ANDREW LANG'S INTRODUCTION TO THE COMPLEAT ANGLER




To write on Walton is, indeed, to hold a candle to the sun.  
The editor has been content to give a summary of the chief or 
rather the only known, events in Walton's long life, adding a 
notice of his character as displayed in his Biographies and in 
The Compleat Angler, with comments on the ancient and modern 
practice of fishing, illustrated by passages from Walton's 
foregoers and contemporaries.  Like all editors of Walton, he 
owes much to his predecessors, Sir John Hawkins, Oldys, Major, 
and, above all, to the learned Sir Harris Nicolas.


HIS LIFE


The few events in the long life of Izaak Walton have been 
carefully investigated by Sir Harris Nicolas.  All that can be 
extricated from documents by the alchemy of research has been 
selected, and I am unaware of any important acquisitions since 
Sir Harris Nicolas's second edition of 1860.  Izaak was of an 
old family of Staffordshire yeomen, probably descendants of 
George Walton of Yoxhall, who died in 1571.  Izaak's father 
was Jarvis Walton, who died in February 1595-6; of Izaak's 
mother nothing is known.  Izaak himself was born at Stafford, 
on August 9, 1593, and was baptized on September 21.  He died 
on December 15, 1683, having lived in the reigns of Elizabeth, 
James I., Charles I., under the Commonwealth, and under 
Charles II.  The anxious and changeful age through which he 
passed is in contrast with his very pacific character and 
tranquil pursuits.

Of Walton's education nothing is known, except on the evidence 
of his writings.  He may have read Latin, but most of the 
books he cites had English translations.  Did he learn his 
religion from 'his mother or his nurse'?  It will be seen that 
the free speculation of his age left him untouched:  perhaps 
his piety was awakened, from childhood, under the instruction 
of a pious mother.  Had he been orphaned of both parents (as 
has been suggested) he might have been less amenable to 
authority, and a less notable example of the virtues which 
Anglicanism so vainly opposed to Puritanismism.  His literary 
beginnings are obscure.  There exists a copy of a work, The 
Loves of Amos and Laura, written by S. P., published in 1613, 
and again in 1619.  The edition of 1619 is dedicated to 'Iz. 
Wa.':-


'Thou being cause IT IS AS NOW IT IS';


the Dedication does not occur in the one imperfect known copy 
of 1613.  Conceivably the words, 'as now it is' refer to the 
edition of 1619, which might have been emended by Walton's 
advice.  But there are no emendations, hence it is more 
probable that Walton revised the poem in 1613, when he was a 
man of twenty, or that he merely advised the author to 
publish:-


'For, hadst thou held thy tongue, by silence might
These have been buried in oblivion's night.'


S. P. also remarks:-


'No ill thing can be clothed in thy verse';


hence Izaak was already a rhymer, and a harmless one, under 
the Royal Prentice, gentle King Jamie.

By this time Walton was probably settled in London.  A deed in 
the possession of his biographer, Dr. Johnson's friend, Sir 
John Hawkins, shows that, in 1614, Walton held half of a shop 
on the north side of Fleet Street, two doors west of Chancery 
Lane:  the other occupant was a hosier.  Mr. Nicholl has 
discovered that Walton was made free of the Ironmongers' 
Company on Nov. 12, 1618.  He is styled an Ironmonger in his 
marriage licence.  The facts are given in Mr. Marston's Life 
of Walton, prefixed to his edition of The Compleat Angler 
(1888).  It is odd that a prentice ironmonger should have been 
a poet and a critic of poetry.  Dr. Donne, before 1614, was 
Vicar of St. Dunstan's in the West, and in Walton had a 
parishioner, a disciple, and a friend.  Izaak greatly loved 
the society of the clergy:  he connected himself with 
Episcopal families, and had a natural taste for a Bishop.  
Through Donne, perhaps, or it may be in converse across the 
counter, he made acquaintance with Hales of Eton, Dr. King, 
and Sir Henry Wotton, himself an angler, and one who, like 
Donne and Izaak, loved a ghost story, and had several in his 
family.  Drayton, the river-poet, author of the Polyolbion, is 
also spoken of by Walton as 'my old deceased friend.'

On Dec. 27, 1626, Walton married, at Canterbury, Rachel Floud, 
a niece, on the maternal side, by several descents, of 
Cranmer, the famous Archbishop of Canterbury.  The Cranmers 
were intimate with the family of the judicious Hooker, and 
Walton was again connected with kinsfolk of that celebrated 
divine.  Donne died in 1631, leaving to Walton, and to other 
friends, a bloodstone engraved with Christ crucified on an 
anchor:  the seal is impressed on Walton's will.  When Donne's 
poems were published in 1633, Walton added commendatory 
verses:-


'As all lament
(Or should) this general cause of discontent.'


The parenthetic 'or should' is much in Walton's manner.  
'Witness my mild pen, not used to upbraid the world,' is also 
a pleasant and accurate piece of self-criticism.  'I am his 
convert,' Walton exclaims.  In a citation from a manuscript 
which cannot be found, and perhaps never existed, Walton is 
spoken of as 'a very sweet poet in his youth, and more than 
all in matters of love.' {1}  Donne had been in the same case:  
he, or Time, may have converted Walton from amorous ditties.  
Walton, in an edition of Donne's poems of 1635, writes of


'This book (dry emblem) which begins
With love; but ends with tears and sighs for sins.'


The preacher and his convert had probably a similar history of 
the heart:  as we shall see, Walton, like the Cyclops, had 
known love.  Early in 1639, Wotton wrote to Walton about a 
proposed Life of Donne, to be written by himself, and hoped 
'to enjoy your own ever welcome company in the approaching 
time of the Fly and the Cork.'  Wotton was a fly-fisher; the 
cork, or float, or 'trembling quill,' marks Izaak for the 
bottom-fisher he was.  Wotton died in December 1639; Walton 
prefixed his own Life of Donne to that divine's sermons in 
1640.  He says, in the Dedication of the reprint of 1658, that 
'it had the approbation of our late learned and eloquent 
King,' the martyred Charles I.  Living in, or at the corner of 
Chancery Lane, Walton is known to have held parochial office:  
he was even elected 'scavenger.'  He had the misfortune to 
lose seven children--of whom the last died in 1641--his wife, 
and his mother-in-law.  In 1644 he left Chancery Lane, and 
probably retired from trade.  He was, of course, a Royalist.  
Speaking of the entry of the Scots, who came, as one of them 
said, 'for the goods,--and chattels of the English,' he 
remarks, 'I saw and suffered by it.' {2}  He also mentions 
that he 'saw' shops shut by their owners till Laud should be 
put to death, in January 1645.  In his Life of Sanderson, 
Walton vouches for an anecdote of 'the knowing and 
conscientious King,' Charles, who, he says, meant to do public 
penance for Strafford's death, and for the abolishing of 
Episcopacy in Scotland.  But the condition, 'peaceable 
possession of the Crown,' was not granted to Charles, nor 
could have been granted to a prince who wished to reintroduce 
Bishops in Scotland.  Walton had his information from Dr. 
Morley.  On Nov. 25, 1645, Walton probably wrote, though John 
Marriott signed, an Address to the Reader, printed, in 1646, 
with Quarles's Shepherd's Eclogues.  The piece is a little 
idyll in prose, and 'angle, lines, and flies' are not omitted 
in the description of 'the fruitful month of May,' while Pan 
is implored to restore Arcadian peace to Britannia, 'and grant 
that each honest shepherd may again sit under his own vine and 
fig-tree, and feed his own flock,' when the King comes, no 
doubt.  'About' 1646 Walton married Anne, half-sister of 
Bishop Ken, a lady 'of much Christian meeknesse.'  Sir Harris 
Nicolas thinks that he only visited Stafford occasionally, in 
these troubled years.  He mentions fishing in 'Shawford 
brook'; he was likely to fish wherever there was water, and 
the brook flowed through land which, as Mr. Marston shows, he 
acquired about 1656.  In 1650 a child was born to Walton in 
Clerkenwell; it died, but another, Isaac, was born in 
September 1651.  In 1651 he published the Reliquiae 
Wottonianae, with a Memoir of Sir Henry Wotton.  The knight 
had valued Walton's company as a cure for 'those splenetic 
vapours that are called hypochondriacal.'

