THE COMPLETE BUNGLER
SCENE I.--HAMPSHIRE
PISCATOR ANGLUS. PISCATOR SCOTUS
Scotus.--Well, now let's go
to your sport of angling. Where, Master, is your
river?
Anglus.--Marry, 'tis here;
mark you, this is the famous Test.
Scotus.--What, Master, this
dry ditch? There be scarce three inches of water
in it.
Anglus.--Patience, Scholar,
the water is in the meadows, or Master Oakley, the
miller, is holding it up. Nay, let us wait here
some hour or so till the water is turned on. Or
perchance, Scholar, for the matter of five shillings,
Master Oakley will even raise his hatches, an you
have a crown about you.
Scotus.--I like not to part
with my substance, but, as needs must, here, Master,
is the coin.
[Exit ANGLUS to the Mill. He returns.]
Anglus.--Now, Scholar, said I not
so? The water is turned on again, and, lo you, at
the tail of yonder stream, a fair trout is rising.
You shall see a touch of our craft.
[ANGLUS crawls on his belly into a
tuft of nettles, where he kneels and flicks his
fly for about ten minutes.]
Anglus.--Alas, he has ceased
rising, and I am grievously entangled in these nettles.
Come, Scholar, but warily, lest ye fright my fish,
and now, disentangle my hook.
Scotus.--Here is your hook,
but, marry, my fingers tingle shrewdly with the
nettles; also I marked the fish hasting up stream.
Anglus.--Nay, come, we shall
even look for another.
Scotus.--Oh, Master, what is
this? That which but now was dry ditch is presently
salad bowl! Mark you how the green vegetables cover
the waters! We shall have no sport.
Anglus.--Patience, Scholar;
'tis but Master Hedgely's men, cutting the weeds
above. We may rest us some hour or two, till they
go by. Or, perchance, for a matter of five shillings
-
Scotus.--Nay, Master, this
English angling is over costly. The rent of your
ditch is high, the expenses of travel are burdensome.
In crawling through your nettles and thistles I
have scratched my face, and torn my raiment, and
I will not pay the labourer to cease labouring in
his industry.
Anglus.--Why then, pazienza,
Scholar, or listen while I sing that sweet ditty
of country contentment and an angler's life, writ
by worthy Master Hackle long ago.
SONG
The Angler hath a jolly life Who by
the rail runs down, And leaves his business and
his wife, And all the din of town. The wind down
stream is blowing straight, And nowhere cast can
he; Then lo, he doth but sit and wait In kindly
company.
Or else men turn the water off, Or
folk be cutting weed, While he doth at misfortune
scoff, From every trouble freed. Or else he waiteth
for a rise, And ne'er a rise may see; For why, there
are not any flies To bear him company.
Or, if he mark a rising trout, He
straightway is caught up, And then he takes his
flasket out, And drinks a rousing cup. Or if a trout
he chance to hook, Weeded and broke is he, And then
be finds a goodly book Instructive company.
What think you of my song, Scholar?
'Tis choicely musical. What, he is gone! A pest
on those Northerners; they have no manners. Now,
methinks I do remember a trout called George, a
heavy fellow that lies ever under the arch of yonder
bridge, where there is shelter from the wind. Ho
for George!
[Exit singing.]
SCENE II.--A BRIDGE
Enter ANGLUS
Anglus.--Now to creep like
your Indian of Virginia on the prey, and angle for
George. I'faith, he is a lusty trout; many a good
Wickham have I lost in George.
[He ensconces himself in the middle
of a thorn bush.]
Anglus.--There he is, I mark
his big back fin. Now speed me, St. Peter, patron
of all honest anglers! But first to dry my fly!
[He flicks his fly for ten minutes.
Enter BOY on Bridge. ANGLUS makes his cast, too
short. BOY heaves a great stone from the Bridge.
Exit GEORGE. Exit BOY.]
