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THE SPECKLED BROOK TROUT
PART X: ALONG A TROUT-STREAM. ________________________________________ "It is a spot beyond imagination Delightful to the heart-where roses bloom And sparkling fountains murmur; where the earth Is gay with many-colored flowers."-FIRDAUSI An ill man is walking down Broadway to his office. Overworked for months, he shrinks from the hard, practical duties of rushing modern business. The half-grown foliage of late May is on the trees in Bowling Green and Battery Park. Robins are calling to each other there. He joys in the fresh wind, and the gulls soaring above North River! How green the grass is! And there, peeping through, he sees several wild violets, blue as the sky at which they gaze. Presto! The jaded and listless look is gone from the man's face; his heart leaps and hope comes strong and welcome; for before him, summoned by memory, are the violets and the vistas, the thorn-blossoms, robins, pheasants, arbutus, and lilies along the chattering flow of his favorite trout-stream! Trinity bells are pealing "Rock of Ages"; but the echoes of those peals sing another song to him in his need of rest. It is: "Only two weeks more! Then you shall be fishing for trout on the Little Slagle River!" How slowly the fortnight drags by! But a morning comes when, before three o'clock, he is actually wading that stream. At last! Since midnight all the jewels of the skies of June have been shining keenly. It is wild, remote, with even the camp a mile away. He is at the entrance to the Lower Glen. Over the high banks are thickets of thorn-bushes, their wealth of snow-white blossoms filled with dewdrops which have caught and hold the starlight! Through that sweetest of all earthly things, wild-flower air, comes the far hooting of owls in lonely nocturne. There are whiffs of mint scents, faint smells of fragrant birch and pine-balsam. The slight stir of a sleepy breeze wakes a low whisper in some of the tree-tops, while the stream sings to the sleeping forest, with . . . . . ."the still sound Of falling water-lulling as the song Of Indian bees at sunset, when they throng Around the fragrant Nilica, and deep In its blue blossoms, hum themselves to sleep." "In the night the great old troutes bite very boldly," said Isaak Walton: so the angler is wading the stream at what the roused camp-cook has called and "unearthly" hour. Far better, he is here to drink in the beauty of the sylvan environment as the mystic hour runs from gold of stars to gold of sunshine. The stream is wide enough for casting flies without trouble from the white thorn-bushes. Fifty feet below him is a deep pool, just beyond the wraith of foam at the foot of short rapids. Gloom and mystery lie over and in it; he can see the white of foam slowly eddying over its black water under two leaning pines. He moves slowly, then pauses with rubber-clad feet on the while and golden gravel, covered with two feet of rushing water. Poising the pliable lancewood rod, while the left hand pulls the line from the reel in unison at each pass of the rod back and forth above him, he extends the line with its leader and flies until forty feet of line are in motion. Then, true as bow from arrow, light as down, fluttering as if alive, the White Miller lures go straight to the centre of the pool, and kiss the water. A flash, gleam, flying spray as a large trout darts from his home under the bank! It is an experience that has often thrilled the real angler. The fish has jumped at and missed the leading fly! But the next cast is successful. An even fiercer rush, and the angler, with the well-known turn of the wrist on the rod, has the fish hooked! Straight down stream flies the quarry, the reel screaming and the heart of the angler beating hard and fast! A long struggle follows. Almost in the landing-net twice, and yet the trout makes savage rushes for liberty! Soon the prize is secured; joy of possession as a wild, twelve-inch king of the jewelled coat lies on the bed of fern-leaves in the bottom of the trout-creel! For this, and for the gladness of returning health among some of earth's fairest scenes, the angler has journeyed almost 1,000 miles. Already he is mastered by the spell of the remote, wild life, with its mystery and music. Three beautiful trout are taken from the pool while the starlight dies and the sky grows lighter. Then, startling the ear of earliest dawn, a solitary bird fills the forest with its first note, clear, pure, and thrilling, as if Heaven itself had sent its own winged messenger to herald the coming day! Then another bird takes up the song; then another and another, until all the woods are vocal with melody-now near and joyous, now far and sweet, like "the horns of elf-land faintly blowing." "Skir-reee!" cries a scared chipmunk as he darts away. A gray squirrel, with tail well cocked, barks and scolds at a safe distance. From far down the stream comes the low drumming of a partridge. Across the bend is a sudden splash, followed by the rattling cry of a kingfisher, who has had his first dive of the day for nothing. A screaming hawk sails away from the dry tree that tops the high bank. "Up all night?" inquires a quail. The hypnotism and delight of it to the man escaped from a busy city office are beyond all expression in words! Blessed hours of recreation! In the air is the faint odor of