Worcester fight was on September 3, 1651; the king was 
defeated, and fled, escaping, thanks to a stand made by Wogan, 
and to the loyalty of Mistress Jane Lane, and of many other 
faithful adherents.  A jewel of Charles's, the lesser George, 
was preserved by Colonel Blague, who intrusted it to Mr. 
Barlow of Blore Pipe House, in Staffordshire.  Mr. Barlow gave 
it to Mr. Milward, a Royalist prisoner in Stafford, and he, in 
turn, intrusted it to Walton, who managed to convey it to 
Colonel Blague in the Tower.  The colonel escaped, and the 
George was given back to the king.  Ashmole, who tells the 
story, mentions Walton as 'well beloved of all good men.'  
This incident is, perhaps, the only known adventure in the 
long life of old Izaak.  The peaceful angler, with a royal 
jewel in his pocket, must have encountered many dangers on the 
highway.  He was a man of sixty when he published his Compleat 
Angler in 1653, and so secured immortality.  The quiet 
beauties of his manner in his various biographies would only 
have made him known to a few students, who could never have 
recognised Byron's 'quaint, old, cruel coxcomb' in their 
author.  'The whole discourse is a kind of picture of my own 
disposition, at least of my disposition in such days and times 
as I allow myself when honest Nat. and R. R. and I go a-
fishing together.'  Izaak speaks of the possibility that his 
book may reach a second edition.  There are now editions more 
than a hundred!  Waltonians should read Mr. Thomas Westwood's 
Preface to his Chronicle of the Compleat Angler:  it is 
reprinted in Mr. Marston's edition.  Mr. Westwood learned to 
admire Walton at the feet of Charles Lamb:-


'No fisher,
But a well-wisher
To the game,'


as Scott describes himself.  {3}

Lamb recommended Walton to Coleridge; 'it breathes the very 
spirit of innocence, purity, and simplicity of heart; . . . it 
would sweeten a man's temper at any time to read it; it would 
Christianise every angry, discordant passion; pray make 
yourself acquainted with it.'  (Oct. 28, 1796.)  According to 
Mr. Westwood, Lamb had 'an early copy,' found in a repository 
of marine stores, but not, even then, to be bought a bargain.  
Mr. Westwood fears that Lamb's copy was only Hawkins's edition 
of 1760.  The original is extremely scarce.  Mr. Locker had a 
fine copy; there is another in the library of Dorchester 
House:  both are in their primitive livery of brown sheep, or 
calf.  The book is one which only the wealthy collector can 
hope, with luck, to call his own.  A small octavo, sold at 
eighteen-pence, The Compleat Angler was certain to be thumbed 
into nothingness, after enduring much from May showers, July 
suns, and fishy companionship.  It is almost a wonder that any 
examples of Walton's and Bunyan's first editions have survived 
into our day.  The little volume was meant to find a place in 
the bulging pockets of anglers, and was well adapted to that 
end.  The work should be reprinted in a similar format:  
quarto editions are out of place.

The fortunes of the book, the fata libelli, have been traced 
by Mr. Westwood.  There are several misprints (later 
corrected) in the earliest copies, as (p. 88) 'Fordig' for 
'Fordidg,' (p. 152) 'Pudoch' for 'Pudock.'  The appearance of 
the work was advertised in The Perfect Diurnal (May 9-16), and 
in No. 154 of The Mercurius Politicus (May 19-26), also in an 
almanack for 1654.  Izaak, or his publisher Marriott, 
cunningly brought out the book at a season when men expect the 
Mayfly.  Just a month before, Oliver Cromwell had walked into 
the House of Commons, in a plain suit of black clothes, with 
grey stockings.  His language, when he spoke, was reckoned 
unparliamentary (as it undeniably was), and he dissolved the 
Long Parliament.  While Marriott was advertising Walton's 
work, Cromwell was making a Parliament of Saints, 'faithful, 
fearing God, and hating covetousness.'  This is a good 
description of Izaak, but he was not selected.  In the midst 
of revolutions came The Compleat Angler to the light, a 
possession for ever.  Its original purchasers are not likely 
to have taken a hand in Royalist plots or saintly 
conventicles.  They were peaceful men.  A certain Cromwellian 
trooper, Richard Franck, was a better angler than Walton, and 
he has left to us the only contemporary and contemptuous 
criticism of his book:  to this we shall return, but anglers, 
as a rule, unlike Franck, must have been for the king, and on 
Izaak's side in controversy.

Walton brought out a second edition in 1655.  He rewrote the 
book, adding more than a third, suppressing Viator, and 
introducing Venator.  New plates were added, and, after the 
manner of the time, commendatory verses.  A third edition 
appeared in 1661, a fourth (published by Simon Gape, not by 
Marriott) came out in 1664, a fifth in 1668 (counting Gape's 
of 1664 as a new edition), and in 1676, the work, with 
treatises by Venables and Charles Cotton, was given to the 
world as The Universal Angler.  Five editions in twelve years 
is not bad evidence of Walton's popularity.  But times now 
altered.  Walton is really an Elizabethan:  he has the quaint 
freshness, the apparently artless music of language of the 
great age.  He is a friend of 'country contents':  no lover of 
the town, no keen student of urban ways and mundane men.  A 
new taste, modelled on that of the wits of Louis XIV., had 
come in:  we are in the period of Dryden, and approaching that 
of Pope.

There was no new edition of Walton till Moses Browne (by 
Johnson's desire) published him, with 'improvements,' in 1750.  
Then came Hawkins's edition in 1760.  Johnson said of Hawkins, 
'Why, ma'am, I believe him to be an honest man at the bottom; 
but, to be sure, he is penurious, and he is mean, and it must 
be owned he has a degree of brutality, and a tendency to 
savageness, that cannot easily be defended.'

This was hardly the editor for Izaak!  However, Hawkins, 
probably by aid of Oldys the antiquary (as Mr. Marston shows), 
laid a good foundation for a biography of Walton.  Errors he 
made, but Sir Harris Nicolas has corrected them.  Johnson 
himself reckoned Walton's Lives as 'one of his most favourite 
books.'  He preferred the life of Donne, and justly complained 
that Walton's story of Donne's vision of his absent wife had 
been left out of a modern edition.  He explained Walton's 
friendship with persons of higher rank by his being 'a great 
panegyrist.'

The eighteenth century, we see, came back to Walton, as the 
nineteenth has done.  He was precisely the author to suit 
Charles Lamb.  He was reprinted again and again, and 
illustrated by Stoddart and others.  Among his best editors 
are Major (1839), 'Ephemera' (1853), Nicolas (1836, 1860), and 
Mr. Marston (1888).

