A TWEEDSIDE SKETCH
The story of the following adventure--this deplorable
confession, one may say--will not have been written
in vain if it impresses on young minds the supreme
necessity of carefulness about details. Let the
"casual" and regardless who read it--the
gatless, as they say in Suffolk--ponder the lesson
which it teaches: a lesson which no amount of bitter
experience has ever impressed on the unprincipled
narrator. Never do anything carelessly whether in
fishing or in golf, and carry this important maxim
even into the most serious affairs of life. Many
a battle has been lost, no doubt, by lack of ammunition,
or by plenty of ammunition which did not happen
to suit the guns; and many a salmon has been lost,
ay, and many a trout, for want of carefulness, and
through a culpable inattention to the soundness
of your gut, and tackle generally. What fiend is
it that prompts a man just to try a hopeless cast,
in a low water, without testing his tackle? As sure
as you do that, up comes the fish, and with his
first dash breaks your casting line, and leaves
you lamenting. This doctrine I preach, being my
own "awful example." "Bad and careless
little boy," my worthy master used to say at
school; and he would have provoked a smile in other
circumstances. But Mr. Trotter, of the Edinburgh
Academy, had something about him (he usually carried
it in the tail-pocket of his coat) which inspired
respect and discouraged ribaldry. Would that I had
listened to Mr. Trotter; would that I had corrected,
in early life, the happy-go-lucky disposition to
scatter my Greek accents, as it were, with a pepper-caster,
to fish with worn tackle, and, generally, to make
free with the responsibilities of life and literature.
It is too late to amend, but others may learn wisdom
from this spectacle of deserved misfortune and absolute
discomfiture.
I am not myself a salmon-fisher, though willing
to try that art again, and though this is a tale
of salmon. To myself the difference between angling
for trout and angling for salmon is like the difference
between a drawing of Lionardo's, in silver point,
and a loaded landscape by MacGilp, R.A. Trout-fishing
is all an idyll, all delicacy--that is, trout-fishing
on the Test or on the Itchen. You wander by clear
water, beneath gracious poplar-trees, unencumbered
with anything but a slim rod of Messrs. Hardy's
make, and a light toy-box of delicate flies. You
need seldom wade, and the water is shallow, the
bottom is of silver gravel. You need not search
all day at random, but you select a rising trout,
and endeavour to lay the floating fly delicately
over him. If you part with him, there is always
another feeding merrily:
Invenies alium si te hic fastidit.
It is like an excursion into Corot's country,
it is rich in memories of Walton and Cotton: it
is a dream of peace, and they bring you your tea
by the riverside. In salmon-fishing, on the Tweed
at least, all is different. The rod, at all events
the rod which some one kindly lent me, is like a
weaver's beam. The high heavy wading trousers and
boots are even as the armour of the giant of Gath.
You have to plunge waist deep, or deeper, into roaring
torrents, and if the water be at all "drumly"
you have not an idea where your next step may fall.
It may be on a hidden rock, or on a round slippery
boulder, or it may be into a deep "pot"
or hole. The inexperienced angler staggers like
a drunken man, is occasionally drowned, and more
frequently is ducked. You have to cast painfully,
with steep precipitous banks behind you, all overgrown
with trees, with bracken, with bramble. It is a
boy's work to disentangle the fly from the branches
of ash and elm and pine. There is no delicacy, and
there is a great deal of exertion in all this. You
do not cast subtilely over a fish which you know
is there, but you swish, swish, all across the current,
with a strong reluctance to lift the line after
each venture and try another. The small of the back
aches, and it is literally in the sweat of your
brow that you take your diversion. After all, there
are many blank days, when the salmon will look at
no fly, or when you encounter the Salmo irritans,
who rises with every appearance of earnest good-will,
but never touches the hook, or, if he does touch
it, runs out a couple of yards of line, and vanishes
for ever. What says the poet?
There's an accommodating fish, In pool or stream,
by rock or pot, Who rises frequent as you wish,
At "Popham," "Parson," or "Jock
Scott," Or almost any fly you've got In all
the furred and feathered clans. You strike, but
ah, you strike him not He is the Salmo irritans!
