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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/35351-8.txt b/35351-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7ff3179 --- /dev/null +++ b/35351-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2265 @@ +Project Gutenberg's Fishing and Shooting Sketches, by Grover Cleveland + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Fishing and Shooting Sketches + +Author: Grover Cleveland + +Illustrator: Henry S. Watson + +Release Date: February 21, 2011 [EBook #35351] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FISHING AND SHOOTING SKETCHES *** + + + + +Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images +generously made available by The Internet Archive/American +Libraries.) + + + + + + + + + + Fishing and + Shooting Sketches + + BY + GROVER CLEVELAND + + Illustrated by + HENRY S. WATSON + + NEW YORK + THE OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY + 1906 + + + + + COPYRIGHT, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, BY THE CURTIS PUBLISHING CO. + COPYRIGHT, 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906, BY THE INDEPENDENT. + COPYRIGHT, 1903, BY THE PRESS PUBLISHING CO. + COPYRIGHT, 1905, BY THE COUNTRY CALENDAR. + COPYRIGHT, 1906, BY THE OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY. + + Entered at Stationers' Hall, London, England. + + _All Rights Reserved._ + + THE OUTING PRESS + DEPOSIT, N. Y. + + + + + [Illustration: From Copyright Photo, by Pach. + Yours truly + Grover Cleveland] + + + + + CONTENTS + + + PAGE + + THE MISSION OF SPORT AND OUTDOOR LIFE 3 + A DEFENSE OF FISHERMEN 19 + THE SERENE DUCK HUNTER 49 + THE MISSION OF FISHING AND FISHERMEN 79 + SOME FISHING PRETENSES AND AFFECTATIONS 111 + SUMMER SHOOTING 139 + CONCERNING RABBIT SHOOTING 153 + A WORD TO FISHERMEN 165 + A DUCK HUNTING TRIP 179 + QUAIL SHOOTING 197 + + + + +The Mission of Sport and Outdoor Life + + +I am sure that it is not necessary for me, at this late day, to dwell +upon the fact that I am an enthusiast in my devotion to hunting and +fishing, as well as every other kind of outdoor recreation. I am so +proud of this devotion that, although my sporting proclivities have at +times subjected me to criticism and petty forms of persecution, I make +no claim that my steadfastness should be looked upon as manifesting the +courage of martyrdom. On the contrary, I regard these criticisms and +persecutions as nothing more serious than gnat stings suffered on the +bank of a stream--vexations to be borne with patience and afterward +easily submerged in the memory of abundant delightful accompaniments. +Thus, when short fishing excursions, in which I have sought relief +from the wearing labors and perplexities of official duty, have been +denounced in a mendacious newspaper as dishonest devices to cover +scandalous revelry, I have been able to enjoy a sort of pleasurable +contempt for the author of this accusation, while congratulating myself +on the mental and physical restoration I had derived from these +excursions. So, also, when people, more mistaken than malicious, have +wagged their heads in pitying fashion and deprecated my indulgence +in hunting and fishing frivolity, which, in high public service, I +have found it easy to lament the neglect of these amiable persons +to accumulate for their delectation a fund of charming sporting +reminiscence; while, at the same time, I sadly reflected how their +dispositions might have been sweetened and their lives made happier if +they had yielded something to the particular type of frivolity which +they deplored. + +I hope it may not be amiss for me to supplement these personal +observations by the direct confession that, so far as my attachment to +outdoor sports may be considered a fault, I am, as related to this +especial predicament of guilt, utterly incorrigible and shameless. Not +many years ago, while residing in a non-sporting but delightfully +cultured and refined community, I found that considerable indignation +had been aroused among certain good neighbors and friends, because it +had been said of me that I was willing to associate in the field with +any loafer who was the owner of a dog and gun. I am sure that I did not +in the least undervalue the extreme friendliness of those inclined to +intervene in my defense; and yet, at the risk of doing an apparently +ungracious thing, I felt inexorably constrained to check their kindly +efforts by promptly conceding that the charge was too nearly true to be +denied. + +There can be no doubt that certain men are endowed with a sort of +inherent and spontaneous instinct which leads them to hunting and +fishing indulgence as the most alluring and satisfying of all +recreations. In this view, I believe it may be safely said that the true +hunter or fisherman is born, not made. I believe, too, that those who +thus by instinct and birthright belong to the sporting fraternity and +are actuated by a genuine sporting spirit, are neither cruel, nor greedy +and wasteful of the game and fish they pursue; and I am convinced that +there can be no better conservators of the sensible and provident +protection of game and fish than those who are enthusiastic in their +pursuit, but who, at the same time, are regulated and restrained by the +sort of chivalric fairness and generosity, felt and recognized by every +true sportsman. + +While it is most agreeable thus to consider hunting and fishing as +constituting, for those especially endowed for their enjoyment, the +most tempting of outdoor sports, it is easily apparent that there +is a practical value to these sports as well as all other outdoor +recreations, which rests upon a broader foundation. Though the +delightful and passionate love for outdoor sports and recreation is not +bestowed upon every one as a natural gift, they are so palpably related +to health and vigor, and so inseparably connected with the work of life +and comfort of existence, that it is happily ordained that a desire +or a willingness for their enjoyment may be cultivated to an extent +sufficient to meet the requirements of health and self-care. In other +words, all but the absolutely indifferent can be made to realize that +outdoor air and activity, intimacy with nature and acquaintanceship with +birds and animals and fish, are essential to physical and mental +strength, under the exactions of an unescapable decree. + +Men may accumulate wealth in neglect of the law of recreation; but how +infinitely much they will forfeit, in the deprivation of wholesome +vigor, in the loss of the placid fitness for the quiet joys and +comforts of advancing years, and in the displacement of contented age by +the demon of querulous and premature decrepitude! + + "For the good God who loveth us + He made and loveth all." + + +A Law not to Be Disobeyed + +Men, in disobedience of this law, may achieve triumph in the world of +science, education and art; but how unsatisfying are the rewards thus +gained if they hasten the night when no man can work, and if the later +hours of life are haunted by futile regrets for what is still left +undone, that might have been done if there had been closer communion +with nature's visible forms! + +In addition to the delight which outdoor recreations afford to those +instinctively in harmony with their enjoyment, and after a recognition +of the fact that a knowledge of their nerve- and muscle-saving +ministrations may be sensibly cultivated, there still remains another +large item that should be placed to their credit. Every individual, as a +unit in the scheme of civilized social life, owes to every man, woman +and child within such relationship an uninterrupted contribution to the +fund of enlivening and pleasurable social intercourse. None of us can +deny this obligation; and none of us can discharge it as we ought, if +our contributions are made in the questionable coin of sordidness and +nature's perversion. Our experience and observation supply abundant +proof that those who contribute most generously to the exhilaration and +charm of social intercourse will be found among the disciples of outdoor +recreation, who are in touch with nature and have thus kept fresh and +unperverted a simple love of humanity's best environment. + + +A Chance in the Open for All + +It seems to me that thoughtful men should not be accused of exaggerated +fears when they deprecate the wealth-mad rush and struggle of American +life and the consequent neglect of outdoor recreation, with the +impairment of that mental and physical vigor absolutely essential to our +national welfare, and so abundantly promised to those who gratefully +recognize, in nature's adjustment to the wants of man, the care of "the +good God" who "made and loveth all." + +Manifestly, if outdoor recreations are important to the individual and +to the nation, and if there is danger of their neglect, every +instrumentality should be heartily encouraged which aims to create and +stimulate their indulgence in every form. + +Fortunately, the field is broad and furnishes a choice for all except +those wilfully at fault. The sky and sun above the head, the soil +beneath the feet, and outdoor air on every side are the indispensable +requisites. + + + + +A Defense of Fishermen + + +By way of introduction and explanation, it should be said that there is +no intention at this time to deal with those who fish for a livelihood. +Those sturdy and hard-working people need no vindication or defense. +Our concern is with those who fish because they have an occult and +mysterious instinct which leads them to love it, because they court the +healthful, invigorating exertion it invites, and because its indulgence +brings them in close contact and communion with Nature's best and most +elevating manifestations. This sort of fishing is pleasure and not +work--sport and not money-grabbing. Therefore it is contemptuously +regarded in certain quarters as no better than a waste of time. + +Generous fishermen cannot fail to look with pity upon the benighted +persons who have no better conception than this of the uses and +beneficent objects of rational diversion. In these sad and ominous days +of mad fortune-chasing, every patriotic, thoughtful citizen, whether he +fishes or not, should lament that we have not among our countrymen more +fishermen. There can be no doubt that the promise of industrial peace, +of contented labor and of healthful moderation in the pursuit of +wealth, in this democratic country of ours, would be infinitely improved +if a large share of the time which has been devoted to the concoction of +trust and business combinations, had been spent in fishing. + +The narrow and ill-conditioned people who snarlingly count all fishermen +as belonging to the lazy and good-for-nothing class, and who take +satisfaction in describing an angler's outfit as a contrivance with a +hook at one end and a fool at the other, have been so thoroughly +discredited that no one could wish for their more irredeemable +submersion. Statesmen, judges, clergymen, lawyers and doctors, as well +as thousands of other outspoken members of the fishing fraternity, have +so effectively given the lie to these revilers of an honest and +conscientious brotherhood that a large majority have been glad to find +refuge in ignominious silence. + +Notwithstanding this, weak, piping voices are still occasionally heard +accusing fishermen of certain shortcomings and faults. These are so +unsubstantial and unimportant that, as against the high place in the +world's esteem claimed by those who love to fish, they might well be +regarded as non-essentials, or, in a phrase of the day, as mere matters +of detail. But, although it may be true that these charges are on the +merits unworthy of notice, it cannot be expected that fishermen, proud +of the name, will be amiably willing to permit those making such +accusations the satisfaction of remaining unchallenged. + + +The Hangers-on of the Fraternity + +At the outset, the fact should be recognized that the community of +fishermen constitute a separate class or a sub-race among the +inhabitants of the earth. It has sometimes been said that fishermen +cannot be manufactured. This is true to the extent that nothing can +supply the lack of certain inherent, constitutional and inborn qualities +or traits which are absolutely necessary to a fisherman's make-up. Of +course there are many who call themselves fishermen and who insist upon +their membership in the fraternity who have not in their veins a drop of +legitimate fisherman blood. Their self-asserted relationship is +nevertheless sometimes seized upon by malicious or ignorant critics as +permitting the assumption that the weaknesses and sins of these +pretenders are the weaknesses and sins of genuine fishermen; but in +truth these pretenders are only interlopers who have learned a little +fish language, who love to fish only "when they bite," who whine at bad +luck, who betray incredulity when they hear a rousing fish story, and +who do or leave undone many other things fatal to good and regular +standing. They are like certain whites called squaw-men, who hang about +Indian reservations, and gain certain advantages in the tribes by +marrying full-blooded Indian women. Surely no just person would for a +moment suppose that genuine Indians could be treated fairly by measuring +them according to a squaw-man standard. Neither can genuine fishermen be +fairly treated by judging them according to the standards presented by +squaw-fishermen. + +In point of fact, full-blooded fishermen whose title is clear, and whose +natural qualifications are undisputed, have ideas, habits of thought and +mental tendencies so peculiarly and especially their own, and their +beliefs and code of ethics are so exclusively fitted to their needs and +surroundings, that an attempt on the part of strangers to speak or write +concerning the character or conduct of its approved membership savors of +impudent presumption. None but fishermen can properly deal with these +delicate matters. + +What sense is there in the charge of laziness sometimes made against +true fishermen? Laziness has no place in the constitution of a man who +starts at sunrise and tramps all day with only a sandwich to eat, +floundering through bushes and briers and stumbling over rocks or wading +streams in pursuit of the elusive trout. Neither can a fisherman who, +with rod in hand, sits in a boat or on a bank all day be called +lazy--provided he attends to his fishing and is physically and mentally +alert in his occupation. This charge may perhaps be truthfully made +against squaw-fishermen who become easily discouraged, who "tire and +faint" early, and lie down under the shade to sleep, or go in swimming, +or who gaze about or read a book while their hooks rest baitless on the +bottom; but how false and unfair it is to accuse regular, full-blooded +fishermen of laziness, based on such performances as these! And yet this +is absurdly done by those who cannot tell a reel from a compass, and who +by way of familiarizing themselves with their topic leave their beds at +eight o'clock in the morning, ride to an office at ten, sit at a desk +until three or perhaps five, with an hour's interval for a hearty +luncheon, and go home in the proud belief that they have done an active, +hard day's work. Fishermen find no fault with what they do in their own +affairs, nor with their conception of work; but they do insist that +such people have no right to impute laziness to those who fish. + + +Why Fish Stories Should Be Believed + +It is sometimes said that there is such close relationship between +mendacity and fishing, that in matters connected with their craft all +fishermen are untruthful. It must, of course, be admitted that large +stories of fishing adventure are sometimes told by fishermen--and why +should this not be so? Beyond all question there is no sphere of human +activity so full of strange and wonderful incidents as theirs. Fish are +constantly doing the most mysterious and startling things; and no one +has yet been wise enough to explain their ways or account for their +conduct. The best fishermen do not attempt it; they move and strive in +the atmosphere of mystery and uncertainty, constantly aiming to reach +results without a clue, and through the cultivation of faculties, +non-existent or inoperative in the common mind. + +In these circumstances fishermen necessarily see and do wonderful +things. If those not members of the brotherhood are unable to assimilate +the recital of these wonders, it is because their believing apparatus +has not been properly regulated and stimulated. Such disability falls +very far short of justifying doubt as to the truth of the narration. The +things narrated have been seen and experienced with a fisherman's eyes +and perceptions. This is perfectly understood by listening fishermen; +and they, to their enjoyment and edification, are permitted by a +properly adjusted mental equipment to believe what they hear. + +This faculty is one of the safest signs of full-blooded right to +membership. If incredulity is intimated by a professional member no +injustice will be done if he is at once put under suspicion as a +squaw-fisherman. As to non-members who accuse true fishermen of +falsehood, it is perfectly clear that they are utterly unfitted to deal +with the subject. The only theory fitting the condition leads to the +statement that any story of personal experience told by a fisherman is +to the fishing apprehension indubitably true; and that since disbelief +in other quarters is owing to the lack of this apprehension, the folly +of accusing fishermen of habitual untruthfulness is quite apparent. + + +The Taking of the Leviathan + +The position thus taken by the brotherhood requires that they stand +solidly together in all circumstances. Tarpon fishing has added greatly +to our responsibilities. Even larger fish than these may, with the +extension of American possessions, fall within the treatment of American +fishermen. As in all past emergencies, we shall be found sufficient in +such future exigencies. All will go well if, without a pretense of +benevolent assimilation, we still fish as is our wont, and continue our +belief in all that our brethren declare they have done or can do. A few +thousand years ago the question was impressively asked, "Canst thou draw +out leviathan with a hook?" We must not falter, if, upon its repetition +in the future, a brother replies: "Yes, with a ten-ounce rod;" nor must +we be staggered even if another declares he has already landed one of +these monsters. If American institutions are found adequate to the new +tasks which Destiny has put upon them in the extension of our lands, the +American Chapter of the world's fishermen must not fail by their +time-honored methods and practices, and by such truthfulness as belongs +to the fraternity in the narration of fishing adventure, to subdue any +new difficulties presented by the extension of our waters. + + +Why the Biggest Fish Are Always Lost + +Before leaving this branch of our subject, especial reference should be +made to one item more conspicuous, perhaps, than any other, among those +comprised in the general charge of fishermen's mendacity. It is +constantly said that they greatly exaggerate the size of the fish that +are lost. This accusation, though most frequently and flippantly made, +is in point of fact based upon the most absurd arrogance and a love of +slanderous assertion that passes understanding. These are harsh words; +but they are abundantly justified. + +In the first place, all the presumptions are with the fisherman's +contention. It is perfectly plain that large fish are more apt to escape +than small ones. Of course their weight and activity, combined with the +increased trickiness and resourcefulness of age and experience, greatly +increase their ability to tear out the hook, and enhance the danger that +their antics will expose a fatal weakness in hook, leader, line or rod. +Another presumption which must be regretfully mentioned, arises from the +fact that in many cases the encounter with a large fish causes such +excitement, and such distraction or perversion of judgment, on the part +of the fisherman as leads him to do the wrong thing or fail to do the +right thing at the critical instant--thus actually and effectively +contributing to an escape which could not and would not have occurred +except in favor of a large fish. + +Beyond these presumptions we have the deliberate and simple story of the +fisherman himself, giving with the utmost sincerity all the details of +his misfortune, and indicating the length of the fish he has lost, or +giving in pounds his exact weight. Now, why should this statement be +discredited? It is made by one who struggled with the escaped fish. +Perhaps he saw it. This, however, is not important, for he certainly +felt it on his rod, and he knows precisely how his rod behaves in the +emergency of every conceivable strain. + + +The Finny Hypnotist + +All true fishermen who listen to his plain, unvarnished tale accept with +absolute faith the declared length and weight of the fish that was +almost caught; but with every presumption, besides positive statement, +against them, carping outsiders who cannot fish, and who love to accuse +fishermen of lying, are exposed in an attempt to originate or perpetuate +an envious and malicious libel. + +The case of our fraternity on this point of absolute and exact +truthfulness is capable of such irrefragable demonstration that anything +in the way of confession and avoidance ought to be considered +inadmissible. And yet, simply for the sake of argument, or by way of +curious speculation, it may be interesting to intimate how a variation +of a few inches in the exact length or a few ounces in the exact weight +of a lost fish, as given by the loser, may be accounted for, without +meanly attributing to him intentional falsehood. The theory has been +recently started, that a trained hunting dog points a bird in the field +solely because the bird's scent creates a hypnotic influence on the dog, +which impels him by a sort of suggestion to direct his nose toward the +spot from which such scent emanates. If there is anything worth +considering in this theory, why may not a struggling fish at the end of +a line exert such a hypnotic influence on the intensely excited and +receptive nature at the other extremity of the fishing outfit, as to +suggest an arbitrary and independent statement of the dimensions of the +hypnotizer? + +With the accusations already mentioned it would certainly seem that +the enmity of those who take pleasure in reviling fishermen and their +ways should be satisfied. They have not been content, however, in +the demonstration of their evil-mindedness without adding to their +indictment against the brotherhood the charge of profanity. Of course, +they have not the hardihood to allege that our profanity is of that +habitual and low sort which characterizes the coarse and ill-bred, who +offend all decent people by constantly interlarding their speech with +fearful and irrelevant oaths. They, nevertheless, find sufficient +excuse for their accusation in the sudden ejaculations, outwardly +resembling profanity, which are occasionally wrung from fishermen in +trying crises and in moments of soul-straining unkindness of Fate. + +Now, this question of profanity is largely one of intention and +deliberation. The man who, intending what he says, coolly indulges in +imprecation, is guilty of an offense that admits of no excuse or +extenuation; but a fisherman can hardly be called profane who, when +overtaken without warning by disaster, and abruptly hurled from the +exhilarating heights of delightful anticipation to the depths of dire +disappointment, impulsively gives vent to his pent-up emotion by the +use of a word which, though found in the list of oaths, is spoken +without intentional imprecation, and because nothing else seems to +suit the occasion. It is by no means to be admitted that fishing tends +even to this semblance of profanity. On the contrary, it imposes a +self-restraint and patient forbearance upon its advanced devotees which +tend to prevent sudden outbursts of feeling. + +It must in frankness be admitted, however, by fishermen of every degree, +that when the largest trout of the day, after a long struggle, winds +the leader about a snag and escapes, or when a large salmon or bass, +apparently fatigued to the point of non-resistance, suddenly, by an +unexpected and vicious leap, frees himself from the hook, the +fisherman's code of morals will not condemn beyond forgiveness the +holder of the straightened rod if he impulsively, but with all the +gentility at his command, exclaims: "Damn that fish!" It is probably +better not to speak at all; but if strong words are to be used, perhaps +these will serve as well as any that can do justice to the occasion. + +Uncle Toby, overcome with tender sympathy, swore with an unctious, +rotund oath, that his sick friend should not die; and we are told that +"the accusing spirit which flew up to Heaven's chancery with the oath +blushed as he gave it in; and the recording angel as he wrote it down +dropped a tear upon the word and blotted it out forever." + +The defense of the fishing fraternity which has been here attempted is +by no means as completely stated as it should be. Nor should the world +be allowed to overlook the admirable affirmative qualities which exist +among genuine members of the brotherhood, and the useful traits which an +indulgence in the gentle art cultivates and fosters. A recital of these, +with a description of the personal peculiarities found in the ranks of +fishermen, and the influence of these peculiarities on success or +failure, are necessary to a thorough vindication of those who worthily +illustrate the virtues of our clan. + + + + +The Serene Duck Hunter + + +In the estimation of many people, all those who for any purpose or in +any manner hunt ducks are grouped together and indiscriminately called +duck hunters. This is a very superficial way of dealing with an +important subject. In point of fact, the objects of duck shooting and +its methods of enjoyment are so various, and the disposition and +personal characteristics of those who engage in it present such strong +contrasts, that a recognition of their differences should suggest the +subdivision of this group into distinct and well-defined sections. Such +a subdivision would undoubtedly promote fairness and justice, and lead +to a better understanding of the general topic. + +There are those whose only claim to a place among duck hunters is based +upon the fact that they shoot ducks for the market. No duck is safe from +their pursuit in any place, either by day or night. Not a particle of +sportsmanlike spirit enters into this pursuit, and the idea never enters +their minds that a duck has any rights that a hunter is bound to +respect. The killing they do amounts to bald assassination--to murder +for the sake of money. All fair-minded men must agree that duck +hunters of this sort should be segregated from all others and placed in +a section by themselves. They are the market shooters. + +There are others claiming a place in the duck-hunting group, who, though +not so murderously inclined as the market shooters, have such peculiar +traits and such distinctive habits of thought and action, as abundantly +justify placing them also in a classification of their own. These are +the hunters who rarely miss a duck, but whose deadly aim affords them +gratification only in so far as it is a prelude to duck mortality, and +who are happy or discontented as their heap of dead is large or small. +They have smothered the keen delights of imagination which should be the +cheering concomitants of the most reputable grade of duck hunting, and +have surrendered its pleasures to actual results and the force of +external circumstances. Their stories of inordinate killing are +frequently heard, and often enliven the pages of sporting magazines. +There can be but little doubt that this contingent give unintentional +support to a popular belief, originating in the market shooters' +operations, that duck shooting is a relentlessly bloody affair. These +are the dead shots among duck hunters. + + +The Vindication of the Gentle Huntsmen + +The danger that all those who essay to shoot ducks may, by the conduct +of these two classes, acquire a general and unmitigated reputation for +persistent slaughter, cannot be contemplated without sadness. It is +therefore not particularly reassuring to recall the fact that our +countrymen seem just now to be especially attracted by the recital of +incidents that involve killing,--whether it be the killing of men or any +other living thing. + +It is quite probable that the aggregation of all duck hunters in one +general group cannot be at once remedied; and the expectation can hardly +be entertained that any sub-classification now proposed will gain the +acceptance and notoriety necessary for the immediate exoneration of +those included within this group who are not in the least responsible +for the sordid and sanguinary behavior of either the market shooter or +the dead shot. These innocent ones comprise an undoubted majority of all +duck hunters; and their common tastes and enjoyments, as well as their +identical conceptions of duty and obligation, have drawn them together +in delightful fraternity. By their moderate destruction of duck life +they so modify the killing done by those belonging to the classes +already described, that the aggregate, when distributed among the entire +body of duck hunters, is relieved from the appearance of bloodthirsty +carnage; and they in every way exert a wholesome influence in the +direction of securing a place for duck hunting among recreations which +are rational, exhilarating and only moderately fatal. + + +The Honorable Order of Serene Duck Hunters + +It must be frankly confessed that the members of this fraternity cannot +claim the ability to kill ducks as often as is required by the highest +averages. This, however, does not in the least disturb their serenity. +Their compensations are ample. They are saved from the sordid and +hardening effects induced by habitual killing, and find pleasure in +the cultivation of the more delicate and elevating susceptibilities +which ducking environments should invite. Under the influence of +these susceptibilities there is developed a pleasing and innocent +self-deception, which induces the belief on the part of those with whom +it has lodgment, that both abundant shooting skill and a thorough +familiarity with all that pertains to the theory of duck hunting are +entirely in their possession and control. They are also led to the +stimulation of reciprocal credulity which seasons and makes digestible +tales of ducking adventure. Nor does bloody activity distract their +attention from their obligations to each other as members of their +especial brotherhood, or cause them to overlook the rule which requires +them to stand solidly together in the promotion and protection, at all +hazards, of the shooting reputation of every one of their associates. +These may well be called the Serene Duck Hunters. + +All that has been thus far written may properly be regarded as merely an +introduction to a description, somewhat in detail, of the manner in +which these representatives of the best and most attractive type of duck +hunters enjoy their favorite recreation. + +A common and easy illustration of their indulgence of the sentimental +enjoyments available to them is presented when members of the fraternity +in the comfortable surroundings of camp undertake the discussion of the +merits of guns and ammunition. The impressiveness with which guns are +put to the shoulder with a view of discovering how they "come up," the +comments on the length and "drop" of the different stocks, the solemn +look through the barrel from the opened breech, and the suggestion of +slight "pitting," are intensely interesting and gratifying to all +concerned. + +When these things are supplemented by an exchange of opinions concerning +ammunition, a large contribution is added to the entertainment of the +party. Such words as Schultz, Blue Ribbon, Dupont, Ballistite and Hazard +are rolled like sweet morsels under the tongue. Each of the company +declares his choice of powder and warmly defends its superiority, each +announces the number of drams that a ducking cartridge should contain, +and each declares his clear conviction touching the size of shot, and +the amount, in ounces and fractions of ounces, that should constitute an +effective load. + +Undoubtedly the enjoyment supplied by such a discussion is keen and +exhilarating. That it has the advantage of ease and convenience in its +favor, is indicated by the fact that its effects are none the less real +and penetrating in the entire absence of any knowledge of the topics +discussed. To the serene duck hunter the pretense of knowledge or +information is sufficient. The important factors in the affair are that +each should have his turn, and should be attentively heard in his +exploitation of that which he thinks he knows. + +There is nothing in all this that can furnish reasonable ground for +reproach or criticism. If under the sanction of harmless self-deception +and pretense this duck-hunting contingent, to whom duck killing is not +inevitably available, are content to look for enjoyment among the things +more or less intimately related to it, it is quite their own affair. At +any rate it is sufficient to say that they have joined the serene +brotherhood for their pastime, and that any outside dictation or +criticism of the mode in which they shall innocently enjoy their +privileges of membership savors of gross impertinence. + +There comes a time, however, when the calm and easy enjoyments of +in-door comfort must give way to sterner activities, and when even the +serene duck hunter must face the discomfort of severe weather and the +responsibility of flying ducks. This exigency brings with it new +duties and new objects of endeavor; but the principles which are +characteristic of the fraternity are of universal application. Therefore +our serene duck hunter should go forth resolved to accomplish the best +results within his reach, but doubly resolved that in this new phase of +his enjoyment he will betray no ignorance of any detail, and that he +will fully avail himself of the rule unreservedly recognized in the +brotherhood, which permits him to claim that every duck at which his +gun is fired is hit--except in rare cases of conceded missing, when an +excuse should be always ready, absolutely excluding any suggestion of +bad shooting. And by way of showing his familiarity with the affair in +hand it is not at all amiss for him to give some directions as he +enters his blind as to the arrangement of the decoys. + + +How to Take Good and Bad Luck + +It is quite likely that his first opportunity to shoot will be presented +when a single duck hovers over the decoys, and as it poises itself +offers as easy a target as if sitting on a fence. Our hunter's gun is +coolly and gracefully raised, and simultaneously with its discharge the +duck falls helplessly into the water. This is a situation that calls for +no word to be spoken. Merely a self-satisfied and an almost indifferent +expression of countenance should indicate that only the expected has +happened, and that duck killing is to be the order of the day. + +Perhaps after a reasonable wait, another venturesome duck will enter +the zone of danger and pass with steady flight over the decoys easily +within shooting distance. Again the gun of our serene hunter gives +voice, summoning the bird to instant death. To an impartial observer, +however, such a course would not seem to be in accordance with the +duck's arrangements. This is plainly indicated by such an acceleration +of flight as would naturally follow the noise of the gun's discharge and +the whistling of the shot in the rear of the expected victim. + +This is the moment when the man behind the gun should rise to the +occasion, and under the rule governing the case should without the least +delay or hesitation insist that the duck is hit. This may be done by the +use of one of several appropriate exclamations--all having the sanction +of precedent and long use. One which is quite clear and emphatic is to +the effect that the fleeing duck is "lead ballasted," another easily +understood is that it has "got a dose," and still another of no +uncertain meaning, that it is "full of shot." Whatever particular +formula is used, it should at once be followed by a decided command to +the guide in attendance to watch the disappearing bird and mark where it +falls. + +The fact should be here mentioned that the complete enjoyment of this +proceeding depends largely upon the tact and intelligence of the guide. +If with these he has a due appreciation of his responsibility as an +adjunct to the sport, and is also in proper accord with his principal, +he will give ready support to the claim that the duck is mortally +wounded, at the same time shrewdly and with apparent depression +suggesting the improbability of recovering the slain. + +If as the hours wear away this process becomes so monotonous as +to be fatiguing, a restful variety may be introduced by guardedly +acknowledging an occasional miss, and bringing into play the excuses and +explanations appropriate to such altered conditions. A very useful way +of accounting for a shot missed is by the suggestion that through a +slightly erroneous calculation of distance the duck was out of range +when the shot was fired. A very frequent and rather gratifying pretext +for avoiding chagrin in case of a long shot missed is found in the +claim that, though the sound of shot striking the bird is distinctly +heard, their penetration is ineffective. Sometimes failure is attributed +to the towering or turning of the duck at the instant of the gun's +discharge. It is at times useful to impute failure to the probability +that the particular cartridge used was stale and weak; and when all +these are inadmissible, the small size of the shot and the faulty +quality or quantity of powder they contain, may be made to do service; +and, in extreme cases, their entire construction as well as their +constructor may be roundly cursed as causes for a miscarriage of fatal +results. + + +How True Duck Hunters Stand Together + +When the ducks have ceased to fly for the day the serene duck hunter +returns to camp in a tranquil, satisfied frame of mind befitting his +fraternity membership. He has several ducks actually in hand, and he +has fully enjoyed the self-deception and pretense which have led him +to the belief that he has shot well. His few confessed misses are +all satisfactorily accounted for; and he is too well broken to the +vicissitudes of duck shooting, and too old a hunter, to be cast down +by the bad fortune which has thickly scattered, over distant waters +and marshes, his unrecovered dead. + +When at the close of such a day a party of serene duck hunters are +gathered together, a common fund of adventure is made up. Each as he +contributes his share is entitled to add such embellishments of the +imagination as will make his recital most interesting to his associates +and gratifying to himself; and a law tacitly adopted but universally +recognized by the company binds them all to an unquestioning acceptance +of the truth of every narration. The successes of the day as well as its +incidents of hard luck, and every excuse and explanation in mitigation +of small returns of game, as they are rehearsed, create lively interest +and quiet enjoyment. The one thing that might be a discordant note would +be a hint or confession of downright and inexcusably bad shooting. + +In this delightful assemblage of serene duck hunters there is no place +for envious feeling toward either the slaughtering market shooter or the +insatiable dead shot. They only seek, in their own mild and gentle way, +the indulgence of the pleasures which the less bloody phases of duck +hunting afford; and no censorious critic has the right to demand that +their enjoyment should be marred or diminished by the exactions of +veracity or self-abasement. + +Reference has already been made to the scrupulous care of this +fraternity for the promotion and preservation, at all hazards, of the +shooting reputation of all the associates. This is a most important +duty. Indeed, it may be reasonably feared that any neglect or faltering +in its discharge would undermine the entire fabric of the serene +brotherhood's renown. The outside world should never gain from any of +its members the least hint that a weak spot has been developed in the +shooting ability of any of their number; and in giving an account of +hunting results it is quite within bounds for them to include in the +aggregate, not only the ducks actually killed and those reported killed, +but those probably killed and neither recovered nor reported. The fact +that such an aggregate has been reported by an associate should impart +to every member absolute verity, and each should make the statement his +own, to the displacement of all other knowledge. Such ready support of +each other's allegations and such entire self-abnegation are absolutely +necessary if the safety of the organization is to be insured, and if its +success and usefulness are to endure. + +Thus the great body of serene duck hunters, who have associated together +for the promotion of high aims and purposes, pursue the even tenor of +their way. They do not clamor for noisy recognition or make cheap +exhibition of their virtues. They will, however, steadily and +unostentatiously persevere, both by precept and practice, in their +mission to make all duck hunters better and happier, and to mitigate the +harsh and bloody features of duck hunting. + + + + +The Mission of Fishing and Fishermen + + +It was quite a long time ago that a compelling sense of duty led me to +undertake the exoneration of a noble fraternity, of which I am an humble +member, from certain narrow-minded, if not malicious, accusations. The +title given to what was then written, "A Defense of Fishermen," was +precisely descriptive of its purpose. It was not easy, however, to keep +entirely within defensive limits; for the temptation was very strong and +constant to abandon negation and palliation for the more pleasing task +of commending to the admiration and affection of mankind in affirmative +terms both fishing and fishermen. A determination to attempt this at +another time, and thus supplement the matter then in hand, made +resistance to this temptation successful; but the contemplated +supplementation was then foreshadowed in the following terms: + + "The