Fly Fishing Poem

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dj1212
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Fly Fishing Poem

Post by dj1212 » Sun Jan 01, 2023 6:33 pm

I was reading through a post about a particular wet fly from a book titled The British Anglers Manual. Looking through it on the internet archive I came across this poem.

** He shakes the boughs that on the margin grow, Which o^er the stream a waving forest throw, When, if an insect fall (his certain guide), He gently takes him from the whirling tide. Examines well his form with curious eyes, His gaudy vest, his wings, his horns, and size ; Then round the hook the chosen fur he winds, And on the back a speckled feather binds ; So just the colours shine through every part, That nature seems to live again in art."

I like it alot. I hope you all do too.

Happy New Year
Doug J.
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Roadkill
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Re: Fly Fishing Poem

Post by Roadkill » Sun Jan 01, 2023 8:10 pm

Very nice!
And a happy new year to all!!
DOUGSDEN
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Re: Fly Fishing Poem

Post by DOUGSDEN » Sun Jan 01, 2023 8:56 pm

Doug,
Indeed I do like it! It just fits and I am certain everyone on the forum will like it too!
Do you have more?
Doug D.
Fish when you can, not when you should! Anything short of this is just a disaster.
chugbug
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Re: Fly Fishing Poem

Post by chugbug » Sun Jan 01, 2023 9:59 pm

:D :D
All smiles here, great find!
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Ron Eagle Elk
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Re: Fly Fishing Poem

Post by Ron Eagle Elk » Sun Jan 01, 2023 10:58 pm

Bravo! Great find, thanks for sharing that with us.
"A man may smile and bid you hale yet curse you to the devil, but when a good dog wags his tail he is always on the level"
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dj1212
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Re: Fly Fishing Poem

Post by dj1212 » Wed Jan 04, 2023 5:38 pm

DOUGSDEN wrote: Sun Jan 01, 2023 8:56 pm Doug,
Indeed I do like it! It just fits and I am certain everyone on the forum will like it too!
Do you have more?
Doug D.
No more at the moment but I'm always on the lookout.

Doug J.
DOUGSDEN
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Re: Fly Fishing Poem

Post by DOUGSDEN » Wed Jan 04, 2023 10:37 pm

Doug J.,
Fantastic! Can't wait to hear what you will find for us! Lots of reading, lots!
Doug D.
Fish when you can, not when you should! Anything short of this is just a disaster.
chugbug
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Re: Fly Fishing Poem

Post by chugbug » Thu Jan 05, 2023 12:02 am

I couldn't help but dig a little deeper on that poem, and thought I'd share what more I found...

