Mostly about TroutGeorge Allen & Unwin, 1921 - 223 Seiten |
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Seite 7
... , can you think a thing out clearly . For there your life goes quietly , and you learn only what is worth while . ERNEST POOLE , Russian Impressions : " The Village . " 7 HE fishing - stories in this book are all true.
... , can you think a thing out clearly . For there your life goes quietly , and you learn only what is worth while . ERNEST POOLE , Russian Impressions : " The Village . " 7 HE fishing - stories in this book are all true.
Seite 16
... things to such folk . Sir Edward Grey ( as he was when he wrote his book on fly - fishing ) gave an answer to that question : " People talk sometimes as if a sort of still , slow patience were the great quality experienced by angling ...
... things to such folk . Sir Edward Grey ( as he was when he wrote his book on fly - fishing ) gave an answer to that question : " People talk sometimes as if a sort of still , slow patience were the great quality experienced by angling ...
Seite 17
... thing , ignorant , prejudiced , easily led by an appetite to slaughter or destroy , far more prone to shout " Away with him ! " than " Hosannah ! " Taken indi- vidually , its every member - if you can only get him to yourself — is a ...
... thing , ignorant , prejudiced , easily led by an appetite to slaughter or destroy , far more prone to shout " Away with him ! " than " Hosannah ! " Taken indi- vidually , its every member - if you can only get him to yourself — is a ...
Seite 31
... thing . To get back to my once upon а time " I used to imagine that there was no colour in a winter landscape , except brown . Trees , fields , hedges and roads , all seemed to me to be brown in winter during the fleeting : 66 glimpses ...
... thing . To get back to my once upon а time " I used to imagine that there was no colour in a winter landscape , except brown . Trees , fields , hedges and roads , all seemed to me to be brown in winter during the fleeting : 66 glimpses ...
Seite 33
... thing different , some new life in the air ; it smells of new life . The turn of the year has come , and " indoors " is stuffy and impossible . I must see that valley again . No colour in the winter months ? When I get to the valley I ...
... thing different , some new life in the air ; it smells of new life . The turn of the year has come , and " indoors " is stuffy and impossible . I must see that valley again . No colour in the winter months ? When I get to the valley I ...
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amongst Avlona bait bank beach beauty Bideford big trout birds boat cast caught chalk-stream Charles Kingsley clear colour comes copse coup de grâce deep dock-leaves down-stream downland dry-fly day experience feeling fish fisher fisherman flies floating flowers fly-fishing gently gillie glorious grass grayling GRAYLING DAY greenheart grey hatch head heavy holiday homewards hook inches keen keep Kingussie land landing-net leave lochs look luck marsh-marigolds May-fly meadows memory mill minutes North Devon passed pike pool pounds reel rise river round rowlocks salmon salmon-fishing Scotland sea-trout seems shallow Shetland Shetland Islands showing side Simon's Bay snook soon spot strain stream sunshine surface thing Torridge trees trout-stream turn up-stream valley voes waders wading warm Water-Baby water-meadows wave weather weed-bed weeds weight Whitehall wild daffodils Wiltshire wind window wonderful wood yards
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 95 - But turn out of the way a little, good scholar, towards yonder high honeysuckle hedge; there well sit and sing whilst this shower falls so gently upon the teeming earth, and gives yet a sweeter smell to the lovely flowers that adorn these verdant meadows.
Seite 96 - ... and turned them into foam : and sometimes I beguiled time by viewing the harmless lambs, some leaping securely in the cool shade, whilst others sported themselves in the cheerful sun ; and saw others craving comfort from the swollen udders of their bleating dams. As I thus sat, these and other sights had so fully possessed my soul with content, that I thought, as the poet has happily expressed it, " I was for that time lifted above earth, And possessed joys not promised in my birth.
Seite 123 - A fire-mist and a planet, — A crystal and a cell, — A jelly-fish and a saurian, And caves where the cave-men dwell ; Then a sense of law and beauty, And a face turned from the clod, — Some call it Evolution, And others call it God.
Seite 86 - In England every village was stricken, there was grief in almost every house. The thought of the suffering, the anxiety for the future, destroyed all pleasure. It came even between one's self and the page of the book one tried to read. In those dark days I found some support in the steady progress unchanged of the beauty of the seasons. Every year, as spring came back unfailing and unfaltering, the leaves came out with the same tender green, the birds sang, the flowers came up and opened, and I felt...
Seite 96 - And the birds in the adjoining grove seemed to have a friendly contention with an echo, whose dead voice seemed to live in a hollow tree, near to the brow of that primrose hill.
Seite 96 - ... which broke their waves, and turned them into foam. And sometimes I beguiled time by viewing the harmless lambs ; some leaping securely in the cool shade, whilst others sported themselves in the cheerful sun ; and saw others craving comfort from the swollen udders of their bleating dams.
Seite 123 - It was the tide, of course ; but Tom knew nothing of the tide. He only knew that in a minute more the water, which had been fresh, turned salt all round him. And then there came a change over him. He felt as strong and light and fresh, as if his veins had run champagne; and gave, he did not know why, three skips out of the water, a yard high, and head over heels, just as the salmon do when they first touch the noble rich salt water, which, as some wise men tell us, is the mother of all living things.
Seite 162 - A haze on the far horizon, The infinite, tender sky, The ripe, rich tint of the cornfields And the wild geese sailing high ; And all over upland and lowland The charm of the golden-rod, — Some of us call it Autumn, And others call it God.
Seite 30 - And sometimes a tear Will rise in each eye, Seeing the two old friends So merrily — So merrily ! And ere to bed Go we, go we, Down on the ashes We kneel on the knee, Praying together ! Thus, then, live I, Till, 'mid all the gloom, By heaven ! the bold sun Is with me in the room, Shining, shining ! Then the clouds part, Swallows soaring between ; The spring is alive, And the meadows are green ! I jump up, like mad, Break the old pipe in twain, And away to the meadows, The meadows again...
Seite 29 - Tis a dull sight To see the year dying, When winter winds Set the yellow wood sighing : Sighing, oh ! sighing. When such a time cometh, I do retire Into an old room Beside a bright fire : Oh, pile a bright fire...