The only contemporary criticism known to me is that of Richard 
Franck, who had served with Cromwell in Scotland, and, not 
liking the aspect of changing times, returned to the north, 
and fished from the Esk to Strathnaver.  In 1658 he wrote his 
Northern Memoirs, an itinerary of sport, heavily cumbered by 
dull reflections and pedantic style.  Franck, however, was a 
practical angler, especially for salmon, a fish of which 
Walton knew nothing:  he also appreciated the character of the 
great Montrose.  He went to America, wrote a wild cosmogonic 
work, and The Admirable and Indefatigable Adventures of the 
Nine Pious Pilgrims (one pilgrim catches a trout!) (London, 
1708).  The Northern Memoirs of 1658 were not published till 
1694.  Sir Walter Scott edited a new issue, in 1821, and 
defended Izaak from the strictures of the salmon-fisher.  
Izaak, says Franck, 'lays the stress of his arguments upon 
other men's observations, wherewith he stuffs his indigested 
octavo; so brings himself under the angler's censure and the 
common calamity of a plagiary, to be pitied (poor man) for his 
loss of time, in scribbling and transcribing other men's 
notions. . . . I remember in Stafford, I urged his own 
argument upon him, that pickerel weed of itself breeds 
pickerel (pike).'  Franck proposed a rational theory, 'which 
my Compleat Angler no sooner deliberated, but dropped his 
argument, and leaves Gesner to defend it, so huffed away. . . 
. '  'So note, the true character of an industrious angler 
more deservedly falls upon Merrill and Faulkner, or rather 
Izaak Ouldham, a man that fished salmon with but three hairs 
at hook, whose collections and experiments were lost with 
himself,'--a matter much to be regretted.  It will be 
observed, of course, that hair was then used, and gut is first 
mentioned for angling purposes by Mr. Pepys.  Indeed, the 
flies which Scott was hunting for when he found the lost Ms. 
of the first part of Waverley are tied on horse-hairs.  They 
are in the possession of the descendants of Scott's friend, 
Mr. William Laidlaw.  The curious angler, consulting Franck, 
will find that his salmon flies are much like our own, but 
less variegated.  Scott justly remarks that, while Walton was 
habit and repute a bait-fisher, even Cotton knows nothing of 
salmon.  Scott wished that Walton had made the northern tour, 
but Izaak would have been sadly to seek, running after a fish 
down a gorge of the Shin or the Brora, and the discomforts of 
the north would have finished his career.  In Scotland he 
would not have found fresh sheets smelling of lavender.

Walton was in London 'in the dangerous year 1655.'  He speaks 
of his meeting Bishop Sanderson there, 'in sad-coloured 
clothes, and, God knows, far from being costly.'  The friends 
were driven by wind and rain into 'a cleanly house, where we 
had bread, cheese, ale, and a fire, for our ready money.  The 
rain and wind were so obliging to me, as to force our stay 
there for at least an hour, to my great content and advantage; 
for in that time he made to me many useful observations of the 
present times with much clearness and conscientious freedom.'  
It was a year of Republican and Royalist conspiracies:  the 
clergy were persecuted and banished from London.

No more is known of Walton till the happy year 1660, when the 
king came to his own again, and Walton's Episcopal friends to 
their palaces.  Izaak produced an 'Eglog,' on May 29:-


'The king!  The king's returned!  And now
Let's banish all sad thoughts, and sing:
We have our laws, and have our king.'


If Izaak was so eccentric as to go to bed sober on that 
glorious twenty-ninth of May, I greatly misjudge him.  But he 
grew elderly.  In 1661 he chronicles the deaths of 'honest 
Nat. and R. Roe,--they are gone, and with them most of my 
pleasant hours, even as a shadow that passeth away, and 
returns not.'  On April 17, 1662, Walton lost his second wife:  
she died at Worcester, probably on a visit to Bishop Morley.  
In the same year, the bishop was translated to Winchester, 
where the palace became Izaak's home.  The Itchen (where, no 
doubt, he angled with worm) must have been his constant haunt.  
He was busy with his Life of Richard Hooker (1665).  The 
peroration, as it were, was altered and expanded in 1670, and 
this is but one example of Walton's care of his periods.  One 
beautiful passage he is known to have rewritten several times, 
till his ear was satisfied with its cadences.  In 1670 he 
published his Life of George Herbert.  'I wish, if God shall 
be so pleased, that I may be so happy as to die like him.'  In 
1673, in a Dedication of the third edition of Reliquiae 
Wottonianae, Walton alludes to his friendship with a much 
younger and gayer man than himself, Charles Cotton (born 
1630), the friend of Colonel Richard Lovelace, and of Sir John 
Suckling:  the translator of Scarron's travesty of Virgil, and 
of Montaigne's Essays.  Cotton was a roisterer, a man at one 
time deep in debt, but he was a Royalist, a scholar, and an 
angler.  The friendship between him and Walton is creditable 
to the freshness of the old man and to the kindness of the 
younger, who, to be sure, laughed at Izaak's heavily dubbed 
London flies.  'In him,' says Cotton, 'I have the happiness to 
know the worthiest man, and to enjoy the best and the truest 
friend any man ever had.'  We are reminded of Johnson with 
Langton and Topham Beauclerk.  Meanwhile Izaak the younger had 
grown up, was educated under Dr. Fell at Christ Church, and 
made the Grand Tour in 1675, visiting Rome and Venice.  In 
March 1676 he proceeded M.A. and took Holy Orders.  In this 
year Cotton wrote his treatise on fly-fishing, to be published 
with Walton's new edition; and the famous fishing house on the 
Dove, with the blended initials of the two friends, was built.  
In 1678, Walton wrote his Life of Sanderson. . . . ''Tis now 
too late to wish that my life may be like his, for I am in the 
eighty-fifth year of my age, but I humbly beseech Almighty God 
that my death may be; and do as earnestly beg of every reader 
to say Amen!'  He wrote, in 1678, a preface to Thealma and 
Clearchus (1683).  The poem is attributed to John Chalkhill, a 
Fellow of Winchester College, who died, a man of eighty, in 
1679.  Two of his songs are in The Compleat Angler.  Probably 
the attribution is right:  Chalkhill's tomb commemorates a man 
after Walton's own heart, but some have assigned the volume to 
Walton himself.  Chalkhill is described, on the title-page, as 
'an acquaintant and friend of Edmund Spencer,' which is 
impossible. {4}

On August 9, 1683, Walton wrote his will, 'in the neintyeth 
year of my age, and in perfect memory, for which praised be 
God.'  He professes the Anglican faith, despite 'a very long 
and very trew friendship for some of the Roman Church.'  His 
worldly estate he has acquired 'neither by falsehood or 
flattery or the extreme crewelty of the law of this nation.'  
His property was in two houses in London, the lease of 
Norington farm, a farm near Stafford, besides books, linen, 
and a hanging cabinet inscribed with his name, now, it seems, 
in the possession of Mr. Elkin Mathews.  A bequest is made of 
money for coals to the poor of Stafford, 'every last weike in 
Janewary, or in every first weike in Febrewary; I say then, 
because I take that time to be the hardest and most pinching 
times with pore people.'  To the Bishop of Winchester he 
bequeathed a ring with the posy, 'A Mite for a Million.'  
There are other bequests, including ten pounds to 'my old 
friend, Mr. Richard Marriott,' Walton's bookseller.  This good 
man died in peace with his publisher, leaving him also a ring.  
A ring was left to a lady of the Portsmouth family, 'Mrs. 
Doro. Wallop.'

Walton died, at the house of his son-in-law, Dr. Hawkins, in 
Winchester, on Dec. 15, 1683:  he is buried in the south aisle 
of the Cathedral.  The Cathedral library possesses many of 
Walton's books, with his name written in them. {5}  His 
Eusebius (1636) contains, on the flyleaf, repetitions, in 
various forms, of one of his studied passages.  Simple as he 
seems, he is a careful artist in language.

Such are the scanty records, and scantier relics, of a very 
long life.  Circumstances and inclination combined to make 
Walpole choose the fallentis semita vitae.  Without ambition, 
save to be in the society of good men, he passed through 
turmoil, ever companioned by content.  For him existence had 
its trials:  he saw all that he held most sacred overthrown; 
laws broken up; his king publicly murdered; his friends 
outcasts; his worship proscribed; he himself suffered in 
property from the raid of the Kirk into England.  He underwent 
many bereavements:  child after child he lost, but content he 
did not lose, nor sweetness of heart, nor belief.  His was one 
of those happy characters which are never found disassociated 
from unquestioning faith.  Of old he might have been the 
ancient religious Athenian in the opening of Plato's Republic, 
or Virgil's aged gardener.  The happiness of such natures 
would be incomplete without religion, but only by such 
tranquil and blessed souls can religion be accepted with no 
doubt or scruple, no dread, and no misgiving.  In his Preface 
to Thealma and Clearchus Walton writes, and we may use his own 
words about his own works:  'The Reader will here find such 
various events and rewards of innocent Truth and undissembled 
Honesty, as is like to leave in him (if he be a good-natured 
reader) more sympathising and virtuous impressions, than ten 
times so much time spent in impertinent, critical, and 
needless disputes about religion.'  Walton relied on 
authority; on 'a plain, unperplexed catechism.'  In an age of 
the strangest and most dissident theological speculations, an 
age of Quakers, Anabaptists, Antinomians, Fifth Monarchy Men, 
Covenanters, Independents, Gibbites, Presbyterians, and what 
not, Walton was true to the authority of the Church of 
England, with no prejudice against the ancient Catholic faith.  
As Gesner was his authority for pickerel weed begetting pike, 
so the Anglican bishops were security for Walton's creed.

