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A TROUT PLAIN
From: “Slain by the Doones”
by RD Blackmore
The Culm, which rises in Somerset
shire, and hastening into a fairer land (as the border waters wisely do) falls
into the Exe near Killerton, formerly was a lovely trout stream, such as
perverts the Devonshire angler from due respect toward Father Thames and the
other canals round London. In the Devonshire valleys it is sweet to see how soon
a spring becomes a rill, and a rill runs on into a rivulet, and a rivulet swells
into a brook; and before one has time to say, “What are you at?” – the first
hill it ever ran down has turned blue, here we have all the airs and graces,
demands and assertions of a full-grown river.
But what is the test of a river? Who
shall say? “The power to drown a man,” replies the river darkly. But rudeness is
not argument. Rather shall we say that the power to work a good undershot wheel,
without being dammed up all night in a pond, and leaving a tidy back-stream to
spare at the bottom of the orchard, is a fair certificate of riverhood. If so,
many Devonshire streams attain that rank within five miles of their spring; aye,
and rapidly adds to it. At every turn they gather aid, from ash-clad dingle and
aldered meadow, mossy d ferny wall, hedge-trough roofed with bramble netting,
where the baby water lurks, and lanes that coming down to ford bring suicidal
tribute. Arrogant, all-engrossing river, now it has claimed a great valley of
its own; and whatever falls within the hill scoop, sooner or later belongs to
itself. Even the crystal “shutt” that crosses the farmyard by the woodrick, and
glides down an aqueduct of last year’s bark for Mary to fill the kettle from;
and even the tricklets that have no organs for telling or knowing their
business, but only get into unwary oozings in and among the water-grass, and
there make moss and forget themselves among it – one and all, they come to the
same thing at last, and that is the river.
The Culm used to be a good river at
Culmstock, tormented already by a factory, but not strangled as yet by a
railroad. How it is now the present writer does not know, and is afraid to ask,
having heard of a vile “Culm Valley Line.” But Culmstock bridge was a very
pretty place to stand and contemplate the ways of trout; which is easier work
than to catch them. When I was just big enough to peep above the rim, or to lie
upon it with one leg inside to seem, for it takes a treat there and spreads
itself. Above the bridge the factory stream falls in again, having done its
business, and washing its hands in the innocent half that has strayed down the
meadows. Then under the arches they both rejoice and come to a slide of about
two feet, and make a short, wide pool below, and indulge themselves in perhaps
two islands, through which a little river always magnifies itself, and maintains
a mysterious middle. But after that, all of it used to come together, and make
off in one body for the meadows, intent upon nurturing trout with rapid
stickles, and buttercuppy corners where fat flies may tumble in. And here you
may find in the very first meadow, or at any rate you might have found, forty
years ago, the celebrated “Crocker’s Hole.”
The story of Crocker is unknown to
me, and interesting as it doubtless was, I do not deal with him, but with his
Hole. I do not deal with him, but with his Hole. Tradition said that he was a
baker’s boy who, during his basket-rounds, fell in love with a maiden who
received the cottageloaf, or perhaps good “Households” for her master’s use. No
doubt she was charming, as a girl should be, but whether she encouraged the
youthful baker and then betrayed him with false role, or whether she “consisted”
throughout, -- as our cousins across the water express it,--is known to their
manes only. Enough that she would not have the floury lad; and that he, after
giving in his books and money, sought an untimely grave among the trout. And
this was the first pool below the breadwalk deep enough to drown a five-foot
baker’s boy. Sad it was; but such things must be, and bread must still be
delivered daily.
A truce to such reflections, -- as
our foremost writers always say, when they do not see how to go on with
them,--but it is a serious thing to know what Crocker’s Hole was like; because
at a time when (if he had only persevered, and married the maid, and succeeded
to the oven, and reared a large family of short-weight bakers) he might have
been leaning on his crutch beside the pool, and teaching his grandson to swim by
precept (that beautiful proxy for practice)—at such a time, I say, there lived a
remarkably fine trout in that hole. Anglers are notoriously truthful, especially
as to what they catch, or even more frequently have not caught. Though I may
have written fiction, among many other sins,--as a nice old lady told me
once,--now I have to deal with facts; and foul scorn would I count it ever to
make believe that I caught that fish. My length at that time was not more than
the butt of a four-jointed rod, and all I could catch was a minnow with a pin,
which our cook Lydia would not cook, but used to say, “Oh, what a shame, Master
Richard! They would have been trout in summer, please God! If you would only a’
let ‘em grow on.” She is living now, and will hear me out on this.
