The Complete' Angler. 23 J 



and tire you by fuch a difcourfe, 

 I fhall therefore but rememberyou, 

 that to know thele, and their feve- 

 ral kinds, and to what flies every 

 particular Cadis turns , and then 

 how to ufe them, fifft as they bee 

 Cadis, and then as they be flies, is 

 an Art , anrJ an Art that every 

 one that profeffes Angling is not ca- 

 pable of. 



But let mee tell you , I have 

 been much pleafed to walk quiet- 

 ly by a Brook with n Httle ftick 

 in my hand, with which I might 

 eafily take thefe, and confider thf 

 curiofity of their compofure; anc 

 if you fhall ever like to do fo, 

 then note, that your ftick muft be 

 cleft, or have a nick at one end 

 of it, by which meanes you may 

 with eafe tak<* many of them out 

 of the water, before you have a- 

 ny occafion to ufe them. Thefe, 



my 



