![]() |
|
Forgotten Treasures #14: Speckled Trout--PART 3
SPECKLED TROUT PART 3
_________________________________________ After deliberating for some time over a pocket compass which I carried, we decided upon our course, and held on to the west. The descent was very gradual. Traces of bear and deer were noted at different points, but not a live animal was seen. About four o'clock we reached the bank of a stream flowing west. Hail to the Beaverkill! and we pushed on along its banks. The trout were plenty, and rose quickly to the hook, but we held on our way, designing to go into camp about six o'clock. Many inviting places, first on one bank, then on the other, made us linger, till finally we reached a smooth, dry place overshadowed by balsam and hemlock, where the creek bent around a little flat, which was so entirely to our fancy that we unslung our knapsacks at once. While my companions were cutting wood and making other preparations for the night, it fell to my lot, as the most successful angler, to provide the trout for supper and breakfast. How shall I describe that wild, beautiful stream, with features so like those of all other mountain streams? And yet, as I saw it in the deep twilight of those woods on that June afternoon, with its steady, even flow, and its tranquil, many-voiced murmur, it made an impression upon my mind distinct and peculiar, fraught in an eminent degree with the charm of seclusion and remoteness. The solitude was perfect, and I felt that strangeness and insignificance which the civilized man must always feel when opposing himself to such a vast scene of silence and wildness. The trout were quite black, like all wood trout, and took the bait eagerly. I followed the stream till the deepening shadows warned me to turn back. As I neared camp, the fire shoe far through the trees, dispelling the gathering gloom, but blinding my eyes to all obstacles at my feet. I was seriously disturbed on arriving to find that one of my companions had cut and ugly gash in his shin with the axe while felling a tree. As we did not carry a fifth wheel, it was not just the time or place to have any of our members crippled, and I had bodings of evil. But, thanks to the healing virtues of the balsam which must have adhered to the blade of the axe, and double thanks to the court-plaster with which Orville had supplied himself before leaving home, the wounded leg, by being favored that night and the next day, gave us little trouble. That night we had our first fair and square camping out,--that is, sleeping on the ground with no shelter over us but the trees,--and it was in many respects the pleasantest night we spent in the woods. The weather was perfect and the place was perfect, and for the first time we were exempt from the midges and smoke; and then we appreciated the clean new page we had to work on. Nothing is so acceptable to the camper-out as a pure article in the way of woods and waters. Any admixture of human relics mars the spirit of the scene. Yet I am willing to confess that, before we were through those weeds, the marks of an axe in a tree were a welcome sight. On resuming our march next day we followed the right bank of the Beaverkill, in order to strike a stream which flowed in from the north, and which was the outlet of Balsam Lake, the objective point of that day's march. The distance to the lake from our camp could not have been over six or seven miles; yet, traveling as we did, without path or guide, climbing up banks, plunging into ravines, making detours around swampy places, and forcing our way through woods choked up with much fallen and decayed timber, it seemed at least twice that distance, and the mid-afternoon sun was shining when we emerged into what is called the "Quaker Clearing," ground that I had been over nine years before, and that lies about two miles south of the lake. From this point we had a well-worn path that led us up a sharp rise of ground, then through level woods till we saw the bright gleam of the water through the trees. I am always stuck, on approaching these little mountain lakes, with the extensive preparation that is made for them in conformation of the ground. I am thinking of a depression, or natural basin, in the side of the mountain or on its top, the brink of which I shall reach after a little steep climbing; but instead of that, after I have accomplished the ascent, I find a broad sweep of level or gently undulating woodland that brings me after a half hour of so to the lake, which lies in this vast lap like a drop of water in the palm of a man's hand. Balsam Lake was oval-shaped, scarcely more than half a mile long and a quarter of a mile wide, but presented a charming picture, with a group of dark gray hemlocks filling the valley about its head, and the mountains rising above and beyond. We