defense of the fishing fraternity which has been here attempted + is by no means so completely stated as it should be. Nor should the + world be allowed to overlook the admirable affirmative qualities + which exist among genuine members of the brotherhood and the useful + traits which the indulgence in the gentle art cultivates and + fosters. A recital of these, with a description of the personal + influence of these peculiarities found in the ranks of fishermen, + and the influence of these peculiarities on success or failure, are + necessary to a thorough vindication of those who worthily illustrate + the virtues of our clan." + +The execution of the design thus foreshadowed has until now been evaded +on account of the importance and delicacy of the undertaking and a +distrust of my ability to deal adequately with the subject. Though these +misgivings have not been overcome, my perplexity, as I enter upon the +work so long delayed, is somewhat relieved by the hope that true +fishermen will be tolerant, whatever may be the measure of my success, +and that all others concerned will be teachable and open-minded. + + +Lessons the Fisherman Learns from Nature + +The plan I have laid out for the treatment of my topic leads me, first +of all, to speak of the manner in which the fishing habit operates upon +man's nature for its betterment; and afterward to deal with the +qualities of heart and disposition necessary to the maintenance of good +and regular standing in the fishing fraternity. + +There is no man in the world capable of profitable thought who does not +know that the real worth and genuineness of the human heart are +measured by its readiness to submit to the influences of Nature, and to +appreciate the goodness of the Supreme Power who has made and beautified +Nature's abiding-place. In this domain, removed from the haunts of men +and far away from the noise and dust of their turmoil and strife, the +fishing that can fully delight the heart of the true fisherman is found; +and here in its enjoyment, those who fish are led, consciously or +unconsciously, to a quiet but distinct recognition of a power greater +than man's, and a goodness far above human standards. Amid such +surroundings and within such influences no true fisherman, whether +sensitively attuned to sublime suggestion, or of a coarser mold and +apparently intent only upon a successful catch, can fail to receive +impressions which so elevate the soul and soften the heart as to make +him a better man. + +It is known of all men that one of the rudiments in the education of a +true fisherman is the lesson of patience. If he has a natural tendency +in this direction it must be cultivated. If such a tendency is lacking +he must acquire patience by hard schooling. This quality is so +indispensable in fishing circles that those who speak of a patient +fisherman waste their words. In point of fact, and properly speaking, +there can be no such thing as an impatient fisherman. It cannot, +therefore, be denied that in so far as fishing is a teacher of the +virtue of patience, it ought to be given a large item of credit in +reckoning its relation to the everyday affairs of life; for certainly +the potency of patience as a factor in all worldly achievements and +progress cannot be overestimated. If faith can move mountains, patience +and faith combined ought to move the universe. + +Moreover, if those who fish must be patient, no one should fail to see +that patience is a most desirable national trait and that it is vastly +important to our body politic that there should continue among our +people a large contingent of well-equipped fishermen, constantly +prepared and willing to contribute to their country's fund of blessings +a liberal and pure supply of this saving virtue. + +To those who are satisfied with a superficial view of the subject it may +seem impossible that the diligence and attention necessary to a +fisherman's success can leave him any opportunity, while fishing, to +thoughtfully contemplate any matter not related to his pursuit. Such a +conception of the situation cannot be indorsed for a moment by those of +us who are conversant with the mysterious and unaccountable mental +phenomena which fishing develops. We know that the true fisherman finds +no better time for profitable contemplation and mental exercise than +when actually engaged with his angling outfit. It will probably never be +possible for us to gather statistics showing the moving sermons, the +enchanting poems, the learned arguments and eloquent orations that have +been composed or constructed between the bites, strikes or rises of +fish; but there can be no doubt that of the many intellectual triumphs +won in every walk of life a larger proportion has been actually hooked +and landed with a rod and reel by those of the fishing fraternity than +have been secured in any one given condition of the non-fishing world. + +This may appear to be a bold statement. It is intended as an assertion +that fishing and fishermen have had much to do with the enlightenment +and elevation of humanity. In support of this proposition volumes might +be written; but only a brief array of near-at-hand evidence will be here +presented. + +Those who have been fortunate enough to hear the fervid eloquence of +Henry Ward Beecher, and even those who have only read what he has +written, cannot overlook his fishing propensity--so constantly manifest +that the things he said and wrote were fairly redolent of fishing +surroundings. His own specific confession of fealty was not needed to +entitle him to the credentials of a true fisherman, nor to disclose one +of the never-failing springs of his best inspiration. When these things +are recalled, and when we contemplate the lofty mission so well +performed by this noble angler, no member of our brotherhood can do +better in its vindication than to point to his career as proof of what +the fishing habit has done for humanity. + + +What Mashpee Waters Did for Webster + +Daniel Webster, too, was a fisherman--always in good and regular +standing. In marshaling the proof which his great life furnishes of the +beneficence of the fishing propensity, I approach the task with a +feeling of awe quite natural to one who has slept in the room occupied +by the great Expounder during his fishing campaigns on Cape Cod and +along the shores of Mashpee Pond and its adjacent streams. This +distinguished member of our fraternity was an industrious and attentive +fisherman. He was, besides, a wonderful orator--and largely so because +he was a fisherman. He himself has confessed to the aid he received +from a fishing environment in the preparation of his best oratorical +efforts; and other irrefutable testimony to the same effect is at hand. + +It is not deemed necessary to cite in proof of such aid more than a +single incident. Perhaps none of Mr. Webster's orations was more +notable, or added more to his lasting fame, than that delivered at the +laying of the cornerstone of the Bunker Hill Monument. And it will +probably be conceded that its most impressive and beautiful passage was +addressed to the survivors of the War of Independence then present, +beginning with the words, "Venerable men!" This thrilling oratorical +flight was composed and elaborated by Mr. Webster while wading waist +deep and casting his flies in Mashpee waters. He himself afterward +often referred to this circumstance; and one who was his companion on +this particular occasion has recorded the fact that, noticing +indications of laxity in fishing action on Mr. Webster's part, he +approached him, and that, in the exact words of this witness, "he seemed +to be gazing at the overhanging trees, and presently advancing one foot +and extending his right hand he commenced to speak, 'Venerable Men!'" + + +Mr. Webster's Remarks to a Fish + +Though this should be enough to support conclusively the contention that +incidents of Mr. Webster's great achievements prove the close +relationship between fishing and the loftiest attainments of mankind, +this branch of our subject ought not to be dismissed without reference +to a conversation I once had with old John Attaquin, then a patriarch +among the few survivors of the Mashpee Indians. He had often been Mr. +Webster's guide and companion on his fishing trips and remembered +clearly many of their happenings. It was with a glow of love and +admiration amounting almost to worship that he related how this great +fisherman, after landing a large trout on the bank of the stream, +"talked mighty strong and fine to that fish and told him what a mistake +he had made, and what a fool he was to take that fly, and that he would +have been all right if he had let it alone." Who can doubt that patient +search would disclose, somewhere in Mr. Webster's speeches and +writings, the elaboration, with high intent, of that "mighty strong and +fine" talk addressed to the fish at Mashpee? + +The impressive story of this simple, truthful old Indian was +delightfully continued when, with the enthusiasm of an untutored mind +remembering pleasant sensations, the narrator told how the great +fisherman and orator having concluded his "strong, fine talk," would +frequently suit the action to the word, when he turned to his guide and +proposed a fitting libation in recognition of his catch. This part of +the story is not here repeated on account of its superior value as an +addition to the evidence we have already gathered, but I am thus given +an opportunity to speak of the emotion which fascinated me as the story +proceeded, and as I recalled how precisely a certain souvenir called +"the Webster Flask," carefully hoarded among my valued possessions, was +fitted to the situation described. + +Let it be distinctly understood that the claim is not here made that all +who fish can become as great as Henry Ward Beecher or Daniel Webster. It +is insisted, however, that fishing is a constructive force, capable of +adding to and developing the best there is in any man who fishes in a +proper spirit and among favorable surroundings. In other words, it is +claimed that upon the evidence adduced it is impossible to avoid the +conclusion that the fishing habit, by promoting close association with +Nature, by teaching patience, and by generating or stimulating useful +contemplation, tends directly to the increase of the intellectual power +of its votaries, and, through them, to the improvement of our national +character. + +In pursuance of the plan adopted for the presentation of our subject, +mention must now be made of the qualities of heart and disposition +absolutely essential to the maintenance of honorable membership in the +fishing fraternity. This mode of procedure is not only made necessary by +the exigencies of our scheme, but the brotherhood of fishermen would not +be satisfied if the exploitation of their service to humanity and their +value to the country should terminate with a recital of the usefulness +of their honorable pursuit. The record would be woefully incomplete if +reference were omitted to the relation of fishing to the moral +characteristics and qualities of heart, with which it is as vitally +connected as with the intellectual traits already mentioned. + +No man can be a completely good fisherman unless within his piscatorial +sphere he is generous, sympathetic and honest. If he expects to enjoy +that hearty and unrestrained confidence of his brethren in the +fraternity which alone can make his membership a comfort and a delight, +he must be generous to the point of willingness to share his last +leaders and flies, or any other items of his outfit, with any worthy +fellow-fisherman who may be in need. The manifestation of littleness +and crowding selfishness often condoned in other quarters, and the +over-reaching conduct so generally permitted in business circles, are +unpardonable crimes in the true fisherman's code. + +Of course, there is nothing to prevent those from fishing who wholly +disregard all rules of generosity, fairness and decency. Nor can we of +the brotherhood of true fishermen always shield ourselves from the +reproach to which we are subjected by those who steal our livery and +disgrace it by casting aside all manly liberality in their intercourse +with other fishermen and all considerate self-restraint in their +intercourse with fish. We constantly deprecate the existence of those +called by our name, in whose low conception of the subject, fishing is +but a greedy game, where selfishness and meanness are the winning cards, +and where the stakes are the indiscriminate and ruthless slaughter of +fish; and let it be here said, once for all, that with these we have +nothing to do except to condemn them as we pass. Our concern is with +true fishermen--a very different type of mankind--and with those who +_prima facie_ have some claim to the title. + + +How to Know a True Fisherman + +No burdensome qualifications or tedious probation obstruct the entrance +to this fraternity; but skill and fishing ability count for nothing in +eligibility. The oldest and most experienced and skillful fisherman +will look with composure upon the vanishing chances of his catch through +the floundering efforts of an awkward beginner, if the awkward +flounderer has shown that he is sound at heart. He may not fish well, +but if he does not deliberately rush ahead of all companions to pre-empt +every promising place in the stream, nor everlastingly study to secure +for his use the best of the bait, nor always fail to return borrowed +tackle, nor prove to be blind, deaf and dumb when others are in tackle +need, nor crowd into another's place, nor draw his flask in secrecy, nor +light a cigar with no suggestion of another, nor do a score of other +indefinable mean things that among true fishermen constitute him an +unbearable nuisance, he will not only be tolerated but aided in every +possible way. + +It is curious to observe how inevitably the brotherhood discovers +unworthiness. Even without an overt act it is detected--apparently by a +sort of instinct. In any event, and in spite of the most cunning +precautions, the sin of the unfit is sure to find them out; and no +excuse is allowed to avert unforgiving ostracism as its punishment. + +A true fisherman is conservative, provident, not given to envy, +considerate of the rights of others, and careful of his good name. He +fishes many a day and returns at night to his home, hungry, tired and +disappointed; but he still has faith in his methods, and is not tempted +to try new and more deadly lures. On the contrary, he is willing in all +circumstances to give the fish the chance for life which a liberal +sporting disposition has determined to be their due; and he will bide +his time under old conditions. He will not indulge his fishing +propensity to the extent of the wanton destruction and waste of fish; he +will not envy the superior advantages of another in the indulgence of +the pastime he loves so well; he will never be known to poach upon the +preserves of a fortunate neighbor; and no one will be quicker or more +spirited than he in the defense of his fishing honor and character. + + +Truth as Defined by the Honorable Guild + +This detailed recital of the necessary qualifications of good +fisherman-ship serves most importantly as the prelude of an invitation +for skeptics to observe the complete identity of these qualifications +with the factors necessary to good citizenship, and from thence to +concede a more ready recognition of the honorable place which should be +awarded to the fraternity among the agencies of our country's good. + +In conclusion, and to the end that there should be no appearance of +timidity or lack of frankness, something should be said explanatory of +the degree and kind of truthfulness which an honorable standing in the +fishing fraternity exacts. Of course, the notion must not be for a +moment tolerated that deliberate, downright lying as to an essential +matter is permissible. It must be confessed, however, that unescapable +traditions and certain inexorable conditions of our brotherhood tend to +a modification of the standards of truthfulness which have been set up +in other quarters. Beyond doubt, our members should be as reliable in +statement as our traditions and full enjoyment of fraternity membership +will permit. + +An attempt has been made to remedy the indefiniteness of this +requirement by insisting that no statement should be regarded as +sufficiently truthful for the fisherman's code that had not for +its foundation at least a belief of its correctness on the part +of the member making it. This was regarded as too much elasticity +in the quality of the belief required. The matter seems to have +been finally adjusted in a manner expressed in the motto: "In +essentials--truthfulness; in non-essentials--reciprocal latitude." If +it is objected that there may be great difficulty and perplexity in +determining what are essentials and what non-essentials under this rule, +it should be remembered that no human arrangements, especially those +involving morals and ethics, can be made to fit all emergencies. + +In any event, great comfort is to be found in the absolute certainty +that the law of truthfulness will be so administered by the brotherhood +that no one will ever be permitted to suffer in mind, body or estate by +reason of fishermen's tales. + + + + +Some Fishing Pretenses and Affectations + + +I would not permit without a resentful protest an expression of doubt as +to my good and regular standing in the best and most respectable circle +of fishermen. I am as jealous as a man can be of the fair fame of the +fraternity; and I am unyielding in my insistence upon the exclusion of +the unworthy from its membership. I also accept without demur all the +traditions of the order, provided that they have been always in the +keeping of the faithful, and carefully protected against all +discrediting incidents. In addition to all this, my faculty of credence +has been so cultivated and strengthened that I yield without question +implicit and unquestioning belief to every fishing story--provided +always that it is told by a fisherman of good repute, and on his own +responsibility. This is especially a matter of loyalty and principle +with me, for I am not only convinced that the usefulness and perhaps the +perpetuity of the order of Free and Accepted Fishermen depends upon a +bland and trustful credulity in the intercourse of its members with each +other, but I have constantly in mind the golden rule of our craft, which +commands us to believe as we would be believed. + +I have not made this profession of faith in a spirit of vainglorious +conceit, but by way of indicating the standpoint from which I shall +venture to comment on some weaknesses which afflict our brotherhood, and +as a reminder that the place I have earned among my associates should in +fairness and decency protect me from the least accusation of +censoriousness or purposeless faultfinding. + +I do not propose to make charges of wickedness and wrong-doing, which +call for such radical corrective treatment as might imperil the peace +and brotherly love of our organization. It is rather my intention mildly +to criticise some affectations and pretenses which I believe have grown +out of overtraining among fishermen, or have resulted from too much +elaboration of method and refinement of theory. + +These affectations and pretenses are, unfortunately, accompaniments of a +high grade of fishing skill; and in certain influential quarters they +are not only excused but openly and stoutly justified. I cannot, +therefore, expect my characterization of them as faults and weaknesses +to pass unchallenged; but I hope that in discharging the duty I have +undertaken I shall not incur the unfriendship of any considerable number +of my fishing brethren. + +It has often occurred to me that the very noticeable and increasing +tendency toward effeminate attenuation and æsthetic standards among +anglers of an advanced type, is calculated to bring about a substitution +of scientific display with rod and reel for the plain, downright, +common-sense enjoyment of fishing. This would be a distinct and +lamentable loss, resulting in the elimination to a great extent of +individual initiative, and the disregard of the inherent distinction +between good and bad fishermen, as measured by natural aptitude and +practical results. + +As in an organized commonwealth neither the highest nor the lowest +elements of its people constitute its best strength and reliance, so in +the fraternity of fishermen neither the lowest hangers-on and intruders, +nor the highest theorists who would make fishing a scientific exercise +instead of a manly, recreative pursuit, make up the supporting and +defensive power of the organization. It is the middle class in the +community of fishermen, those who fish sensibly and decently, though +they may be oblivious to the advantages of carrying fishing refinements +far beyond the exigencies of catching fish, upon whom we must depend for +the promotion and protection of the practical interests of the +brotherhood. + +It is, therefore, of the utmost importance that the zeal and enthusiasm +of this valuable section of our membership should not be imperiled by +subjecting them to the humiliating consciousness that their sterling +fishing qualities are held in only patronizing toleration by those in +the fraternity who gratuitously assume fictitious and unjustifiable +superiority. + +I shall attempt to locate the responsibility for the affectations and +pretenses I have mentioned, not only in vindication of our sincere and +well-intentioned rank and file, but for another reason, which concerns +the peace of mind and comfort of every member of the organization in his +relationship with the outside world. The fact that we are in a manner +separated from the common mass of mankind naturally arouses the +unfriendly jealousy of those beyond the pale of the brotherhood; and +fishing--the fundamental object and purpose of our union--is in many +quarters decried as an absurd exertion or a frivolous waste of time. In +such circumstances we cannot be charged with a surrender of independence +if we attempt by a frank statement to deprive these ill-natured critics +of all excuse for attacking our entire body on account of faults and +weaknesses for which only a small minority is responsible. + +Bluntly stated, the affectations and pretenses which I have in mind, and +which in my opinion threaten to bring injury upon our noble pursuit, +grow out of the undue prominence and exaggerated superiority claimed for +fly-casting for trout. I hasten to say for myself and on behalf of all +well-conditioned fishermen that we are not inclined to disparage in the +least the delightful exhilaration of the sudden rise and strike, nor +the pleasurable exercise of skill and deft manipulation afforded by this +method of fishing. We have no desire to disturb by a discordant dissent +the extravagant praise awarded to the trout when he is called the +wariest of his tribe, "the speckled beauty," the aristocratic gentleman +among fish, and the most toothsome of his species. At the same time, we +of the unpretentious sort of fishermen are not obliged to forget that +often the trout will refuse to rise or strike and will wait on the +bottom for food like any plebeian fish, that he is frequently unwary and +stupid enough to be lured to his death by casts of the fly that are no +better than the most awkward flings, that notwithstanding his fine dress +and aristocratic bearing it is not unusual to find him in very low +company, that this gentleman among fish is a willing and shameless +cannibal, and that his toothsomeness, not extraordinary at best, is +probably more dependent than that of most fish upon his surroundings. + +While our knowledge of these things does not exact from us an +independent protest against constantly repeated praise of the qualities +of trout and of fly-casting as a means of taking them, it perhaps +adds to the spirit and emphasis of our dissent when we are told +that fly-casting for trout is the only style of fishing worthy of +cultivation, and that no other method ought to be undertaken by a true +fisherman. This is one of the deplorable fishing affectations and +pretenses which the sensible rank and file of the fraternity ought +openly to expose and repudiate. Our irritation is greatly increased when +we recall the fact that every one of these super-refined fly-casting +dictators, when he fails to allure trout by his most scientific casts, +will chase grasshoppers to the point of profuse perspiration, and turn +over logs and stones with feverish anxiety in quest of worms and grubs, +if haply he can with these save himself from empty-handedness. Neither +his fine theories nor his exclusive faith in fly-casting so develops his +self-denying heroism that he will turn his back upon fat and lazy trout +that will not rise. + +We hear a great deal about long casts and the wonderful skill they +require. To cast a fly well certainly demands dexterity and careful +practice. It is a matter of nice manipulation, and a slight variation in +execution is often apt to settle the question of success or failure in +results. It is, besides, the most showy of all fishing accomplishments, +and taken all together it is worth the best efforts and ambition of any +fisherman. Inasmuch, however, as the tremendously long casts we hear of +are merely exhibition performances and of but little if any practical +use in the actual taking of fish, their exploitation may be classed +among the rather harmless fishing affectations. There is a very +different degree of rankness in the claim sometimes made that an expert +caster can effectively send his fly on its distant mission by a motion +of his forearm alone, while all above the elbow is strapped to his side. +We take no risk in saying that such a thing was never done on a fishing +excursion, and that the proposition in all its aspects is the baldest +kind of a pretense. + +As becomes a consistent member of the fraternity of fishermen, I have +carefully avoided unfriendly accusation in dealing with a branch of +fishing enthusiastically preferred by a considerable contingent of my +associates. If, in lamenting the faddishness that has grown up about it, +plain language has been used, I have nevertheless been as tolerant as +the situation permits. No attempt has been made to gain the applause of +pin-hook-and-sapling fishermen, nor to give the least comfort to those +who are fishermen only in their own conceit, and whose coarse-handed +awkwardness, even with the most approved tackle, leads them to be +incurably envious of all those who fish well. + +It is not pleasant to criticise, even in a mild way, anything that +genuine fishermen may do--especially when their faults result from +over-zealous attachment to one of the most prominent and attractive +features of our craft's pursuit. It is, therefore, a relief to pass from +the field of criticism, and in the best of humor, to set against the +claim of exclusive merit made in behalf of fly-casting for trout the +delights and compensations of black-bass fishing. I am sure I shall +be seconded in this by a very large body of fishermen in the best of +standing. It is manifestly proper also to select for this competition +with trout casting a kind of fishing which presents a contrast in being +uninfluenced by any affectations or by a particle of manufactured and +fictitious inflation. + +In speaking of black bass I am not dealing with the large-mouthed +variety that are found in both Northern and Southern waters, and which +grow in the latter to a very large size, but only with the small-mouthed +family inhabiting the streams or lakes and ponds of the North, and which +are large when they reach four pounds in weight. I consider these, when +found in natural and favorable surroundings, more uncertain, whimsical +and wary in biting, and more strong, resolute and resourceful when +hooked, than any other fish ordinarily caught in fresh waters. They will +in some localities and at certain seasons rise to a fly; but this cannot +be relied upon. They can sometimes also be taken by trolling; but this +is very often not successful, and is at best a second-class style of +fishing. On the whole it is best and most satisfactory to attempt their +capture by still fishing with bait. + +To those with experience this will not suggest angling of a tame and +unruffled sort; and if those without experience have such an estimate of +it they are most decidedly reckoning without their host. As teachers of +patience in fishing, black bass are at the head of the list. They are +so whimsical that the angler never knows whether on a certain day they +will take small live fish, worms, frogs, crickets, grasshoppers, +crawfish or some other outlandish bait; and he soon learns that in the +most favorable conditions of wind and weather they will frequently +refuse to touch bait of any kind. In their intercourse with fishermen, +especially those in the early stages of proficiency, they are the most +aggravating and profanity-provoking animal that swims in fresh water. +Whether they will bite or not at any particular time we must freely +concede is exclusively their own affair; but having decided this +question against the fishermen, nothing but inherent and tantalizing +meanness can account for the manner in which a black bass will even then +rush for the bait, and after actually mouthing it will turn about and +insultingly whack it with his tail. An angler who has seen this +performance finds, in his desire to make things even with such +unmannerly wretches, a motive in addition to all others for a relentless +pursuit of the bass family. + +Another and more encouraging stage in bass fishing is reached when +biting seems to be the order of the day. It must not be supposed, +however, that thereupon the angler's troubles and perplexities are over, +or that nothing stands in the way of an easy and satisfying catch. +Experience in this kind of fishing never fails to teach that it is one +thing to induce these cunning fellows to take the bait, and quite +another to accomplish their capture. It is absolutely necessary in this +stage of the proceedings that the deliberation and gingerly touch of the +fish be matched by the deliberation and care on the part of the +fisherman at the butt of the rod; and the strike on his part must not be +too much hastened, lest he fail to lodge his hook in a good holding +place. Even if he succeeds in well hooking his fish he cannot +confidently expect a certain capture. In point of fact the tension and +anxiety of the work in hand begins at that very instant. + +Ordinarily when a bass is struck with the hook, if he is in surroundings +favorable to his activity, he at once enters upon a series of acrobatic +performances which, during their continuance, keep the fisherman in a +state of acute suspense. While he rushes away from and toward and around +and under the boat, and while he is leaping from the water and turning +somersaults with ugly shakes of his head, in efforts to dislodge the +hook, there is at the other end of the outfit a fisherman, tortured by +the fear of infirmity lurking somewhere in his tackle, and wrought to +the point of distress by the thought of a light hook hold in the fish's +jaw, and its liability to tear out in the struggle. If in the midst of +it all a sudden release of pull and a straightening of his rod give the +signal that the bass has won the battle, the vanquished angler has, +after a short period of bad behavior and language, the questionable +satisfaction of attempting to solve a forever unsolvable problem, by +studying how his defeat might have been avoided if he had managed +differently. + +No such perplexing question, however, is presented to the bass fisherman +who lands his fish. He complacently regards his triumph as the natural +and expected result of steadiness and skill, and excludes from his +thoughts all shadow of doubt concerning the complete correctness of his +procedure in every detail. + +My expressed design to place fishing for black bass with bait in +competition with fly-casting for trout will, I hope, be considered a +justification for the details I have given of bass fishing. It commends +itself in every feature to the sporting instincts of all genuine +anglers; and it is because I do not hope to altogether correct the +"Affectations and Pretenses of Fishing" that I have felt constrained to +rally those who should love angling for bass--to the end that at least a +good-natured division may be established within our fraternity between +an ornamental and pretense-breeding method and one which cultivates +skill, stimulates the best fishing traits, and remains untouched by any +form of affectation. + + + + +Summer Shooting + + +As a general rule our guns should be put away for a long rest before the +summer vacation. There is, however, one game situation which justifies +their use, and it is this situation which sometimes appropriately allows +a small-gauge gun to be placed beside the rod and reel in making up a +vacation outfit. + +In July or August the summer migration from their breeding places in +the far North brings shore-birds and plover--both old and full-grown +young--along our Eastern coast, in first-rate condition. My experience +in shooting this game has all been within recent years, and almost +entirely in the marshes and along the shores of Cape Cod. Like other +members of the present generation and later comers in a limited field, I +have been obliged to hear with tiresome iteration the old, old story of +gray-haired men who tell of the "arms and the man" who in days gone by, +on this identical ground, have slain these birds by thousands. The +embellishment of these tales by all the incidents that mark the progress +of our people in game extermination I have accepted as furnishing an +explanation of the meager success of many of my excursions; but at the +same time my condemnation of the methods of the inconsiderate +slaughterers who preceded me has led to a consoling consciousness of my +own superior sporting virtues. + +While I am willing to confess to considerable resentment against those +who in their shooting days were thoughtless enough to forget that I was +to come after them, it must by no means be understood that my gunning +for shore-birds has been discouraging. I have made some fair bags, and +any bag is large enough for me, providing I have lost no opportunities +and have shot well. Besides, I have never indulged in any shooting so +conducive to the stimulation and strengthening of the incomparable +virtue of patience. I have sat in a blind for five hours, by the +watch--and awake nearly all the time at that--without seeing or hearing +a bird worth shooting. + +It is, however, neither the killing of birds nor the cultivation of +patience that has exacted my absolute submission to the fascination of +shore-bird shooting on Cape Cod. It is hard to explain this fascination, +but my notion is that it grows out of a conceited attempt to calculate +the direction of the wind and other weather conditions over-night, the +elaborate preparations for a daylight start, the uncertainties of the +pursuit under any conditions, the hope, amounting almost to expectation, +that notwithstanding this the wisdom and calculation expended in +determining upon the trip will be vindicated, the delightful early +morning drive to the grounds, the anticipation of a flight of birds +every moment while there, and the final sustaining expectation of their +arrival in any event just before night. The singular thing in my case +is that if all goes wrong at last, and even if under the influence of +fatigue and disappointment I resolve during the drive home in chill and +darkness that the trip will not be repeated for many a long day, it is +quite certain that within forty-eight hours I shall be again observing +the weather and guessing what the direction of the wind will be the next +morning, in contemplation of another start. + +But some will say, how are the incidents of hope and expectation, +or of preparation and calculation, which are common to all sporting +excursions, made to account for this especial infatuation with +shore-bird shooting? I shall answer this question as well as I can by +suggesting that the difference is one of degree. In gunning for other +game one knows, or thinks he knows, where it is or ought to be. The wind +and weather, while not entirely ignored, usually have a subordinate +place in preliminary calculation, and the pleasures of hope and +expectation are kept within the limits of ability or luck in finding the +game. On the other hand, the shore-bird hunter knows not the abiding +place of his game. He knows that at times during certain summer months +these birds pass southward in their long migration, but he cannot know +whether they will keep far out at sea or will on some unknown day be +driven by wind and weather to the shore for temporary rest and feeding, +and thus give him his opportunity. Though the presence on marsh or shore +of a few bird stragglers may put him on his guard, it must still remain +a question whether the game in sufficient quantities to make good +shooting is hundreds or thousands of miles away or in the neighborhood +of the shooting grounds. + +I believe the unusual contingencies of shore-bird shooting and the wider +scope they give for hope and expectation, together with the manifold +conditions which give abundant opportunity for self-conceit in +calculating probabilities, account for its quality of exceptional +fascination. + +The sportsman who persists is apt occasionally to find a good number of +birds about the grounds; and when that happens, if he is adequately +equipped with good decoys, and the right spirit, and especially if he is +able to call the birds, he will enjoy a variety of fine shooting. The +initiated well understand the importance of the call, and they know that +the best caller will get the most birds. The notes of shore-birds, +though quite dissimilar, are in most cases easily imitated after a +little practice, and a simply constructed contrivance which can be +purchased at almost any sporting goods store will answer for all the +game if properly used. The birds are usually heard before they are +seen, and if their notes are answered naturally and not too vehemently +or too often, they will soon be seen within shooting range, whether they +are Black-Breasted Plover, Chicken Plover, Yellow Legs, Piping Plover, +Curlew, Sanderlings or Grass Birds. Of course, no decent hunter allows +them to alight before he shoots. + +I would not advise the summer vacationist who lacks the genuine sporting +spirit to pursue the shore-bird. Those who do so should not disgrace +themselves by killing the handsome little sand-pipers or peeps too small +to eat. It is better to go home with nothing killed than to feel the +weight of a mean, unsportsmanlike act. + + + + +Concerning Rabbit Shooting + + +Some hunters there are, of the super-refined and dudish sort, who deny +to the rabbit any position among legitimate game animals; and there are +others who, while grudgingly admitting rabbits to the list, seem to +think it necessary to excuse their concession by calling them hares. I +regard all this as pure affectation and nonsense. I deem it not beneath +my dignity and standing as a reputable gunner to write of the rabbit as +an entirely suitable member of the game community; and in doing so I am +not dealing with hares or any other thing except plain, little everyday +plebeian rabbits--sometimes appropriately called "cotton-tails." +Though they may be "defamed by every charlatan" among hunters of +self-constituted high degree, and despised by thousands who know nothing +of their game qualities, I am not ashamed of their pursuit; and I count +it by no means bad skill to force them by a successful shot to a +topsy-turvy pause when at their best speed. + +These sly little fellows feed at night, and during the day they hide so +closely in grass or among rocks and brush that it is seldom they can +be seen when at rest. Of course, no decent man will shoot a rabbit while +sitting, and I have known them to refuse to start for anything less than +a kick or punch. When they do start, however, they demonstrate quite +clearly that they have kept their feet in the best possible position for +a spring and run. After such a start the rabbit must in fairness be +given an abundant chance to gain full headway, and when he has traversed +the necessary distance for this, and is at his fastest gait, the hunter +that shoots him has good reason to be satisfied with his marksmanship. I +once actually poked one up and he escaped unhurt, though four loads of +shot were sent after him. + +In the main, however, dogs must be relied upon for the real enjoyment +and success of rabbit hunting. The fastest dogs are not the best, +because they are apt to chase the rabbit so swiftly and closely that he +quickly betakes himself to a hole or other safe shelter, instead of +relying upon his running ability. The baying of three or four good dogs +steadily following a little cotton-tail should be as exhilarating and as +pleasant to ears attuned to the music as if the chase were for bigger +game. As the music is heard more distinctly, the hunter is allowed to +flatter himself that his acute judgment can determine the route of the +approaching game and the precise point from which an advantageous shot +can be secured. The self-satisfied conceit aroused by a fortunate guess +concerning this important detail, especially if supplemented by a fatal +shot, should permit the lucky gunner to enjoy as fully the complacent +pleasurable persuasion that the entire achievement is due to his +sagacity, keenness and skill as though the animal circumvented were a +larger beast. In either case the hunter experiences the delight +born of a well-fed sense of superiority and self-pride; and this, +notwithstanding all attempts to keep it in the background, is the most +gratifying factor in every sporting indulgence. + +Some people speak slightingly of the rabbit's eating qualities. This +must be an abject surrender to fad or fashion. At any rate it is +exceedingly unjust to the cotton-tail; and one who can relish tender +chicken and refuse to eat a nicely cooked rabbit is, I believe, a victim +of unfounded prejudices. + +Why, then, should not rabbit hunting, when honorably pursued, be given a +respectable place among gunning activities? It certainly has every +element of rational outdoor recreation. It ministers to the most +exhilarating and healthful exercise; it furnishes saving relief from +care and overwork; it is free from wantonness and inexcusable +destruction of animal life, and, if luck favors, it