Introduction to the Compleat Angler - Andrew Lang 2 стр.


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 mens observations, wherewith he stuffs his indigested octavo; so brings himself under the anglers censure and the common calamity of a plagiary, to be pitied (poor man) for his loss of time, in scribbling and transcribing other mens 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

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