found a bough house in good repair, also a dug-out and paddle and several floats of logs. In the dug-out I was soon creeping along the shady side of the lake, where the trout were incessantly jumping for a species of black fly, that, sheltered from the slight breeze, were dancing in swarms just above the surface of the water. The gnats were there in swarms also, and did their best toward balancing the accounts by preying upon me while I preyed upon the trout which preyed upon the flies. But by dint of keeping my hands, face, and neck constantly wet, I am convinced that the balance of blood was on my side. The trout jumped most within a foot or two of shore, where the water was only a few inches deep. The shallowness of the water, perhaps, accounted for the inability of the fish to do more than lift their heads above the surface. They came up mouths wide open, and dropped back again in the most impotent manner. Where there is any depth of water, a trout will jump several feet into the air; and where there is a solid, unbroken sheet or column, they will scale falls and dams fifteen feet high. We had the very cream and flower of our trout-fishing at this lake. For the first time we could use the fly to advantage; and then the contrast between laborious tramping along shore, on the one hand, and sitting in one end of a dug-out and casting your line right and left with no fear of entanglement in brush or branch, while you were gently propelled along, on the other, was of the most pleasing character. There were two varieties of trout in the lake,--what it seems proper to call silver trout and golden trout; the former were the slimmer, and seemed to keep apart from the latter. Starting from the outlet and working round on the eastern side toward the head, we invariably caught these first. They glanced in the sun like bars of silver. Their sides and bellies were indeed as white as new silver. As we neared the head, and especially as we came near a space occupied by some kind watergrass that grew in the deeper part of the lake, the other variety would begin to take the hook, their bellies a bright gold color, which became a deep orange on their fins; and as we returned to the place of departure with the bottom of the boat strewn with these bright forms intermingled, it was a sight not soon to be forgotten. It pleased my eye so, that I would fain linger over them, arranging them in rows and studying the various hues and tints. They were of nearly a uniform size, rarely over ten or under eight inches in length, and it seemed as if the hues of all the precious metals and stones were reflected from their sides. The flesh was deep salmon-color; that of brook trout is generally much lighter. Some hunters and fishers from the valley of the Mill Brook, whom we met here, told us the trout were much larger in the lake, though far less numerous than they used to be. Brook trout do not grow large till they become scarce. It is only in streams that have been long and much fished that I have caught them as much as sixteen inches in length. The "porcupigs" were numerous about the lake, and not at all shy. One night the heat became so intolerable in our oven-shaped bough house that I was obliged to withdraw from under its cover and lie down a little to one side. Just at daybreak, as I lay rolled in my blanket, something awoke me. Lifting up my head, there was a porcupine with his forepaws on my hips. He was apparently as much surprised as I was; and to my inquiry as to what he a that moment might be looking for, he did not pause to reply, but hitting me a slap with his tail which left three or four quills in my blanket, he scampered off down the hill into the brush. Being an observer of the birds, of course every curious incident connected with them fell under my notice. Hence, as we stood about our camp-fire one afternoon looking out over the lake, I was the only one to see a little commotion in the water, half hidden by the near branches, as of some tiny swimmer struggling to reach the shore. Rushing to its rescue in the canoe, I found a yellow-rumped warbler, quite exhausted, clinging to a twig that hung down into the water. I brought the drenched and helpless thing to camp, and, putting it into a basket, hung it up to dry. An hour or two afterward I heard it fluttering in its prison, and cautiously lifted the lid to get a better glimpse of the lucky captive, when it darted out and was gone in a twinkling. How came it in the water? That was my wonder, and I can only guess that it was a young bird that had never before flown over a pond of water, and, seeing the clouds and blue sky so perfect down there, thought it was a vast opening or gateway into another summer land, perhaps a short cut to the tropics, and so got itself into trouble. How my eye was delighted also