with a hook. It is a parable of human experience.
I have been thinking, for instance, of Walton’s
life as well as of his angling: of the losses
and sufferings that he, the firm Royalist, endured
when the Commonwealth men came marching into London
town; of the consoling days that were granted to him,
in troublous times, on the banks of the Lea and the
Dove and the New River, and the good friends that
he made there, with whom he took sweet counsel in
adversity; of the little children who played in his
house for a few years, and then were called away into
the silent land where he could hear their voices no
longer. I was thinking how quietly and peaceably
he lived through it all, not complaining nor desponding,
but trying to do his work well, whether he was keeping
a shop or writing hooks, and seeking to prove himself
an honest man and a cheerful companion, and never
scorning to take with a thankful heart such small
comforts and recreations as came to him.
It is a plain, homely, old-fashioned
meditation, reader, but not unprofitable. When
I talk to you of fisherman’s luck, I do not forget
that there are deeper things behind it. I remember
that what we call our fortunes, good or ill, are but
the wise dealings and distributions of a Wisdom higher,
and a Kindness greater, than our own. And I suppose
that their meaning is that we should learn, by all
the uncertainties of our life, even the smallest,
how to be brave and steady and temperate and hopeful,
whatever comes, because we believe that behind it all
there lies a purpose of good, and over it all there
watches a providence of blessing.
In the school of life many branches
of knowledge are taught. But the only philosophy
that amounts to anything, after all, is just the secret
of making friends with our luck.