But upon every great occasion there
arises a great man; or to put it more accurately, in the present instance, a
mighty and distinguished boy. My father, being the parson of the parish, an
getting, need it be said, small pay, took sundry pupils, very pleasant fellows,
about to adorn the universities. Among them was the original “Bude Light,” as he
was satirically called at Cambridge, for he came from Bude, and there was no
light in him. Among them also was John Pike, a born Zebedee, if ever there was
one.
John Pike was a thick-set younker,
with a large and bushy head, keen blue eyes that could see through water, and
the proper slough of shoulder into which great anglers ripen; but greater still
are born with it; and of these was Master John. It mattered little what the
weather was, and scarcely more as to the time of year, John Pike must have his
fishing every day, and on Sunday he read about it, and made flies. All the rest
of the time he was thinking about it.
My father was coaching him in the
fourth book of the Aeneid and all those wonderful speeches of Dido, where
passion disdains construction; but the only line Pike cared for was of
horsehair. “I fear, Mr. Pike, that you are not giving me your entire attention,”
my father used to say in his mild dry way; and once when Pike was more than
usually abroad, his tutor begged to share his meditations. “Well, sir,” said
Pike, who was very truthful, “I can see a green drake by the strawberry tree,
the first of the season, and your derivation of ‘barbarous’ put me in mind of my
barberry dye.” In those days it was a very nice point to get the right tint for
the Mallard’s feather.
No sooner was lesson done that Pike,
whose rod was ready upon the lawn, dashed away always for the river, rushing
headlong down the hill, and away to the left through a private yard, where “no
thoroughfare” was put up, and a big dog stationed to enforce it. But Cerberus
himself could not have stopped John Pike; his conscience backed him up in
trespass the most sinful when his heart was inditing of a trout upon the rise.
All this, however, is preliminary,
as the boy said when he put his father’s coat upon his grandfather’s
tenterhooks, with felonious intent upon his grandmother’s apples; the main point
to be understood is this, that nothing – neither brazen tower, hundred-eyed
Argus, nor Cretan Minotaur—could stop John Pike from getting a good stickle.
But, even as the world knows nothing of its greatest men, its greatest men know
nothing of the world beneath their very nose, till fortune sneezes dexter. For
two years John Pike must have been whipping the water as hard as Xerxes, without
having ever once dreamed of the glorious trout that lived in Crocker’s Hole. But
why, when he ought to have been at least on bowing terms with every fish as long
as his middle finger, why had he failed to know this champion? The answer is
simple—because of his short cuts. Flying as he did like an arrow from a bow,
Pike used to hit his beloved river at an elbow, some furlong below Crocker’s
Hole, where a sweet little stickle sailed away down stream, whereas for the
length of a meadow upward the water lay smooth, clear, and shallow; therefore
the youth, with so little time to spare, rushed into the downward joy.
And here it may be noted that the
leading maxim of the present period, that man can discharge his duty only by
going counter to the stream, was scarcely mooted in those days. My grandfather
(who was a wonderful man, if he was accustomed to fill a cart in two days of
fly-fishing on the Barle) regularly fished down stream; and what more than a
cartload need any one put into his basket?
And surely it is more genial and
pleasant to behold our friend the river growing and thriving as we go on,
strengthening its voice and enlargening its bosom, and sparkling through each
successive meadow with richer plentitude of silver, than to trace it against its
own grain and good-will toward weakness, and littleness, and immature
conceptions.