It may be different in Norway or on the lower
casts of the Tweed, as at Floors, or Makerstoun;
but higher up the country, in Scott's own country,
at Yair or Ashiesteil, there is often a terrible
amount of fruitless work to be done. And I doubt
if, except in throwing a very long line, and knowing
the waters by old experience, there is very much
skill in salmon-fishing. It is all an affair of
muscle and patience. The choice of flies is almost
a pure accident. Every one believes in the fly with
which he has been successful. These strange combinations
of blues, reds, golds, of tinsel and worsted, of
feathers and fur, are purely fantastic articles.
They are like nothing in nature, and are multiplied
for the fanciful amusement of anglers. Nobody knows
why salmon rise at them; nobody knows why they will
bite on one day and not on another, or rather, on
many others. It is not even settled whether we should
use a bright fly on a bright day, and a dark fly
on a dark day, as Dr. Hamilton advises, or reverse
the choice as others use. Muscles and patience,
these, I repeat, are the only ingredients of ultimate
success.
However, one does do at Rome as the Romans do,
and fishes for salmon in Tweed when the nets are
off in October, when the yellowing leaves begin
to fall, and when that beautiful reach of wooded
valley from Elibank to the meeting of Tweed and
Ettrick is in the height of its autumnal charm.
Why has Yarrow been so much more besung than Tweed,
in spite of the greater stream's far greater and
more varied loveliness? The fatal duel in the Dowie
Dens of Yarrow and the lamented drowning of Willie
there have given the stream its 'pastoral melancholy,'
and engaged Wordsworth in the renown of the water.
For the poetry of Tweed we have chiefly, after Scott,
to thank Mr. Stoddart, its loyal minstrel. "Dearer
than all these to me," he says about our other
valleys, "is sylvan Tweed."
Let ither anglers choose their ain, And ither
waters tak' the lead O' Hieland streams we covet
nane, But gie to us the bonny Tweed; And gie to
us the cheerfu' burn, That steals into its valley
fair, The streamlets that, at ilka turn, Sae saftly
meet and mingle there.
He kept his promise, given in the following verse:
And I, when to breathe is a labour, and joy Forgets
me, and life is no longer the boy, On the labouring
staff, and the tremorous knee, Will wander, bright
river, to thee!
Life is always "the boy" when one is
beside the Tweed. Times change, and we change, for
the worse. But the river changes little. Still he
courses through the keen and narrow rocks beneath
the bridge of Yair.
From Yair, which hills so closely bind, Scarce
can the Tweed his passage find, Though much he fret,
and chafe, and toil, Till all his eddying currents
boil.
Still the water loiters by the long boat-pool
of Yair, as though loath to leave the drooping boughs
of the elms. Still it courses with a deep eddy through
the Elm Wheel, and ripples under Fernilea, where
the author of the "Flowers of the Forest"
lived in that now mouldering and roofless hall,
with the peaked turrets. Still Neidpath is fair,
Neidpath of the unhappy maid, and still we mark
the tiny burn at Ashiesteil, how in November,
Murmuring hoarse, and frequent seen, Through bush
and briar, no longer green, An angry brook, it sweeps
the glade, Brawls over rock and wild cascade, And
foaming brown, with doubled speed, Hurries its waters
to the Tweed.
Still the old tower of Elibank is black and strong
in ruin; Elibank, the home of that Muckle Mou'd
Meg, who made Harden after all a better bride than
he would have found in the hanging ash-tree of her
father. These are unaltered, mainly, since Scott
saw them last, and little altered is the homely
house of Ashiesteil, where he had been so happy.
And we, too, feel but little change among those
scenes of long ago, those best-beloved haunts of
boyhood, where we have had so many good days and
bad, days of rising trout and success; days of failure,
and even of half-drowning.
One cannot reproduce the charm of the strong river
in pool and stream, of the steep rich bank that
it rushes or lingers by, of the green and heathery
hills beyond, or the bare slopes where the blue
slate breaks through among the dark old thorn-trees,
remnants of the forest. It is all homely and all
haunted, and, if a Tweedside fisher might have his
desire, he would sleep the long sleep in the little
churchyard that lies lonely above the pool of Caddon-foot,
and hard by Christopher North's favourite quarters
at Clovenfords.
