122 SALMON FLIES. 



flics arc made by nature, so no distinction of species 

 need be observed. My rule has been to adapt my fly, 

 both as to colour and size, to the state of the water : a 

 large fly with sober colours for deep and clear w^ater, 

 and a smaller one, equally unassuming, where it is 

 shallower ; in the throat of the cast, and as long as it 

 continues rough, a large fly also ; at the tail of it, where 

 the water runs more quietly and evenly, a smaller one 

 serves the purpose best. Thus you should change your 

 fly in every stream once or twice. A large and rather 

 gaudy fly is preferable when the river is full and dis- 

 coloured, that the salmon, which lie at great depths, may 

 see it ; but I never had any great success with very 

 gaudy flies, either in the Tweed or elsewhere, in clear 

 and low waters. Salmon will rise at them, it is true ; 

 but those that have been long in the w^ater will not take 

 them freely when the river is in the state I have spoken 

 of, though they excite their curiosity, and serve them 

 for playthings. I believe it is the fashion now to think 

 otherwise ; so that in these days a golden pheasant's 

 feathers are in as high estmiation in Scotland as they 

 always have been in Ireland. 



In tying your flies, you may have some regard to 

 the harmonic colours, as less startling and more natural. 

 You may laugh, if you please, but I would fain think 

 there is something in this. If you know them not, con- 

 sult Sir David Brewster's table of spectral colours in 

 his distinguished " Philosophical Magazine." 



I have said that there is no animal in nature re- 

 sembling our salmon flics ; but I once caught a fish who 

 was certainly persuaded that he was attacking an animal 