To him, if we may say so, it was easy to be saved, while 
Bunyan, a greater humorist, could be saved only in following a 
path that skirted madness, and 'as by fire.'  To Bunyan, 
Walton would have seemed a figure like his own Ignorance; a 
pilgrim who never stuck in the Slough of Despond, nor met 
Apollyon in the Valley of the Shadow, nor was captive in 
Doubting Castle, nor stoned in Vanity Fair.  And of Bunyan, 
Walton would have said that he was among those Nonconformists 
who 'might be sincere, well-meaning men, whose indiscreet zeal 
might be so like charity, as thereby to cover a multitude of 
errors.'  To Walton there seemed spiritual solace in 
remembering 'that we have comforted and been helpful to a 
dejected or distressed family.'  Bunyan would have regarded 
this belief as a heresy, and (theoretically) charitable deeds 
'as filthy rags.'  Differently constituted, these excellent 
men accepted religion in different ways.  Christian bows 
beneath a burden of sin; Piscator beneath a basket of trout.  
Let us be grateful for the diversities of human nature, and 
the dissimilar paths which lead Piscator and Christian alike 
to the City not built with hands.  Both were seekers for a 
City which to have sought through life, in patience, honesty, 
loyalty, and love, is to have found it.  Of Walton's book we 
may say:-


'Laudis amore tumes?  Sunt certa piacula quae te
Ter pure lecto poterunt recreare libello.'



WALTON AS A BIOGRAPHER



It was probably by his Lives, rather than, in the first 
instance, by his Angler, that Walton won the liking of Dr. 
Johnson, whence came his literary resurrection.  It is true 
that Moses Browne and Hawkins, both friends of Johnson's, 
edited The Compleat Angler before 1775-1776, when we find Dr. 
Home of Magdalene, Oxford, contemplating a 'benoted' edition 
of the Lives, by Johnson's advice.  But the Walton of the 
Lives is, rather than the Walton of the Angler, the man after 
Johnson's own heart.  The Angler is 'a picture of my own 
disposition' on holidays.  The Lives display the same 
disposition in serious moods, and in face of the eternal 
problems of man's life in society.  Johnson, we know, was very 
fond of biography, had thought much on the subject, and, as 
Boswell notes, 'varied from himself in talk,' when he 
discussed the measure of truth permitted to biographers.  'If 
a man is to write a Panegyrick, he may keep vices out of 
sight; but if he professes to write a Life, he must represent 
it as it really was.'  Peculiarities were not to be concealed, 
he said, and his own were not veiled by Boswell.  'Nobody can 
write the life of a man but those who have eat and drunk and 
lived in social intercourse with him.'  'They only who live 
with a man can write his life with any genuine exactness and 
discrimination; and few people who have lived with a man know 
what to remark about him.'  Walton had lived much in the 
society of his subjects, Donne and Wotton; with Sanderson he 
had a slighter acquaintance; George Herbert he had only met; 
Hooker, of course, he had never seen in the flesh.  It is 
obvious to every reader that his biographies of Donne and 
Wotton are his best.  In Donne's Life he feels that he is 
writing of an English St. Austin,--'for I think none was so 
like him before his conversion; none so like St. Ambrose after 
it:  and if his youth had the infirmities of the one, his age 
had the excellencies of the other; the learning and holiness 
of both.'

St. Augustine made free confession of his own infirmities of 
youth.  With great delicacy Walton lets Donne also confess 
himself, printing a letter in which he declines to take Holy 
Orders, because his course of life when very young had been 
too notorious.  Delicacy and tact are as notable in Walton's 
account of Donne's poverty, melancholy, and conversion through 
the blessed means of gentle King Jamie.  Walton had an awful 
loyalty, a sincere reverence for the office of a king.  But 
wherever he introduces King James, either in his Donne or his 
Wotton, you see a subdued version of the King James of The 
Fortunes of Nigel.  The pedantry, the good nature, the 
touchiness, the humour, the nervousness, are all here.  It 
only needs a touch of the king's broad accent to set before 
us, as vividly as in Scott, the interviews with Donne, and 
that singular scene when Wotton, disguised as Octavio Baldi, 
deposits his long rapier at the door of his majesty's chamber.  
Wotton, in Florence, was warned of a plot to murder James VI.  
The duke gave him 'such Italian antidotes against poison as 
the Scots till then had been strangers to':  indeed, there is 
no antidote for a dirk, and the Scots were not poisoners.  
Introduced by Lindsay as 'Octavio Baldi,' Wotton found his 
nervous majesty accompanied by four Scottish nobles.  He spoke 
in Italian; then, drawing near, hastily whispered that he was 
an Englishman, and prayed for a private interview.  This, by 
some art, he obtained, delivered his antidotes, and, when 
James succeeded Elizabeth, rose to high favour.  Izaak's 
suppressed humour makes it plain that Wotton had acted the 
scene for him, from the moment of leaving the long rapier at 
the door.  Again, telling how Wotton, in his peaceful hours as 
Provost of Eton, intended to write a Life of Luther, he says 
that King Charles diverted him from his purpose to attempting 
a History of England 'by a persuasive loving violence (to 
which may be added a promise of 500 pounds a year).'  He likes 
these parenthetic touches, as in his description of Donne, 
'always preaching to himself, like an angel from a cloud,--BUT 
IN NONE.'  Again, of a commendation of one of his heroes he 
says, 'it is a known truth,--though it be in verse.'

A memory of the days when Izaak was an amorist, and shone in 
love ditties, appears thus.  He is speaking of Donne:-


'Love is a flattering mischief . . . a passion that carries us 
to commit errors with as much ease as whirlwinds remove 
feathers.'

'The tears of lovers, or beauty dressed in sadness, are 
observed to have in them a charming sadness, and to become 
very often too strong to be resisted.'


These are examples of Walton's sympathy:  his power of 
portrait-drawing is especially attested by his study of Donne, 
as the young gallant and poet, the unhappy lover, the man of 
state out of place and neglected; the heavily burdened father, 
the conscientious scholar, the charming yet ascetic preacher 
and divine, the saint who, dying, makes himself in his own 
shroud, an emblem of mortality.

As an example of Walton's style, take the famous vision of Dr. 
Donne in Paris.  He had left his wife expecting her 
confinement:-


'Two days after their arrival there, Mr. Donne was left alone 
in that room in which Sir Robert and he, and some other 
friends, had dined together.  To this place Sir Robert 
returned within half an hour, and as he left, so he found Mr. 
Donne alone, but in such an ecstacy, and so altered as to his 
looks, as amazed Sir Robert to behold him; insomuch that he 
earnestly desired Mr. Donne to declare what had befallen him 
in the short time of his absence.  To which Mr. Donne was not 
able to make a present answer:  but, after a long and 
perplexed pause, did at last say, "I have seen a dreadful 
vision since I saw you:  I have seen my dear wife pass twice 
by me through this room, with her hair hanging about her 
shoulders, and a dead child in her arms; this I have seen 
since I saw you."  To which Sir Robert replied, "Sure, sir, 
you have slept since I saw you; and this is the result of some 
melancholy dream, which I desire you to forget, for you are 
now awake."  To which Mr. Donne's reply was, "I cannot be 
surer that I now live than that I have not slept since I saw 
you:  and I am as sure that at her second appearing she 
stopped, and looked me in the face, and vanished . . . "  And 
upon examination, the abortion proved to be the same day, and 
about the very hour, that Mr. Donne affirmed he saw her pass 
by him in his chamber.