However, you will say that if John
Pike had fished up stream, he would have found his trout much sooner. And that
is true; but still, as it was, the trout had more time to grow into such a
prize. And the way in which John found him out was this. For some day he had
been tormented with a very painful tooth, which even poisoned all the joys of
fishing. Therefore he resolved to have it out, and sturdily entered the shop of
John Sweetland, the village blacksmith, and there paid his six-pence. Sweetland
extracted the teeth of the village, whenever they required it, the simplest and
most effectual way. A piece of fine wire was fastened round the tooth, and the
other end round the anvil’s nose, then the sturdy blacksmith shut the lower half
of his shop door, which was about breast-high, with the patient outside and the
anvil within; a strong push of the foot upset the anvil, and the tooth flew out
like a well-thrown fly.
When John Pike had suffered this
very bravely, “Ah, Master Pike,” said the blacksmith, with a grin, “I reckon you
won’t pull out thic there big vish,”—the smithy commanded a view of the
river,--“clever as you be, quite so peart as thiccy.”
“What big fish?” asked the boy, with
deepest interest, though his mouth was bleeding fearfully.
“Why that girt mortial of a vish as
hath his hover in Crocker’s Hole. Zum on ‘em saith as a’ must be a zammon.”
Off went Pike with his handkerchief
to his mouth, and after him ran Alec Bolt, one of his fellow-pupils, who had
come to the shop to enjoy the extraction.
“Oh, my!” was all that Pike could
utter, when by craftily posting himself he had obtained a good view of this
grand fish.
“I’ll lay you a crown you don’t
catch him!” cried Bolt, an impatient youth, who scorned angling.
“How long will you give me?” asked
the wary Pike, who never made rash wagers.
“Oh! till the holidays if you like;
or, if that won’t do, till Michaelmas.”
Now the midsummer holidays were six
weeks off—boys used not to talk of “vacations” then, still else of “recesses.”
“I think I’ll bet you,” said Pike,
in his slow way, bending forward carefully, with his keen eyes on this monster;
“but it would not be fair to take till Michaelmas. I’ll bet you a crown that I
catch him before the holidays–at least, unless some other fellow does.”
The day of that most momentous
interview must have been the 14th of May. Of the year I will not be
so sure; for children take more note of days that of years, for which the latter
have their full revenge thereafter. It must have been the 14th,
because the morrow was our holiday, given upon the 15th of May, in
honor of a birthday.
Now, John Pike was beyond his years
wary as well as enterprising, calm as well as ardent, quite as rich in patience
as in promptitude and vigor. But Alec Bolt was a headlong youth, volatile, hot,
and hasty, fit only to fish the Maelstrom, or a torrent of new lava. And the
moment he had laid that wager he expected his crown piece; though time, as the
lawyers phrase it, was “expressly of the essence of the contract.” And now he
demanded that Pike should spend the holiday in trying to catch that trout.
“I shall not go near him,” that lad
replied, “until I have got a new collar.” No piece of personal adornment was it,
without which he would not act, but rather that which now is called the
fly-cast, or the gut-cast, or the trace, or what it may be. “And another thin,”
continued Pike; “the bet is off if you go near him, either now or at any other
time, without asking my leave first, and then only going as I tell you.”
“What do I want with the great slimy
beggar?” the arrogant Bolt made answer. “A good rat is worthy fifty of him. No
fear of my going near him, Pike. You shan’t get out of it that way.
Pike showed his remarkable qualities
that day, by fishing exactly as he would have fished without having heard of the
great Crockerite. He was up and away upon the millstream before breakfast; and
the forenoon he devoted to his favorite course—first down the Craddock stream, a
very pretty confluent of the Culm, and from its junction, down the pleasant
hams, where the river winds toward Uffculme. It was my privilege to accompany
this hero, as his humble Sancho; while Bolt and the faster race went up the
river ratting. We were back in time to have Pike’s trout (which ranged between
two ounces and one-half pound) fried for the early dinner; and here it may be
lawful to remark that the trout of the Culm are of the very purest excellence,
by reason of the flinty bottom, at any rate in these the upper regions. For the
valley is the western out let of the Black-down range, with the Beacon hill upon
the north, and the Hackpen long ridge to the south; and beyond that again the
Whetstone hill, upon whose western end dark portholes scarped with white grit
mark the pits. But flint is the staple of the broad Culm Valley, under good,
well-pastured loam; and here are chalcedonies and agate stones.
