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VI
A FATAL SUCCESS
"What surprises me
in her behaviour," said he, "is
its thoroughness.
Woman seldom does things by halves, but often
by doubles."
SOLOMON SINGLEWITZ: The Life of Adam.
A FATAL SUCCESS
Beekman De Peyster was probably the most
passionate and triumphant fisherman in the
Petrine Club. He angled with the same dash
and confidence that he threw into his operations
in the stock-market. He was sure to be the
first man to get his flies on the water at
the opening of the season. And when we came
together for our fall meeting, to compare
notes of our wanderings on various streams
and make up the fish-stories for the year,
Beekman was almost always "high hook."
We expected, as a matter of course, to hear
that he had taken the most and the largest
fish.
It was so with everything that he undertook.
He was a masterful man. If there was an unusually
large trout in a river, Beekman knew about
it before any one else, and got there first,
and came home with the fish. It did not make
him unduly proud, because there was nothing
uncommon about it. It was his habit to succeed,
and all the rest of us were hardened to it.
When he married Cornelia Cochrane, we were
consoled for our partial loss by the apparent
fitness and brilliancy of the match. If Beekman
was a masterful man, Cornelia was certainly
what you might call a mistressful woman. She
had been the head of her house since she was
eighteen years old. She carried her good looks
like the family plate; and when she came into
the breakfast-room and said good-morning,
it was with an air as if she presented every
one with a check for a thousand dollars. Her
tastes were accepted as judgments, and her
preferences had the force of laws. Wherever
she wanted to go in the summer-time, there
the finger of household destiny pointed. At
Newport, at Bar Harbour, at Lenox, at Southampton,
she made a record. When she was joined in
holy wedlock to Beekman De Peyster, her father
and mother heaved a sigh of satisfaction,
and settled down for a quiet vacation in Cherry
Valley.
It was in the second summer after the wedding
that Beekman admitted to a few of his ancient
Petrine cronies, in moments of confidence
(unjustifiable, but natural), that his wife
had one fault.
"It is not exactly a fault," he
said, "not a positive fault, you know.
It is just a kind of a defect, due to her
education, of course. In everything else she's
magnificent. But she doesn't care for fishing.
She says it's stupid,can't see why any
one should like the woods,calls camping
out the lunatic's diversion. It's rather awkward
for a man with my habits to have his wife
take such a view. But it can be changed by
training. I intend to educate her and convert
her. I shall make an angler of her yet."
And so he did.
The new education was begun in the Adirondacks,
and the first lesson was given at Paul Smith's.
It was a complete failure.
Beekman persuaded her to come out with him
for a day on Meacham River, and promised to
convince her of the charm of angling. She
wore a new gown, fawn-colour and violet, with
a picture-hat, very taking. But the Meacham
River trout was shy that day; not even Beekman
could induce him to rise to the fly. What
the trout lacked in confidence the mosquitoes
more than made up. Mrs. De Peyster came home
much sunburned, and expressed a highly unfavourable
opinion of fishing as an amusement and of
Meacham River as a resort.
"The nice people don't come to the Adirondacks
to fish," said she; "they come to
talk about the fishing twenty years ago. Besides,
what do you want to catch that trout for?
If you do, the other men will say you bought
it, and the hotel will have to put in a new
one for the rest of the season."
The following year Beekman tried Moosehead
Lake. Here he found an atmosphere more favourable
to his plan of education. There were a good
many people who really fished, and short expeditions
in the woods were quite fashionable. Cornelia
had a camping-costume of the most approved
style made by Dewlap on Fifth Avenue,pearl-gray
with linings of rose-silk,and consented
to go with her husband on a trip up Moose
River. They pitched their tent the first evening
at the mouth of Misery Stream, and a storm
came on. The rain sifted through the canvas
in a fine spray, and Mrs. De Peyster sat up
all night in a waterproof cloak, holding an
umbrella. The next day they were back at the
hotel in time for lunch.