smoke, and of boiling coffee. The cook has gone farther down the stream with a heavy lunch-basket, has put six big potatoes before a kindled camp-fire on the brookside, and then has caught five larger trout from a deeper pool; breakfast there is nearly ready. The roasted potatoes are done to a turn-how well the cook can prepare them! And out from the little frying-pan come the five trout, swimming a half hour ago, and now garnished with tender water-cress from that bank of it close to hand. Abundant coffee, cream, toast, butter! The breakfast is served on two snowy napkins spread over a mossy knoll; the dishes are pieces of freshly cut birch bark, the seat is a birch log. Peerless dining-room-a June sky curved in azure benediction above a wild pine-forest filled with sough of wind through its aisles-with bird-notes, with the voice (so glad!) of the soul of the wilderness-the talking stream whose rapids reflect the early sunlight down one of the long aisles, and cause it to dance on the foliage. Not all the chefs and banquets in the cities of the round world could produce such a meal as this, with such a breakfast-chamber! For the wealth of beauty is everywhere. Laurel and rhododendron blossoms are around him-wild lilies, trailing arbutus, and white strawberry blossoms! Finally, the forest rises above a blue carpet of violets. How the angler loves them! He stops the cook from plucking them for a boutonničre. He almost wishes, as he lies beside a thick cluster of their blooms, that he might strike hands and feet in the kind earth, take root himself beside his favorite flowers, and nevermore abandon the happy companionship. The little, nodding, blue comrades! He feels that they are sentient-know and are grateful for his love and insight. He is charmed by their wild, shy life. As he lies prone and drinks from the spring below the bank, one of them takes advantage of a sudden gust of wind to actually nod at him several times! "It is just a little violet on the bank above the spring; Just a little point of blue that nods before the saucy air: And as he notes the beauty of the wee and winsome thing, He feels that it is glad to see him back and drinking there." And now comes proof that the angler sees and knows the beauty of his environment. For he is not fishing. He could talk for hours of rods, lines, leaders, and reels-of camping, guides, tents, pack-horses, canoes; of the various flies to be used according to season, location, lights, hours of the day or night, on a dozen widely separated streams. He has fished on the Peribonca in Quebec, the best salmon-streams in Newfoundland, the far-famed Nepigon, and the fierce waters of a dozen rivers in British Columbia that are guarded by black mountains whose bases were green with foliage; while their peaks, sometimes two miles high, carried snow-banners in every high wind. He knows Pennsylvania's best trout-streams; and the waters of the Muskoka Region; besides the Au Sable, Shuswap, Two Medicine and St. Mary's Lakes in Montana, and Square and the Sourdnahonk Lakes in Maine. Trout from the Margaree in Cape Breton, from the Tabusintac and Bartibog Rivers in New Brunswick, and the Morell Stream on Prince Edward Island, have been brought to his creel by hundreds. The best cruising for edible salt-water fishes-that around Albemarle and Pamlico Sounds-is familiar to him. But nowhere else exist such wildness, remoteness, wealth of sylvan enchantment, such flavor to trout, such health and life in air and water, such music in a stream, as along the peerless little Slagle River! He is realizing this, and is happy to the point of fear. He could easily fill his creel with trout; yet he does not cast the flies. For he is in a hypnotized state. He will not even light his morning cigar; its smoke would pollute the air of a place which has "become religion." And he would sooner take a drink of whiskey before St. Peter, the ancient fisherman who now guards the gates of Paradise, than here, right in a Paradise upon earth. The rod is laid on the half-submerged log where he sits, with his rubber-clad feet in the water. He really hears and sees! What a contrast to the scenes he beheld last summer along Granite Creek, which flows into the head of St. George's Pond in Newfoundland! There, the hillsides were yellow with ripe bake-apple berries; barrens were gray with Arctic moss; caribou grazed in plain sight on many hills. Moose-birds, tame by reason of their ignorance of human presence, roosted on the ends of the little logs on the camp-fire before the tripod tent. Marsh-hens called and fluttered; and at night, from far above, could be heard the quacking of ducks and the thrilling "honk! honk! honk!" of the stout-hearted old wild ganders, each winging his way toward Labrador at the head of invisible wedges of night-flying geese. Great trout were in the pools of that stream; and the steel-gray color of its gravelly bed was very beautiful. And yet, even among such scenes, the angler had longed for the music, the flower and bird life, foliage and mystery of the Slagle! Its waters flow around his legs now! And they seem to talk to him as they rush: "Where have you been, my devotee? Why have you roamed so far from me? Thrice welcome back to my fair shore! Now learn to love me more and more." He sees the flash of the body of a brook trout as he leaps from the brook, in pursuit of a butterfly, wandering too