gives play to +innocent but gratifying self-conceit. + +Let us remember, however, that if rabbit hunting is to be a manly +outdoor recreation, entirely free from meanness, and a sport in which a +true hunter can indulge without shame, the little cotton-tail must in +all circumstances be given a fair chance for his life. + + + + +A Word to Fishermen + + +Those of us who fish in a fair, well-bred and reasonable way, for the +purpose of recreation and as a means of increasing the table pleasures +of ourselves or our friends, may well regret the apparently unalterable +decree which gives to all those who fish, under the spur of any +motive--good, bad or indifferent--the name of fishermen. We certainly +have nothing in common with those who fish for a livelihood, unless +it be a desire to catch fish. We have, in point of fact, no closer +relationship than this with the murderously inclined, whose only motive +in fishing is to make large catches, and whose sole pleasure in the +pursuit is the gratification of a greedy propensity. Nevertheless we, +and those with whom we have so little sympathy, are by a sort of +unavoidable law of gravitation classed together in the same fraternity, +and called fishermen. Occasionally weak attempts have been made to +classify the best of this fraternity under the name of Anglers, or some +title of that kind, but such efforts have always failed. Even Izaak +Walton could not change the current of human thought by calling his +immortal book "The Compleat Angler." So it seems however much those +who fish may differ in social standing, in disposition and character, +in motive and ambition, and even in mode of operation, all must abide, +to the end of the chapter, in the contemplation of the outside world, +within the brotherhood called "Fishermen." Happily, however, this +grouping of incongruous elements under a common name does not prevent +those of us who properly appreciate the importance of upholding the +respectability of decent fishing from coming to an agreement concerning +certain causes of congratulation and certain rules of conduct. + +We who claim to represent the highest fishing aspirations are sometimes +inclined to complain on days when the fish refuse to bite. There can be +no worse exhibition than this of an entire misconception of a wise +arrangement for our benefit. We should always remember that we have +about us on every side thousands of those who claim membership in the +fishing fraternity, because, in a way, they love to fish when the +fish bite--and only then. These are contented only when capture is +constant, and their only conception of the pleasures of fishing rests +upon uninterrupted slaughter. If we reflect for a moment upon the +consequences of turning an army of fishermen like these loose upon fish +that would bite every day and every hour, we shall see how nicely the +vicissitudes of fishing have been adjusted, and how precisely and +usefully the fatal attack of discouraging bad luck selects its +victims. If on days when we catch few or no fish we feel symptoms of +disappointment, these should immediately give way to satisfaction when +we remember how many spurious and discouraged fishermen are spending +their time in hammocks or under trees or on golf fields instead of with +fishing outfits, solely on account of just such unfavorable days. We +have no assurance that if fish could be easily taken at all times the +fishing waters within our reach would not be depopulated--a horrible +thing to contemplate. Let it not be said that such considerations as +these savor of uncharitableness and selfishness on our part. We are only +recognizing the doctrine of the survival of the fittest as applied to +fishermen, and claiming that these "fittest" should have the best +chance. + +What has been said naturally leads to the suggestion that consistency +requires those of us who are right-minded fishermen to reasonably limit +ourselves as to the number of fish we should take on favorable days. On +no account should edible fish be caught in such quantities as to be +wasted. By restraining ourselves in this matter we discourage in our own +natures the growth of greed, we prevent wicked waste, we make it easier +for us to bear the fall between decent good luck and bad luck, or no +luck, and we make ourselves at all points better men and better +fishermen. + +We ought not to forget these things as we enter upon the pleasures of +our summer's fishing. But in any event let us take with us when we go +out good tackle, good bait, and plenty of patience. If the wind is in +the South or West so much the better, but let's go, wherever the wind +may be. If we catch fish we shall add zest to our recreation. If we +catch none, we shall still have the outing and the recreation--more +healthful and more enjoyable than can be gained in any other way. + + + + +A Duck-Hunting Trip + + +It is not a pleasant thing for one who prides himself on his strict +obedience to game laws to be accused of violating these laws whenever he +hunts or fishes--and especially is it exasperating to be thus accused +solely for the delectation or profit of some hungry and mendacious +newspaper correspondent. It is not true that I was once arrested in +Virginia for violation of the game laws, or for shooting without a +license; nor was any complaint ever made against me; nor, so far as I +know, was such a thing ever contemplated. + + +Sport Versus Slaughter + +Equally false and mischievous, though not involving a violation of law, +was the charge that a party of which I was a member killed five hundred +ducks. Our shooting force on that expedition consisted of five gunners +of various grades of hunting ability, including one who had not "fired a +gun in twenty years," and another who could "do pretty well with a +rifle, but didn't know much about a shotgun." We were shooting four +days, but on only one of these days was our entire force engaged. +There was not one in the party who would not have been ashamed of any +complicity in the killing of five hundred ducks, within the time spent +and in the circumstances surrounding us; nor is there one of the party +who does not believe that, if the extermination of wild ducks is to be +prevented, and if our grandchildren are to know anything about duck +shooting, except as a matter of historical reading, stringent and +intelligent laws for the preservation of this game must be supplemented +and aided by an aggressive sentiment firmly held among decent ducking +sportsmen, making it disgraceful to kill ducks for the purpose of +boasting of a big bag, or for the mere sake of killing. Those who hunt +ducks with no better motives than these, and who are restrained, in the +absence of law, by nothing except the lack of opportunity to kill, are +duck-slaughterers, who merit the contempt of the present generation and +the curses of generations yet to come. + +Our party killed about one hundred and twenty-five ducks. We ate as many +as we cared to eat during our stay among the hunting marshes, and we +brought enough home to eat on our own tables and to distribute among our +friends. It seems to me that gunners who kill as many ducks as will +answer all these purposes ought to be satisfied. + + +On the Cooking of Wild Ducks + +And just here I want to suggest something which ought to greatly curtail +the distribution of wild ducks among our friends. In households where no +idea prevails of the difference between properly cooking a wild duck and +one brought up in a barnyard, a complimentary gift of wild fowl is +certainly of questionable advisability; for if these are cooked after +the fashion prescribed for the domestic duck they will be so thoroughly +discredited in the eating that the recipient of the gift will come near +suspecting a practical joke, and the donor will be nearly guilty of +waste. + +In Virginia they have a very good law prohibiting duck shooting on +Wednesdays and Saturdays, and of course on Sundays. These are called +rest days. We arrived at the very comfortable club-house of the Back Bay +Club, in Princess Anne County, about noon one Saturday, with weather +very fair and quiet--too much so for good ducking. From the time of our +arrival until very early Monday morning, besides eating and sleeping, we +had nothing to do but to "get ready." It must not be supposed that those +words only mean the settlement in our quarters and the preparation of +guns, ammunition and other outfit. Many other things are necessary by +way of stimulating interest and filling the minds of waiting gunners +with lively anticipation and hope. Thus during the preparatory hours +left to us our eyes were strained hundreds of times from every favorable +point of observation in search of flying ducks; hundreds of times the +question as to the most desirable shooting points was discussed, and +thousands of times the wish was expressed that Monday, instead of being +a "blue bird day," would present us with a good, stiff breeze from the +right direction. The field of prediction was open to all of us, and none +avoided it. A telling hit was made by the most self-satisfied +weather-prophet of the party, who foretold an east wind at sundown, +which promptly made its appearance on schedule time. + +When we were roused out of bed at 4.30 o'clock that Monday morning we +found our east wind still with us in pretty good volume, and although we +all knew it was not in the most favorable quarter, and that the weather +was too warm for the best shooting, it was with high hopes that we got +into our boats and started in midnight darkness for our blinds. Whatever +anticipation of good shooting I had indulged met with a severe reverse +when I learned that my shooting companion and I were expected to kill +ducks with our decoys placed to the windward of us. I warmly protested +against this, declaring that I had never done such a thing in my life, +and in the strongest language I objected to the arrangement; but all to +no purpose. + +As I expected, the ducks that were inclined to fly within our range, +coming up the wind behind us, saw our blinds and us before they saw the +decoys, and when we tried to turn and get a shot, a sudden flare or +tower put them out of reach. As for fair decoying, they had no notion of +such a thing. We killed a few ducks through much tribulation; but the +irritation of knowing that many good opportunities had been lost by our +improper location more than overbalanced all the satisfaction of our +slight success. That my theory on the subject of windward decoys is +correct was proved when on Thursday, with a west wind and decoys to the +leeward, we killed at the same place more than twice as many ducks as we +killed the first day. This was not because more came to us, but because +they came in proper fashion. + + +On Having One's "Eye Wiped" + +It was on this day that I once or twice had my "eye wiped," and I recall +it even now with anything but satisfaction. It is a provoking thing to +miss a fair shot, but to have your companion after you have had your +chance knock down the bird by a long, hard shot makes one feel somewhat +distressed. This we call "wiping the eye"; but I have always thought the +sensation caused by this operation justified calling it "gouging the +eye." + +We left for home after one more very cold day spent in the blinds, with +some good shooting. Every one of the party was enthusiastic in speaking +of the pleasure our outing had afforded us, and all were outspoken in +the hope that our experience might be repeated in the future. + +Now, let it be observed that most prominent among the things that had +occupied us and were thus delightfully remembered, and among the +experiences desired again in the future, were the rigors and discomforts +we had undergone in our shooting. So far as the good things and the +comforts of the club-house itself entered into the enjoyment of our +trip, it would be strange if they did not present great allurement; for +nothing in the way of snug shelter and good eating and drinking was +lacking. It is not so easy, however, to reason out the duck hunter's +eagerness to leave a warm bed, morning after morning, long before light, +and go shivering out into the cold and darkness for the sake of reaching +his blind before daybreak--not to find there warmth and shelter, but to +sit for hours chilled to the bone patiently waiting for the infrequent +shot which reminds him that he is indulging in sport or healthful +recreation. Suppose that such a regimen as this were prescribed in cold +blood as necessary to health. How many would think health worth the cost +of such hardships? + + +"The Duck Hunter Is Born--Not Made" + +Suppose the discomforts willingly endured by duck hunters were required +of employees in an industrial establishment. There would be one place +where a condition of strike would be constant and chronic. If it be said +that the gratification of bringing down ducks pays for all the suffering +of their pursuit, the question obtrudes itself, how is this compensation +forthcoming in the stress of bad luck or no luck, and how is it that the +duck-hunting propensity survives all conditions and all fortunes? + +I am satisfied that there is but one way to account for the unyielding +enthusiasm of those who hunt ducks and for their steady devotion to +their favorite recreation: The duck hunter is born--not made. + + + + +Quail Shooting + + +We hear a great deal in these days about abundant physical exercise as a +necessary factor in the maintenance of sound health and vigor. This is +so universally and persistently enjoined upon us by those whose studies +and efforts are devoted to our bodily welfare that frequently, if we +withhold an iota of belief concerning any detail of the proposition, we +subject ourselves to the accusation of recklessly discrediting the laws +of health. + +While beyond all doubt a wholesale denial of the importance of physical +exertion to a desirable condition of bodily strength would savor of +foolish hardihood, we are by no means obliged to concede that mere +activity of muscles without accompaniment constitutes the exercise best +calculated to do us good. In point of fact we are only boldly honest and +sincere when we insist that really beneficial exercise consists as much +in the pursuit of some independent object we desire to reach or gain by +physical exertion, coupled with a pleasant stimulation of mental +interest and recreation, as in any given kind or degree of mere muscular +activity. Bodily movement alone, undertaken from a sense of duty or upon +medical advice, is among the dreary and unsatisfying things of life. It +may cultivate or increase animal strength and endurance, but it is apt +at the same time to weaken and distort the disposition and temper. The +medicine is not only distasteful, but fails in efficacy unless it is +mingled with the agreeable and healing ingredients of mental recreation +and desirable objects of endeavor. + +I am convinced that nothing meets all the requirements of rational, +healthful outdoor exercise more completely than quail shooting. It seems +to be so compounded of wholesome things that it reaches, with vitalizing +effect, every point of mental or physical enervation. Under the +prohibitions of the law, or the restraints of sporting decency, or both, +it is permitted only at a season of the year when nature freely +dispenses, to those who submit to her treatment, the potent tonic of +cool and bracing air and the invigorating influences of fields and trees +and sky, no longer vexed by summer heat. It invites early rising; and as +a general rule a successful search for these uncertain birds involves +long miles of travel on foot. Obviously this sport furnishes an +abundance of muscular action and physically strengthening surroundings. +These, fortunately, are supplemented by the eager alertness essential to +the discovery and capture of game well worth the effort, and by the +recreative and self-satisfying complacency of more or less skillful +shooting. + +In addition to all this, the quail shooter has on his excursions a +companion, who not only promotes his success, but whose manner of +contributing to it is a constant source of delight. I am not speaking of +human companionship, which frequently mars pleasure by insistent +competition or awkward interference, but of the companionship of a +faithful, devoted helper, never discouraged or discontented with his +allotted service, except when the man behind the gun shoots badly, and +always dumbly willing to concede to the shooter the entire credit of a +successful hunt. The work in the field of a well-trained dog is of +itself an exhibition abundantly worth the fatigue of a quailing +expedition. It behooves the hunter, however, to remember that the dog is +in the field for business, and that no amount of sentimental admiration +of his performances on the part of his master will compensate him, if, +after he has found and indicated the location of the game, it escapes +through inattention or bad shooting at the critical instant. The +careless or bungling shooter who repeatedly misses all manner of fair +shots, must not be surprised if, in utter disgust, his dog companion +sulkily ceases effort, or even wholly abandons the field, leaving the +chagrined and disappointed hunter to return home alone--leg weary, +gameless and ashamed. He is thus forced to learn that hunting-dog +intelligence is not limited to abject subservience; and he thus gains a +new appreciation of the fact that the better his dog, the better the +shooter must know "what to do with his gun." + +I do not assume to be competent to give instruction in quail shooting. I +miss too often to undertake such a _rôle_. It may not, however, be +entirely unprofitable to mention a fault which I suppose to be somewhat +common among those who have not reached the point of satisfactory skill, +and which my experience has taught me will stand in the way of success +as long as it remains uncorrected. I refer to the instinctive and +difficultly controlled impulse to shoot too quickly when the bird rises. +The flight seems to be much more speedy than it really is; and the +undrilled shooter, if he has any idea in his mind at all, is dominated +by the fear that if the formality of aiming his gun is observed the +game will be beyond range before he shoots. This leads to a nervous, +flustered pointing of the gun in the direction of the bird's flight, and +its discharge at such close range that the load of shot hardly separates +in the intervening distance. Nine times out of ten the result is, of +course, a complete miss; and if the bird should at any time under these +conditions be accidentally hit, it would be difficult to find its +scattered fragments. An old quail shooter once advised a younger one +afflicted with this sort of quick triggeritis: "When the bird gets up, +if you chew tobacco spit over your shoulder before you shoot." + +It is absolutely certain that he who aspires to do good quail shooting +must keep cool; and it is just as certain that he must trust the +carrying qualities of his gun as well as his own ability and the +intelligence of his dog. If he observes these rules, experience and +practice will do the rest. + +I hope I may be allowed to suggest that both those who appreciate the +table qualities of the toothsome quail, and those who know the keen +enjoyment and health-giving results of their pursuit, should recognize +it as quite worth their while, and as a matter of duty, to co-operate in +every movement having for its object the protection, preservation and +propagation of this game. Our quail have many natural enemies; they are +often decimated by the severity of winter, and there are human beings so +degraded and so lost to shame as to seek their destruction in ways most +foul. A covey of quail will sometimes huddle as close together as +possible in a circle, with their heads turned outward. I have heard of +men who, discovering them in this situation, have fired upon them, +killing every one at a single shot. There ought to be a law which would +consign one guilty of this crime to prison for a comfortable term of +years. A story is told of a man so stupidly unsportsmanlike that when he +was interfered with as he raised his gun, apparently to shoot a quail +running on the ground, he exclaimed with irritation: "I did not intend +to shoot until it had stopped running." This may be called innocent +stupidity; but there is no place for such a man among sportsmen, and he +is certainly out of place among quail. + +It is cause for congratulation that so much has been done for quail +protection and preservation through the enactment of laws for that +purpose. But neither these nor their perfunctory enforcement will be +sufficiently effective. There must be, in addition, an active sentiment +aroused in support of more advanced game legislation, and of willing, +voluntary service in aid of its enforcement; and in the meantime all +belonging to the sporting fraternity should teach that genuine +sportsmanship is based upon honor, generosity, obedience to law and a +scrupulous willingness to perpetuate, for those who come after them, the +recreation they themselves enjoy. + + + + +TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: + +Minor changes have been made to correct typesetters' errors; otherwise, +every effort has been made to remain true to the author's words and +intent. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Fishing and Shooting Sketches, by Grover Cleveland + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FISHING AND SHOOTING SKETCHES *** + +***** This file should be named 35351-8.txt or 35351-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/3/5/35351/ + +Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images +generously made available by The Internet Archive/American +Libraries.) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Fishing and Shooting Sketches + +Author: Grover Cleveland + +Illustrator: Henry S. Watson + +Release Date: February 21, 2011 [EBook #35351] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FISHING AND SHOOTING SKETCHES *** + + + + +Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images +generously made available by The Internet Archive/American +Libraries.) + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 310px;"> +<img src="images/icover.jpg" width="310" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<h1 style="color: red;">Fishing and<br /> +Shooting Sketches</h1> + +<h3>BY</h3> +<h2>GROVER CLEVELAND</h2> + +<h4>Illustrated by<br /> +HENRY S. WATSON</h4> + +<p class="smallgap"> </p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 103px;"> +<img src="images/ititle.jpg" width="103" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p class="smallgap"> </p> + +<h3>NEW YORK<br /> +THE OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY<br /> +1906</h3> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, by The Curtis<br /> +Publishing Co.</span><br /> +<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906, by The Independent.</span><br /> +<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1903, by The Press Publishing Co.</span><br /> +<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1905, by The Country Calendar.</span></p> + +<hr class="tiny" /> + +<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1906, by The Outing Publishing Company.</span></p> + +<hr class="tiny" /> + +<p class="center">Entered at Stationers’ Hall, London, England.</p> + +<hr class="tiny" /> + +<p class="center"><i>All Rights Reserved.</i></p> + +<p class="smallgap"> </p> + +<p class="center">THE OUTING PRESS<br /> +DEPOSIT, N. Y.<br /> +</p> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 301px;"> +<img src="images/iphoto.jpg" width="301" height="450" alt="From Copyright Photo, by Pach." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><span style="margin-right: 9em;">From Copyright Photo, by Pach.</span></span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 260px;"> +<img src="images/isignature.jpg" width="260" height="100" alt="Yours truly +Grover Cleveland" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 365px;"> +<img src="images/icontents1.jpg" width="365" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>CONTENTS</h2> +<div class="centered"> +<table border="0" width="70%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="1" summary="CONTENTS"> + +<tr> +<td align="right"> </td> +<td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">THE MISSION OF SPORT AND<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">OUTDOOR LIFE</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">A DEFENSE OF FISHERMEN</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_19">19</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">THE SERENE DUCK HUNTER</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">THE MISSION OF FISHING AND<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">FISHERMEN</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">SOME FISHING PRETENSES AND<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">AFFECTATIONS</span></td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">SUMMER SHOOTING</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">CONCERNING RABBIT SHOOTING</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_153">153</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">A WORD TO FISHERMEN</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_165">165</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">A DUCK HUNTING TRIP</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_179">179</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">QUAIL SHOOTING</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p> </p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 206px;"> +<img src="images/icontents2.jpg" width="206" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 335px;"> +<img src="images/i001.jpg" width="335" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 182px;"> +<img src="images/i002.jpg" width="182" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 346px;"> +<img src="images/i003.jpg" width="346" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>The Mission of Sport and<br /> +Outdoor Life</h2> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">I</span> am sure that it is not necessary for me, at this late day, to dwell +upon the fact that I am an enthusiast in my devotion to hunting and +fishing, as well as every other kind of outdoor recreation. I am so +proud of this devotion that, although my sporting proclivities have at +times subjected me to criticism and petty <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>forms of persecution, I make +no claim that my steadfastness should be looked upon as manifesting the +courage of martyrdom. On the contrary, I regard these criticisms and +persecutions as nothing more serious than gnat stings suffered on the +bank of a stream—vexations to be borne with patience and afterward +easily submerged in the memory of abundant delightful accompaniments. +Thus, when short fishing excursions, in which I have sought relief from +the wearing labors and perplexities of official duty, have been +denounced in a mendacious newspaper as dishonest devices to cover +scandalous revelry, I have been able to enjoy a sort of pleasurable +contempt for the author of this accusation, while <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>congratulating myself +on the mental and physical restoration I had derived from these +excursions. So, also, when people, more mistaken than malicious, have +wagged their heads in pitying fashion and deprecated my indulgence in +hunting and fishing frivolity, which, in high public service, I have +found it easy to lament the neglect of these amiable persons to +accumulate for their delectation a fund of charming sporting +reminiscence; while, at the same time, I sadly reflected how their +dispositions might have been sweetened and their lives made happier if +they had yielded something to the particular type of frivolity which +they deplored.</p> + +<p>I hope it may not be amiss for me to supplement these personal +observations <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>by the direct confession that, so far as my attachment to +outdoor sports may be considered a fault, I am, as related to this +especial predicament of guilt, utterly incorrigible and shameless. Not +many years ago, while residing in a non-sporting but delightfully +cultured and refined community, I found that considerable indignation +had been aroused among certain good neighbors and friends, because it +had been said of me that I was willing to associate in the field with +any loafer who was the owner of a dog and gun. I am sure that I did not +in the least undervalue the extreme friendliness of those inclined to +intervene in my defense; and yet, at the risk of doing an apparently +ungracious thing, I felt inexorably <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>constrained to check their kindly +efforts by promptly conceding that the charge was too nearly true to be +denied.</p> + +<p>There can be no doubt that certain men are endowed with a sort of +inherent and spontaneous instinct which leads them to hunting and +fishing indulgence as the most alluring and satisfying of all +recreations. In this view, I believe it may be safely said that the true +hunter or fisherman is born, not made. I believe, too, that those who +thus by instinct and birthright belong to the sporting fraternity and +are actuated by a genuine sporting spirit, are neither cruel, nor greedy +and wasteful of the game and fish they pursue; and I am convinced that +there can be no better conservators <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>of the sensible and provident +protection of game and fish than those who are enthusiastic in their +pursuit, but who, at the same time, are regulated and restrained by the +sort of chivalric fairness and generosity, felt and recognized by every +true sportsman.</p> + +<p>While it is most agreeable thus to consider hunting and fishing as +constituting, for those especially endowed for their enjoyment, the most +tempting of outdoor sports, it is easily apparent that there is a +practical value to these sports as well as all other outdoor +recreations, which rests upon a broader foundation. Though the +delightful and passionate love for outdoor sports and recreation is not +bestowed upon every one as a natural <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>gift, they are so palpably related +to health and vigor, and so inseparably connected with the work of life +and comfort of existence, that it is happily ordained that a desire or a +willingness for their enjoyment may be cultivated to an extent +sufficient to meet the requirements of health and self-care. In other +words, all but the absolutely indifferent can be made to realize that +outdoor air and activity, intimacy with nature and acquaintanceship with +birds and animals and fish, are essential to physical and mental +strength, under the exactions of an unescapable decree.</p> + +<p>Men may accumulate wealth in neglect of the law of recreation; but how +infinitely much they will forfeit, in the deprivation of wholesome +vigor, in <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>the loss of the placid fitness for the quiet joys and +comforts of advancing years, and in the displacement of contented age by +the demon of querulous and premature decrepitude!</p> + +<div class="centerbox bbox"><p>“For the good God who loveth us<br /> +He made and loveth all.”</p></div> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>A Law not to Be Disobeyed</h3> + +<p>Men, in disobedience of this law, may achieve triumph in the world of +science, education and art; but how unsatisfying are the rewards thus +gained if they hasten the night when no man can work, and if the later +hours of life are haunted by futile regrets for what is still left +undone, that might have been done if there had been closer communion +with nature’s visible forms!</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11-2]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 354px;"> +<img src="images/i011.jpg" class="ispace" width="354" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p><p>In addition to the delight which outdoor recreations afford to those +instinctively in harmony with their enjoyment, and after a recognition +of the fact that a knowledge of their nerve- and muscle-saving +ministrations may be sensibly cultivated, there still remains another +large item that should be placed to their credit. Every individual, as a +unit in the scheme of civilized social life, owes to every man, woman +and child within such relationship an uninterrupted contribution to the +fund of enlivening and pleasurable social intercourse. None of us can +deny this obligation; and none of us can discharge it as we ought, if +our contributions are made in the questionable coin of sordidness and +nature’s perversion. Our <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>experience and observation supply abundant +proof that those who contribute most generously to the exhilaration and +charm of social intercourse will be found among the disciples of outdoor +recreation, who are in touch with nature and have thus kept fresh and +unperverted a simple love of humanity’s best environment.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>A Chance in the Open for All</h3> + +<p>It seems to me that thoughtful men should not be accused of exaggerated +fears when they deprecate the wealth-mad rush and struggle of American +life and the consequent neglect of outdoor recreation, with the +impairment of that mental and physical vigor absolutely essential to our +national welfare, and so abundantly promised to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>those who gratefully +recognize, in nature’s adjustment to the wants of man, the care of “the +good God” who “made and loveth all.”</p> + +<p>Manifestly, if outdoor recreations are important to the individual and +to the nation, and if there is danger of their neglect, every +instrumentality should be heartily encouraged which aims to create and +stimulate their indulgence in every form.</p> + +<p>Fortunately, the field is broad and furnishes a choice for all except +those wilfully at fault. The sky and sun above the head, the soil +beneath the feet, and outdoor air on every side are the indispensable +requisites.</p> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 202px;"> +<img src="images/i016.jpg" class="ispace" width="202" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 303px;"> +<img src="images/i017.jpg" width="303" height="500" alt="A Defence of Fishermen" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 190px;"> +<img src="images/i018.jpg" width="190" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 565px;"> +<img src="images/i019.jpg" width="565" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>A Defense of Fishermen</h2> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">B</span>y way of introduction and explanation, it should be said that there is +no intention at this time to deal with those who fish for a livelihood. +Those sturdy and hard-working people need no vindication or defense. Our +concern is with those who fish because they have an occult and +mysterious instinct which leads them to love it, because they court the +healthful, invigorating exertion it invites, and because its indulgence +brings them in close contact <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>and communion with Nature’s best and most +elevating manifestations. This sort of fishing is pleasure and not +work—sport and not money-grabbing. Therefore it is contemptuously +regarded in certain quarters as no better than a waste of time.</p> + +<p>Generous fishermen cannot fail to look with pity upon the benighted +persons who have no better conception than this of the uses and +beneficent objects of rational diversion. In these sad and ominous days +of mad fortune-chasing, every patriotic, thoughtful citizen, whether he +fishes or not, should lament that we have not among our countrymen more +fishermen. There can be no doubt that the promise of industrial peace, +of contented labor and of healthful <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>moderation in the pursuit of +wealth, in this democratic country of ours, would be infinitely improved +if a large share of the time which has been devoted to the concoction of +trust and business combinations, had been spent in fishing.</p> + +<p>The narrow and ill-conditioned people who snarlingly count all fishermen +as belonging to the lazy and good-for-nothing class, and who take +satisfaction in describing an angler’s outfit as a contrivance with a +hook at one end and a fool at the other, have been so thoroughly +discredited that no one could wish for their more irredeemable +submersion. Statesmen, judges, clergymen, lawyers and doctors, as well +as thousands of other outspoken members of the fishing fraternity, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>have +so effectively given the lie to these revilers of an honest and +conscientious brotherhood that a large majority have been glad to find +refuge in ignominious silence.</p> + +<p>Notwithstanding this, weak, piping voices are still occasionally heard +accusing fishermen of certain shortcomings and faults. These are so +unsubstantial and unimportant that, as against the high place in the +world’s esteem claimed by those who love to fish, they might well be +regarded as non-essentials, or, in a phrase of the day, as mere matters +of detail. But, although it may be true that these charges are on the +merits unworthy of notice, it cannot be expected that fishermen, proud +of the name, will be amiably willing to permit those <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>making such +accusations the satisfaction of remaining unchallenged.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>The Hangers-on of the Fraternity</h3> + +<p>At the outset, the fact should be recognized that the community of +fishermen constitute a separate class or a sub-race among the +inhabitants of the earth. It has sometimes been said that fishermen +cannot be manufactured. This is true to the extent that nothing can +supply the lack of certain inherent, constitutional and inborn qualities +or traits which are absolutely necessary to a fisherman’s make-up. Of +course there are many who call themselves fishermen and who insist upon +their membership in the fraternity who have not in their veins a drop of +legitimate fisherman blood. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>Their self-asserted relationship is +nevertheless sometimes seized upon by malicious or ignorant critics as +permitting the assumption that the weaknesses and sins of these +pretenders are the weaknesses and sins of genuine fishermen; but in +truth these pretenders are only interlopers who have learned a little +fish language, who love to fish only “when they bite,” who whine at bad +luck, who betray incredulity when they hear a rousing fish story, and +who do or leave undone many other things fatal to good and regular +standing. They are like certain whites called squaw-men, who hang about +Indian reservations, and gain certain advantages in the tribes by +marrying full-blooded Indian women. Surely no <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>just person would for a +moment suppose that genuine Indians could be treated fairly by measuring +them according to a squaw-man standard. Neither can genuine fishermen be +fairly treated by judging them according to the standards presented by +squaw-fishermen.</p> + +<p>In point of fact, full-blooded fishermen whose title is clear, and whose +natural qualifications are undisputed, have ideas, habits of thought and +mental tendencies so peculiarly and especially their own, and their +beliefs and code of ethics are so exclusively fitted to their needs and +surroundings, that an attempt on the part of strangers to speak or write +concerning the character or conduct of its approved membership savors of +impudent presumption. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>None but fishermen can properly deal with these +delicate matters.</p> + +<p>What sense is there in the charge of laziness sometimes made against +true fishermen? Laziness has no place in the constitution of a man who +starts at sunrise and tramps all day with only a sandwich to eat, +floundering through bushes and briers and stumbling over rocks or wading +streams in pursuit of the elusive trout. Neither can a fisherman who, +with rod in hand, sits in a boat or on a bank all day be called +lazy—provided he attends to his fishing and is physically and mentally +alert in his occupation. This charge may perhaps be truthfully made +against squaw-fishermen who become easily discouraged, who “tire and +faint” early, and lie down under <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>the shade to sleep, or go in swimming, +or who gaze about or read a book while their hooks rest baitless on the +bottom; but how false and unfair it is to accuse regular, full-blooded +fishermen of laziness, based on such performances as these! And yet this +is absurdly done by those who cannot tell a reel from a compass, and who +by way of familiarizing themselves with their topic leave their beds at +eight o’clock in the morning, ride to an office at ten, sit at a desk +until three or perhaps five, with an hour’s interval for a hearty +luncheon, and go home in the proud belief that they have done an active, +hard day’s work. Fishermen find no fault with what they do in their own +affairs, nor with their conception of work; but they do <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>insist that +such people have no right to impute laziness to those who fish.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>Why Fish Stories Should Be Believed</h3> + +<p>It is sometimes said that there is such close relationship between +mendacity and fishing, that in matters connected with their craft all +fishermen are untruthful. It must, of course, be admitted that large +stories of fishing adventure are sometimes told by fishermen—and why +should this not be so? Beyond all question there is no sphere of human +activity so full of strange and wonderful incidents as theirs. Fish are +constantly doing the most mysterious and startling things; and no one +has yet been wise enough to explain their ways or account for their +conduct. The best fishermen do <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>not attempt it; they move and strive in +the atmosphere of mystery and uncertainty, constantly aiming to reach +results without a clue, and through the cultivation of faculties, +non-existent or inoperative in the common mind.