"It was horrid," she told her most
intimate friend, "perfectly horrid. The
idea of sleeping in a shower-bath, and eating
your breakfast from a tin plate, just for
sake of catching a few silly fish! Why not
send your guides out to get them for you?"
But, in spite of this profession of obstinate
heresy, Beekman observed with secret joy that
there were signs, before the end of the season,
that Cornelia was drifting a little, a very
little but still perceptibly, in the direction
of a change of heart. She began to take an
interest, as the big trout came along in September,
in the reports of the catches made by the
different anglers. She would saunter out with
the other people to the corner of the porch
to see the fish weighed and spread out on
the grass. Several times she went with Beekman
in the canoe to Hardscrabble Point, and showed
distinct evidences of pleasure when he caught
large trout. The last day of the season, when
he returned from a successful expedition to
Roach River and Lily Bay, she inquired with
some particularity about the results of his
sport; and in the evening, as the company
sat before the great open fire in the hall
of the hotel, she was heard to use this information
with considerable skill in putting down Mrs.
Minot Peabody of Boston, who was recounting
the details of her husband's catch at Spencer
Pond. Cornelia was not a person to be contented
with the back seat, even in fish-stories.
When Beekman observed these indications he
was much encouraged, and resolved to push
his educational experiment briskly forward
to his customary goal of success.
"Some things can be done, as well as
others," he said in his masterful way,
as three of us were walking home together
after the autumnal dinner of the Petrine Club,
which he always attended as a graduate member.
"A real fisherman never gives up. I told
you I'd make an angler out of my wife; and
so I will. It has been rather difficult. She
is 'dour' in rising. But she's beginning to
take notice of the fly now. Give me another
season, and I'll have her landed."
Good old Beekman! Little did he think
But I must not interrupt the story with moral
reflections.
The preparations that he made for his final
effort at conversion were thorough and prudent.
He had a private interview with Dewlap in
regard to the construction of a practical
fishing-costume for a lady, which resulted
in something more reasonable and workmanlike
than had ever been turned out by that famous
artist. He ordered from Hook and Catchett
a lady's angling-outfit of the most enticing
description,a split-bamboo rod, light
as a girl's wish, and strong as a matron's
will; an oxidized silver reel, with a monogram
on one side, and a sapphire set in the handle
for good luck; a book of flies, of all sizes
and colours, with the correct names inscribed
in gilt letters on each page. He surrounded
his favourite sport with an aureole of elegance
and beauty. And then he took Cornelia in September
to the Upper Dam at Rangeley.
She went reluctant. She arrived disgusted.
She stayed incredulous. She returned
Wait a bit, and you shall hear how she returned.
The Upper Dam at Rangeley is the place, of
all others in the world, where the lunacy
of angling may be seen in its incurable stage.
There is a cosy little inn, called a camp,
at the foot of a big lake. In front of the
inn is a huge dam of gray stone, over which
the river plunges into a great oval pool,
where the trout assemble in the early fall
to perpetuate their race. From the tenth of
September to the thirtieth, there is not an
hour of the day or night when there are no
boats floating on that pool, and no anglers
trailing the fly across its waters. Before
the late fishermen are ready to come in at
midnight, the early fishermen may be seen
creeping down to the shore with lanterns in
order to begin before cock-crow. The number
of fish taken is not large,perhaps five
or six for the whole company on an average
day,but the size is sometimes enormous,nothing
under three pounds is counted,and they
pervade thought and conversation at the Upper
Dam to the exclusion of every other subject.
There is no driving, no dancing, no golf,
no tennis. There is nothing to do but fish
or die.
At first, Cornelia thought she would choose
the latter alternative. But a remark of that
skilful and morose old angler, McTurk, which
she overheard on the verandah after supper,
changed her mind.
"Women have no sporting instinct,"
said he. "They only fish because they
see men doing it. They are imitative animals."
That same night she told Beekman, in the
subdued tone which the architectural construction
of the house imposes upon all confidential
communications in the bedrooms, but with resolution
in every accent, that she proposed to go fishing
with him on the morrow.
