Fishing and Fishers
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J. Paul Taylor
J. Paul Taylor was born and raised in Tacoma, Washington. He is a graduate of Northwest University in Kirkland, Washington, and has been ordained with the Assemblies of God for fifty-seven years. He spent forty-six years in pastoral ministry.God gave him a heart for missions, and the churches he pastored gave over 20 percent of their income to missions, and he has had the privilege of ministering in seven nations overseas.Paul and his wife, Dawn, have been married for over sixty-five years. They dedicated each one of their six children to the Lord and to His service. God took them at their word, and all of their children are in ministry, some here in the US and some overseas. And those who are not in full-time ministry are involved in their local church ministries.Paul and Dawn have fifteen grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren and are living in Gig Harbor, Washington.
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Fishing and Fishers - J. Paul Taylor
Introduction
MY good friend, the author of this book, asked me to write an Introduction for it. Why should I? Why should I not? These questions he answered so satisfactorily, to himself if not to me, that I most heartily consented, but on the understanding that the few words I wrote should not be required to be praise or blame, approval or disapproval, agreement or disagreement; nor were they to be regarded as a sort of certificate of the author’s high morals, physical health, mental superiority, or worldly solvency. The chapters of a book should, and of course always do, speak for themselves; and in these days your readers will, exceeding soon, form opinions on their own account. Under these circumstances to set out on the path of eulogy of the author, to dilate upon the length of our friendship and its depth, would be an impertinence. But we fishing men—anglers, Waltonians, contemplative recreationists, practitioners of the Gentle Art, or by whatever name we are known—are in truth a very friendly and amiable set of folks, always excepting on those occasions when one has been more successful at the waterside than another. Brotherly love may then be discontinued for a brief space, though the rule of life is, without question, commendably harmonious.
It comes therefore to this: my good friend, the author of this book, asked me to write an Introduction for it, and I plead no other apology for poaching on his preserves. Further, if the readers enjoy his published pages as much as I have enjoyed a perusal of the proof sheets, it will not be a bad thing for him or his publishers.
There is one reason why I send up a hearty cheer at the launch of this venture; it is that he has, to a great extent, built on my own lines. Very like egotism is this I know. But again, why not? We are told on excellent authority that we may be angry and sin not; and I assume an equal toleration for egotism, which is not necessarily vanity, nor self-conceit, nor brag, nor bounce.
Without therefore pretending for a moment that it has been my good (or ill) fortune to found a school of angling literature, I can modestly vouch that I have restored, if not established, a tolerably sound form, by making popular a type of fishing book intended to interest the class which may be termed non-anglers—calculated to attract to our sport, or at least to enlist the interest of, readers who cared nought, and knew nothing, about rods, lines, reels, hooks, baits, or methods.
The desire to do this became a possibility away back in the early Seventies, when I was invited by Mr. Richard Gowing, then editor of the Gentleman’s Magazine, to contribute a set of articles to that venerable serial. He listened with kindly open ears to the suggestion of fishing papers that should be without technicalities, but whose matter should contain instruction and advice respecting the art of angling, so innocently mixed with morsels of natural history, archæology, communion with nature at large, and all the humanities, that the whole might be swallowed by anybody without a wry face. Hence the Red Spinner
series of essays which were republished in Waterside Sketches and other volumes.
Angling books written in that way are common enough now, but they were not in those days. Francis Francis, a master hand with both rod and pen, oncè told me, in reply to my expressed admiration of certain passages of beautiful description by him of Hampshire meadows as they flaunt their hawthorns and marsh marigolds in early summer, that he was always afraid to let himself go
in that course. He held that what his angling readers expected of him was to be told how to dress flies, how to tie new knots, how to become learned in new dodges and wrinkles, how to kill two trout where one was killed before. We have had no better authority on the practical details of angling than he, nor an author who could express the fulness of knowledge with so much raciness or vigour. Yet it is evident, in all his books, that he considered it his main duty to keep close to the track of practicality; and if he did stray aside it was mostly when allured by some humorous incident which he must tell, and did tell most admirably.