However, while we are still on earth, Caddon-foot
is more attractive for her long sweep of salmon-pool--the
home of sea-trout too--than precisely for her kirk-yard.
There will be time enough for that, and time it
is to recur to the sad story of the big fish and
the careless angler. It was about the first day
of October, and we had enjoyed a "spate."
Salmon-fishing is a mere child of the weather; with
rain almost anybody may raise fish, without it all
art is apt to be vain. We had been blessed with
a spate. On Wednesday the Tweed had been roaring
red from bank to bank. Salmon-fishing was wholly
out of the question, and it is to be feared that
the innumerable trout-fishers, busy on every eddy,
were baiting with salmon roe, an illegal lure. On
Thursday the red tinge had died out of the water,
but only a very strong wader would have ventured
in; others had a good chance, if they tried it,
of being picked up at Berwick. Friday was the luckless
day of my own failure and broken heart. The water
was still very heavy and turbid, a frantic wind
was lashing the woods, heaps of dead leaves floated
down, and several sheaves of corn were drifted on
the current. The long boat-pool at Yair, however,
is sheltered by wooded banks, and it was possible
enough to cast, in spite of the wind's fury. We
had driven from a place about five miles distant,
and we had not driven three hundred yards before
I remembered that we had forgotten the landing-net.
But, as I expected nothing, it did not seem worth
while to go back for this indispensable implement.
We reached the water-side, and found that the trout
were feeding below the pendent branches of the trees
and in the quiet, deep eddies of the long boat-pool.
One cannot see rising trout without casting over
them, in preference to labouring after salmon, so
I put up a small rod and diverted myself from the
bank. It was to little purpose. Tweed trout are
now grown very shy and capricious; even a dry fly
failed to do any execution worth mentioning. Conscience
compelled me, as I had been sent out by kind hosts
to fish for salmon, not to neglect my orders. The
armour--the ponderous gear of the fisher--was put
on with the enormous boots, and the gigantic rod
was equipped. Then came the beginning of sorrows.
We had left the books of salmon flies comfortably
reposing at home. We had also forgotten the whiskey
flask. Everything, in fact, except cigarettes, had
been left behind. Unluckily, not quite everything:
I had a trout fly-book, and therein lay just one
large salmon fly, not a Tweed fly, but a lure that
is used on the beautiful and hopeless waters of
the distant Ken, in Galloway. It had brown wings,
a dark body, and a piece of jungle-cock feather,
and it was fastened to a sea-trout casting-line.
Now, if I had possessed no salmon flies at all,
I must either have sent back for some, or gone on
innocently dallying with trout. But this one wretched
fly lured me to my ruin. I saw that the casting-line
had a link which seemed rather twisted. I tried
it; but, in the spirit of Don Quixote with his helmet,
I did not try it hard. I waded into the easiest-looking
part of the pool, just above a huge tree that dropped
its boughs to the water, and began casting, merely
from a sense of duty. I had not cast a dozen times
before there was a heavy, slow plunge in the stream,
and a glimpse of purple and azure.
"That's him," cried a man who was trouting
on the opposite bank. Doubtless it was "him,"
but he had not touched the hook. I believe the correct
thing would have been to wait for half an hour,
and then try the fish with a smaller fly. But I
had no smaller fly, no other fly at all. I stepped
back a few paces, and fished down again. In Major
Traherne's work I have read that the heart leaps,
or stands still, or otherwise betrays an uncomfortable
interest, when one casts for the second time over
a salmon which has risen. I cannot honestly say
that I suffered from this tumultuous emotion. "He
will not come again," I said, when there was
a long heavy drag at the line, followed by a shrieking
of the reel, as in Mr. William Black's novels. Let
it be confessed that the first hooking of a salmon
is an excitement unparalleled in trout-fishing.