' . . . And though it is most certain that two lutes, being 
both strung and tuned to an equal pitch, and then one played 
upon, the other, that is not touched, being laid upon a table 
at a fit distance, will (like an echo to a trumpet) warble a 
faint audible harmony in answer to the same tune; yet many 
will not believe there is any such thing as a sympathy of 
souls, and I am well pleased that every reader do enjoy his 
own opinion . . . '


He then appeals to authority, as of Brutus, St. Monica, Saul, 
St. Peter:-


'More observations of this nature, and inferences from them, 
might be made to gain the relation a firmer belief; but I 
forbear:  lest I, that intended to be but a relator, may be 
thought to be an engaged person for the proving what was 
related to me, . . . by one who had it from Dr. Donne.'


Walpole was no Boswell; worthy Boswell would have cross-
examined Dr. Donne himself.

Of dreams he writes:-


'Common dreams are but a senseless paraphrase on our waking 
thoughts, or of the business of the day past, or are the 
result of our over engaged affections when we betake ourselves 
to rest.' . . . Yet 'Almighty God (though the causes of dreams 
be often unknown) hath even in these latter times also, by a 
certain illumination of the soul in sleep, discovered many 
things that human wisdom could not foresee.'


Walton is often charged with superstition, and the enlightened 
editor of the eighteenth century excised all the scene of Mrs. 
Donne's wraith as too absurd.  But Walton is a very fair 
witness.  Donne, a man of imagination, was, he tells us, in a 
perturbed anxiety about Mrs. Donne.  The event was after 
dinner.  The story is, by Walton's admission, at second hand.  
Thus, in the language of the learned in such matters, the tale 
is 'not evidential.'  Walton explains it, if true, as a result 
of 'sympathy of souls'--what is now called telepathy.  But he 
is content that every man should have his own opinion.  In the 
same way he writes of the seers in the Wotton family:  'God 
did seem to speak to many of this family' (the Wottons) 'in 
dreams,' and Thomas Wotton's dreams 'did usually prove true, 
both in foretelling things to come, and discovering things 
past.'  Thus he dreamed that five townsmen and poor scholars 
were robbing the University chest at Oxford.  He mentioned 
this in a letter to his son at Oxford, and the letter, 
arriving just after the robbery, led to the discovery of the 
culprits.  Yet Walton states the causes and nature of dreams 
in general with perfect sobriety and clearness.  His tales of 
this sort were much to Johnson's mind, as to Southey's.  But 
Walton cannot fairly be called 'superstitious,' granting the 
age in which he lived.  Visions like Dr. Donne's still excite 
curious comment.

To that cruel superstition of his age, witchcraft, I think 
there is no allusion in Walton.  Almost as uncanny, however, 
is his account of Donne's preparation for death


'Several charcoal fires being first made in his large study, 
he brought with him into that place his winding-sheet in his 
hand, and having put off all his clothes, had this sheet put 
on him, and so tied with knots at his head and feet, and his 
hands so placed as dead bodies are usually fitted, to be 
shrouded and put into their coffin or grave.  Upon this urn he 
thus stood, with his eyes shut, and with so much of the sheet 
turned aside as might show his lean, pale, and death-like 
face, which was purposely turned towards the east, from which 
he expected the second coming of his and our Saviour Jesus.  
In this posture he was drawn at his just height, and, when the 
picture was fully finished, he caused it to be set by his 
bedside, where it continued, and became his hourly object till 
death.'


Thus Donne made ready to meet the common fate:-


'That body, which once was a temple of the Holy Ghost, is now 
become a small quantity of Christian ashes.  But I shall see 
it reanimated.'


This is the very voice of Faith.  Walton was, indeed, an 
assured believer, and to his mind, the world offered no 
insoluble problem.  But we may say of him, in the words of a 
poet whom he quotes:-


'Many a one
Owes to his country his religion;
And in another would as strongly grow
Had but his nurse or mother taught him so.'


In his account of Donne's early theological studies of the 
differences between Rome and Anglicanism, it is manifest that 
Izaak thinks these differences matters of no great moment.  
They are not for simple men to solve:  Donne has taken that 
trouble for him; besides, he is an Englishman, and


'Owes to his country his religion.'


He will be no Covenanter, and writes with disgust of an 
intruded Scots minister, whose first action was to cut down 
the ancient yews in the churchyard.  Izaak's religion, and all 
his life, were rooted in the past, like the yew-tree.  He is 
what he calls 'the passive peaceable Protestant.'  'The common 
people in this nation,' he writes, 'think they are not wise 
unless they be busy about what they understand not, and 
especially about religion'; as Bunyan was busy at that very 
moment.  In Walton's opinion, the plain facts of religion, and 
of consequent morality, are visible as the sun at noonday.  
The vexed questions are for the learned, and are solved 
variously by them.  A man must follow authority, as he finds 
it established in his own country, unless he has the learning 
and genius of a Donne.  To these, or equivalents for these in 
a special privy inspiration, 'the common people' of his day, 
and ever since Elizabeth's day, were pretending.  This was the 
inevitable result of the translation of the Bible into 
English.  Walton quotes with approval a remark of a witty 
Italian on a populace which was universally occupied with 
Free-will and Predestination.  The fruits Walton saw, in 
preaching Corporals, Antinomian Trusty Tompkinses, Quakers who 
ran about naked, barking, Presbyterians who cut down old yew-
trees, and a Parliament of Saints.  Walton took no kind of joy 
in the general emancipation of the human spirit.  The clergy, 
he confessed, were not what he wished them to be, but they 
were better than Quakers, naked and ululant.  To love God and 
his neighbour, and to honour the king, was Walton's 
unperplexed religion.  Happily he was saved from the view of 
the errors and the fall of James II., a king whom it was not 
easy to honour.  His social philosophy was one of established 
rank, tempered by equity and Christian charity.  If anything 
moves his tranquil spirit, it is the remorseless greed of him 
who takes his fellow-servant by the throat and exacts the 
uttermost penny.  How Sanderson saved a poor farmer from the 
greed of an extortionate landlord, Walton tells in his Life of 
the prelate, adding this reflection:-


'It may be noted that in this age there are a sort of people 
so unlike the God of mercy, so void of the bowels of pity, 
that they love only themselves and their children; love them 
so as not to be concerned whether the rest of mankind waste 
their days in sorrow or shame; people that are cursed with 
riches, and a mistake that nothing but riches can make them 
and theirs happy.'


Thus Walton appears, this is 'the picture of his own 
disposition,' in the Lives.  He is a kind of antithesis to 
John Knox.  Men like Walton are not to be approached for new 
'ideas.'  They will never make a new world at a blow:  they 
will never enable us to understand, but they can teach us to 
endure, and even to enjoy, the world.  Their example is 
alluring:-


'Even the ashes of the just
Smell sweet, and blossom in the dust.'



THE COMPLEAT ANGLER



Franck, as we saw, called Walton 'a plagiary.'  He was a 
plagiary in the same sense as Virgil and Lord Tennyson and 
Robert Burns, and, indeed, Homer, and all poets.  The Compleat 
Angler, the father of so many books, is the child of a few.  
Walton not only adopts the opinions and advice of the authors 
whom he cites, but also follows the manner, to a certain 
extent, of authors whom he does not quote.  His very exordium, 
his key-note, echoes (as Sir Harris Nicolas observes) the 
opening of A Treatise of the Nature of God (London, 1599).  
The Treatise starts with a conversation between a gentleman 
and a scholar:  it commences:-


Gent.  Well overtaken, sir!
Scholar.  You are welcome, gentleman.