At dinner everybody had a brace of
trout—large for the larger folk, little for the little ones, with coughing and
some patting on the back for bones. What of equal purport could the fierce
rat-hunter show? Pike explained many points in the history of each fish, seeming
to know them none the worse, and love them all the better, for being fried. We
banqueted , neither a whit did soul get stinted of banquet impartial. Then the
wielder of the magic rod very modestly sought leave of absence at the tea time.
“Fishing again, Mr. Pike, I
suppose,” my father answered pleasantly; “I used to be fond of it at your age;
but never so entirely wrapped up in it as you are.”
“No, sir; I am not going fishing
again. I want to walk to Wellington, to get some things at Cherry’s.”
“Books, Mr. Pike? Ah! I am very glad
of that. But I fear it can only be fly-books.”
“I want a little Horace for
eighteenpence—the Cambridge one just published, to carry in my pocket—and a new
hank of gut.”
“Which of the two is more important?
Put that into Latin, and answer it.”
“Utrum pluris facio? Flaccum flocci.
Viscera magni.” With this vast effort Pike turned as red as any trout spot.
“After that who would refuse you?”
said my father. “You always tell the truth, my boy, in Latin or in English.”
Although it was a long walk, some
fourteen miles to Wellington and back, I got permission to go with Pike; and as
we crossed the bridge and saw the tree that overhung Crocker’s Hole, I begged
him to show me that might fish.
“Not a bit of it,” he replied. “It
would bring the blackguards. If the blackguards once fin him out, it is all over
with him.”
“The blackguards are all in factory
now, and I am sure they cannot see us from the windows. They wont’ be out till
five o’clock.”
With the true liberality of young
England, which abides even now as large and glorious as ever, we always called
the free an enlightened operatives of the period by the courteous name above set
down, and it must be acknowledged that some of them deserved it, although
perhaps they poached with less of science than their sons. But eh cowardly
murder of fish by liming the water was already prevalent.
Yielding to my request and perhaps
his own desire—manfully kept in check that morning—Pike very carefully
approached that pool, commanding me to sit down while he reconnoitred from the
meadow upon the right bank of the stream. And the place which had so sadly
quenched the fire of the poor baker’s love filled my childish heart with dread
and deep wonder at the cruelty of women. But as for John Pike, all he though of
was the fish and the best way to get at him.
Very likely that hole is “holed out”
now, as the Yankees well express it, or at any rate changed out of knowledge.
Even in my time a very heavy flood entirely altered its character; but to the
eager eye of Pike it seemed pretty much as follows, and possibly it may have
come to such a form again:
The river, after passing through a
hurdle fence at the head of the meadow, takes a little turn or two of bright and
shallow indifference, then gathers itself into a good strong slide, as if going
down a slope instead of steps. The right bank is high and beetles over with
yellow loam and grassy fringe; but the other side is of flinty shingle, low and
bare and washed by floods. At the end of this rapid, the stream turns sharply
under an ancient alder tree into a large, deep, calm repose, cool, unruffled,
and sheltered from the sun by branch and leaf—and that is the hole of poor
Crocker.
At the head of the pool (where the
hasty current rushes in so eagerly, with noisy excitement and much ado) the
quieter waters from below, having rested and enlarged themselves, come lapping
up round either curve, with some recollection of their past career, the hoary
experience of foam. And sidling toward the new arrival of the impulsive column,
where they meet it, things go on, which no man can describe without his mouth
being full of water. A “V” is formed, a fancy letter V, beyond any designer’s
tracery, and even beyond his imagination, a perpetually fluctuating limpid
wedge, perpetually crenelled and rippled into by little ups and downs that try
to make an impress, but can only glide away upon either side or sink in dimples
under it. And here a gray bough of the ancient alder stretches across, like a
thirsty giant’s arm, and makes it a very ticklish place to throw a fly. Yet this
was the very spot our John Pike must put his fly into, or lose his crown.
Because the great tenant of
Crocker’s Hole, who allowed no other fish to wag a fin there, and from strict
monopoly had grown so fat, kept his victualing yard—if so low an expression can
be used concerning him—within about a square yard of this spot. He had a sweet
hover, both for rest and recreation, under the bank, in a placid antre, where
the water made no noise, but tickled his belly in digestive ease. The loftier
the character is of any being, the slower and more dignified his movements are.