Anglus.--Oh, Mass! verily the
angler had need of patience! Yonder boy hath spoiled
my sport, and were it not that swearing frights
the fish, I could find it in my heart to say an
oath or twain. But, ha, here come the swallows,
hawking low on the stream. Now, were but my Scholar
here, I could impart to him much honest lore concerning
the swallow, and other birds. But where she hawks,
there fly must be, and fish will rise, and, look
you, I do mark the trout feeding in yonder ford
below the plank bridge.
[ANGLUS steals off, and gingerly takes
up his position.]
Anglus.--Marry, that is a good
trout under the burdock!
[He is caught up in the burdock, and
breaks his tackle.]
Anglus.--Now to knot a fresh
cast. Marry, but they are feeding gaily! How kindly
is the angler's life; he harmeth no fish that swims,
yet the Spectator deemeth ours a cruel sport. Ah,
good Master Townsend and learned Master Hutton,
little ye wot of our country contents. So, I am
ready again, and this Whitchurch dun will beguile
yonder fish, I doubt not. Marry, how thick the flies
come, and how the fish do revel in this merciful
provender that Heaven sendeth! Verily I know not
at which of these great fellows to make my essay.
[Enter twenty-four callow young ducks,
swimming up stream. The ducks chevy the flies, taking
them out of the very mouths of the trout.]
Anglus.--Oh, mercy. I have
hooked a young duck! Where is my landing-net? Nay,
I have left it under yonder elm!
[He struggles with the young duck.
By the conclusion of the fray the Rise is over.]
Anglus.--I have saved my fly,
but lo, the trout have ceased to feed, and will
rise no more till after sunset. Well, "a merry
heart goes all the way!" And lo, here comes
my Scholar. Ho, runaway, how have you sped?
Scotus.--Not ill. Here be my
spoils, great ones; but how faint- hearted are your
southern trout!
Anglus.--That fat fellow is a good
three pounds by the scales. But, Scholar, with what
fly caught ye these, and where?
Scotus.--Marry, Master, in a Mill-tail,
where the water lagged not, but ran free as it doth
in bonny Scotland; nor with no fly did I grip him,
but with an artificial penk, or minnow. It was made
by a handsome woman that had a fine hand, and wrought
for Master Brown, of Aberdeen. The mould, or body
of the minnow, is of parchment, methinks, and he
hath fins of copper, all so curiously dissembled
that it will beguile any sharp-sighted trout in
a swift stream. Men call it a Phantom, Master; wilt
thou not try my Phantom?
Anglus.--Begone, sirrah. I
took thee for an angler, and thou art but a poaching
knave!
Scotus.--Knave thyself! I will
break thy head!
Anglus.--Softly, Scholar. Here
comes good Master Hedgely, who will see fair play.
Now lie there, my coat, and have at you!
[They fight, SCOTUS is knocked down.]
Anglus.--Half-minute time!
Time is up! Master Hedgely, in my dry fly box thou
wilt find a little sponge for moistening of my casting
lines. Wilt thou, of thy courtesy, throw it up for
my Scholar? And now, Scholar, trust me, thy guard
is too low. I hope thou bearest no malice.
Scotus.--None, Master. But,
lo! I am an hungered; wilt thou taste my cates?
Here I have bread slices and marmalade of Dundee.
This fishing is marvellous hungry work.
Anglus.--Gladly will I fall
to, but first say me a grace-- Benedictus benedicat!
Where is thine usquebaugh? Marry, 'tis the right
Talisker!
Scotus.--And now, Master, wherefore
wert thou wroth with me? Came we not forth to catch
fish?
Anglus.--Nay, marry, Scholar,
by no means to catch fish, but to fish with the
dry fly. Now this, humanly speaking, is impossible;
natheless it is rare sport. But for your fish, as
they were ill come by, let us even give them to
good Master Hedgely here, and so be merry till the
sedges come on in the late twilight. And, trust
me, this is the rarest fishing, and the peacefulest;
only see that thou fish not with the wet fly, for
that is Anathema. So shall we have light consciences.
Scotus.--And light baskets!
Anglus.--Ay, it may be so.
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