near the water's surface for safety. The line and flies have drifted from the log. Flash! A trout strikes one of the lures, pulls the rod into the stream, and the owner scrambles after it. Now he is casting again, and filling the creel. Nearly every effort brings some response. In pools, behind rocks, on the ripples, here by the bank, there beneath those logs, yonder in the foam of the rapids, and in places where least suspected, glittering beauty, crimson-spotted, always ready for a bait, lurk and play the wild brook trout. The wild trout is the ideal fish, the fish of the poets and the sportsman, who often feels that the breeding-pond is the half-way house to a fish-stall in a market. And so he wanders down the brook, happy, filling his hours with best recreation. Steeper, higher, wilder, in lordly, many-colored scenes, grow the banks of the Glen. Great trout lie in the waters which eddy, rush, and glance in silvery willfulness over an intaglio of white and golden gravel that beautifies the swift current. Thus, all too quickly, passes the angler's day. The late afternoon light is over all as he again stops, and looks, and listens. To his right is a high knoll, mottled with moss-growths, its base sandalled with the white star-points of wild strawberry blooms, and the tiny pale-blue flowers of forget-me-nots. Beyond, is the brown, far-spreading carpet of the forest, splashed by blue of violets, white of lilies, yellow of daffodils! The whole left bank is a mass of dark wintergreen growth, edged at the water with mint and cress. Yonder is a little slope exquisite with the pale pink flowers of the anemone. Buds of wild honeysuckle are opening down there on the little island. Blossoms of laurel, rhododendron, trailing arbutus! Forest odors, bird-notes, whispering stream, murmuring foliage! Mottled patches of sunlight and shadow dance under the great trees where, last night, the strident calls of the whippoorwills were ringing. A mother partridge is trying to coax her brood of chicks across that log over the stream! Beautiful! No wonder the gray-haired angler loves it all. "The infinite Night with her solemn aspect, Day, and the sweet approach of Even and Morn, are full of meaning for him. He loves the green Earth with her streams and forests, her flowery leas and eternal skies-loves her with a sort of passion in all her vicissitudes of light and shade: his spirit revels in her grandeur and charms-expands like the breeze over wood and lawn, over glade and dingle, stealing and giving odors. Nature is to him no longer an insensate assemblage of colors and perfumes, but a mysterious Presence with which he communes in unutterable sympathies." So this angler looks, listens, and feels more and more. Every water-curve is full of grace, fantasy, and ease of motion, like a wind-swayed flag. And he studies the currents, full of color, clearness, mantlings of shadows, prismatic lights running over the white gravel of the bed, or darting through the foam-fire. And at still pauses is as much in the water as above it-boughs, foliage, blue sky, drifting clouds, all softened and etherealized by reflection. "Sweet views which in our world above Can never well be seen, Are imaged by the water's love Of this fair forest green. And all is interfused beneath With an Elysian glow; An atmosphere without a breath- A softer day below." This effect is heightened by the music of the water-flow. Old anglers have ears trained to nicest sense of sound in the music of running water, and will know the physical conditions, even when unseen, which cause many of the notes of sound in a trout-brook. The impact of hurrying water on the air causes vibrations that determine the notes of the liquid oboe. When deflected from a bank in mass, the water has the swishing sound of swift volume-crisp and full of life. Confined and made rapid in a little caņon or cut, its tone is deepened and becomes sonorous. Or it falls over a half-buried timber and deepens to a low roar, which is slashed with purling dots of sound as drops fall singly into the current. From underneath this shell of swift water come echoes of partly drowned notes from the back-current below, and purls from roots and boughs around which the turned stream hurries. Gurgles ensue-the compressed air below varying in density with the varying volume of the water-leaps, the tones of the back-flow struggling through, with the whisper of air intermingled as it comes from the breaking bubbles with which the boiling pool is brightly opaque. Or a fallen tree with its hundreds of boughs and twigs forms obstructive points of sounding current-tiny, but the whole furnishing a low, droning complaint. All these notes are varied by the width of stream, volume, depth, speed, angles of obstruction, character of the bed, kind, amount, and density of foliage, incline and height of banks, changes in echoes and resonance being endless, and even being affected by the dryness or humidity of the air, and the mingling of foliage sounds as winds are light or strong. Up the stream is a broad shallow where the brook flows over partly submerged rocks, spread evenly, with a slumberous sound, like a steady wind moving through thick woods. Falling over the even edge of a wide dam the water has much the same sound. Unobstructed on inclines, rapidly flowing water in small volume has the inimitable purl, so exquisite that even in