There have been anglers who, when the salmon was
once on, handed him over to the gillie to play and
land. One would like to act as gillie to those lordly
amateurs. My own fish rushed down stream, where
the big tree stands. I had no hope of landing him
if he took that course, because one could neither
pass the rod under the boughs, nor wade out beyond
them. But he soon came back, while one took in line,
and discussed his probable size with the trout-fisher
opposite. His size, indeed! Nobody knows what it
was, for when he had come up to the point whence
he had started, he began a policy of violent short
tugs--not "jiggering," as it is called,
but plunging with all his weight on the line. I
had clean forgotten the slimness of the tackle,
and, as he was clearly well hooked, held him perhaps
too hard. Only a very raw beginner likes to take
hours over landing a fish. Perhaps I held him too
tight: at all events, after a furious plunge, back
came the line; the casting line had snapped at the
top link.
There was no more to be said or done, except to
hunt for another fly in the trout fly-book. Here
there was no such thing, but a local spectator offered
me a huge fly, more like a gaff, and equipped with
a large iron eye for attaching the gut to. Withal
I suspect this weapon was meant, not for fair fishing,
but for "sniggling." Now "sniggling"
is a form of cold-blooded poaching. In the open
water, on the Ettrick, you may see half a dozen
snigglers busy. They all wear high wading trousers;
they are all armed with stiff salmon-rods and huge
flies. They push the line and the top joints of
the rod deep into the water, drag it along, and
then bring the hook out with a jerk. Often it sticks
in the side of a salmon, and in this most unfair
and unsportsmanlike way the free sport of honest
people is ruined, and fish are diminished in number.
Now, the big fly MAY have been an honest character,
but he was sadly like a rake-hook in disguise. He
did not look as if an fish could fancy him. I, therefore,
sent a messenger across the river to beg, buy, or
borrow a fly at "The Nest." But this pretty
cottage is no longer the home of the famous angling
club, which has gone a mile or two up the water
and builded for itself a new dwelling. My messenger
came back with one small fatigued-looking fly, a
Popham, I think, which had been lent by some one
at a farm- house. The water was so heavy that the
small fly seemed useless; however, we fastened it
on as a dropper, using the sniggler as the trail
fly; so exhausted were our resources, that I had
to cut a piece of gut off a minnow tackle and attach
the small fly to that. The tiny gut loop of the
fly was dreadfully frayed, and with a heavy heart
I began fishing again. My friend on the opposite
side called out that big fish were rising in the
bend of the stream, so thither I went, stumbling
over rocks, and casting with much difficulty, as
the high overgrown banks permit no backward sweep
of the line. You are obliged to cast by a kind of
forward thrust of the arms, a knack not to be acquired
in a moment. I splashed away awkwardly, but at last
managed to make a straight, clean cast. There was
a slight pull, such as a trout gives in mid-stream
under water. I raised the point, and again the reel
sang aloud and gleefully as the salmon rushed down
the stream farther and faster than the first. It
is a very pleasant thing to hook a salmon when you
are all alone, as I was then--alone with yourself
and the Goddess of Fishing. This salmon, just like
the other, now came back, and instantly began the
old tactics of heavy plunging tugs. But I knew the
gut was sound this time, and as I fancied he had
risen to the sniggler, I had no anxiety about the
tackle holding. One more plunge, and back came the
line as before. He was off. One could have sat down
and gnawed the reel. What had gone wrong? Why, the
brute had taken the old fly from the farmhouse and
had snapped the loop that attaches the gut. The
little loop was still on the fragment of minnow
tackle which fastened it to the cast.
There was no more chance, for there were now no
more flies, except a small "cobbery,"
a sea-trout fly from the Sound of Mull. It was time
for us to go, with a heavy heart and a basket empty,
except for two or three miserable trout. The loss
of those two salmon, whether big or little fish,
was not the whole misfortune. All the chances of
the day were gone, and seldom have salmon risen
so freely. I had not been casting long enough to
smoke half a cigarette, when I hooked each of those
fish. They rose at flies which were the exact opposites
of each other in size, character, and colour. They
were ready to rise at anything but the sniggler.
And I had nothing to offer them, absolutely nothing
bigger than a small red-spinner from the Test. On
that day a fisher, not far off, hooked nine salmon
and landed four of them, in one pool, I never had
such a chance before; the heavy flood and high wind
had made the salmon as "silly" as perch.