with the redbird that alighted for a moment on a dry branch above the lake, just where a ray of light from the setting sun fell full upon it! A mere crimson point, and yet how it offset that dark, sombre background! I have thus run over some of the features of an ordinary trouting excursion to the wood. People inexperienced in such matters, sitting in their rooms and thinking of these things, of all the poets have sung and romancer written, are apt to get sadly taken in when they attempt to realize their dreams. They expect to enter a sylvan paradise of trout, cool retreats, laughing brooks, picturesque views, and balsamic couches, instead of which they find hunger, rain, smoke, toil, gnats, mosquitoes, dirt broken rest, vulgar guides, and salt pork; and they are very apt not to see where the fun comes in. But he who goes in a right spirit will not be disappointed, and will find the taste of this kind of life better, though bitterer, than the writers have described. _______________________________________ END SPECKLED TROUT This work is in the public domain. To the best of my knowledge its inclusion here does not violate any U.S. or other copyright laws. Note: Many of the authors presented in this series so far (as well as others yet to come) were well known in their own times. Some of them are still familiar to bookish sorts. Burroughs, all but forgotten today, was an extremely popular nature writer in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Burroughs (John of the birds) was a contemporary of and often compared with John Muir (John of the mountains), who remains better known today due his great influence in the environmental movement. Both were familiars of another famous writer and conservationist, Teddy Roosevelt. More about Burroughs he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Burroughs MUCH more he http://www.johnburroughs.org/ |
Forgotten Treasures #14: Speckled Trout--PART 3
"Steve" wrote in message ... On Wed, 8 Nov 2006 16:05:18 -0600, "Wolfgang" wrote: But he who goes in a right spirit will not be disappointed, and will find the taste of this kind of life better, though bitterer, than the writers have described. Thanks for this. You're welcome. Wolfgang |
Forgotten Treasures #14: Speckled Trout--PART 3
"Wolfgang" wrote ... SPECKLED TROUT PART 3 _________________________________________ [...] Thanks for the pleasant read. Yesterday (and it seems today) in the Chicago area, we were treated to an amazing day, weather-wise. High 60s, mild breeze, lots of rejuvenating sun. Just what a boy needs after Wisconsin's trout season has ended....a day *perfect* for fishing. So, as the jones built, I saw this posted. Not a total assuaging of said jones, but close. Thanks. Dan |
Forgotten Treasures #14: Speckled Trout--PART 3
"William Claspy" wrote in message ... After you posted these delightful passages, I remembered you and I discussing Burroughs at some point in the past. But for the life of me I can't remember the context, what we said, decided, or argued. Ah well, we'll just have to do it again sometime. Given that natural history is one of the few major points at which our tastes converge, it stands to reason that Burroughs would have come up at one time or another.....but I don't remember the discussion. You're right, we'll just have to do it again. :) I know Project Gutenberg is a great and wonderful thing, but I have to admit to being a "book as object" kind of person, so I went upstairs and retrieved the two editions we have in this building of "Locusts and Wild Honey", both of them from Collected Works series. One, the 1907 Riverside Press (Houghton Mifflin) edition, is very nicely illustrated with drawings and sepia tone prints. I decided that one or two of you ingrates might enjoy seeing them, so I did a few quick scans that might add to the enjoyment of the plain-text postings by Wolfgang. This is the photo verso the title page, of Burroughs and his dog: http://filer.case.edu/wpc/trout/burroughs1.jpg This image is within the "Speckled Trout" chapter and is entitled simply enough "Trout Stream." No GPS points given: http://filer.case.edu/wpc/trout/burroughs2.jpg Finally, this colored drawing is later in the book, but I included it because I'm fond of kingfishers. So sue me: http://filer.case.edu/wpc/trout/burroughs3.jpg Thanks for posting the essay, Wolfgang, De nada. and I hope you enjoy these images. I did. Like you, I much prefer a good old fashioned book to e-text. Alas, I don't have the resources at hand that SOME folks do. :( Anyone else who'd like to read the whole thing (and has a REAL job that doesn't allow lounging about among books all the livelong day) can find a plain text version he http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext04/lwhon10.txt or a scanned facsimile including all of the illustrations (as a 3.5 meg PDF file, courtesy of Google Books) he http://tinyurl.com.y5pnyp Wolfgang |