A more important source is The Treatyse of Fysshynge wyth an 
Angle, commonly attributed to Dame Juliana Barnes (printed at 
Westminster, 1496).  A manuscript, probably of 1430-1450, has 
been published by Mr. Satchell (London, 1883).  This book may 
be a translation of an unknown French original.  It opens:-


'Soloman in hys paraboles seith that a glad spirit maket a 
flowryng age.  That ys to sey, a feyre age and a longe' (like 
Walton's own), 'and sith hyt ys so I aske this question, wyche 
bynne the menys and cause to reduce a man to a mery spryte.'  
The angler 'schall have hys holsom walke and mery at hys owne 
ease, and also many a sweyt eayr of divers erbis and flowres 
that schall make hym ryght hongre and well disposed in hys 
body.  He schall heyr the melodies melodious of the ermony of 
byrde:  he schall se also the yong swannes and signetes 
folowing ther eyrours, duckes, cootes, herons, and many other 
fowlys with ther brodys, wyche me semyt better then all the 
noyse of houndes, and blastes of hornes and other gamys that 
fawkners or hunters can make, and yf the angler take the 
fyssche, hardly then ys ther no man meryer then he in his 
sprites.'


This is the very 'sprite' of Walton; this has that vernal and 
matutinal air of opening European literature, full of birds' 
music, and redolent of dawn.  This is the note to which the 
age following Walton would not listen.

In matter of fact, again, Izaak follows the ancient Treatise.  
We know his jury of twelve flies:  the Treatise says:-


'These ben the xij flyes wyth whyche ye shall angle to the 
trought and graylling, and dubbe like as ye shall now here me 
tell.

'Marche.  The donne fly, the body of the donne woll, and the 
wyngis of the pertryche.  Another donne flye, the body of 
blacke woll, the wyngis of the blackyst drake; and the lay 
under the wynge and under the tayle.'


Walton has:-


'The first is the dun fly in March:  the body is made of dun 
wool, the wings of the partridge's feathers.  The second is 
another dun fly:  the body of black wool; and the wings made 
of the black drake's feathers, and of the feathers under his 
tail.'


Again, the Treatise has:-


Auguste.  The drake fly.  The body of black wull and lappyd 
abowte wyth blacke sylke:  winges of the mayle of the blacke 
drake wyth a blacke heed.'


Walton has:-


'The twelfth is the dark drake-fly, good in August:  the body 
made with black wool, lapt about with black silk, his wings 
are made with the mail of the black drake, with a black head.'


This is word for word a transcript of the fifteenth century 
Treatise.  But Izaak cites, not the ancient Treatise, but Mr. 
Thomas Barker. {6}  Barker, in fact, gives many more, and more 
variegated flies than Izaak offers in the jury of twelve which 
he rendered, from the old Treatise, into modern English.  Sir 
Harris Nicolas says that the jury is from Leonard Mascall's 
Booke of Fishing with Hooke and Line (London, 1609), but 
Mascall merely stole from the fifteenth-century book.  In 
Cotton's practice, and that of The Angler's Vade Mecum (1681), 
flies were as numerous as among ourselves, and had, in many 
cases, the same names.  Walton absurdly bids us 'let no part 
of the line touch the water, but the fly only.'  Barker says, 
'Let the fly light first into the water.'  Both men insist on 
fishing down stream, which is, of course, the opposite of the 
true art, for fish lie with their heads up stream, and trout 
are best approached from behind.  Cotton admits of fishing 
both up and down, as the wind and stream may serve:  and, of 
course, in heavy water, in Scotland, this is all very well.  
But none of the old anglers, to my knowledge, was a dry-fly 
fisher, and Izaak was no fly-fisher at all.  He took what he 
said from Mascall, who took it from the old Treatise, in 
which, it is probable, Walton read, and followed the pleasant 
and to him congenial spirit of the mediaeval angler.  All 
these writers tooled with huge rods, fifteen or eighteen feet 
in length, and Izaak had apparently never used a reel.  For 
salmon, he says, 'some use a wheel about the middle of their 
rods or near their hand, which is to be observed better by 
seeing one of them, than by a large demonstration of words.'

Mr. Westwood has made a catalogue of books cited by Walton in 
his Compleat Angler.  There is AElian (who makes the first 
known reference to fly-fishing); Aldrovandus, De Piscibus 
(1638); Dubravius, De Piscibus (1559); and the English 
translation (1599) Gerard's Herball (1633); Gesner, De 
Piscibus (s.a.) and Historia Naturalis (1558); Phil. Holland's 
Pliny (1601); Rondelet, De Piscibus Marines (1554); Silvianus 
Aquatilium Historiae (1554):  these nearly exhaust Walton's 
supply of authorities in natural history.  He was devoted, as 
we saw, to authority, and had a childlike faith in the 
fantastic theories which date from Pliny.  'Pliny hath an 
opinion that many flies have their birth, or being, from a dew 
that in the spring falls upon the leaves of trees.'  It is a 
pious opinion!  Izaak is hardly so superstitious as the author 
of The Angler's Vade Mecum.  I cannot imagine him taking 
'Man's fat and cat's fat, of each half an ounce, mummy finely 
powdered, three drains,' and a number of other abominations, 
to 'make an Oyntment according to Art, and when you Angle, 
anoint 8 inches of the line next the Hook therewith.'  Or, 
'Take the Bones and Scull of a Dead-man, at the opening of a 
Grave, and beat the same into Pouder, and put of this Pouder 
in the Moss wherein you keep your Worms,--BUT OTHERS LIKE 
GRAVE EARTH AS WELL.'  No doubt grave earth is quite as 
efficacious.

These remarks show how Izaak was equipped in books and in 
practical information:  it follows that his book is to be 
read, not for instruction, but for human pleasure.

So much for what Walton owed to others.  For all the rest, for 
what has made him the favourite of schoolboys and sages, of 
poets and philosophers, he is indebted to none but his Maker 
and his genius.  That he was a lover of Montaigne we know; 
and, had Montaigne been a fisher, he might have written 
somewhat like Izaak, but without the piety, the perfume, and 
the charm.  There are authors whose living voices, if we know 
them in the flesh, we seem to hear in our ears as we peruse 
their works.  Of such was Mr. Jowett, sometime Master of 
Balliol College, a good man, now with God.  It has ever seemed 
to me that friends of Walton must thus have heard his voice as 
they read him, and that it reaches us too, though faintly.  
Indeed, we have here 'a kind of picture of his own 
disposition,' as he tells us Piscator is the Walton whom 
honest Nat. and R. Roe and Sir Henry Wotton knew on fishing-
days.  The book is a set of confessions, without their 
commonly morbid turn.  'I write not for money, but for 
pleasure,' he says; methinks he drove no hard bargain with 
good Richard Marriott, nor was careful and troubled about 
royalties on his eighteenpenny book.  He regards scoffers as 
'an abomination to mankind,' for indeed even Dr. Johnson, who, 
a century later, set Moses Browne on reprinting The Compleat 
Angler, broke his jest on our suffering tribe.  'Many grave, 
serious men pity anglers,' says Auceps, and Venator styles 
them 'patient men,' as surely they have great need to be.  For 
our toil, like that of the husbandman, hangs on the weather 
that Heaven sends, and on the flies that have their birth or 
being from a kind of dew, and on the inscrutable caprice of 
fish; also, in England, on the miller, who giveth or 
withholdeth at his pleasure the very water that is our 
element.  The inquiring rustic who shambles up erect when we 
are lying low among the reeds, even he disposes of our 
fortunes, with whom, as with all men, we must be patient, 
dwelling ever -


'With close-lipped Patience for our only friend,
Sad Patience, too near neighbour of Despair.'


O the tangles, more than Gordian, of gut on a windy day!  O 
bitter east wind that bloweth down stream!  O the young ducks 
that, swimming between us and the trout, contend with him for 
the blue duns in their season!  O the hay grass behind us that 
entangles the hook!  O the rocky wall that breaks it, the 
boughs that catch it; the drought that leaves the salmon-
stream dry, the floods that fill it with turbid, impossible 
waters!  Alas for the knot that breaks, and for the iron that 
bends; for the lost landing-net, and the gillie with the gaff 
that scrapes the fish!  Izaak believed that fish could hear; 
if they can, their vocabulary must be full of strange oaths, 
for all anglers are not patient men.  A malison on the trout 
that 'bulge' and 'tail,' on the salmon that 'jiggers,' or 
sulks, or lightly gambols over and under the line.  These 
things, and many more, we anglers endure meekly, being patient 
men, and a light world fleers at us for our very virtue.