No true psychologist could have believed—as Sweetland the blacksmith did, and
Mr. Pook the tinman—that this trout could ever be the embodiment of Crocker. For
this was the last trout in the universal world to drown himself for love; if
truly any trout had done so.
“You may come now, and try to look
along my back,” John Pike, with a reverential whisper, said to me. “Now don’t be
in a hurry, young stupid; kneel down. He is not to be disturbed at his dinner,
mind. You keep behind me, and look along my back; I never clapped eyes on such a
whopper.”
I had to kneel down in a tender
reminiscence of pasture land, and gaze carefully; and not having eyes like those
of our Zebedee (who offered his spine for a camera, as he crawled on all fours
in front of me), it took me a long time to descry an object most distinct to all
who have that special gift of piercing with their eyes the water. See what is
said upon this subject in that delicious book, The Gamekeeper at Home.
“You are no better than a muff,”
said Pike, and it was not in my power to deny it.
“If the sun would only leave off,” I
said. But the sun, who was having a very pleasant play with the sparkle of the
water and the twinkle of the leaves, had no inclination to leave off, but kept
the rippling crystal in a dance of flashing facets, and the quivering verdure in
a steady flush of gold.
But suddenly a May-fly, a luscious
gray-drake, richer and more delicate than a canvas-back or wood-cock, with a
dart and a leap and a merry zigzag, began to enjoy a little game above the
stream. Rising and falling like a gnat, thrilling her gauzy wings, and arching
her elegant pellucid frame, every now and then she almost dipped her three long
tapering whisks into the dimples of the water.
“He sees her! He’ll have her as sure
as a gun!” cried Pike, with a gulp, as if he himself were “rising.” “Now, you
can see him, stupid?”
“Crikey, crokums!” I explained with
classic elegance; “I have seen that long thing for five minutes; but I took it
for a tree.”
“You little”—animal quite early in
the alphabet—“now don’t you stir a peg, or I’ll dig my elbow into you.”
The great trout was stationary
almost as a stone, in the middle of the “V” above described. He was gently
fanning his large clear fins, but holding his own against the current mainly by
the wagging of his broad-fluked tail. As soon as my slow eyes had once defined
him, he grew upon them mightily, moulding himself in the matrix of the water, as
a thing put into jelly does. And I doubt whether even John Pike saw him more
accurately than I did. His size was such, or seemed to be such, that I fear to
say a word about it; not because language does not contain the word, but from
dread of exaggeration. But his shape and color may be reasonably told without
wounding the felling of an age whose incredulity springs from self-knowledge.
His head was truly small, his
shoulders vast; the spring of his back was like a rainbow when the sun is
southing; the generous sweep of his deep elastic belly, nobly pulped out with
rich nurture, showed what the power of his brain must be, and seemed to
undulate, time for time, with the vibrant vigilance of his large wise eyes. His
latter end was consistent also. An elegant taper run of counter, coming almost
to a cylinder, as a mackerel does, boldly developed with a hugeous spread to a
glorious amplitude of swallow-tail. His color was all that can be desired, but
ill-described by any poor word-palette. Enough that he seemed to tone away from
olive and umber, with carmine stars, to glowing gold and soft pure silver,
mantled with a subtle flush of rose and fawn and opal.
Swoop came with a swallow, as we
gazed, and was gone with a flick, having missed the May-fly. But the wind of his
passage, or the skir of wing, struck the merry dancer down, so that he fluttered
for one instant on the wave, and that instant was enough. Swift as the swallow,
and more true of aim, the great trout made one dart, and a sound, deeper than a
tinkle, but as slivery as a bell, rang the poor ephemerid’s knell. The rapid
water scarcely showed a break; but a bubble echoed with the music of a rise.
“He knows how to take a fly,” said
Pike; “he has had too many to be tricked by mine. Have him I must; but how ever
shall I do it?”