Forgotten Treasures #14: Speckled Trout--PART 3
"Daniel-San" (Rot13) wrote in message t... Thanks for the pleasant read. Yesterday (and it seems today) in the Chicago area, we were treated to an amazing day, weather-wise. High 60s, mild breeze, lots of rejuvenating sun. Just what a boy needs after Wisconsin's trout season has ended....a day *perfect* for fishing. So, as the jones built, I saw this posted. Not a total assuaging of said jones, but close. Well, you're in good company, anyway: "The man's true life, for which he consents to live, lies altogether in the field of fancy. The clergyman, in his spare hours, may be winning battles, the farmer sailing ships, the banker reaping triumph in the arts: all leading another life, plying another trade from that they chose....For no man lives in the external truth, among salts and acids, but in the warm, phantasmagoric chamber of his brain, with the painted windows and storied walls."--R.L. Stevenson Quoted in, "Exuberance: The Passion For Life" by Kay Redfield Jamison, Alfred A. Knopf, 2004, p. 86. "Snoopy, " Jamison goes on to say, "dining by candlelight on the top of his doghouse, with his stained-glass window and van Gogh below, would agree." :) Wolfgang |
Forgotten Treasures #14: Speckled Trout--PART 3
"Wolfgang" wrote ... "Daniel-San" wrote ... Thanks for the pleasant read. Yesterday (and it seems today) in the Chicago area, we were treated to an amazing day, weather-wise. High 60s, mild breeze, lots of rejuvenating sun. Just what a boy needs after Wisconsin's trout season has ended....a day *perfect* for fishing. So, as the jones built, I saw this posted. Not a total assuaging of said jones, but close. Well, you're in good company, anyway: "The man's true life, for which he consents to live, lies altogether in the field of fancy. The clergyman, in his spare hours, may be winning battles, the farmer sailing ships, the banker reaping triumph in the arts: all leading another life, plying another trade from that they chose....For no man lives in the external truth, among salts and acids, but in the warm, phantasmagoric chamber of his brain, with the painted windows and storied walls."--R.L. Stevenson Quoted in, "Exuberance: The Passion For Life" by Kay Redfield Jamison, Alfred A. Knopf, 2004, p. 86. "Snoopy, " Jamison goes on to say, "dining by candlelight on the top of his doghouse, with his stained-glass window and van Gogh below, would agree." :) Hells bells, it seems Thurber stole Mitty from Stevenson. Well, perhaps not "stole," but the idea is certainly there. Never read much of Stevenson; perhaps I should. Michelle and I often discuss this very idea. She usually catches me flipping through a well-worn copy of one of the many Calvin and Hobbes anthologies that dot my book collection, which leads to a discussion of Mitty and the whole idea of the internal life, separate from the external. Usually makes for an interesting discussion...ranging from your basic daydream (which I believe to be a "healthy" expression of simple desires) to the secret lives some people live (not so healthy, IMO...) Anyway... it's about 65 or so outside, and mentally, I'm a little west of Madison, casting a little sedge over a rising trout. Physically, I'm sitting inside my little carrel reading a surprisingly intersting union journal from the 1920s. Great stuff. Walter...err... Dan |
Forgotten Treasures #14: Speckled Trout--PART 3
Wolfgang wrote:
Anyone else who'd like to read the whole thing (and has a REAL job that doesn't allow lounging about among books all the livelong day) I'll let that one slide. :-) can find a plain text version he http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext04/lwhon10.txt or a scanned facsimile including all of the illustrations (as a 3.5 meg PDF file, courtesy of Google Books) he http://tinyurl.com/y5pnyp [I fixed a typo in that last URL] Hm, interesting that they didn't get all of the images- and that each edition, same publisher, used different illustrations. I looked at another edition of "Locusts and Wild Honey" via Google Books and it would appear that the automated scanner doesn't know to wisp aside the tissue covering over the image pages! Bill (temporarily posting via Google Groups) |
Forgotten Treasures #14: Speckled Trout--PART 3
