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in Europe, has his shop half so well furnished as you have.

Pisc. You, perhaps, may think now, that I rake together this trumpery, as you call it, for shew only; to the end that such as see it, which are not many I assure you, may think me a great master in the Art of Angling: but let me tell you here are some colours, as contemptible as they seem here, that are very hard to be got, and scarce any one of them, which, if it should be lost, I should not miss, and be concerned about the loss of it too, once in the year : but look you, Sir, amongst all these I will choose out these two colours only, of which, this is bear's hair, this darker, no great matter what; but I am sure I have killed a great deal of fish with it; and with one or both of these, you shall take Trout or Grayling this very day, notwithstanding all disadvantages, or my art shall fail me.

VIAT. You promise comfortably, and I have a great deal of reason to believe every thing you say; but I wish the fly were made, that we were at it.

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PISC. That will not be long in doing and pray observe then. You see first how I hold my hook, and thus I begin. Look you, here are my first two or three whips about the bare hook; thus I join hook and line; thus I put on my wings; thus I twirl and lap on my dubbing; thus I work it up towards the head; thus I part my wings; thus I nip my superfluous dubbing from my silk; thus

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fasten; thus trim and adjust my fly; and there's a fly nade: and now how do you like it ?

VIAT. In earnest, admirably well, and it perfectly resembles a fly; but we about London make the bodies of our flies both much bigger and longer, so long as even almost to the very beard of the hook.

Pisc. I know it very well, and had one of those flies given me by an honest gentleman, who came with my Father Walton to give me a visit; which, to tell you the truth, I hung in my parlour window to laugh at : but, Sir, you know the proverb, “They "who go to Rome, must do as they at Rome do ;" and believe me, you must here make your flies after this fashion, or you will take no fish. Come, I will look you out a line, and you shall put it on, and try it. There, Sir, now I think you are fitted; and now beyond the farther end of the walk you shall begin: I see at that bend of the water above, the air crisps the water a little, knit your line first here, and then go up thither, and see what you can do.

VIAT. Did you see that, Sir?

Pisc. Yes, I saw the fish, and he saw you too, which made him turn short; you must fish further off, if you intend to have any sport here; this is no New-River, let me tell you. That was a good Trout, believe me; did you touch him?

VIAT, No, I would I had, we would not have

parted so. Look you, there was another; this is an excellent fly.

PISC. That fly, I am sure, would kill fish, if the day were right; but they only chew at it, I see, and will not take it. Come, Sir, let us return back to the Fishing-house; this still water I see will not do our business to-day; you shall now, if you please, make a fly yourself, and try what you can do in the streams with that; and I know a Trout taken with a fly of your own making, will please you better than twenty with one of mine. Give me that bag there is a hook,

again, Sirrah; look you, Sir,

towght, silk, and a feather for the wings; be doing with those, and I will look you out a dubbing, that I think will do.

VIAT. This is a very little hook.

Pisc. That may serve to inform you, that it is for a very little fly, and you must make your wings accordingly; for as the case stands it must be a little fly, and a very little one too, that must do your business. Well said! believe me you shift your fingers very handsomely; I doubt I have taken upon me to teach my Master. So, here's your dubbing now.

VIAT. This dubbing is very black.

Pisc. It appears so in hand; but step to the door and hold it up betwixt your eye and the Sun, and it will appear a shining red : let me tell you, never a man in England can discern the true colour of a dubbing any way but that, and therefore choose

always to make your flies on such a bright sunshine day as this, which also you may the better do, because it is worth nothing to fish in; here, put it on, and be sure to make the body of your fly as slender as you can. Very good! Upon my word you have made a marvellous handsome fly.

VIAT. I am very glad to hear it; 'tis the first that ever I made of this kind in my life.

PISC. Away, away! you are a Doctor at it! but I will not commend you too much, lest I make you proud. Come, put it on, and you shall now go downward to some streams betwixt the rocks below the little foot-bridge you see there, and try your fortune. Take heed of slipping into the water as you follow me under this rock: So, now you are over, and now throw in.

VIAT. This is a fine stream indeed: There's one! I have him.

Pisc. And a precious catch you have of him; pull him out! I see you have a tender hand: this is a diminutive gentleman, e'en throw him in again, and let him grow till he be more worthy your

anger.

VIAT. Pardon me, Sir, all's fish that comes to to th' hook with me now. Another !

Pisc. And of the same standing.

VIAT. I see I shall have good sport now: another! and a Grayling. Why you have fish here at will.

Pisc. Come, come, cross the bridge, and go

down the other side lower, where you will find finer streams, and better sport, I hope, than this. Look you, Sir, here is a fine stream now, you have length enough, stand a little further off, let me entreat you, and do but fish this stream like an artist, and peradventure a good fish may fall to your share. How now! what is all gone ?

VIAT. No, I but touched him; but that was a fish worth taking.

PISC. Why now, let me tell you, you lost that fish by your own fault, and through your own eagerness and haste; for you are never to offer to strike a good fish, if he do not strike himself, till first you see him turn his head after he has taken your fly, and then you can never strain your tackle in the striking, if you strike with any manner of moderation. Come, throw in once again, and fish me this stream by inches; for I assure you here are very good fish; both Trout and Grayling lie here; and at that great stone on the other side, 'tis ten to one a good Trout gives you the meeting,

VIAT. I have him now, but he is gone down towards the bottom: I cannot see what he is, yet he should be a good fish by his weight; but he makes no great stir.

PISC. Why then, by what you say, I dare venture to assure you, 'tis a Grayling, who is one of the deadest-hearted fishes in the world, and the bigger he is, the more easily taken. Look you, now you see him plain; I told you what he was;

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