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Piscator. Nay, then, take mine; and I will fish with yours. Look
you,
scholar, I have another. Come, do as you did before. And now I have
a
bite at another. Oh me! he has broke all: there's half a line and
a good
hook lost.
Venator. Ay, and a good Trout too.
Piscator. Nay, the Trout is not lost; for pray take notice, no
man can
lose what he never had.
Venator. Master, I can neither catch with the first nor second
angle: I
have no fortune.
Piscator. Look you, scholar, I have yet another. And now, having
caught
three brace of Trouts, I will tell you a short tale as we walk
towards our
breakfast. A scholar, a preacher I should say, that was to preach
to
procure the approbation of a parish that he might be their lecturer,
had
got from his fellow-pupil the copy of a sermon that was first
preached
with great commendation by him that composed it: and though the
borrower of it preached it, word for word, as it was at first,
yet it was
utterly disliked as it was preached by the second to his congregation,
which the sermon-borrower complained of to the lender of it: and
was
thus answered: " I lent you, indeed, my fiddle, but not my
fiddle-stick;
for you are to know, that every one cannot make musick with my
words, which are fitted for my own mouth". And so, my scholar,
you
are to know, that as the ill pronunciation or ill accenting of
words in a
sermon spoils it, so the ill carriage of your line, or not fishing
even to a
foot in a right place, makes you lose your labour: and you are
to know,
that though you have my fiddle, that is, my very rod and tacklings
with
which you see I catch fish, yet you have not my fiddle-stick,
that is, you
yet have not skill to know how to carry your hand and line, nor
how to
guide it to a right place: and this must be taught you; for you
are to
remember, I told you Angling is an art, either by practice or
a long
observation, or both. But take this for a rule, When you fish
for a Trout
with a worm, let your line have so much, and not more lead than
will fit
the stream in which you fish; that is to say, more in a great
troublesome
stream than in a smaller that is quieter; as near as may be, so
much as
will sink the bait to the bottom, and keep it still in motion,
and not
more.
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