Trout in Side Currents.—"As a general rule although many trout are taken near, very near the rough, white water of a stream, they do not as a rule lie in the very swiftest portions, but in adjacent and quieter side currents."—Samuel G. Camp.
The Angler's Joy.—"The brook trout always will be the Angler's greatest joy, but the German brown trout [introduced in American waters] and the rainbow trout add variety to the social life of the streams."—Neal Brown.
CHAPTER XIX
THE ANGLER
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"I live not in myself, but I become Portion of that around me; and to me High mountains are a feeling, but the hum Of human cities torture." Byron. |
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"He'd eat his lunch in a minute; He had no time to spare. At a mounted fish in a window He'd stop an hour to stare." Judge. |
The Lone Angler.—"The reason a man likes to go angling is that his family doesn't like to go with him."—New York Press.