</p> + +<p>In these circumstances fishermen necessarily see and do wonderful +things. If those not members of the brotherhood are unable to assimilate +the recital of these wonders, it is because their believing apparatus +has not been properly regulated and stimulated. Such disability falls +very far short of justifying doubt as to the truth of the narration. The +things narrated have been seen and experienced with a fisherman’s eyes +and perceptions. This is perfectly understood <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>by listening fishermen; +and they, to their enjoyment and edification, are permitted by a +properly adjusted mental equipment to believe what they hear.</p> + +<p>This faculty is one of the safest signs of full-blooded right to +membership. If incredulity is intimated by a professional member no +injustice will be done if he is at once put under suspicion as a +squaw-fisherman. As to non-members who accuse true fishermen of +falsehood, it is perfectly clear that they are utterly unfitted to deal +with the subject. The only theory fitting the condition leads to the +statement that any story of personal experience told by a fisherman is +to the fishing apprehension indubitably true; and that since disbelief +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>in other quarters is owing to the lack of this apprehension, the folly +of accusing fishermen of habitual untruthfulness is quite apparent.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>The Taking of the Leviathan</h3> + +<p>The position thus taken by the brotherhood requires that they stand +solidly together in all circumstances. Tarpon fishing has added greatly +to our responsibilities. Even larger fish than these may, with the +extension of American possessions, fall within the treatment of American +fishermen. As in all past emergencies, we shall be found sufficient in +such future exigencies. All will go well if, without a pretense of +benevolent assimilation, we still fish as is our wont, and continue <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>our +belief in all that our brethren declare they have done or can do. A few +thousand years ago the question was impressively asked, “Canst thou draw +out leviathan with a hook?” We must not falter, if, upon its repetition +in the future, a brother replies: “Yes, with a ten-ounce rod;” nor must +we be staggered even if another declares he has already landed one of +these monsters. If American institutions are found adequate to the new +tasks which Destiny has put upon them in the extension of our lands, the +American Chapter of the world’s fishermen must not fail by their +time-honored methods and practices, and by such truthfulness as belongs +to the fraternity in the narration of fishing adventure, to subdue <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>any +new difficulties presented by the extension of our waters.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>Why the Biggest Fish Are Always<br /> +Lost</h3> + +<p>Before leaving this branch of our subject, especial reference should be +made to one item more conspicuous, perhaps, than any other, among those +comprised in the general charge of fishermen’s mendacity. It is +constantly said that they greatly exaggerate the size of the fish that +are lost. This accusation, though most frequently and flippantly made, +is in point of fact based upon the most absurd arrogance and a love of +slanderous assertion that passes understanding. These are harsh words; +but they are abundantly justified.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p><p>In the first place, all the presumptions are with the fisherman’s +contention. It is perfectly plain that large fish are more apt to escape +than small ones. Of course their weight and activity, combined with the +increased trickiness and resourcefulness of age and experience, greatly +increase their ability to tear out the hook, and enhance the danger that +their antics will expose a fatal weakness in hook, leader, line or rod. +Another presumption which must be regretfully mentioned, arises from the +fact that in many cases the encounter with a large fish causes such +excitement, and such distraction or perversion of judgment, on the part +of the fisherman as leads him to do the wrong thing or fail to do the +right thing at the critical <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>instant—thus actually and effectively +contributing to an escape which could not and would not have occurred +except in favor of a large fish.</p> + +<p>Beyond these presumptions we have the deliberate and simple story of the +fisherman himself, giving with the utmost sincerity all the details of +his misfortune, and indicating the length of the fish he has lost, or +giving in pounds his exact weight. Now, why should this statement be +discredited? It is made by one who struggled with the escaped fish. +Perhaps he saw it. This, however, is not important, for he certainly +felt it on his rod, and he knows precisely how his rod behaves in the +emergency of every conceivable strain.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p><h3>The Finny Hypnotist</h3> + +<p>All true fishermen who listen to his plain, unvarnished tale accept with +absolute faith the declared length and weight of the fish that was +almost caught; but with every presumption, besides positive statement, +against them, carping outsiders who cannot fish, and who love to accuse +fishermen of lying, are exposed in an attempt to originate or perpetuate +an envious and malicious libel.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37-8]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 312px;"> +<img src="images/i037.jpg" class="ispace" width="312" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>The case of our fraternity on this point of absolute and exact +truthfulness is capable of such irrefragable demonstration that anything +in the way of confession and avoidance ought to be considered +inadmissible. And yet, simply for the sake of argument,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> or by way of curious speculation, it may be interesting to intimate how +a variation of a few inches in the exact length or a few ounces in the +exact weight of a lost fish, as given by the loser, may be accounted +for, without meanly attributing to him intentional falsehood. The theory +has been recently started, that a trained hunting dog points a bird in +the field solely because the bird’s scent creates a hypnotic influence +on the dog, which impels him by a sort of suggestion to direct his nose +toward the spot from which such scent emanates. If there is anything +worth considering in this theory, why may not a struggling fish at the +end of a line exert such a hypnotic influence on the intensely excited +and receptive nature at the other extremity <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>of the fishing outfit, as +to suggest an arbitrary and independent statement of the dimensions of +the hypnotizer?</p> + +<p>With the accusations already mentioned it would certainly seem that the +enmity of those who take pleasure in reviling fishermen and their ways +should be satisfied. They have not been content, however, in the +demonstration of their evil-mindedness without adding to their +indictment against the brotherhood the charge of profanity. Of course, +they have not the hardihood to allege that our profanity is of that +habitual and low sort which characterizes the coarse and ill-bred, who +offend all decent people by constantly interlarding their speech with +fearful and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>irrelevant oaths. They, nevertheless, find sufficient +excuse for their accusation in the sudden ejaculations, outwardly +resembling profanity, which are occasionally wrung from fishermen in +trying crises and in moments of soul-straining unkindness of Fate.</p> + +<p>Now, this question of profanity is largely one of intention and +deliberation. The man who, intending what he says, coolly indulges in +imprecation, is guilty of an offense that admits of no excuse or +extenuation; but a fisherman can hardly be called profane who, when +overtaken without warning by disaster, and abruptly hurled from the +exhilarating heights of delightful anticipation to the depths of dire +disappointment, impulsively gives vent to his pent-up emotion by <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>the +use of a word which, though found in the list of oaths, is spoken +without intentional imprecation, and because nothing else seems to suit +the occasion. It is by no means to be admitted that fishing tends even +to this semblance of profanity. On the contrary, it imposes a +self-restraint and patient forbearance upon its advanced devotees which +tend to prevent sudden outbursts of feeling.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43-4]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 353px;"> +<img src="images/i043.jpg" class="ispace" width="353" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>It must in frankness be admitted, however, by fishermen of every degree, +that when the largest trout of the day, after a long struggle, winds the +leader about a snag and escapes, or when a large salmon or bass, +apparently fatigued to the point of non-resistance, suddenly, by an +unexpected and vicious leap, frees himself from <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>the hook, the fisherman’s code of morals will not condemn beyond +forgiveness the holder of the straightened rod if he impulsively, but +with all the gentility at his command, exclaims: “Damn that fish!” It is +probably better not to speak at all; but if strong words are to be used, +perhaps these will serve as well as any that can do justice to the +occasion.</p> + +<p>Uncle Toby, overcome with tender sympathy, swore with an unctious, +rotund oath, that his sick friend should not die; and we are told that +“the accusing spirit which flew up to Heaven’s chancery with the oath +blushed as he gave it in; and the recording angel as he wrote it down +dropped a tear upon the word and blotted it out forever.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p><p>The defense of the fishing fraternity which has been here attempted is +by no means as completely stated as it should be. Nor should the world +be allowed to overlook the admirable affirmative qualities which exist +among genuine members of the brotherhood, and the useful traits which an +indulgence in the gentle art cultivates and fosters. A recital of these, +with a description of the personal peculiarities found in the ranks of +fishermen, and the influence of these peculiarities on success or +failure, are necessary to a thorough vindication of those who worthily +illustrate the virtues of our clan.</p> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 373px;"> +<img src="images/i047.jpg" width="373" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 244px;"> +<img src="images/i048.jpg" width="244" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 469px;"> +<img src="images/i049.jpg" width="469" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>The Serene Duck Hunter</h2> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">I</span>n the estimation of many people, all those who for any purpose or in +any manner hunt ducks are grouped together and indiscriminately called +duck hunters. This is a very superficial way of dealing with an +important subject. In point of fact, the objects of duck shooting and +its methods of enjoyment are so various, and the disposition and +personal characteristics of those who engage in it present such strong +contrasts, that a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>recognition of their differences should suggest the +subdivision of this group into distinct and well-defined sections. Such +a subdivision would undoubtedly promote fairness and justice, and lead +to a better understanding of the general topic.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51-2]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 339px;"> +<img src="images/i051.jpg" class="ispace" width="339" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>There are those whose only claim to a place among duck hunters is based +upon the fact that they shoot ducks for the market. No duck is safe from +their pursuit in any place, either by day or night. Not a particle of +sportsmanlike spirit enters into this pursuit, and the idea never enters +their minds that a duck has any rights that a hunter is bound to +respect. The killing they do amounts to bald assassination—to murder +for the sake of money. All fair-minded men must <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>agree that duck hunters of this sort should be segregated from all +others and placed in a section by themselves. They are the market +shooters.</p> + +<p>There are others claiming a place in the duck-hunting group, who, though +not so murderously inclined as the market shooters, have such peculiar +traits and such distinctive habits of thought and action, as abundantly +justify placing them also in a classification of their own. These are +the hunters who rarely miss a duck, but whose deadly aim affords them +gratification only in so far as it is a prelude to duck mortality, and +who are happy or discontented as their heap of dead is large or small. +They have smothered the keen delights of imagination which should be the +cheering <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>concomitants of the most reputable grade of duck hunting, and +have surrendered its pleasures to actual results and the force of +external circumstances. Their stories of inordinate killing are +frequently heard, and often enliven the pages of sporting magazines. +There can be but little doubt that this contingent give unintentional +support to a popular belief, originating in the market shooters’ +operations, that duck shooting is a relentlessly bloody affair. These +are the dead shots among duck hunters.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>The Vindication of the Gentle<br /> +Huntsmen</h3> + +<p>The danger that all those who essay to shoot ducks may, by the conduct +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>of these two classes, acquire a general and unmitigated reputation for +persistent slaughter, cannot be contemplated without sadness. It is +therefore not particularly reassuring to recall the fact that our +countrymen seem just now to be especially attracted by the recital of +incidents that involve killing,—whether it be the killing of men or any +other living thing.</p> + +<p>It is quite probable that the aggregation of all duck hunters in one +general group cannot be at once remedied; and the expectation can hardly +be entertained that any sub-classification now proposed will gain the +acceptance and notoriety necessary for the immediate exoneration of +those included within this group who are not <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>in the least responsible +for the sordid and sanguinary behavior of either the market shooter or +the dead shot. These innocent ones comprise an undoubted majority of all +duck hunters; and their common tastes and enjoyments, as well as their +identical conceptions of duty and obligation, have drawn them together +in delightful fraternity. By their moderate destruction of duck life +they so modify the killing done by those belonging to the classes +already described, that the aggregate, when distributed among the entire +body of duck hunters, is relieved from the appearance of bloodthirsty +carnage; and they in every way exert a wholesome influence in the +direction of securing a place for duck hunting among recreations <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>which +are rational, exhilarating and only moderately fatal.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>The Honorable Order of Serene<br /> +Duck Hunters</h3> + +<p>It must be frankly confessed that the members of this fraternity cannot +claim the ability to kill ducks as often as is required by the highest +averages. This, however, does not in the least disturb their serenity. +Their compensations are ample. They are saved from the sordid and +hardening effects induced by habitual killing, and find pleasure in the +cultivation of the more delicate and elevating susceptibilities which +ducking environments should invite. Under the influence of these +susceptibilities there is developed a pleasing and innocent +self-deception, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>which induces the belief on the part of those with whom +it has lodgment, that both abundant shooting skill and a thorough +familiarity with all that pertains to the theory of duck hunting are +entirely in their possession and control. They are also led to the +stimulation of reciprocal credulity which seasons and makes digestible +tales of ducking adventure. Nor does bloody activity distract their +attention from their obligations to each other as members of their +especial brotherhood, or cause them to overlook the rule which requires +them to stand solidly together in the promotion and protection, at all +hazards, of the shooting reputation of every one of their associates. +These may well be called the Serene Duck Hunters.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59-60]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 349px;"> +<img src="images/i059.jpg" class="ispace" width="349" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p><p>All that has been thus far written may properly be regarded as merely an +introduction to a description, somewhat in detail, of the manner in +which these representatives of the best and most attractive type of duck +hunters enjoy their favorite recreation.</p> + +<p>A common and easy illustration of their indulgence of the sentimental +enjoyments available to them is presented when members of the fraternity +in the comfortable surroundings of camp undertake the discussion of the +merits of guns and ammunition. The impressiveness with which guns are +put to the shoulder with a view of discovering how they “come up,” the +comments on the length and “drop” of the different stocks, the solemn +look through the barrel from the opened <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>breech, and the suggestion of +slight “pitting,” are intensely interesting and gratifying to all +concerned.</p> + +<p>When these things are supplemented by an exchange of opinions concerning +ammunition, a large contribution is added to the entertainment of the +party. Such words as Schultz, Blue Ribbon, Dupont, Ballistite and Hazard +are rolled like sweet morsels under the tongue. Each of the company +declares his choice of powder and warmly defends its superiority, each +announces the number of drams that a ducking cartridge should contain, +and each declares his clear conviction touching the size of shot, and +the amount, in ounces and fractions of ounces, that should constitute an +effective load.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p><p>Undoubtedly the enjoyment supplied by such a discussion is keen and +exhilarating. That it has the advantage of ease and convenience in its +favor, is indicated by the fact that its effects are none the less real +and penetrating in the entire absence of any knowledge of the topics +discussed. To the serene duck hunter the pretense of knowledge or +information is sufficient. The important factors in the affair are that +each should have his turn, and should be attentively heard in his +exploitation of that which he thinks he knows.</p> + +<p>There is nothing in all this that can furnish reasonable ground for +reproach or criticism. If under the sanction of harmless self-deception +and pretense this duck-hunting contingent, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>to whom duck killing is not +inevitably available, are content to look for enjoyment among the things +more or less intimately related to it, it is quite their own affair. At +any rate it is sufficient to say that they have joined the serene +brotherhood for their pastime, and that any outside dictation or +criticism of the mode in which they shall innocently enjoy their +privileges of membership savors of gross impertinence.</p> + +<p>There comes a time, however, when the calm and easy enjoyments of +in-door comfort must give way to sterner activities, and when even the +serene duck hunter must face the discomfort of severe weather and the +responsibility of flying ducks. This exigency brings with it new duties +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>and new objects of endeavor; but the principles which are +characteristic of the fraternity are of universal application. Therefore +our serene duck hunter should go forth resolved to accomplish the best +results within his reach, but doubly resolved that in this new phase of +his enjoyment he will betray no ignorance of any detail, and that he +will fully avail himself of the rule unreservedly recognized in the +brotherhood, which permits him to claim that every duck at which his gun +is fired is hit—except in rare cases of conceded missing, when an +excuse should be always ready, absolutely excluding any suggestion of +bad shooting. And by way of showing his familiarity with the affair in +hand it is not at all amiss for him to give some <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>directions as he +enters his blind as to the arrangement of the decoys.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>How to Take Good and Bad Luck</h3> + +<p>It is quite likely that his first opportunity to shoot will be presented +when a single duck hovers over the decoys, and as it poises itself +offers as easy a target as if sitting on a fence. Our hunter’s gun is +coolly and gracefully raised, and simultaneously with its discharge the +duck falls helplessly into the water. This is a situation that calls for +no word to be spoken. Merely a self-satisfied and an almost indifferent +expression of countenance should indicate that only the expected has +happened, and that duck killing is to be the order of the day.</p> + +<p>Perhaps after a reasonable wait, another <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>venturesome duck will enter +the zone of danger and pass with steady flight over the decoys easily +within shooting distance. Again the gun of our serene hunter gives +voice, summoning the bird to instant death. To an impartial observer, +however, such a course would not seem to be in accordance with the +duck’s arrangements. This is plainly indicated by such an acceleration +of flight as would naturally follow the noise of the gun’s discharge and +the whistling of the shot in the rear of the expected victim.</p> + +<p>This is the moment when the man behind the gun should rise to the +occasion, and under the rule governing the case should without the least +delay or hesitation insist that the duck is hit. This may be done by the +use of one <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>of several appropriate exclamations—all having the sanction +of precedent and long use. One which is quite clear and emphatic is to +the effect that the fleeing duck is “lead ballasted,” another easily +understood is that it has “got a dose,” and still another of no +uncertain meaning, that it is “full of shot.” Whatever particular +formula is used, it should at once be followed by a decided command to +the guide in attendance to watch the disappearing bird and mark where it +falls.</p> + +<p>The fact should be here mentioned that the complete enjoyment of this +proceeding depends largely upon the tact and intelligence of the guide. +If with these he has a due appreciation of his responsibility as an +adjunct to the sport, and is also in proper accord <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>with his principal, +he will give ready support to the claim that the duck is mortally +wounded, at the same time shrewdly and with apparent depression +suggesting the improbability of recovering the slain.</p> + +<p>If as the hours wear away this process becomes so monotonous as to be +fatiguing, a restful variety may be introduced by guardedly +acknowledging an occasional miss, and bringing into play the excuses and +explanations appropriate to such altered conditions. A very useful way +of accounting for a shot missed is by the suggestion that through a +slightly erroneous calculation of distance the duck was out of range +when the shot was fired. A very frequent and rather gratifying pretext +for avoiding chagrin in case of a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>long shot missed is found in the +claim that, though the sound of shot striking the bird is distinctly +heard, their penetration is ineffective. Sometimes failure is attributed +to the towering or turning of the duck at the instant of the gun’s +discharge. It is at times useful to impute failure to the probability +that the particular cartridge used was stale and weak; and when all +these are inadmissible, the small size of the shot and the faulty +quality or quantity of powder they contain, may be made to do service; +and, in extreme cases, their entire construction as well as their +constructor may be roundly cursed as causes for a miscarriage of fatal +results.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p><h3>How True Duck Hunters Stand<br /> +Together</h3> + +<p>When the ducks have ceased to fly for the day the serene duck hunter +returns to camp in a tranquil, satisfied frame of mind befitting his +fraternity membership. He has several ducks actually in hand, and he has +fully enjoyed the self-deception and pretense which have led him to the +belief that he has shot well. His few confessed misses are all +satisfactorily accounted for; and he is too well broken to the +vicissitudes of duck shooting, and too old a hunter, to be cast down by +the bad fortune which has thickly scattered, over distant waters and +marshes, his unrecovered dead.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p><p>When at the close of such a day a party of serene duck hunters are +gathered together, a common fund of adventure is made up. Each as he +contributes his share is entitled to add such embellishments of the +imagination as will make his recital most interesting to his associates +and gratifying to himself; and a law tacitly adopted but universally +recognized by the company binds them all to an unquestioning acceptance +of the truth of every narration. The successes of the day as well as its +incidents of hard luck, and every excuse and explanation in mitigation +of small returns of game, as they are rehearsed, create lively interest +and quiet enjoyment. The one thing that might be a discordant note would +be a hint or confession <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>of downright and inexcusably bad shooting.</p> + +<p>In this delightful assemblage of serene duck hunters there is no place +for envious feeling toward either the slaughtering market shooter or the +insatiable dead shot. They only seek, in their own mild and gentle way, +the indulgence of the pleasures which the less bloody phases of duck +hunting afford; and no censorious critic has the right to demand that +their enjoyment should be marred or diminished by the exactions of +veracity or self-abasement.</p> + +<p>Reference has already been made to the scrupulous care of this +fraternity for the promotion and preservation, at all hazards, of the +shooting reputation of all the associates. This <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>is a most important +duty. Indeed, it may be reasonably feared that any neglect or faltering +in its discharge would undermine the entire fabric of the serene +brotherhood’s renown. The outside world should never gain from any of +its members the least hint that a weak spot has been developed in the +shooting ability of any of their number; and in giving an account of +hunting results it is quite within bounds for them to include in the +aggregate, not only the ducks actually killed and those reported killed, +but those probably killed and neither recovered nor reported. The fact +that such an aggregate has been reported by an associate should impart +to every member absolute verity, and each should make the statement his +own, to the displacement <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>of all other knowledge. Such ready support of +each other’s allegations and such entire self-abnegation are absolutely +necessary if the safety of the organization is to be insured, and if its +success and usefulness are to endure.</p> + +<p>Thus the great body of serene duck hunters, who have associated together +for the promotion of high aims and purposes, pursue the even tenor of +their way. They do not clamor for noisy recognition or make cheap +exhibition of their virtues. They will, however, steadily and +unostentatiously persevere, both by precept and practice, in their +mission to make all duck hunters better and happier, and to mitigate the +harsh and bloody features of duck hunting.</p> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 76-7]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 368px;"> +<img src="images/i077.jpg" width="368" height="500" alt="The Mission of Fishing and Fishermen" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 167px;"> +<img src="images/i078.jpg" width="167" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 394px;"> +<img src="images/i079.jpg" width="394" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>The Mission of Fishing and<br /> +Fishermen</h2> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">I</span>t was quite a long time ago that a compelling sense of duty led me to +undertake the exoneration of a noble fraternity, of which I am an humble +member, from certain narrow-minded, if not malicious, accusations. The +title given to what was then written, “A Defense of Fishermen,” was +precisely descriptive of its purpose. It was <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>not easy, however, to keep +entirely within defensive limits; for the temptation was very strong and +constant to abandon negation and palliation for the more pleasing task +of commending to the admiration and affection of mankind in affirmative +terms both fishing and fishermen. A determination to attempt this at +another time, and thus supplement the matter then in hand, made +resistance to this temptation successful; but the contemplated +supplementation was then foreshadowed in the following terms:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>“The defense of the fishing fraternity which has been here attempted is +by no means so completely stated as it should be. Nor should the world +be allowed to overlook the admirable affirmative qualities which exist +among <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>genuine members of the brotherhood and the useful traits which +the indulgence in the gentle art cultivates and fosters. A recital of +these, with a description of the personal influence of these +peculiarities found in the ranks of fishermen, and the influence of +these peculiarities on success or failure, are necessary to a thorough +vindication of those who worthily illustrate the virtues of our clan.”</p></div> + +<p>The execution of the design thus foreshadowed has until now been evaded +on account of the importance and delicacy of the undertaking and a +distrust of my ability to deal adequately with the subject. Though these +misgivings have not been overcome, my perplexity, as I enter upon the +work so long delayed, is somewhat <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>relieved by the hope that true +fishermen will be tolerant, whatever may be the measure of my success, +and that all others concerned will be teachable and open-minded.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>Lessons the Fisherman Learns from<br /> +Nature</h3> + +<p>The plan I have laid out for the treatment of my topic leads me, first +of all, to speak of the manner in which the fishing habit operates upon +man’s nature for its betterment; and afterward to deal with the +qualities of heart and disposition necessary to the maintenance of good +and regular standing in the fishing fraternity.</p> + +<p>There is no man in the world capable of profitable thought who does not +know that the real worth and genuineness <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>of the human heart are +measured by its readiness to submit to the influences of Nature, and to +appreciate the goodness of the Supreme Power who has made and beautified +Nature’s abiding-place. In this domain, removed from the haunts of men +and far away from the noise and dust of their turmoil and strife, the +fishing that can fully delight the heart of the true fisherman is found; +and here in its enjoyment, those who fish are led, consciously or +unconsciously, to a quiet but distinct recognition of a power greater +than man’s, and a goodness far above human standards. Amid such +surroundings and within such influences no true fisherman, whether +sensitively attuned to sublime suggestion, or of a coarser mold and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>apparently intent only upon a successful catch, can fail to receive +impressions which so elevate the soul and soften the heart as to make +him a better man.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85-6]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 319px;"> +<img src="images/i085.jpg" class="ispace" width="319" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>It is known of all men that one of the rudiments in the education of a +true fisherman is the lesson of patience. If he has a natural tendency +in this direction it must be cultivated. If such a tendency is lacking +he must acquire patience by hard schooling. This quality is so +indispensable in fishing circles that those who speak of a patient +fisherman waste their words. In point of fact, and properly speaking, +there can be no such thing as an impatient fisherman. It cannot, +therefore, be denied that in so far as fishing is a teacher +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>of the virtue of patience, it ought to be given a large item of credit +in reckoning its relation to the everyday affairs of life; for certainly +the potency of patience as a factor in all worldly achievements and +progress cannot be overestimated. If faith can move mountains, patience +and faith combined ought to move the universe.</p> + +<p>Moreover, if those who fish must be patient, no one should fail to see +that patience is a most desirable national trait and that it is vastly +important to our body politic that there should continue among our +people a large contingent of well-equipped fishermen, constantly +prepared and willing to contribute to their country’s fund of blessings +a liberal and pure supply of this saving virtue.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p><p>To those who are satisfied with a superficial view of the subject it may +seem impossible that the diligence and attention necessary to a +fisherman’s success can leave him any opportunity, while fishing, to +thoughtfully contemplate any matter not related to his pursuit. Such a +conception of the situation cannot be indorsed for a moment by those of +us who are conversant with the mysterious and unaccountable mental +phenomena which fishing develops. We know that the true fisherman finds +no better time for profitable contemplation and mental exercise than +when actually engaged with his angling outfit. It will probably never be +possible for us to gather statistics showing the moving sermons, the +enchanting poems, the learned arguments <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>and eloquent orations that have +been composed or constructed between the bites, strikes or rises of +fish; but there can be no doubt that of the many intellectual triumphs +won in every walk of life a larger proportion has been actually hooked +and landed with a rod and reel by those of the fishing fraternity than +have been secured in any one given condition of the non-fishing world.</p> + +<p>This may appear to be a bold statement. It is intended as an assertion +that fishing and fishermen have had much to do with the enlightenment +and elevation of humanity. In support of this proposition volumes might +be written; but only a brief array of near-at-hand evidence will be here +presented.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p><p>Those who have been fortunate enough to hear the fervid eloquence of +Henry Ward Beecher, and even those who have only read what he has +written, cannot overlook his fishing propensity—so constantly manifest +that the things he said and wrote were fairly redolent of fishing +surroundings. His own specific confession of fealty was not needed to +entitle him to the credentials of a true fisherman, nor to disclose one +of the never-failing springs of his best inspiration. When these things +are recalled, and when we contemplate the lofty mission so well +performed by this noble angler, no member of our brotherhood can do +better in its vindication than to point to his career as proof of what +the fishing habit has done for humanity.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p><h3>What Mashpee Waters Did for<br /> +Webster</h3> + +<p>Daniel Webster, too, was a fisherman—always in good and regular +standing. In marshaling the proof which his great life furnishes of the +beneficence of the fishing propensity, I approach the task with a +feeling of awe quite natural to one who has slept in the room occupied +by the great Expounder during his fishing campaigns on Cape Cod and +along the shores of Mashpee Pond and its adjacent streams. This +distinguished member of our fraternity was an industrious and attentive +fisherman. He was, besides, a wonderful orator—and largely so because +he was a fisherman. He himself has confessed to the aid he received +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>from a fishing environment in the preparation of his best oratorical +efforts; and other irrefutable testimony to the same effect is at hand.</p> + +<p>It is not deemed necessary to cite in proof of such aid more than a +single incident. Perhaps none of Mr. Webster’s orations was more +notable, or added more to his lasting fame, than that delivered at the +laying of the cornerstone of the Bunker Hill Monument. And it will +probably be conceded that its most impressive and beautiful passage was +addressed to the survivors of the War of Independence then present, +beginning with the words, “Venerable men!” This thrilling oratorical +flight was composed and elaborated by Mr. Webster while wading waist +deep and casting his <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>flies in Mashpee waters. He himself afterward +often referred to this circumstance; and one who was his companion on +this particular occasion has recorded the fact that, noticing +indications of laxity in fishing action on Mr. Webster’s part, he +approached him, and that, in the exact words of this witness, “he seemed +to be gazing at the overhanging trees, and presently advancing one foot +and extending his right hand he commenced to speak, ‘Venerable Men!’”</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>Mr. Webster’s Remarks to a Fish</h3> + +<p>Though this should be enough to support conclusively the contention that +incidents of Mr. Webster’s great achievements prove the close +relationship between fishing and the loftiest <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>attainments of mankind, +this branch of our subject ought not to be dismissed without reference +to a conversation I once had with old John Attaquin, then a patriarch +among the few survivors of the Mashpee Indians. He had often been Mr. +Webster’s guide and companion on his fishing trips and remembered +clearly many of their happenings. It was with a glow of love and +admiration amounting almost to worship that he related how this great +fisherman, after landing a large trout on the bank of the stream, +“talked mighty strong and fine to that fish and told him what a mistake +he had made, and what a fool he was to take that fly, and that he would +have been all right if he had let it alone.” Who can doubt that patient +search <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>would disclose, somewhere in Mr. Webster’s speeches and +writings, the elaboration, with high intent, of that “mighty strong and +fine” talk addressed to the fish at Mashpee?</p> + +<p>The impressive story of this simple, truthful old Indian was +delightfully continued when, with the enthusiasm of an untutored mind +remembering pleasant sensations, the narrator told how the great +fisherman and orator having concluded his “strong, fine talk,” would +frequently suit the action to the word, when he turned to his guide and +proposed a fitting libation in recognition of his catch. This part of +the story is not here repeated on account of its superior value as an +addition to the evidence we have already gathered, but I am thus given +an opportunity <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>to speak of the emotion which fascinated me as the story +proceeded, and as I recalled how precisely a certain souvenir called +“the Webster Flask,” carefully hoarded among my valued possessions, was +fitted to the situation described.</p> + +<p>Let it be distinctly understood that the claim is not here made that all +who fish can become as great as Henry Ward Beecher or Daniel Webster. It +is insisted, however, that fishing is a constructive force, capable of +adding to and developing the best there is in any man who fishes in a +proper spirit and among favorable surroundings. In other words, it is +claimed that upon the evidence adduced it is impossible to avoid the +conclusion that the fishing habit, by promoting close association <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>with +Nature, by teaching patience, and by generating or stimulating useful +contemplation, tends directly to the increase of the intellectual power +of its votaries, and, through them, to the improvement of our national +character.