wrote in message oups.com... Wolfgang wrote: Anyone else who'd like to read the whole thing (and has a REAL job that doesn't allow lounging about among books all the livelong day) I'll let that one slide. :-) can find a plain text version he http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext04/lwhon10.txt or a scanned facsimile including all of the illustrations (as a 3.5 meg file, courtesy of Google Books) he http://tinyurl.com/y5pnyp [I fixed a typo in that last URL] Oops. Thanks. Hm, interesting that they didn't get all of the images- and that each edition, same publisher, used different illustrations. I looked at another edition of "Locusts and Wild Honey" via Google Books and it would appear that the automated scanner doesn't know to wisp aside the tissue covering over the image pages! I didn't look through the entire PDF file. Saw the frontispiece and just assumed that the rest of the illustration would be there. Caveat lector! Bill (temporarily posting via Google Groups) Yeah, I do that at home. As a news reader Google Groups sucks large. Wolfgang o.k., sure, it ain't as fun and illuminating as politics..... |
Forgotten Treasures #14: Speckled Trout--PART 3
"Daniel-San" (Rot13) wrote in message . .. "Wolfgang" wrote ... "Daniel-San" wrote ... Thanks for the pleasant read. Yesterday (and it seems today) in the Chicago area, we were treated to an amazing day, weather-wise. High 60s, mild breeze, lots of rejuvenating sun. Just what a boy needs after Wisconsin's trout season has ended....a day *perfect* for fishing. So, as the jones built, I saw this posted. Not a total assuaging of said jones, but close. Well, you're in good company, anyway: "The man's true life, for which he consents to live, lies altogether in the field of fancy. The clergyman, in his spare hours, may be winning battles, the farmer sailing ships, the banker reaping triumph in the arts: all leading another life, plying another trade from that they chose....For no man lives in the external truth, among salts and acids, but in the warm, phantasmagoric chamber of his brain, with the painted windows and storied walls."--R.L. Stevenson Quoted in, "Exuberance: The Passion For Life" by Kay Redfield Jamison, Alfred A. Knopf, 2004, p. 86. "Snoopy, " Jamison goes on to say, "dining by candlelight on the top of his doghouse, with his stained-glass window and van Gogh below, would agree." :) Hells bells, it seems Thurber stole Mitty from Stevenson. Well, perhaps not "stole," but the idea is certainly there. I looked for the original source of the quote after I posted it. Well, one thing led to another and I never quite got there......you know how that goes......but I found a reference that suggested Stevenson was alluding (however indirectly) to a certain gentleman of La Mancha. Seems that rather than committing outright theft from an origianl owner Thurber was (ala Shakespeare) just recycling an already well used idea. An enterprising scholar could (and probably already did) make a career of listing everybody who flogged it before Cervantes got hold of it. :) Never read much of Stevenson; perhaps I should. While in college (getting to be a while ago now despite the fact that I got there a decade and a half after my high school classmates) I made a concerted effort to work my way through the great 19th century American and English authors. There turned out to be a lot more of them than I expected and most of them were alarmingly prolific. Needless to say, perhaps, but I didn't get very far. But I DID manage to get through Twain, Irving, Stevenson and Dickens (blech!).....and maybe a couple of works each by some lesser luminaries like Hawthorne and Cooper. Stevenson is definitely worth the time. Michelle and I often discuss this very idea. She usually catches me flipping through a well-worn copy of one of the many Calvin and Hobbes anthologies that dot my book collection, which leads to a discussion of Mitty and the whole idea of the internal life, separate from the external. Usually makes for an interesting discussion...ranging from your basic daydream (which I believe to be a "healthy" expression of simple desires) to the secret lives some people live (not so healthy, IMO...) Well, the whole idea of reading books (indisputably one of the most salutary of human activities) outside one's own professional specialty is Mittyish to the core. The self-referential irony in Mitty couldn't possibly have been lost on Thurber. Reading is simply a manifestation (albeit with a bit of mechanical aid) of your healthy daydreaming. Writing, on the other hand, represents (if we are to give credence to the evidence of practioners' own statements as well as the testimony of innumerable eyewitnesses) those not so healthy and all too infrequently secret lives. :) Anyway... it's about 65 or so outside, and mentally, I'm a little west of Madison, casting a little sedge over a rising trout. Try the Pass Lake......trust me. Physically, I'm sitting inside my little carrel reading a surprisingly intersting union journal from the 1920s. Great stuff. Um.....yeah, that HAS TO be better than it sounds! Wolfgang |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:10 AM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2006 FishingBanter