Izaak, of course, justifies us by the example of the primitive 
Christians, and, in the manner of the age, drowns opposition 
in a flood of erudition, out of place, but never pedantic; 
futile, yet diverting; erroneous, but not dull.

'God is said to have spoken to a fish, but never to a beast.'  
There is a modern Greek phrase, 'By the first word of God, and 
the second of the fish.'  As for angling, 'it is somewhat like 
poetry:  men are to be born so'; and many are born to be both 
rhymers and anglers.  But, unlike many poets, the angler 
resembles 'the Adonis, or Darling of the Sea, so called 
because it is a loving and innocent fish,' and a peaceful; 
'and truly, I think most anglers are so disposed to most of 
mankind.'

Our Saviour's peculiar affection for fishermen is, of course, 
a powerful argument.  And it is certain that Peter, James, and 
John made converts among the twelve, for 'the greater number 
of them were found together, fishing, by Jesus after His 
Resurrection.'  That Amos was 'a good-natured, plain 
fisherman,' only Walton had faith enough to believe.  He fixes 
gladly on mentions of hooks in the Bible, omitting Homer, and 
that excellent Theocritean dialogue of the two old anglers and 
the fish of gold, which would have delighted Izaak, had he 
known it; but he was no great scholar.  'And let me tell you 
that in the Scripture, angling is always taken in the best 
sense,' though Izaak does not dwell on Tobias's enormous 
capture.  So he ends with commendations of angling by Wotton, 
and Davors (Dennys, more probably) author of The Secrets of 
Angling (1613).  To these we may add Wordsworth, Thomson, 
Scott, Hogg, Stoddart, and many minor poets who loved the 
music of the reel.

Izaak next illustrates his idea of becoming mirth, which 
excludes 'Scripture jests and lascivious jests,' both of them 
highly distasteful to anglers.  Then he comes to practice, 
beginning with chub, for which I have never angled, but have 
taken them by misadventure, with a salmon fly.  Thence we 
proceed to trout, and to the charming scene of the milkmaid 
and her songs by Raleigh and Marlowe, 'I think much better 
than the strong lines that are now in fashion in this critical 
age,' for Walton, we have said, was the last of the 
Elizabethans and the new times were all for Waller and Dryden.  
'Chevy Chace' and 'Johnny Armstrong' were dear to Walton as to 
Scott, but through a century these old favourites were to be 
neglected, save by Mr. Pepys and Addison.  Indeed, there is no 
more curious proof of the great unhappy change then coming to 
make poetry a mechanic art, than the circumstance that Walton 
is much nearer to us, in his likings, than to the men between 
1670 and 1770.  Gay was to sing of angling, but in 'the strong 
lines that are now in fashion.'  All this while Piscator has 
been angling with worm and minnow to no purpose, though he 
picks up 'a trout will fill six reasonable bellies' in the 
evening.  So we leave them, after their ale, in fresh sheets 
that smell of lavender.'  Izaak's practical advice is not of 
much worth; we read him rather for sentences like this:  'I'll 
tell you, scholar:  when I sat last on this primrose bank, and 
looked down these meadows, I thought of them as Charles the 
Emperor did of the city of Florence, "that they were too 
pleasant to be looked upon, but only on holy-days."'  He did 
not say, like Fox, when Burke spoke of 'a seat under a tree, 
with a friend, a bottle, and a book,' 'Why a book?'  Izaak 
took his book with him--a practice in which, at least, I am 
fain to imitate this excellent old man.

As to salmon, Walton scarcely speaks a true word about their 
habits, except by accident.  Concerning pike, he quotes the 
theory that they are bred by pickerel weed, only as what 'some 
think.'  In describing the use of frogs as bait, he makes the 
famous, or infamous, remark, 'Use him as though you loved him 
. . . that he may live the longer.'  A bait-fisher MAY be a 
good man, as Izaak was, but it is easier for a camel to pass 
through the eye of a needle.  As coarse fish are usually 
caught only with bait, I shall not follow Izaak on to this 
unholy and unfamiliar ground, wherein, none the less, grow 
flowers of Walton's fancy, and the songs of the old poets are 
heard.  The Practical Angler, indeed, is a book to be marked 
with flowers, marsh marigolds and fritillaries, and petals of 
the yellow iris, for the whole provokes us to content, and 
whispers that word of the apostle, 'Study to be quiet.'



FISHING THEN AND NOW



Since Maui, the Maori hero, invented barbs for hooks, angling 
has been essentially one and the same thing.  South Sea 
islanders spin for fish with a mother-of-pearl lure which is 
also a hook, and answers to our spoon.  We have hooks of 
stone, and hooks of bone; and a bronze hook, found in Ireland, 
has the familiar Limerick bend.  What Homer meant by making 
anglers throw 'the horn of an ox of the stall' into the sea, 
we can only guess; perhaps a horn minnow is meant, or a little 
sheath of horn to protect the line.  Dead bait, live bait, and 
imitations of bait have all been employed, and AElian mentions 
artificial Mayflies used, with a very short line, by the 
Illyrians.

But, while the same in essence, angling has been improved by 
human ingenuity.  The Waltonian angler, and still more his 
English predecessors, dealt much in the home-made.  The 
Treatise of the fifteenth century bids you make your 'Rodde' 
of a fair staff even of a six foot long or more, as ye list, 
of hazel, willow, or 'aspe' (ash?), and 'beke hym in an ovyn 
when ye bake, and let him cool and dry a four weeks or more.'  
The pith is taken out of him with a hot iron, and a yard of 
white hazel is similarly treated, also a fair shoot of 
blackthorn or crabtree for a top.  The butt is bound with 
hoops of iron, the top is accommodated with a noose, a hair 
line is looped in the noose, and the angler is equipped.  
Splicing is not used, but the joints have holes to receive 
each other, and with this instrument 'ye may walk, and there 
is no man shall wit whereabout ye go.'  Recipes are given for 
colouring and plaiting hair lines, and directions for forging 
hooks.  'The smallest quarell needles' are used for the 
tiniest hooks.

Barker (1651) makes the rod 'of a hasel of one piece, or of 
two pieces set together in the most convenient manner, light 
and gentle.'  He recommends the use of a single hair next the 
fly,--'you shall have more rises,' which is true, 'and kill 
more fish,' which is not so likely.  The most delicate 
striking is required with fine gut, and with a single hair 
there must be many breakages.  For salmon, Barker uses a rod 
ten feet in the butt, 'that will carry a top of six foot 
pretty stiffe and strong.'  The 'winder,' or reel, Barker 
illustrates with a totally unintelligible design.  His salmon 
fly 'carries six wings'; perhaps he only means wings composed 
of six kinds of feathers, but here Franck is a better 
authority, his flies being sensible and sober in colour.  Not 
many old salmon flies are in existence, nor have I seen more 
ancient specimens than a few, chiefly of peacocks' feathers, 
in the fly-leaf of a book at Abbotsford; they were used in 
Ireland by Sir Walter Scott's eldest son.  The controversy as 
to whether fish can distinguish colours was unknown to our 
ancestors.  I am inclined to believe that, for salmon, size, 
and perhaps shade, light or dark, with more or less of tinsel, 
are the only important points.  Izaak stumbled on the idea of 
Mr. Stewart (author of The Practical Angler) saying, 'for the 
generality, three or four flies, neat, and rightly made, and 
not too big, serve for a trout in most rivers, all the 
summer.'  Our ancestors, though they did not fish with the dry 
fly, were intent on imitating the insect on the water.  As far 
as my own experience goes, if trout are feeding on duns, one 
dun will take them as well as another, if it be properly 
presented.  But my friend Mr. Charles Longman tells me that, 
after failing with two trout, he examined the fly on the 
water, an olive dun, and found in his book a fly which exactly 
matched the natural insect in colour.  With this he captured 
his brace.