</p> + +<p>In pursuance of the plan adopted for the presentation of our subject, +mention must now be made of the qualities of heart and disposition +absolutely essential to the maintenance of honorable membership in the +fishing fraternity. This mode of procedure is not only made necessary by +the exigencies of our scheme, but the brotherhood of fishermen would not +be satisfied if the exploitation of their service to humanity and their +value to the country should terminate <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>with a recital of the usefulness +of their honorable pursuit. The record would be woefully incomplete if +reference were omitted to the relation of fishing to the moral +characteristics and qualities of heart, with which it is as vitally +connected as with the intellectual traits already mentioned.</p> + +<p>No man can be a completely good fisherman unless within his piscatorial +sphere he is generous, sympathetic and honest. If he expects to enjoy +that hearty and unrestrained confidence of his brethren in the +fraternity which alone can make his membership a comfort and a delight, +he must be generous to the point of willingness to share his last +leaders and flies, or any other items of his outfit, with any worthy +fellow-fisherman who may be <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>in need. The manifestation of littleness +and crowding selfishness often condoned in other quarters, and the +over-reaching conduct so generally permitted in business circles, are +unpardonable crimes in the true fisherman’s code.</p> + +<p>Of course, there is nothing to prevent those from fishing who wholly +disregard all rules of generosity, fairness and decency. Nor can we of +the brotherhood of true fishermen always shield ourselves from the +reproach to which we are subjected by those who steal our livery and +disgrace it by casting aside all manly liberality in their intercourse +with other fishermen and all considerate self-restraint in their +intercourse with fish. We constantly deprecate the existence <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>of those +called by our name, in whose low conception of the subject, fishing is +but a greedy game, where selfishness and meanness are the winning cards, +and where the stakes are the indiscriminate and ruthless slaughter of +fish; and let it be here said, once for all, that with these we have +nothing to do except to condemn them as we pass. Our concern is with +true fishermen—a very different type of mankind—and with those who +<i>prima facie</i> have some claim to the title.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>How to Know a True Fisherman</h3> + +<p>No burdensome qualifications or tedious probation obstruct the entrance +to this fraternity; but skill and fishing ability count for nothing in +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>eligibility. The oldest and most experienced and skillful fisherman +will look with composure upon the vanishing chances of his catch through +the floundering efforts of an awkward beginner, if the awkward +flounderer has shown that he is sound at heart. He may not fish well, +but if he does not deliberately rush ahead of all companions to pre-empt +every promising place in the stream, nor everlastingly study to secure +for his use the best of the bait, nor always fail to return borrowed +tackle, nor prove to be blind, deaf and dumb when others are in tackle +need, nor crowd into another’s place, nor draw his flask in secrecy, nor +light a cigar with no suggestion of another, nor do a score of other +indefinable mean things that among <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>true fishermen constitute him an +unbearable nuisance, he will not only be tolerated but aided in every +possible way.</p> + +<p>It is curious to observe how inevitably the brotherhood discovers +unworthiness. Even without an overt act it is detected—apparently by a +sort of instinct. In any event, and in spite of the most cunning +precautions, the sin of the unfit is sure to find them out; and no +excuse is allowed to avert unforgiving ostracism as its punishment.</p> + +<p>A true fisherman is conservative, provident, not given to envy, +considerate of the rights of others, and careful of his good name. He +fishes many a day and returns at night to his home, hungry, tired and +disappointed; <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>but he still has faith in his methods, and is not tempted +to try new and more deadly lures. On the contrary, he is willing in all +circumstances to give the fish the chance for life which a liberal +sporting disposition has determined to be their due; and he will bide +his time under old conditions. He will not indulge his fishing +propensity to the extent of the wanton destruction and waste of fish; he +will not envy the superior advantages of another in the indulgence of +the pastime he loves so well; he will never be known to poach upon the +preserves of a fortunate neighbor; and no one will be quicker or more +spirited than he in the defense of his fishing honor and character.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></p><h3>Truth as Defined by the Honorable<br /> +Guild</h3> + +<p>This detailed recital of the necessary qualifications of good +fisherman-ship serves most importantly as the prelude of an invitation +for skeptics to observe the complete identity of these qualifications +with the factors necessary to good citizenship, and from thence to +concede a more ready recognition of the honorable place which should be +awarded to the fraternity among the agencies of our country’s good.</p> + +<p>In conclusion, and to the end that there should be no appearance of +timidity or lack of frankness, something should be said explanatory of +the degree and kind of truthfulness <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>which an honorable standing in the +fishing fraternity exacts. Of course, the notion must not be for a +moment tolerated that deliberate, downright lying as to an essential +matter is permissible. It must be confessed, however, that unescapable +traditions and certain inexorable conditions of our brotherhood tend to +a modification of the standards of truthfulness which have been set up +in other quarters. Beyond doubt, our members should be as reliable in +statement as our traditions and full enjoyment of fraternity membership +will permit.</p> + +<p>An attempt has been made to remedy the indefiniteness of this +requirement by insisting that no statement should be regarded as +sufficiently truthful for the fisherman’s <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>code that had not for its +foundation at least a belief of its correctness on the part of the +member making it. This was regarded as too much elasticity in the +quality of the belief required. The matter seems to have been finally +adjusted in a manner expressed in the motto: “In +essentials—truthfulness; in non-essentials—reciprocal latitude.” If it +is objected that there may be great difficulty and perplexity in +determining what are essentials and what non-essentials under this rule, +it should be remembered that no human arrangements, especially those +involving morals and ethics, can be made to fit all emergencies.</p> + +<p>In any event, great comfort is to be found in the absolute certainty +that <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107-8]</a></span>the law of truthfulness will be so administered by the brotherhood +that no one will ever be permitted to suffer in mind, body or estate by +reason of fishermen’s tales.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 320px;"> +<img src="images/i107.jpg" class="ispace" width="320" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 287px;"> +<img src="images/i108.jpg" width="287" height="500" alt="Some Fishing Pretenses and Affectations" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 206px;"> +<img src="images/icontents2.jpg" width="206" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 493px;"> +<img src="images/i111.jpg" width="493" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>Some Fishing Pretenses and<br /> +Affectations</h2> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">I</span> would not permit without a resentful protest an expression of doubt as +to my good and regular standing in the best and most respectable circle +of fishermen. I am as jealous as a man can be of the fair fame of the +fraternity; and I am unyielding in my insistence upon the exclusion of +the unworthy from its membership. I also accept without demur all the +traditions of the order, provided <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>that they have been always in the +keeping of the faithful, and carefully protected against all +discrediting incidents. In addition to all this, my faculty of credence +has been so cultivated and strengthened that I yield without question +implicit and unquestioning belief to every fishing story—provided +always that it is told by a fisherman of good repute, and on his own +responsibility. This is especially a matter of loyalty and principle +with me, for I am not only convinced that the usefulness and perhaps the +perpetuity of the order of Free and Accepted Fishermen depends upon a +bland and trustful credulity in the intercourse of its members with each +other, but I have constantly in mind the golden rule of our craft, which +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>commands us to believe as we would be believed.</p> + +<p>I have not made this profession of faith in a spirit of vainglorious +conceit, but by way of indicating the standpoint from which I shall +venture to comment on some weaknesses which afflict our brotherhood, and +as a reminder that the place I have earned among my associates should in +fairness and decency protect me from the least accusation of +censoriousness or purposeless faultfinding.</p> + +<p>I do not propose to make charges of wickedness and wrong-doing, which +call for such radical corrective treatment as might imperil the peace +and brotherly love of our organization. It is rather my intention mildly +to criticise some affectations and pretenses <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>which I believe have grown +out of overtraining among fishermen, or have resulted from too much +elaboration of method and refinement of theory.</p> + +<p>These affectations and pretenses are, unfortunately, accompaniments of a +high grade of fishing skill; and in certain influential quarters they +are not only excused but openly and stoutly justified. I cannot, +therefore, expect my characterization of them as faults and weaknesses +to pass unchallenged; but I hope that in discharging the duty I have +undertaken I shall not incur the unfriendship of any considerable number +of my fishing brethren.</p> + +<p>It has often occurred to me that the very noticeable and increasing +tendency <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>toward effeminate attenuation and æsthetic standards among +anglers of an advanced type, is calculated to bring about a substitution +of scientific display with rod and reel for the plain, downright, +common-sense enjoyment of fishing. This would be a distinct and +lamentable loss, resulting in the elimination to a great extent of +individual initiative, and the disregard of the inherent distinction +between good and bad fishermen, as measured by natural aptitude and +practical results.</p> + +<p>As in an organized commonwealth neither the highest nor the lowest +elements of its people constitute its best strength and reliance, so in +the fraternity of fishermen neither the lowest hangers-on and intruders, +nor the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>highest theorists who would make fishing a scientific exercise +instead of a manly, recreative pursuit, make up the supporting and +defensive power of the organization. It is the middle class in the +community of fishermen, those who fish sensibly and decently, though +they may be oblivious to the advantages of carrying fishing refinements +far beyond the exigencies of catching fish, upon whom we must depend for +the promotion and protection of the practical interests of the +brotherhood.</p> + +<p>It is, therefore, of the utmost importance that the zeal and enthusiasm +of this valuable section of our membership should not be imperiled by +subjecting them to the humiliating consciousness that their sterling +fishing <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>qualities are held in only patronizing toleration by those in +the fraternity who gratuitously assume fictitious and unjustifiable +superiority.</p> + +<p>I shall attempt to locate the responsibility for the affectations and +pretenses I have mentioned, not only in vindication of our sincere and +well-intentioned rank and file, but for another reason, which concerns +the peace of mind and comfort of every member of the organization in his +relationship with the outside world. The fact that we are in a manner +separated from the common mass of mankind naturally arouses the +unfriendly jealousy of those beyond the pale of the brotherhood; and +fishing—the fundamental object and purpose of our union—is in many +quarters decried as an absurd <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>exertion or a frivolous waste of time. In +such circumstances we cannot be charged with a surrender of independence +if we attempt by a frank statement to deprive these ill-natured critics +of all excuse for attacking our entire body on account of faults and +weaknesses for which only a small minority is responsible.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119-10]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 290px;"> +<img src="images/i119.jpg" class="ispace" width="290" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>Bluntly stated, the affectations and pretenses which I have in mind, and +which in my opinion threaten to bring injury upon our noble pursuit, +grow out of the undue prominence and exaggerated superiority claimed for +fly-casting for trout. I hasten to say for myself and on behalf of all +well-conditioned fishermen that we are not inclined to disparage in the +least the delightful exhilaration of the sudden +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>rise and strike, nor the pleasurable exercise of skill and deft +manipulation afforded by this method of fishing. We have no desire to +disturb by a discordant dissent the extravagant praise awarded to the +trout when he is called the wariest of his tribe, “the speckled beauty,” +the aristocratic gentleman among fish, and the most toothsome of his +species. At the same time, we of the unpretentious sort of fishermen are +not obliged to forget that often the trout will refuse to rise or strike +and will wait on the bottom for food like any plebeian fish, that he is +frequently unwary and stupid enough to be lured to his death by casts of +the fly that are no better than the most awkward flings, that +notwithstanding his fine dress and aristocratic bearing <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>it is not +unusual to find him in very low company, that this gentleman among fish +is a willing and shameless cannibal, and that his toothsomeness, not +extraordinary at best, is probably more dependent than that of most fish +upon his surroundings.</p> + +<p>While our knowledge of these things does not exact from us an +independent protest against constantly repeated praise of the qualities +of trout and of fly-casting as a means of taking them, it perhaps adds +to the spirit and emphasis of our dissent when we are told that +fly-casting for trout is the only style of fishing worthy of +cultivation, and that no other method ought to be undertaken by a true +fisherman. This is one of the deplorable fishing affectations and +pretenses <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>which the sensible rank and file of the fraternity ought +openly to expose and repudiate. Our irritation is greatly increased when +we recall the fact that every one of these super-refined fly-casting +dictators, when he fails to allure trout by his most scientific casts, +will chase grasshoppers to the point of profuse perspiration, and turn +over logs and stones with feverish anxiety in quest of worms and grubs, +if haply he can with these save himself from empty-handedness. Neither +his fine theories nor his exclusive faith in fly-casting so develops his +self-denying heroism that he will turn his back upon fat and lazy trout +that will not rise.</p> + +<p>We hear a great deal about long casts and the wonderful skill they +require. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>To cast a fly well certainly demands dexterity and careful +practice. It is a matter of nice manipulation, and a slight variation in +execution is often apt to settle the question of success or failure in +results. It is, besides, the most showy of all fishing accomplishments, +and taken all together it is worth the best efforts and ambition of any +fisherman. Inasmuch, however, as the tremendously long casts we hear of +are merely exhibition performances and of but little if any practical +use in the actual taking of fish, their exploitation may be classed +among the rather harmless fishing affectations. There is a very +different degree of rankness in the claim sometimes made that an expert +caster can effectively send his fly on <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>its distant mission by a motion +of his forearm alone, while all above the elbow is strapped to his side. +We take no risk in saying that such a thing was never done on a fishing +excursion, and that the proposition in all its aspects is the baldest +kind of a pretense.</p> + +<p>As becomes a consistent member of the fraternity of fishermen, I have +carefully avoided unfriendly accusation in dealing with a branch of +fishing enthusiastically preferred by a considerable contingent of my +associates. If, in lamenting the faddishness that has grown up about it, +plain language has been used, I have nevertheless been as tolerant as +the situation permits. No attempt has been made to gain the applause of +pin-hook-and-sapling fishermen, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>nor to give the least comfort to those +who are fishermen only in their own conceit, and whose coarse-handed +awkwardness, even with the most approved tackle, leads them to be +incurably envious of all those who fish well.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127-8]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 322px;"> +<img src="images/i127.jpg" class="ispace" width="322" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>It is not pleasant to criticise, even in a mild way, anything that +genuine fishermen may do—especially when their faults result from +over-zealous attachment to one of the most prominent and attractive +features of our craft’s pursuit. It is, therefore, a relief to pass from +the field of criticism, and in the best of humor, to set against the +claim of exclusive merit made in behalf of fly-casting for trout the +delights and compensations of black-bass fishing. I am sure I shall +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>be seconded in this by a very large body of fishermen in the best of +standing. It is manifestly proper also to select for this competition +with trout casting a kind of fishing which presents a contrast in being +uninfluenced by any affectations or by a particle of manufactured and +fictitious inflation.</p> + +<p>In speaking of black bass I am not dealing with the large-mouthed +variety that are found in both Northern and Southern waters, and which +grow in the latter to a very large size, but only with the small-mouthed +family inhabiting the streams or lakes and ponds of the North, and which +are large when they reach four pounds in weight. I consider these, when +found in natural and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>favorable surroundings, more uncertain, whimsical +and wary in biting, and more strong, resolute and resourceful when +hooked, than any other fish ordinarily caught in fresh waters. They will +in some localities and at certain seasons rise to a fly; but this cannot +be relied upon. They can sometimes also be taken by trolling; but this +is very often not successful, and is at best a second-class style of +fishing. On the whole it is best and most satisfactory to attempt their +capture by still fishing with bait.</p> + +<p>To those with experience this will not suggest angling of a tame and +unruffled sort; and if those without experience have such an estimate of +it they are most decidedly reckoning without their host. As teachers of +patience <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>in fishing, black bass are at the head of the list. They are +so whimsical that the angler never knows whether on a certain day they +will take small live fish, worms, frogs, crickets, grasshoppers, +crawfish or some other outlandish bait; and he soon learns that in the +most favorable conditions of wind and weather they will frequently +refuse to touch bait of any kind. In their intercourse with fishermen, +especially those in the early stages of proficiency, they are the most +aggravating and profanity-provoking animal that swims in fresh water. +Whether they will bite or not at any particular time we must freely +concede is exclusively their own affair; but having decided this +question against the fishermen, nothing but inherent <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>and tantalizing +meanness can account for the manner in which a black bass will even then +rush for the bait, and after actually mouthing it will turn about and +insultingly whack it with his tail. An angler who has seen this +performance finds, in his desire to make things even with such +unmannerly wretches, a motive in addition to all others for a relentless +pursuit of the bass family.</p> + +<p>Another and more encouraging stage in bass fishing is reached when +biting seems to be the order of the day. It must not be supposed, +however, that thereupon the angler’s troubles and perplexities are over, +or that nothing stands in the way of an easy and satisfying catch. +Experience in this kind of fishing never fails to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>teach that it is one +thing to induce these cunning fellows to take the bait, and quite +another to accomplish their capture. It is absolutely necessary in this +stage of the proceedings that the deliberation and gingerly touch of the +fish be matched by the deliberation and care on the part of the +fisherman at the butt of the rod; and the strike on his part must not be +too much hastened, lest he fail to lodge his hook in a good holding +place. Even if he succeeds in well hooking his fish he cannot +confidently expect a certain capture. In point of fact the tension and +anxiety of the work in hand begins at that very instant.</p> + +<p>Ordinarily when a bass is struck with the hook, if he is in surroundings +favorable to his activity, he at once <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>enters upon a series of acrobatic +performances which, during their continuance, keep the fisherman in a +state of acute suspense. While he rushes away from and toward and around +and under the boat, and while he is leaping from the water and turning +somersaults with ugly shakes of his head, in efforts to dislodge the +hook, there is at the other end of the outfit a fisherman, tortured by +the fear of infirmity lurking somewhere in his tackle, and wrought to +the point of distress by the thought of a light hook hold in the fish’s +jaw, and its liability to tear out in the struggle. If in the midst of +it all a sudden release of pull and a straightening of his rod give the +signal that the bass has won the battle, the vanquished angler has, +after <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>a short period of bad behavior and language, the questionable +satisfaction of attempting to solve a forever unsolvable problem, by +studying how his defeat might have been avoided if he had managed +differently.</p> + +<p>No such perplexing question, however, is presented to the bass fisherman +who lands his fish. He complacently regards his triumph as the natural +and expected result of steadiness and skill, and excludes from his +thoughts all shadow of doubt concerning the complete correctness of his +procedure in every detail.</p> + +<p>My expressed design to place fishing for black bass with bait in +competition with fly-casting for trout will, I hope, be considered a +justification for the details I have given of bass <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>fishing. It commends +itself in every feature to the sporting instincts of all genuine +anglers; and it is because I do not hope to altogether correct the +“Affectations and Pretenses of Fishing” that I have felt constrained to +rally those who should love angling for bass—to the end that at least a +good-natured division may be established within our fraternity between +an ornamental and pretense-breeding method and one which cultivates +skill, stimulates the best fishing traits, and remains untouched by any +form of affectation.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 208px;"> +<img src="images/i136.jpg" class="ispace" width="208" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 261px;"> +<img src="images/i137.jpg" width="261" height="500" alt="Summer Shooting" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 162px;"> +<img src="images/i138.jpg" width="162" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 378px;"> +<img src="images/i139.jpg" width="378" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>Summer Shooting</h2> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">A</span>s a general rule our guns should be put away for a long rest before the +summer vacation. There is, however, one game situation which justifies +their use, and it is this situation which sometimes appropriately allows +a small-gauge gun to be placed beside the rod and reel in making up a +vacation outfit.</p> + +<p>In July or August the summer migration from their breeding places in +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>the far North brings shore-birds and plover—both old and full-grown +young—along our Eastern coast, in first-rate condition. My experience +in shooting this game has all been within recent years, and almost +entirely in the marshes and along the shores of Cape Cod. Like other +members of the present generation and later comers in a limited field, I +have been obliged to hear with tiresome iteration the old, old story of +gray-haired men who tell of the “arms and the man” who in days gone by, +on this identical ground, have slain these birds by thousands. The +embellishment of these tales by all the incidents that mark the progress +of our people in game extermination I have accepted as furnishing an +explanation <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>of the meager success of many of my excursions; but at the +same time my condemnation of the methods of the inconsiderate +slaughterers who preceded me has led to a consoling consciousness of my +own superior sporting virtues.</p> + +<p>While I am willing to confess to considerable resentment against those +who in their shooting days were thoughtless enough to forget that I was +to come after them, it must by no means be understood that my gunning +for shore-birds has been discouraging. I have made some fair bags, and +any bag is large enough for me, providing I have lost no opportunities +and have shot well. Besides, I have never indulged in any shooting so +conducive to the stimulation and strengthening <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>of the incomparable +virtue of patience. I have sat in a blind for five hours, by the +watch—and awake nearly all the time at that—without seeing or hearing +a bird worth shooting.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143-4]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 344px;"> +<img src="images/i143.jpg" class="ispace" width="344" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>It is, however, neither the killing of birds nor the cultivation of +patience that has exacted my absolute submission to the fascination of +shore-bird shooting on Cape Cod. It is hard to explain this fascination, +but my notion is that it grows out of a conceited attempt to calculate +the direction of the wind and other weather conditions over-night, the +elaborate preparations for a daylight start, the uncertainties of the +pursuit under any conditions, the hope, amounting almost to expectation, +that notwithstanding this the wisdom and calculation expended +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>in determining upon the trip will be vindicated, the delightful early +morning drive to the grounds, the anticipation of a flight of birds +every moment while there, and the final sustaining expectation of their +arrival in any event just before night. The singular thing in my case is +that if all goes wrong at last, and even if under the influence of +fatigue and disappointment I resolve during the drive home in chill and +darkness that the trip will not be repeated for many a long day, it is +quite certain that within forty-eight hours I shall be again observing +the weather and guessing what the direction of the wind will be the next +morning, in contemplation of another start.</p> + +<p>But some will say, how are the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>incidents of hope and expectation, or of +preparation and calculation, which are common to all sporting +excursions, made to account for this especial infatuation with +shore-bird shooting? I shall answer this question as well as I can by +suggesting that the difference is one of degree. In gunning for other +game one knows, or thinks he knows, where it is or ought to be. The wind +and weather, while not entirely ignored, usually have a subordinate +place in preliminary calculation, and the pleasures of hope and +expectation are kept within the limits of ability or luck in finding the +game. On the other hand, the shore-bird hunter knows not the abiding +place of his game. He knows that at times during certain summer months +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>these birds pass southward in their long migration, but he cannot know +whether they will keep far out at sea or will on some unknown day be +driven by wind and weather to the shore for temporary rest and feeding, +and thus give him his opportunity. Though the presence on marsh or shore +of a few bird stragglers may put him on his guard, it must still remain +a question whether the game in sufficient quantities to make good +shooting is hundreds or thousands of miles away or in the neighborhood +of the shooting grounds.</p> + +<p>I believe the unusual contingencies of shore-bird shooting and the wider +scope they give for hope and expectation, together with the manifold +conditions which give abundant opportunity <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>for self-conceit in +calculating probabilities, account for its quality of exceptional +fascination.</p> + +<p>The sportsman who persists is apt occasionally to find a good number of +birds about the grounds; and when that happens, if he is adequately +equipped with good decoys, and the right spirit, and especially if he is +able to call the birds, he will enjoy a variety of fine shooting. The +initiated well understand the importance of the call, and they know that +the best caller will get the most birds. The notes of shore-birds, +though quite dissimilar, are in most cases easily imitated after a +little practice, and a simply constructed contrivance which can be +purchased at almost any sporting goods store will answer for all the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>game if properly used. The birds are usually heard before they are +seen, and if their notes are answered naturally and not too vehemently +or too often, they will soon be seen within shooting range, whether they +are Black-Breasted Plover, Chicken Plover, Yellow Legs, Piping Plover, +Curlew, Sanderlings or Grass Birds. Of course, no decent hunter allows +them to alight before he shoots.</p> + +<p>I would not advise the summer vacationist who lacks the genuine sporting +spirit to pursue the shore-bird. Those who do so should not disgrace +themselves by killing the handsome little sand-pipers or peeps too small +to eat. It is better to go home with nothing killed than to feel the +weight of a mean, unsportsmanlike act.</p> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 150-1]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 287px;"> +<img src="images/i150.jpg" width="287" height="500" alt="A Word Concerning Rabbit Hunting" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 153px;"> +<img src="images/i152.jpg" width="153" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 432px;"> +<img src="images/i153.jpg" width="432" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>Concerning Rabbit Shooting</h2> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">S</span>ome hunters there are, of the super-refined and dudish sort, who deny +to the rabbit any position among legitimate game animals; and there are +others who, while grudgingly admitting rabbits to the list, seem to +think it necessary to excuse their concession by calling them hares. I +regard all this as pure affectation and nonsense. I deem it not beneath +my dignity and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>standing as a reputable gunner to write of the rabbit as +an entirely suitable member of the game community; and in doing so I am +not dealing with hares or any other thing except plain, little everyday +plebeian rabbits—sometimes appropriately called “cotton-tails.” Though +they may be “defamed by every charlatan” among hunters of +self-constituted high degree, and despised by thousands who know nothing +of their game qualities, I am not ashamed of their pursuit; and I count +it by no means bad skill to force them by a successful shot to a +topsy-turvy pause when at their best speed.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155-6]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 329px;"> +<img src="images/i155.jpg" class="ispace" width="329" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>These sly little fellows feed at night, and during the day they hide so +closely in grass or among rocks and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>brush that it is seldom they can be seen when at rest. Of course, no +decent man will shoot a rabbit while sitting, and I have known them to +refuse to start for anything less than a kick or punch. When they do +start, however, they demonstrate quite clearly that they have kept their +feet in the best possible position for a spring and run. After such a +start the rabbit must in fairness be given an abundant chance to gain +full headway, and when he has traversed the necessary distance for this, +and is at his fastest gait, the hunter that shoots him has good reason +to be satisfied with his marksmanship. I once actually poked one up and +he escaped unhurt, though four loads of shot were sent after him.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span></p><p>In the main, however, dogs must be relied upon for the real enjoyment +and success of rabbit hunting. The fastest dogs are not the best, +because they are apt to chase the rabbit so swiftly and closely that he +quickly betakes himself to a hole or other safe shelter, instead of +relying upon his running ability. The baying of three or four good dogs +steadily following a little cotton-tail should be as exhilarating and as +pleasant to ears attuned to the music as if the chase were for bigger +game. As the music is heard more distinctly, the hunter is allowed to +flatter himself that his acute judgment can determine the route of the +approaching game and the precise point from which an advantageous shot +can be secured. The self-satisfied <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>conceit aroused by a fortunate guess +concerning this important detail, especially if supplemented by a fatal +shot, should permit the lucky gunner to enjoy as fully the complacent +pleasurable persuasion that the entire achievement is due to his +sagacity, keenness and skill as though the animal circumvented were a +larger beast. In either case the hunter experiences the delight born of +a well-fed sense of superiority and self-pride; and this, +notwithstanding all attempts to keep it in the background, is the most +gratifying factor in every sporting indulgence.</p> + +<p>Some people speak slightingly of the rabbit’s eating qualities. This +must be an abject surrender to fad or fashion. At any rate it is +exceedingly <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>unjust to the cotton-tail; and one who can relish tender +chicken and refuse to eat a nicely cooked rabbit is, I believe, a victim +of unfounded prejudices.</p> + +<p>Why, then, should not rabbit hunting, when honorably pursued, be given a +respectable place among gunning activities? It certainly has every +element of rational outdoor recreation. It ministers to the most +exhilarating and healthful exercise; it furnishes saving relief from +care and overwork; it is free from wantonness and inexcusable +destruction of animal life, and, if luck favors, it gives play to +innocent but gratifying self-conceit.</p> + +<p>Let us remember, however, that if rabbit hunting is to be a manly +outdoor recreation, entirely free from <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>meanness, and a sport in which a +true hunter can indulge without shame, the little cotton-tail must in +all circumstances be given a fair chance for his life.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 266px;"> +<img src="images/i161.jpg" class="ispace" width="266" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 284px;"> +<img src="images/i163.jpg" width="284" height="500" alt="A Word to Fishermen" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 206px;"> +<img src="images/icontents2.jpg" width="206" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 426px;"> +<img src="images/i165.jpg" width="426" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>A Word to Fishermen</h2> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">T</span>hose of us who fish in a fair, well-bred and reasonable way, for the +purpose of recreation and as a means of increasing the table pleasures +of ourselves or our friends, may well regret the apparently unalterable +decree which gives to all those who fish, under the spur of any +motive—good, bad or indifferent—the name of fishermen. We certainly +have nothing in common with those who fish for a livelihood, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>unless it +be a desire to catch fish. We have, in point of fact, no closer +relationship than this with the murderously inclined, whose only motive +in fishing is to make large catches, and whose sole pleasure in the +pursuit is the gratification of a greedy propensity. Nevertheless we, +and those with whom we have so little sympathy, are by a sort of +unavoidable law of gravitation classed together in the same fraternity, +and called fishermen. Occasionally weak attempts have been made to +classify the best of this fraternity under the name of Anglers, or some +title of that kind, but such efforts have always failed. Even Izaak +Walton could not change the current of human thought by calling his +immortal book “The Compleat +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>Angler.” So it seems however much those who fish may differ in social +standing, in disposition and character, in motive and ambition, and even +in mode of operation, all must abide, to the end of the chapter, in the +contemplation of the outside world, within the brotherhood called +“Fishermen.” Happily, however, this grouping of incongruous elements +under a common name does not prevent those of us who properly appreciate +the importance of upholding the respectability of decent fishing from +coming to an agreement concerning certain causes of congratulation and +certain rules of conduct.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167-8]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 326px;"> +<img src="images/i167.jpg" class="ispace" width="326" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>We who claim to represent the highest fishing aspirations are sometimes +inclined to complain on days <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>when the fish refuse to bite. There can be +no worse exhibition than this of an entire misconception of a wise +arrangement for our benefit. We should always remember that we have +about us on every side thousands of those who claim membership in the +fishing fraternity, because, in a way, they love to fish when the fish +bite—and only then. These are contented only when capture is constant, +and their only conception of the pleasures of fishing rests upon +uninterrupted slaughter. If we reflect for a moment upon the +consequences of turning an army of fishermen like these loose upon fish +that would bite every day and every hour, we shall see how nicely the +vicissitudes of fishing have been adjusted, and how precisely and +useful <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>the fatal attack of discouraging bad luck selects its victims. If on +days when we catch few or no fish we feel symptoms of disappointment, +these should immediately give way to satisfaction when we remember how +many spurious and discouraged fishermen are spending their time in +hammocks or under trees or on golf fields instead of with fishing +outfits, solely on account of just such unfavorable days. We have no +assurance that if fish could be easily taken at all times the fishing +waters within our reach would not be depopulated—a horrible thing to +contemplate. Let it not be said that such considerations as these savor +of uncharitableness and selfishness on our part. We are only recognizing +the doctrine of the survival of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>the fittest as applied to fishermen, +and claiming that these “fittest” should have the best chance.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171-2]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 331px;"> +<img src="images/i172.jpg" class="ispace" width="331" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>What has been said naturally leads to the suggestion that consistency +requires those of us who are right-minded fishermen to reasonably limit +ourselves as to the number of fish we should take on favorable days. On +no account should edible fish be caught in such quantities as to be +wasted. By restraining ourselves in this matter we discourage in our own +natures the growth of greed, we prevent wicked waste, we make it easier +for us to bear the fall between decent good luck and bad luck, or no +luck, and we make ourselves at all points better men and better +fishermen.