All the way to Wellington he uttered
not a word, but shambled along with a mind full of care. When I ventured up now
and then, to surmise what was going on beneath his hat, deeply-set eyes and a
wrinkled forehead, relieved at long intervals by a solid shake, proved that
there are meditations deeper than those of philosopher or statesman.
Surely no trout could have been
misled by the artificial May-fly of that time, unless he were either a very
young fish, quite new to entomology, or else one afflicted with a combination of
myopy and bulimy. Even now there is room for plenty of improvement in our
counterfeit presentment; but in those days the body was made with yellow mohair,
ribbed with red silk and gold twist, and as thick as a fertile bumble-bee. John
Pike perceived that to offer such a thing to Crocker’s trout would probably
consign him – even if his great stamina should over-get the horror—to an
uneatable death, through just and natural indignation. On the other hand, while
the May-fly lasted, a trout so cultured, so highly refined, so full of light and
sweetness, would never demean himself to low bait, or any course son of a
maggot.
Meanwhile, Alec Bolt allowed poor
Pike no peaceful thought, no calm absorption of high mind into the world of
flies, no placid period of cobblers’ wax, floss-silk, turned hackles, and
dubbing. For in making of flies John Pike had his special moments of
inspiration, times of clearer insight into the everlasting verities, times of
brighter conception and more subtle execution, tails of more elastic grace and
heads of a neater and nattier expressions. As a poet labors at one immortal
line, compressing worlds of wisdom into the music of ten syllables, so toiled
the patient Pike about the fabric of a fly comprising all the excellence that
ever sprang from maggot. Yet Bolt rejoiced to jerk his elbow at the moment of
sublimest art. And a swarm of flies was blighted thus.
Peaceful, therefore, and
long-suffering, and full of resignation as he was, John Pike came slowly to the
sad perception that arts avail not without arms. The elbow, so often jerked, at
last took a voluntary jerk from the shoulder, and Alec Bolt lay prostrate, with
his right eye full of cobbler’s wax. This put a desirable check upon his
energies for a week or more, and by that time Pike had flown his fly.
When the honeymoon of spring and
summer (which they are now too fashionable to celebrate in this country), they
hey-day of the whole year marked by the budding of the wild rose, the start of
the wheat-ear from its sheath, the feathering of the lesser plantain, and
flowering of the meadow-sweet, and, foremost for the angler’s joy, the caracole
of May-flies—when these things are to be seen and felt (which has not happened
at all this year), then rivers should be mild and bright, skies blue and white
with fleecy cloud, the west wind blowing softly, and the trout in charming
appetite.
On such a day came Pike to the bank
of Culm, with a loudly beating heart. A fly there is not ignominious, or of
cowdab origin, neither gross and heavy-bodied, from cradlehood of slimy stones,
nor yet of menacing aspect and suggesting deeds of poison, but elegant, bland,
and of sunny nature, and obviously good to eat. Him or her—why quest we
which?—the shepherd of the dale, contemptuous of gender, except in his own
species, has called, and as long as they two coexist will call, the “Yellow
Sally.” A fly that does not waste the day in giddy dances and the fervid waltz,
but undergoes family incidents with decorum and discretion. He or she, as the
case may be,--for the natural history of the river bank is a book to come
hereafter, and of fifty men who make flies not one knows the name of the fly he
is making,--in the early morning of June, or else in the second quarter of the
afternoon, this Yellow Sally fares abroad, with a nice well-ordered flutter.
Despairing of the May-fly, as it
still may be despaired of, Pike came down to the river with his master-piece of
portraiture. The artificial Yellow Sally is generally always—as they say in
Cheshire—a mile or more too yellow. On the other hand, the “Yellow Dun” conveys
no idea of any Sally. But Pike had made a very decent Sally, not perfect (for he
was young as well as wise), but far above any counterfeit to be had in
fishing-tackle shops. How he made it, he told nobody. But if he lives now, as I
hope he does, any of my readers may ask him through the G.P.O., and hope to get
an answer.
It fluttered beautifully on the
breeze, and in such living form, that a brother or sister Sally came up to see
it, and went away sadder and wiser. Then Pike said: “Get away, you young
wretch,” to your humble servant who tells this tale; yet being better than his
words, allowed that pious follower to lie down upon his digestive organs and
with deep attention watch. There just have been great things to see, but to see
them so was difficult. And if I huddle up what happened, excitement also shares
the blame.