music the sweetest sounds are called liquid, like a tinkling rill. And the notes that blend from different water-tones are always in concord, never in dissonance. Flowing under many conditions, meeting multiform obstacles over even a single rod of its course, these notes combine and make a certain "tone" or pitch of musical sound. Put a log across the brook, choke it with rocks, or remove those already there, and all the minor sounds are changed-also the general tone and pitch of the water-music. Or the stream will part with some portion of its water volume, which will run into still nooks and limpidly go to sleep. Thus the tone, volume, and blended orchestral effects of the water along a rushing trout-stream are endless in variety and beauty-but all perfect. And the feeling of the hearing, sensitive student will be played upon until some echo of that music will be roused in his own spirit as he studies it all in its light and gloom, sunshine and shadow, storm and peace. So in all ages the best poets have studied and sung of the sound of flowing water, and have peopled their musical brooks with singing nymphs and wraiths of water-sprites. Wild life, hypnotism, the home of Health! The true angler sees much, but will realize that as compared with what is about him he sees very little. Pluck a single leaf and look at it carefully. Even a skilled artist must keep it before him as a model, to mimic the delicate veinings and exact shape. Break a bough from a maple-tree, and try to see it. Some of the leaves are mere lines to the sight-edgewise; others are foreshortened; many are shaded by companions. Through them reigns an intensity of reflection and brilliant semi-transparence acting upon and through surfaces extremely complex in shape, curve, and relative position. The light is in among the leaves and alters the appearance of the bough from within as well as without. Turn it, hold it in any position, and it is perfect; yet not another bough in all these miles of forest is just like it! Multiply the woods until they are a wilderness swayed by wind or quiet in unity of rest-flecked by driving cloud-shadows or flooded with moonlight or sunshine. Manifestly, we cannot see them. Only a few of even the subtle and weird patterns woven by ferns and mosses, and flowering grasses and plants, on the floor of the forest can be noted or understood. Above all, Mystery reigns. The stream drowses under long, partly seen roofs of foliage, or under loving, interlacing boughs of water-tunnel whose portals and winding sides are a tapestry of leaf and twig, misty with rain, unearthly as they shine in the wan smile of dying sunlight; even more real and divine in ghostly semi-darkness at night! Opaline lights play through still lagoons in deep glades where the twin sisters of Silence and Twilight keep noonday watch, and "all cheated hours sing vespers." Foliage melting away in distance to mystery of banks and masses, softest shadows deepening into black gloom, lonely stretches of the stream covered with Nature-Glory in their remote windings! Yet over each small section of such a scene is the mystery of color, form, interlaced shade. Here is what a man of sharpest sight has said of it "The stones and gravel of the banks catch green reflections from the boughs above. The bushes receive grays and yellows from the ground. Every hair-breath of polished surface gives back a little bit of blue of the sky or gold of sun. This local color is again disguised and modified by the hue of the light, or quenched in the gray of the shadows." But over all and in all reigns the deeper Mystery of Life. Visible forms and their beauty are not the strongest attractions of the trout-stream. Grant that mystery of soft depth of gloom, grace of motion in water, and of greatest delicacy of color are before the angler. What enchantment is there in even all this lovely environment to create such fierce longing for it, such content when possessed? Blue sky-fire may burn like a steadfast sapphire through emerald foliage; the pride of fern-plumes may wave and rustle in their green refreshment, -gold and pearl may throb in clouds whose shadows wing their way over mountain, glen, and forest, -all through a sun-shafted fantasia of gold-dusted wine-air which is perfumed by arbutus, lily, violet, and forget-me-not,-the blossoming life all in a tangle of fragrant day-dreams. Fairy tints may dance and quiver through that baby of prismatic mist, the tiny rainbow as it spans the cascade. All the glamour and riot of wild freshness may dwell in the mysterious woods, waters, sky, as a June breeze makes the whole a harp of whispering leaves, purling crystal, and curving blue. Place the angler in closest touch with it all, as he wades the stream with ears, heart, and spirit receptive and alert, -foliage near, rushing water about him, changing, intermingling light and shadow over him as it falls in dancing fretwork. Yet even all this does not explain his great love. What causes it? It is because in this Nature about him is a Mystery of Life. An evasive, sleeplessly unwearied living principle dwells in the leaf he may pluck and crush, and is forming its colors, shaping its forms. Fern and flower, traced with life-streaming veins, specially textured, with hues that blend and part again, substantially present, possessed, yet hold a secret of living being and growing life that forever eludes