</p> + +<p>We ought not to forget these things <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>as we enter upon the pleasures of +our summer’s fishing. But in any event let us take with us when we go +out good tackle, good bait, and plenty of patience. If the wind is in +the South or West so much the better, but let’s go, wherever the wind +may be. If we catch fish we shall add zest to our recreation. If we +catch none, we shall still have the outing and the recreation—more +healthful and more enjoyable than can be gained in any other way.</p> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 271px;"> +<img src="images/i176.jpg" width="271" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 288px;"> +<img src="images/i177.jpg" width="288" height="500" alt="A Duck Hunting Trip" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 199px;"> +<img src="images/i178.jpg" width="199" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 385px;"> +<img src="images/i179.jpg" width="385" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>A Duck-Hunting Trip</h2> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">I</span>t is not a pleasant thing for one who prides himself on his strict +obedience to game laws to be accused of violating these laws whenever he +hunts or fishes—and especially is it exasperating to be thus accused +solely for the delectation or profit of some hungry and mendacious +newspaper correspondent. It is not true that I was once arrested in +Virginia for violation <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>of the game laws, or for shooting without a +license; nor was any complaint ever made against me; nor, so far as I +know, was such a thing ever contemplated.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>Sport Versus Slaughter</h3> + +<p>Equally false and mischievous, though not involving a violation of law, +was the charge that a party of which I was a member killed five hundred +ducks. Our shooting force on that expedition consisted of five gunners +of various grades of hunting ability, including one who had not “fired a +gun in twenty years,” and another who could “do pretty well with a +rifle, but didn’t know much about a shotgun.” We were shooting four +days, but on only one of these days was our entire +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>force engaged. There was not one in the party who would not have been +ashamed of any complicity in the killing of five hundred ducks, within +the time spent and in the circumstances surrounding us; nor is there one +of the party who does not believe that, if the extermination of wild +ducks is to be prevented, and if our grandchildren are to know anything +about duck shooting, except as a matter of historical reading, stringent +and intelligent laws for the preservation of this game must be +supplemented and aided by an aggressive sentiment firmly held among +decent ducking sportsmen, making it disgraceful to kill ducks for the +purpose of boasting of a big bag, or for the mere sake of killing. Those +who hunt ducks with <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>no better motives than these, and who are +restrained, in the absence of law, by nothing except the lack of +opportunity to kill, are duck-slaughterers, who merit the contempt of +the present generation and the curses of generations yet to come.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181-2]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 293px;"> +<img src="images/i181.jpg" class="ispace" width="293" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>Our party killed about one hundred and twenty-five ducks. We ate as many +as we cared to eat during our stay among the hunting marshes, and we +brought enough home to eat on our own tables and to distribute among our +friends. It seems to me that gunners who kill as many ducks as will +answer all these purposes ought to be satisfied.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p><h3>On the Cooking of Wild Ducks</h3> + +<p>And just here I want to suggest something which ought to greatly curtail +the distribution of wild ducks among our friends. In households where no +idea prevails of the difference between properly cooking a wild duck and +one brought up in a barnyard, a complimentary gift of wild fowl is +certainly of questionable advisability; for if these are cooked after +the fashion prescribed for the domestic duck they will be so thoroughly +discredited in the eating that the recipient of the gift will come near +suspecting a practical joke, and the donor will be nearly guilty of +waste.</p> + +<p>In Virginia they have a very good <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>law prohibiting duck shooting on +Wednesdays and Saturdays, and of course on Sundays. These are called +rest days. We arrived at the very comfortable club-house of the Back Bay +Club, in Princess Anne County, about noon one Saturday, with weather +very fair and quiet—too much so for good ducking. From the time of our +arrival until very early Monday morning, besides eating and sleeping, we +had nothing to do but to “get ready.” It must not be supposed that those +words only mean the settlement in our quarters and the preparation of +guns, ammunition and other outfit. Many other things are necessary by +way of stimulating interest and filling the minds of waiting gunners +with lively anticipation and hope. Thus <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>during the preparatory hours +left to us our eyes were strained hundreds of times from every favorable +point of observation in search of flying ducks; hundreds of times the +question as to the most desirable shooting points was discussed, and +thousands of times the wish was expressed that Monday, instead of being +a “blue bird day,” would present us with a good, stiff breeze from the +right direction. The field of prediction was open to all of us, and none +avoided it. A telling hit was made by the most self-satisfied +weather-prophet of the party, who foretold an east wind at sundown, +which promptly made its appearance on schedule time.</p> + +<p>When we were roused out of bed at <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>4.30 o’clock that Monday morning we +found our east wind still with us in pretty good volume, and although we +all knew it was not in the most favorable quarter, and that the weather +was too warm for the best shooting, it was with high hopes that we got +into our boats and started in midnight darkness for our blinds. Whatever +anticipation of good shooting I had indulged met with a severe reverse +when I learned that my shooting companion and I were expected to kill +ducks with our decoys placed to the windward of us. I warmly protested +against this, declaring that I had never done such a thing in my life, +and in the strongest language I objected to the arrangement; but all to +no purpose.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></p><p>As I expected, the ducks that were inclined to fly within our range, +coming up the wind behind us, saw our blinds and us before they saw the +decoys, and when we tried to turn and get a shot, a sudden flare or +tower put them out of reach. As for fair decoying, they had no notion of +such a thing. We killed a few ducks through much tribulation; but the +irritation of knowing that many good opportunities had been lost by our +improper location more than overbalanced all the satisfaction of our +slight success. That my theory on the subject of windward decoys is +correct was proved when on Thursday, with a west wind and decoys to the +leeward, we killed at the same place more than twice as many ducks as we +killed the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>first day. This was not because more came to us, but because +they came in proper fashion.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<h3>On Having One’s “Eye Wiped”</h3> + +<p>It was on this day that I once or twice had my “eye wiped,” and I recall +it even now with anything but satisfaction. It is a provoking thing to +miss a fair shot, but to have your companion after you have had your +chance knock down the bird by a long, hard shot makes one feel somewhat +distressed. This we call “wiping the eye”; but I have always thought the +sensation caused by this operation justified calling it “gouging the +eye.”</p> + +<p>We left for home after one more very cold day spent in the blinds, with +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>some good shooting. Every one of the party was enthusiastic in speaking +of the pleasure our outing had afforded us, and all were outspoken in +the hope that our experience might be repeated in the future.</p> + +<p>Now, let it be observed that most prominent among the things that had +occupied us and were thus delightfully remembered, and among the +experiences desired again in the future, were the rigors and discomforts +we had undergone in our shooting. So far as the good things and the +comforts of the club-house itself entered into the enjoyment of our +trip, it would be strange if they did not present great allurement; for +nothing in the way of snug shelter and good eating and drinking was +lacking. It is not <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>so easy, however, to reason out the duck hunter’s +eagerness to leave a warm bed, morning after morning, long before light, +and go shivering out into the cold and darkness for the sake of reaching +his blind before daybreak—not to find there warmth and shelter, but to +sit for hours chilled to the bone patiently waiting for the infrequent +shot which reminds him that he is indulging in sport or healthful +recreation. Suppose that such a regimen as this were prescribed in cold +blood as necessary to health. How many would think health worth the cost +of such hardships?</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p><h3>“The Duck Hunter Is Born—Not<br /> +Made”</h3> + +<p>Suppose the discomforts willingly endured by duck hunters were required +of employees in an industrial establishment. There would be one place +where a condition of strike would be constant and chronic. If it be said +that the gratification of bringing down ducks pays for all the suffering +of their pursuit, the question obtrudes itself, how is this compensation +forthcoming in the stress of bad luck or no luck, and how is it that the +duck-hunting propensity survives all conditions and all fortunes?</p> + +<p>I am satisfied that there is but one way to account for the unyielding +enthusiasm of those who hunt ducks and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>for their steady devotion to +their favorite recreation: The duck hunter is born—not made.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 348px;"> +<img src="images/i194.jpg" class="ispace" width="348" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 329px;"> +<img src="images/i195.jpg" width="329" height="500" alt="Quail Shooting" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 148px;"> +<img src="images/i196.jpg" width="148" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 482px;"> +<img src="images/i197.jpg" width="482" height="250" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>Quail Shooting</h2> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">W</span>e hear a great deal in these days about abundant physical exercise as a +necessary factor in the maintenance of sound health and vigor. This is +so universally and persistently enjoined upon us by those whose studies +and efforts are devoted to our bodily welfare that frequently, if we +withhold an iota of belief concerning any detail of the proposition, we +subject ourselves to the accusation of recklessly discrediting the laws +of health.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></p><p>While beyond all doubt a wholesale denial of the importance of physical +exertion to a desirable condition of bodily strength would savor of +foolish hardihood, we are by no means obliged to concede that mere +activity of muscles without accompaniment constitutes the exercise best +calculated to do us good. In point of fact we are only boldly honest and +sincere when we insist that really beneficial exercise consists as much +in the pursuit of some independent object we desire to reach or gain by +physical exertion, coupled with a pleasant stimulation of mental +interest and recreation, as in any given kind or degree of mere muscular +activity. Bodily movement alone, undertaken from a sense of duty or upon +medical advice, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>is among the dreary and unsatisfying things of life. It +may cultivate or increase animal strength and endurance, but it is apt +at the same time to weaken and distort the disposition and temper. The +medicine is not only distasteful, but fails in efficacy unless it is +mingled with the agreeable and healing ingredients of mental recreation +and desirable objects of endeavor.</p> + +<p>I am convinced that nothing meets all the requirements of rational, +healthful outdoor exercise more completely than quail shooting. It seems +to be so compounded of wholesome things that it reaches, with vitalizing +effect, every point of mental or physical enervation. Under the +prohibitions of the law, or the restraints of sporting decency, or both, +it is permitted <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>only at a season of the year when nature freely +dispenses, to those who submit to her treatment, the potent tonic of +cool and bracing air and the invigorating influences of fields and trees +and sky, no longer vexed by summer heat. It invites early rising; and as +a general rule a successful search for these uncertain birds involves +long miles of travel on foot. Obviously this sport furnishes an +abundance of muscular action and physically strengthening surroundings. +These, fortunately, are supplemented by the eager alertness essential to +the discovery and capture of game well worth the effort, and by the +recreative and self-satisfying complacency of more or less skillful +shooting.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201-2]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 335px;"> +<img src="images/i201.jpg" class="ispace" width="335" height="500" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p>In addition to all this, the quail <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>shooter has on his excursions a companion, who not only promotes his +success, but whose manner of contributing to it is a constant source of +delight. I am not speaking of human companionship, which frequently mars +pleasure by insistent competition or awkward interference, but of the +companionship of a faithful, devoted helper, never discouraged or +discontented with his allotted service, except when the man behind the +gun shoots badly, and always dumbly willing to concede to the shooter +the entire credit of a successful hunt. The work in the field of a +well-trained dog is of itself an exhibition abundantly worth the fatigue +of a quailing expedition. It behooves the hunter, however, to remember +that the dog is in the field for <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>business, and that no amount of +sentimental admiration of his performances on the part of his master +will compensate him, if, after he has found and indicated the location +of the game, it escapes through inattention or bad shooting at the +critical instant. The careless or bungling shooter who repeatedly misses +all manner of fair shots, must not be surprised if, in utter disgust, +his dog companion sulkily ceases effort, or even wholly abandons the +field, leaving the chagrined and disappointed hunter to return home +alone—leg weary, gameless and ashamed. He is thus forced to learn that +hunting-dog intelligence is not limited to abject subservience; and he +thus gains a new appreciation of the fact that the better his dog, the +better <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>the shooter must know “what to do with his gun.”</p> + +<p>I do not assume to be competent to give instruction in quail shooting. I +miss too often to undertake such a <i>rôle</i>. It may not, however, be +entirely unprofitable to mention a fault which I suppose to be somewhat +common among those who have not reached the point of satisfactory skill, +and which my experience has taught me will stand in the way of success +as long as it remains uncorrected. I refer to the instinctive and +difficultly controlled impulse to shoot too quickly when the bird rises. +The flight seems to be much more speedy than it really is; and the +undrilled shooter, if he has any idea in his mind at all, is dominated +by the fear that if the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>formality of aiming his gun is observed the +game will be beyond range before he shoots. This leads to a nervous, +flustered pointing of the gun in the direction of the bird’s flight, and +its discharge at such close range that the load of shot hardly separates +in the intervening distance. Nine times out of ten the result is, of +course, a complete miss; and if the bird should at any time under these +conditions be accidentally hit, it would be difficult to find its +scattered fragments. An old quail shooter once advised a younger one +afflicted with this sort of quick triggeritis: “When the bird gets up, +if you chew tobacco spit over your shoulder before you shoot.”</p> + +<p>It is absolutely certain that he who aspires to do good quail shooting +must <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>keep cool; and it is just as certain that he must trust the +carrying qualities of his gun as well as his own ability and the +intelligence of his dog. If he observes these rules, experience and +practice will do the rest.</p> + +<p>I hope I may be allowed to suggest that both those who appreciate the +table qualities of the toothsome quail, and those who know the keen +enjoyment and health-giving results of their pursuit, should recognize +it as quite worth their while, and as a matter of duty, to co-operate in +every movement having for its object the protection, preservation and +propagation of this game. Our quail have many natural enemies; they are +often decimated by the severity of winter, and there are human beings so +degraded and so lost <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>to shame as to seek their destruction in ways most +foul. A covey of quail will sometimes huddle as close together as +possible in a circle, with their heads turned outward. I have heard of +men who, discovering them in this situation, have fired upon them, +killing every one at a single shot. There ought to be a law which would +consign one guilty of this crime to prison for a comfortable term of +years. A story is told of a man so stupidly unsportsmanlike that when he +was interfered with as he raised his gun, apparently to shoot a quail +running on the ground, he exclaimed with irritation: “I did not intend +to shoot until it had stopped running.” This may be called innocent +stupidity; but there is no place for such a man <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>among sportsmen, and he +is certainly out of place among quail.</p> + +<p>It is cause for congratulation that so much has been done for quail +protection and preservation through the enactment of laws for that +purpose. But neither these nor their perfunctory enforcement will be +sufficiently effective. There must be, in addition, an active sentiment +aroused in support of more advanced game legislation, and of willing, +voluntary service in aid of its enforcement; and in the meantime all +belonging to the sporting fraternity should teach that genuine +sportsmanship is based upon honor, generosity, obedience to law and a +scrupulous willingness to perpetuate, for those who come after them, the +recreation they themselves enjoy.</p> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 466px;"> +<img src="images/i210.jpg" width="466" height="100" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /> +<h3><span class="smcap">Transcriber’s Note:</span></h3> + +<p>Minor changes have been made to correct typesetters’ errors; otherwise, +every effort has been made to remain true to the author’s words and intent.</p> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Fishing and Shooting Sketches, by Grover Cleveland + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FISHING AND SHOOTING SKETCHES *** + +***** This file should be named 35351-h.htm or 35351-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/3/5/35351/ + +Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images +generously made available by The Internet Archive/American +Libraries.) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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b/35351-h/images/ititle.jpg diff --git a/35351.txt b/35351.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..402f5f7 --- /dev/null +++ b/35351.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2265 @@ +Project Gutenberg's Fishing and Shooting Sketches, by Grover Cleveland + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Fishing and Shooting Sketches + +Author: Grover Cleveland + +Illustrator: Henry S. Watson + +Release Date: February 21, 2011 [EBook #35351] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FISHING AND SHOOTING SKETCHES *** + + + + +Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images +generously made available by The Internet Archive/American +Libraries.) + + + + + + + + + + Fishing and + Shooting Sketches + + BY + GROVER CLEVELAND + + Illustrated by + HENRY S. WATSON + + NEW YORK + THE OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY + 1906 + + + + + COPYRIGHT, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, BY THE CURTIS PUBLISHING CO. + COPYRIGHT, 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906, BY THE INDEPENDENT. + COPYRIGHT, 1903, BY THE PRESS PUBLISHING CO. + COPYRIGHT, 1905, BY THE COUNTRY CALENDAR. + COPYRIGHT, 1906, BY THE OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY. + + Entered at Stationers' Hall, London, England. + + _All Rights Reserved._ + + THE OUTING PRESS + DEPOSIT, N. Y. + + + + + [Illustration: From Copyright Photo, by Pach. + Yours truly + Grover Cleveland] + + + + + CONTENTS + + + PAGE + + THE MISSION OF SPORT AND OUTDOOR LIFE 3 + A DEFENSE OF FISHERMEN 19 + THE SERENE DUCK HUNTER 49 + THE MISSION OF FISHING AND FISHERMEN 79 + SOME FISHING PRETENSES AND AFFECTATIONS 111 + SUMMER SHOOTING 139 + CONCERNING RABBIT SHOOTING 153 + A WORD TO FISHERMEN 165 + A DUCK HUNTING TRIP 179 + QUAIL SHOOTING 197 + + + + +The Mission of Sport and Outdoor Life + + +I am sure that it is not necessary for me, at this late day, to dwell +upon the fact that I am an enthusiast in my devotion to hunting and +fishing, as well as every other kind of outdoor recreation. I am so +proud of this devotion that, although my sporting proclivities have at +times subjected me to criticism and petty forms of persecution, I make +no claim that my steadfastness should be looked upon as manifesting the +courage of martyrdom. On the contrary, I regard these criticisms and +persecutions as nothing more serious than gnat stings suffered on the +bank of a stream--vexations to be borne with patience and afterward +easily submerged in the memory of abundant delightful accompaniments. +Thus, when short fishing excursions, in which I have sought relief +from the wearing labors and perplexities of official duty, have been +denounced in a mendacious newspaper as dishonest devices to cover +scandalous revelry, I have been able to enjoy a sort of pleasurable +contempt for the author of this accusation, while congratulating myself +on the mental and physical restoration I had derived from these +excursions. So, also, when people, more mistaken than malicious, have +wagged their heads in pitying fashion and deprecated my indulgence +in hunting and fishing frivolity, which, in high public service, I +have found it easy to lament the neglect of these amiable persons +to accumulate for their delectation a fund of charming sporting +reminiscence; while, at the same time, I sadly reflected how their +dispositions might have been sweetened and their lives made happier if +they had yielded something to the particular type of frivolity which +they deplored. + +I hope it may not be amiss for me to supplement these personal +observations by the direct confession that, so far as my attachment to +outdoor sports may be considered a fault, I am, as related to this +especial predicament of guilt, utterly incorrigible and shameless. Not +many years ago, while residing in a non-sporting but delightfully +cultured and refined community, I found that considerable indignation +had been aroused among certain good neighbors and friends, because it +had been said of me that I was willing to associate in the field with +any loafer who was the owner of a dog and gun. I am sure that I did not +in the least undervalue the extreme friendliness of those inclined to +intervene in my defense; and yet, at the risk of doing an apparently +ungracious thing, I felt inexorably constrained to check their kindly +efforts by promptly conceding that the charge was too nearly true to be +denied. + +There can be no doubt that certain men are endowed with a sort of +inherent and spontaneous instinct which leads them to hunting and +fishing indulgence as the most alluring and satisfying of all +recreations. In this view, I believe it may be safely said that the true +hunter or fisherman is born, not made. I believe, too, that those who +thus by instinct and birthright belong to the sporting fraternity and +are actuated by a genuine sporting spirit, are neither cruel, nor greedy +and wasteful of the game and fish they pursue; and I am convinced that +there can be no better conservators of the sensible and provident +protection of game and fish than those who are enthusiastic in their +pursuit, but who, at the same time, are regulated and restrained by the +sort of chivalric fairness and generosity, felt and recognized by every +true sportsman. + +While it is most agreeable thus to consider hunting and fishing as +constituting, for those especially endowed for their enjoyment, the +most tempting of outdoor sports, it is easily apparent that there +is a practical value to these sports as well as all other outdoor +recreations, which rests upon a broader foundation. Though the +delightful and passionate love for outdoor sports and recreation is not +bestowed upon every one as a natural gift, they are so palpably related +to health and vigor, and so inseparably connected with the work of life +and comfort of existence, that it is happily ordained that a desire +or a willingness for their enjoyment may be cultivated to an extent +sufficient to meet the requirements of health and self-care. In other +words, all but the absolutely indifferent can be made to realize that +outdoor air and activity, intimacy with nature and acquaintanceship with +birds and animals and fish, are essential to physical and mental +strength, under the exactions of an unescapable decree. + +Men may accumulate wealth in neglect of the law of recreation; but how +infinitely much they will forfeit, in the deprivation of wholesome +vigor, in the loss of the placid fitness for the quiet joys and +comforts of advancing years, and in the displacement of contented age by +the demon of querulous and premature decrepitude! + + "For the good God who loveth us + He made and loveth all." + + +A Law not to Be Disobeyed + +Men, in disobedience of this law, may achieve triumph in the world of +science, education and art; but how unsatisfying are the rewards thus +gained if they hasten the night when no man can work, and if the later +hours of life are haunted by futile regrets for what is still left +undone, that might have been done if there had been closer communion +with nature's visible forms! + +In addition to the delight which outdoor recreations afford to those +instinctively in harmony with their enjoyment, and after a recognition +of the fact that a knowledge of their nerve- and muscle-saving +ministrations may be sensibly cultivated, there still remains another +large item that should be placed to their credit. Every individual, as a +unit in the scheme of civilized social life, owes to every man, woman +and child within such relationship an uninterrupted contribution to the +fund of enlivening and pleasurable social intercourse. None of us can +deny this obligation; and none of us can discharge it as we ought, if +our contributions are made in the questionable coin of sordidness and +nature's perversion. Our experience and observation supply abundant +proof that those who contribute most generously to the exhilaration and +charm of social intercourse will be found among the disciples of outdoor +recreation, who are in touch with nature and have thus kept fresh and +unperverted a simple love of humanity's best environment. + + +A Chance in the Open for All + +It seems to me that thoughtful men should not be accused of exaggerated +fears when they deprecate the wealth-mad rush and struggle of American +life and the consequent neglect of outdoor recreation, with the +impairment of that mental and physical vigor absolutely essential to our +national welfare, and so abundantly promised to those who gratefully +recognize, in nature's adjustment to the wants of man, the care of "the +good God" who "made and loveth all." + +Manifestly, if outdoor recreations are important to the individual and +to the nation, and if there is danger of their neglect, every +instrumentality should be heartily encouraged which aims to create and +stimulate their indulgence in every form. + +Fortunately, the field is broad and furnishes a choice for all except +those wilfully at fault. The sky and sun above the head, the soil +beneath the feet, and outdoor air on every side are the indispensable +requisites. + + + + +A Defense of Fishermen + + +By way of introduction and explanation, it should be said that there is +no intention at this time to deal with those who fish for a livelihood. +Those sturdy and hard-working people need no vindication or defense. +Our concern is with those who fish because they have an occult and +mysterious instinct which leads them to love it, because they court the +healthful, invigorating exertion it invites, and because its indulgence +brings them in close contact and communion with Nature's best and most +elevating manifestations. This sort of fishing is pleasure and not +work--sport and not money-grabbing. Therefore it is contemptuously +regarded in certain quarters as no better than a waste of time. + +Generous fishermen cannot fail to look with pity upon the benighted +persons who have no better conception than this of the uses and +beneficent objects of rational diversion. In these sad and ominous days +of mad fortune-chasing, every patriotic, thoughtful citizen, whether he +fishes or not, should lament that we have not among our countrymen more +fishermen. There can be no doubt that the promise of industrial peace, +of contented labor and of healthful moderation in the pursuit of +wealth, in this democratic country of ours, would be infinitely improved +if a large share of the time which has been devoted to the concoction of +trust and business combinations, had been spent in fishing. + +The narrow and ill-conditioned people who snarlingly count all fishermen +as belonging to the lazy and good-for-nothing class, and who take +satisfaction in describing an angler's outfit as a contrivance with a +hook at one end and a fool at the other, have been so thoroughly +discredited that no one could wish for their more irredeemable +submersion. Statesmen, judges, clergymen, lawyers and doctors, as well +as thousands of other outspoken members of the fishing fraternity, have +so effectively given the lie to these revilers of an honest and +conscientious brotherhood that a large majority have been glad to find +refuge in ignominious silence. + +Notwithstanding this, weak, piping voices are still occasionally heard +accusing fishermen of certain shortcomings and faults. These are so +unsubstantial and unimportant that, as against the high place in the +world's esteem claimed by those who love to fish, they might well be +regarded as non-essentials, or, in a phrase of the day, as mere matters +of detail. But, although it may be true that these charges are on the +merits unworthy of notice, it cannot be expected that fishermen, proud +of the name, will be amiably willing to permit those making such +accusations the satisfaction of remaining unchallenged. + + +The Hangers-on of the Fraternity + +At the outset, the fact should be recognized that the community of +fishermen constitute a separate class or a sub-race among the +inhabitants of the earth. It has sometimes been said that fishermen +cannot be manufactured. This is true to the extent that nothing can +supply the lack of certain inherent, constitutional and inborn qualities +or traits which are absolutely necessary to a fisherman's make-up. Of +course there are many who call themselves fishermen and who insist upon +their membership in the fraternity who have not in their veins a drop of +legitimate fisherman blood. Their self-asserted relationship is +nevertheless sometimes seized upon by malicious or ignorant critics as +permitting the assumption that the weaknesses and sins of these +pretenders are the weaknesses and sins of genuine fishermen; but in +truth these pretenders are only interlopers who have learned a little +fish language, who love to fish only "when they bite," who whine at bad +luck, who betray incredulity when they hear a rousing fish story, and +who do or leave undone many other things fatal to good and regular +standing. They are like certain whites called squaw-men, who hang about +Indian reservations, and gain certain advantages in the tribes by +marrying full-blooded Indian women. Surely no just person would for a +moment suppose that genuine Indians could be treated fairly by measuring +them according to a squaw-man standard. Neither can genuine fishermen be +fairly treated by judging them according to the standards presented by +squaw-fishermen. + +In point of fact, full-blooded fishermen whose title is clear, and whose +natural qualifications are undisputed, have ideas, habits of thought and +mental tendencies so peculiarly and especially their own, and their +beliefs and code of ethics are so exclusively fitted to their needs and +surroundings, that an attempt on the part of strangers to speak or write +concerning the character or conduct of its approved membership savors of +impudent presumption. None but fishermen can properly deal with these +delicate matters. + +What sense is there in the charge of laziness sometimes made against +true fishermen? Laziness has no place in the constitution of a man who +starts at sunrise and tramps all day with only a sandwich to eat, +floundering through bushes and briers and stumbling over rocks or wading +streams in pursuit of the elusive trout. Neither can a fisherman who, +with rod in hand, sits in a boat or on a bank all day be called +lazy--provided he attends to his fishing and is physically and mentally +alert in his occupation. This charge may perhaps be truthfully made +against squaw-fishermen who become easily discouraged, who "tire and +faint" early, and lie down under the shade to sleep, or go in swimming, +or who gaze about or read a book while their hooks rest baitless on the +bottom; but how false and unfair it is to accuse regular, full-blooded +fishermen of laziness, based on such performances as these! And yet this +is absurdly done by those who cannot tell a reel from a compass, and who +by way of familiarizing themselves with their topic leave their beds at +eight o'clock in the morning, ride to an office at ten, sit at a desk +until three or perhaps five, with an hour's interval for a hearty +luncheon, and go home in the proud belief that they have done an active, +hard day's work. Fishermen find no fault with what they do in their own +affairs, nor with their conception of work; but they do insist that +such people have no right to impute laziness to those who fish. + + +Why Fish Stories Should Be Believed + +It is sometimes said that there is such close relationship between +mendacity and fishing, that in matters connected with their craft all +fishermen are untruthful. It must, of course, be admitted that large +stories of fishing adventure are sometimes told by fishermen--and why +should this not be so? Beyond all question there is no sphere of human +activity so full of strange and wonderful incidents as theirs. Fish are +constantly doing the most mysterious and startling things; and no one +has yet been wise enough to explain their ways or account for their +conduct. The best fishermen do not attempt it; they move and strive in +the atmosphere of mystery and uncertainty, constantly aiming to reach +results without a clue, and through the cultivation of faculties, +non-existent or inoperative in the common mind. + +In these circumstances fishermen necessarily see and do wonderful +things. If those not members of the brotherhood are unable to assimilate +the recital of these wonders, it is because their believing apparatus +has not been properly regulated and stimulated. Such disability falls +very far short of justifying doubt as to the truth of the narration. The +things narrated have been seen and experienced with a fisherman's eyes +and perceptions. This is perfectly understood by listening fishermen; +and they, to their enjoyment and edification, are permitted by a +properly adjusted mental equipment to believe what they hear. + +This faculty is one of the safest signs of full-blooded right to +membership. If incredulity is intimated by a professional member no +injustice will be done if he is at once put under suspicion as a +squaw-fisherman. As to non-members who accuse true fishermen of +falsehood, it is perfectly clear that they are utterly unfitted to deal +with the subject. The only theory fitting the condition leads to the +statement that any story of personal experience told by a fisherman is +to the fishing apprehension indubitably true; and that since disbelief +in other quarters is owing to the lack of this apprehension, the folly +of accusing fishermen of habitual untruthfulness is quite apparent. + + +The Taking of the Leviathan + +The position thus taken by the brotherhood requires that they stand +solidly together in all circumstances. Tarpon fishing has added greatly +to our responsibilities. Even larger fish than these may, with the +extension of American possessions, fall within the treatment of American +fishermen. As in all past emergencies, we shall be found sufficient in +such future exigencies. All will go well if, without a pretense of +benevolent assimilation, we still fish as is our wont, and continue our +belief in all that our brethren declare they have done or can do. A few +thousand years ago the question was impressively asked, "Canst thou draw +out leviathan with a hook?" We must not falter, if, upon its repetition +in the future, a brother replies: "Yes, with a ten-ounce rod;" nor must +we be staggered even if another declares he has already landed one of +these monsters. If American institutions are found adequate to the new +tasks which Destiny has put upon them in the extension of our lands, the +American Chapter of the world's fishermen must not fail by their +time-honored methods and practices, and by such truthfulness as belongs +to the fraternity in the narration of fishing adventure, to subdue any +new difficulties presented by the extension of our waters. + + +Why the Biggest Fish Are Always Lost + +Before leaving this branch of our subject, especial reference should be +made to one item more conspicuous, perhaps, than any other, among those +comprised in the general charge of fishermen's mendacity. It is +constantly said that they greatly exaggerate the size of the fish that +are lost. This accusation, though most frequently and flippantly made, +is in point of fact based upon the most absurd arrogance and a love of +slanderous assertion that passes understanding. These are harsh words; +but they are abundantly justified. + +In the first place, all the presumptions are with the fisherman's +contention. It is perfectly plain that large fish are more apt to escape +than small ones. Of course their weight and activity, combined with the +increased trickiness and resourcefulness of age and experience, greatly +increase their ability to tear out the hook, and enhance the danger that +their antics will expose a fatal weakness in hook, leader, line or rod. +Another presumption which must be regretfully mentioned, arises from the +fact that in many cases the encounter with a large fish causes such +excitement, and such distraction or perversion of judgment, on the part +of the fisherman as leads him to do the wrong thing or fail to do the +right thing at the critical instant--thus actually and effectively +contributing to an escape which could not and would not have occurred +except in favor of a large fish. + +Beyond these presumptions we have the deliberate and simple story of the +fisherman himself, giving with the utmost sincerity all the details of +his misfortune, and indicating the length of the fish he has lost, or +giving in pounds his exact weight. Now, why should this statement be +discredited? It is made by one who struggled with the escaped fish. +Perhaps he saw it. This, however, is not important, for he certainly +felt it on his rod, and he knows precisely how his rod behaves in the +emergency of every conceivable strain. + + +The Finny Hypnotist + +All true fishermen who listen to his plain, unvarnished tale accept with +absolute faith the declared length and weight of the fish that was +almost caught; but with every presumption, besides positive statement, +against them, carping outsiders who cannot fish, and who love to accuse +fishermen of lying, are exposed in an attempt to originate or perpetuate +an envious and malicious libel. + +The case of our fraternity on this point of absolute and exact +truthfulness is capable of such irrefragable demonstration that anything +in the way of confession and avoidance ought to be considered +inadmissible. And yet, simply for the sake of argument, or by way of +curious speculation, it may be interesting to intimate how a variation +of a few inches in the exact length or a few ounces in the exact weight +of a lost fish, as given by the loser, may be accounted for, without +meanly attributing to him intentional falsehood. The