FAVOURITE FLIES. 125 



If your fish misses the fly in making his offer, wait 

 awhile before you throw a second time ; and if he rises 

 at all, he will come more eagerly for this delay. When 

 he returns to his seat, after the unsuccessful sortie, he 

 will say mentally (for thus do fishes and novelists dis- 

 course), " "VYliat a donkey I was to be so awkward ! By 

 St. Antonio, if he comes again, I'll smash him ! " But if 

 you keep lasliing away at him immediately, as I have 

 seen many fishermen do, — ay, and practised hands too, — 

 he will probably treat you with contempt, and will have 

 no intercourse with your gay deluders for the rest of 

 the day. It is some time, perhaps, since he has taken 

 up his seat in the water, without ever having seen an 

 animal like that which you are so obliging as to tender 

 him : all of a sudden come a swarm of locusts, as it were, 

 one after another over his neb, which astonish and 

 alann him exceedingly. Thus it is apparent, my most 

 excellent, but too persevering friend, that you do not 

 do justice to his sagacity, or instinct, or whatever you 

 please to term it, if you set to work in such an intrusive 

 manner. 



As in all other rivers, so there are various flies made 

 use of in the Tweed; but the variety consists more, 

 I think, in size than in colour. A large fly, as I have 

 said, for the heavy and deep waters, and a smaller one 

 for the upper part of the river. That is the general 

 system. More minute particulars I have already given. 

 Here are six flies, which I have always found the most 

 successful : I do not mean to say that they are the best 

 that can be used, but only that they are such as I have 

 most confidence in from experience. They were tried 



