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This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
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INTRODUCTORY THERE are several reasons why this preface is not more
apologetic than it is. Authors have for so many centuries been in
such transports of glad apology, and have displayed so curious an
ingenuity in expressing that diffident but hopeful emotion that,
search as I will, I can happen on no set of phrases that looks
original-even to myself. Yet I willingly concede the rightness of
the apologetic mood in an author, and especialIy in this author,
and I have large sympathy-with those critics who will be unable to
see the necessity for this volume. They will be unable to see it
for a very proper reason - there is no necessity. I cannot plead
the urgency of friends for its production. Ones friends, every mans
friends, are nowadays too busy commencing author themselves to be
solicitous in the preliminaries of alien publication. With the
results it is different. There is much kindly and mutual reading
there is exchange of candid opinion and quite a fortunate number of
authors would be justified in stamping John Groliers excellent
motto, et amzcorum, on the binding of their own works. This is all
passing pleasant, but it robs me of a possible excuse. Nor can I
urge any high purpose which might at the first seeing lend dignity
to the book and wrap it in some faint mist of necessity. There is
practically no purpose and, I hope, no exhortation. Words of
counsel may, I am afraid, be met with here and there. But, as a
friend about to publish once said to me and it is surely a
memorable saying, it is the hardest thing in the world for an
angler to refrain from giving good advice. Angling, however, has an
advantage over life in this respect good advice has a definite
place in its scheme ofthings, and is not always unwelcome. The man
who can tell us where to fish and wherewith earns our thanks, and
not, as would be the case if he suggested a change in habitation or
deportment, our frown. Therefore I plead guilty to the words of
counsel, and without claiming for them any value as counsel, I dare
to hope that they are quite innocuous as words. So at the worst
they should meet with indifference. Even at the best they could not
give any weight of necessity to the book-they are happily too few
and unimportant for that-and I am confronted once more with the
lack that will be plain to the critics. It might, perhaps, be
possible to argue that there is no necessity for any books beyond
the greatest, that students of life should confine their reading to
Shakespeare, that brothers of the angle should be well content with
Walton. But argument is scarcely worth while, even if it had a
chance of convincing. I cannot argue, sir, but fish I must and
will, is a senti- ment not unworthy the consideration of most
anglers, and it could well be adapted by those of them who are
impelled to write of their pastime. In fact I hereby adapt it, and
so an end to this matter of necessity. Of late there has been great
activity among the anglers who wield pens, and the Bibliotheca
Piscatoria will soon need yet another supplement to keep pace with
the growing shelves. But I have not heard or seen it suggested that
anglers are yet weary of reading about their sport. If they are,
one more volume, unpretentious and unread, will not add very
greatly to their weariness if they are not, I can only express the
hope that it will noteprove the last straw in a burden borne so far
without complaint...
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