theory has been +recently started, that a trained hunting dog points a bird in the field +solely because the bird's scent creates a hypnotic influence on the dog, +which impels him by a sort of suggestion to direct his nose toward the +spot from which such scent emanates. If there is anything worth +considering in this theory, why may not a struggling fish at the end of +a line exert such a hypnotic influence on the intensely excited and +receptive nature at the other extremity of the fishing outfit, as to +suggest an arbitrary and independent statement of the dimensions of the +hypnotizer? + +With the accusations already mentioned it would certainly seem that +the enmity of those who take pleasure in reviling fishermen and their +ways should be satisfied. They have not been content, however, in +the demonstration of their evil-mindedness without adding to their +indictment against the brotherhood the charge of profanity. Of course, +they have not the hardihood to allege that our profanity is of that +habitual and low sort which characterizes the coarse and ill-bred, who +offend all decent people by constantly interlarding their speech with +fearful and irrelevant oaths. They, nevertheless, find sufficient +excuse for their accusation in the sudden ejaculations, outwardly +resembling profanity, which are occasionally wrung from fishermen in +trying crises and in moments of soul-straining unkindness of Fate. + +Now, this question of profanity is largely one of intention and +deliberation. The man who, intending what he says, coolly indulges in +imprecation, is guilty of an offense that admits of no excuse or +extenuation; but a fisherman can hardly be called profane who, when +overtaken without warning by disaster, and abruptly hurled from the +exhilarating heights of delightful anticipation to the depths of dire +disappointment, impulsively gives vent to his pent-up emotion by the +use of a word which, though found in the list of oaths, is spoken +without intentional imprecation, and because nothing else seems to +suit the occasion. It is by no means to be admitted that fishing tends +even to this semblance of profanity. On the contrary, it imposes a +self-restraint and patient forbearance upon its advanced devotees which +tend to prevent sudden outbursts of feeling. + +It must in frankness be admitted, however, by fishermen of every degree, +that when the largest trout of the day, after a long struggle, winds +the leader about a snag and escapes, or when a large salmon or bass, +apparently fatigued to the point of non-resistance, suddenly, by an +unexpected and vicious leap, frees himself from the hook, the +fisherman's code of morals will not condemn beyond forgiveness the +holder of the straightened rod if he impulsively, but with all the +gentility at his command, exclaims: "Damn that fish!" It is probably +better not to speak at all; but if strong words are to be used, perhaps +these will serve as well as any that can do justice to the occasion. + +Uncle Toby, overcome with tender sympathy, swore with an unctious, +rotund oath, that his sick friend should not die; and we are told that +"the accusing spirit which flew up to Heaven's chancery with the oath +blushed as he gave it in; and the recording angel as he wrote it down +dropped a tear upon the word and blotted it out forever." + +The defense of the fishing fraternity which has been here attempted is +by no means as completely stated as it should be. Nor should the world +be allowed to overlook the admirable affirmative qualities which exist +among genuine members of the brotherhood, and the useful traits which an +indulgence in the gentle art cultivates and fosters. A recital of these, +with a description of the personal peculiarities found in the ranks of +fishermen, and the influence of these peculiarities on success or +failure, are necessary to a thorough vindication of those who worthily +illustrate the virtues of our clan. + + + + +The Serene Duck Hunter + + +In the estimation of many people, all those who for any purpose or in +any manner hunt ducks are grouped together and indiscriminately called +duck hunters. This is a very superficial way of dealing with an +important subject. In point of fact, the objects of duck shooting and +its methods of enjoyment are so various, and the disposition and +personal characteristics of those who engage in it present such strong +contrasts, that a recognition of their differences should suggest the +subdivision of this group into distinct and well-defined sections. Such +a subdivision would undoubtedly promote fairness and justice, and lead +to a better understanding of the general topic. + +There are those whose only claim to a place among duck hunters is based +upon the fact that they shoot ducks for the market. No duck is safe from +their pursuit in any place, either by day or night. Not a particle of +sportsmanlike spirit enters into this pursuit, and the idea never enters +their minds that a duck has any rights that a hunter is bound to +respect. The killing they do amounts to bald assassination--to murder +for the sake of money. All fair-minded men must agree that duck +hunters of this sort should be segregated from all others and placed in +a section by themselves. They are the market shooters. + +There are others claiming a place in the duck-hunting group, who, though +not so murderously inclined as the market shooters, have such peculiar +traits and such distinctive habits of thought and action, as abundantly +justify placing them also in a classification of their own. These are +the hunters who rarely miss a duck, but whose deadly aim affords them +gratification only in so far as it is a prelude to duck mortality, and +who are happy or discontented as their heap of dead is large or small. +They have smothered the keen delights of imagination which should be the +cheering concomitants of the most reputable grade of duck hunting, and +have surrendered its pleasures to actual results and the force of +external circumstances. Their stories of inordinate killing are +frequently heard, and often enliven the pages of sporting magazines. +There can be but little doubt that this contingent give unintentional +support to a popular belief, originating in the market shooters' +operations, that duck shooting is a relentlessly bloody affair. These +are the dead shots among duck hunters. + + +The Vindication of the Gentle Huntsmen + +The danger that all those who essay to shoot ducks may, by the conduct +of these two classes, acquire a general and unmitigated reputation for +persistent slaughter, cannot be contemplated without sadness. It is +therefore not particularly reassuring to recall the fact that our +countrymen seem just now to be especially attracted by the recital of +incidents that involve killing,--whether it be the killing of men or any +other living thing. + +It is quite probable that the aggregation of all duck hunters in one +general group cannot be at once remedied; and the expectation can hardly +be entertained that any sub-classification now proposed will gain the +acceptance and notoriety necessary for the immediate exoneration of +those included within this group who are not in the least responsible +for the sordid and sanguinary behavior of either the market shooter or +the dead shot. These innocent ones comprise an undoubted majority of all +duck hunters; and their common tastes and enjoyments, as well as their +identical conceptions of duty and obligation, have drawn them together +in delightful fraternity. By their moderate destruction of duck life +they so modify the killing done by those belonging to the classes +already described, that the aggregate, when distributed among the entire +body of duck hunters, is relieved from the appearance of bloodthirsty +carnage; and they in every way exert a wholesome influence in the +direction of securing a place for duck hunting among recreations which +are rational, exhilarating and only moderately fatal. + + +The Honorable Order of Serene Duck Hunters + +It must be frankly confessed that the members of this fraternity cannot +claim the ability to kill ducks as often as is required by the highest +averages. This, however, does not in the least disturb their serenity. +Their compensations are ample. They are saved from the sordid and +hardening effects induced by habitual killing, and find pleasure in +the cultivation of the more delicate and elevating susceptibilities +which ducking environments should invite. Under the influence of +these susceptibilities there is developed a pleasing and innocent +self-deception, which induces the belief on the part of those with whom +it has lodgment, that both abundant shooting skill and a thorough +familiarity with all that pertains to the theory of duck hunting are +entirely in their possession and control. They are also led to the +stimulation of reciprocal credulity which seasons and makes digestible +tales of ducking adventure. Nor does bloody activity distract their +attention from their obligations to each other as members of their +especial brotherhood, or cause them to overlook the rule which requires +them to stand solidly together in the promotion and protection, at all +hazards, of the shooting reputation of every one of their associates. +These may well be called the Serene Duck Hunters. + +All that has been thus far written may properly be regarded as merely an +introduction to a description, somewhat in detail, of the manner in +which these representatives of the best and most attractive type of duck +hunters enjoy their favorite recreation. + +A common and easy illustration of their indulgence of the sentimental +enjoyments available to them is presented when members of the fraternity +in the comfortable surroundings of camp undertake the discussion of the +merits of guns and ammunition. The impressiveness with which guns are +put to the shoulder with a view of discovering how they "come up," the +comments on the length and "drop" of the different stocks, the solemn +look through the barrel from the opened breech, and the suggestion of +slight "pitting," are intensely interesting and gratifying to all +concerned. + +When these things are supplemented by an exchange of opinions concerning +ammunition, a large contribution is added to the entertainment of the +party. Such words as Schultz, Blue Ribbon, Dupont, Ballistite and Hazard +are rolled like sweet morsels under the tongue. Each of the company +declares his choice of powder and warmly defends its superiority, each +announces the number of drams that a ducking cartridge should contain, +and each declares his clear conviction touching the size of shot, and +the amount, in ounces and fractions of ounces, that should constitute an +effective load. + +Undoubtedly the enjoyment supplied by such a discussion is keen and +exhilarating. That it has the advantage of ease and convenience in its +favor, is indicated by the fact that its effects are none the less real +and penetrating in the entire absence of any knowledge of the topics +discussed. To the serene duck hunter the pretense of knowledge or +information is sufficient. The important factors in the affair are that +each should have his turn, and should be attentively heard in his +exploitation of that which he thinks he knows. + +There is nothing in all this that can furnish reasonable ground for +reproach or criticism. If under the sanction of harmless self-deception +and pretense this duck-hunting contingent, to whom duck killing is not +inevitably available, are content to look for enjoyment among the things +more or less intimately related to it, it is quite their own affair. At +any rate it is sufficient to say that they have joined the serene +brotherhood for their pastime, and that any outside dictation or +criticism of the mode in which they shall innocently enjoy their +privileges of membership savors of gross impertinence. + +There comes a time, however, when the calm and easy enjoyments of +in-door comfort must give way to sterner activities, and when even the +serene duck hunter must face the discomfort of severe weather and the +responsibility of flying ducks. This exigency brings with it new +duties and new objects of endeavor; but the principles which are +characteristic of the fraternity are of universal application. Therefore +our serene duck hunter should go forth resolved to accomplish the best +results within his reach, but doubly resolved that in this new phase of +his enjoyment he will betray no ignorance of any detail, and that he +will fully avail himself of the rule unreservedly recognized in the +brotherhood, which permits him to claim that every duck at which his +gun is fired is hit--except in rare cases of conceded missing, when an +excuse should be always ready, absolutely excluding any suggestion of +bad shooting. And by way of showing his familiarity with the affair in +hand it is not at all amiss for him to give some directions as he +enters his blind as to the arrangement of the decoys. + + +How to Take Good and Bad Luck + +It is quite likely that his first opportunity to shoot will be presented +when a single duck hovers over the decoys, and as it poises itself +offers as easy a target as if sitting on a fence. Our hunter's gun is +coolly and gracefully raised, and simultaneously with its discharge the +duck falls helplessly into the water. This is a situation that calls for +no word to be spoken. Merely a self-satisfied and an almost indifferent +expression of countenance should indicate that only the expected has +happened, and that duck killing is to be the order of the day. + +Perhaps after a reasonable wait, another venturesome duck will enter +the zone of danger and pass with steady flight over the decoys easily +within shooting distance. Again the gun of our serene hunter gives +voice, summoning the bird to instant death. To an impartial observer, +however, such a course would not seem to be in accordance with the +duck's arrangements. This is plainly indicated by such an acceleration +of flight as would naturally follow the noise of the gun's discharge and +the whistling of the shot in the rear of the expected victim. + +This is the moment when the man behind the gun should rise to the +occasion, and under the rule governing the case should without the least +delay or hesitation insist that the duck is hit. This may be done by the +use of one of several appropriate exclamations--all having the sanction +of precedent and long use. One which is quite clear and emphatic is to +the effect that the fleeing duck is "lead ballasted," another easily +understood is that it has "got a dose," and still another of no +uncertain meaning, that it is "full of shot." Whatever particular +formula is used, it should at once be followed by a decided command to +the guide in attendance to watch the disappearing bird and mark where it +falls. + +The fact should be here mentioned that the complete enjoyment of this +proceeding depends largely upon the tact and intelligence of the guide. +If with these he has a due appreciation of his responsibility as an +adjunct to the sport, and is also in proper accord with his principal, +he will give ready support to the claim that the duck is mortally +wounded, at the same time shrewdly and with apparent depression +suggesting the improbability of recovering the slain. + +If as the hours wear away this process becomes so monotonous as +to be fatiguing, a restful variety may be introduced by guardedly +acknowledging an occasional miss, and bringing into play the excuses and +explanations appropriate to such altered conditions. A very useful way +of accounting for a shot missed is by the suggestion that through a +slightly erroneous calculation of distance the duck was out of range +when the shot was fired. A very frequent and rather gratifying pretext +for avoiding chagrin in case of a long shot missed is found in the +claim that, though the sound of shot striking the bird is distinctly +heard, their penetration is ineffective. Sometimes failure is attributed +to the towering or turning of the duck at the instant of the gun's +discharge. It is at times useful to impute failure to the probability +that the particular cartridge used was stale and weak; and when all +these are inadmissible, the small size of the shot and the faulty +quality or quantity of powder they contain, may be made to do service; +and, in extreme cases, their entire construction as well as their +constructor may be roundly cursed as causes for a miscarriage of fatal +results. + + +How True Duck Hunters Stand Together + +When the ducks have ceased to fly for the day the serene duck hunter +returns to camp in a tranquil, satisfied frame of mind befitting his +fraternity membership. He has several ducks actually in hand, and he +has fully enjoyed the self-deception and pretense which have led him +to the belief that he has shot well. His few confessed misses are +all satisfactorily accounted for; and he is too well broken to the +vicissitudes of duck shooting, and too old a hunter, to be cast down +by the bad fortune which has thickly scattered, over distant waters +and marshes, his unrecovered dead. + +When at the close of such a day a party of serene duck hunters are +gathered together, a common fund of adventure is made up. Each as he +contributes his share is entitled to add such embellishments of the +imagination as will make his recital most interesting to his associates +and gratifying to himself; and a law tacitly adopted but universally +recognized by the company binds them all to an unquestioning acceptance +of the truth of every narration. The successes of the day as well as its +incidents of hard luck, and every excuse and explanation in mitigation +of small returns of game, as they are rehearsed, create lively interest +and quiet enjoyment. The one thing that might be a discordant note would +be a hint or confession of downright and inexcusably bad shooting. + +In this delightful assemblage of serene duck hunters there is no place +for envious feeling toward either the slaughtering market shooter or the +insatiable dead shot. They only seek, in their own mild and gentle way, +the indulgence of the pleasures which the less bloody phases of duck +hunting afford; and no censorious critic has the right to demand that +their enjoyment should be marred or diminished by the exactions of +veracity or self-abasement. + +Reference has already been made to the scrupulous care of this +fraternity for the promotion and preservation, at all hazards, of the +shooting reputation of all the associates. This is a most important +duty. Indeed, it may be reasonably feared that any neglect or faltering +in its discharge would undermine the entire fabric of the serene +brotherhood's renown. The outside world should never gain from any of +its members the least hint that a weak spot has been developed in the +shooting ability of any of their number; and in giving an account of +hunting results it is quite within bounds for them to include in the +aggregate, not only the ducks actually killed and those reported killed, +but those probably killed and neither recovered nor reported. The fact +that such an aggregate has been reported by an associate should impart +to every member absolute verity, and each should make the statement his +own, to the displacement of all other knowledge. Such ready support of +each other's allegations and such entire self-abnegation are absolutely +necessary if the safety of the organization is to be insured, and if its +success and usefulness are to endure. + +Thus the great body of serene duck hunters, who have associated together +for the promotion of high aims and purposes, pursue the even tenor of +their way. They do not clamor for noisy recognition or make cheap +exhibition of their virtues. They will, however, steadily and +unostentatiously persevere, both by precept and practice, in their +mission to make all duck hunters better and happier, and to mitigate the +harsh and bloody features of duck hunting. + + + + +The Mission of Fishing and Fishermen + + +It was quite a long time ago that a compelling sense of duty led me to +undertake the exoneration of a noble fraternity, of which I am an humble +member, from certain narrow-minded, if not malicious, accusations. The +title given to what was then written, "A Defense of Fishermen," was +precisely descriptive of its purpose. It was not easy, however, to keep +entirely within defensive limits; for the temptation was very strong and +constant to abandon negation and palliation for the more pleasing task +of commending to the admiration and affection of mankind in affirmative +terms both fishing and fishermen. A determination to attempt this at +another time, and thus supplement the matter then in hand, made +resistance to this temptation successful; but the contemplated +supplementation was then foreshadowed in the following terms: + + "The defense of the fishing fraternity which has been here attempted + is by no means so completely stated as it should be. Nor should the + world be allowed to overlook the admirable affirmative qualities + which exist among genuine members of the brotherhood and the useful + traits which the indulgence in the gentle art cultivates and + fosters. A recital of these, with a description of the personal + influence of these peculiarities found in the ranks of fishermen, + and the influence of these peculiarities on success or failure, are + necessary to a thorough vindication of those who worthily illustrate + the virtues of our clan." + +The execution of the design thus foreshadowed has until now been evaded +on account of the importance and delicacy of the undertaking and a +distrust of my ability to deal adequately with the subject. Though these +misgivings have not been overcome, my perplexity, as I enter upon the +work so long delayed, is somewhat relieved by the hope that true +fishermen will be tolerant, whatever may be the measure of my success, +and that all others concerned will be teachable and open-minded. + + +Lessons the Fisherman Learns from Nature + +The plan I have laid out for the treatment of my topic leads me, first +of all, to speak of the manner in which the fishing habit operates upon +man's nature for its betterment; and afterward to deal with the +qualities of heart and disposition necessary to the maintenance of good +and regular standing in the fishing fraternity. + +There is no man in the world capable of profitable thought who does not +know that the real worth and genuineness of the human heart are +measured by its readiness to submit to the influences of Nature, and to +appreciate the goodness of the Supreme Power who has made and beautified +Nature's abiding-place. In this domain, removed from the haunts of men +and far away from the noise and dust of their turmoil and strife, the +fishing that can fully delight the heart of the true fisherman is found; +and here in its enjoyment, those who fish are led, consciously or +unconsciously, to a quiet but distinct recognition of a power greater +than man's, and a goodness far above human standards. Amid such +surroundings and within such influences no true fisherman, whether +sensitively attuned to sublime suggestion, or of a coarser mold and +apparently intent only upon a successful catch, can fail to receive +impressions which so elevate the soul and soften the heart as to make +him a better man. + +It is known of all men that one of the rudiments in the education of a +true fisherman is the lesson of patience. If he has a natural tendency +in this direction it must be cultivated. If such a tendency is lacking +he must acquire patience by hard schooling. This quality is so +indispensable in fishing circles that those who speak of a patient +fisherman waste their words. In point of fact, and properly speaking, +there can be no such thing as an impatient fisherman. It cannot, +therefore, be denied that in so far as fishing is a teacher of the +virtue of patience, it ought to be given a large item of credit in +reckoning its relation to the everyday affairs of life; for certainly +the potency of patience as a factor in all worldly achievements and +progress cannot be overestimated. If faith can move mountains, patience +and faith combined ought to move the universe. + +Moreover, if those who fish must be patient, no one should fail to see +that patience is a most desirable national trait and that it is vastly +important to our body politic that there should continue among our +people a large contingent of well-equipped fishermen, constantly +prepared and willing to contribute to their country's fund of blessings +a liberal and pure supply of this saving virtue. + +To those who are satisfied with a superficial view of the subject it may +seem impossible that the diligence and attention necessary to a +fisherman's success can leave him any opportunity, while fishing, to +thoughtfully contemplate any matter not related to his pursuit. Such a +conception of the situation cannot be indorsed for a moment by those of +us who are conversant with the mysterious and unaccountable mental +phenomena which fishing develops. We know that the true fisherman finds +no better time for profitable contemplation and mental exercise than +when actually engaged with his angling outfit. It will probably never be +possible for us to gather statistics showing the moving sermons, the +enchanting poems, the learned arguments and eloquent orations that have +been composed or constructed between the bites, strikes or rises of +fish; but there can be no doubt that of the many intellectual triumphs +won in every walk of life a larger proportion has been actually hooked +and landed with a rod and reel by those of the fishing fraternity than +have been secured in any one given condition of the non-fishing world. + +This may appear to be a bold statement. It is intended as an assertion +that fishing and fishermen have had much to do with the enlightenment +and elevation of humanity. In support of this proposition volumes might +be written; but only a brief array of near-at-hand evidence will be here +presented. + +Those who have been fortunate enough to hear the fervid eloquence of +Henry Ward Beecher, and even those who have only read what he has +written, cannot overlook his fishing propensity--so constantly manifest +that the things he said and wrote were fairly redolent of fishing +surroundings. His own specific confession of fealty was not needed to +entitle him to the credentials of a true fisherman, nor to disclose one +of the never-failing springs of his best inspiration. When these things +are recalled, and when we contemplate the lofty mission so well +performed by this noble angler, no member of our brotherhood can do +better in its vindication than to point to his career as proof of what +the fishing habit has done for humanity. + + +What Mashpee Waters Did for Webster + +Daniel Webster, too, was a fisherman--always in good and regular +standing. In marshaling the proof which his great life furnishes of the +beneficence of the fishing propensity, I approach the task with a +feeling of awe quite natural to one who has slept in the room occupied +by the great Expounder during his fishing campaigns on Cape Cod and +along the shores of Mashpee Pond and its adjacent streams. This +distinguished member of our fraternity was an industrious and attentive +fisherman. He was, besides, a wonderful orator--and largely so because +he was a fisherman. He himself has confessed to the aid he received +from a fishing environment in the preparation of his best oratorical +efforts; and other irrefutable testimony to the same effect is at hand. + +It is not deemed necessary to cite in proof of such aid more than a +single incident. Perhaps none of Mr. Webster's orations was more +notable, or added more to his lasting fame, than that delivered at the +laying of the cornerstone of the Bunker Hill Monument. And it will +probably be conceded that its most impressive and beautiful passage was +addressed to the survivors of the War of Independence then present, +beginning with the words, "Venerable men!" This thrilling oratorical +flight was composed and elaborated by Mr. Webster while wading waist +deep and casting his flies in Mashpee waters. He himself afterward +often referred to this circumstance; and one who was his companion on +this particular occasion has recorded the fact that, noticing +indications of laxity in fishing action on Mr. Webster's part, he +approached him, and that, in the exact words of this witness, "he seemed +to be gazing at the overhanging trees, and presently advancing one foot +and extending his right hand he commenced to speak, 'Venerable Men!'" + + +Mr. Webster's Remarks to a Fish + +Though this should be enough to support conclusively the contention that +incidents of Mr. Webster's great achievements prove the close +relationship between fishing and the loftiest attainments of mankind, +this branch of our subject ought not to be dismissed without reference +to a conversation I once had with old John Attaquin, then a patriarch +among the few survivors of the Mashpee Indians. He had often been Mr. +Webster's guide and companion on his fishing trips and remembered +clearly many of their happenings. It was with a glow of love and +admiration amounting almost to worship that he related how this great +fisherman, after landing a large trout on the bank of the stream, +"talked mighty strong and fine to that fish and told him what a mistake +he had made, and what a fool he was to take that fly, and that he would +have been all right if he had let it alone." Who can doubt that patient +search would disclose, somewhere in Mr. Webster's speeches and +writings, the elaboration, with high intent, of that "mighty strong and +fine" talk addressed to the fish at Mashpee? + +The impressive story of this simple, truthful old Indian was +delightfully continued when, with the enthusiasm of an untutored mind +remembering pleasant sensations, the narrator told how the great +fisherman and orator having concluded his "strong, fine talk," would +frequently suit the action to the word, when he turned to his guide and +proposed a fitting libation in recognition of his catch. This part of +the story is not here repeated on account of its superior value as an +addition to the evidence we have already gathered, but I am thus given +an opportunity to speak of the emotion which fascinated me as the story +proceeded, and as I recalled how precisely a certain souvenir called +"the Webster Flask," carefully hoarded among my valued possessions, was +fitted to the situation described. + +Let it be distinctly understood that the claim is not here made that all +who fish can become as great as Henry Ward Beecher or Daniel Webster. It +is insisted, however, that fishing is a constructive force, capable of +adding to and developing the best there is in any man who fishes in a +proper spirit and among favorable surroundings. In other words, it is +claimed that upon the evidence adduced it is impossible to avoid the +conclusion that the fishing habit, by promoting close association with +Nature, by teaching patience, and by generating or stimulating useful +contemplation, tends directly to the increase of the intellectual power +of its votaries, and, through them, to the improvement of our national +character. + +In pursuance of the plan adopted for the presentation of our subject, +mention must now be made of the qualities of heart and disposition +absolutely essential to the maintenance of honorable membership in the +fishing fraternity. This mode of procedure is not only made necessary by +the exigencies of our scheme, but the brotherhood of fishermen would not +be satisfied if the exploitation of their service to humanity and their +value to the country should terminate with a recital of the usefulness +of their honorable pursuit. The record would be woefully incomplete if +reference were omitted to the relation of fishing to the moral +characteristics and qualities of heart, with which it is as vitally +connected as with the intellectual traits already mentioned. + +No man can be a completely good fisherman unless within his piscatorial +sphere he is generous, sympathetic and honest. If he expects to enjoy +that hearty and unrestrained confidence of his brethren in the +fraternity which alone can make his membership a comfort and a delight, +he must be generous to the point of willingness to share his last +leaders and flies, or any other items of his outfit, with any worthy +fellow-fisherman who may be in need. The manifestation of littleness +and crowding selfishness often condoned in other quarters, and the +over-reaching conduct so generally permitted in business circles, are +unpardonable crimes in the true fisherman's code. + +Of course, there is nothing to prevent those from fishing who wholly +disregard all rules of generosity, fairness and decency. Nor can we of +the brotherhood of true fishermen always shield ourselves from the +reproach to which we are subjected by those who steal our livery and +disgrace it by casting aside all manly liberality in their intercourse +with other fishermen and all considerate self-restraint in their +intercourse with fish. We constantly deprecate the existence of those +called by our name, in whose low conception of the subject, fishing is +but a greedy game, where selfishness and meanness are the winning cards, +and where the stakes are the indiscriminate and ruthless slaughter of +fish; and let it be here said, once for all, that with these we have +nothing to do except to condemn them as we pass. Our concern is with +true fishermen--a very different type of mankind--and with those who +_prima facie_ have some claim to the title. + + +How to Know a True Fisherman + +No burdensome qualifications or tedious probation obstruct the entrance +to this fraternity; but skill and fishing ability count for nothing in +eligibility. The oldest and most experienced and skillful fisherman +will look with composure upon the vanishing chances of his catch through +the floundering efforts of an awkward beginner, if the awkward +flounderer has shown that he is sound at heart. He may not fish well, +but if he does not deliberately rush ahead of all companions to pre-empt +every promising place in the stream, nor everlastingly study to secure +for his use the best of the bait, nor always fail to return borrowed +tackle, nor prove to be blind, deaf and dumb when others are in tackle +need, nor crowd into another's place, nor draw his flask in secrecy, nor +light a cigar with no suggestion of another, nor do a score of other +indefinable mean things that among true fishermen constitute him an +unbearable nuisance, he will not only be tolerated but aided in every +possible way. + +It is curious to observe how inevitably the brotherhood discovers +unworthiness. Even without an overt act it is detected--apparently by a +sort of instinct. In any event, and in spite of the most cunning +precautions, the sin of the unfit is sure to find them out; and no +excuse is allowed to avert unforgiving ostracism as its punishment. + +A true fisherman is conservative, provident, not given to envy, +considerate of the rights of others, and careful of his good name. He +fishes many a day and returns at night to his home, hungry, tired and +disappointed; but he still has faith in his methods, and is not tempted +to try new and more deadly lures. On the contrary, he is willing in all +circumstances to give the fish the chance for life which a liberal +sporting disposition has determined to be their due; and he will bide +his time under old conditions. He will not indulge his fishing +propensity to the extent of the wanton destruction and waste of fish; he +will not envy the superior advantages of another in the indulgence of +the pastime he loves so well; he will never be known to poach upon the +preserves of a fortunate neighbor; and no one will be quicker or more +spirited than he in the defense of his fishing honor and character. + + +Truth as Defined by the Honorable Guild + +This detailed recital of the necessary qualifications of good +fisherman-ship serves most importantly as the prelude of an invitation +for skeptics to observe the complete identity of these qualifications +with the factors necessary to good citizenship, and from thence to +concede a more ready recognition of the honorable place which should be +awarded to the fraternity among the agencies of our country's good. + +In conclusion, and to the end that there should be no appearance of +timidity or lack of frankness, something should be said explanatory of +the degree and kind of truthfulness which an honorable standing in the +fishing fraternity exacts. Of course, the notion must not be for a +moment tolerated that deliberate, downright lying as to an essential +matter is permissible. It must be confessed, however, that unescapable +traditions and certain inexorable conditions of our brotherhood tend to +a modification of the standards of truthfulness which have been set up +in other quarters. Beyond doubt, our members should be as reliable in +statement as our traditions and full enjoyment of fraternity membership +will permit. + +An attempt has been made to remedy the indefiniteness of this +requirement by insisting that no statement should be regarded as +sufficiently truthful for the fisherman's code that had not for +its foundation at least a belief of its correctness on the part +of the member making it. This was regarded as too much elasticity +in the quality of the belief required. The matter seems to have +been finally adjusted in a manner expressed in the motto: "In +essentials--truthfulness; in non-essentials--reciprocal latitude." If +it is objected that there may be great difficulty and perplexity in +determining what are essentials and what non-essentials under this rule, +it should be remembered that no human arrangements, especially those +involving morals and ethics, can be made to fit all emergencies. + +In any event, great comfort is to be found in the absolute certainty +that the law of truthfulness will be so administered by the brotherhood +that no one will ever be permitted to suffer in mind, body or estate by +reason of fishermen's tales. + + + + +Some Fishing Pretenses and Affectations + + +I would not permit without a resentful protest an expression of doubt as +to my good and regular standing in the best and most respectable circle +of fishermen. I am as jealous as a man can be of the fair fame of the +fraternity; and I am unyielding in my insistence upon the exclusion of +the unworthy from its membership. I also accept without demur all the +traditions of the order, provided that they have been always in the +keeping of the faithful, and carefully protected against all +discrediting incidents. In addition to all this, my faculty of credence +has been so cultivated and strengthened that I yield without question +implicit and unquestioning belief to every fishing story--provided +always that it is told by a fisherman of good repute, and on his own +responsibility. This is especially a matter of loyalty and principle +with me, for I am not only convinced that the usefulness and perhaps the +perpetuity of the order of Free and Accepted Fishermen depends upon a +bland and trustful credulity in the intercourse of its members with each +other, but I have constantly in mind the golden rule of our craft, which +commands us to believe as we would be believed. + +I have not made this profession of faith in a spirit of vainglorious +conceit, but by way of indicating the standpoint from which I shall +venture to comment on some weaknesses which afflict our brotherhood, and +as a reminder that the place I have earned among my associates should in +fairness and decency protect me from the least accusation of +censoriousness or purposeless faultfinding. + +I do not propose to make charges of wickedness and wrong-doing, which +call for such radical corrective treatment as might imperil the peace +and brotherly love of our organization. It is rather my intention mildly +to criticise some affectations and pretenses which I believe have grown +out of overtraining among fishermen, or have resulted from too much +elaboration of method and refinement of theory. + +These affectations and pretenses are, unfortunately, accompaniments of a +high grade of fishing skill; and in certain influential quarters they +are not only excused but openly and stoutly justified. I cannot, +therefore, expect my characterization of them as faults and weaknesses +to pass unchallenged; but I hope that in discharging the duty I have +undertaken I shall not incur the unfriendship of any considerable number +of my fishing brethren. + +It has often occurred to me that the very noticeable and increasing +tendency toward effeminate attenuation and aesthetic standards among +anglers of an advanced type, is calculated to bring about a substitution +of scientific display with rod and reel for the plain, downright, +common-sense enjoyment of fishing. This would be a distinct and +lamentable loss, resulting in the elimination to a great extent of +individual initiative, and the disregard of the inherent distinction +between good and bad fishermen, as measured by natural aptitude and +practical results. + +As in an organized commonwealth neither the highest nor the lowest +elements of its people constitute its best strength and reliance, so in +the fraternity of fishermen neither the lowest hangers-on and intruders, +nor the highest theorists who would make fishing a scientific exercise +instead of a manly, recreative pursuit, make up the supporting and +defensive power of the organization. It is the middle class in the +community of fishermen, those who fish sensibly and decently, though +they may be oblivious to the advantages of carrying fishing refinements +far beyond the exigencies of catching fish, upon whom we must depend for +the promotion and protection of the practical interests of the +brotherhood. + +It is, therefore, of the utmost importance that the zeal and enthusiasm +of this valuable section of our membership should not be imperiled by +subjecting them to the humiliating consciousness that their sterling +fishing qualities are held in only patronizing toleration by those in +the fraternity who gratuitously assume fictitious and unjustifiable +superiority. + +I shall attempt to locate the responsibility for the affectations and +pretenses I have mentioned, not only in vindication of our sincere and +well-intentioned rank and file, but for another reason, which concerns +the peace of mind and comfort of every member of the organization in his +relationship with the outside world. The fact that we are in a manner +separated from the common mass of mankind naturally arouses the +unfriendly jealousy of those beyond