Of Francis, however, it may be said, as of so many who were his predecessors and contemporaries, that with him everything must be subservient to the didactic aspect of his subject. Early in the century there were many writers who were probably not competent to expound the mysteries in full, but who left us delightful works in which a little fishing was made the peg upon which to hang tales of adventure, typographical descriptions of localities or countries, or learned disquisitions on philosophy or science. Some of them, it is true, were too sparing in their statements as to fishing, so that their treatises somewhat resembled the sermon of which it was said that it did not contain enough gospel to save a tomtit.
More than half a century has passed since two of the best sporting books ever written were given us from Scotland. How many of us must there be who have not yet forgotten the joy of the first reading of Colquhoun’s Moor and the Loch, first published by Blackwood in 1840, and Scrope’s Days and Nights of Salmon Fishing, which appeared three years later with lithographs and engravings from Wilkie and the Landseers? Then came St. John’s Wild Sport and Natural History of the Highlands, and the Rev. H. Newland with his Erne and its Legends, and Forest Scenes in Norway and Sweden. These are amongst the classics, but they belong to general rather than to angling literature.
In the same category of eminence must be placed Sir Humphrey Davy’s Salmonia; or, Days of Fly-Fishing in a Series of Conversations. Even this was not generally accepted as a genuine angling work by such bibliographers as the late Thomas Satchell; and it is certainly not so by comparison with books that have of recent years been the vogue.
The works of Sir Humphrey’s brother, John—The Angler in the Lake District, and The Angler and His Friend, published in 1855 and 1857 respectively, should be much more to the taste of the angler; yet they have never been so popular as the book written by his more eminent big brother as a means of amusement (as he tells us) during months of illness. Dr. John’s dialogues are lighter than the conversations between Halieus, Poietes, Physicus, and Ornither, and the references to angling are always sound.
Very largely the good angling books of the first half of the century concerned the grander branches of the sport, and a worthy type of them was (taking it as it occurs to me at the moment) Conway’s Forays among Salmon and Deer. The smaller game received attention as it happened to come in the way of nobler sport, but the rod was generally a minor implement in the estimation of the traveller or naturalist.
The bottom-fisher was meanwhile well looked after in literature by men acquainted with the Thames and Lea. T. F. Salter, gent., for example, published his Anglers’ Guide in 1808, and announced in decidedly comprehensive terms that it covered the whole art of angling as practised in the rivers Thames and Lea and other waters twenty miles round London. It was founded on forty years’ practice and observation,
and in prosaic fashion dealt with trolling, bottom-fishing, fly-fishing, and trimmer angling.
The less said about his fly-fishing perhaps the better. It was not till 1836 that a treatise on this subject worthy of the name was published, and to this day Ronalds’ Fly-Fishers’ Entomology is a standard reference for fly-dressers and fly-fishers, and an object of desire to all, should it possess the original copper plates representing the principal natural and artificial trout flies in juxtaposition.
A very typical demonstrator of the all-round school was the worthy Hofland, whose British Angler’s Manual was published in 1839 with dedication to Sir Francis Chantrey, R.A., who was an accomplished fly-fisher. Perhaps, take it all in all, Hofland should stand first on the list of angling authors at that period, his range being wider than that of his contemporaries. Fishing for thirty years on the principal rivers, lakes, and trout streams of Great Britain
filled him with knowledge at first-hand, and the book is written in dignified style, with wonderfully minute directions for the making and keeping of tackle.
There are three writers of a later period to whom anglers of the present are deeply indebted, and in truth who are in no danger of being forgotten yet awhile: They are Edward Fitzgibbon, better known as Ephemera
of Bell’s Life in its palmy days; Francis Francis, the voluminous author, and for many years angling editor of the Field; and Mr. Cholmondeley Pennell, who seems not yet to have thought about getting old, though his first work was published six-and-thirty years ago. It is a little curious that a young poet should make practicality the strong feature of his angling books. Spinning Tackle; what it is and what it ought to be, with a few words on Fine Fishing was the title of his first volume, and then followed The Angler Naturalist, an incomparably useful work, and The Book of the Pike—all in the early Sixties. These treatises were the beginning of a valuable output of avowedly practical works which led us to the forward stage of progress which is exemplified by such books as Halford’s Floating Flies, The Management of Fisheries, and Dry Fly Entomology; Bickerdyke’s All Round Angler quartette; and the Badminton volumes, not to mention many others.