Such incidents look as if trout were particular to a shade, 
but we can never be certain that the angler did not make an 
especially artful and delicate cast when he succeeded.  Sir 
Herbert Maxwell intends to make the experiment of using duns 
of impossible and unnatural colours; if he succeeds with 
these, on several occasions, as well as with orthodox flies, 
perhaps we may decide that trout do not distinguish hues.  On 
a Sutherland loch, an angler found that trout would take flies 
of any colour, except that of a light-green leaf of a tree.  
This rejection decidedly looked as if even Sutherland loch 
trout exercised some discrimination.  Often, on a loch, out of 
three flies they will favour one, and that, perhaps, not the 
trail fly.  The best rule is:  when you find a favourite fly 
on a salmon river, use it:  its special favouritism may be a 
superstition, but, at all events, salmon do take it.  We 
cannot afford to be always making experiments, but Mr. Herbert 
Spencer, busking his flies the reverse way, used certainly to 
be at least as successful with sea trout as his less 
speculative neighbours in Argyllshire.

In making rods, Walton is most concerned with painting them; 
'I think a good top is worth preserving, or I had not taken 
care to keep a top above twenty years.'  Cotton prefers rods 
'made in Yorkshire,' having advanced from the home-made stage.  
His were spliced, and kept up all through the season, as he 
had his water at his own door, while Walton trudged to the Lee 
and other streams near London, when he was not fishing the 
Itchen, or Shawford Brook.  The Angler's Vade Mecum recommends 
eighteen-feet rods:  preferring a fir butt, fashioned by the 
arrow-maker, a hazel top, and a tip of whalebone.  This 
authority, even more than Walton, deals in mysterious 
'Oyntments' of gum ivy, horse-leek, asafoetida, man's fat, 
cat's fat, powdered skulls, and grave earth.  A ghoulish body 
is the angler of the Vade Mecum.  He recommends up-stream 
fishing, with worm, in a clear water, and so is a predecessor 
of Mr. Stewart.  'When you have hooked a good fish, have an 
especial care to keep the rod bent, lest he run to the end of 
the line' (he means, as does Walton, lest he pull the rod 
horizontal) 'and break either hook or hold.'  An old owner of 
my copy adds, in manuscript, 'And hale him not to near ye top 
of the water, lest in flaskering he break ye line.'

This is a favourite device of sea trout, which are very apt to 
'flasker' on the top of the water.  The Vade Mecum, in advance 
of Walton on this point, recommends a swivel in minnow-
fishing:  but has no idea of an artificial minnow of silk.  I 
have known an ingenious lady who, when the bodies of her 
phantom minnows gave out, in Norway, supplied their place 
successfully with bed-quilting artfully sewn.  In fact, 
anything bright and spinning will allure fish, though in the 
upper Ettrick, where large trout exist, they will take the 
natural, but perhaps never the phantom or angel minnow.  I 
once tried a spinning Alexandra fly over some large pond 
trout.  They followed it eagerly, but never took hold, on the 
first day; afterwards they would not look at it at all.  The 
Vade Mecum man, like Dr. Hamilton, recommends a light fly for 
a light day, a dark fly for a dark day and dark weather; 
others hold the converse opinion.  Every one agrees that the 
smallness of the flies should be in proportion to the lowness 
of the water and the advance of summer. {7}

Our ancestors, apparently, used only one fly at a time; in 
rapid rivers, with wet fly, two, three, or, in lochs like Loch 
Leven, even four are employed.  To my mind more than two only 
cause entanglements of the tackle.  The old English anglers 
knew, of course, little or nothing of loch fishing, using bait 
in lakes.  The great length of their rods made reels less 
necessary, and they do not seem to have waded much.  A modern 
angler, casting upwards, from the middle of the stream, with a 
nine-foot rod, would have astonished Walton.  They dealt with 
trout less educated than ours, and tooled with much coarser 
and heavier implements.  They had no fine scruples about bait 
of every kind, any more than the Scots have, and Barker loved 
a lob-worm, fished on the surface, in a dark night.  He was a 
pot-fisher, and had been a cook.  He could catch a huge basket 
of trout, and dress them in many different ways,--broyled, 
calvored hot with antchovaes sauce, boyled, soused, stewed, 
fried, battered with eggs, roasted, baked, calvored cold, and 
marilled, or potted, also marrionated.  Barker instructs my 
Lord Montague to fish with salmon roe, a thing prohibited and 
very popular in Scotland.  'If I had known it but twenty years 
agoe, I would have gained a hundred pounds onely with that 
bait.  I am bound in duty to divulge it to your Honour, and 
not to carry it to my grave with me.  I do desire that men of 
quality should have it that delight in that pleasure:  the 
greedy angler will murmur at me, but for that I care not.'  
Barker calls salmon roe 'an experience I have found of late:  
the best bait for a trout that I have seen in all my time,' 
and it is the most deadly, in the eddy of a turbid water.  
Perhaps trout would take caviare, which is not forbidden by 
the law of the land.  Any unscrupulous person may make the 
experiment, and argue the matter out with the water-bailie.  
But, in my country, it is more usual to duck that official, 
and go on netting, sniggling, salmon-roeing, and destroying 
sport in the sacred name of Liberty.


Scots wha fish wi' salmon roe,
Scots wha sniggle as ye go,
Wull ye stand the Bailie?  No!
Let the limmer die!

Now's the day and now's the time,
Poison a' the burns wi' lime,
Fishing fair's a dastard crime,
We're for fishing FREE!


'Ydle persones sholde have but lyttyl mesure in the sayd 
disporte of fysshyng,' says our old Treatise, but in southern 
Scotland they have left few fish to dysporte with, and the 
trout is like to become an extinct animal.  Izaak would 
especially have disliked Fishing Competitions, which, by dint 
of the multitude of anglers, turn the contemplative man's 
recreation into a crowded skirmish; and we would repeat his 
remark, 'the rabble herd themselves together' (a dozen in one 
pool, often), 'and endeavour to govern and act in spite of 
authority.'

For my part, had I a river, I would gladly let all honest 
anglers that use the fly cast line in it, but, where there is 
no protection, then nets, poison, dynamite, slaughter of 
fingerlings, and unholy baits devastate the fish, so that 
'Free Fishing' spells no fishing at all.  This presses most 
hardly on the artisan who fishes fair, a member of a large 
class with whose pastime only a churl would wish to interfere.  
We are now compelled, if we would catch fish, to seek Tarpon 
in Florida, Mahseer in India:  it does not suffice to 'stretch 
our legs up Tottenham Hill.'



Footnotes:

{1}  The MS. was noticed in The Freebooter, Oct. 18, 1823, but 
Sir Harris Nicolas could not find it, where it was said to be, 
among the Lansdowne MSS.

{2}  The quip about 'goods and chattels' was revived later, in 
the case of a royal mistress.

{3}  Sir Walter was fond of trout-fishing, and in his 
Quarterly review of Davy's Salmonia, describes his pleasure in 
wading Tweed, in 'Tom Fool's light' at the end of a hot summer 
day.  In salmon-fishing he was no expert, and said to Lockhart 
that he must have Tom Purdie to aid him in his review of 
Salmonia.  The picturesqueness of salmon-spearing by 
torchlight seduced Scott from the legitimate sport.

{4}  There is an edition by Singer, with a frontispiece by 
Wainewright, the poisoner.  London, 1820.

{5}  Nicolas, I. clv.

{6}  Barker's Delight; or, The Art of Angling.  1651, 1657, 
1659, London.

{7}  I have examined all the Angling works of the period known 
to me.  Gilbert's Angler's Delight (1676) is a mere pamphlet; 
William Gilbert, gent., pilfers from Walton, without naming 
him, and has literally nothing original or meritorious.  The 
book is very scarce.  My own copy is 'uncut,' but incomplete, 
lacking the directions for fishing 'in Hackney River.'  
Gervase Markham, prior to Walton, is a compiler rather than an 
original authority on angling.