the pale of the brotherhood; and +fishing--the fundamental object and purpose of our union--is in many +quarters decried as an absurd exertion or a frivolous waste of time. In +such circumstances we cannot be charged with a surrender of independence +if we attempt by a frank statement to deprive these ill-natured critics +of all excuse for attacking our entire body on account of faults and +weaknesses for which only a small minority is responsible. + +Bluntly stated, the affectations and pretenses which I have in mind, and +which in my opinion threaten to bring injury upon our noble pursuit, +grow out of the undue prominence and exaggerated superiority claimed for +fly-casting for trout. I hasten to say for myself and on behalf of all +well-conditioned fishermen that we are not inclined to disparage in the +least the delightful exhilaration of the sudden rise and strike, nor +the pleasurable exercise of skill and deft manipulation afforded by this +method of fishing. We have no desire to disturb by a discordant dissent +the extravagant praise awarded to the trout when he is called the +wariest of his tribe, "the speckled beauty," the aristocratic gentleman +among fish, and the most toothsome of his species. At the same time, we +of the unpretentious sort of fishermen are not obliged to forget that +often the trout will refuse to rise or strike and will wait on the +bottom for food like any plebeian fish, that he is frequently unwary and +stupid enough to be lured to his death by casts of the fly that are no +better than the most awkward flings, that notwithstanding his fine dress +and aristocratic bearing it is not unusual to find him in very low +company, that this gentleman among fish is a willing and shameless +cannibal, and that his toothsomeness, not extraordinary at best, is +probably more dependent than that of most fish upon his surroundings. + +While our knowledge of these things does not exact from us an +independent protest against constantly repeated praise of the qualities +of trout and of fly-casting as a means of taking them, it perhaps +adds to the spirit and emphasis of our dissent when we are told +that fly-casting for trout is the only style of fishing worthy of +cultivation, and that no other method ought to be undertaken by a true +fisherman. This is one of the deplorable fishing affectations and +pretenses which the sensible rank and file of the fraternity ought +openly to expose and repudiate. Our irritation is greatly increased when +we recall the fact that every one of these super-refined fly-casting +dictators, when he fails to allure trout by his most scientific casts, +will chase grasshoppers to the point of profuse perspiration, and turn +over logs and stones with feverish anxiety in quest of worms and grubs, +if haply he can with these save himself from empty-handedness. Neither +his fine theories nor his exclusive faith in fly-casting so develops his +self-denying heroism that he will turn his back upon fat and lazy trout +that will not rise. + +We hear a great deal about long casts and the wonderful skill they +require. To cast a fly well certainly demands dexterity and careful +practice. It is a matter of nice manipulation, and a slight variation in +execution is often apt to settle the question of success or failure in +results. It is, besides, the most showy of all fishing accomplishments, +and taken all together it is worth the best efforts and ambition of any +fisherman. Inasmuch, however, as the tremendously long casts we hear of +are merely exhibition performances and of but little if any practical +use in the actual taking of fish, their exploitation may be classed +among the rather harmless fishing affectations. There is a very +different degree of rankness in the claim sometimes made that an expert +caster can effectively send his fly on its distant mission by a motion +of his forearm alone, while all above the elbow is strapped to his side. +We take no risk in saying that such a thing was never done on a fishing +excursion, and that the proposition in all its aspects is the baldest +kind of a pretense. + +As becomes a consistent member of the fraternity of fishermen, I have +carefully avoided unfriendly accusation in dealing with a branch of +fishing enthusiastically preferred by a considerable contingent of my +associates. If, in lamenting the faddishness that has grown up about it, +plain language has been used, I have nevertheless been as tolerant as +the situation permits. No attempt has been made to gain the applause of +pin-hook-and-sapling fishermen, nor to give the least comfort to those +who are fishermen only in their own conceit, and whose coarse-handed +awkwardness, even with the most approved tackle, leads them to be +incurably envious of all those who fish well. + +It is not pleasant to criticise, even in a mild way, anything that +genuine fishermen may do--especially when their faults result from +over-zealous attachment to one of the most prominent and attractive +features of our craft's pursuit. It is, therefore, a relief to pass from +the field of criticism, and in the best of humor, to set against the +claim of exclusive merit made in behalf of fly-casting for trout the +delights and compensations of black-bass fishing. I am sure I shall +be seconded in this by a very large body of fishermen in the best of +standing. It is manifestly proper also to select for this competition +with trout casting a kind of fishing which presents a contrast in being +uninfluenced by any affectations or by a particle of manufactured and +fictitious inflation. + +In speaking of black bass I am not dealing with the large-mouthed +variety that are found in both Northern and Southern waters, and which +grow in the latter to a very large size, but only with the small-mouthed +family inhabiting the streams or lakes and ponds of the North, and which +are large when they reach four pounds in weight. I consider these, when +found in natural and favorable surroundings, more uncertain, whimsical +and wary in biting, and more strong, resolute and resourceful when +hooked, than any other fish ordinarily caught in fresh waters. They will +in some localities and at certain seasons rise to a fly; but this cannot +be relied upon. They can sometimes also be taken by trolling; but this +is very often not successful, and is at best a second-class style of +fishing. On the whole it is best and most satisfactory to attempt their +capture by still fishing with bait. + +To those with experience this will not suggest angling of a tame and +unruffled sort; and if those without experience have such an estimate of +it they are most decidedly reckoning without their host. As teachers of +patience in fishing, black bass are at the head of the list. They are +so whimsical that the angler never knows whether on a certain day they +will take small live fish, worms, frogs, crickets, grasshoppers, +crawfish or some other outlandish bait; and he soon learns that in the +most favorable conditions of wind and weather they will frequently +refuse to touch bait of any kind. In their intercourse with fishermen, +especially those in the early stages of proficiency, they are the most +aggravating and profanity-provoking animal that swims in fresh water. +Whether they will bite or not at any particular time we must freely +concede is exclusively their own affair; but having decided this +question against the fishermen, nothing but inherent and tantalizing +meanness can account for the manner in which a black bass will even then +rush for the bait, and after actually mouthing it will turn about and +insultingly whack it with his tail. An angler who has seen this +performance finds, in his desire to make things even with such +unmannerly wretches, a motive in addition to all others for a relentless +pursuit of the bass family. + +Another and more encouraging stage in bass fishing is reached when +biting seems to be the order of the day. It must not be supposed, +however, that thereupon the angler's troubles and perplexities are over, +or that nothing stands in the way of an easy and satisfying catch. +Experience in this kind of fishing never fails to teach that it is one +thing to induce these cunning fellows to take the bait, and quite +another to accomplish their capture. It is absolutely necessary in this +stage of the proceedings that the deliberation and gingerly touch of the +fish be matched by the deliberation and care on the part of the +fisherman at the butt of the rod; and the strike on his part must not be +too much hastened, lest he fail to lodge his hook in a good holding +place. Even if he succeeds in well hooking his fish he cannot +confidently expect a certain capture. In point of fact the tension and +anxiety of the work in hand begins at that very instant. + +Ordinarily when a bass is struck with the hook, if he is in surroundings +favorable to his activity, he at once enters upon a series of acrobatic +performances which, during their continuance, keep the fisherman in a +state of acute suspense. While he rushes away from and toward and around +and under the boat, and while he is leaping from the water and turning +somersaults with ugly shakes of his head, in efforts to dislodge the +hook, there is at the other end of the outfit a fisherman, tortured by +the fear of infirmity lurking somewhere in his tackle, and wrought to +the point of distress by the thought of a light hook hold in the fish's +jaw, and its liability to tear out in the struggle. If in the midst of +it all a sudden release of pull and a straightening of his rod give the +signal that the bass has won the battle, the vanquished angler has, +after a short period of bad behavior and language, the questionable +satisfaction of attempting to solve a forever unsolvable problem, by +studying how his defeat might have been avoided if he had managed +differently. + +No such perplexing question, however, is presented to the bass fisherman +who lands his fish. He complacently regards his triumph as the natural +and expected result of steadiness and skill, and excludes from his +thoughts all shadow of doubt concerning the complete correctness of his +procedure in every detail. + +My expressed design to place fishing for black bass with bait in +competition with fly-casting for trout will, I hope, be considered a +justification for the details I have given of bass fishing. It commends +itself in every feature to the sporting instincts of all genuine +anglers; and it is because I do not hope to altogether correct the +"Affectations and Pretenses of Fishing" that I have felt constrained to +rally those who should love angling for bass--to the end that at least a +good-natured division may be established within our fraternity between +an ornamental and pretense-breeding method and one which cultivates +skill, stimulates the best fishing traits, and remains untouched by any +form of affectation. + + + + +Summer Shooting + + +As a general rule our guns should be put away for a long rest before the +summer vacation. There is, however, one game situation which justifies +their use, and it is this situation which sometimes appropriately allows +a small-gauge gun to be placed beside the rod and reel in making up a +vacation outfit. + +In July or August the summer migration from their breeding places in +the far North brings shore-birds and plover--both old and full-grown +young--along our Eastern coast, in first-rate condition. My experience +in shooting this game has all been within recent years, and almost +entirely in the marshes and along the shores of Cape Cod. Like other +members of the present generation and later comers in a limited field, I +have been obliged to hear with tiresome iteration the old, old story of +gray-haired men who tell of the "arms and the man" who in days gone by, +on this identical ground, have slain these birds by thousands. The +embellishment of these tales by all the incidents that mark the progress +of our people in game extermination I have accepted as furnishing an +explanation of the meager success of many of my excursions; but at the +same time my condemnation of the methods of the inconsiderate +slaughterers who preceded me has led to a consoling consciousness of my +own superior sporting virtues. + +While I am willing to confess to considerable resentment against those +who in their shooting days were thoughtless enough to forget that I was +to come after them, it must by no means be understood that my gunning +for shore-birds has been discouraging. I have made some fair bags, and +any bag is large enough for me, providing I have lost no opportunities +and have shot well. Besides, I have never indulged in any shooting so +conducive to the stimulation and strengthening of the incomparable +virtue of patience. I have sat in a blind for five hours, by the +watch--and awake nearly all the time at that--without seeing or hearing +a bird worth shooting. + +It is, however, neither the killing of birds nor the cultivation of +patience that has exacted my absolute submission to the fascination of +shore-bird shooting on Cape Cod. It is hard to explain this fascination, +but my notion is that it grows out of a conceited attempt to calculate +the direction of the wind and other weather conditions over-night, the +elaborate preparations for a daylight start, the uncertainties of the +pursuit under any conditions, the hope, amounting almost to expectation, +that notwithstanding this the wisdom and calculation expended in +determining upon the trip will be vindicated, the delightful early +morning drive to the grounds, the anticipation of a flight of birds +every moment while there, and the final sustaining expectation of their +arrival in any event just before night. The singular thing in my case +is that if all goes wrong at last, and even if under the influence of +fatigue and disappointment I resolve during the drive home in chill and +darkness that the trip will not be repeated for many a long day, it is +quite certain that within forty-eight hours I shall be again observing +the weather and guessing what the direction of the wind will be the next +morning, in contemplation of another start. + +But some will say, how are the incidents of hope and expectation, +or of preparation and calculation, which are common to all sporting +excursions, made to account for this especial infatuation with +shore-bird shooting? I shall answer this question as well as I can by +suggesting that the difference is one of degree. In gunning for other +game one knows, or thinks he knows, where it is or ought to be. The wind +and weather, while not entirely ignored, usually have a subordinate +place in preliminary calculation, and the pleasures of hope and +expectation are kept within the limits of ability or luck in finding the +game. On the other hand, the shore-bird hunter knows not the abiding +place of his game. He knows that at times during certain summer months +these birds pass southward in their long migration, but he cannot know +whether they will keep far out at sea or will on some unknown day be +driven by wind and weather to the shore for temporary rest and feeding, +and thus give him his opportunity. Though the presence on marsh or shore +of a few bird stragglers may put him on his guard, it must still remain +a question whether the game in sufficient quantities to make good +shooting is hundreds or thousands of miles away or in the neighborhood +of the shooting grounds. + +I believe the unusual contingencies of shore-bird shooting and the wider +scope they give for hope and expectation, together with the manifold +conditions which give abundant opportunity for self-conceit in +calculating probabilities, account for its quality of exceptional +fascination. + +The sportsman who persists is apt occasionally to find a good number of +birds about the grounds; and when that happens, if he is adequately +equipped with good decoys, and the right spirit, and especially if he is +able to call the birds, he will enjoy a variety of fine shooting. The +initiated well understand the importance of the call, and they know that +the best caller will get the most birds. The notes of shore-birds, +though quite dissimilar, are in most cases easily imitated after a +little practice, and a simply constructed contrivance which can be +purchased at almost any sporting goods store will answer for all the +game if properly used. The birds are usually heard before they are +seen, and if their notes are answered naturally and not too vehemently +or too often, they will soon be seen within shooting range, whether they +are Black-Breasted Plover, Chicken Plover, Yellow Legs, Piping Plover, +Curlew, Sanderlings or Grass Birds. Of course, no decent hunter allows +them to alight before he shoots. + +I would not advise the summer vacationist who lacks the genuine sporting +spirit to pursue the shore-bird. Those who do so should not disgrace +themselves by killing the handsome little sand-pipers or peeps too small +to eat. It is better to go home with nothing killed than to feel the +weight of a mean, unsportsmanlike act. + + + + +Concerning Rabbit Shooting + + +Some hunters there are, of the super-refined and dudish sort, who deny +to the rabbit any position among legitimate game animals; and there are +others who, while grudgingly admitting rabbits to the list, seem to +think it necessary to excuse their concession by calling them hares. I +regard all this as pure affectation and nonsense. I deem it not beneath +my dignity and standing as a reputable gunner to write of the rabbit as +an entirely suitable member of the game community; and in doing so I am +not dealing with hares or any other thing except plain, little everyday +plebeian rabbits--sometimes appropriately called "cotton-tails." +Though they may be "defamed by every charlatan" among hunters of +self-constituted high degree, and despised by thousands who know nothing +of their game qualities, I am not ashamed of their pursuit; and I count +it by no means bad skill to force them by a successful shot to a +topsy-turvy pause when at their best speed. + +These sly little fellows feed at night, and during the day they hide so +closely in grass or among rocks and brush that it is seldom they can +be seen when at rest. Of course, no decent man will shoot a rabbit while +sitting, and I have known them to refuse to start for anything less than +a kick or punch. When they do start, however, they demonstrate quite +clearly that they have kept their feet in the best possible position for +a spring and run. After such a start the rabbit must in fairness be +given an abundant chance to gain full headway, and when he has traversed +the necessary distance for this, and is at his fastest gait, the hunter +that shoots him has good reason to be satisfied with his marksmanship. I +once actually poked one up and he escaped unhurt, though four loads of +shot were sent after him. + +In the main, however, dogs must be relied upon for the real enjoyment +and success of rabbit hunting. The fastest dogs are not the best, +because they are apt to chase the rabbit so swiftly and closely that he +quickly betakes himself to a hole or other safe shelter, instead of +relying upon his running ability. The baying of three or four good dogs +steadily following a little cotton-tail should be as exhilarating and as +pleasant to ears attuned to the music as if the chase were for bigger +game. As the music is heard more distinctly, the hunter is allowed to +flatter himself that his acute judgment can determine the route of the +approaching game and the precise point from which an advantageous shot +can be secured. The self-satisfied conceit aroused by a fortunate guess +concerning this important detail, especially if supplemented by a fatal +shot, should permit the lucky gunner to enjoy as fully the complacent +pleasurable persuasion that the entire achievement is due to his +sagacity, keenness and skill as though the animal circumvented were a +larger beast. In either case the hunter experiences the delight +born of a well-fed sense of superiority and self-pride; and this, +notwithstanding all attempts to keep it in the background, is the most +gratifying factor in every sporting indulgence. + +Some people speak slightingly of the rabbit's eating qualities. This +must be an abject surrender to fad or fashion. At any rate it is +exceedingly unjust to the cotton-tail; and one who can relish tender +chicken and refuse to eat a nicely cooked rabbit is, I believe, a victim +of unfounded prejudices. + +Why, then, should not rabbit hunting, when honorably pursued, be given a +respectable place among gunning activities? It certainly has every +element of rational outdoor recreation. It ministers to the most +exhilarating and healthful exercise; it furnishes saving relief from +care and overwork; it is free from wantonness and inexcusable +destruction of animal life, and, if luck favors, it gives play to +innocent but gratifying self-conceit. + +Let us remember, however, that if rabbit hunting is to be a manly +outdoor recreation, entirely free from meanness, and a sport in which a +true hunter can indulge without shame, the little cotton-tail must in +all circumstances be given a fair chance for his life. + + + + +A Word to Fishermen + + +Those of us who fish in a fair, well-bred and reasonable way, for the +purpose of recreation and as a means of increasing the table pleasures +of ourselves or our friends, may well regret the apparently unalterable +decree which gives to all those who fish, under the spur of any +motive--good, bad or indifferent--the name of fishermen. We certainly +have nothing in common with those who fish for a livelihood, unless +it be a desire to catch fish. We have, in point of fact, no closer +relationship than this with the murderously inclined, whose only motive +in fishing is to make large catches, and whose sole pleasure in the +pursuit is the gratification of a greedy propensity. Nevertheless we, +and those with whom we have so little sympathy, are by a sort of +unavoidable law of gravitation classed together in the same fraternity, +and called fishermen. Occasionally weak attempts have been made to +classify the best of this fraternity under the name of Anglers, or some +title of that kind, but such efforts have always failed. Even Izaak +Walton could not change the current of human thought by calling his +immortal book "The Compleat Angler." So it seems however much those +who fish may differ in social standing, in disposition and character, +in motive and ambition, and even in mode of operation, all must abide, +to the end of the chapter, in the contemplation of the outside world, +within the brotherhood called "Fishermen." Happily, however, this +grouping of incongruous elements under a common name does not prevent +those of us who properly appreciate the importance of upholding the +respectability of decent fishing from coming to an agreement concerning +certain causes of congratulation and certain rules of conduct. + +We who claim to represent the highest fishing aspirations are sometimes +inclined to complain on days when the fish refuse to bite. There can be +no worse exhibition than this of an entire misconception of a wise +arrangement for our benefit. We should always remember that we have +about us on every side thousands of those who claim membership in the +fishing fraternity, because, in a way, they love to fish when the +fish bite--and only then. These are contented only when capture is +constant, and their only conception of the pleasures of fishing rests +upon uninterrupted slaughter. If we reflect for a moment upon the +consequences of turning an army of fishermen like these loose upon fish +that would bite every day and every hour, we shall see how nicely the +vicissitudes of fishing have been adjusted, and how precisely and +usefully the fatal attack of discouraging bad luck selects its +victims. If on days when we catch few or no fish we feel symptoms of +disappointment, these should immediately give way to satisfaction when +we remember how many spurious and discouraged fishermen are spending +their time in hammocks or under trees or on golf fields instead of with +fishing outfits, solely on account of just such unfavorable days. We +have no assurance that if fish could be easily taken at all times the +fishing waters within our reach would not be depopulated--a horrible +thing to contemplate. Let it not be said that such considerations as +these savor of uncharitableness and selfishness on our part. We are only +recognizing the doctrine of the survival of the fittest as applied to +fishermen, and claiming that these "fittest" should have the best +chance. + +What has been said naturally leads to the suggestion that consistency +requires those of us who are right-minded fishermen to reasonably limit +ourselves as to the number of fish we should take on favorable days. On +no account should edible fish be caught in such quantities as to be +wasted. By restraining ourselves in this matter we discourage in our own +natures the growth of greed, we prevent wicked waste, we make it easier +for us to bear the fall between decent good luck and bad luck, or no +luck, and we make ourselves at all points better men and better +fishermen. + +We ought not to forget these things as we enter upon the pleasures of +our summer's fishing. But in any event let us take with us when we go +out good tackle, good bait, and plenty of patience. If the wind is in +the South or West so much the better, but let's go, wherever the wind +may be. If we catch fish we shall add zest to our recreation. If we +catch none, we shall still have the outing and the recreation--more +healthful and more enjoyable than can be gained in any other way. + + + + +A Duck-Hunting Trip + + +It is not a pleasant thing for one who prides himself on his strict +obedience to game laws to be accused of violating these laws whenever he +hunts or fishes--and especially is it exasperating to be thus accused +solely for the delectation or profit of some hungry and mendacious +newspaper correspondent. It is not true that I was once arrested in +Virginia for violation of the game laws, or for shooting without a +license; nor was any complaint ever made against me; nor, so far as I +know, was such a thing ever contemplated. + + +Sport Versus Slaughter + +Equally false and mischievous, though not involving a violation of law, +was the charge that a party of which I was a member killed five hundred +ducks. Our shooting force on that expedition consisted of five gunners +of various grades of hunting ability, including one who had not "fired a +gun in twenty years," and another who could "do pretty well with a +rifle, but didn't know much about a shotgun." We were shooting four +days, but on only one of these days was our entire force engaged. +There was not one in the party who would not have been ashamed of any +complicity in the killing of five hundred ducks, within the time spent +and in the circumstances surrounding us; nor is there one of the party +who does not believe that, if the extermination of wild ducks is to be +prevented, and if our grandchildren are to know anything about duck +shooting, except as a matter of historical reading, stringent and +intelligent laws for the preservation of this game must be supplemented +and aided by an aggressive sentiment firmly held among decent ducking +sportsmen, making it disgraceful to kill ducks for the purpose of +boasting of a big bag, or for the mere sake of killing. Those who hunt +ducks with no better motives than these, and who are restrained, in the +absence of law, by nothing except the lack of opportunity to kill, are +duck-slaughterers, who merit the contempt of the present generation and +the curses of generations yet to come. + +Our party killed about one hundred and twenty-five ducks. We ate as many +as we cared to eat during our stay among the hunting marshes, and we +brought enough home to eat on our own tables and to distribute among our +friends. It seems to me that gunners who kill as many ducks as will +answer all these purposes ought to be satisfied. + + +On the Cooking of Wild Ducks + +And just here I want to suggest something which ought to greatly curtail +the distribution of wild ducks among our friends. In households where no +idea prevails of the difference between properly cooking a wild duck and +one brought up in a barnyard, a complimentary gift of wild fowl is +certainly of questionable advisability; for if these are cooked after +the fashion prescribed for the domestic duck they will be so thoroughly +discredited in the eating that the recipient of the gift will come near +suspecting a practical joke, and the donor will be nearly guilty of +waste. + +In Virginia they have a very good law prohibiting duck shooting on +Wednesdays and Saturdays, and of course on Sundays. These are called +rest days. We arrived at the very comfortable club-house of the Back Bay +Club, in Princess Anne County, about noon one Saturday, with weather +very fair and quiet--too much so for good ducking. From the time of our +arrival until very early Monday morning, besides eating and sleeping, we +had nothing to do but to "get ready." It must not be supposed that those +words only mean the settlement in our quarters and the preparation of +guns, ammunition and other outfit. Many other things are necessary by +way of stimulating interest and filling the minds of waiting gunners +with lively anticipation and hope. Thus during the preparatory hours +left to us our eyes were strained hundreds of times from every favorable +point of observation in search of flying ducks; hundreds of times the +question as to the most desirable shooting points was discussed, and +thousands of times the wish was expressed that Monday, instead of being +a "blue bird day," would present us with a good, stiff breeze from the +right direction. The field of prediction was open to all of us, and none +avoided it. A telling hit was made by the most self-satisfied +weather-prophet of the party, who foretold an east wind at sundown, +which promptly made its appearance on schedule time. + +When we were roused out of bed at 4.30 o'clock that Monday morning we +found our east wind still with us in pretty good volume, and although we +all knew it was not in the most favorable quarter, and that the weather +was too warm for the best shooting, it was with high hopes that we got +into our boats and started in midnight darkness for our blinds. Whatever +anticipation of good shooting I had indulged met with a severe reverse +when I learned that my shooting companion and I were expected to kill +ducks with our decoys placed to the windward of us. I warmly protested +against this, declaring that I had never done such a thing in my life, +and in the strongest language I objected to the arrangement; but all to +no purpose. + +As I expected, the ducks that were inclined to fly within our range, +coming up the wind behind us, saw our blinds and us before they saw the +decoys, and when we tried to turn and get a shot, a sudden flare or +tower put them out of reach. As for fair decoying, they had no notion of +such a thing. We killed a few ducks through much tribulation; but the +irritation of knowing that many good opportunities had been lost by our +improper location more than overbalanced all the satisfaction of our +slight success. That my theory on the subject of windward decoys is +correct was proved when on Thursday, with a west wind and decoys to the +leeward, we killed at the same place more than twice as many ducks as we +killed the first day. This was not because more came to us, but because +they came in proper fashion. + + +On Having One's "Eye Wiped" + +It was on this day that I once or twice had my "eye wiped," and I recall +it even now with anything but satisfaction. It is a provoking thing to +miss a fair shot, but to have your companion after you have had your +chance knock down the bird by a long, hard shot makes one feel somewhat +distressed. This we call "wiping the eye"; but I have always thought the +sensation caused by this operation justified calling it "gouging the +eye." + +We left for home after one more very cold day spent in the blinds, with +some good shooting. Every one of the party was enthusiastic in speaking +of the pleasure our outing had afforded us, and all were outspoken in +the hope that our experience might be repeated in the future. + +Now, let it be observed that most prominent among the things that had +occupied us and were thus delightfully remembered, and among the +experiences desired again in the future, were the rigors and discomforts +we had undergone in our shooting. So far as the good things and the +comforts of the club-house itself entered into the enjoyment of our +trip, it would be strange if they did not present great allurement; for +nothing in the way of snug shelter and good eating and drinking was +lacking. It is not so easy, however, to reason out the duck hunter's +eagerness to leave a warm bed, morning after morning, long before light, +and go shivering out into the cold and darkness for the sake of reaching +his blind before daybreak--not to find there warmth and shelter, but to +sit for hours chilled to the bone patiently waiting for the infrequent +shot which reminds him that he is indulging in sport or healthful +recreation. Suppose that such a regimen as this were prescribed in cold +blood as necessary to health. How many would think health worth the cost +of such hardships? + + +"The Duck Hunter Is Born--Not Made" + +Suppose the discomforts willingly endured by duck hunters were required +of employees in an industrial establishment. There would be one place +where a condition of strike would be constant and chronic. If it be said +that the gratification of bringing down ducks pays for all the suffering +of their pursuit, the question obtrudes itself, how is this compensation +forthcoming in the stress of bad luck or no luck, and how is it that the +duck-hunting propensity survives all conditions and all fortunes? + +I am satisfied that there is but one way to account for the unyielding +enthusiasm of those who hunt ducks and for their steady devotion to +their favorite recreation: The duck hunter is born--not made. + + + + +Quail Shooting + + +We hear a great deal in these days about abundant physical exercise as a +necessary factor in the maintenance of sound health and vigor. This is +so universally and persistently enjoined upon us by those whose studies +and efforts are devoted to our bodily welfare that frequently, if we +withhold an iota of belief concerning any detail of the proposition, we +subject ourselves to the accusation of recklessly discrediting the laws +of health. + +While beyond all doubt a wholesale denial of the importance of physical +exertion to a desirable condition of bodily strength would savor of +foolish hardihood, we are by no means obliged to concede that mere +activity of muscles without accompaniment constitutes the exercise best +calculated to do us good. In point of fact we are only boldly honest and +sincere when we insist that really beneficial exercise consists as much +in the pursuit of some independent object we desire to reach or gain by +physical exertion, coupled with a pleasant stimulation of mental +interest and recreation, as in any given kind or degree of mere muscular +activity. Bodily movement alone, undertaken from a sense of duty or upon +medical advice, is among the dreary and unsatisfying things of life. It +may cultivate or increase animal strength and endurance, but it is apt +at the same time to weaken and distort the disposition and temper. The +medicine is not only distasteful, but fails in efficacy unless it is +mingled with the agreeable and healing ingredients of mental recreation +and desirable objects of endeavor. + +I am convinced that nothing meets all the requirements of rational, +healthful outdoor exercise more completely than quail shooting. It seems +to be so compounded of wholesome things that it reaches, with vitalizing +effect, every point of mental or physical enervation. Under the +prohibitions of the law, or the restraints of sporting decency, or both, +it is permitted only at a season of the year when nature freely +dispenses, to those who submit to her treatment, the potent tonic of +cool and bracing air and the invigorating influences of fields and trees +and sky, no longer vexed by summer heat. It invites early rising; and as +a general rule a successful search for these uncertain birds involves +long miles of travel on foot. Obviously this sport furnishes an +abundance of muscular action and physically strengthening surroundings. +These, fortunately, are supplemented by the eager alertness essential to +the discovery and capture of game well worth the effort, and by the +recreative and self-satisfying complacency of more or less skillful +shooting. + +In addition to all this, the quail shooter has on his excursions a +companion, who not only promotes his success, but whose manner of +contributing to it is a constant source of delight. I am not speaking of +human companionship, which frequently mars pleasure by insistent +competition or awkward interference, but of the companionship of a +faithful, devoted helper, never discouraged or discontented with his +allotted service, except when the man behind the gun shoots badly, and +always dumbly willing to concede to the shooter the entire credit of a +successful hunt. The work in the field of a well-trained dog is of +itself an exhibition abundantly worth the fatigue of a quailing +expedition. It behooves the hunter, however, to remember that the dog is +in the field for business, and that no amount of sentimental admiration +of his performances on the part of his master will compensate him, if, +after he has found and indicated the location of the game, it escapes +through inattention or bad shooting at the critical instant. The +careless or bungling shooter who repeatedly misses all manner of fair +shots, must not be surprised if, in utter disgust, his dog companion +sulkily ceases effort, or even wholly abandons the field, leaving the +chagrined and disappointed hunter to return home alone--leg weary, +gameless and ashamed. He is thus forced to learn that hunting-dog +intelligence is not limited to abject subservience; and he thus gains a +new appreciation of the fact that the better his dog, the better the +shooter must know "what to do with his gun." + +I do not assume to be competent to give instruction in quail shooting. I +miss too often to undertake such a _role_. It may not, however, be +entirely unprofitable to mention a fault which I suppose to be somewhat +common among those who have not reached the point of satisfactory skill, +and which my experience has taught me will stand in the way of success +as long as it remains uncorrected. I refer to the instinctive and +difficultly controlled impulse to shoot too quickly when the bird rises. +The flight seems to be much more speedy than it really is; and the +undrilled shooter, if he has any idea in his mind at all, is dominated +by the fear that if the formality of aiming his gun is observed the +game will be beyond range before he shoots. This leads to a nervous, +flustered pointing of the gun in the direction of the bird's flight, and +its discharge at such close range that the load of shot hardly separates +in the intervening distance. Nine times out of ten the result is, of +course, a complete miss; and if the bird should at any time under these +conditions be accidentally hit, it would be difficult to find its +scattered fragments. An old quail shooter once advised a younger one +afflicted with this sort of quick triggeritis: "When the bird gets up, +if you chew tobacco spit over your shoulder before you shoot." + +It is absolutely certain that he who aspires to do good quail shooting +must keep cool; and it is just as certain that he must trust the +carrying qualities of his gun as well as his own ability and the +intelligence of his dog. If he observes these rules, experience and +practice will do the rest. + +I hope I may be allowed to suggest that both those who appreciate the +table qualities of the toothsome quail, and those who know the keen +enjoyment and health-giving results of their pursuit, should recognize +it as quite worth their while, and as a matter of duty, to co-operate in +every movement having for its object the protection, preservation and +propagation of this game. Our quail have many natural enemies; they are +often decimated by the severity of winter, and there are human beings so +degraded and so lost to shame as to seek their destruction in ways most +foul. A covey of quail will sometimes huddle as close together as +possible in a circle, with their heads turned outward. I have heard of +men who, discovering them in this situation, have fired upon them, +killing every one at a single shot. There ought to be a law which would +consign one guilty of this crime to prison for a comfortable term of +years. A story is told of a man so stupidly unsportsmanlike that when he +was interfered with as he raised his gun, apparently to shoot a quail +running on the ground, he exclaimed with irritation: "I did not intend +to shoot until it had stopped running." This may be called innocent +stupidity; but there is no place for such a man among sportsmen, and he +is certainly out of place among quail. + +It is cause for congratulation that so much has been done for quail +protection and preservation through the enactment of laws for that +purpose. But neither these nor their perfunctory enforcement will be +sufficiently effective. There must be, in addition, an active sentiment +aroused in support of more advanced game legislation, and of willing, +voluntary service in aid of its enforcement; and in the meantime all +belonging to the sporting fraternity should teach that genuine +sportsmanship is based upon honor, generosity, obedience to law and a +scrupulous willingness to perpetuate, for those who come after them, the +recreation they themselves enjoy. + + + + +TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: + +Minor changes have been made to correct typesetters' errors; otherwise, +every effort has been made to remain true to the author's words and +intent. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Fishing and Shooting Sketches, by Grover Cleveland + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FISHING AND SHOOTING SKETCHES *** + +***** This file should be named 35351.txt or 35351.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/3/5/35351/ + +Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images +generously made available by The Internet Archive/American +Libraries.) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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