Amongst the monographic publications one may mention The Book of the Roach, by Greville Fennell, The Book of the Pike, mentioned on the previous page, and books on the grayling by the late Mr. Pritt and Mr. F. M. Walbran, who is to-day the foremost exponent of fishing in the Yorkshire streams.
One might have supposed that there was nothing more left to say, or be said or sung, about Fish and Fishing. But so far as I know, no one has been heard to cry Hold, enough!
and angling books are issuing forth in many directions.
To the accepted instructors above-mentioned there have succeeded a procession of writers bent apparently upon entertaining rather than lecturing and teaching. They sketch and plead rather than expound and argue; they lay more stress upon the incidental charms of angling than upon the technicalities of either its sport or the manifold mechanical preparations of tackle. They seem to take it for granted that the reader is well grounded in all the rudiments, and need not be bothered with the essential but matter-of-fact information that may be found elsewhere.
I hope the author of Fishing and Fishers will not be offended if I invite him to place himself in this category, content to know that the giving of pleasure is not less praiseworthy than the imparting of knowledge; and that, while there are those who will accept none but the expert as their Gamaliel, there are others who prefer the guide that will lead them gently into pleasant places, and lightly discourse upon a thousand matters that demand no study and leave the poor brain unracked.
RED SPINNER.
Prefatory Chapter
AS the experiences of fifty years are here condensed, comparative brevity may fairly be claimed, even if these jottings extend themselves over some two hundred pages. Doubtless it is possible to be both brief and tedious; and whether this undesired end has been attained, the reader alone can judge.
Knowing well the preface-skipping habits so common among us, I will include a few explanatory remarks in this chapter, and thus avoid the necessity for a preface.
So far from supposing the fishing public to feel any curiosity as to my personal experiences as such, my chief idea is that the thread of narrative interwoven in the following sketches may prove interesting as reminding many a reader of similar little adventures which may have happened to himself.
Being now in my anecdotage,
or near it, I feel tempted to recount various trivial incidents of childhood, but will not yield to the weakness further than to confess that my earliest recollection of anything is that of my first fish-hook, and of the horny hand of the old gardener, as he bent the pin to make it, my own fingers being then much too small.
As the volumes which have appeared lately, dealing with the strictly practical side of the subject, are so many and so good, I have touched but lightly upon it, and little formal description of either fish or tackle is attempted. This omission may be considered the less remarkable as a little book on practical fishing (consisting of articles I have contributed to The Boy’s Own Paper) will shortly be issued by the Editor of that serial.
With regard to the chapter on Izaak Walton, much as I admire the character of that venerable poet-angler, I should not have ventured on the well-worn theme had I not enjoyed the advantage of dwelling for twenty years in the very district he most frequented, and of fishing, with some success, the rivers made classic by his pen.
Again, with respect to fishing literature, I claim no special skill as critic; but, having for the last fourteen years been in the constant habit of making full use of the library of the Fly-fishers’ Club, and also of other collections of fish-books, I have been enabled to form a fair acquaintance with a great variety of works on the subject, and am glad to be able to give others, less favoured by opportunity, some hints as to the books best worth buying—or borrowing.
With regard to the accounts of various fishing resorts, and of the wild and romantic scenery by which many of these are surrounded, everything alluded to (with the most trivial exceptions) is sketched from personal experience.
It is this very circumstance that will explain, and partly excuse, a certain want of up-to-dateness
which will be noticed by the bran-new fisher in many parts of the book. Pleading guilty to this charge, I can only urge, in stay of judgment, that the energy of youth cannot be united to the experience of age.
As to the tales at the fag end, they are added for the sake of those who like something avowedly fictitious even in a fishing book.
I have only to add an expression of the gratitude I feel to all those friends who have helped, either with advice or encouragement. Also to those veterans in fishing literature, Mr. Senior (Red Spinner) and Mr. C. H. Cook (John Bicker-dyke), who have given such solid assistance, and especially to the former, whose generous introduction is, disclaimers notwithstanding, such a valuable certificate of a certain moderate degree of fitness on my part to undertake a work which had for years seemed to me too ambitious for my modest powers.
CHAPTER I
Why We Fish
DOUBTLESS we do take our pleasures sadly
in this our