Pike had fashioned well the time and
manner of this overture. He knew that the giant Crockerite was satiate now with
May-flies, or began to find their flavor failing, as happens to us with
asparagus, marrow-fat peas, or strawberries, when we have had a month of them.
And he thought that the first Yellow Sally of the season, inferior though it
were, might have the special charm of novelty. With the skill of a Zulu, he
stole up through the branches over the lower pool till he came to a sot where a
yard-wideng gave just space for spring of rod. Then he was his desirable
friend at dinner, wagging his tail, as a hungry gentleman dining with the lord
Mayor agitates his coat. With one dexterous whirl, untaught by any of the many
books upon the subject, John Pike laid his Yellow Sally (for he cast with one
fly only, as lightly as gossamer upon the rapid,) about a yard in front of the
big trout’s head. A moment’s pause, and then, too quick for words, was the thing
that happened.
A heavy plunge was followed by a
fearful rush. Forgetful of current the river was ridged, as if with a plough
driven under it; the strong line, though given out as fast as might be, twanged
like a harp-string as it cut the wave, and then Pike stood up, like a ship
dismastered, with the butt of his rod snapped below the ferrule. He had one of
those foolish things, just invented, a hollow butt of hickory; and the finial
ring of his spare top looked out, to ask what had happened to the rest of it.
“Bad luck!” cried the fisherman; “but never mind, I shall have him next time, to
a certainty.”
When this great issue came to be
considered, the cause of it was sadly obvious. The fish, being hooked, had made
off with the rush of a shark for the bottom of the pool. A thicket of saplings
below the alder had stopped the judicious hooker from all possibility of
following; and when he strove to turn him by elastic pliance, his rod broke at
the breach of pliability. “I have learned a sad lesson,” said John Pike, looking
sadly.
How many fellows would have given up
this matter, and gloried themselves for having hooked so grand a fish, while
explaining that they must have caught him, if they could have done it! But Pike
only told me not to say a word about it, and began to make ready for another tug
of war. He made himself a splice-rod, short and handy, of well-seasoned ash,
with a stout top of bamboo, tapered so discretely, and so balanced in its
spring, that verily it formed an arc, with any pressure on it, as perfect as a
leafy poplar in a stormy summer. “Now break it if you can,” he said, “By any
amount of rushes; I’ll hook you by your jacket collar; you cut away now, and
I’ll land you.”
This was highly skillful, and he did
it many times; and whenever I was landed well, I got a lollypop, so that I was
careful not to break his tackle. Moreover he made a landing net, with a
kidney-bean stick, a ring of wire, and his own best nightcap of strong cotton
net. Then he got the farmer’s leave, and lopped obnoxious bushes; and now the
chiefest question was: what bait, and when to offer it? In spite of his sad
rebuff, the spirit of John Pike had been equable. The genuine angling mind is
steadfast, large, and self-supported, and to the vapid, ignominious chaff,
tossed by swine upon the idle wind, it pays as much heed as a bid trout does to
a dance of midges. People put their fingers to their noses and said: “Master
Pike, have you caught him yet?” and Pike only answered: “Wait a bit.” If ever
this fortitude and perseverance is to be recovered as the English Brand (the one
thing that has made us what we are, are nay yet redeem us from niddering shame),
a degenerate age should encourage the habit of fishing and never despairing. And
the brightest sign yet for our future is the increasing demand for hooks and
gut.
Pike fished in a manlier age, when
nobody would dream of cowering from a savage because he was cleaver at skulking;
and when, if a big fish broke the rod, a stronger rod was made for him,
according to the usage of Great Britain. And though the young angler had been
defeated, he did not sit down and have a good cry over it.
About the second week in June, when
the May-fly had danced its day, and died,--for the season was an early one,--and
Crocker’s trout had recovered from the wound to his feelings and philanthropy,
there came a night of gentle rain, of pleasant tinkling upon window ledges, and
a soothing patter among young leaves, and the Culm was yellow in the morning. “I
mean to do it this afternoon,” Pike whispered to me, as he came back panting.