"But not on that pool, right in front
of the house, you understand. There must be
some other place, out on the lake, where we
can fish for three or four days, until I get
the trick of this wobbly rod. Then I'll show
that old bear, McTurk, what kind of an animal
woman is.
Beekman was simply delighted. Five days of
diligent practice at the mouth of Mill Brook
brought his pupil to the point where he pronounced
her safe.
"Of course," he said patronizingly,
"you have 'nt learned all about it yet.
That will take years. But you can get your
fly out thirty feet, and you can keep the
tip of your rod up. If you do that, the trout
will hook himself, in rapid water, eight times
out of ten. For playing him, if you follow
my directions, you 'll be all right. We will
try the pool to-night, and hope for a medium-sized
fish."
Cornelia said nothing, but smiled and nodded.
She had her own thoughts.
At about nine o'clock Saturday night, they
anchored their boat on the edge of the shoal
where the big eddy swings around, put out
the lantern and began to fish. Beekman sat
in the bow of the boat, with his rod over
the left side; Cornelia in the stern, with
her rod over the right side. The night was
cloudy and very black. Each of them had put
on the largest possible fly, one a "Bee-Pond"
and the other a "Dragon;" but even
these were invisible. They measured out the
right length of line, and let the flies drift
back until they hung over the shoal, in the
curly water where the two currents meet.
There were three other boats to the left
of them. McTurk was their only neighbour in
the darkness on the right. Once they heard
him swearing softly to himself, and knew that
he had hooked and lost a fish.
Away down at the tail of the pool, dimly
visible through the gloom, the furtive fisherman,
Parsons, had anchored his boat. No noise ever
came from that craft. If he wished to change
his position, he did not pull up the anchor
and let it down again with a bump. He simply
lengthened or shortened his anchor rope. There
was no click of the reel when he played a
fish. He drew in and paid out the line through
the rings by hand, without a sound. What he
thought when a fish got away, no one knew,
for he never said it. He concealed his angling
as if it had been a conspiracy. Twice that
night they heard a faint splash in the water
near his boat, and twice they saw him put
his arm over the side in the darkness and
bring it back again very quietly.
"That 's the second fish for Parsons,"
whispered Beekman, "what a secretive
old Fortunatus he is! He knows more about
fishing than any man on the pool, and talks
less."
Cornelia did not answer. Her thoughts were
all on the tip of her own rod. About eleven
o'clock a fine, drizzling rain set in. The
fishing was very slack. All the other boats
gave it up in despair; but Cornelia said she
wanted to stay out a little longer, they might
as well finish up the week.
At precisely fifty minutes past eleven, Beekman
reeled up his line, and remarked with firmness
that the holy Sabbath day was almost at hand
and they ought to go in.
"Not till I 've landed this trout,"
said Cornelia.
"What? A trout! Have you got one?"
"Certainly; I 've had him on for at
least fifteen minutes. I 'm playing him Mr.
Parsons' way. You might as well light the
lantern and get the net ready; he 's coming
in towards the boat now."
Beekman broke three matches before he made
the lantern burn; and when he held it up over
the gunwale, there was the trout sure enough,
gleaming ghostly pale in the dark water, close
to the boat, and quite tired out. He slipped
the net over the fish and drew it in,a
monster.
"I 'll carry that trout, if you please,"
said Cornelia, as they stepped out of the
boat; and she walked into the camp, on the
last stroke of midnight, with the fish in
her hand, and quietly asked for the steelyard.
Eight pounds and fourteen ounces,that
was the weight. Everybody was amazed. It was
the "best fish" of the year. Cornelia
showed no sign of exultation, until just as
John was carrying the trout to the ice-house.
Then she flashed out:
"Quite a fair imitation, Mr. McTurk,isn't
it?"
Now McTurk's best record for the last fifteen
years was seven pounds and twelve ounces.
So far as McTurk is concerned, this is the
end of the story. But not for the De Peysters.