One might have caught half a dozen of the great
sturdy fellows, who make all trout, even sea- trout,
seem despicable minnows. Next day I fished again
in the same water, with a friend. I rose a fish,
but did not hook it, and he landed a small one,
five minutes after we started, and we only had one
other rise all the rest of the day. Probably it
was not dark and windy enough, but who can explain
the caprices of salmon? The only certain thing is,
that carelessness always brings misfortune; that
if your tackle is weak fish will hook themselves
on days, and in parts of the water, where you expected
nothing, and then will go away with your fly and
your casting-lines. Fortune never forgives. He who
is lazy, and takes no trouble because he expects
no fish, will always be meeting heart-breaking adventures.
One should never make a hopeless or careless cast;
bad luck lies in wait for that kind of performance.
These are the experiences that embitter a man, as
they embittered Dean Swift, who, old and ill, neglected
and in Irish exile, still felt the pang of losing
a great trout when he was a boy. What pleasure is
there in landscape and tradition when such accidents
befall you?
The sun upon the Weirdlaw hill, In Ettrick's vale
is sinking sweet.
There is a fire of autumn colour in the tufted
woods that embosom Fernilea. "Bother the setting
sun," we say, and the Maid of Neidpath, and
the "Flowers of the Forest," and the memories
of Scott at Ashiesteil, and of Muckle Mou'd Meg,
at Elibank. These are filmy, shadowy pleasures of
the fancy, these cannot minister to the mind of
him who has been "broken" twice, who cannot
resume the contest for want of ammunition, and who
has not even brought the creature-comfort of a flask.
Since that woful day I have lain on the bank and
watched excellent anglers skilfully flogging the
best of water, and that water full of fish, without
hooking one. Salmon-fishing, then, is a matter of
chance, or of plodding patience. They will rise
on one day at almost any fly (but the sniggler),
however ill-presented to them. On a dozen other
days no fly and no skill will avail to tempt them.
The salmon is a brainless brute and the grapes are
sour!
If only the gut had held, this sketch would have
ended with sentiment, and a sunset, and the music
of Ettrick, the melody of Tweed. In the gloaming
we'd be roaming homeward, telling, perhaps, the
story of the ghost seen by Sir Walter Scott near
Ashiesteil, or discussing the Roman treasure still
buried near Oakwood Tower, under an inscribed stone
which men saw fifty years ago. Or was it a treasure
of Michael Scott's, who lived at Oakwood, says tradition?
Let Harden dig for Harden's gear, it is not for
me to give hints as to its whereabouts. After all
that ill-luck, to be brief, one is not in the vein
for legendary lore, nor memories of boyhood, nor
poetry, nor sunsets. I do not believe that one ever
thinks of the landscape or of anything else, while
there is a chance for a fish, and no abundance of
local romance can atone for an empty creel. Poetical
fishers try to make people believe these fallacies;
perhaps they impose on themselves; but if one would
really enjoy landscape, one should leave, not only
the fly-book and the landing-net, but the rod and
reel at home. And so farewell to the dearest and
fairest of all rivers that go on earth, fairer than
Eurotas or Sicilian Anapus with its sea-trout; farewell--for
who knows how long?--to the red-fringed Gleddis-wheel,
the rock of the Righ-wheel, the rushing foam of
the Gullets, the woodland banks of Caddon-foot.
The valleys of England are wide, Her rivers rejoice
every one, In grace and in beauty they glide, And
water-flowers float at their side, As they gleam
in the rays of the sun.
But where are the speed and the spray - The dark
lakes that welter them forth, Tree and heath nodding
over their way - The rock and the precipice grey,
That bind the wild streams of the North?
Well, both, are good, the streams of north and
south, but he who has given his heart to the Tweed,
as did Tyro, in Homer, to the Enipeus will never
change his love.
P.S.--That Galloway fly--"The Butcher and
Lang"--has been avenged. A copy of him, on
the line of a friend, has proved deadly on the Tweed,
killing, among other victims, a sea-trout of thirteen
pounds.
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Chapter
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