“When the water clears will be a splendid time.”
The lover of the rose knows well a
gay voluptuous beetle, whose pleasure is to lie embedded in a fount of beauty.
Deep among the incurving petals of the blushing fragrance, he loses himself in
his joys sometimes, till a breezy waft reveals him. And when the sunlight breaks
upon his luscious dissipation, few would have the heart to oust him, such a gem
from such a setting. All his back is emerald sparkles; all his front red Indian
gold, and here and there he grows white spots to save the eye from aching. Pike
put his finger in and fetched him out, and offered him a little change of joys,
by putting a Limerick hook though his thorax, and bringing it out between his
elytra. Cetonia aurata liked it not, but pawed the air very naturally, and
fluttered with his wings attractively.
“I meant to have tried with a
fern-web,” said the angler; “until I saw one of these beggars this morning. If
he works like that upon the water, he will do. It was hopeless to try
artificials again. What a lovely color the water is! Only three days now to the
holidays. I have run it very close. You be ready, younker.”
With these words he stepped upon a
branch of the alder, for the tone of the waters allowed approach, being soft and
sublustrous, without any mud. Also Master Pike’s own tone was such as becomes
the fisherman, calm, deliberate, free from nerve, but full of eye and muscle. He
stepped upon the alder bough to get as near as might be to the fish, for he
could not cast this beetle like a fly; it must be dropped gently and allowed to
play. “You may come and look,” he said to me; “when the water is so, they have
no eyes in their tails.”
The rose-beetle trod upon the water
prettily, under a lively vibration, and he looked quite as happy, and
considerably more active, than when he had been cradled in the anthers of the
rose. To the eye of a fish he was a strong individual, fighting courageously
with the current, but sure to be beaten through lack of fins; and mercy
suggested, as well as appetite, that the proper solution was to gulp him.
“Hooked him in the gullet. He can’t
get off!” cried John Pike, laboring to keep his nerves under; “every inch of
tackle is as strong as a bell-pull. Now, if I don’t land him, I will never fish
again!”
Providence, which had constructed
Pike, foremost of all things, for lofty angling—disdainful of worm and even
minnow—Providence, I say, at this adjuration, pronounced that Pike must catch
that trout. Not many anglers are heaven born; and for one to drop off the hook
halfway through his teens would be infinitely worse than to slay the champion
trout. Pike felt the force of this, and rushing through the rushes, shouted: “I
am sure to have him, Dick! Be ready with my nightcap.”
Rod in a bow, like a springle-riser;
line on the hum, like the string of Paganini; winch on the gallop, like a
harpoon wheel, Pike, the head-centre of everything, dashed through thick and
thin, and once taken overhead—for he jumped into the hole, when he must have
lost him else, but the fish too impetuously towed him out, and made off in
passion for another pool, when, if ye had only retired to his hover, the angler
might have shared the baker’s fate—all these things (I tell you, for they all
come up again, as if the day were yesterday) so scared me of my never very
steadfast wits, that I could only holloa! But one thing I id, I kept the
nightcap ready.
“He is pretty nearly spent, I do
believe,” said Pike; and his voice was like balm of Gilead, as we came to Farmer
Anning’s meadow, a quarter of a mile below Crocker’s Hole. “Take it coolly, my
dear boy, and we shall be safe to have him.”
Never have I felt, through forty
years, such tremendous responsibility. I had not the faintest notion how to use
a landing neat; but a mighty general directed me. “Don’t let him see it; don’t
let him see it! Don’t clap it over him; go under him, you stupid! If he makes
another rush, he will get off, after all. Bring it up his tail. Well done! You
have him!”
The might trout lay in the nightcap
of Pike, which was half a fathom long, with a tassel at the end, for his mother
had made it in the winter evenings. “Come and hold the rod, if you can’t lift
him,” my master shouted, and so I did. Then, with both arms straining, and his
mouth wide John Pike made a mighty sweep, and we both fell upon the grass
and rolled, with the giant of the deep flapping heavily between us, and no power
left to us, except to cry, “Hurrah!”
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