I wish it were. Beekman went to sleep that
night with a contented spirit. He felt that
his experiment in education had been a success.
He had made his wife an angler.
He had indeed, and to an extent which he
little suspected. That Upper Dam trout was
to her like the first taste of blood to the
tiger. It seemed to change, at once, not so
much her character as the direction of her
vital energy. She yielded to the lunacy of
angling, not by slow degrees, (as first a
transient delusion, then a fixed idea, then
a chronic infirmity, finally a mild insanity,)
but by a sudden plunge into the most violent
mania. So far from being ready to die at Upper
Dam, her desire now was to live thereand
to live solely for the sake of fishingas
long as the season was open.
There were two hundred and forty hours left
to midnight on the thirtieth of September.
At least two hundred of these she spent on
the pool; and when Beekman was too exhausted
to manage the boat and the net and the lantern
for her, she engaged a trustworthy guide to
take Beekman's place while he slept. At the
end of the last day her score was twenty-three,
with an average of five pounds and a quarter.
His score was nine, with an average of four
pounds. He had succeeded far beyond his wildest
hopes.
The next year his success became even more
astonishing. They went to the Titan Club in
Canada. The ugliest and most inaccessible
sheet of water in that territory is Lake Pharaoh.
But it is famous for the extraordinary fishing
at a certain spot near the outlet, where there
is just room enough for one canoe. They camped
on Lake Pharaoh for six weeks, by Mrs. De
Peyster's command; and her canoe was always
the first to reach the fishing-ground in the
morning, and the last to leave it in the evening.
Some one asked him, when he returned to the
city, whether he had good luck.
"Quite fair," he tossed off in
a careless way; "we took over three hundred
pounds."
"To your own rod?" asked the inquirer,
in admiration.
"No-o-o," said Beekman, "there
were two of us."
There were two of them, also, the following
year, when they joined the Natasheebo Salmon
Club and fished that celebrated river in Labrador.
The custom of drawing lots every night for
the water that each member was to angle over
the next day, seemed to be especially designed
to fit the situation. Mrs. De Peyster could
fish her own pool and her husband's too. The
result of that year's fishing was something
phenomenal. She had a score that made a paragraph
in the newspapers and called out editorial
comment. One editor was so inadequate to the
situation as to entitle the article in which
he described her triumph "The Equivalence
of Woman." It was well- meant, but she
was not at all pleased with it.
She was now not merely an angler, but a "record"
angler of the most virulent type. Wherever
they went, she wanted, and she got, the pick
of the water. She seemed to be equally at
home on all kinds of streams, large and small.
She would pursue the little mountain- brook
trout in the early spring, and the Labrador
salmon in July, and the huge speckled trout
of the northern lakes in September, with the
same avidity and resolution. All that she
cared for was to get the best and the most
of the fishing at each place where she angled.
This she always did.
And Beekman,well, for him there were
no more long separations from the partner
of his life while he went off to fish some
favourite stream. There were no more home-comings
after a good day's sport to find her clad
in cool and dainty raiment on the verandah,
ready to welcome him with friendly badinage.
There was not even any casting of the fly
around Hardscrabble Point while she sat in
the canoe reading a novel, looking up with
mild and pleasant interest when he caught
a larger fish than usual, as an older and
wiser person looks at a child playing some
innocent game. Those days of a divided interest
between man and wife were gone. She was now
fully converted, and more. Beekman and Cornelia
were one; and she was the one.
The last time I saw the De Peysters he was
following her along the Beaverkill, carrying
a landing-net and a basket, but no rod. She
paused for a moment to exchange greetings,
and then strode on down the stream. He lingered
for a few minutes longer to light a pipe.
"Well, old man," I said, "you
certainly have succeeded in making an angler
of Mrs. De Peyster."
"Yes, indeed," he answered,"have
n't I?" Then he continued, after a few
thoughtful puffs of smoke, "Do you know,
I 'm not quite so sure as I used to be that
fishing is the best of all sports. I sometimes
think of giving it up and going in for croquet."
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