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THE COMPLEAT ANGLER
OR, THE CONTEMPLATIVE MAN'S RECREATION The Second Part BEING INSTRUCTIONS HOW TO ANGLE FOR A TROUT OR GRAYLING IN A CLEAR STREAM BY CHARLES COTTON Qui mihi non credit, faciat licet ipse perîclum Et fuerit scriptis æquior ille meis Dedication
TO MY MOST WORTHY FATHER AND FRIEND, MR. IZAAK WALTON, THE ELDER Sir: BEING you
were
pleased, some years past, to grant me your free leave to do what I have
here
attempted, and observing you never retract any promise, when made in
favor even
of your meanest friends, I accordingly expect to see these following
particular
directions for the taking of a trout to wait upon your better and more
general
rules for all sorts of angling: and, though mine be neither so perfect,
so well
digested, nor indeed so handsomely couched, as they might have been, in
so long
a time as since your leave was granted, yet I dare affirm them to be
generally
true; and they had appeared too in something a neater dress, but that I
was
surprised with the sudden news of a sudden new edition of your Complete Angler;
so that, having but a little more than ten days' time to turn me in,
and rub up
my memory, for, in truth, I have not, in all this long time, though I
have
often thought on 't, and almost as often resolved to go presently about
it, I
was forced upon the instant to scribble what I here present you; which
I have
also endeavored to accommodate to your own method. And, if mine be
clear enough
for the honest Brothers of the Angle readily to understand, which is
the only
thing I aim at, then I have my end, and shall need to make no further
apology:
a writing of this kind not requiring, if I were master of any such
thing, any
eloquence to set it off or recommend it; so that if you, in your
better
judgment, or kindness rather, can allow it passable, for a thing of
this
nature, you will then do me honor, if the Cipher, fixed and carved in the
front
of my little fishing-house, may be here explained: and to permit me to
attend
you in public, who, in private, have ever been, am, and ever resolve to
be, sir,
Your most
affectionate son and servant, CHARLES
COTTON
Acceptance
TO MY MOST HONORED FRIEND, CHARLES COTTON, ESQ. Sir: You now
see I have
returned you your very pleasant and useful discourse of the Art of
Fly-fishing,
printed just as it was sent me: for I have been so obedient to your
desires, as
to endure all the praises you have ventured to fix upon me in it. And
when I
have thanked you for them, as the effects of an undissembled love, then
let me
tell you, sir, that I will really endeavor to live up to the character
you have
given of me; if there were no other reason, yet for this alone, that
you, that
love me so well, and always think what you speak, may not, for my sake,
suffer
by a mistake in your judgment. And, sir,
I have
ventured to fill a part of your margin, by way of paraphrase, for the
reader's
clearer understanding the situation, both of your Fishing-house, and
the
pleasantness of that you dwell in. And I have ventured also to give him
a copy
of verses that you were pleased to send me, now some years past; in
which he
may see a good picture of both; and so much of your own mind, too, as
will make
any reader that is blest with a generous soul to love you the better. I
confess, that for doing this you may justly judge me too bold: if you
do, I
will say so too; and so far commute for my offence, that, though I be
more than
a hundred miles from you, and in the eighty-third year of my age, yet I
will
forget both, and next month begin a pilgrimage to beg your pardon; for
I would
die in your favor; and till then will live, sir, Your most
affectionate father and friend, IZAAK WALTON
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