It comes from a book of verse written by John Gay, a contemporary of Swift and Pope, and published in 1770. The subject of this particular poem is "Rural Sports." The Cambridge History of English and American Literature refers to the following passage as "a minute and rather grotesque description of fly-fishing" .... but opinions on literary value aside it's really quite charming, and timeless.
. . . .
When genial spring a living warmth bestows,
And o'er the year her verdant mantle throws,
No swelling inundation hides the grounds,
But crystal currents glide within their bounds;
The finny brood their wonted haunts forsake,
Float in the sun, and skim along the lake,
With frequent leap they range the shallow streams,
Their silver coats reflect the dazling beams.
Now let the fisherman his toils prepare,
And arm himself with ev'ry watry snare;
His hooks, his lines peruse with careful eye,
Encrease his tackle, and his rod retye.
When floating clouds their spongy fleeces drain,
Troubling the streams with swift-descending rain,
And waters tumbling down the mountain's side,
Bear the loose soil into the swelling tide;
Then, soon as vernal gales begin to rise,
And drive the liquid burthen thro' the skies,
The fisher to the neighb'ring current speeds,
Whose rapid surface purles unknown to weeds;
Upon a rising border of the brook
He sits him down, and ties the treach'rous hook;
Now expectation chears his eager thought,
His bosom glows with treasures yet uncaught,
Before his eyes a banquet seems to stand,
Where ev'ry guest applauds his skilful hand.
Far up the stream the twisted hair he throws,
Which down the murm'ring curren gently flows;
When if or chance or hunger's pow'rful sway
Directs the roving trout this fatal way,
He greedily sucks in the twining bait,
And tugs and nibbles the fallacious meat:
Now, happy fisherman, now twitch the line!
How thy rod bends! behold, the prize is thine!
Cast on the bank, he dies with gasping pains,
And trickling blood his silver mail distains.
You must not ev'ry worm promiscuous use,
Judgment will tell thee proper bait to chuse;
The worm that draws a long immod'rate size
The trout abhors, and the rank morsel flies;
And if too small, the naked fraud's in sight,
And fear forbids, while hunger does invite.
Those baits will best reward the fisher's pains,
Whose polish'd tails a shining yellow stains:
Cleanse them from filth, to give a tempting gloss,
Cherish the sully'd reptile race with moss;
Amid the verdant bed they twine, they toil,
And from their bodies wipe their native soil.
But when the sun displays his glorious beams,
And shallow rivers flow with silver streams,
Then the deceit the scaly breed survey,
Bask in the sun, and look into the day.
You now a more delusive art must try,
And tempt their hunger with the curious fly.
To frame the little animal, provide
All the gay hues that wait on female pride,
Let nature guide thee; sometimes golden wire
The shining bellies of the fly require;
The peacock's plumes thy tackle must not fail,
Nor the dear purchase of the sable's tail.
Each gaudy bird some slender tribute brings,
And lends the growing insect proper wings:
Silks of all colours must their aid impart,
And ev'ry fur promote the fisher's art.
So the gay lady, with expensive care,
Borrows the pride of land, of sea, and air;
Furs, pearls, and plumes, the glittering thing displays,
Dazles our eyes, and easie hearts betrays.
Mark well the various seasons of the year,
How the succeeding insect race appear;
In this revolving moon one colour reigns,
Which in the next the fickle trout disdains.
Oft' have I seen a skilful angler try
The various colours of the treach'rous fly;
When he with fruitless pain hath skim'd the brook,
And the coy fish rejects the skipping hook,
He shakes the boughs that on the margin grow,
Which o'er the stream a waving forrest throw;
When if an insect fall (his certain guide)
He gently takes him from the whirling tide;
Examines well his form with curious eyes,
His gaudy vest, his wings, his horns and size.
Then round his hook the chosen fur he winds,
And on the back a speckled feather binds,
So just the colours shine thro' ev'ry part,
That nature seems to live again in art.
Let not thy wary step advance too near,
While all thy hope hangs on a single hair;
The new-form'd insect on the water moves,
The speckled trout the curious snare approves;
Upon the curling surface let it glide,
With nat'ral motion from thy hand supply'd,
Against the stream now gently let it play,
Now in the rapid eddy roll away.
The scaly shoals float by, and seiz'd with fear
Behold their fellows tost in thinner air;
But soon they leap, and catch the swimming bait,
Plunge on the hook, and share an equal fate.
When a brisk gale against the current blows,
And all the watry plain in wrinkles flows,
Then let the fisherman his art repeat,
Where bubbling eddys favour the deceit.
If an enormous salmon chance to spy
The wanton errors of the floating fly,
He lifts his silver gills above the flood,
And greedily sucks in th' unfaithful food;
Then downward plunges with the fraudful prey,
And bears with joy the little spoil away.
Soon in smart pain he feels the dire mistake,
Lashes the wave, and beats the foamy lake,
With sudden rage he now aloft appears,
And in his eye convulsive anguish bears;
And now again, impatient of the wound,
He rolls and wreaths his shining body round;
Then headlong shoots beneath the dashing tide,
The trembling fins the boiling wave divide;
Now hope exalts the fisher's beating heart,
Now he turns pale, and fears his dubious art;
He views the tumbling fish with longing eyes,
While the line stretches with th' unwieldy prize;
Each motion humours with his steady hands,
And one slight hair the mighty bulk commands:
'Till tir'd at last, despoil'd of all his strength,
The game athwart the stream unfolds his length.
He now, with pleasure, views the gasping prize
Gnash his sharp teeth, and roll his blood-shot eyes;
Then draws him to the shore, with artful care,
And lifts his nostrils in the sick'ning air:
Upon the burthen'd stream he floating lies,
Stretches his quivering fins, and gasping dies.
Would you preserve a num'rous finny race?
Let your fierce dogs the rav'nous otter chase;
Th' amphibious monster ranges all the shores,
Darts through the waves, and ev'ry haunt explores:
Or let the gin his roving steps betray,
And save from hostile jaws the scaly prey.
I never wander where the bord'ring reeds
O'erlook the muddy stream, whose tangling weeds
Perplex the fisher; I, nor chuse to bear
The thievish nightly net, nor barbed spear;
Nor drain I ponds the golden carp to take,
Nor trowle for pikes, dispeoplers of the lake.
Around the steel no tortur'd worm shall twine.
No blood of living insect stain my line;
Let me, less cruel, cast the feather'd hook,
With pliant rod athwart the pebbled brook,
Silent along the mazy margin stray,
And with the fur-wrought fly delude the prey.

Here's a link to the passage in the 1770 publication
https://hdl.handle.net/2027/nyp.3343307 ... 4294832-41
Johnno
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Re: Fly Fishing Poem

Post by Johnno » Thu Jan 05, 2023 1:22 am

Roses are red
Violets are blue.
I fish flymphs
And so should you.

😆
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letumgo
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Re: Fly Fishing Poem

Post by letumgo » Thu Jan 05, 2023 5:33 pm

Good one John. Maybe that should be my next Flymph tee shirt. :D

I love this thread.
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