his search, and always will. Life even more mystic than the spirit that he feels in himself is present before him, inscrutable, regnant, locked and barred away from his knowledge. Thus for him Nature wears a double aspect-that of substantial presence and infinite remoteness. She dominates him with love of possession and of unattainable desire. He looks with mortal eyes upon her material features; yet he may gaze forever upon the veil that hides her invisible secret of life, and she is yet Isis-a Magnet of Mystery. Therefore he kneels, a rapt, glad, and humble devotee, before the closed gates, the thin wall beyond which are the secrets of her vivifying existence. Besides, she stands, like himself, between an Eternity of the Past and one of the Future, seeming to call and beckon from a fathomless Abyss whose depths his eyes will never pierce. She is fairest of the fair in visible forms; yet in her mystery of life she is unseen and unapproachable even in closest communion. So he loves her with unutterable love. But he knows all is benign, and the vital import of the power that has created. But how, and by what facts and mysteries of life? No answer comes. He will not fathom the secrets; but he will realize more and more the divine wisdom in making so much unknown as all is borne forward. He will be sure that it is inconceivable that all is not of holy import and being-sure that all the mystery is blessed. Half-read messages and tones of sphere-music will come to him as he wonders at the Earth, and at himself, standing there with her, both between two Eternities. And thus his faith is satisfied, and his love is crowned! The result is inevitable. With bowed and reverent head the angler hopes that when he has crossed the Delectable Mountains, and, one poor thread in the web of universal history, has waved back his mute farewells to his favorite trout-stream before he enters the Unknown and is swallowed by Oblivion, a merciful and loving Heaven may furnish to him the counterpart of this brook. Will he not find a heavenly stream on the Other Side? Will not its waters sing as with a new song, its forests whisper, its flowers enchant? Yes, for there stands the message of Holy Writ, the last words of John, Seer and Prophet-words of inspiration and promise: "And he shewed me a pure river of water of life." END THE SPECKLED BROOK TROUT _____________________________________________ Wolfgang This work is in the public domain. To the best of my knowledge, its inclusion here violates no U.S. or other copyright laws. |
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... THE SPECKLED BROOK TROUT PART X: ALONG A TROUT-STREAM. ________________________________________ McIntosh offers----good stuff--reminds me of J.Miller's condensed version of a day up Sassaffass Falls when he fishes among the butterflies. By the way , see you will soon be fishing with Miller-- don"t quit for the day and let him just fish on around the next bend. He will land more fish around the bend than your combined total previously. And I do believe him !! |
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![]() "Joe McIntosh" wrote in message ... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... THE SPECKLED BROOK TROUT PART X: ALONG A TROUT-STREAM. ________________________________________ McIntosh offers----good stuff--reminds me of J.Miller's condensed version of a day up Sassaffass Falls when he fishes among the butterflies. By the way , see you will soon be fishing with Miller-- don"t quit for the day and let him just fish on around the next bend. He will land more fish around the bend than your combined total previously. And I do believe him !! You should join us. Together, I think we can just about keep him under control. ![]() Wolfgang |
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message McIntosh offers----good stuff--reminds me of J.Miller's condensed version of a day up Sassaffass Falls when he fishes among the butterflies. By the way , see you will soon be fishing with Miller-- don"t quit for the day and let him just fish on around the next bend. He will land more fish around the bend than your combined total previously. And I do believe him !! You should join us. Together, I think we can just about keep him under control. ![]() Wolfgang Would like to be there--especially if you boat into Slickrock creek rather than hike up and down---but wife has me going to tennis camp in Ga. that week. Over the years I have enjoyed spending time with Roffers---fond memories--a fire dance in Montana--camping when guys retire in wrong tent with another already in sleeping bag--my introduction to single malt---have landed few fish but caught lots of friends,. Have a good time and carry extra toilet paper for Miller JOE |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Forgotten Treasures #19: THE SPECKLED BROOK TROUT--PART VI | Wolfgang | Fly Fishing | 0 | May 2nd, 2007 09:07 PM |
Forgotten Treasures #19: THE SPECKLED BROOK TROUT--PART IV | Wolfgang | Fly Fishing | 24 | May 1st, 2007 05:35 PM |
Forgotten Treasures #19: THE SPECKLED BROOK TROUT--PART III | Wolfgang | Fly Fishing | 0 | April 29th, 2007 06:35 AM |
Forgotten Treasures #19: THE SPECKLED BROOK TROUT--PART I | Wolfgang | Fly Fishing | 4 | April 28th, 2007 05:51 PM |
Forgotten Treasures #19: THE SPECKLED BROOK TROUT--PART II | Wolfgang | Fly Fishing | 0 | April 28th, 2007 05:44 PM |